Tuesday 31 January 2012

Libyan militia leader sues former UK spy chief (Reuters)

LONDON (Reuters) ? A Libyan militia leader has begun legal action against a former senior British intelligence chief whom he accuses of playing a key role in illegally returning him to Libya to be jailed and tortured under Muammar Gaddafi, his London-based lawyers said.

Abdel Hakim Belhadj, who commands one of Libya's most powerful militias, is seeking damages from Mark Allen, who was director of counter-terrorism at MI6, Britain's foreign intelligence agency.

Belhadj and a second Libyan dissident, Sami al-Saadi, accuse Allen of complicity in torture, negligence and misfeasance in public office -- the wrongful exercise of his authority.

"We are taking this unusual step of preparing legal action against an individual as the documents we have in our possession suggest Sir Mark was directly involved in the unlawful rendition of our clients," said lawyer Sapna Malik, from the London law firm Leigh & Day, which represents Belhadj and Saadi.

An Oxford-educated Middle East specialist, Allen retired from MI6 in 2004 and went on to work for oil major BP and The Monitor Group, a global investment and consultancy firm.

He is an honorary fellow of St Antony's College at Oxford University and sits on the advisory board for the London School of Economics' centre for diplomacy and international affairs.

Belhadj accuses Allen of helping to organize the operation to fly him from Bangkok to a prison in Libya in 2004.

During six years in jail, Belhadj says, he was tortured and beaten. He also accuses Thai and U.S. agents of abusing him when he was first held in Bangkok.

Born in Libya in 1966, Belhadj is a former leader of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, which waged an insurgency against Gaddafi in the 1990s.

His emergence as an important figure in Libya after Gaddafi's downfall is potentially embarrassing for London, which led international moves to improve relations with Libya after Gaddafi renounced weapons of mass destruction in 2003.

Belhadj's lawyers say Allen's name was found in intelligence documents recovered in Tripoli around the time of the collapse of Gaddafi's administration last August.

The pair are also suing the British government and its legal advisers, the MI5 domestic intelligence agency, the Home Office (interior ministry) and the Foreign Office, which oversees MI6.

A Foreign Office spokesman said: "We take all allegations of mistreatment seriously, but these matters are also the subject of legal correspondence between Mr Belhadj's lawyers and our own so we can offer no further comment at this stage."

Allen could not immediately be reached for comment.

Earlier this month, Britain postponed a judge-led inquiry into whether its security services knew about the torture of suspects overseas. Ministers said the inquiry would be delayed because police have begun a separate investigation into whether London illegally sent detainees to Libya.

Britain has long faced accusations that its spies were complicit in the abuse of overseas detainees in the years after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

Prime Minister David Cameron has cited those suspicions as one of the reasons why he set up the now-delayed inquiry. Britain's security services have always denied using or condoning torture.

(Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/britain/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120131/wl_nm/us_britain_rendition

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Sexual healing? Not likely

Monday, January 30, 2012

A new study shows the production of sperm is more biologically taxing than previously thought, and expending energy on it has significant health implications.

In research published in PLoS ONE, Dr Damian Dowling of Monash University's School of Biological Sciences and Professor Leigh Simmons of the University of Western Australia have investigated the trade-off between sperm quality and immunity.

The researchers used the Australian cricket, Teleogryllus oceanicus to prove that the production of quality sperm is expensive and males are strategic about investing energy in the biological process.

Dr Dowling said investigations into life history trade-offs - investment in reproduction versus future reproduction and survival prospects - have historically focused on females.

"This study challenges the traditional view that sex, and sperm production, come cheaply to males. It is typically thought that females must invest heavily into reproduction, whereas males can freely produce millions of high-quality, tiny sperm on demand, with few costs," Dr Dowling said.

"Here we show that the costs are in fact large, and these costs dictate how much effort a male will devote into any given sexual encounter."

The crickets were housed either with sexually immature females, sexually mature females incapable of reproduction, or sexually mature females capable of reproduction. Sperm quality was measured twice and immune function once during the experiment.

Dr Dowling said the male crickets were more likely to produce high quality sperm when housed with sexually mature females with whom they could mate, indicating a strategic investment of energy.

The researchers also found that production of quality sperm appeared to have a negative effect on the crickets' immune systems.

"Males that invested heavily in their sperm paid the price of being more likely to succumb to a bacterial infection. And we are not talking about STDs here - we are talking about how increased investment into the quality of the ejaculate corresponds with general reductions in immune function," Dr Dowling said.

###

Monash University: http://www.monash.edu.au

Thanks to Monash University for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/117174/Sexual_healing__Not_likely

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Panasonic adds Lumix DMC-TS4 and DMC-TS20 to ruggedized camera line

Panasonic has helped lead the market for ruggedized cameras, which have been a hit among adventurous photographers for years, and now the company has two new additions to add to its water/shock/freeze/dustproof cam line. Described as "the optical outdoor companion," the Lumix DMC-TS4 is Panasonic's new ruggedized flagship, replacing the TS3 and packing a 12.1 megapixel CCD sensor, 1080/60i HD video capture, a 4.6x 28-128mm optical zoom lens and 2.7-inch LCD. Naturally, it can withstand just about everything you'll throw its way, considering that it's waterproof to depths of 40 feet, shockproof to 6.6 feet and freezeproof to temps as low as 14 degrees Fahrenheit. The TS4 also includes GPS, compass, altimeter and barometer functionality, logging all this data to supplement your photos with a full weather and location readout. Panasonic has also added full manual control, letting you adjust both aperture and shutter speed when shooting in manual mode.

The TS4 may offer a respectable spec list, but it doesn't come cheap. The TS20 is an attractive alliterative, however, with a slim profile, 16.1 megapixel sensor, 720p HD shooting, a 4x 25-100mm optically stabilized zoom lens and a 2.7-inch LCD. It's waterproof to 16 feet, freezeproof to 14 degrees Fahrenheit and can survive drops from up to five feet. There's no manual option on this lower-end model, but it does include Panasonic's Intelligent Auto mode for more accurate shooting. The TS20 will ship in late-February in orange, blue, black and red for $180, while the flagship TS4 will be available in orange, blue, black and silver for $400 when it ships in mid-March. You'll find both press releases after the break.

Continue reading Panasonic adds Lumix DMC-TS4 and DMC-TS20 to ruggedized camera line

Panasonic adds Lumix DMC-TS4 and DMC-TS20 to ruggedized camera line originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 Jan 2012 00:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Monday 30 January 2012

That which does not kill yeast makes it stronger

ScienceDaily (Jan. 29, 2012) ? Cells trying to keep pace with constantly changing environmental conditions need to strike a fine balance between maintaining their genomic integrity and allowing enough genetic flexibility to adapt to inhospitable conditions. In their latest study, researchers at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research were able to show that under stressful conditions yeast genomes become unstable, readily acquiring or losing whole chromosomes to enable rapid adaption.

The research, published in the January 29, 2012, advance online issue of Nature, demonstrates that stress itself can increase the pace of evolution by increasing the rate of chromosomal instability or aneuploidy. The observation of stress-induced chromosome instability casts the molecular mechanisms driving cellular evolution into a new perspective and may help explain how cancer cells elude the body's natural defense mechanisms or the toxic effects of chemotherapy drugs.

"Cells employ intricate control mechanisms to maintain genomic stability and prevent abnormal chromosome numbers," says the study's leader, Stowers investigator Rong Li, Ph.D. "We found that under stress cellular mechanisms ensuring chromosome transmission fidelity are relaxed to allow the emergence of progeny cells with diverse aneuploid chromosome numbers, producing a population with large genetic variation."

Known as adaptive genetic change, the concept of stress-induced genetic variation first emerged in bacteria and departs from a long-held basic tenet of evolutionary theory, which holds that genetic diversity -- evolution's raw material from which natural selection picks the best choice under any given circumstance -- arises independently of hostile environmental conditions.

"From an evolutionary standpoint it is a very interesting finding," says graduate student and first author Guangbo Chen. "It shows how stress itself can help cells adapt to stress by inducing chromosomal instability."

Aneuploidy is most often associated with cancer and developmental defects and has recently been shown to reduce cellular fitness. Yet, an abnormal number of chromosomes is not necessarily a bad thing. Many wild yeast strains and their commercial cousins used to make bread or brew beer have adapted to their living environs by rejiggering the number of chromosomes they carry. "Euploid cells are optimized to thrive under 'normal' conditions," says Li. "In stressful environments aneuploid cells can quickly gain the upper hand when it comes to finding creative solutions to roadblocks they encounter in their environment."

After Li and her team had shown in an earlier Nature study that aneuploidy can confer a growth advantage on cells when they are exposed to many different types of stress conditions, the Stowers researchers wondered whether stress itself could increase the chromosome segregation error rate.

To find out, Chen exposed yeast cells to different chemicals that induce various types of general stress and assessed the loss of an artificial chromosome. This initial screen revealed that many stress conditions, including oxidative stress, increased the rate of chromosome loss ten to 20-fold, a rate typically observed when cells are treated with benomyl, a microtubule inhibitor that directly affects chromosome segregation.

The real surprise was radicicol, a drug that induces proteotoxic stress by inhibiting a chaperone protein, recalls Chen. "Even at a concentration that barely slows down growth, radicicol induced extremely high levels of chromosome instability within a very short period of time," he says.

Continued growth of yeast cells in the presence of radicicol led to the emergence of drug-resistant colonies that had acquired an additional copy of chromosome XV. Yeast cells pretreated briefly with radicicol to induce genomic instability also adapted more efficiently to the presence of other drugs including fluconazole, tunicamycin, or benomyl, when compared to euploid cells.

Interestingly, certain chromosome combinations dominated in colonies that were resistant to a specific drug. Fluconazole-resistant colonies typically gained an extra copy of chromosome VIII, tunicamycin-resistant colonies tended to lose chromosome XVI, while a majority of benomyl-resistant colonies got rid of chromosome XII. "This suggested to us that specific karyotypes are associated with resistance to certain drugs," says Chen.

Digging deeper, Chen grew tunicamycin-resistant yeast cells, which had adapted to the presence of the antibiotic by losing one copy of chromosome XVI, under drug-free conditions. Before long, colonies of two distinct sizes emerged. He quickly discovered that the faster growing colonies had regained the missing chromosome. By returning to a normal chromosome XVI number, these newly arisen euploid cells had acquired a distinctive growth advantage over their aneuploid neighbors. But most importantly, the fast growing yeast cells were no longer resistant to tunicamycin and thus clearly linking tunicamycin resistance to the loss of chromosome XVI.

Researchers who also contributed to the work include William D. Bradford and Chris W. Seidel both at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research.

The study was funded in part by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Guangbo Chen, William D. Bradford, Chris W. Seidel, Rong Li. Hsp90 stress potentiates rapid cellular adaptation through induction of aneuploidy. Nature, 2012; DOI: 10.1038/nature10795

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/~3/5Ai57WPl72k/120129151104.htm

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Friday 27 January 2012

From locksmith to limelight: Dujardin, star of 'The Artist,' adored in France

Jean Dujardin, who has already won a Golden Globe for his role in 'The Artist' and is nominated for an Oscar, has endeared himself ? particularly his eyebrows ? to the French.

Move over G?rard Depardieu. France has a new face on the global silver screen.

Skip to next paragraph

Jean Dujardin, who manages to be both suave and folksy ? in a French sort of way ? is a 2012 "Best Actor" Oscar nominee for his role in ?The Artist,? a black and white ?silent? throwback to the 1920s, with swing-era jazz and plenty of playful nostalgia.

Mr. Dujardin, unknown abroad until now, is loved in France as an unsnobby comic who rose from a working class Paris suburb, a one-time locksmith who was told his face was too rotund for the camera.

?I adore him ?he is a born clown,? says Christine Bertholts, a legal secretary in Paris, in a typical comment. ?And those eyebrows!???

While France has produced several female Oscar winners, Dujardin, will be the first French male to take home the prize?if he gets the nod on Feb. 26.?

Dujardin plays George Valentin, a silent star with a pencil-thin moustache who can?t or won?t make the transition to talkies and goes into a funk, but is saved by his adorable dog and a woman he generously helps when he?s riding high.

The French actor learned to tap dance for the part, and says his favorite American actor is Paul Newman. He is up against George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Demian Bichir, and Gary Oldman for the Oscar. ?

The Artist is nominated for 10 Oscars, including Best Picture. It just won three Golden Globe awards ? including best actor in a comedy for?Dujardin ? throwing film-crazy France into a small state of euphoria.?In interviews after the ceremony, French radio hosts had fun with an Anglo version of Dujardin?s last name, asking if they were speaking with ?Jean of the Garden.?

"When I started [as an actor],? Dujardin said after winning the Golden Globe, ?An agent told me, ?You won?t make films, your face is too expressive??It's not my fault,? I told him, ?My eyebrows act independently!?"

France's main Hollywood presence for years has been Mr. Depardiu, who earned a 1990 Academy Award nomination for Green Card, but did not win. Le Point, a French news magazine, said of Dujardin, ?He may even de-throne Depardieu in the Anglo-Saxon heart.?

"We thought it would be a film for festivals, a film that critics could like, but we weren?t counting on this!" French daily Figaro quoted director Michel Hazanavicius saying about its commercial and critical success.

It's a good thing "The Artist" is a silent film. Dujardin speaks little English and says he?s not preparing for work outside of France.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/q8JnXu6TVlU/From-locksmith-to-limelight-Dujardin-star-of-The-Artist-adored-in-France

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Citizen Scientists Study Whale Songs: Years of Work Done in Months

Pilot Whale wearing sound-recording tag. Credit: Daniel Ottmann; photo was taken taken as part of research conducted under permit 14241 issued by the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service.

In November 2011, Scientific American, Zooniverse and a team of research partners launched the Web site Whale.FM, a citizen-science project devoted to cataloging the calls made by Pilot whales and Killer whales (Orcas), both of which are actually dolphin species. Different whale families have their own dialects and closely related families share calls. Underwater microphones, called hydrophones, typically attached by suction cups to the whales, record the haunting and lovely sounds. Cataloging calls is a step in learning more about the communication of these magnificent marine mammals.

So far, more than 5,000 Whale.FM visitors (including yours truly) have matched a total of more than 100,000 calls. The task is simple and fun?my daughters (ages 11 and 15) like to match calls with me. (The 11-year-old is pretty good at imitating the calls herself.) How it works: You listen to a call and see a spectrogram, a visualization of the sounds. Then you listen to several others that are displayed on the screen and see if you can select a match.

A question that has come up often about citizen-science projects is, How accurate are the data? Our friends at Zooniverse just did a spot check, using a subset of 300 of the calls. As Robert Simpson of Zooniverse put it in a note, ?We?ve compared their call categories to the (very!) preliminary results from Whale FM and it seems that the users are picking out good matches that tally with those of professionals.??? They located 28 subset-to-subset call pairings. A total of 25 of these were matched with calls from the same call category, as defined by professional scientists. Even more exciting, there were more than 350 pairings with calls outside of the 300-call subset?which is an important reason to do Whale.FM.

Whale families share dialects. Credit: Leigh Hickman, Open Ocean Consulting; photo was taken taken as part of research conducted under permit 14241 issued by the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service.

One thing is also certain: Whale.FM already has produced the equivalent of years of cataloguing work by scientists in just a couple of months. Although there?s still more work to do, that?s an achievement worth singing about. For more information about other projects in which you can help scientists conduct research, please check out Scientific American?s Citizen Science page.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=7c641213830c497056a83c3455f0f198

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Thursday 26 January 2012

On the Evolution of Investing ? Matt Mullenweg

Essays



Today Y Combinator announced they are adding two new partners, Garry Tan and Aaron Iba. This is announcement is unique because it does not list their academic credentials, their previous investments, the boards of companies or non-profits they have sat on, how many years of experience they have, or any of the usual badges of honor investors parade in their biographies and Crunchbase profiles.

Instead we get accolades of ?rare individuals who can both design and program? and ?best hackers among the YC alumni.? Take note of this moment.

I was part of a dinner conversation the other night that included institutional and angel investors, entrepreneurs, and someone who was part of the YC program. The group circled with alarming intent on grilling the YC entrepreneur: ?How much time did you actually get with PG?? ?It?s a cult of personality.? ?The average quality of the companies has really dropped as they?ve broadened.? ?I can?t wait for this bubble to pop.? I believe it was mostly in jest ? few topics were spared that night ? but there was some truth in the defensive undertone.

The hackers and engineers of Y Combinator are doing what hackers and engineers do to any industry, they?re efficiently and ruthlessly disrupting the traditional model of venture capital and are going to destroy far more more wealth for their contemporaries than they create for themselves, as broadband did to entertainment, Craigslist did to newspapers, and Amazon did to traditional retailers. This is what outsiders, by definition, do.

The dark humor in this is that the same people who delight and celebrate investing in disrupting other industries are blind or in denial about it happening to their own.

The question then becomes if you?re an investor with a traditional LP model (and expectations), or a more financial background than an operational one, or an operational background more in management than in design or coding, what should you do to stay relevant through this shift?


Source: http://ma.tt/2012/01/on-the-evolution-of-investing/

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Thursday 19 January 2012

Exclusive Video: Harry Connick Jr. Reveals Details About Law & Order: SVU Arc (omg!)

It's been a rough year for Det. Olivia Benson (Mariska Hargitay) on Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. First, her team's squad room was showered with bullets by a distraught victim in the Season 12 finale. And then her longtime partner, Elliot Stabler (Christopher Meloni) unexpectedly left the force at the beginning of this season.

Luckily, things are looking up for Benson ? particularly when it comes to her love life. In Wednesday's episode, airing at 10/9c on NBC, Benson will see sparks when she is assigned to work with Executive Assistant District Attorney David Haden (guest star Harry Connick Jr. in his first of four episodes).

Law & Order: SVU scoop: Harry Connick Jr. to play Benson's new love interest

"What I do like about him is he seems to be a guy who's interested in the truth," Connick Jr. says of Haden. "He seems to be a good guy who's genuinely interested in upholding the law ... and a guy who's looking to do the right thing."

Get a first look at Connick Jr.'s first episode here:

Are you excited to see Connick Jr. on Law & Order: SVU?

Related Articles on TVGuide.com

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_exclusive_video_harry_connick_jr_reveals_details_law032700667/44212969/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/exclusive-video-harry-connick-jr-reveals-details-law-032700667.html

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Fire Walker Chronicles: A Million Reasons To Say No (Balloon Juice)

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Wednesday 18 January 2012

Analyst's arrest puts Cohen's SAC in spotlight again (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Hedge fund titan Steven A. Cohen is once again in the spotlight over allegations of improper trading at his $14 billion SAC Capital Advisors.

The arrest on Wednesday of technology analyst Jon Horvath marks the fourth time in two years that U.S. authorities have implicated or charged a person with engaging in insider trading while working at SAC Capital. It is the latest to come from an investigation FBI agents have coined Operation Perfect Hedge.

Federal authorities did not charge Cohen or SAC Capital with any wrongdoing in the case against Horvath, who is accused of using inside information to help the Stamford, Connecticut-based hedge fund generate a $1 million profit from trading in shares and option contracts of PC maker Dell Inc..

Horvath's lawyer could not immediately be reached for comment.

The case against Horvath comes less than a month after SAC Capital capped another successful year, generating an 8 percent return while most hedge funds lost money in 2011.

But the new allegations of improper trading are a fresh reminder that SAC Capital remains a major focal point for U.S. prosecutors as they continue a multi-year crackdown on insider trading in the $1.7 trillion hedge fund industry.

And while industry observers and investment managers say the newest case is not likely to prompt investors to rush to pull money from Cohen's fund, it could cause some discomfort for some of his wealthy patrons.

"There is a feeling that the Feds' web around Cohen might be slowly tightening and that is bound to get people to think about what to do with their money," said one industry investor familiar with Cohen's fund but who asked not to be named.

A spokesman for Cohen's SAC declined to comment beyond saying that the firm is continuing to cooperate with the government investigation.

It is no secret in the hedge fund world that the federal authorities have been probing possible wrongdoing at SAC for years. Reuters previously has reported federal prosecutors and regulators have been investigating allegations of improper trading at SAC Capital since at least 2007.

But it was not until last year that those years of investigation began to get uncomfortably close for Cohen when two former traders, Noah Freeman and Donald Longueuil, pleaded guilty to insider trading charges. Another former SAC Capital employee, Jonathan Hollander, settled civil charges of insider trading with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Now that a fourth SAC Capital employee has been accused of improper trading, hedge fund industry analysts, lawyers and investors say the scrutiny of Cohen's roughly 800 employees is bound to increase.

"I suspect that remaining with a fund that's implicated is just bad business from a reputational standpoint," said Nicole Boyson, a finance professor at Northeastern University, who has researched the implications of hedge fund fraud.

Over the years, SAC Capital, in response to other trading scandals, has noted that it has some of the strongest compliance systems in the hedge fund industry. But in a deposition taken last year in a civil lawsuit, a copy of which was obtained by Reuters, Cohen said federal laws on insider trading were "very vague."

To be sure, Cohen, a 55-year old trader who founded SAC Capital in 1992 with just $25 million, continues to maintain a large reservoir of support. And a good deal of that stems from the fact that Cohen himself has never been charged with wrongdoing and that despite the negative headlines, SAC Capital continues to post strong returns.

"It is unfortunate, but I do not think Steve is involved with this and, yes, we have money with him and I stand by him," said Anthony Scaramucci, who runs Skybridge Capital which featured Cohen as a prominent speaker at his investment conference last year.

The improper trading Horvath is alleged to have engaged in occurred at Sigma Capital, a division of SAC Capital that is based in New York City. Horvath reported to Michael Steinberg, a long time top trader with SAC Capital, who talks frequently to Cohen, according to people familiar with the matter. Steinberg could not be reached at his office on Wednesday.

Ron Geffner, a partner at law firm Sadis & Goldberg, which specializes in representing hedge funds, said just because some employees at a fund are doing something wrong, it is incorrect to infer "that their employer put them on a path of bad decision-making."

Others also note that for hedge fund investors, solid performance counts for more than anything. These people say investors will put up with a lot of bad behavior at a hedge fund as long as the returns are good.

Still, the new charges come at an awkward time for Cohen, who has expressed some interest in submitting a bid to buy the financially strapped Los Angeles Dodgers professional baseball team. A spokesman for Major League Baseball said it is premature to discuss the sale because the deadline for submitting bids is still open. One of the many factors considered in vetting prospective buyers of teams is their business practices, a person familiar with the process said.

One of the biggest investors with SAC Capital is an investment fund managed by Blackstone Group Inc., sources have told Reuters. Blackstone's investment advisory arm is running the sales process for the Dodgers. A Blackstone spokesman did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

(Reporting By Svea Herbst-Bayliss, with additional reporting by Jennifer Ablan in New York. Editing by Matthew Goldstein and Martin Howell.)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120119/bs_nm/us_hedgefunds_saccapital

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CES 2012: interview roundup (video)

The Engadget stage was home to many an interview at this year's CES. Many, many interviews. Given the deluge of guests we hosted in Las Vegas this year, you could be forgiven for not keeping up -- for throwing up your hands in exasperation and making a sandwich to heal the hurt. You could, but you won't. That's because this year, we thought it'd be a good idea to corral all of our CES 2012 interviews into one big metallic box, and hand-pick only the plumpest, juiciest and most eyebrow-arching ones for your enjoyment. We then took those select few and put them in a smaller, spotlit box, which was affixed atop the aforementioned metallic box with a butterfly shaped bow and maybe some duck fat. Add some mood lighting, a splash of bourbon, and voilà. It's the CES 2012 interview roundup, and it's after the break.

Continue reading CES 2012: interview roundup (video)

CES 2012: interview roundup (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Jan 2012 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tuesday 17 January 2012

Lowe and Rangers agree to $1.7 million deal

updated 10:16 a.m. ET Jan. 17, 2012

ARLINGTON, Texas - Right-hander Mark Lowe and the Texas Rangers have agreed to a $1.7 million, one-year contract, a raise of $500,000.

Lowe, who avoided salary arbitration, was 2-3 with a 3.80 ERA and one save in 52 games for the AL champions last season.

He is 7-18 with a 4.03 ERA in parts of six major league seasons with the Rangers and Seattle. Texas acquired him from the Mariners in July 2010.

The agreement was announced Tuesday.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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??Craig Calcaterra likes the deal between the Yankees and Mariners that saw Michael Pineda land in the Bronx in exchange for Jesus Montero.

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Monday 16 January 2012

Coast guard: ship aground off Italy, bodies found (AP)

PORTO SANTO STEFANO, Italy ? A luxury cruise ship ran aground off the coast of Tuscany, sending water pouring in through a 160-foot (50-meter) gash in the hull and forcing the evacuation of some 4,200 people from the listing vessel early Saturday, the Italian coast guard said.

Three bodies were recovered from the sea, said Coast Guard Cmdr. Francesco Paolillo. There were reports that three other people had died after the accident late Friday night near the tiny Tuscan island of Giglio, but those reports were not yet confirmed, he said.

Twelve hours after the accident, the ship was lying virtually flat, its right-hand side submerged in the water.

Passengers complained the crew failed to give instructions on how to evacuate the Costa Concordia and that the evcauation drill was only scheduled for Saturday afternoon. Authorities still hadn't counted all the survivors.

"It was so unorganized, our evacuation drill was scheduled for 5 p.m.," said Melissa Goduti, 28, of Wallingford, Connecticut, who had set out on the cruise of the Mediterranean hours earlier. "We had joked what if something had happened today."

Helicopters plucked to safety some 50 people who were trapped on the ship after it listed so badly they couldn't launch lifeboats, Paolillo told The Associated Press in Rome by telephone from his command in the Tuscan port city of Livorno.

Passenger Mara Parmegiani, a journalist, told the ANSA news agency that "it was like a scene from the Titanic."

Survivor Christine Hammer, from Bonn, Germany, shivered near the harbor of Porto Santo Stefano, on the mainland, after stepping off a ferry from Giglio. She was wearing elegant dinner clothes ? a cashmere sweater, a silk scarf ? along with a large pair of hiking boots, which a kind islander gave her after she lost her shoes in the scramble to escape, along with her passport, credit cards and phone.

Hammer, 65, told The Associated Press that she was eating her first course, an appetizer of squid, on her first night aboard her first-ever cruise, which was a gift to her and her husband, Gert, from her local church where she volunteers.

Suddenly, "we heard a crash. Glasses and plates fell down and we went out of the dining room and we were told it wasn't anything dangerous," she said.

The passengers were then instructed to put on life jackets and take to the life rafts but, Hammer said, they couldn't get into the boats because the cruise liner was tilting so much the boats couldn't be lowered into the cold, night sea. The passengers were eventually rescued by one of several boats in the area that came to their aid.

"It was terrible," Hammer said, as German and Spanish tourists were about to board buses at the port.

"No one counted us, neither in the life boats or on land," said Ophelie Gondelle, 28, a French military officer from Marseille. She said there had been no evacuation drill since she boarded in France on Jan. 8.

As dawn neared, a painstaking search of the 290-meter (950-foot) long ship's interior was being conducted to see if anyone might have been trapped inside, Paolillo said.

"There are some 2,000 cabins, and the ship isn't straight," Paolillo said, referring to the Concordia's dramatic more than 45-degree tilt on its right side. "I'll leave it to your imagination to understand how they (the rescuers) are working as they move through it."

Some Concordia crew members were still aboard to help the coast guard rescuers, he said.

Paolillo said it wasn't immediately known if the dead were passengers or crew, nor were the nationalities of the victims immediately known. It wasn't clear how they died.

Some 30 people were reported injured, most of them suffering only bruises, but at least two people were reported in grave condition.

Paolillo said the Concordia was believed to have set sail with 3,206 passengers and 1,023 crew members.

Some passengers, apparently in panic, had jumped off the boat into the sea, a Tuscany-based government official, Grosseto prefect Giuseppe Linardi, was quoted as saying. Authorities were trying to obtain a full passenger and crew list from Costa, so they could do a roll call to determine who might be missing.

The evacuees were taking refuge in schools, hotels, and a church on the tiny island of Giglio, a popular vacation isle about 18 miles (25 kilometers) off Italy's central west coast. Those evacuated by helicopter were flown to Grosseto, while others, rescued by local ferries pressed into emergency service, took survivors to the port of Porto Santo Stefano on the nearby mainland.

Passengers sat dazed in a middle school opened for them, wrapped in woolen blankets with some wearing their life preservers and their shoeless feet covered with aluminum foil.

Survivors far outnumbered Giglio's 1,500 residents, and island Mayor Sergio Ortelli issued an appeal for islanders -- "anyone with a roof" to open their homes to shelter the evacuees.

Paolillo said the exact circumstances of the accident were still unclear, but that the first alarm went off about 10:30 p.m., about three hours after the Concordia had begun its voyage from the port of Civitavecchia, en route to its first port of call, Savona, in northwestern Italy.

The coast guard official, speaking from the port captain's office in the Tuscan port of Livorno, said the vessel "hit an obstacle" ? it wasn't clear if it might have hit a rocky reef in the waters off Giglio ? "ripping a gash 50 meters (160 feet) across" in the side of the ship, and started taking on water.

The cruise liner's captain, Paolillo said, then tried to steer his ship toward shallow waters, near Giglio's small port, to make evacuation by lifeboat easier.

But after the ship started listing badly, lifeboat evacuation was no longer feasible, Paolillo said.

Five helicopters, from the coast guard, navy and air force, were taking turns airlifting survivors still aboard and ferrying them to safely. A coast guard member was airlifted aboard the vessel to help people get aboard a small basket so they could be hoisted up to the helicopter, said Capt. Cosimo Nicastro, another Coast Guard official.

Costa Cruises said the Costa Concordia was sailing on a cruise across the Mediterranean Sea, starting from Civitavecchia with scheduled calls to Savona, Marseille, Barcelona, Palma de Mallorca, Cagliari and Palermo.

It said about 1,000 Italian passengers were onboard, as well as more than 500 Germans, about 160 French and about 1,000 crew members.

The Concordia had a previous accident in Italian waters, ANSA reported. In 2008, when strong winds buffeted Palermo, the cruise ship banged against the Sicilian port's dock, and suffered damage but no one was injured, ANSA said.

___

D'Emilio reported from Rome.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120114/ap_on_re_eu/eu_italy_cruise_aground

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Golden Globe parties crowded with stars (AP)

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. ? Post parties after the Golden Globe Awards, less raucous than in previous years, flowed instead of crackled, conjuring up the understated 1920s glamor of black-and-white French-directed silent film and Globe comedy or musical winner "The Artist."

Celebrities at several after-parties located around the Beverly Hilton Hotel following Sunday's awards ceremony made the rounds noshing on gourmet comfort food, sipping martinis, chatting and dancing, but the overall party vibe felt more serene than spastic. Sophisticated, pared down decorations completed the effect, adding to a certain "je ne sais quoi" in the air.

"It's felt very, very mellow tonight, but in a good way," said "American Horror Story" star Connie Britton just before midnight at the Warner Bros. bash with InStyle magazine at the hotel's Oasis courtyard.

Britton, fresh off celebrating Jessica Lange's supporting actress in a series, miniseries or TV movie win for the show, summed up the sense of laidback acceptance pervasive at the parties:

"Jessica's win felt communal. I came here to support the show. I didn't feel pressure about winning or losing," said Britton, who also noted she was tired, with a newly adopted baby to care for at home.

"Modern Family" starlet Sofia Vergara, in a Sophia Loren-esque strapless blue Vera Wang gown, laughed and swayed with her son and friends next to a DJ spinning `80s tunes in the party's large tent, decorated with a sculpture suspended from the ceiling blinking red and blue lights. Starkly fragmented mirrors tinged with red neon lights lined the walls. In past years, a live cover band added spice to the party.

Vergara was happy about the show winning a trophy for best musical or comedy series ? but she also expected her night to end well before the wee hours.

"That's the good thing about L.A., that you can finish early. I'm going to go soon. I'm old," said the gorgeous 39-year-old actress, with a mock frown, at 10:45 p.m.

Other guests, which included "Mad Men" star Jon Hamm, singer Adam Levine, John Stamos, Zooey Deschanel and her sister Emily Deschanel, feasted on roasted root vegetable salad and crostini with apple and fig jam.

Earlier in the evening, at the NBC-Universal rooftop party, guests packed the dance floor to watch singer Janelle Monae, rocking her trademark pompadour, perform with her eight-piece band. Guests, mostly industry insiders, munched on sushi, roast beef and grilled salmon in the modern, tented nightspot.

Across the hotel, at The Weinstein Company's annual party in a cavernous tent at the lot adjacent to Bar 210, formerly Trader Vic's, slight rain showers couldn't dampen the celebration for the Weinstein-produced "The Artist." The film, besides being anointed best musical or comedy, also snagged trophies for original score and best acting for its French star Jean Dujardin. Set in `20s Hollywood, it follows the rise of talking pictures out of the silent film era and is almost completely silent.

With black couches and walls, and vases of crisp, white flowers, the party kept to a black-and-white theme, in keeping with the film's black-and-white palette. Clear beaded chandeliers accented by gold lights dangled from the ceiling. Revelers ate oysters and shrimp and drank Moet champagne. The ghost of old Hollywood drifted throughout the bash.

"The Artist" co-star and best actress nominee Berenice Bejo sat looking exhausted, yet like the `20s ing?nue she plays in the film, with her husband, the film's director, Michel Hazanavicius, on a corner couch, surveying the scene. She had a jolt of enthusiasm when she spotted Leonardo DiCaprio across the room and rushed over to greet him.

Cameron Diaz took up a back couch next to Sean "P. Diddy" Combs, while Rob Lowe sat on top of his, grinning like a schoolboy. Other guests included Paris and Nicky Hilton, surrounded by an entourage of followers, and "Beginners" heartthrob Ewan McGregor, who vowed he would make it an early night, due to having four children at home.

Gerard Butler, the party's main go-to hunk, seemed overwhelmed by all the attention. Leggy women routinely wandered over to him, mugging for photos and kissing him on the cheek.

"I was pushed off of my own table!" said the actor, pointing behind him, to a packed table. "And I love women, and beautiful women, but sometimes ... ." He paused, head in his heads, and shrugged his shoulders.

At HBO's post party at Circa 55 restaurant, the first bash many celebrities headed to right after the awards ceremony, sleek and sparkling silver and white tablecloths, plus silver vats of white chrysanthemums, transformed the space into an ode to old Hollywood. The adjacent outdoor pool was half drained to make way for more tables. A clear tent and heat lamps protected against the cold.

A litany of A-listers such as Tim Robbins, Jane Fonda, Seth Rogen, Owen Wilson, Harrison Ford and Calista Flockhart indulged in a smorgasbord of beef tenderloin, grilled chicken, sea bass with a honey miso glaze, ravioli, grilled asparagus, mashed potatoes and sushi.

Laura Dern, clutching her trophy for best actress in a TV musical or comedy for the HBO show "Enlightened," circled her way throughout the soiree, being greeted at every turn.

"It's so awesome," director and producer Judd Apatow said to Dern. "I'm freaking out!" she told other fans.

Another winner, Christopher Plummer, looked less sprightly. Seated at his table, his glisteningly golden best supporting actor trophy for "Beginners" next to his plate, Plummer waxed poetic on being 82 and celebrating his very first Globe win.

Would he stay out late?

"I've over 80 years old, have some mercy on me!" Plummer said. "I plan to leave early."

___

AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120116/ap_en_ot/us_golden_globes_parties

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Heather Locklear taken to California hospital (omg!)

FILE - In this June 12, 2009 file photo, Heather Locklear arrives at the Women in Film Crystal Lucy Awards in Los Angeles. Paramedics responded to Locklear?s home 35 miles northwest of Los Angeles for a medical emergency and transported a woman matching the actress? description as a precautionary measure, authorities said Thursday, Jan. 12, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles, File)

THOUSAND OAKS, California (AP) ? Heather Locklear was taken to a Southern California hospital for precautionary reasons Thursday after an emergency call was made from her home, authorities said.

Paramedics and sheriff's deputies responded Thursday afternoon to Locklear's home in Westlake Village, which is 35 miles (56 kilometers) northwest of Los Angeles.

Locklear was taken to Los Robles Hospital & Medical Center in Thousand Oaks, where a spokeswoman told KCAL-TV the actress was stable and her parents were by her side.

"Her parents wanted everybody to know that she's doing well, she's fine, she's not in any danger, she's healthy," hospital spokeswoman Kris Carraway-Bowman told the station.

Ventura County sheriff's Capt. Mike Aranda said he did not know Locklear's condition but deputies were not investigating.

Locklear has been hospitalized several times over the years. In 2009, she pleaded no contest to reckless driving after being arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of prescription medication.

The 50-year-old actress's publicists did not return messages seeking comment.

Locklear and "Melrose Place" co-star Jack Wagner recently ended their engagement. She was previously married to Bon Jovi guitarist Richie Sambora, and they have a daughter together.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_heather_locklear_taken_california_hospital045020700/44164497/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/heather-locklear-taken-california-hospital-045020700.html

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Sunday 15 January 2012

'Leap of Faith' to jump to Broadway (AP)

NEW YORK ? Someone on Broadway is finally taking a leap of faith on "Leap of Faith."

Producers announced Thursday that the much-delayed musical based on the 1992 film starring Steve Martin as a shady preacher will start performances April 3 at the St. James Theatre.

The show had its world premiere in late 2010 at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles and has been a work in progress ever since. It boasts music by Alan Menken and will be directed by Christopher Ashley.

The Broadway version will again star Raul Esparza, who plays Jonas Nightingale, a fraudulent faith healer ready to scam residents of a dusty, down-and-out Kansas town.

The cast will also feature Jessica Phillips from "Priscilla Queen of the Desert" and Kendra Kassebaum of "Wicked."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120113/ap_en_ce/us_theater_leap_of_faith

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American Capital Ltd: Private Equity Investing At A Deep Discount ...

Access to private equity and hedge fund investments used to be reserved solely for the super rich and institutional investors. American Capital Ltd (ACAS) currently offers a unique opportunity for non-institutional investors to invest in private equity at a deep discount to its intrinsic value.

American Capital is a publicly traded private equity firm and global asset manager with $57 billion in assets under management. Their main focus is on middle market companies in which they make investments between $10 million to $100mm. The company?s portfolio is very well diversified across multiple industries and sectors with approximately 152 companies in their investment portfolio. Since ACAS has been well covered by many articles in Seeking Alpha, I will not go into detail on the company. Instead, I recommend reading the Q3 2011 fact sheet presentation on the investor relations section of their website, which contains excellent information.

American Capital?s stock has been under tremendous selling pressure since August due to the combination of the general market sell-off in Q3 and heavy liquidation from John Paulson?s funds. During the third quarter of 2011, the Russell 2000 index declined by 22% and the iShares iBoxx High Yield corporate bond ETF (HYG) fell by 9%. American Capital?s net asset value (NAV) dropped by 9.4% to $11.92/share during the quarter while the stock price has fallen by 26% since the end of Q2.

John Paulson purchased 43.7mm shares of ACAS in April 2010 at $5.06. His funds have recently been liquidating shares of ACAS. The most recent filings on Bloomberg showed his position has been reduced to 32.8mm shares as of 12/22/11. Many of Paulson?s holdings came under heavy selling pressure last quarter as market participants smelled blood and drove down prices of his positions.

As previously mentioned, American Capital?s stated net asset value at the end of Q3 was $11.92/share. While it is difficult to estimate the current net asset value due to the uncertainty of ACAS?s diverse investment portfolio, it is reasonable to assume that book value may have increased since they last reported. Since their portfolio consists of a well diversified mix of both equity and debt investments in small cap companies, it should be highly correlated to the performance of the Russell 2000 and HYG. The Russell 2000 gained 15% during Q4 2011 and the HYG was up 8%. Using a blend of 25% Russell and 75% HYG as a proxy, would indicate that NAV may have increased by 9.75% to $13.08/share during the fourth quarter. Based on yesterday?s closing price of $7.34, ACAS may be trading at as much as 44% discount to NAV.

The recent actions of management also indicate their belief that shares are deeply undervalued. The company announced that they repurchased 8.4mm shares at $6.97 so far this quarter. That buyback comes on the heels of 9.1mm shares repurchased at $8.21 last quarter. Normally, I do not care for share repurchase programs as they have been responsible for so much value destruction in recent years. But, in this instance, where the company is able to repurchase stock at .56X book value, it is immediately accretive to shareholders and an attractive use of capital. Management is also vested. The CEO, Malon Wilkus owned 1.45mm shares as of his last filing.

American Capital?s stock offers compelling upside potential for those who believe the economy is on the mend. ACAS also trades at a steep discount to its peers. KKR & Co. L.P (KKR), The Blackstone Group L.P (BX) and Fortress Investment Group LLC (FIG) trade at 2.45X book, 4.14X book and 3.89x book, respectively.

I recommend buying ACAS at current prices vs. shorting an equivalent dollar amount of the S&P500 or a combination of HYG and S&P500 in order to minimize market risk.

Disclosure: I am long ACAS and may buy or sell ACAS over the next three days. I am short the S&P500 and may buy or sell the S&P500 over the next three days. I have no positions in HYG

Source: http://seekingalpha.com/article/319448-american-capital-ltd-private-equity-investing-at-a-deep-discount

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Saturday 14 January 2012

The Digital Camera Revolution

access View larger image 1. A camera built from off-the-shelf parts, dubbed the Frankencamera, is programmable. The team that designed it has also released the code needed to manipulate the commercially available Nokia N900. 2. The BigShot camera comes as an educational kit. During assembly, kids will learn about optics, mechanics, electronics and the human eye. Researchers hope to have the kit on the market within two years. 3. A throwable, panoramic ball camera developed by researchers at Technische Universit?t in Berlin snaps a full spherical panorama. There?s a design, but no word on investors ? yet. 4. The Pelican camera, designed to fit inside a smartphone, has an array of 25 lenslets that capture a scene?s entire light field. A release date hasn?t been announced. 5. Lytro ($399 for 8GB, $499 for 16GB) allows the photographer to refocus at will after a shot has been taken.from left: Camera 2.0 Project/Stanford University; Columbia Computer Vision Laboratory; Jonas Pfeil/jonaspfeil.de/Ballcamera; Pelican Imaging; LYTRO

Take a grainy, blurred image of a formless face or an illegible license plate, and with a few keystrokes the picture sharpens and the killer is caught ? if you?re a crime-scene tech on TV. From Harrison Ford in Blade Runner to CSI, Criminal Minds and NCIS, the zoom-and-enhance maneuver has become such a staple of Hollywood dramas that it?s mocked with video montages on YouTube.

In real life, of course, no amount of high-techery can disclose data not captured by a camera in the first place. But scientific advances are now gaining ground on fictional forensics. The field known as computational photography has exploded in the last decade, yielding powerful new cameras capable of tricks once seen only in the labs of make-believe.

For a long time camera makers and operators focused mostly on getting more pixels. But the ?pixel war? is over, says Marc Levoy, a pioneer in computational photography at Stanford University. Today?s manufacturers are looking beyond good resolution.

Low-cost computing and new algorithms, combined with fancy optics and sensors, are drastically changing how cameras re-create the world. Scientists have recently devised a camera that could spot a culprit by peeking around corners; another might divulge the identity of an attacker by collecting information reflected in a victim?s eyes. Other developments, some of which are making their way into commercially available cameras and smartphones, won?t necessarily help snag a bad guy but can turn anyone with a camera into a photo-grapher extraordinaire.

Researchers are, for example, finding ways to clean up pictures so that smudges or window screens disappear. The addition of unconventional lenses means pictures can be refocused long after a shot is taken. And the ?Frankencamera,? recently developed at Stanford, is designed to be programmable, so that users can play around with the hardware and the computer code behind it. Such work may lead to previously impossible photos, researchers say ? images that have yet to be imagined.

?The possibilities are not readily apparent at first,? write MIT?s Ramesh Raskar and Jack Tumblin of Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., in a comprehensive textbook on computational photography set to be published this year. ?Like a long-caged animal in a zoo destroyed by a hurricane, those of us who grew up with film photography are still standing here in shocked astonishment at the changes.?

Caught on camera

Until a few years ago, most digital cameras were basically film cameras, just with an electronic sensor doing the job of the film. These ?filmlike? cameras use a lens to capture light from a 3-D scene, faithfully re-creating it as a 2-D image.

But in a digital camera, there?s no need for that re-creation to be faithful. Digital cameras have a tiny computer that processes incoming optical information before it is stored on the memory card. That computer can transform the scene, measuring, manipulating and combining visual signals in fundamentally new ways. With the help of tricked-out optics ? such as multiple lenses in different arrangements ? photographers can not only perfect the traditional recording of their lives, but they can also manipulate those keepsake shots to get something strange and different.

Advances in math and optics are now developing hand in hand, says Shree Nayar, head of the Computer Vision Laboratory at Columbia University. ?When you worry about both of them at the same time, you can do new and interesting things.?

One new and interesting thing is the ability to look around corners, beyond the line of sight. Developed in 2009 by Raskar, MIT graduate student Ahmed Kirmani and colleagues at MIT and the University of California, Santa Cruz, a new camera with a titanium-sapphire laser for a flash shoots brilliant light in pulses lasting less than a trillionth of a second. After the light ricochets off objects, including those not visible to the photographer, the camera collects the returning ?echoes.? The camera then analyzes the photons that return and can estimate shapes blocked by a wall or other obstruction.

The technology might lead to devices that allow drivers to see around blind corners or surgeons to get a better view in tight places. It could also help first responders plan rescues in dangerous situations and crime fighters spot hidden foes.

Another technology that might aid real-world sleuths is the ?world in an eye? imaging system, which can re-create a person?s surroundings from information reflected in a single eye. Using a geometric model of the eye?s cornea, Nayar and colleague Ko Nishino, now at Drexel University in Philadelphia, created a camera that detects where the cornea and the white of the eye meet. Computations then turn the cornea?s reflection of a fish bowl?like image into a map of the environmental surroundings projected on the person?s retina.

Using information on the tilt of the camera and the person?s eye positioning, whatever the person is looking at can be pinpointed, making the technology useful for eye-tracking studies where researchers want to know what a participant is paying attention to. The technology (which is available as a software package from the Computer Vision Laboratory) is also helping people look into the past. One photographer has been assessing reflections in the eyes of old photographs, exposing a blurred scene reflected in the eye of an old man in an 1840 portrait.

Picture perfect

If just capturing precious moments is more your style, many researchers, Nayar included, are exploring ways to enhance pictures taken for the more traditional purpose of archiving one?s life. There are methods for getting around that annoying shutter delay that makes you miss your shot, for deblurring moving objects and even for erasing raindrops that obscure what a picture was meant to capture.

Such tricks are gradually making their way into commercial cameras, or being made available as downloadable apps for use with smartphones. One new camera dubbed Lytro, developed by Ren Ng for his dissertation at Stanford, can readjust the focus post-shoot, so a picture can clearly render what?s nearby or far away.

Lytro?s trick is it that it employs ?radically different optics,? says Stanford?s Levoy, who worked on those optics with Ng.

In between the main lens and the sensor, Lytro has an array of tiny lenses called lenslets that capture an entire light field ? the intensity, color and direction of every ray of incoming light (in this case, that?s 11 million rays). Whereas a traditional camera captures some of the light leaving any one point in a scene and focuses it back together on a single pixel on a sensor, the lenslets distribute the light so it is recorded in separate pixels. This spread of information across pixels is encoded in the image, making refocusing later possible.

Lytro became commercially available last year, and another light-field camera may soon be available in smartphones. Last February Pelican Imaging announced a prototype for mobile devices that has an array of 25 lenslets. Like Lytro, Pelican promises images that can be refocused. But unlike Lytro?s boxy shape, this version would fit in the slender confines of a cell phone.

Arrays of full cameras (not just the lenses) also allow for interesting manipulations. When packed close together, the cameras approximate a giant lens, which means much more light is available for manipulating. Photos can thus be created with a shallow depth of field so that the photo?s subject is nice and crisp and the background is blurred, freeing the image from distracting clutter. A giant lens also means that a photographer can capture enough light from different angles to blur out foreground objects like foliage or venetian blinds, in effect looking around them. One of Stanford?s large-camera arrays has 128 video cameras set up 2 inches apart. The arrangement is like having a camera with a 3-foot-wide aperture.

Tweaks to a camera?s back end are also improving documentary potential. Image sensors have become much better at capturing light, so cameras can take many more pictures per second. A high frame rate combined with complex math means the camera can snap many versions of the same picture at different exposures and then merge them for the best results or select the best of the single images, a trick known as high dynamic range imaging.

New cameras can also deal with shutter lag. When set in a particular mode, the camera begins taking a burst of photos and temporarily saves them. The photographer gets the typical shot (the one taken when the shutter is clicked) as well as a series of shots from before and after.

?It?s something I?ve always wanted in a camera ? for it to start taking pictures before something interesting happens,? says Tumblin. ?So when your daughter is blowing out her birthday candles, you have a sequence of shots, one right after the other.?

Made to order

It?s all well and good that camera manufacturers are getting around to incorporating such advances, Levoy says. But he has higher hopes ? that consumer cameras will one day be programmable, giving users the power to get exactly what they want out of the device.

?I came out of computer graphics where anyone can play around,? Levoy says. ?The camera industry is not like that. It?s very secretive.?

While every digital camera has a computer inside, it?s usually locked in a black box. You can?t get in there and program it. Several hacking tools exist for liberating the code of particular cameras, but Levoy and his colleagues wanted to play around with settings without resorting to such measures. So Levoy and colleagues built the programmable Frankencamera.

Dealing with commercially available cameras ?was just a painful experience,? says Andrew Adams, who worked with Levoy and is now at MIT. ?So after getting sufficiently frustrated at the programming that exists, we decided to make our own camera.?

The Frankencamera started out as a clunky black thing built with off-the-shelf components (hence the ?Franken?). But in the spirit of computer science, the camera is easy to program, running on Linux-based software. With a little effort, the camera can be made to, say, use gyroscope data to determine if it is moving when a picture is taken. If so, it can select the sharpest photo from a bunch that are taken, an application Adams calls ?lucky imaging.?

Nokia was interested enough in the Frankencamera to help researchers make their computer code compatible with the Nokia N900. The researchers began using the N900 in the classroom and have been shipping it around the world to other academics in the field of computational photography.

?The first assignment was to replace the autofocus algorithm,? says Adams. ?It was so cool; we gave them a week and they came up with better things than Nokia.?

One student took several pictures over circular objects from above and programmed the camera to average the pictures together, yielding an image that normally could be captured only with a much larger lens, says Adams. Several other manipulations have been explored, such as panoramic stitching, high dynamic range imaging and flash/no-flash imaging, which combines shots taken with and without a flash to create a photograph that displays the best of both. The Frankencamera team released its code in 2010, so anyone can add these capabilities to the Nokia N900.

The camera has also been set up for ?rephotography,? the retaking of a previously taken photo, historic or otherwise. The camera looks for distinguishing features in a scene, such as corners, and directs the photographer with arrows to align the camera precisely, creating a second version of the original picture but in a new season or new time in history.

With all the new souped-up cameras rolling out, the dangers of shaky hands or poor lighting are rapidly becoming concerns of the past. And the ability to make a picture bizarre, or shocking, is now available to anyone with the right smartphone and app. But once Frankencameras and similar build-your-own devices are in the hands of enough people, the creative possibilities balloon. You name it, programmers will find a way to do it.

?There?s a catchphrase,? Adams says: ?Computation is the new optics.?


Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/337554/title/The_Digital_Camera_Revolution

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7 passengers on Qantas injured by turbulence

Seven passengers were treated for cuts and bruises after a Qantas Airways superjumbo hit severe turbulence en route from London to Singapore, the Australian airline said Sunday.

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The injuries are the latest blot on the airline's record with the new Airbus A380. A Qantas A380 made an emergency landing in Singapore in 2010 after one of its engines disintegrated.

In the latest incident, flight QF32 carrying 450 passengers struck turbulence in Indian airspace on Saturday three hours before it arrived in Singapore, Qantas spokeswoman Sophia Connolly said.

"The seat belt sign had come on but some passengers were still moving back to their seats," she said.

She said seven passengers suffered minor cuts and bruises. Four were treated in a Singapore hospital and the others at a medical center. All have been discharged.

The aircraft was cleared to fly after being assessed by engineers. The flight continued to Sydney on Sunday, 24 hours behind schedule.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45917138/ns/travel-news/

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Friday 13 January 2012

Breaking News: Cameron hails London 2012 legacy

David Cameron hailed the London 2012 legacy as ministers gathered at the Olympic Park 200 days before the Games' opening ceremony.

The Prime Minister called a Cabinet meeting at the site in Stratford, east London, and urged ministers to fully exploit the opportunities the summer showpiece and the Queen's Diamond Jubilee will offer.

Mr Cameron, London mayor Boris Johnson and Lord Coe, chairman of the London Organising Committee for the Olympic Games, will tour the park later while other ministers fan out to visit sports facilities, businesses, schools and organisations across the UK in a co-ordinated push to promote the Games' value.

Opening the meeting, the Prime Minister said: "A very warm welcome everyone to the Olympic Park, and a happy new year. This is the first Cabinet meeting of the new year and it is appropriate we are having it here."

He told senior Government ministers they would hear a presentation from Lord Coe, updating them on progress for the Games' legacy.

Mr Cameron said six of the eight main venues had already secured their legacies, adding: "Not only are they already up and running, but they already have a future, and we can be very proud of that."

Ministers travelled to the site on board a high-speed Olympic Javelin shuttle train from St Pancras station in central London. Their meeting took place at the 7,000-capacity handball arena, with tables erected on the court surrounded by multi-coloured seats.

The Cabinet meeting was the first for new Cabinet Secretary Sir Jeremy Heywood, who took up the post after Sir Gus O'Donnell retired last month.

Earlier, organisers said newly-agreed contracts for the long-term running of three more of the eight permanent Olympic venues would create 254 jobs for local people paid at London living wage rate.

Officials remain confident they will secure deals for the remaining two - the main stadium and the media centre - in time for the opening ceremony.

Source: http://www.southportvisiter.co.uk/southport-news/southport-breaking-news/2012/01/09/cameron-hails-london-2012-legacy-101022-30086114/

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