Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Activists fear large death toll near Damascus

This citizen journalism image provided by Aleppo Media Center AMC which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows members of the free Syrian Army hiding behind scrap metal during an attack against Syrian government forces, in the neighborhood of al-Amerieh in Aleppo, Syria, Sunday, April. 21, 2013. The Syrian opposition called on Hezbollah to withdraw its fighters from the country immediately, as activists said regime troops supported by pro-government gunmen linked to the Lebanese Shiite militant group battled rebels Sunday for control of a string of villages near the Lebanon-Syria border. (AP Photo/Aleppo Media Center AMC)

This citizen journalism image provided by Aleppo Media Center AMC which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows members of the free Syrian Army hiding behind scrap metal during an attack against Syrian government forces, in the neighborhood of al-Amerieh in Aleppo, Syria, Sunday, April. 21, 2013. The Syrian opposition called on Hezbollah to withdraw its fighters from the country immediately, as activists said regime troops supported by pro-government gunmen linked to the Lebanese Shiite militant group battled rebels Sunday for control of a string of villages near the Lebanon-Syria border. (AP Photo/Aleppo Media Center AMC)

BEIRUT (AP) ? Two Syrian activist groups say they fear the past six days of clashes in two Damascus suburbs may have killed hundreds of people.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says the number of dead could be as high as 250.

Rami Abdul-Rahman, who heads the Observatory, says the group has documented 80 names of those killed in Jdaidet Artouz and Jdaidet al-Fadel suburbs.

The Local Coordination Committees, another activist group, says the death toll is 483. It says most of the people were killed in Jdaidet Artouz.

State-run news agency SANA said Syrian troops "inflicted heavy losses" on the rebels in the suburbs.

Monday's reports came as President Bashar Assad's forces continued a major offensive in the suburbs against opposition fighters who were closing in on parts of Damascus.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-04-22-Syria/id-6e7d5a5fe3c6487db01965b5ba990dbe

brandon knight brandon knight The Bachelor 2013 Time earthquake today earthquake today mothers day

Commonly used drug can limit radiation damage to lungs and heart for cancer patients

Apr. 21, 2013 ? Unavoidable damage caused to the heart and lungs by radiotherapy treatment of tumours in the chest region can be limited by the administration of an ACE inhibitor, a drug commonly used in the treatment of cardiovascular disease, a group of Dutch researchers have found. [1]

Common cancers such as breast, esophagus, lung, and Hodgkin's lymphoma are frequently treated with radiotherapy, but the radiation dose that can be given safely is limited by the sensitivity of the health lung tissue which is also irradiated.

The lung is a particularly complex and sensitive organ and strategies for protecting it from radiotherapy damage, apart from limiting the dose given and, therefore, the efficacy of the treatment, are few. Presenting the research to the 2nd Forum of the European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology (ESTRO) today (Sunday), Dr Sonja Van der Veen, MSc, from the University Medical Centre, Groningen, The Netherlands, said that she had set out with colleagues to see whether the use of an ACE inhibitor could protect against early radiation-induced lung toxicity (RILT). Previous studies had shown that damage to blood vessels can play an important role in the development of RILT [2], so the researchers irradiated the lungs, heart, or heart and lungs of rats and administered the ACE inhibiter captopril immediately after treatment. The rats' lung functions were then measured at two-weekly intervals.

"After eight weeks, when early lung toxicity is usually at its height, we found that captopril improved the rats' heart and lung functions, but we were surprised to find that this only occurred when the heart was included in the irradiation field," said Dr Van der Veen. "This was not due to protection of the lung blood vessels, which were equally damaged with or without captopril. So we investigated further and found that the captopril treatment improved the heart's function and decreased the level of fibrosis in the heart soon after irradiation. So these new findings show that ACE inhibition decreases RILT by reducing direct acute heart damage."

Irradiating the heart leads to the development of fibrosis, which stiffens it, and this in turn leads to problems in the relaxation of the left ventricle. Due to this, blood flow from the lungs into the heart is hindered, and this can cause pulmonary damage. However, after treatment with captopril, the researchers observed an improvement in ventricular relaxation in the irradiated hearts.

Dr Van der Veen and her colleagues are now collaborating with a research group from the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota (USA), in order to design a randomised clinical trial where patients who are treated with radiation to the thoracic area including the heart will be treated with either an ACE inhibitor or a placebo after irradiation.

Much progress has been made in radiation treatment over recent years, but in breast cancer, for example, most women still receive high doses to the heart, and this is known to increase the risk of heart disease. A recent study [3] has shown that for each Gray (Gy) [4] of radiation, there is a 7.4% increase in the occurrence of a subsequent major coronary event.

"Given that most women will receive a dose of between 1 and 5 Gray, and that the dangers are even greater for women with existing cardiac risk factors or coronary disease, this is still a big problem," said Dr Van der Veen.

Rats were chosen for the study because, unlike mice, they are big enough for researchers to be able to irradiate different part of the lungs and heart. The researchers believe that the way in which ACE inhibition works in both animals and humans is similar.

"We are confident that our clinical trial will see the same protective effect in humans as that which we have seen in rats," said Dr Van der Veen. "We will also now begin to study the late effects of ACE inhibition on RILT to see whether it affords similar protection. We believe that our results suggest a promising strategy for shielding patients from radiation damage and improving their quality of life, while at the same time allowing them to receive a high enough dose to ensure the effective treatment of their cancer."

President of ESTRO, Professor Vincenzo Valentini, a radiation oncologist at the Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli, Rome, Italy, said: "This study underlines the importance of translational research. The understanding of anti-cancer mechanisms, as well as of protective opportunities discovered in the experimental environment, is of upmost importance in the era of personalised medicine. This research provides further evidence of the importance of testing experimental theories in the clinical environment to the ultimate benefit of patients."

[1] ACE (angiotensin-converting enzyme) Inhibitors are a class of drugs usually used for treating high blood pressure and heart failure.

[2] Ghobadi G, Bartelds B, van der Veen SJ, Dickinson MG, Brandenburg S, Berger RM, et al. Lung irradiation induces pulmonary vascular remodelling resembling pulmonary arterial hypertension. Thorax 2012 Apr;67(4):334-341

[3] Darby SC, Ewertz M, McGale P, Bennet AM, Blom-Goldman U, Bronnum D, et al. Risk of ischemic heart disease in women after radiotherapy for breast cancer. N Engl J Med 2013 Mar 14;368(11):987-998.

[4] One Gray is the absorption of one joule of energy, in the form of ionising radiation, per kilogram of matter.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by ESTRO, via AlphaGalileo.

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


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/AN_Sbo3phaI/130421074513.htm

australia Brothers Grimm Tate Stevens Miss Universe 2012 x factor x factor john kerry

Monday, April 22, 2013

Caterpillar profit misses, cuts outlook on weak mining sales

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Caterpillar Inc posted disappointing quarterly results and cut its 2013 profit forecast on Monday to reflect a drop in demand for heavy equipment from its mining customers.

But its shares gained nearly 1 percent to $81.21 in early New York Stock Exchange trading, helped by bullish comments from Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Doug Oberhelman that the mining sector has hit bottom and production was expected to ramp up in the second quarter, based on lower inventories in China and the United States.

The Peoria, Illinois-based company said it now expects to report a 2013 profit of $7 per share on sales of $57 billion to $61 billion. That was down from a previously estimated profit of between $7 and $9 a share on sales of $60 billion to $68 billion.

"Mining is the big culprit," said Longbow Research analyst Eli Lustgarten. "The key question now is not 2013, but 2014 - will it be up or down?"

The news came as the company, the world's largest maker of construction and mining equipment, reported a weaker-than-expected first-quarter profit.

Caterpillar said it earned a profit of $880 million, or $1.31 a share, down from $1.59 billion, or $2.37 a share, in the year-ago quarter.

Analysts had expected the company to report a profit of $1.40 per share. Sales during the period fell 17 percent to $13.20 billion.

Caterpillar also said on Monday that it would resume a share buyback for the first time in five years.

CEO Oberhelman said the revised 2013 outlook reflects a sales decline of about 50 percent from 2012 for traditional Cat machines used in mining.

However, Oberhelman suggested optimism, telling CNBC that it was the first time in three years he has seen relative stability around the world, noting inventories in China and the United States have come down significantly.

"We don't want to be overly optimistic but it certainly feels better than the last two springs," he said.

The decline in first-quarter sales was led by a drop in revenue from mining products, which plummeted 23 percent. Sales of construction equipment fell 17 percent and sales of gas and diesel power systems declined 12 percent, the company said.

With mining orders falling because of a slump in the price of many commodities, including coal, Caterpillar needed a strong rebound from other customers, including residential construction, to offset that weakness.

But that increased demand from builders has not materialized fast enough, in part, because some jumped the gun last spring when unseasonably warm weather combined with signs of the nascent economic recovery in the United States prompted many construction equipment customers to place orders for new equipment. In the end, the optimism proved to be a little premature, Lustgarten said.

Robert Wertheimer, a principal at Vertical Research Partners, said the drop in mining orders that Caterpillar was experiencing was "in line" with what its rivals were seeing. "We met with several competitors last week and they all seem to be having similar experiences," Wertheimer said. "It's not a (market) share issue at Caterpillar."

Its shares were not taking a bigger hit, analysts said, because Caterpillar affirmed the weakness several times, most recently earlier this month, when it laid off 11 percent of its workforce at the Decatur, Illinois, plant that makes mining equipment.

In January, the company also specifically warned that results for the first quarter would be "well below" those posted during the comparable period last year as dealers, awash in product, tried to sell off existing inventory before placing new orders.

(Reporting by James B. Kelleher; Writing by Patricia Kranz; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/caterpillar-inc-misses-cuts-outlook-weak-mining-sales-120215110--sector.html

luol deng culkin wooly mammoth no child left behind no child left behind neurofibromatosis steve jobs fbi file

The Story of 5: Baby Shower Blessings....

I really never thought I'd have more baby showers. ?(I also didn't mind if I didn't.) ?But, when John Michael's sister and one of my friends suggested it, ?well, I've just been very thankful for all of them and the amount of work that went into them. ?So, we have had 2 showers - one in Fayetteville and one at our house. ?

Vanessa (JM's sis) hosted one at her house a couple of weeks ago. ?It was mainly JM's sisters and their families, my mom, his mom, one of JM's friends and Melissa & Shannon. ?

Jenna checking out all the yummy goodies on the table.?

I was so happy that Melissa and Shannon were able to come too! ?I haven't seen them in forever and I've never even met Shannon's little girl! ?Melissa made some more fabulous artwork for the baby's room. I will have to take pictures and post it soon. ?I've already gotten tons of compliments on it too.

A cute one of my mom, me and silly goose Jenna.

JM has had this thumbs up photo in his family for a while. ?I love this one of us. ?

And this pic might be tiny, but I was trying to do the fast way and copy if off shutterfly. ?A great picture of JM with his two sisters, mom, and niece Ellie.

And on to shower #2....

Sarah and Emily hosted another shower here at our ?house. ?I'm so glad for this great group of girls. ?Because we all have different schedules now, I don't really get to hang out with all of them on a regular basis, so it was nice having them all here and letting all of our kiddos play together.

Amanda, Sarah, Brittany, my mom, me, Beth, Aaryn and Emily


The hostesses - Sarah & Emily. ?They did an amazing job! ?


Jenna wanted a silly pic together. And yep, she wanted to wear the same dress she wore to the last shower. ?:)

The super cute cake that Sarah made. ?They made tons of other cute little decorations and favors too.?

Jenna was all about the presents! She loved it all!

I'm seriously so thankful and so humbled by everyone's sweet support and thoughfulness. ?It really means so much to me and I think everyone else is just as excited about this baby as we are! I should also mention that we've also received several other nice things along the way outside of the showers too. And besides all of the materialistic things, we've had a lot of sweet comments and emotional support too. We are so, so, so, thankful and appreciative of everything. ?T minus 3 weeks now! :)

Source: http://www.thestoryof5.com/2013/04/baby-shower-blessings.html

daytona 500 start time ryan zimmerman oscars red carpet jennifer lopez wardrobe malfunction hugo hugo nfl combine

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Iceman ?tzi had bad teeth

Apr. 9, 2013 ? For the first time, researchers from the Centre for Evolutionary Medicine at the University of Zurich together with colleagues abroad have been able to provide evidence of periodontitis, tooth decay and accident-related dental damage in the ice mummy '?tzi'. The latest scientific findings provide interesting information on the dietary patterns of the Neolithic Iceman and on the evolution of medically significant oral pathologies.

The Neolithic mummy ?tzi (approximately 3300 BC) displays an astoundingly large number of oral diseases and dentition problems that are still widespread today. As Prof. Frank R?hli, head of the study, explains, ?tzi suffered from heavy dental abrasions, had several carious lesions -- some severe -- and had mechanical trauma to one of his front teeth which was probably due to an accident.

Although research has been underway on this important mummy for over 20 years now, the teeth had scarcely been examined. Dentist Roger Seiler from the Centre for Evolutionary Medicine at the University of Zurich has now examined ?tzi's teeth based on the latest computer tomography data and found that: "The loss of the periodontium has always been a very common disease, as the discovery of Stone Age skulls and the examination of Egyptian mummies has shown. ?tzi allows us an especially good insight into such an early stage of this disease," explains Seiler. He specializes in examining dental pathologies in earlier eras.

Advanced periodontitis

The three-dimensional computer tomography reconstructions give an insight into the oral cavity of the Iceman and show how severely he was suffering from advanced periodontitis. Particularly in the area of the rear molars, Seiler found loss of the periodontal supporting tissue that almost extended to the tip of the root. While ?tzi is scarcely likely to have cleaned his teeth, his abrasive diet contributed significantly to a process of self-cleaning. Nowadays periodontitis is connected to cardiovascular diseases. Interestingly, the Iceman also displays vascular calcification, for which -- like in the case of the periodontitis -- mainly his genetic make-up was responsible.

The fact that the Iceman suffered from tooth decay is attributable to his eating more and more starchy foods such as bread and cereal porridge which were consumed more commonly in the Neolithic period because of the rise of agriculture. In addition, the food was very abrasive because of contaminants and the rub-off from the quern, as is demonstrated by the Iceman's abraded teeth. His accident-related dental damage and his other injuries testify to his troubled life at that time. One front tooth has suffered mechanical trauma -- the discoloration is still clearly visible -- and one molar has lost a cusp, probably from chewing on something, perhaps a small stone in the cereal porridge.

?tzi -- the world's oldest wet mummy

The Iceman -- known widely as '?tzi' -- is the oldest wet mummy in the world. Since its discovery in 1991, numerous scientific examinations have taken place. In 2007, for example, also with the involvement of Frank R?hli, ?tzi's cause of death was determined as probably stemming from internal bleeding.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Zurich.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Roger Seiler, Andrew I Spielman, Albert Zink, Frank R?hli. Oral pathologies of the Neolithic Iceman, c. 3,300 BC. European Journal of Oral Sciences, 2013; DOI: 10.1111/eos.12037

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/zDZkfKmviwc/130409105903.htm

the international preppers geraldo obama trayvon martin pietrus cheney tori spelling

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Training Specialist - CPL Sales & Marketing - Jobs.ie - Jobs in ...


CPL Sales & Marketing

CPL Sales & Marketing

Contact: Sales Marketing Team

Address: Cpl Resources plc, 83 Merrion Square, Dublin 2, Ireland

Phone: +353 1 6146000

Fax: +353 1 6146100

CPL Sales & Marketing - Training Specialist

Location: Dublin City Centre
Salary: Negotiable
Job type: Permanent, Full-time
Job description

Based in our Dublin Sales Centre, this Training Specialist role will be responsible for the delivery of on-boarding programs, sales and sales management workshops.?The successful person will require strong facilitation skills, deep sales knowledge and a passion for delivering high impact workshops.?

A background in leading training for technology and service sales, and in particular sales via channel partners, would be a distinct advantage.?

What's in it for the Candidate:

  • The chance to work in a fast moving innovative environment.
  • Use your own sales training techniques and explore your creative side.
  • Work with a developing company in a growing industry in Ireland.
  • Work hands on with all levels of the company, from the management to the sales reps.
  • Be an essential part of the sales force and watch your own ideas implemented.?
  • Demonstating your knowledege of sales and sales training.

The role:

  • Deliver on-boarding, sales and business programs aimed at providing new employees with the critical skills to drive revenue growth and sales team effectiveness.
  • Support the delivery of leadership and management training.?
  • Act as a Sales Expert after training to reinforce concepts and effective application of methodology.
  • Work with business leaders to prioritize training needs and build impactful learning solutions that solve business issues and drives performance.

The Ideal Candidate:

  • At least 5 years experience in similar roles.
  • An expert in sales and sales training.
  • Degree (or equivalent) level education desirable.
  • CIPD training qualification/other training qualification desirable.
  • Proven track record of leading effective sales training.
  • Demonstrated ability to conduct training needs analysis.
  • Experience of working with multi-lingual audiences.

Email your CV to Paul McAllister at CPL recruitment in Dublin: paul.mcallister(at)cpl.ie. Or call at 01 6146063.


Email this job to yourself / a friend

Source: http://www.jobs.ie/ApplyForJob.aspx?Id=1252058

branson mo monkees songs rail gun harrisburg top chef texas great pacific garbage patch ben affleck and jennifer garner

AT&T and Boingo unite on free-but-not-really airport WiFi

AT&T and Boingo unite on freebutnotreally airport WiFi

AT&T has been forging partnerships that give its roaming customers free WiFi while abroad, and it just struck one of the more logical networking deals that we've seen to date, if also the most lopsided. A pact with Boingo will let AT&T subscribers have 1GB of free data each month on Boingo's airport hotspots -- but, as with previous arrangements, only if they're subscribed to AT&T's $60 or $120 international data plans. Boingo subscribers, meanwhile, get a much better deal. They can use AT&T hotspots anywhere in the US as part of their existing rate, which could see them paying as little as $10 per month. Either arrangement will keep us online during a layover, and for that we're thankful -- but there's only one that's likely to have us pulling out our credit cards.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Source: AT&T, Boingo

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/aM1iODKqyVc/

whitney houston cause of death marquette city creek center hilary duff michigan state michigan state andrew luck pro day

Monday, April 8, 2013

SKorea: NKorea may be preparing to test missile

A South Korean soldier closes a military gate in Paju, north of Seoul, South Korea, Sunday, April 7, 2013. A top South Korean national security official said Sunday that North Korea may be setting the stage for a missile test or another provocative act with its warning that it soon will be unable to guarantee diplomats' safety in Pyongyang. But he added that the North's clearest objective is to extract concessions from Washington and Seoul. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

A South Korean soldier closes a military gate in Paju, north of Seoul, South Korea, Sunday, April 7, 2013. A top South Korean national security official said Sunday that North Korea may be setting the stage for a missile test or another provocative act with its warning that it soon will be unable to guarantee diplomats' safety in Pyongyang. But he added that the North's clearest objective is to extract concessions from Washington and Seoul. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

A North Korean military guard post is seen near the border village of Panmunjom, which has separated the two Koreas since the Korean War, in Paju, north of Seoul, South Korea, Sunday, April 7, 2013. A top South Korean national security official said Sunday that North Korea may be setting the stage for a missile test or another provocative act with its warning that it soon will be unable to guarantee diplomats' safety in Pyongyang. But he added that the North's clearest objective is to extract concessions from Washington and Seoul. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

A South Korean Army soldier salutes as a military vehicle crosses the barricaded Unification Bridge near the border village of Panmunjom, that has separated the two Koreas since the Korean War, in Paju, north of Seoul, South Korea, Sunday, April 7, 2013. South Korea said its top military officer has put off a plan to visit Washington due to current tension with North Korea. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

People watch a TV program showing North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at Seoul Railway Station in Seoul, South Korea, Sunday, April 7, 2013. South Korea?s top military officer has put off a plan to visit Washington because of escalating tension with North Korea that have also led more than a dozen South Korean companies to halt operations at a joint factory complex in the North, officials said Sunday. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

North Koreans, working at a field in North Korea's Kaepoong, are viewed from the unification observation post near the border village of Panmunjom, that has separated the two Koreas since the Korean War, in Paju, north of Seoul, South Korea, Sunday, April 7, 2013. South Korea said its top military officer has put off a plan to visit Washington due to current tension with North Korea. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

(AP) ? A top South Korean national security official said Sunday that North Korea may be setting the stage for a missile test or another provocative act with its warning that it soon will be unable to guarantee diplomats' safety in Pyongyang. But he added that the North's clearest objective is to extract concessions from Washington and Seoul.

North Korea's warning last week followed weeks of war threats and other efforts to punish South Korea and the U.S. for ongoing joint military drills, and for their support of U.N. sanctions over Pyongyang's Feb. 12 nuclear test. Many nations are deciding what to do about the notice, which said their diplomats' safety in Pyongyang cannot be guaranteed beginning this Wednesday.

Tensions between Seoul and Pyongyang led South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff to announce Sunday that its chairman had put off a visit to Washington. The U.S. military said its top commander in South Korea had also canceled a trip to Washington. The South Korean defense minister said Thursday that North Korea had moved a missile with "considerable range" to its east coast, possibly to conduct a test launch.

His description suggests that the missile could be the Musudan missile, capable of striking American bases in Guam with its estimated range of up to 4,000 kilometers (2,490 miles).

Citing North Korea's suggestion that diplomats leave the country, South Korean President Park Geun-hye's national security director said Pyongyang may be planning a missile launch or another provocation around Wednesday, according to presidential spokeswoman Kim Haing.

During a meeting with other South Korean officials, the official, Kim Jang-Soo, also said the notice to diplomats and other recent North Korean actions are an attempt to stoke security concerns and to force South Korea and the U.S. to offer a dialogue. Washington and Seoul want North Korea to resume the six-party nuclear talks ? which also include China, Russia and Japan ? that it abandoned in 2009.

The roughly two dozen countries with embassies in North Korea had not yet announced whether they would evacuate their staffs.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague suggested that North Korea's comments about foreign diplomats are "consistent" with a regime that is using the prospect of an external threat to justify its militarization to its people.

"I haven't seen any immediate need to respond to that by moving our diplomats out of there," he told the BBC on Saturday. "We will keep this under close review with our allies, but we shouldn't respond and play to that rhetoric and that presentation of an external threat every time they come out with it."

Germany said its embassy in Pyongyang would stay open for at least the time being.

"The situation there is tense but calm," a German Foreign Office official, who declined to be named in line with department policy, said in an email. "The security and danger of the situation is constantly being evaluated. The different international embassies there are in close touch with each other."

Indonesia's foreign affairs ministry said it was considering a plan to evacuate its diplomats. A statement released by the ministry on Saturday said that its embassy in Pyongyang has been preparing a contingency plan to anticipate the worst-case scenario, and that the Indonesian foreign minister is communicating with the staff there to monitor the situation.

India also said it was monitoring events. "We have been informed about it," said Syed Akbaruddin, spokesman for India's external affairs ministry. "We are in constant touch with our embassy and are monitoring the situation. We will carefully consider all aspects and decide well in time."

Seoul and Washington, which lack diplomatic relations with the North, are taking the threats seriously, though they say they have seen no signs that Pyongyang is preparing for a large-scale attack.

Kim Jang-soo said the North would face "severalfold damages" for any hostilities. Since 2010, when attacks Seoul blames on North Korea killed 50 people, South Korea has vowed to aggressively respond to any future attack.

South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Jung Seung-jo had planned to meet with his U.S. counterpart, Gen. Martin Dempsey, in Washington on April 16 for regular talks. But tensions on the Korean Peninsula are so high that Jung cannot take a long trip away from South Korea, so the meeting will be rescheduled, a South Korean Joint Chiefs officer said Sunday. The officer spoke on condition of anonymity, citing office policy.

The top U.S. military commander in South Korea, Gen. James Thurman, will not make a planned trip to Washington this week to testify before Congress because of tensions with North Korea. In an email Sunday to The Associated Press, Army Col. Amy Hannah said Thurman would remain in Seoul as "a prudent measure." He was scheduled to testify on Tuesday and Wednesday.

The U.S. Defense Department has delayed an intercontinental ballistic missile test that had been planned for this week because of concerns the launch could be misinterpreted and exacerbate the Korean crisis, a senior defense official told The Associated Press.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel decided to delay the test at an Air Force base in California until sometime next month, the official said Saturday. The official was not authorized to speak publicly about the test delay and requested anonymity.

In recent weeks, the U.S. has followed provocations from North Korea with shows of force connected to the joint exercises with South Korea. It has sent nuclear capable B-2 and B-52 bombers and stealth F-22 fighters to participate in the drills.

In addition, the U.S. said last week that two of the Navy's missile-defense ships were moved closer to the Korean Peninsula, and a land-based missile-defense system is being deployed to the Pacific territory of Guam later this month. The Pentagon last month announced longer-term plans to strengthen its U.S.-based missile defenses.

The U.S. military also is considering deploying an intelligence drone at the Misawa Air Base in northern Japan to step up surveillance of North Korea, a Japanese Defense Ministry official said Sunday.

Three Global Hawk surveillance planes are deployed on Guam and one of them is being considered for deployment in Japan, the official said on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to speak about the issue.

North Korea successfully shot a satellite into space in December and conducted its third nuclear test in February. It has threatened to launch a nuclear attack on the United States, though many analysts say the North hasn't achieved the technology to manufacture a miniaturized nuclear warhead that could fit on a long-range missile capable of hitting the U.S.

North Korea also raised tensions Wednesday when it barred South Koreans and supply trucks from entering the Kaesong industrial complex, where South Korean companies have employed thousands of North Korean workers for the past decade.

North Korea is not forcing South Korean managers to leave the factory complex, and nearly 520 of them remained at Kaesong on Sunday. But the entry ban at the park, the last remaining inter-Korean rapprochement project, is posing a serious challenge to many of the more than 120 South Korean firms there because they are running out of raw materials and are short on replacement workers.

Nine more firms, including food and textile companies, have stopped operations at Kaesong, bringing to 13 the total number of companies that have done so, South Korea's Unification Ministry said in a statement Sunday.

North Korea briefly restricted the heavily fortified border crossing at Kaesong in 2009 ? also during South Korea-U.S. drills ? but manufacturers fear the current border shutdown could last longer.

___

AP writers Lolita C. Baldor in Washington, Robert Burns in Bagram, Afghanistan, Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo, Louise Watt in Beijing, Cassandra Vinograd in London, Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin and Niniek Karmini in Jakarta, Indonesia, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-04-07-Koreas-Tension/id-ddf8f010f3c74583b59253ac44a86a91

bobbi kristina brown new edition austerity rihanna and chris brown back together pebble beach cause of whitney houston death keanu reeves

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Neal Mohan, Google's $100 Million Man - Business Insider

Two years ago, Twitter was in disarray. ?

On April 14, 2011, Fortune's Jessi Hempel?blasted Twitter for failing to launch exciting new products, generate meaningful revenues, or hang on to executive talent.

None of this was news to Twitter's board members or CEO Dick Costolo, of course.

They'd spent the months prior trying to turn Twitter into "a real company" after years of neglectful management.

The first step:?hire a chief product officer.?The board wanted someone who could fix the company's internal turmoil, revamp its product lineup, and get advertisers spending billions of dollars on the platform.?

David Rosenblatt, the former CEO of DoubleClick and Google executive who joined Twitter's board in December 2010, believed he had the perfect candidate.

Rosenblatt reached out to Neal Mohan ? a Google executive who had been Rosenblatt's top lieutenant at DoubleClick.

Twitter made an offer, and it seemed like?Mohan would accept.

But then he said no.

Elsa/Getty Images

Neal Mohan gets paid more than Carmelo Anthony

Why?

Because Google wrote a massive check to keep him.

Rosenblatt told a friend that Google made him an offer much richer than the one the Knicks had just given star forward Carmelo Anthony.

That February, the Knicks made headlines everywhere for agreeing to pay Anthony $65 million over three years.

TechCrunch later reported that Google paid Mohan more than $100 million in stock.

In the two years since Mohan signed the deal, Google's stock price has increased about 35 percent, making Mohan's deal worth as much as $150 million.

Over the past several weeks, we've spoken to his colleagues, clients, and competitors to learn more about Mohan.?Some of them asked to remain anonymous out of deference to Mohan's quiet, behind-the-scenes style.?Mohan himself declined to comment.

They say Mohan is the visionary who predicted how brand advertising would fund the Internet, turned this vision into a plan, and then executed it.?

A $100 million career starts with a $60,000 job

Mohan graduated from Stanford with a degree in electrical engineering in 1996. Then he worked at Andersen Consulting ? the company now called Accenture.?

Then, in 1997, he joined a startup called Net Gravity. It sold?enterprise software to digital marketers.

This was the beginning of Neal Mohan's?$100 million career in Internet advertising.

It?was a humble start. The gig paid $60,000 per year. On LinkedIn, Mohan lists his title at NetGravity as "senior analyst." ?But his boss from that time, Richard Frankel, tells us Mohan was basically a high-end customer support representative.

The Internet Archive

Neal Mohan got in the Internet advertising business with a $60,000 customer support job, helping clients use software like this

Frankel says he hired Mohan for two reasons. The first was that it was?the 1990s, and Mohan was one of the few people NetGravity could find "who knew a little bit about Internet tech."

The second reason Frankel hired Mohan was he found him to be a "rare" combination ? an "insatiable technologist" who also had enough business savvy to interact with NetGravity's enterprise customers on a strategic level.

"When he worked with a customer, he didn't just help them solve their problems," Frankel said."He helped customers figure out how to better use our technology. That turned into a lot more business for NetGravity."

Frankel soon handed him NetGravity's largest accounts. Mohan made them larger.

Frankel believes the secret to Mohan's success, even so early on, was his curiosity.

"In a?typical meeting with Neal, he asks questions non-stop. He really wants to understand what you're discussing: some new segment, some new company, some customer problem. He wants to understand it ? and he can really absorb and digest all the facts that he's getting hit with."

In November 1997, NetGravity was acquired by a another, larger, Internet advertising startup, DoubleClick. He moved from California to New York, where DoubleClick was based.

From 1997 to 2003, Mohan's?role at DoubleClick expanded from services to sales operations to business operations.

Hired to work with clients on their problems, he began to focus on DoubleClick's. He re-organized the company's 500-person technology sales and services group. When the bubble burst, DoubleClick management asked Mohan to figure out which costs the company could cut, and to execute those cuts. He rose to the position of Vice President, Business Operations.

In 2003, Mohan went back to Stanford to get his MBA.

Two years later, DoubleClick reached a breaking point.?

The company, which went public in 1998, had acquired a?data-collection agency called Abacus Direct for $1.7 billion in 1999, and the merger wasn't working anymore. The company had stretched itself too far.

Private equity firm Hellman & Friedman decided to acquire DoubleClick for $1.1 billion, load it with debt, and break it into two pieces,?Abacus Direct and DoubleClick.

Hellman & Friedman asked?longtime executive David Rosenblatt to become the CEO of the new DoubleClick.

Rosenblatt accepted, with a plan to refocus the company on the opportunity presented by a future in which hundreds of billions in annual offline advertising spending would eventually move online.

It was going to be a painful process. DoubleClick would have to unload lots of assets, pivot into a new business, and deal with a massive amount of debt.

Rosenblatt knew he needed help.

His first call was to a friend and former colleague who'd just finished his MBA at Stanford.

How to turn $1 billion into $3 billion

Despite offers from Google and others, Mohan agreed to rejoin DoubleClick as?head of products, and by extension, head of strategy.

Business Insider

David Rosenblatt hired Neal Mohan to run DoubleClick product and strategy ??from 3,000 miles away

But he had one condition for Rosenblatt: he had to stay in California.?He'd convinced his wife, a life-long New Yorker, to move out there for Stanford only by promising that once they started their life in Northern California, they wouldn't have to uproot themselves again.

Rosenblatt agreed to this condition,?even though it meant asking someone who had never managed a product development team to manage a large one from 3,000 miles away.

With Mohan back in the company, the pair spent the next six months creating a strategy for the new DoubleClick.

The result: an epic, 400- to 500-page PowerPoint document.

Several sources who have seen this document, or participated in its creation, say that even today you can see traces of it in similar documents outlining Google's current product road map in display advertising.

These sources say the document is another example of Mohan's special ability to understand what's newly possible thanks to technology, and how this might be applied to serve a business strategy.?

The first half of the presentation detailed a vision of where Internet advertising was going for publishers, advertisers, and consumers, and what kinds of products DoubleClick should create to take advantage of it.

That vision: As the world grew more digital, some company was going to provide "comprehensive" and "holistic" solutions to publishers and marketers that allowed them to figure out exactly the price at which they should be buying or selling ads.?Additionally, some company was going to help these publishers and marketers deliver "interactive" and "rich media" ads. The document proposed that this company should be DoubleClick.

The second half of the deck spelled out exactly how many engineers DoubleClick needed to hire every month, and for which products, to achieve that vision and reach very specific, aggressive revenue goals.

Mohan and Rosenblatt presented the PowerPoint to the DoubleClick board ? which included their overlords at Hellman & Friedman ? in December 2005. The board approved the plan.

The new DoubleClick was born. It developed three primary business lines: core ad tech solutions, an ad network, and an advertising exchange.

Less than a year and a half later, Google bought DoubleClick for $3.1 billion.

Betting on Mohan's PowerPoint plan paid off nicely for Hellman & Friedman.?

Would it for Google?

How to survive at Google

After Google bought DoubleClick in 2007, competitors Microsoft and Yahoo rushed into the market to acquire similar companies.

Yahoo bought the Right Media Exchange for $680 million. Microsoft bought aQuantive for $6.3 billion.

Five years later, Microsoft announced the entire deal was a bust, and that it was writing off $6.2 billion of the $6.3 billion it spent as a loss.

Over at Yahoo, Right Media's entire senior management team left the company within two years. Current CEO Marissa Mayer is unsure if she should just sell Right Media's assets for parts.

Meanwhile, at Google, Mohan is still in charge of DoubleClick product and strategy. And other than Rosenblatt, who left once he was fully vested, most of Mohan's team from DoubleClick is still intact.

What did Google and Mohan do right that Microsoft and Yahoo could not?

Most of the credit goes to Susan Wojcicki.?

Susan Wojcicki replaced Google's existing display advertising team with Mohan's team

Wojcicki is the executive who built Google's advertising business, including search advertising, which still accounts for more than 95 percent of Google's $50 billion annual revenues.

She reports directly to CEO Larry Page, who trusts her so immensely that there is a saying??saying at Google, "What Susan wants, Susan gets."

What Wojcicki wanted in 2007 was DoubleClick. She got it.?

What Wojcicki wanted in 2008, after the DoubleClick deal finally gained approval from antitrust regulators, was to replace the people who had been building Google's display advertising products with DoubleClick's management team.

The move could have been controversial. It put Google's widely-respected chief of display product, Gokul Rajaram, on the street.?Rajaram has game. He's now running Facebook's multi-billion dollar display advertising business.

If Mohan had whiffed, the numbers Rajaram is putting up just down the highway from Google would have made Wojcicki look very bad.

But Mohan hasn't whiffed.

In January 2012, Google announced its display advertising gross revenues reached $5 billion in 2011. Google isn't planning on releasing a 2012 update to that number, but we hear whispers of $7 billion or more, with Google keeping 32 percent of that.?

Many people believe the reason Mohan has done so well at Google is that he is able to talk to engineers about advertising and media in a way they understand.

"At a company like Google, one that really thrives on intellectual discourse, he was able to come into most senior rooms and describe the whole strategy that drove the acquisition and explain it incredibly coherently," one colleague says.

"Generally people are able to either go wide or go deep. He manages to do both, which I'm impressed with anytime I'm in the room with him at the most senior levels."

The other big reason for Mohan's success at Google has been that Wojcicki and senior management have given him lots of money to spend on acquisitions, and he has spent it very well.

Mohan has spent it on companies developing products that fit into the vision for DoubleClick he and Rosenblatt first laid out in that 500-page PowerPoint: becoming a company that provides an end-to-end solution for digital advertisers and publishers.

The best example of a successful Mohan acquisition is a startup called Invite Media, which Google bought for? about $85 million in 2010.

The deal process began when, during one of his quarterly meetings with one of Google's big advertising clients, Mohan asked?what kind of tools the agency was using, and which of them would be easier to use if Google owned them. ?

The agency ? a source tells us it was Omnicom ? said Mohan should look at Invite.

Invite was one of the first companies to create a product that the industry calls a "demand-side platform" that facilitates "real-time bidding."

Essentially, it was a dashboard Madison Avenue agencies could use to buy ads that would be shown to particular kinds of people almost anywhere across the Internet on the fly and in an instant.

It fit perfectly into Mohan's long-term vision for DoubleClick and Google.

So he went and talked to Invite Media's CEO, Nat Turner, and told him Google would like to buy his startup.

Normally, even relatively small deals take as much as six to nine months to complete.?

Mohan got a term sheet in front of Turner within the month.

"He timed it perfectly," says Turner, who worked at Google for a time and is now working on another startup. "He did it before we got too big ? before other companies gave us offers."

Since the acquisition, "real-time bidding" and "demand-side platforms" have become an everyday part of the entire display advertising industry online, and Google's tools are considered the best in the space.

"You could argue that was the most perfectly timed acquisition that Google has made since DoubleClick," says a Mohan colleague. ?

"If he had waited a little bit more, who knows, it could have been a much more expensive acquisition. It could have been a whole different dynamic. That acquisition closed and the hockey stick growth phase immediately followed."

Mohan has acquired several other companies for Google, including Admeld and Teracent.

He's building that end-to-end solution for advertisers and publisher as if it were a giant puzzle, says Turner.

"I would argue startups invented each little pocket of that whole thing, but Neal is the puppetmaster. He's the guy who got the resources and pulled everything together."

How does a $100 million Googler work?

So what are some of Neal Mohan's secrets? How does he work? ?What can the rest of us learn from a guy whom Google is paying $100 million??

We asked current and former colleagues and clients about his management style, and this is what we learned:

From current and former direct reports:

  • "He's not a screamer or a big table-banger."
  • "You don't waste a lot of time in meetings with Neal, that's for sure."
  • "If I escalate something to him, I know that he will return a response."
  • "He gives you a lot of autonomy, but believes in defining big, specific, and strategic goals."
  • "Every three months, he makes sure there is not a lot of redundancy in his product line, which is critical because in ad tech, everything has to sync."
  • "He doesn't bullshit. If our numbers were going bad, I heard from him."
  • "I never had to talk to him unless I needed to. It was awesome."?

From clients:

  • "He is the quiet assassin. He's not a big show-boater."?
  • "He listens to his partners. He invests time in understanding what they need."

How come Mohan's not a CEO somewhere?

Twitter isn't the only company that's tried to hire Neal Mohan away from Google.?A former senior executive at Facebook said he tried to lure Mohan over.

Another source close to Mohan says he gets notes from competitors all the time.

Why has he stayed? Why isn't he CEO of something, somewhere?

A source close to Mohan tells us he already feels like CEO, but one who doesn't have to do all the annoying parts of the job.?

"Obviously, [Mohan] gets pinged on these types of things. But in this role [he] gets to make a big impact on the entire industry, building things for publishers, advertisers, agencies and consumers.

"[Meanwhile,] Google provides the basic infrastructure ? starting with a great CFO and a global sales organization. Building a product at Google you get to plug into and take advantage of all that. You get to focus."

"He's in a really good spot," says Turner. "There is one guy who runs display advertising at Google, and that's Neal. Susan leaves it to him.

"If he had a another display guy above him, or if there were political nonsense going on, he would probably take off sooner.?But there isn't."

Another source, a proud former colleague, brings up another reason Mohan hasn't left Google.

?"I don't think you can ignore the compensation."

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/neal-mohan-googles-100-million-man-2013-4

Ray Lewis Murder UFC 156 my bloody valentine Super Bowl Winners what time does the superbowl start Kaepernick Tattoos superbowl time

Fusion-io bumps its ioFX super-SSD to 1.6TB, announces HP Workstation Z integration

Fusionio bumps its ioFX superSSD to 16TB, announces HP Workstation Z integration

We have a feeling graphics artists are going to be begging their studios for Fusion-io's latest ioFX super-SSD. After receiving critical acclaim for its 460GB version, the company has today introduced a massively-speced 1.6TB variant at NAB. Despite the space increase, the new unit is not bigger than its older sibling. In related news, HP has also signed on to integrate ioFX into its HP Z 420, 620 and 820 all-in-ones, and it'll also give current workstation owners the option to simply add the card to their existing machines. Fusion won't be releasing any details about pricing for the 1.6TB ioFX just yet -- that'll remain under wraps until its released this summer. For now, movie makers can net the 460GB one for $2K (about $500 less that its release price). Full press release after the break.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/07/fusion-io-iofx-1-6tb-announces-hp/

wiz khalifa taylor allderdice eddie royal iditarod nfl free agents 2012 encyclopedia brittanica nfl free agency jonbenet ramsey

Friday, April 5, 2013

Man set free in Ariz. enjoys first day of freedom

FILE - In a Dec. 20, 1970 file photo Tucson, Ariz., firefighters apply a steady stream of water during the Pioneer International Hotel fire , that resulted in 29 deaths. Louis Cuen Taylor who has spent more than four decades in prison for the hotel fire is expected to be released Tuesday, April 2, 2013, as part of a deal with prosecutors. (AP Photo/The Tucson Citizen, file )

FILE - In a Dec. 20, 1970 file photo Tucson, Ariz., firefighters apply a steady stream of water during the Pioneer International Hotel fire , that resulted in 29 deaths. Louis Cuen Taylor who has spent more than four decades in prison for the hotel fire is expected to be released Tuesday, April 2, 2013, as part of a deal with prosecutors. (AP Photo/The Tucson Citizen, file )

Louis Cuen Taylor in custody in Tucson, Ariz. in December, 1970. Taylor was tried and convicted in connection with the Pioneer International Hotel fire on Dec. 20, 1970, that left 29 dead. Taylor, who turns 59 this week, is scheduled to plead no contest in an agreement that sets aside his original conviction and gives him credit for time served, the Arizona Daily Star reported. (AP Photo/Arizona Daily Star, Harry Lewis,file ) ALL LOCAL TV OUT; PAC-12 OUT; MANDATORY CREDIT

Undated photo provided by the Arizona Department of Corrections is of Arizona prison inmate Louis C. Taylor, serving a life sentence after being convicted in the deaths of 28 people in the 1970 Pioneer Hotel fire. Taylor, who turns 59 this week, is scheduled to plead no contest in an agreement that sets aside his original conviction and gives him credit for time served, the Arizona Daily Star reported. (AP Photo/Arizona Daily Star, Arizon Department of Corrections ) ALL LOCAL TV OUT; PAC-12 OUT; MANDATORY CREDIT

Louis Taylor wipes away tears during a news conference with the legal team from the Arizona Justice Project in downtown Phoenix on Wednesday, April 3, 2013. Taylor, 58, was released Tuesday after doubts about his conviction surfaced and he entered a no-contest plea in a deal with prosecutors. Taylor was 16 years old when he was arrested in the Pioneer Fire in Tucson in 1970. Taylor, who is black, was later convicted by an all-white jury and sentenced to life in prison. The case ended up back in court after a new defense team and others raised fresh questions about the evidence used to convict Taylor. Authorities still insist Taylor is guilty, but they acknowledged that gaining a conviction at a new trial would be dicey given that some evidence has been lost and witnesses have either moved or died. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, Michael Schennum) MARICOPA COUNTY OUT; MAGS OUT; NO SALES

Lewis Taylor shakes the hand of his first attorney from 1972, Howard Kashman, as his current defense team from Phoenix surrounds him after a hearing in Pima County Superior Court in Tucson, Ariz. on Tuesday April 2, 2013. Taylor spent more than 40 years in prison for a 1970 hotel fire that killed 29 people agreed to a deal with prosecutors Tuesday that cleared the way for him to be released. The plea deal marks a stunning reversal for Taylor, who was 16 years old when he was arrested in the fire at the Pioneer Hotel in 1970, where employees of an aircraft company were celebrating at a Christmas party. Prosecutors still believe that Taylor is guilty, but said they would not be able to pursue a new trial due to a lack of evidence and living witnesses. (AP Photo/Arizona Daily Star,Benjie Sanders, Pool)

(AP) ? Louis Taylor broke down in tears Wednesday as he described how he spent his first hours of freedom after more than 40 years in prison for a hotel fire that killed 29 people: an evening hike and some fast food.

He struggled to operate what he called an "Apple telephone" and said he was more familiar with 8-tracks than modern technology.

Taylor was released Tuesday after doubts about his conviction surfaced and he agreed to a deal with prosecutors that set him free. He pleaded no contest to each of the nearly 30 counts of murder against him in an agreement that allowed the judge to sentence him to time served.

While he has consistently maintained his innocence, Taylor said he took the deal because he wanted out now instead of remaining in prison for years more to seek vindication at a new trial.

"I had no choice," he said at a news conference with his attorneys on Wednesday. "I wasn't going to give them another minute, another hour, another decade."

The 1970 blaze at the Pioneer Hotel was one of the deadliest fires in Arizona history as hundreds of people gathered at the exclusive spot in Tucson to celebrate Christmas. When the fire erupted, exits were blocked and fire truck ladders were too short to reach the upper floors. Many guests were trapped in their rooms. Some jumped to their deaths while others burned alive. One of the victims was waiting for his family to arrive for the Christmas holiday. The gifts burned in the room.

Taylor was 16 when he was arrested that night at the hotel, where he says he went to get free drinks and food from various parties. The now-58-year-old, who is black, was convicted by an all-white jury and sentenced to life in prison.

At his news conference, Taylor addressed the questions of race that have long loomed over the case. The original fire investigator told The Associated Press this week that he profiled the suspect as "probably a negro," but insisted his statements had nothing to do with Taylor's arrest.

"They singled me out," Taylor said. "They targeted me. All they said was, 'The little colored boy, the little negro boy.'"

He broke down in tears before continuing.

"I'm not saying it was a racial injustice but certainly it wasn't fair what they did to me," Taylor said.

The case started getting more attention a decade ago amid reports by "60 Minutes" that raised questions about whether the fire was arson. The Arizona Justice Project, which works on behalf of inmates believed to be wrongly convicted, began reviewing the evidence.

The group claimed prosecutors committed misconduct at Taylor's original trial when they neglected to inform his defense that no accelerants were found at the scene. In addition, fire experts the group hired to review evidence could not determine what caused the blaze.

However, Cy Holmes, now 83 and the original fire investigator, stands by his findings that it was arson, noting experts taking on the case now don't have all the evidence and didn't spend days investigating the scene like he did.

Prosecutors still insist Taylor is guilty, but they acknowledged that gaining a conviction at a new trial would be dicey given that some evidence has been lost and witnesses have either moved or died.

Pima County authorities say Taylor was arrested with five boxes of matches and told numerous lies as he was questioned by investigators. They say he also admitted to starting arson fires in the past. In court papers, prosecutors wrote that hotel employees on the night of the blaze "found the defendant standing by himself simply looking at the fire."

"This is not exoneration," Pima County Attorney Barbara LaWall said. "Louis Taylor was found guilty at trial beyond a reasonable doubt."

Taylor claims he was railroaded, and that authorities never allowed him access to an attorney on the night of his arrest.

"I never hurt anybody in my whole life," he said Wednesday, adding that he helped save guests. "I'm glad I went there because I saved a lot of people."

He explained how while in prison, some inmates encouraged him to escape.

"I said, 'I'm not going nowhere, I'm an innocent man,'" Taylor said. "Only the guilty run away. I held on, and look, I'm free now."

Arizona Department of Corrections records show Taylor was found guilty while in prison of nearly 70 infractions, including disorderly conduct, sexual assault and arson.

He acknowledged he was "no angel" behind bars.

"You grow up in prison, you get a lot of bad habits," he said.

Yet despite his claims of injustice, Taylor forgives everyone involved and is just looking to the future. The no contest pleas allowed Taylor to neither dispute the charges against him nor admit guilt, and he also gave up his right to seek a new trial.

He said he took an hour-long hike in a canyon near Tucson to "transcend back into society" upon his release. He went to In-N-Out Burger, then cooked bacon and eggs for breakfast on Wednesday morning.

"I'm going to try to do the best that I can. I can't look back," Taylor said. "I just thank God that I'm free."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-04-03-US-Tucson-Hotel-Fire/id-08055c0690824f4b8f343deb1fd8e9df

lra lra eric johnson eric johnson big east tournament ashley olsen new apple tv

TCTV Interview - Nick Hungerford Aims To Disrupt The Financial Investment World With A Little Nutmeg

Screen Shot 2013-04-04 at 15.49.03Nutmeg is a UK-based online investment management startup backed by the likes of Tim Draper and intends to pull of something of a bank-job by disrupting the world of financial investing, and it has some heavyweights to help it. It launched last year after raising $5.3 million from Pentech, Tim Draper, Spotify board member Klaus Hommels and Armada Investment Group chairman Daniel Aegerter. Clearly the idea is to capitalise on consumer disillusionment with banks and existing investment models. Nick Hungerford, Nutmeg?s founder and CEO, spoke to us about the launch and what Nutmeg is trying to achieve in making investing as transparent and democratic as possible.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/grV8OmdPyCo/

Sandy Hook kanye west Univision josh hamilton Susan Rice American Airlines the Who

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Writer Iain Banks: I have months to live

FILE- Scottish author Iain Banks shown in this file photo dated April 7, 2004, who has revealed Wednesday April 3, 2013, that he has been diagnosed with late-stage gall bladder cancer and has just months to live. In a statement posted on his publisher?s website Wednesday, 59-year-old fiction writer Banks said he is ?officially very poorly? and is considering chemotherapy to try to extend his life, but his latest novel is likely to be his last. (AP Photo / Yui Mok, PA, file) UNITED KINGDOM OUT - NO SALES - NO ARCHIVES

FILE- Scottish author Iain Banks shown in this file photo dated April 7, 2004, who has revealed Wednesday April 3, 2013, that he has been diagnosed with late-stage gall bladder cancer and has just months to live. In a statement posted on his publisher?s website Wednesday, 59-year-old fiction writer Banks said he is ?officially very poorly? and is considering chemotherapy to try to extend his life, but his latest novel is likely to be his last. (AP Photo / Yui Mok, PA, file) UNITED KINGDOM OUT - NO SALES - NO ARCHIVES

(AP) ? Scottish writer Iain Banks said Wednesday he has been diagnosed with late-stage gall bladder cancer and has just months to live.

Banks says it is "extremely unlikely" he will live more than a year and that his latest novel, "The Quarry," will likely be his last.

The 59-year-old said he is "officially very poorly" and is weighing the pros and cons of chemotherapy to extend his life.

"As a result, I've withdrawn from all planned public engagements and I've asked my partner Adele if she will do me the honor of becoming my widow," Banks said in a statement posted on his publisher's website. "Sorry ? but we find ghoulish humor helps."

Banks writes general fiction and science fiction, the latter under the name Iain M. Banks.

Banks published his first novel "The Wasp Factory" in 1984. His first science fiction novel, "Consider Phlebas," was published in 1987.

In 2008, he was named one of the 50 greatest British writers since 1945 in a list compiled by The Times of London.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-04-03-EU-Britain-Iain-Banks/id-39cc452884824b4390ad65367a909320

raspberry ketone ron burgundy millennial media nit championship transcendentalism bells palsy channel 5 news

Hillary Clinton steps back into spotlight with Biden

ap Clinton ac 130402 wblog Hillary Clinton Shares Stage With Joe Biden in One of First Public Events Since Leaving StateJoe Biden and Hillary Clinton

WASHINGTON - Hillary Clinton stepped out of the shadows tonight at an award ceremony held to recognize leaders from around the world who worked to improve the plight of women and featuring such guests as Nicholas Kristof and Vice President Joe Biden.

The event, Vital Voices' Global Leadership Awards, was the former secretary of state's second public appearances since she left her post at the end of January.

Clinton founded the original Vital Voices Democracy Initiative as first lady in 1997 with then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and has attended 11 of 12 such award ceremonies - every year except 2012 when she was traveling.

She reflected on her time as first lady, fighting for women's rights with former Chief of Staff Melanne Verveer by her side against problems that are far from over. She said today a map of the world shows "too many countries where women still face violence and abuse, too many political systems that treat women like second class or even worse.

"But that's not all the map shows. It's not what Melanne and I see," Clinton said. "When we look at the map we do see progress, because we know people who are making that progress against the most extraordinary odds every day, everywhere. We see the opportunities that are there to be seized. We see, we hear those vital voices."

Though some have speculated the high-profile Democrat could go head-to-head with Biden in a future primary election, Clinton said she was "delighted" that the vice president could be at the ceremony this year.

"Vice President Biden and I have worked together on so many important issues," she said. "One that is particularly close to his heart is the fight against domestic violence, and I know what a personal victory it was for him to see the Violence Against Women Act reauthorized last month."

Biden presented an award to the event's only male honorees, three brothers who run an NGO standing up for victims of human trafficking in India.

Before introducing the Kant brothers - Ravi, Nishi and Rishi - Biden declared that the U.S. government has an obligation to stand up for equal rights for women around the globe.

"In the end we know this is more than just policies and legislation," the vice president said. "We have to change fundamental norms and we have to let women around the world know that they aren't standing alone, that they don't have to accept their circumstances, because we won't accept it either."

Biden denounced practices like forced child marriage and sexual violence that occur around the world, calling them "barbaric." In Egypt, he said, we have a responsibility to support efforts to stop mistreatment of women.

"In each of these cases we have an obligation to act not just because we have a moral obligation, which should be self-evident to every human being, but because it's in all of our interests," Biden said. "Because again to quote my little sister, 'Peace, justice and equality can never be achieved when we use only half the brain power in the world.'"

Though neither Biden nor Clinton dropped any hints about future ambitions, a group of about 30 people gathered outside the Kennedy Center to urge Clinton to run for president in 2016.

The supporters and former campaign volunteers held signs imprinted with "Ready for Hillary," and some homemade signs reading things like "Power to the Pantsuit 2016," and "Hell Yea Hillary." They waved and shouted "2016 Hillary" as cars honked pulling into the Clinton event at the Kennedy Center this evening.

"It's going to happen, it's going to happen," Ray Anderson of Arlington, Va., said, "I think she'll run - she's got to save the country, right?"

The rally was organized by Ready for Hillary, a super PAC that launched recently and declared itself set to go should Clinton decide to run in the 2016 presidential campaign. Word was put out on local college campuses, Facebook as well as the super Pac's new website.

Supporters said they came out tonight to give Clinton the "little extra push" as she is making her decision whether to run.

"I am 99 percent sure, but that's why we're here - to make it 100 percent," McKayla Masen of Massachusetts answered, when asked whether she thinks Clinton will throw her hat into the ring. "It lets her know that people are supporting her."

Supporters out tonight predicted that if Clinton runs, in their opinion, she will win the White House.

"She's unbeatable," Jazmin Gargoum of D.C. declared.

Allida Black, chair of Ready for Hillary, is a professor at George Washington University's Elliott School of International Affairs and a long-time Hillary supporter. She said she believes "very, very strongly" that if ("when," according to Black) Clinton jumps in the ring, it is her job to have a base of eager supporters ready and waiting.

"Hillary is such a leader. I mean it's in her DNA she can't get rid of it," Black said. "The issues of my lifetime are the issues that she has spent her lifetime addressing, and one of the things that those of us who formed this organization believe is that she has the stamina, the wisdom, the shrewdness, the toughness and the hugest heart that this job requires."

Clinton's next speaking engagement is just days away. On Friday she is scheduled to address the Daily Beast's Women in the World Summit in New York.

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hillary-clinton-shares-stage-joe-biden-first-public-031609037--abc-news-politics.html

stephen hawking marion barry virginia beach jet crash ridiculously photogenic guy amanda bynes dui ghost ship tiger woods masters

Google Website Rank - Google Inbound Links | Orbit Media

Google considers more than 200 factors when ranking websites, but none are more important than links. When many websites link to a page, that page is more likely to rank in search engines. Link popularity matters. A lot.

But not all links are created equal. Keep reading, and in 5 minutes, you?ll know all about links:

  • How do links work in Google?
  • Why are some links better than others?
  • How can I tell the difference?
  • What can I do to get links and rank higher?

First, a Little History (Don?t like history? Scroll down to the tips)

Using links to measure relevance was Google?s great innovation. It?s how they crushed Alta Vista, Lycos, and everyone else. Those search engines were easier to manipulate. SEOs just crammed in a bunch of keywords and their pages ranked higher. Eventually people noticed that their search results weren?t so relevant.

Then Google started using link popularity as a ranking factor, and rankings became harder to fake. Search results became more relevant and people noticed. Today, Google handles two-thirds of all search traffic. This dominance comes from relevance and relevance comes from links.

Links Are Credibility

?

?

Keywords: A Million Links Won?t Help Unless?

?your page is relevant for a specific topic for which people are actually searching. This is why researching keywords is so important in SEO. The goal is to align the page with a relevant phrase.

?

?

Check the Competition

?

?

Link Text: The Words Within Those Links

The link text (or anchor text) is the word or words that make up the link. The link text for this link is ?this link.? Make sense?

Lots of times, link text is simply ?click here? or ?www.example.com.? But when link text includes a keyword, it can be another indication of relevance. If the links to a page say ?flying carpet safety? then Google is likely to believe that this is what the page is about.

Measuring Link Value

To see if a link from a website is valuable, look up the site on Open Site Explorer. This ?search engine of links? shows the link popularity of any site and measures it as ?domain authority? on a scale of 1 to 100. This is the size of the balls in the diagrams above! Keep in mind, the free version of this tool is limited, showing only some links and may be used only a few times per day.

Tip: It?s also valuable for checking competition during keyword research.

Trivia: The Google metric for link popularity is called ?PageRank? and is named after Google co-founder, Larry Page. Because PageRank is a scale of 1 to 10, I prefer using domain authority.

How to Get Links

Google has an army of math PhDs working hard to fight anyone who tries to artificially manipulate rankings. Any spammy, unethical attempts to drive traffic to a page could be devalued or even penalized.

Here are some ways to ?future-proof? your link building and SEO. Google changes their secret formula hundreds of times each year. It won?t bother you a bit. You?ll be safe and happy if you focus the natural approaches to link building.

Notice how each of these tactics has benefits beyond links.

1. Quality Content

Links happen naturally but only when the page is worth linking to. Google has told us all, time and again, that the key to ranking (and links) is great content. Just make the best page on the Internet for the topic; Google will take care of the rest.

You can deliberately create a ?linkable asset,? which is simply high-quality content with a web address on your site. It could be a webpage or blog post (not a PDF), but make it something good, like original research, an online tool, or even a useful checklist or buyer?s guide. If it?s good, the links will come.

Beyond Links: Quality content is effective at getting visitors to act. It?s good for converting visitors, not just for links.

2. Guest Blogging

One of the few ethical, reliable ways to get links is to write for other websites. You will generally get a link in the ?author bio,? and you may find a few opportunities to link to other pages on your site.

Guest blogging takes a lot of work. Writing something good enough to get accepted by a good blog takes time. And pitching a guest post is its own skill.

Beyond Links: Guest blogging often has social media benefits. It?s good for networking, not just for links.

3. PR

I don?t mean online press releases, which do not lead to quality links (did you think Google could be fooled so easily?). I?m talking about actual mentions in the media. Press mentions don?t always lead to links, although savvy PR firms know the value and do request a link.

Beyond Links: PR has obvious public awareness benefits. It?s good for your brand, not just for links.

4. Keep Your Eye Out For Legit Opportunities

If you?re part of an association or chamber, request a link. Find websites that already mentioned your business but haven?t linked. Ask nicely for the link. There are at least 131 other ways to get legitimate links. Just be aware, resourceful, and polite.

Other types of web marketing, such as social media and email newsletters, can indirectly lead to links. These traffic sources improve the visibility of your content, and some of those readers may write something and link to you.

Tip: Social activity, such as comments, sharing and +1s, may contribute directly to higher rankings, since Google may see these as evidence of quality content.

And Now You Know

If you made it this far, you now know why links matter to Google and how they can work for you. If you?re like me, you?ll never see the Internet the same way again!

By the way, Google actually wants you to understand this stuff. Google?s own Matt Cutts explains this in this video (skip to minute 7:30), and the Google Webmaster Blog is filled with this kind of SEO advice.

So be good, write well, and pay attention to your links!

Andy Crestodina is the Strategic Director of?Orbit Media, a web design company in Chicago. He?s also the author of?Content Chemistry, An Illustrated Guide to Content Marketing. You can find Andy on?Google+?and?Twitter.

Source: http://www.orbitmedia.com/blog/google-website-rank

Justin Bieber Smoking Weed Katherine Webb Cut for Bieber AJ McCarron Johnny Manziel ups Aj Mccarron Girlfriend