Sunday, March 31, 2013

Islamic extremists attack Timbuktu in north Mali

BAMAKO, Mali (AP) ? Mali army officials say Islamic extremist fighters have attacked Timbuktu in northern Mali.

Capt. Samba Coulibaly, spokesman for the Mali military in Timbuktu, said Sunday there is continuing gunfire between the army and jihadist fighters linked to Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM. He said the Islamic radicals sneaked into the city's military camp.

Coulibaly said the fighting started Saturday night at about 10 p.m. when a jihadist suicide bomber blew himself up at a Malian military checkpoint at the western entrance to Timbuktu. He said one army soldier was slightly injured in the explosion.

He said that since the bomb attack, the jihadists have fired upon the Mali army from hidden positions and so far the French military in Timbuktu has not been involved in the fighting.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/islamic-extremists-attack-timbuktu-north-mali-122803432.html

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Electronic Health Records: Most Doctors Don't Think Patients Should Have Full Access To Their Files

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By Jeffrey Kopman

According to a new Harris Poll survey, conducted on behalf of the management consulting firm Accenture, less than one-third of U.S. doctors think patients should have full access to their own electronic health records.

As a patient, you may literally trust your doctor with your life, and the doctor-patient relationship relies on this level of trust. The relationship should be one of give and take, even if the exchange is sometimes dominated by the professional.

So it may come as a surprise that 65 percent of docs believe their patients should have only limited access to their electronic health records, and 4 percent believe patients should have no access at all.


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One thing is clear ? patients believe electronic medical records improve their care. According to a 2011 survey, conducted by GfK Roper on behalf of Practice Fusion, a San Francisco-based electronic health record provider, 78 percent of patients whose doctors kept electronic medical records felt that their care improved.

"Patients want their healthcare to reflect the fact we're in the 21st century," said Ryan Howard, CEO of Practice Fusion. "They want to have prescriptions sent electronically, to receive email appointment reminders and to review past diagnoses and upcoming appointments online."

?Several US health systems have proven that the benefits outweigh the risks in allowing patients open access to their medical records, and we expect this trend to continue,? said Mark Knicrehm, senior global managing director of Accenture Health, of the poll?s results.

While a majority of doctors in the Accenture survey wouldn?t trust patients with full access to their records, 81 percent said they wanted their patients to keep the records up to date, which may seem like a disconnect.

Primarily, though, the doctors are referring to updating personal information, not medical information. Almost all doctors polled think patients should update their own demographic information (95 percent), family history (88 percent), medications (86 percent), allergies (85 percent), and even some medical information, like new symptoms and self-administered test results (81 percent).

There seem to be few disadvantages to giving patients access to records and some real advantages, according to experts and commentators. So why do many doctors feel that their patients should not have full access to their electronic medical records?

Stephen Baker, author of The Numerati blog, wrote that patient sensitivity may be to blame for doctors' unwillingness to share medical records.

?This would not be a problem if we, as a society, weren't so hypersensitive to 'hurtful' words, and eager to sue in cases of errors,? Baker stated on his blog.

He used an example of a doctor speculating about his or her patient being the victim of abuse. While the patient might be offended on reading this information in their electronic medical record, the doctor might feel that it's important to document their observations. Baker concluded, ?if we want the data, we should be ready to see and accept it, even when offensive. This openness would pay off richly.?

Thomas J. Vento, MD, a family doctor in private practice in Reisterstown, Md., sees the benefits of open access to medical records, because patients can help prevent medical errors.

"It?s a great idea to give your family doctor a copy to keep in his file, but it?s also very important to have your own copy of the health journal in case of a medical emergency," Dr. Vento said. "Being an active voice in health care is an integral part of getting the best care you can for yourself and your children."

After a 2012 study found that doctors failed to read many test results when patients were discharged from hospitals, experts claimed that electronic records could help "prevent important information from falling through cracks."

"[This] problem could be solved with electronic medical records that keep track of test results and alert doctors when the results have not been reviewed," said Gordon Schiff, MD, associate director of the Brigham Center for Patient Safety Research and Practice, at the time. "Patients also can play a role by keeping track of their tests and asking their doctor about the results."

As doctors and medical institutions continue to switch to electronic medical records, and patients demand more access, the debate will continue: How much information should patients have access to?

"Electronic Health Records: Doctors Want to Keep Patients Out" originally appeared on Everyday Health.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/30/electronic-health-records-patient-access-doctors_n_2963506.html

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Bee deaths stir up renewed buzz

From 2012: Honeybees may be victims of widely used insecticides. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

This past winter has been exceptionally rough for honeybees ??and although it's too early to say exactly why, the usual suspects range from pesticides that appear to cause memory loss to pests that got an exceptionally early start last spring.

Friday marked the start of an annual survey that asks beekeepers to report how many bees they lost over the winter, conducted by the Bee Informed Partnership, the Apiary Inspectors of America and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The advance word is that the results will be brutal.??The New York Times, for example, quoted beekeepers as saying the losses reached levels of 40 to 50 percent?? which would be double the average reported last year.

One beekeeper in Montana was quoted as saying that his bees seemed health last spring, but in September, "they started to fall on their face, to die like crazy."


Dennis vanEngelsdorp, an entomologist at the University of Maryland who is one of the leaders of the survey team, said he can't predict what the past winter's average loss figure will be. The beekeepers' reports are being solicited online for the next two weeks, and the figures are due for release on May 7.

"What I can say is, when we were in California this year, the strength of the colonies that were there was significantly lower than it was in previous years," vanEngelsdorp told NBC News.?

Pesticides at issue
That's consistent with a mysterious ailment known as colony collapse disorder, which has stirred scientists' concern for the past decade. The malady almost certainly due to combination of factors ??including the Varroa mite, a single-celled parasite known as Nosema, several varieties of viruses, and pesticides. Researchers point to one particular class of pesticides, known as neonicotinoids, as a prime suspect.

Neonicotinoid-based pesticides are commonly applied as a coating on corn seeds, but the chemicals can persist in the environment. Although they have low toxicity for mammals, they've been found to have a significant neurotoxic effect on insects, including bees. Several European countries have banned neonicotinoids, the European Union has been looking at a wider ban, and the Environmental Protection Agency is considering new limitations as well. Just last week, a lawsuit called on the EPA to suspend the use of two types of neonicotinoids immediately.

Two recently published studies add to the concern: This week, researchers report in Nature Communications that neonicotinoids block the part of a bee's brain that associates scents with foods. They suggest that without that functionality, the bees effectively forget that floral scents mean food is nearby, and thus die off before they can pollinate. A study published in January in the Journal of Experimental Biology found a similar link to problems with scent-related learning and memory.

Mild winter, dry summer
Although neonicotinoids are currently front and center in the debate over colony collapse disorder, they're not necessarily the primary reason for this winter's dramatic dip in bee colonies.

VanEngelsdorp noted that the winter of 2011-2012 was easy on the bees: Losses amounted to just 21.9 percent, compared with a 2006-2011 average of 33 percent. However, the mild winter was kind to the bees' pests as well. VanEngelsdorp speculated that Varroa mites may have gained an early foothold in the hives last spring. By the time beekeepers started their treatments on the usual schedule, it was too late to keep the mites from weakening the colonies. That would help explain why the past winter's losses were worse than usual.

Scott Bauer / USDA via AP

A worker bee carries a Varroa mite, visible in this close-up view.

California beekeeper Randy Oliver, who discusses industry trends on the Scientific Beekeeping blog, said the past summer's drought was also a factor: "When there's a drought, the bees are in poor shape with the food," he told NBC News. He said he and other beekeepers predicted that there'd be heavy winter losses last July, when the scale of the drought became clear.

Heavy losses are bad news, and if bee colonies are becoming progressively weaker, that's worse news. It's not just because of the honey: The Department of Agriculture says that bee pollination is responsible for more than $15 billion in increased crop value each year. A bee scarcity increases costs for the farmers who need them for pollination, and that could lead to higher food prices. But Oliver said it's important to keep a sense of perspective about the bad news.

"The situation with the bees is not dire," he said. "The bees are doing OK. There's no danger that the bees will go extinct. ... That's just not true."

More about bees:


Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page?to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2a2553f5/l/0Lcosmiclog0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A30C290C175187930Ebee0Edeaths0Estir0Eup0Erenewed0Ebuzz0Dlite/story01.htm

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Saturday, March 30, 2013

Ryan Gosling Reveals Director's 'Place Beyond The Pines' Challenge

Director Derek Cianfrance felt inspired by police show 'COPS' and challenged himself to its one-shot takes, the actor tells MTV News.
By Driadonna Roland, with reporting by Josh Horowitz


Ryan Gosling
Photo: MTV News

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1704651/ryan-gosling-place-beyond-the-pines.jhtml

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Hard-Boiled Tips For Easter Eggs, Passover Food Safety - CBS Detroit

DETROIT (WWJ) ? If you?re planning an Easter egg hunt or cooking eggs for your Passover Seder, USDA has important advice to help you keep your family safe from foodborne illness throughout the Spring celebrations.

Susan Conley, director of Food Safety Education for USDA?s Food Safety and Inspection Service, said hard-boiled eggs for Easter and Passover celebrations should be prepared with care.

If you plan to eat the Easter eggs you decorate, be sure to use only food grade dye. Some people even?make two sets of eggs ? one for decorating and hiding, another for eating ? while others use plastic eggs for hiding.

For an Easter egg hunt, avoid cracking the egg shells. If the shells crack, bacteria could enter and contaminate the egg inside. Also, try to?hide eggs in places that are protected from dirt, pets and other bacteria sources. Conley said it?s especially important to keep hard-boiled eggs chilled in the refrigerator until just before the hunt.

The total time for hiding and hunting eggs should be no more than two hours. Then be sure to refrigerate the ?found? eggs right away until you eat them. Eggs found hours later or the next day should be thrown out, not eaten.

Eggs also play and important role on the Seder plate during Passover celebrations. If that egg sits out at room temperature for more than two hours, it should not be eaten. Since the hard-boiled eggs that are usually served to each person as part of the special dinner are meant to be eaten, keep those eggs in the refrigerator until ready to serve.

When shell eggs are hard-boiled, the protective coating is washed away, leaving open pores in the shell where harmful bacteria could enter. Be sure to refrigerate eggs within two hours of cooking and use them within a week. Check your refrigerator temperature with an appliance thermometer and adjust the refrigerator temperature to 40?F?or below.

For egg safety, to stay healthy and avoid foodborne illness, USDA advises:

  • Always buy eggs from a refrigerated case. Choose eggs with clean, uncracked shells
  • Buy eggs before the ?Sell-By? or ?EXP? (expiration) date on the carton
  • Take eggs straight home from the grocery store and refrigerate them right away. Check to be sure your refrigerator is set at 40?F or below. Don?t take eggs out of the carton to put them in the refrigerator ? the carton protects them. Keep the eggs in the coldest part of the refrigerator ? not on the door.
  • Raw shell eggs in the carton can stay in your refrigerator for three to five weeks from the purchase date. Although the ?Sell-By? date might pass during that time, the eggs are still safe to use.
  • Always wash your hands with warm water and soap before and after handling raw eggs. To avoid cross-contamination, you should also wash forks, knives, spoons and all counters and other surfaces that touch the eggs with hot water and soap.
  • Don?t keep raw or cooked eggs out of the refrigerator more than two hours.
  • Egg dishes such as deviled eggs or egg salad should be used within 3 to 4 days.

Source: http://detroit.cbslocal.com/2013/03/30/hard-boiled-tips-for-easter-eggs-passover-food-safety/

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Friday, March 29, 2013

Iran summons Saudi envoy over spy ring claim

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) ? Iran has summoned a Saudi envoy to protest the kingdom's allegation that members of a spy ring arrested in the Arab country last week worked for Iranian intelligence.

The semi-official Mehr news agency said in a report late Wednesday that Iran's Foreign Ministry "strongly rejected" the claim during a meeting with the Saudi charge d'affaires in Tehran. The report says Iran is seeking an explanation from the kingdom.

Saudi Arabia has said that material evidence and detainee confessions prove the members of the arrested group had received money from Iran for information on vital locations in the kingdom. Iran has denied such payments.

The mainly Sunni kingdom and the predominantly Shiite Iran are regional rivals. They have a hostile relationship and frequently trade accusations.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-summons-saudi-envoy-over-spy-ring-claim-070933402.html

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Salwa Amin: Arrested AGAIN on Drug Charge

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/03/salwa-amin-arrested-again-on-drug-charge/

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Playdek Closes $3.8M Series A To Build A Digital Community Where Tabletop Gamers Can Feel At Home

playdekFresh from putting smiles on the faces of tabletop gaming geeks everywhere, with yesterday's news that it would be helping to bring Dungeons & Dragons to iOS devices later this year, mobile game publisher Playdek has closed a $3.8 million Series A funding round. The round was led by Qualcomm Ventures, with IDG Ventures and ff Venture Capital also participating.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/4XBqWpCoRrs/

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Bankruptcy Alternatives 03/28 by Guide to Financial Peace | Blog ...

  • On AirLoading

    Join The SpeakEasy Cafe's Open-Mic Poetry Show! Poets, you're invited to take the stage! Call in and inspire, listen in and be inspired!

  • VividLife Radio?s Edie Weinstein welcomes Nancy Dreyfus, Psy. D, to discuss her best selling book Talk To Me Like I'm Someone You Love.

  • Teen hosts Jackie, Brooke, and Drew discuss the challenge of what to do after high school graduation. They are joined by guest Andrea Hahn from CNY Works.

  • Join Democracy Interactive for a conversation with Pulitzer Prize winner and reporter Hedrick Smith, about his book "Who Stole The American Dream?"

  • Hear hosts Ben and Corey of mHealth Zone in a conversation with doctors who are driving mobile health.

  • This week on the BIG show, host Tim Gordon will welcome writer/director Storm Saulter to discuss his latest film, the Caribbean crime drama, Better Mus' Come.

  • The PointClickFish.com Team welcomes Captain Tyler McLaughlin, the Captain of the F/V Pin Wheel on National Geographic Channel?s hit series Wicked Tuna.

  • Bernice Bennett welcomes Joanne Abel for a discussion of the Jeanes Teachers and their community organizing work to build Rosenwald Schools in the rural South.

  • NWP welcomes Terry Brooks, known for his mega-series Shannara, Landover, and for Star Wars: The Phantom Menace. Millions of fans read and love Terry Brooks.

  • Bleacher Report feature columnist Ian Berg joins Weigh In Sports! Listen as they previews all Sweet 16 match ups. Ian gives his keys to victory for each team!

  • Raider's Jason Tarver, Lion's Ben Archibald, Patriot's Daniel Fells, Viking's/Steeler's Todd Kalis and Brown's Anthony Griggs join the Thursday Night Tailgate.

  • John Marsh owns Triton Mixed Martial Arts Studio but his latest venture is Wyatt?s BBQ & Catering Company. Learn how both his passions cross paths.

  • Dennis Daniel talks with voice actor Christopher Sabat, best known as Vegeta and Piccolo from the iconic cartoon series, "DragonBall Z"

  • Doreen Taylor, named the "One to Watch for 2013" by guyism.com, talks to Olivia Wilder about her 2013 "Magic" tour, kicking off in Philadelphia on May 23rd.

  • Robin Donley, of Perceptual Testing, talks about her system and starting a business in California. Leslie Eastman adds free market and science perspectives.

  • Experience The Witch's Tale, a horror-fantasy radio series running from 1931 to 1938. The program was created, written and directed by Alonzo Deen Cole.

  • Alexia Vernon also known as the ?Moxie Maven? is the creator of Step Into Your Moxie, which helps women learn to speak with power and impact.

  • Join Pete Peters from Straight Down the Middle as he welcomes Dean Visser,Tournament Coordinator of the Arizona Interscholastic Association.

  • The Best Ever You welcomes Dr. Lisa Christiansen, one of the most sought-after motivational speakers, life coaches, and business consultants worldwide.

  • Author, Dr. Sherry Gorman M.D. talks about her real life experience, that lead her to write the medical mystery thriller, "It's Nothing Personal."

  • Paranormal Research Society explores a mysterious phenomenon called shadow people, one of the most seen figures in the paranormal, yet the least talked about!

  • Fieldstone Common welcomes Prof. Ava Chamberlain, author of The Notorious Elizabeth Tuttle: Marriage, Murder, and Madness in the Family of Jonathan Edwards.

  • Master Energy Coach Sheevaun O?Connor Moran, joins The Feminine Soul! Learn how to manage your energy so you can achieve your dreams beyond any obstacle!

  • Source: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/guide-to-financial-peace/2013/03/28/bankruptcy-alternatives

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    Thursday, March 28, 2013

    Gunnar Optiks MLG Legend


    Like a lot of people, I spend all day, every day, in front of a computer screen. Multiple screens, in fact. Between my 15-inch laptop, 23-inch external monitor, and the three or four PCs I test every week, my workday is full to the brim with glowing displays. My home life is no different. When I'm not kicking back with some games on either my PC or PS3, I'm usually watching shows on Netflix or Hulu or browsing Metafilter and Reddit. Needless to say, I have some eyestrain issues to deal with. Luckily, the Gunnar Optiks MLG Legend glasses ($99 direct) are made with gamers and heavy PC users in mind.

    I'd seen products from Gunnar Optiks before, but have always dismissed them. I wore glasses for most of my life before experiencing the miracle of Lasik. Glasses are uncomfortable, heavy-lensed face huggers, with lenses that manage to get grubby no matter how much care you take not to touch the lenses. I put up with my own glasses because they were necessary to see, but these glasses, made for gamers and PC users? No thank you. But hearing Gunnars' claims about reduced eyestrain, improved contrast, and resulting improvements in competitive gaming performance? I figured it was time to give them a try.

    Design
    In design, the MLG Legends are quite similar to the Gunnar Optiks PPK Digital Performance Eyewear we reviewed back in 2011, with the same bowed earpieces and simple hinges. The biggest difference between the two is the lens shape. Where the PPK model has rectangular lenses, the MLG Legends use a teardrop shape. The wider lenses reduce the amount of the frame encroaching on your peripheral vision, and resulting in more of an aviator look.

    My biggest concern was that the pressure on my nose and ears caused by the weight of the glasses would result in headaches as bad, or worse, than the eyestrain I was trying to avoid. The glasses actually ended up being far lighter than I expected?0.64 ounces?though that may have something to do with the fact that my old glasses had heavy coke-bottle lenses.

    The frames I tested came in all black (onyx in Gunnar's parlance), but are also available in chrome. The bowed earpieces are partially covered with transparent plastic sleeves, so you can read the words "Major League Gaming" on the earpieces. The ear pieces are made to flex easily, letting you wear them while also wearing a gaming headset, though it still takes a bit of getting used to. Long term use will still leave little nose pad prints on the bridge of your nose, but the strain on the ears and the problems with headsets that I anticipated were never much of a problem.

    Features
    Gunnar Optiks touts its gaming and computer glasses as solving the woes of eyestrain through four means, each given a peculiar name for marketing purposes: FRACTYL lens geometry, DIAMIX lens material, IONIK lens tints, and i-FI lens coatings. Let's try to look past the goofy marketing speak to cut through the hype.

    Gunnar claims that its lenses are specially shaped?that's the FRACTYL lens geometry at work?to provide optimum clarity, enhance focus, and to wrap around the eye in such a way as to "limit air currents around the eye" and thus prevent dry eyes. The first two claims seem reasonable enough, though they couldn't be easily tested using the equipment in the PC Lab. The lenses do seem to be distortion free, and appear to provide just the slightest magnification?though it's so slight that you'll only notice it if you're looking for it.

    The claims that the curved lenses create a so-called "microclimate" are more dubious. Gunnar's website states that the "Lenses wrap closely to the face and form a protective barrier from drying air currents while trapping humidity close to the eye." While the lenses will provide a barrier against air currents, such as those from an air conditioning vent or open window, it's not necessarily a technological feat?even cheap sunglasses or safety glasses will do the same thing.

    The second half of the claim, that they reduce dryness by trapping humidity near the eye, sounds like poppycock?and honestly I noticed no difference during use. However, Gunnar Optiks does claim that this is based upon lab testing, though we aren't equipped to verify this.

    The DIAMIX material used in the lenses is certainly clear and distortion free, but claims of higher durability and scratch resistance may be exaggerated. Our review unit has a scratch on the left lens that either occurred during shipping, or between the time we opened the package and put on the glasses.

    Gunnar's IONIK lens tints were developed to shift colors to a warmer part of the spectrum, while also increasing contrast perception. The result is the distinctive yellow tint of the lenses, which do reduce the level of blue-wavelength light coming into the eye from LCD screens and fluorescent lights, so this claim seems to be solid. This filtering did indeed reduce eye-strain, and softened the brightness of office lighting as well. In addition to visible light, the tinted lenses block UVA and UVB light?wavelengths which can damage the cornea, lens and retina of the eye.

    The fourth piece of the puzzle is Gunnar's iFi lens coatings, which include a hard coat to prevent scratching and coatings to reduce smudges and fingerprints. We've already mentioned scratching, but we really wonder about the hydrophobic and oleophobic coatings?the glasses are nearly impossible to keep clean, picking up every smudge and smear from both my face and fingers. Even when taking great care not to touch the lenses at all, I still had to wipe them regularly.

    Gunnar's regular offerings are meant for folks that either need no vision correction, or have either contacts or other means to correct their vision without glasses. Prescription lens wearers aren't totally out of luck, however, as Gunnar does offer prescription variations of its PC and gaming eyewear?for a hefty increase in cost. While non-prescription models sell for around $100 each, prescriptions bump up the price to more than $300, combining corrective lenses with Gunnar's unique blend of materials, frames, and lens coatings.

    Gunnar offers a 30-day money-back guarantee on all of its non-prescription eyewear, so you can try them out and return them if you're not satisfied. The company also covers its products with a one-year warranty against defects in material or workmanship.

    Performance
    With my life already filled with glowing screens, it wasn't hard to test the MLG Legends. In addition to wearing the glasses during my regular work day, I also made it a point to wear them during extended periods of game testing. From day to day, I did find that the tinted lenses left my eyes feeling less fatigued at the end of the day, and after a few days, I found myself preferring the yellow tinted view of my screens to the noticeably blue glow without them.

    In gaming, there was certainly a benefit to wearing the glasses. The sharper contrast and reduced eye fatigue gave me a slight improvement in play while I fragged Joker-wannabes in Gotham City Impostors, and helped me to play at a slightly faster pace in the Red vs. Blue battles of Team Fortress 2.

    One unfortunate side-effect of the glasses, however, is the yellow-tinged view it puts on everything. For games that are more about competition than immersion, it's not a problem, but when playing anything in single-player mode, the yellow tint reduces overall immersion, screwing up the vibrant colors and shades that make modern games so visually impressive. You can either get used to the yellow tinge, or try to adjust your screen to correct for it, but neither is particularly satisfying.

    Conclusion
    In the end, I can't recommend the MLG Legend glasses for everyone. They're too expensive for most, and the benefits, while real, won't justify the cost in many people's minds. That said, the benefits (though heavily hyped) are noticeable?reduced eyestrain, enhanced contrast, and a potential improvement in gaming performance. If you're a competitive gamer, logging hours in-game every day and serious about your win/loss ratio, then consider them an investment. Your eyes will thank you.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/JGTxLs1QY7s/0,2817,2416778,00.asp

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    Akira Takarada Joins Gareth Edwards' Godzilla

    akira-takarada-godzilla-reboot-slice

    Filming is currently underway in Vancouver on director Gareth Edwards? new take on Godzilla, and the production has been rather generous to the legions of curious fans thus far, giving fans peeks behind-the-scenes of the pic.? Edwards previously shared a video greeting from the first day of filming a couple of weeks ago, and now Legendary Pictures has released a new set photo that reveals that OG star Akira Takarada will make an appearance in the upcoming redo.? Takarada was the lead in Ishiro Honda?s 1954 original film Godzilla, which spawned countless sequels, offshoots, spinoffs, and remakes.? It?s unknown how big of a role Takrada will have in Legendary/Warner Bros.? new film, but it?s certainly neat to see Edwards paying tribute to the original?Godzilla.

    Hit the jump to check out the set photo featuring Takarada and Edwards.? The film stars Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Elizabeth Olsen,?Juliette Binoche,?David Strathairn,??Bryan Crantson?and?Ken Watanabe.? Godzilla opens in 3D on May 16, 2014.

    Via Legendary?s Twitter.

    akira-takarada-godzilla-reboot

    And here?s a still of Takarada in the original Godzilla:

    akira-takarada-godzilla

    Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1927127/news/1927127/

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    Wednesday, March 27, 2013

    U.S. spends $3.7 million on ex-presidents in 2012

    WASHINGTON (AP) ? Being the leader of the free world is an expensive proposition. And the costs don't stop once you leave the White House.

    The government spent nearly $3.7 million on former presidents in 2012, according to an analysis just released by the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service. That covers a pension, compensation and benefits for office staff, and other costs like travel, office space and postage.

    The costliest former president? George W. Bush, who clocked in last year at just over $1.3 million.

    The $3.7 million taxpayers shelled out in 2012 is about $200,000 less than in 2011, and the sum in 2010 was even higher. It's a drop in the bucket compared with the trillions the federal government spends each year.

    Still, with ex-presidents able to command eye-popping sums for books, speaking engagements and the like in their post-White House years, the report raises questions about whether the U.S. should provide such generous subsidies at a time when spending cuts and the deficit are forcing lawmakers and federal agencies to seek ways to cut back.

    Under the Former Presidents Act, previous inhabitants of the Oval Office are given a $200,000 annual pension ? the equivalent to a Cabinet secretary's salary ? plus $96,000 a year for a small office staff. The government also picks up the tab for other costs like travel, office space and postage.

    Departing presidents also get extra help in the first years after they leave office, one reason that Bush's costs were higher than other living ex-presidents. The most recent ex-president to leave the White House, Bush was granted almost $400,000 for 8,000 square feet of office space in Dallas, plus $85,000 in telephone costs. Another $60,000 went to travel costs.

    President Bill Clinton came in second at just under $1 million, followed by George H.W. Bush at nearly $850,000. Clinton spent the most government money on office space: $442,000 for his 8,300 square foot digs in New York's Harlem neighborhood.

    Clinton's predecessor, President George H.W. Bush, received about $840,000 in federal funds last year. Costs for Jimmy Carter, the only other living former president, came in at about $500,000.

    Widows of former presidents are entitled to a pension of $20,000, but Nancy Reagan, the wife of former President Ronald Reagan, waived her pension last year. The former first lady did accept $14,000 in postage.

    The cost totals for ex-president don't include what the Secret Service spends protecting them, their spouses and children. Those costs are part of a separate budget that isn't made public.

    Funding for ex-presidents under the Former Presidents Act dates back to 1958, when Congress created the program largely in response to President Harry Truman's post-White House financial woes, the Congressional Research Service said. The goal was to maintain the dignity of the presidency and help with ongoing costs associated with being a former president, such as responding to correspondence and scheduling requests.

    These days, a former president's income can be substantial from speaking and writing, and ex-presidents also have robust presidential centers and foundations that accept donations and facilitate many of their post-presidential activities.

    Noting that none of the living ex-presidents are poor, Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, introduced a bill last year that would limit costs to a $200,000 pension, plus another $200,000 that ex-presidents could use at their discretion. And for every dollar that an ex-president earns in excess of $400,000, their annual allowance would be reduced by the same amount. The bill died in committee.

    ___

    Follow Josh Lederman at http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/govt-spent-nearly-3-7m-ex-presidents-2012-190704449--politics.html

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    Tuesday, March 26, 2013

    Facebook Says VoIP Calling Will Be Added To Its Messenger iOS App In The U.K. Today

    facebook messengerFacebook is slowly beefing up the capabilities of its Messenger app as it moves to combat the rise of free messaging apps like Whatsapp, Viber and Line. Today it's taking another baby step by expanding VoIP calling to U.K. users of its iOS app, following its initial test of the feature in Canada in January, which was soon followed by a U.S. rollout.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/RYzrbTmGK5A/

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    Paralyzed 9 years ago, Iraq vet prepares to die

    Tomas Young is "ready to go" as he puts it. After nine years of suffering and with his body quickly deteriorating he has decided to end his struggle.

    Young, 33, was paralyzed from the chest down by a sniper's bullet in a battle in Sadr City, Iraq on April 4, 2004, less than a week after he got to the country. He had joined the Army just two days after September 11, 2001 and assumed he would be sent to Afghanistan. Now nine years after that battle he is choosing to end his suffering. He is in hospice care and getting ready to die.

    "I just decided that I was tired of seeing my body deteriorate and I want to go before it's too late," Young said in phone interview with ABC News from his home in Kansas City, Missouri. "I've been doing this for the past nine years now?and I finally felt helpless every day and a burden to the people who take care of me and that's why I want to go."

    Young and his wife Claudia Cuellar are receiving guests for a few more weeks. During that time, Young will say goodbye to friends and family and then will stop receiving medications, nourishment and water. They don't know how long it could be after that time he will die, but they believe it will be one to three weeks, but it could be as long as six weeks.

    They don't consider it suicide, just an end to his suffering.

    "I'm not the boy who would always think suicide if maybe something goes wrong," Young said. "I put lots of time into this. I considered the facts that people I know who love me and would prefer that I stick around, and my only hope is that they realize that they're being selfish in wanting me to just stick around and endure the pain."

    Young and Cuellar have decided to go public with their story. First, in an article in the Kansas City Star because they want to change the perception on death and dying in this country as well as continue to shine a light on the anti-Iraq war activism Young has been focused on since becoming paralyzed. He was the subject of a 2007 documentary "Body of War" produced by Phil Donahue. It showed Young dealing with the excruciating physical effects of his injury including post-traumatic stress, as well as his work against the Iraq war.

    Cuellar says since the first story was written about his choice to die last week they have received mixed reactions of people supporting Young's decision as well as people urging him to "hang on" or "fight a little more." She says it's because people can't fathom his daily pain.

    In 2008, he suffered a pulmonary embolism and anoxic brain injury which he believes was because he was taken off of blood thinners. It affected his speech as well as impaired the use of his arms. Cuellar and Young met when she saw the documentary and she began visiting him when he was in rehabilitation in Chicago after the embolism. They married last April.

    "He was a para[plegic] and he was independent and functioning independently so he rolled the ball up the mountain to learn how to be a paraplegic and then four years later...he has the embolism he gets rolled back all the way down the mountain and he now has to live like a partial quadriplegic," Cuellar said.

    Since then, they estimate, he takes between 35 to 45 pills a day. He has mucus, but because of his paralysis cannot cough it up so Cuellar presses it out of him ten to fifteen times a day. He takes more pills for waves of nausea that hit him throughout the day, antibiotics for infections, his vision is fading, and he's had increased nightmares they believe because of the increase in pain medications. His colon was removed in November and he now can't eat solid food. Young's speech is also quite blurred so his wife jumps in when needed.

    "We've had to increase the pain medication over time quite consistently and incrementally so increase in pain meds will decrease his faculties somewhat so he is becoming forgetful a little bit. He was always very clear before," Cuellar said.

    She also must clean "pressure sores" on his buttocks where Cuellar says she can see the "living bone."

    "I hope people understand that we are not just deciding to stop feeding because things are kind of difficult," Cuellar said. "It is an insurmountable challenge every day and I don't know how we get through. We get through with each other."

    So, how exactly does this happen in the age of modern medicine and to a man who served his country bravely?

    Young says it's been a "long process" since he began experiencing "severe abdominal pain in July of 2009" and he hasn't just been struggling with his deteriorating body, but with the health care system, calling the Veterans Affairs (VA) Hospital a "factory." He left in October against medical advice.

    "At the VA the doctors seem to think they are so much better than all of their patients and if you try to say, 'Oh what if it's like this?' or 'What if we go down this road?' and they say, 'No, no that won't work,'" Young said. "I said (the VA) was more zoo-like, it's actually more like a factory. Like patients are on an assembly line."

    They said the treatment at a private hospital he went to was better, but Cuellar said "there is still this drive towards procedures, surgeries, drugs, procedures, surgeries, drugs."

    "When we felt like we had enough of procedures, surgeries, and drugs there isn't a space allowed to begin to talk about transition into hospice or feelings about suffering or death and dying. Even with medical professionals they don't want to talk about it," Cuellar said.

    They said when they first approached Young's doctors with his wish to go into hospice they said due to his young age he wasn't the "typical hospice patient."

    "This is what happens when a country sends their sons and daughters to war," Cuellar said. "Broken bodies come back and broken bodies deteriorate over time just like a diseased body and just like an aging body and this is the reality. I'm sorry if it doesn't fit your profile of somebody who is 90 years old and about to die going to hospice."

    In order to be accepted in a hospice, Young must be "terminally" ill, which he technically is not. They were able to be accepted when he was ruled to have an "inability to thrive." He now has in-home hospice care from Crossroads Hospice.

    "All we want to do is go home," Cuellar said, referring to the time before the ruling was made. "We don't want to be in a hospital, we don't want to be in an ER, we don't want to go into a nursing home?we felt like we were like Frankenstein. They just wanted to keep cutting open, stitching up, going in, another pill and this is a dehumanizing process."

    Although Young has been involved in protesting the Iraq war for years, his final piece of political activism is an open letter he wrote to former President George W. Bush and former Vice President Dick Cheney accusing them of war crimes.

    "You may evade justice, but in our eyes you are each guilty of egregious war crimes, of plunder and, finally, of murder, including the murder of thousands of young Americans--my fellow veterans--whose future you stole," it reads in part.

    ABC News' Chief Global Affairs Correspondent Martha Raddatz has covered the war in Iraq extensively even writing a book, "The Long Road Home" about the battle in Sadr City in which Young was injured in.

    She sat down with the man who saved Young and others, Robert Miltenberger several times since the battle He served as a staff sergeant in Sadr City in 2004.

    Miltenberger, who was awarded the silver star for his bravery told Raddatz in 2005 that he thought about Young and others oftenm, telling her the memories were "haunting." In November 2011, she interviewed him again and he said he had told Young that he apologized to him for what happened right after he was paralyzed.

    "I was telling him that I was sorry that I lied to him, that he wasn't paralyzed, that people were lying on his legs and he was just numb from all the weight and stuff," Miltenberger recalled. "He said it was okay. He didn't blame me."

    Young's reaction to hearing those words was that "I've never had any hard feelings and I never considered it lying. I was just trying to keep my head above water."

    Young said he would like to talk to Miltenberger before his life ends.

    Young says he wants the country to learn from his struggle that "war is the last resort" and in future conflicts the American government should try diplomacy and "if they are still not cooperating they should send in a small group of elite trained forces not 125,000 19-year-old kids whose first cultural experience is eating at the Olive Garden or Taco Bell. "

    "I want our government to try every possible outlet with the country before invading it, before going to war," Young said.

    Young added that if the United States does go to war then "all boxes must be checked."

    "Make sure that the soldiers, marines, and sailors have the best body armor, the best armor around their vehicles," Young said before Cuellar added, "And having a healthcare system that will take of you when they get back. I mean, they just can't be abandoned when they sacrifice for their country."

    Young's mother Cathy Smith, whom he says has worked as a "pit bull" on his behalf, is also almost always by his side.

    He said "she's come around to the conclusion that it would be far more selfish for her to want me to stay alive and be in pain the rest of my life than just let me go."

    Also Read

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wounded-iraq-vet-prepares-die-122209007.html

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