Friday, October 26, 2012

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Powell standing by Obama in 2012 presidential race

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Former Secretary of State Colin Powell, a longtime Republican, is sticking with President Barack Obama in this year's election.

He told CBS' "This Morning" he respects fellow Republican Mitt Romney but thinks he's been vague on many issues.

Powell said the president got the United States out of Iraq, has laid out a plan for leaving Afghanistan "and didn't get us into any new wars."

He praised Obama's economic performance, saying, while difficult choices are ahead on taxes, spending and budgetary policies, "steadily, I think we've begun to come out of the dive and we're gaining altitude."

Obama later called Powell to thank him.

Powell, a retired general, was also a White House national security adviser and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Powell says he's still a Republican.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/powell-standing-obama-2012-presidential-race-114641048--election.html

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Microsoft makes risky bet with Windows 8 release

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer arrives to give his presentation at the launch of Microsoft Windows 8, in New York, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Windows 8 is the most dramatic overhaul of the personal computer market's dominant operating system in 17 years. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer arrives to give his presentation at the launch of Microsoft Windows 8, in New York, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Windows 8 is the most dramatic overhaul of the personal computer market's dominant operating system in 17 years. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer gives his presentation at the launch of Microsoft Windows 8, in New York, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Windows 8 is the most dramatic overhaul of the personal computer market's dominant operating system in 17 years. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer gives his presentation at the launch of Microsoft Windows 8, in New York, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Windows 8 is the most dramatic overhaul of the personal computer market's dominant operating system in 17 years. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer walks in front of a screen of computer manufacturers after his presentation at the launch of Microsoft Windows 8, in New York, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Windows 8 is the most dramatic overhaul of the personal computer market's dominant operating system in 17 years. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer gives his presentation at the launch of Microsoft Windows 8, in New York, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Windows 8 is the most dramatic overhaul of the personal computer market's dominant operating system in 17 years. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Microsoft unveiled a radical redesign of its world-dominating Windows operating system Thursday, introducing a touch-enabled interface that attempts to bridge the gap between personal computers and fast-growing mobile devices powered by the company's fiercest competitors.

The debut of Windows 8 heralded the biggest change to the system since 1995, when the company first offered built-in Internet support. And with so much riding on it, the overhaul could be Microsoft's most important product since co-founder Bill Gates won the contract to build an operating system for IBM Corp.'s first personal computer in 1981.

To succeed, the new version will have to be innovative and elegant enough to attract consumers who've fallen in love with notebook computers, tablets and smartphones running software from Apple and Google.

"What you have seen and heard should leave no doubt that Windows 8 will shatter the perceptions about what a PC really is," Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer crowed at a New York launching event.

The first PCs and other devices running Windows 8 were to go on sale Friday.

The software is designed for use on a variety of machines ? desktop PCs, notebook computers and tablets, including Microsoft's new Surface tablet, the first computing device the company has manufactured after focusing almost exclusively on software for nearly 30 years.

The redesigned operating system represents an attempt to pull off a difficult balancing act as Microsoft maintains its highly profitable heritage in software while trying to get a foothold in the newer, more fertile field of mobile devices.

So far, the booming mobile device market has been defined and dominated by Apple's trend-setting iPhone and iPad, Google's pervasive Android software and Amazon's Kindle Fire tablets. Tablets have been undercutting the sales of desktop and laptop computers since Apple released its pioneering iPad in 2010.

Another version of Windows 8 will be released next week for smartphones, which are overwhelmingly dominated by Apple Inc. and Google Inc.'s Android software.

Microsoft is also opening a Windows 8 store featuring applications built to run on the system. The store is similar to the apps stores of Apple and Google and will include many of the same services.

About 670 million PCs currently run on Windows. But the owners of most existing Windows machines aren't expected to switch to Windows 8 for at least a year, maybe longer. That means most of Windows 8's early usage will come from consumers, businesses and government agencies that buy new devices with Windows 8 already installed.

There were few surprises because Microsoft Corp. has been previewing preliminary versions of Windows 8 for the past 13 months ? part of 1 billion hours of testing.

Still, the overhaul poses a big risk for the Redmond, Wash., company because Windows 8 looks and operates so much differently than previous versions.

"This is the biggest gamble they've ever made," said analyst Richard Doherty of the Envisioneering Group. "Does (Windows 8) do more things? Yes ... but it's not that easy to use."

Even when users revert to a desktop mode, the redesign discards the familiar "start" button and menu that Windows has had for 17 years, a change that critics believe will almost certainly provoke howls of protest. But many reviewers applaud Microsoft for overhauling Windows so it greets users with a mosaic of tiles displaying applications instead of relying on the desktop icons that served as the welcome mat for years.

In a brief interview Thursday, Ballmer expressed confidence that PC users would quickly realize the mosaic is easier and quicker to use than the old desktop format.

"You've got a whole screen as a start button!" he said.

Windows 8 comes with new controls. It marks the first time Microsoft has made touch-screen control the top priority, though the system can still be navigated with a keyboard and mouse in desktop mode.

"In the case of Windows 8, seeing, touching, clicking and swiping is really believing," Ballmer said. He also predicted the PCs running on Windows 8 will be hailed as the best machines ever made.

Some Windows 8 PCs will be hybrids that look like laptops, but also have detachable display screens containing a separate battery so they can work like tablets, too. Those devices will face direct competition from Microsoft's Surface.

On Thursday, Microsoft also spent time touting the Surface as a more versatile and durable alternative to the iPad, still the most popular tablet on the market.

At one point, a Microsoft executive dropped the Surface on the stage floor to demonstrate how difficult it is to break. In another gimmick, another Microsoft executive stood on a Surface with wheels to show it even had the strength of a skateboard.

The Surface goes on sale Friday, priced at $499 for a Wi-Fi-only tablet with 32 gigabytes of storage. Apple charges the same price for its latest full-size iPad with half the storage capacity. The price for a separate Microsoft "touch cover" that also serves as an attachable keyboard starts at $120.

Apple rolled out its own artillery earlier this week when it showed off a series of improvements to its own laptop and desktop computers and debuted the iPad Mini, a smaller and less expensive take on its top-selling tablet. Google will return fire Monday in New York at an event that it expected to introduce yet another smartphone and a larger version of the company's 7-inch Nexus tablet.

Microsoft's decision to sell its own piece of Windows 8 hardware threatens to alienate the device makers who license its software at the same time many consumers could be expressing their dismay and confusion with the redesigned operating system.

In an attempt to help people grasp and understand the changes, Microsoft is expected to spend an estimated $1 billion promoting Windows 8.

If Windows 8 is a hit, it could also help lift the fortunes of struggling PC makers, including Hewlett-Packard Co. and Dell Inc., whose stocks have plummeted in recent years amid the rise of mobile computing.

If Windows 8 is a flop, however, it will increase the pressure on Ballmer. Although Microsoft is far larger than when Ballmer became CEO nearly 13 years ago, the company's stock has lost nearly half its value as Apple, Google and Amazon steered computing in a new direction. Restless shareholders could start clamoring for Ballmer's ouster if Windows 8 doesn't shake up the state of the technology market as dramatically as Ballmer envisions.

Microsoft shares fell two cents Thursday to close at $27.88.

___

Liedtke reported from San Francisco.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2012-10-25-Microsoft-Windows%208/id-bc3b87a530f749f9943117df545ea250

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For Obama campaign, ?Romnesia? not a laughing matter

President Barack Obama (David Greedy/Getty Images)

DENVER, Colo.?It appears "Romnesia"?the term President Barack Obama coined last week at a campaign stop in Virginia to criticize Mitt Romney for shifting positions?is here to stay.

Sure, it's cute. The crowds love it. And since Friday, Obama has not delivered a campaign speech without mentioning it. But Obama and his team aren't laughing. Romnesia, they say, isn't a trivial idea. It's the most important issue of this presidential campaign.

"On Romnesia, this is about as big a thing you can have in a presidential election. It's about trust," White House senior adviser David Plouffe told reporters aboard Obama's press bus Wednesday. "You cannot trust Governor Romney."

Trust has become the driving theme of Obama's campaign in the final weeks before Election Day. Obama may have been careful about appearing too aggressive against Romney earlier in the fight, but ever since the presidential final debate, he has made his opinion clear: He not only disagrees with Romney on issues of policy, he's not afraid to say he thinks Romney has an integrity problem.

"We joke about Romnesia, but all this stuff leads to something that is essential to your choice," Obama told a crowd of about 16,000 people who rallied for him at Denver's City Park Wednesday. "Trust."

[Political junkie? Sign up for the Yahoo! News Daily Ticket newsletter today]

If the campaign finds the strategy to be effective, and it appears that so far it does, the trust theme could last until Election day.

"You have never seen a major party nominee this close to an election try and fudge what he's going to do as president," Plouffe said. "We want to make sure people understand the differences here. Governor Romney is someone in the closing of his campaign who has been dishonest about the position he intends to try and execute as president."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/obama-campaign-romnesia-no-laughing-matter-221929234--politics.html

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Did bacteria spark evolution of multicellular life?

ScienceDaily (Oct. 23, 2012) ? Bacteria have a bad rap as agents of disease, but scientists are increasingly discovering their many benefits, such as maintaining a healthy gut.

A new study now suggests that bacteria may also have helped kick off one of the key events in evolution: the leap from one-celled organisms to many-celled organisms, a development that eventually led to all animals, including humans.

Published this month in the inaugural edition of the new online journal eLife, the study by University of California, Berkeley, and Harvard Medical School scientists involves choanoflagellates (aka "choanos"), the closest living relatives of animals. These microscopic, one-celled organisms sport a long tail or flagellum, tentacles for grabbing food and are members of the ocean's plankton community. As our closest living relative, choanos offer critical insights into the biology of their last common ancestor with animals, a unicellular or colonial organism that lived and died over 650 million years ago.

"Choanoflagellates evolved not long before the origin of animals and may help reveal how animals first evolved," said senior author Nicole King, UC Berkeley associate professor of molecular and cell biology.

Since first starting to study choanoflagellates as a post-doc, King has been trying to figure out why some choanoflagellates live their lives as single cells, while others form colonies. After years of dead ends, King and undergraduate researcher Richard Zuzow discovered accidentally that a previously unknown species of bacteria stimulates one choanoflagellate, Salpingoeca rosetta, to form colonies. Because bacteria were abundant in the oceans when animals first evolved, the finding that bacteria influence choano colony formation means it is plausible that bacteria also helped to stimulate multicellularity in the ancestors of animals.

"I would be surprised if bacteria did not influence animal origins, since most animals rely on signals from bacteria for some part of their biology," King said. "The interaction between bacteria and choanos that we discovered is interesting for evolutionary reasons, for understanding how bacteria interact with other organisms in the oceans, and potentially for discovering mechanisms by which our commensal bacteria are signaling to us."

No one is sure why choanoflagellates form colonies, said one of the study's lead authors, UC Berkeley post-doctoral fellow Rosanna Alegado. It may be an effective way of exploiting an abundant food source: instead of individual choanoflagellates rocketing around in search of bacteria to eat, they can form an efficient bacteria-eating "Death Star" that sits in the middle of its food source and chows down.

Whatever the reasons, colonies of unicellular organisms may have led the way to more permanent multicellular conglomerations, and eventually organisms composed of different cell types specialized for specific functions.

Sequencing the choanoflagellate genome

King's 12-year search for the trigger of choanoflagellate colony development was reignited in 2005 when she started to prime cultures of the choanoflagellate S. rosetta for a genome sequencing project. The sequencing of another choanoflagellate, the one-celled Monosiga brevicollis, gave some clues into animal origins, but she needed to compare its genome to that of a colony-forming choanoflagellate.

Surprisingly, when Zuzow tried to isolate the colony-forming choanoflagellate by adding antibiotics to the culture dish to kill off residual bacteria, strange things happened, said King.

"When he treated the culture with one cocktail of antibiotics, he saw a bloom of rosette colony formation," she said, referring to the rose petal-shaped colonies that were floating in the culture media. "When he treated with a different cocktail of antibiotics, that got rid of colony formation altogether."

That "rather mundane but serendipitous observation" led Zuzow and Alegado to investigate further and discover that only one specific bacterial species in the culture was stimulating colony formation. When other bacteria outnumbered it, or when antibiotics wiped it out, colony formation stopped. Alegado identified the colony-inducing bacteria as the new species, Algoriphagus machipongonensis. While she found that other bacteria in the Algoriphagus genus can also stimulate colony formation, other bacteria like E. coli, common in the human gut, cannot.

Working with Jon Clardy of Harvard Medical School, a natural products chemist, the two labs identified a molecule -- a fatty acid combined with a lipid that they called RIF-1 -- that sits on the surface of bacteria and is the colony development cue produced by the bacteria.

"This molecule may be betraying the presence of bacteria," Alegado said. "Bacteria just sit around blebbing off little membrane bubbles, and if one of them has this molecule, the choanoflagellates all of a sudden say, 'Aha, there are some bacteria around here.'"

The signal sets off a predetermined program in the choanoflagellate that leads to cell division and the development of rosettes, she said. The molecule RIF-1 is remarkably potent; choanos detect and respond to it at densities that are about one billionth that of the lowest concentration of sugar that humans can taste in water.

"We are investigating this molecule from many sides. How and why do bacteria make it? How do choanoflagellates respond to it, and why?" King said. She and her team also are analyzing the genome of the colony-forming choanoflagellate and the colony-inducing bacteria for clues to their interaction.

King hopes that this unexpected signaling between choanoflagellates and bacteria can yield insights into other ways in which bacteria influence biology, particularly the biology of the gut.

Coauthors with King, Alegado and Clardy are Zuzow, now a graduate student at Stanford University; Laura Brown, now a faculty member at Indiana University; Shugeng Cao and Renee Dermenjian of Harvard Medical School; and Stephen Fairclough of UC Berkeley. Dermenjian is now at Merck.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California - Berkeley. The original article was written by Robert Sanders.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Rosanna A Alegado, Laura W Brown, Shugeng Cao, Renee K Dermenjian, Richard Zuzow, Stephen R Fairclough, Jon Clardy, Nicole King. A bacterial sulfonolipid triggers multicellular development in the closest living relatives of animals. eLife, 2012; 1 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.00013

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/jc083uSCCwo/121024101758.htm

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Timing is everything: Hormone use may reduce or increase Alzheimer's disease risk in women

ScienceDaily (Oct. 24, 2012) ? A new study suggests that women who begin taking hormone therapy within five years of menopause may reduce their risk of developing Alzheimer's disease. The research is published in the October 24, 2012, online issue of Neurology?, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

"This has been an area of debate because observational studies have shown a reduced risk of Alzheimer's disease with hormone therapy use, while a randomized controlled trial showed an increased risk. Our results suggest that there may be a critical window near menopause where hormone therapy may possibly be beneficial," said study author Peter P. Zandi, PhD, with Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. "On the other hand, if started later in life, hormone therapy could be associated with an increased risk of developing Alzheimer's disease."

For the study, researchers followed 1,768 women ages 65 and older for 11 years. The women provided a history of their hormone therapy use and the date at which menopause began. A total of 1,105 women had used hormone therapy, consisting of estrogen alone or in combination with a progestin. During the study, 176 women developed Alzheimer's disease dementia, including 87 of the 1,105 women who had taken hormone therapy compared to 89 of the 663 others.

The study found that women who began hormone therapy within five years of menopause had a 30-percent lower risk of Alzheimer's dementia than those who had not used hormone therapy. The risk was unchanged among other hormone users who had begun treatment more than five years after menopause, but a higher risk of dementia was observed among women who had started a combined therapy of estrogen and progestin when they were at least 65 years old.

"While this well-designed study supports the possibility that short-term hormone use may reduce the risk of Alzheimer's disease, more research is needed before we can make new clinical recommendations for women and their use of hormone therapy," said Victor Henderson, MD, MS, with Stanford University in Stanford, Calif., and a Fellow of the American Academy of Neurology, who wrote an accompanying editorial.

The study was supported by the National Institute on Aging.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Academy of Neurology.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Huibo Shao, John C.S. Breitner, Rachel A. Whitmer, Junmin Wang, Kathleen Hayden, Heidi Wengreen, Chris Corcoran, JoAnn Tschanz, Maria Norton, Ron Munger, Kathleen Welsh-Bohmer, and Peter P. Zandi. Hormone therapy and Alzheimer disease dementia: New findings from the Cache County Study WNL. Neurology, October 24, 2012 DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e318271f823

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/most_popular/~3/paDFrtUGZ70/121024164717.htm

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Oxygen's ups and downs in early atmosphere and ocean

ScienceDaily (Oct. 23, 2012) ? Most researchers imagine the initial oxygenation of the ocean and atmosphere to have been something like a staircase, but with steps only going up. The first step, so the story goes, occurred around 2.4 billion years ago, and this, the so-called Great Oxidation Event, has obvious implications for the origins and evolution of the first forms of eukaryotic life. The second big step in this assumed irreversible rise occurred almost two billion years later, coinciding with the first appearances and earliest diversification of animals.

Now a team led by geochemists at the University of California, Riverside challenges the simple notion of an up-only trend for early oxygen and provides the first compelling direct evidence for a major drop in oxygen after the first rise.

"Our group is among a subset of scientists who imagine that oxygen, once it began to accumulate in the ocean-atmosphere system, may have ultimately risen to very high levels about 2.3-2.2 billion years ago, perhaps even to concentrations close to what we see today," said Timothy Lyons, a professor of biogeochemistry and the principal investigator of the project. "But unlike the posited irreversible rise favored by many, our new data point convincingly to an equally impressive, and still not well understood, fall in oxygen about 200 million years later."

According to Lyons, this drop in oxygen may have ushered in more than a billion years that were marked by a return to low-oxygen concentrations at Earth's surface, including the likelihood of an oxygen-free deep ocean.

"It is this condition that may have set the environmental stage and ultimately the clock for the advance of eukaryotic organisms and eventually animals," he said.

Study results appear online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"The time window between 2.3 and 2.1 billion years ago is famous for the largest and longest-lived positive carbon isotope excursion in Earth history," said Noah Planavsky, a recent Ph.D. graduate from UC Riverside, current postdoctoral fellow at Caltech, and first author of the research paper.

He explained that carbon isotopes are fractionated during photosynthesis. When organic matter is buried, oxygen is released and rises in the biosphere. The burial of organic matter is tracked by the positive or heavy isotopic composition of carbon in the ocean.

"Some workers have attributed the carbon isotope excursion to something other than organic burial and associated release of oxygen," Planavsky said. "We studied the sulfur isotope composition of the same rocks used for the carbon isotope analyses -- from Canada, South Africa, the U.S., and Zimbabwe -- and demonstrated convincingly that the organic burial model is the best answer."

The researchers' sulfur data point to high sulfate concentrations in the ocean, which, like today, is a classic fingerprint of high oxygen levels in the ocean and atmosphere. Sulfate, the second most abundant negatively charged ion in the ocean today, remains high when the mineral pyrite oxidizes easily on the continents and is buried in relatively small amounts in the oxygen-rich ocean.

"What is equally impressive is that the rise in oxygen was followed by a dramatic fall in sulfate and therefore oxygen," Lyons said. "Why the rise and fall occurred and how that impacted the billion years or more of ocean chemistry that followed and the life within that ocean are hot topics of research."

The research team is thrilled to have found strong chemical evidence for oxygen variability on the early Earth.

"The idea that oxygen levels at Earth's surface went up and down must be vital in any effort to understand the links between environmental and biological evolution on broad, geologic time scales," Planavsky said.

He and Lyons were joined in the study by Andrey Bekker at the University of Manitoba, Axel Hofmann at the University of Johannesburg and Jeremy Owens at UCR.

The NASA Exobiology Program supported this research. A National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship and a postdoctoral fellowship from the NSF Division of Earth Sciences covered Planavsky's salary.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California - Riverside. The original article was written by Iqbal Pittalwala.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. N. J. Planavsky, A. Bekker, A. Hofmann, J. D. Owens, T. W. Lyons. Sulfur record of rising and falling marine oxygen and sulfate levels during the Lomagundi event. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1120387109

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/~3/CJXMFclzYEk/121023134812.htm

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Zynga Reports Third Quarter Revenue Of $317M, Shares Pop 12.7% In After-Hours On Casino Push

zynga-logoZynga said it saw third quarter revenue of $317 million, which was slightly above the lower range of $300 million to $305 million the company said it would see earlier this month.?Bookings came in at $256 million, up 11 percent year-over-year.?The company saw a loss of 7 cents per share, and its non-GAAP earnings, which exclude one-off share based compensation costs, were 0 cents per share. Because the revenues came in slightly ahead of the company's earlier forecasts, the company's shares popped 10 percent in after-hours trading to $2.36 from today's close of $2.12.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/rT2lW7mSs4c/

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NY Times public editor asks if incoming CEO fit to serve

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The New York Times public editor has questioned whether incoming chief executive Mark Thompson, the former head of the BBC, is fit to serve as the company's top official as a scandal shakes Britain's most prestigious broadcaster.

One Wall Street analyst called for the New York Times Co, which publishes its namesake newspaper and the Boston Globe, to delay Thompson taking over the company. That added more pressure on executives to address the matter on the company's earnings conference call on Thursday.

The BBC has been damaged by the scandal involving one of its most famous entertainers, the late Jimmy Savile, who is accused of sexually abusing hundreds of women and girls over the course of six decades. Savile, the eccentric host of the "Top of the Pops" music show, died last year at the age of 84.

Thompson held the top job as director general at the BBC from 2004 until September and also held the title of editor-in-chief, according to a description of the Director General's duties on the BBC website.

"How likely is it that (Thompson) knew nothing?" New York Times public editor Margaret Sullivan wrote in a blog post on Tuesday.

"His integrity and decision-making are bound to affect The Times and its journalism -- profoundly. It's worth considering now whether he is the right person for the job, given this turn of events."

A New York Times spokesman declined to comment.

No evidence has emerged in police and parliamentary investigations that shows Thompson knew about the decision to pull the Newsnight program or about Savile's alleged behaviour.

Thompson did not respond immediately to an email seeking comment about the public editor's column.

The allegations enveloping the British broadcaster hinge partly on the BBC's decision last year to shelve a show at its flagship "Newsnight" program investigating Savile. Rival broadcaster ITV aired a bombshell report this month about Savile and the claims against him, which had been rumoured for years.

Last week, Thompson said in a statement, "I was not notified or briefed about the Newsnight investigation, nor was I involved in any way in the decision not to complete and air the investigation.

In her post, Sullivan commended the paper for "reporting this story regularly".

As public editor and a representative of readers, Sullivan writes about issues affecting the newspaper independent from News York Times management, including chairman and publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. and executive editor Jill Abramson.

Since stepping into the role in September, she has already made waves including a post that criticized the paper's decision not to publish on the front page a story about a congressional hearing into attacks on a U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, last month in which four Americans were killed.

A representative from Sullivan's office said she declined to comment further on her blog about Thompson. An email sent to Sulzberger seeking comment was not returned immediately.

Sullivan's post on Thompson follows New York Times former executive editor Bill Keller, who wrote a column last week drawing a parallel between Savile and Penn State football coach Jerry Sandusky, who was recently sentenced to what amounts to life imprisonment for molesting children.

The New York Times tapped Thompson in August as CEO, a role that had been vacant eight months after the company ousted its former CEO Janet Robinson last year.

Thompson is expected to start with the Times on November 12. A New York Times spokesman told the paper on Tuesday, "We believe his experience and accomplishments make him the ideal person to take the helm of the Times Company as we focus on growing our businesses through digital and global expansion."

Like all Times executives, Thompson is an "at will" employee meaning he can leave or the company can terminate his employment at any time.

He stands to make $6 million next year including his base salary, bonuses based on targets and $3 million in performance-based options.

The unfolding Savile scandal has also caught the attention of some analysts in the United States.

"The New York Times should delay (Thompson's) start date until there is more clarity," said Doug Arthur, an analyst with Evercore Partners who follows the New York Times.

"It seems to me he will have to attend a hearing in the UK parliament. That is going to be a distraction. It's unfortunate. It's an unexpected complication."

In a hearing with British lawmakers on Tuesday, BBC Director General George Entwistle denied that the BBC helped cover up allegations that Savile preyed on women.

Thompson said the Newsnight investigation was mentioned to him by a journalist at a party last year, but he was later told it was not going ahead for journalistic reasons.

"I was never formally notified about the Newsnight investigation and was not briefed about the allegations they were examining and to what extent, if at all, those allegations related to Savile's work at the BBC," he said in a letter to a British lawmaker on Tuesday.

Thompson added he would be happy to appear in front of the parliamentary committee or any other inquiry in future.

In an interview with the New York Times on Tuesday, Thompson restated that he was not aware of the program until after it was cancelled.

"I talked to senior management in BBC News and reported the conversation I had at the party and asked was there a problem," Thompson told the paper.

"I did not impede or stop the Newsnight investigation, nor have I done anything else that could be construed as untoward or unreasonable."

Newsnight's editor, Peter Rippon, stepped aside on Monday after the BBC said his explanation for shelving the story had been "inaccurate or incomplete".

(Reporting By Jennifer Saba; Editing by Edward Tobin, Paul Tait, Jean Yoon, Theodore d'Afflisio, Andrew Hay)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ny-times-public-editor-calls-incoming-ceo-thompson-055245548--finance.html

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Forbes Presents Collection of Estate Planning Articles - The Wiewel ...

With all the noise these days about taxing the rich and the future of the federal estate tax, the message that ordinary folks also need to plan, to protect themselves and their families, gets drowned out.

Did you know we just passed National Estate Planning Awareness Week (Oct. 15-21)? Don?t worry if you missed it, estate planning is a continuous endeavor and one that is never out of season.

While proper estate planning is no Do-It-Yourself project and competent legal counsel should be retained, there is plenty of literature available to help you learn the basics of estate planning and beyond. Leave it to Forbes to compile ?The Forbes Guide To Estate Planning? from its storehouse of past estate planning articles. Of course, these 40 some articles give only the Forbes perspective, but it?s a quick glimpse at the panoply of topics and worth a read.

If you still need information on estate planning topics and strategies, contact your legal and financial counselors in order to gain knowledge about protecting your family and your assets.

Reference: Forbes (October 14, 2012) ?The Forbes Guide To Estate Planning?

Source: http://blog.texastrustlaw.com/2012/10/forbes-presents-collection-of-estate-planning-articles.html

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Jennifer Lopez Flaunts Her Abs in London

10/22/2012 at 04:30 PM EDT

They say if you've got it, flaunt it ? and Jennifer Lopez did just that.

The mother of twins exposed her enviable abs while out and about in London on Monday with boyfriend Casper Smart.

Clad in a tight-fitting cropped black top with black pants and a long, gray coat, the physically fit star, 43, strolled alongside her man, who was also dressed in a similar color scheme.

Lopez worked hard with trainer Tracy Anderson on a custom routine that targeted the area from the singer's abs to her hips.

"We don't want her natural beauty to go out of balance," Anderson told PEOPLE over the summer. "[Overly] ripped abs would ruin her look."

In the end, Lopez "loves the results," according to Anderson.

Source: http://feeds.people.com/~r/people/headlines/~3/8Y0DZilyALs/0,,20641361,00.html

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Florida fungal meningitis cases rise to 19; newest case in Marion



An image through a microscope of the Exserohilum rostratum fungus involved in the current meningitis outbreak. It's a common mold found in soil and on plants. (AP Photo/CDC)

Published: Tuesday, October 23, 2012 at 2:14 p.m.
Last Modified: Tuesday, October 23, 2012 at 2:14 p.m.

The Florida Department of Health on Tuesday confirmed a 19th case of fungal meningitis associated with contaminated steroid injections.

The latest case is a 66-year-old Marion County woman who received an injection six weeks ago from the Florida Pain Clinic in Ocala.

Officials have determined that the medicine she received was from one of the contaminated lots manufactured and distributed by the New England Compounding Center (NECC).

Almost 300 patients nationwide have contracted fungal meningitis attributed to tainted methylprednisolone acetate, which is a steroid used for epidural back injections. There have been 23 deaths, three of them in Marion County.

Dr. John Armstrong, the state?s secretary of health, said the average age of affected patients in Florida is 70. Nationwide, it?s 65.

In Florida, the average incubation period for the fungal meningitis is 14 days, with a range of seven to 81 days.

Nationally, the average is 22 days with a range of four to 89, Armstrong said during a Tuesday afternoon news conference.

He said the state has not spent additional dollars on this investigation; rather, the cost has been covered through the Department of Health?s regular budget.

Source: http://www.ocala.com/article/20121023/articles/121029916

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AIGCAF Provides $100 Million Loan ? World Leasing News

Oct 22, 2012

AIGCAF Provides $100 Million Loan

AIG Commercial Asset Finance (AIGCAF) and its affiliates have provided a $100 million long-term loan to Basin Electric Power Cooperative (Basin Electric) headquartered in Bismarck, North Dakota. ?Basin Electric is constructing two 45 megawatt gas-fired electrical generating stations in northwest North Dakota. ?The plants are scheduled to go on-line in mid-2013. Proceeds from the loan will be used in completion of construction and for general corporate purposes. ?This financing follows a $70 million loan by CAF and its affiliates to Dakota Coal Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of Basin Electric.

Andrew M. Serri, CEO and General Manager for Basin Electric, noted that AIGCAF?s expertise in financing long-lived assets played a key role in Basin Electric choosing AIGCAF as a financing source. ??Once again, AIGCAF has stepped to the forefront and shown its commitment to Basin Electric and its overall mission of supplying low cost power to its member cooperatives. ?This is a business relationship the parties plan to build upon in years to come.?

Basin Electric is one of the largest electric generation and transmission cooperatives in the US with over 5,000 megawatts of generation capacity serving portions of nine states. ?The company maintains more than 2,250 miles of high voltage transmission lines.

Kirk Phillips, Senior Vice President of Direct Originations at AIGCAF, noted that creating financial solutions tailored to the specific needs of AIGCAF?s customers ? coupled with many years of experience in asset financing ? contributed to the timely closing of this transaction, ?We are pleased to have the opportunity to provide for this additional request from Basin Electric, a highly valued customer ? and to do so within the customer?s timeframe. ?This is another example where we leveraged our broad expertise in equipment finance along with our focus on developing direct and lasting relationships with our customers to create a winning transaction for both parties.?
About AIG Commercial Asset Finance
AIG Commercial Asset Finance is a leading provider of secured and unsecured corporate, project, equipment, and select commercial real estate loans to qualified companies in a variety of industries including utilities, manufacturing, transportation, healthcare, and technology. Target customers are located in the U.S., Canada and other select international markets.
Contact: Dan Rouse
dan.rouse@aig.com

Source: http://www.worldleasingnews.com/news/aigcaf-provides-100-million-loan/

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Ryan to deliver speech on helping middle class

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan is set to deliver a speech in Ohio outlining how Mitt Romney would help middle-class families.

Aides say Ryan will tell voters Wednesday that the country cannot afford four more years of President Barack Obama. They say the Wisconsin congressman specifically plans to reach out to low-income people and tell them that Romney would be better for them than the president.

Ryan also will tell voters that Romney will keep social safety nets in place for those who need them, and offer parents more choices to educate their children.

The speech is set for Wednesday afternoon at Cleveland State University in politically important Ohio.

Both campaigns are fighting hard to win the state on Nov. 6.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-10-23-Ryan/id-3d8b398673794857bb26d550e562ba8d

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Motorcycle Sales Exec, Norfolk, Motor Trade Job job at in Attleborough

is in need of Motorcycle Sales Exec, Norfolk, Motor Trade Job on Tue, 23 Oct 2012 02:37:53 GMT. Automotive, Motor Trade Job: Motorcycle Sales Executive Required in Norfolk. Salary: £12,000 Basic, OTE £30,000 Full Time, Permanent Motor Trade Jobs / Automotive Vacancies: Automotive Motorcycle Sales Executive Required in Norfolk. If you have a passion for Motorcycles, and want to be the best, this is the perfect job for you! My Client is a Motorcycle Main Dealership in the Norfolk area...

Location: Attleborough, England

Description: is in need of Motorcycle Sales Exec, Norfolk, Motor Trade Job right now, this job will be assigned in England. More complete informations about this job opportunity please read the description below. Automotive, Motor Trade Job: Motorcycle Sales Executive Required in Norfolk.

Salary: £12,000 Basic, OTE £30,000 Full Time, Permanent

Motor Trade Jobs / Automotive Vacancies:
Automotive Motorcycle Sales Executive Required in Norfolk.

If you have a passion for Motorcycles, and want to be the best, this is the perfect job for you! My Client is a Motorcycle Main Dealership in the Norfolk area, currently looking to recruit a Motorcycle Sales Executive for their busy Sales department. As a Motorcycle Sales Executive you will have experience of Sales, including upselling of products as well as a desire to provide the highest levels of customer care.

My Client is looking for a Sales Executive who can speak with knowledge, confidence and enthusiasm. Experience of Sales within either Car or Motorcycle dealerships would be ideal, but is not considered essential.

You will ideally live near, or be able to travel to the Norfolk area. The successful candidate must have a Motorcycle License, and be passionate about Motorcycles.

Our Client offers a fantastic salary, company m! otorcycle, and a very good bonus scheme.

To apply ple! ase send your accurate and current CV to Rebecca Mead, quoting Job Ref: J26797.

Please remember to add your home phone number, mobile number, email address and full address to your CV. If this information is missing it slows down our process and may result in us not being able to contact you.

Follow us on Twitter N/A /MotorTradeJobs

Perfect Placement UK Ltd is an employment agency acting as such under the Employment Act 2008 and Employment Agencies Act 1973 (and amendments).

We have many different Motor Trade Jobs available from Service Manager, Service Team Leader, Aftersales Manager, Sales Executive, General Sales Manager, Sales Manager, Business Manager, Sales Admin, Body Shop Manager, Paint Sprayer, Panel Beater, Bodyshop Estimator, Dealer Principal, Motor Mechanic, Service Advisor, Motor Cycle Technicians & Mechanics, Vehicle Technician, Light Commercial Vehicle Technicians, HGV Fitters, Trade Parts Representative, Parts Advisor, Par! ts Manager, Workshop Controller, Fast Fit, Tyre Fitters, Warranty Administrator, Rental Advisor, Car Valetor, Collection & Delivery Drivers.

WE ARE THE PREMIER AUTOMOTIVE RECRUITMENT AGENCY FOR MOTOR TRADE JOBS IN NORFOLK TM

Lots of Motor Trade Jobs throughout Norfolk including North Norfolk, South Norfolk, Cromer, Diss, Dereham, Fakenham, Great Yarmouth, Holt, Kings Lynn, Norwich, Stalham, Swaffham, Hunstanton, Thetford, North Walsham, Wymondham, and Attleborough.

Call Us Now For Motor Trade Jobs, Working in Automotive Main Car Dealerships such as Mercedes, Audi, BMW, VW, Jaguar, Land Rover, Volvo, Bentley, Saab, Lexus, Toyota, Mazda, Ford, Peugeot, Renault, Citroen, Vauxhall, Nissan and many more.

Copyright © Perfect Placement UK Limited 2012.

The reproduction, transmission or other use of all or any part of this advert to or in any media, without Perfect Placement UK Limited's prior written permission is prohibited and may re! sult in criminal or civil actions.

Please contact our offices ! on N/A if you wish to discuss this copyright.
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If you were eligible to this job, please send us your resume, with salary requirements and a resume to .

Interested on this job, just click on the Apply button, you will be redirected to the official website

This job will be started on: Tue, 23 Oct 2012 02:37:53 GMT


Apply Motorcycle Sales Exec, Norfolk, Motor Trade Job Here

Source: http://nuneatonjoblist.blogspot.com/2012/10/motorcycle-sales-exec-norfolk-motor.html

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Philips Q3 earnings rise, growth economies help

AMSTERDAM (AP) ? Royal Philips Electronics NV, the maker of electric shavers, light bulbs and medical imaging equipment, saw earnings more than double in the third quarter, thanks to modest growth at all its business lines as well as the disposal of its loss-making television business.

Net profit rose to ?169 million ($220 million) from ?74 million in the same period a year ago, when Philips booked a ?54 million loss on televisions. Sales rose 3.4 percent to ?6.13 billion.

Philips shares rose 2.7 percent to ?19.52 in early trading Monday.

Despite the upbeat trading performance, Philips CEO Frans van Houten said the company is facing stiff "headwinds" with its biggest market, Europe, in decline, China growing more slowly, and with the U.S. market showing "more and more uncertainty related to elections and the so-called 'fiscal cliff'."

Van Houten said the company's best-selling new products include a line of home cookers endorsed by celebrity chef Jamie Oliver ? the first of a product line they plan to introduce together; docking stations for Apple and Android smartphones; and a combination shaver/beard trimmer/hair-clipper "targeting young guys, to make sure they convert to electric rather than wet shaving."

He said LED lighting sales were up 50 percent year on year, with projects to illuminate the San Francisco Bay Bridge, among others. Nearly a quarter of the lights Philips sells are now LEDs.

Because of the transition to LEDs, Van Houten said the company, which is the world's largest lighting maker by sales, will have to get rid of some plants that make traditional bulbs.

Philips has previously announced it plans to take around ?300 million in restructuring charges in the fourth quarter.

Philips' performance differed strongly by geography. In mature economies, sales of consumer products and lighting sales dipped, but sales of medical imaging machines grew. In developing economies sales were up 10 percent in all categories.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/philips-q3-earnings-rise-growth-economies-help-072130856--finance.html

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Immune Cell Research Fuels Undergrad's Passion for Career, University

Newswise ? Three years ago, Kate Kondratuk didn?t want anything to do with South Dakota State University.

Like many of her classmates, the 2011 Brookings High School graduate thought her best bet for an education was at a private college or large university outside the state. Kondratuk admits she chose SDSU because she didn?t want to take out a loan to pay for her education and State offered her a good scholarship.

?What I?ve realized is that you?re as close or as far away from home as you want to be,? Kondratuk said. Today she?d like to get on the loudspeaker at Brookings High School and tell her peers, ?Hey, you guys need to look at this school.?

Her enthusiasm comes from the opportunity she?s had to do undergraduate research in microbiology and the lessons she?s learned from this work.

A sophomore, Kondratuk is already known for the work she?s doing with bovine viral diarrhea virus and the immune cells called neutrophils that rush through the blood stream to destroy any bacteria that enters the cow?s body.

Began with Microbiology Research Fellowship

Kondratuk was awarded a 2012 American Society of Microbiology Undergraduate Research Fellowship to study how these immune cells defend the cow?s body and how the virus neutralizes them. Her fellowship provided a $4,000 stipend for her research work, a two-year student membership and a trip to the society?s presentation institute and general meeting in Denver in May 2013.

Although she will finish the fellowship in December, she estimated that what she wants to accomplish on the neutrophil project will take the rest of her undergraduate career. She will continue her research through the university?s honors college as an independent study project.

Her adviser, professor Chris Chase of the veterinary and biomedical sciences department, agreed. ?This is not a trivial project,? he said. Very little research has been done on these immune cells since 1970 simply because it is so difficult to work with them. ?They die just like that,? Kondratuk said as she snapped her fingers.

Chase explained that the virus?s name is a misnomer because diarrhea is the final symptom. ?It is an immune-suppressive disease,? he said. ?White blood cell count goes down, and the animal becomes susceptible to other infections.? Pneumonia and respiratory diseases are the most common outcomes.

When an infection invades the cow?s body, neutrophils are released into the blood stream and rush to the site of the infection to eliminate it quickly, Chase explained. Once they spring into action, these immune cells live for only six hours.

Immune cells difficult to culture

Before Kondratuk can figure out how viral diarrhea neutralizes these first responders, she said, ?I have to work through a lot of kinks.? Once the blood is drawn from the cow, she has had to learn how to isolate and culture these tricky little critters.

?On a given day, it can be a good day or a really bad day when the neutrophils become active in the centrifuge, clump and die,? she said.

On the bad days, Kondratuk heads to the library to dig through the literature to find out what could have gone wrong, how to do it better next time and how to fill in the blanks for future experiments.

Kondratuk has figured out that if the cow has been running or stressed before the blood is drawn, the cells are more likely to clump. ?They are very delicate,? she said. She also puts the tubes of blood on ice as soon as they are drawn and centrifuges them at 4 degrees Celsius.

?Cold is the key to keep them from getting activated,? she said. Once activated, they die quickly, and she must wait until more blood can be collected.

Despite the challenges of working with these cells, Kondratuk said, ?I think they are cool. The neutrophils eat the bacteria and spit out extracellular traps that catch and kill foreign bodies.?

Undergrad become an expert

?She?s become the expert,? Chase said. She has developed her own support network, meeting the leading authority on neutrophils at the U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service National Animal Disease Center at Ames, Iowa and collaborating with a group of experts at the University of Wisconsin.

Next Kondratuk wants to see what the virus does to the neutrophils to prevent them from leaving the bloodstream as they normally would. She will begin by comparing healthy immune cells with those exposed to the virus.

?People don?t know about these cells,? Kondratuk said, ?and I want to find out everything I can.?

Kondratuk is considering a career in biomedical research and plans on getting her doctorate in immunology and infection diseases first and then a medical degree.

?I love the immune system, particularly the complex interactions of pathogens and immune systems,? Kondratuk said. ?I feel like I?ve had an amazing opportunity to start my career already through undergraduate research.?

About South Dakota State University

Founded in 1881, South Dakota State University is the state?s Morrill Act land-grant institution as well as its largest, most comprehensive school of higher education. SDSU confers degrees from eight different colleges representing more than 175 majors, minors and specializations. The institution also offers 29 master?s degree programs, 12 Ph.D. and two professional programs.

The work of the university is carried out on a residential campus in Brookings, at sites in Sioux Falls, Pierre and Rapid City, and through Cooperative Extension offices and Agricultural Experiment Station research sites across the state.


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Good workers missed by picky employers

Getty Images stock

If I make my resume eight pages long, and include 100 keywords, maybe I'll get noticed!

By Allison Linn, TODAY

There are about 12 million unemployed people in the United States, and yet many employers will tell you that one of the biggest problems they face is finding qualified workers.

That's sure to leave many Americans - and particularly unemployed Americans - scratching their heads.

Researchers will tell you the gripe actually?has merit in some fields, such as highly skilled manufacturing.

But as the job market slowly recovers, many also are pointing their fingers back at employers, who they say have become overly choosy and?too reliant on technology that won't always spot the best candidate.

Rusty Rueff, a career and workplace expert for the company information website Glassdoor, calls it the ?arrogance of supply.?

?(Employers have) become pickier and pickier and pickier, and what?s happened is all the technology has allowed you to become even more stringent, to a fault in some cases,? Rueff said.

Anyone who's looked for a job in the past few years knows exactly what kind of technology Rueff is talking about. Most companies now rely on automated systems that scan resumes for keywords, automatically weeding out people who don't list a certain education level or an?experience with very specific technologies.

The resume scanners do have benefits for both employers and jobseekers, however.

In such a tight job market, some companies may get 1,000 applications for a single job opening, said John Sullivan, professor of management at San Francisco State University.?The prospect of actually reading all those resumes is mind-numbing,?and a computer that screens applicants is preferable to even more haphazard systems.

Sullivan said he's known of managers who?only looked at?resumes that came in on colored paper, or rejected those he didn't believe were stapled correctly. By comparison, scanning for keywords is much more precise.

Still, even Sullivan admits that submitting your resume electronically is virtually useless unless you know how to work the system and find other ways to get an edge.

?We call it the black hole,? he said.

To get noticed these days, Sullivan said he recommends that people write pages-long resumes that include virtually every keyword in the job description. But even then, he says, you may never get flagged unless you can use your networking skills to connect with the hiring manager in another way.

That's because automated screening systems won't necessarily spot even the best candidate, and not all managers are checking them thoroughly.

Brandi Britton, district president for the temporary services and recruitment firm OfficeTeam, said it?s all too common for outside recruiters to identify a candidate, only to find that the candidate applied through the company's system but then fell through the cracks.

?Companies need processes to keep track of their applicants, but sometimes those processes are what?s preventing them from finding (candidates) in the first place,? Britton said.

It's especially tough for people who have the bigger uphill battle of convincing an employer they can do a job even though they may not have one of those keyword requirements, like a college degree.

Russ Wichelman, 60, has been looking for work since last November, when he lost his job as a engineering and programming manager for a manufacturing company.

Although he has 30 years of experience in the field, Wichelman fears he isn?t being considered for some jobs because automated resume screeners are often looking for a college degree. That?s something the Royse City, Texas, resident doesn?t have.

?It doesn?t matter if I?m qualified or not. It?s like, the degree. If (you) don?t got it, they aren?t talking to you,? he said.

In the past, Wichelman said he would often physically go to the potential employer to fill out an application and hopefully get a foot in the door. But these days, he said, even that doesn?t help.

?Now I go to places and they say, ?No, you have to go online and such and such a website and apply on there,'? he said.

Ioana Elena Marinescu, assistant professor of economics at the University of Chicago, has for several years been working with the jobs site CareerBuilder.

One thing that surprised her is that jobseekers typically apply for employment?that does?fit their skills. That could debunk the idea that many people are flooding the system with resumes in the hopes of getting a hit.

Still, she said, that doesn?t mean that employers and employees are doing a great job finding each other.

One issue is that companies - knowing the unemployment rate is so high - may write a job description that is so detailed and arduous that almost no one would be qualified for the job. She said CareerBuilder actually offers a tool that can show a company whether anyone in their system could match the qualifications, to help avoid that problem.

?Some employers seem to feel that because the labor market is the way it is, all of a sudden they can be super demanding,? Marinescu said.

For example, an employer may think they need to find an employee who has a whole bunch of skills, such as knowledge of several programming languages. In reality, they might have an easier time finding an employee if they focused on just one of those programming skills, and planned to train the worker in the others.

But many employers these days see training as a last resort, believing that they shouldn't have to spend money on training when there are so many unemployed people out there who are desperate for a job.

That means the onus is?on jobseekers to either train themselves or to work hard to convince the employer that they can learn fast.

Matt Youngquist, president of the Bellevue, Wash.-based consulting firm Career Horizons, said employers these days are much like consumers: They want things cheap, quick and perfect.

?They want someone who can come in on day one and produce results with very little or no training, and there are not many candidates who can do that,? Youngquist said.

The tight job market also has made employers demanding in other ways. Britton said companies also risk losing candidates because they are taking so long to decide who to hire. Many applicants are now subjected to multiple interviews, tests and screens - and the best ones may move on before the company has made a decision.

Another barrier: Salaries. Britton said many employers think they can offer lower salaries because of the weak economy, but that can backfire in fields where workers are in higher demand.

?There is a bit of an unrealistic idea of what an employer can get for what they sometimes want to pay,? she said.

Researchers say there are some good explanations for the problem. In the past five years, many people who worked in fields like construction or manufacturing have lost their jobs, while fields like health care have seen some of the strongest growth. It?s no surprise that it?s tough for someone with a background in construction to get a job as a nurse.

Although they may gripe about employer practices, experts say the truth is that it?s still a buyer?s market. That means employers have little incentive to change their practices, and jobseekers need to learn to adapt.

Youngquist, the career coach, recommends that jobseekers have multiple resumes that are tailored to specific jobs, so they are more likely to make it through electronic screens. They also may need to be flexible about things like salary and hours, especially if they are currently unemployed.

But, he said, jobseekers also need to realize that they should be spending less time on the resume and more time on the good, old-fashioned networking that is so often the key to landing a job.

For many people, that means becoming more of an extrovert and a sales person than they are naturally comfortable with.

?Talent is only half the battle,? he said. ?Self-promotion is the other half."

Do you think employers have become too picky?

Source: http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2012/10/22/14542224-how-employers-make-it-hard-to-find-good-workers?lite

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CPT SAYS 48V INITIATIVE WILL HELP FACILITATE ENERGY ...

The UK-based low carbon engine technology specialist, Controlled Power Technologies (CPT), says that the new 48 volt standard proposed by leading automakers provides an ideal compromise for performance and cost in the development of a new generation of affordable super fuel efficient cars.??With global CO2 emission targets rapidly converging, the auto industry has only a decade to achieve almost another 30 per cent reduction by 2022 putting pressure on automakers to come up with innovative and affordable technical solutions.

?The convergence of global standards for fuel economy and CO2 emissions means that the auto industry will need to embrace exhaust gas energy recuperation as well as kinetic energy recovery by electro-mechanical means as the next major step for CO2 reduction,? says Nick Pascoe chief executive and chief technology officer at Controlled Power Technologies.?? Speaking on the eve of the Engine Expo international trade fair for automotive powertrain design and technology held at Novi in Michigan he commented.? ?Energy recuperation is the key to ground-breaking solutions that the motorist can afford and this has caused the industry to re-visit the previously mooted higher than 12 volts, but less than 60 volts, electrical architecture.? Mild electrification deploying a proposed 48 volt standard will be a major factor for enabling the required motor-generator efficiency and power levels.?

Pascoe says the industry has reckoned the additional cost to the motorist to achieve the required 30 per cent reduction in CO2 emissions is estimated at $1,500 for a family sized saloon.? This is significantly less than the $7,500 US federal subsidy for electric vehicles; an on cost that would seem to remain unavoidable unless there is a significant breakthrough to reduce battery cost.

CPT gained significant prominence and credibility in the industry last year when it sold its VTES electric supercharger business in December 2011 to Valeo for ?30 million.? An elite team of automotive engineers, originally established in the UK by Ford then Visteon, had worked on the technology for more than 10 years.? With extraordinary vision their switched-reluctance motor-generator technology was developed from the outset to be scalable to higher voltages.? The choice of a switched-reluctance electrical machine was also carefully researched.

CPT is similarly focused on bringing its closely related Cobra, SpeedStart and Tigers technology to market readiness.? Cobra is a water cooled electric supercharger for commercial vehicle and off highway applications.? SpeedStart is a powerful water cooled starter-motor and generator able to provide torque assist to the engine and harvest kinetic energy.? Tigers is a water cooled turbine integrated gas energy recovery system.

?Automakers have a broad palette of hybrid technology options,? says Pascoe.? ?Some however are more expensive than others.? Mild and full hybrid vehicles including plug-in hybrids, for example, operating between 200 and 600 volts, incur significant additional development and product costs to the automaker, which then have to be passed on to the consumer or absorbed by the OEM; hence the need for governments to subsidise electric vehicles. ?Consequently such hybrid and electric vehicles are unaffordable for most motorists even with government subsidies.?

The recuperation energy potential of a downsized gasoline engine equipped with a powerful water-cooled starter-motor and generator is significant says Pascoe.? At 48 volts SpeedStart is able to provide torque assist to the engine for acceleration, reduce fuelling during cruise conditions, and harvest kinetic energy during braking.? Brake energy alone is worth more than 60kJ/km accumulated over the New European Drive Cycle and is just waiting to be harvested.

?Not only does 48 volts provide a solution for more efficient powertrains, but also for meeting other increasing vehicle energy demands already exceeding the capabilities of a 12V/3kW alternator.? This includes electrically powered cooling fans, water pumps, and electric power assisted steering ? all part of hybridisation ? as well as improving passenger safety, security and comfort systems.? These higher power electrical devices would all benefit from higher voltage systems.? However, increasing the voltage beyond 60 volts requires much greater safety consideration leading to a significant increase in cost.? The specification for 48 volts is still evolving, and there may yet be more than one, but there is real pressure from global automakers to conclude the specification as quickly as possible,? says Pascoe.

Already developed for 12 volts, the CPT SpeedStart system is a powerful belt-driven starter-motor and generator with its control and power electronics fully integrated into the liquid cooled device.? It?s also the world?s first liquid cooled switched reluctance motor-generator developed for automotive stop-start.? Switched reluctance machines have the benefit of eliminating increasingly expensive rare earth materials used in permanent magnet motors, which currently predominate throughout the industry for alternators, conventional starter motors and first generation stop-start systems.

The CO2 and fuel economy benefits of 12 volt based stop-start combined with SpeedStart?s efficient high current electrical generation and regeneration can be as much as 20 per cent.? The driver benefits also include its high torque fast response, leading to a more desirable and comfortable stop-start with a unique ?Driver Change of Mind? capability to ensure that its operation is not intrusive to normal driving styles.?? The availability of this market ready technology is expected to be in the next generation of cars reaching dealer showrooms in 2015.

Meanwhile, CPT anticipates having a 48 volt SpeedStart technology demonstrator running in 2013.? Bench testing has indicated an increase in transient performance to 10kW of generation power, depending upon system specification.? And the motoring power through direct torque assist to the engine has similarly increased, though duration becomes a critical parameter.? The engine breakaway torque at zero rpm can also be increased to 95Nm ? enough to start even large automotive engines.

?A combination of electric launch assist, quasi-continuous electric motoring for fuelling optimisation, and energy recuperation with electric brake assist not only has a measurable impact on NEDC emissions but offers significant real world fuel economy,? says Pascoe.? ?However, this additional benefit can only be achieved at 48 volts.? Compared with our 12 volt LC Super Hybrid technology demonstrator based on a VW Passat 1.4 litre TSI model it would further reduce the CO2 emissions by 4 to 8 per cent, depending upon drivability targets, and the 0-60mph acceleration further reduced from nine seconds.? And this is for a large family saloon weighing 3,200lbs (1,450kg) with a small 1.4 litre gasoline engine delivering 42mpg US (50mpg imperial) fuel economy in our 12 volt demonstrator with performance already equivalent to a 2-litre turbocharged diesel engine costing at least $3,000 more.?

CPT will also next year secure the first vehicle installation of its turbine integrated gas energy recovery system known as TIGERS in a UK government Technology Strategy Board (TSB) co-funded project.? The ?Vehicle Integrated Powertrain Energy Recovery? project known as VIPER will build on CPT?s involvement in the Ricardo-led ?HyBoost? programme, which was similarly part funded by the TSB.? The VIPER project aims to develop more thermally efficient engines and technologies for thermal energy recovery.? The programme objectives will show how this can be achieved over a broad range of vehicles in part by optimising the control of heat energy from gasoline and diesel engines.? The VIPER project explores several technologies for recovering energy otherwise lost as waste heat, and is being led by Jaguar Land Rover.? Other consortium members include Ford, IAV, BP, Dana, the University of Nottingham and Imperial College London.

CPT is already successfully running TIGERS on an engine dynamometer at 650 degrees centigrade, which is close to the engine exhaust temperature of 800 degrees in a running vehicle.? The TIGERS system has a generating efficiency of more than 70 per cent and a maximum operating speed of 63,000rpm.? The liquid cooled generator is targeted to recover 2-4kW from an engine?s hot exhaust gases.? For a comparison with energy recuperation from electric brake assist this is equivalent to SpeedStart recuperating 40-75 per cent of the braking energy generated during an NEDC test.

The VIPER programme will compare the TIGERS installation with thermo electric generators (TEGs)where power levels and system cost remain major issues.? The TIGERS-V platform will also be used in the programme to develop a sensing system; a stator and rotor design for continuous steady state operation; low pressure ratio high efficiency turbine optimisation; and bypass system design and development.

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CPT

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CPT turbine integrated gas energy recovery system known as Tigers

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CPT?s low cost solutions for CO2 reduction are being exhibited this week at the Engine Expo at the Suburban Collection Showplace in Novi, where the company will be presenting its technology on booth E218.? The show runs from Tuesday to Thursday 23-25 Oct.

In addition, CPT?s 12V demonstrator is being shipped to the US for evaluation by US automakers and will also be presented at the Battery Show next month at the same exhibition venue in Novi.? The car will be displayed by Exide Technologies, which has supplied the advanced lead-carbon batteries.?? Representing the state of the art in affordable CO2 reduction, the LC Super Hybrid was first unveiled at the 2012 Geneva International Motor Show.? The technology demonstrator is helping to define a whole new class of low cost micro-mild hybrid vehicles.? The car has been developed in cooperation with the Advanced Lead-Acid Battery Consortium, an international research group based in the US in North Carolina, which has funded the vehicle and is also exhibiting at the Battery Show.

Based on a series production 1.4-litre turbocharged VW Passat TSI model ? generally considered an industry benchmark for fuel economy in this size of vehicle ? the LC Super Hybrid is already providing carmakers with real world validation of CPT?s pioneering and innovative technical achievements.?? The technologies comprise a VTES electric supercharger, SpeedStart belt-integrated starter generator with an advanced belt tensioning system, new PbC lead-carbon batteries, which avoid the need for higher cost battery technologies or super-capacitors, and higher gear ratios to reduce engine speed.

Recalibration of the engine increases power from 122 to 142PS and torque from 200 to 275Nm.? This power and torque is comparable with VW?s bigger 1.8-litre TSI gasoline engine, which delivers 160PS and 250Nm, and the engine output of the LC Super Hybrid is generally equivalent to vehicles in the 2-litre class.? Despite the enhanced gasoline engine performance the vehicle achieves near diesel levels of fuel economy, but with substantially lower production costs.

The impressive performance and excellent fuel economy are underscored by the acceleration figures and results measured on the standard European drive cycle.? The LC Super Hybrid delivers CO2 emissions of less than 130g/km compared with 140g/km for the baseline Passat 1.4-litre TSI, which is already best in class, and an even more significant reduction when compared with 160g/km for the equivalent performance 1.8-litre TSI model.? This represents a reduction in CO2 emissions of 8 and 23 per cent respectively.? Similarly, the excellent fuel economy of 5.6 litres/100km (42mpg US/50mpg imperial) represents a significant 11 and 24 per cent improvement respectively when compared with 6.2 litres/100km (38mpg US/46mpg imperial) for the 1.4-litre TSI and 6.9 litres/100km (34mpg US/41mpg imperial) for the 1.8-litre TSI also measured over the NEDC drive cycle.

The technology incorporated into the LC Super Hybrid, which has taken 10 years of research to develop, has achieved its technical breakthrough in the cost effective reduction of CO2 emissions and fuel consumption without compromising the fun-to-drive factor and high energy density fuel tank range advantage of gasoline engines.? The demonstrator embraces low voltage switched reluctance (SR) motor-generators, which are not currently employed by the automotive industry in mass production.?? The motors are of simple robust construction using steel, aluminium and copper and avoid the use of increasingly expensive rare earth materials required for permanent magnet motors. ?The SR technology is licensed from Nidec Corporation of Japan, one of the world?s leading suppliers of electric motors.

Controlled Power Technologies (CPT) is an independent, award winning, clean-tech company specialising in the development of cost-effective CO2 reduction measures for the global automotive industry that avoid major redesign of the powertrain or vehicle electrical system.? Its core competencies include low voltage power electronics, advanced control software and the application of low voltage electrical machines to vehicle powertrains.? The company is a spin-off from the advanced powertrain development team established in the UK more than 10 years ago by Visteon, a spin out from Ford, when electric supercharging and switched reluctance motor technology was first mooted, and its technology development partner Emerson Corporation, whose motor business has since been acquired by Nidec.??CPT was established in 2007 as a management buy-in funded by venture capital to acquire this advanced powertrain business.? The company comes with a highly experienced team of automotive engineers and is backed by a number of prominent investors specialising in the energy and environmental sectors.?? Further information on CPT is available at www.cpowert.com.

Tags: CONTROLLED POWER TECHNOLOGIES, CPT, EMN, NICK PASCOE, PETER SCANES, SPEEDSTART, TIGERS

Source: http://europeanmotornews.com/2012/10/23/cpt-says-48v-initiative-will-help-facilitate-energy-recuperation/

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