Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Football fans rejoice! Super Bowl will be streamed live by CBS this year

Football fans rejoice! CBS will be live streaming the Super Bowl again this year. Last year, the Super Bowl was one of the largest streamed events in history, and this one will likely be the same. CBSSports.com and NFL.com will feature the live streams, which will be the same as the one shown on TV.

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Online viewers will also have access to additional features, such as live stats and in-game highlights. My one hope for the live stream is that it features the same ads that the TV version does. After all, the Super Bowl has become more about the ads than the actual game, and it would suck to miss out on those by watching online.

Source: http://www.tweaktown.com/news/27383/football_fans_rejoice_super_bowl_will_be_streamed_live_by_cbs_this_year/index.html

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White House rejects Boehner?s Plan B for fiscal cliff

In the aftermath of Friday's Newtown school shooting, we've heard tales mostly horrifying and occasionally heroic, from surviving witnesses and mourning citizens alike, but this one lies somewhere in between, all the more unshakeable. One six-year-old Sandy Hook student played dead in her first-grade classroom, her family pastor said late Sunday, with the kind of quick thinking that ended up saving her life but now leaves her with the unshakeable memories of watching all her classmates being shot and killed. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/white-house-rejects-boehner-fiscal-cliff-plan-b-164943686--politics.html

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The Mystical Hunt

Vampires, Angels, Demons, elves and fey. What do they have in common? More than you think!

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Monday, December 17, 2012

Broncos rout Ravens 34-17 for 9th straight win

Denver Broncos running back Jacob Hester to lifted into the air my teammate tackle Orlando Franklin after scoring a touchdown during the first half of an NFL football game against the Baltimore Ravens in Baltimore, Sunday, Dec. 16, 2012. (AP Photo/Gail Burton)

Denver Broncos running back Jacob Hester to lifted into the air my teammate tackle Orlando Franklin after scoring a touchdown during the first half of an NFL football game against the Baltimore Ravens in Baltimore, Sunday, Dec. 16, 2012. (AP Photo/Gail Burton)

Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning reacts to a touchdown by running back Jacob Hester during the first half of an NFL football game against the Baltimore Ravens in Baltimore, Sunday, Dec. 16, 2012. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Denver Broncos wide receiver Eric Decker, left, is knocked out of bounds just short of a touchdown by Baltimore Ravens cornerback Jimmy Smith during the first half of an NFL football game in Baltimore, Sunday, Dec. 16, 2012. (AP Photo/Gail Burton)

Denver Broncos running back Knowshon Moreno is stopped by Baltimore Ravens inside linebacker Brendon Ayanbadejo, top, and defensive back James Ihedigbo, bottom during the first half of an NFL football game in Baltimore, Sunday, Dec. 16, 2012. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Denver Broncos wide receiver Eric Decker pulls in a touchdown pass as Baltimore Ravens cornerback Cary Williams looks on during the second half of an NFL football game in Baltimore, Sunday, Dec. 16, 2012. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

(AP) ? The Denver Broncos no longer can be considered a notch below the best in the AFC, nor can they be viewed as a team that can succeed only when Peyton Manning puts up dazzling numbers.

Their 34-17 rout of the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday showed just how good these Broncos can be.

Chris Harris returned an interception 98 yards for a momentum-turning touchdown, and Denver cruised to its ninth straight victory in surprisingly easy fashion.

"You come to the Ravens' house and beat them handily, it's definitely a statement game," Harris said. "We definitely wanted to show to everybody that we're an elite team."

Manning threw for 204 yards and a score in his ninth consecutive win against Baltimore, the first with the Broncos (11-3).

But he was merely a role player in this one, because Denver's defense dominated the Ravens, who sputtered in their first game with Jim Caldwell as offensive coordinator.

This was supposed to be a test for Denver, which was 0-5 in Baltimore and was eager to face a quality opponent on the road.

"Pat Bowlen has owned the team for 29 years and has averaged 10 wins a season, but it's the first time he's won in this building," Broncos coach John Fox said. "I was proud to see that for him."

Down 10-0 late in the first half, the Ravens had a first-and-goal at the Denver 4 when Harris stepped in front of Anquan Boldin, picked off a pass by Joe Flacco and sprinted down the right sideline with Flacco in pursuit. The quarterback tripped up Harris, who tumbled into the end zone, leaving Flacco flat on his stomach and with a cut lip.

"He just ran the out route and I was waiting to see when he was going to look back at the quarterback," Harris said. "As soon as he looked back, I looked back and the ball was there. I just made a play on the ball."

It was the longest regular-season interception return in Broncos history, and it turned a close game into a rout.

"I made a mistake. No other way to say it," Flacco said.

"Baltimore had some momentum there on the drive and looks like they're probably going to get the touchdown ? plus they get the ball the first series of the second half," Manning said.

"So just a huge play. The turnover is good, the fact that he took it all the way to the house for a touchdown was even bigger. Big play, big swing in the game, in the momentum. I thought it kind of jump-started everything in the second half for us."

The Ravens (9-5) were playing their first game under Caldwell, who replaced the fired Cam Cameron. Baltimore's offense sputtered in the first half, gaining only 119 yards and committing two turnovers that led to 10 Denver points.

Baltimore has lost three straight ? including two in a row at home for the first time since December 2007. The Ravens trailed 31-3 in the fourth quarter before Flacco threw touchdown passes of 31 and 61 yards to tight end Dennis Pitta.

"We couldn't get anything going until late," coach John Harbaugh said.

Caldwell's debut was a resounding flop. Flacco went 20 for 40 for 254 yards, lost a fumble and threw an interception. Ray Rice ran for 38 yards on 12 carries and the Ravens produced a meager 56 yards rushing.

For three weeks, Baltimore has needed one win to clinch a fifth straight trip to the playoffs. The Ravens still lead the AFC North, but their lead has shrunk to one game with two to play.

"We're a 9-5 football team and we feel like we're 0-14 right now," Flacco said.

Baltimore's previous two defeats were by three points apiece. This one wasn't even close, and the stadium was near empty in the middle of the fourth quarter.

"As (part of) the Ravens Nation, as a player, I am embarrassed for our city," safety Ed Reed said.

Denver, on the other hand, appears poised to reach the postseason with confidence and momentum. The AFC West champions haven't lost since Oct. 7, at New England. The Broncos, who can still capture the top seed in the conference, finish with home games against Cleveland and Kansas City.

Baltimore's first offensive series under Caldwell lasted three plays and ended badly. Flacco fumbled on a third-and-1 plunge and the Broncos recovered at the Denver 47, which led to a 27-yard field goal for a 3-0 lead.

In the first quarter, Baltimore totaled 21 yards on 12 plays, punted three times and lost a fumble.

Denver went up 10-0 when Jacob Hester ran in from the 1 to cap an 11-play, 78-yard drive. Baltimore answered with three more unproductive plays before punting. On their fifth drive, the Ravens finally got their initial first down ? on a 14-yard run by Bernard Pierce with eight minutes left in the half.

Pierce eventually left the game with a concussion, as did wide receiver Torrey Smith, who hit his head after attempting to make a leaping catch near the sideline in the third quarter.

Denver pulled away with two third-quarter touchdowns. Manning threw a 51-yard scoring pass to Eric Decker, and after the Ravens went three-and-out, Knowshon Moreno ended a 39-yard drive with a 6-yard run to make it 31-3.

Decker caught eight passes for 133 yards and Moreno finished with 118 yards rushing on 22 carries.

NOTES: Rice passed 1,000 yards rushing for a fourth straight season. ... Terrell Suggs returned for Baltimore after missing one game with a torn biceps and made one tackle. ... Hester's score was the second rushing touchdown of his career and the first since his rookie season in 2008. ... Pitta had seven catches for 125 yards.

___

Online: http://pro32.ap.org/poll and http://twitter.com/AP_NFL

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-12-16-FBN-Broncos-Ravens/id-317fb408872241b995e12c0c24097914

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Sunday, December 16, 2012

jamey shrillness: Recreation And Sports Activities: Boxing Report ...

According to some 2007 article within the Telegraph out of the United Kingdom, this extreme sport has decided to become a popular daredevil sport the same as bungee jumping and skydiving. The Shimano Di2 is built to last in fact it is also the bike that will withstand any weather condition. Road con ?

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Source: http://self-development-information.com/2012/12/04/recreation-and-sports-activities-boxing-report-category-click/

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Saturday, December 15, 2012

Insert Coin: MeterPlug estimates electricity costs per device, aims to save you some cash

Insert Coin: MeterPlug estimates electricity costs per device, aims to save you some cash

Decking out homes with smartphone-controlled appliances and using gadgets to keep tabs on electricity usage isn't exactly new, but the MeterPlug thinks it can do a better job of tracking exactly how much dough your devices are burning in electricity. The plastic dongle plugs in-between an outlet and a device, and leverages a database of electricity prices based on location and time of day to calculate how much an appliance drains from your wallet per hour, day, week, month and year. With the help of Bluetooth, MeterPlug slings data to an Android or iOS app, and shoots updated meter information -- stored inside built-in memory -- as you come into range. Sure, Bluetooth connectivity only allows for connected devices within 100 feet to be manually switched on and off through the app, but it also gives users the option of proximity control. MeterPlug can cut power to whatever is jacked in as users wander away, and restore juice when they walk back into range.

Continue reading Insert Coin: MeterPlug estimates electricity costs per device, aims to save you some cash

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Source: MeterPlug (Indiegogo)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/12/14/insert-coin-meterplug-electricity-meter/

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Web Marketing All-in-One Desk Reference For Dummies | 100 ...

Everyone?s doing it ? Web marketing, that is. Building an online presence is vital to your business, and if you?re looking for Web marketing real-world experiences, look no farther than Web Marketing All-in-One For Dummies.

These eight minibooks break down Web marketing into understandable chunks, with lots of examples from an author team of experts. The minibooks cover:

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Not only that, but Web Marketing All-in-One For Dummies includes a Google AdWords redeemable coupon worth $25 to get you started! Begin developing your Web site strategy and start marketing your business online today.

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What Chuck Hagel would, and wouldn't, bring to defense job

Republican Chuck Hagel, a former US senator with a strong independent streak, is now widely seen as the front-runner for the job of secretary of Defense.

Aside from having forged a friendship with President Obama, Mr. Hagel has several other assets that may play to his favor as the president reshapes his national security team for his second term.

For starters, senators would likely afford Hagel the sort of easy confirmation process that fellow lawmakers tend to accord one another.

Then, there's the 'R' after his name. In nominating a Republican, Mr. Obama would again demonstrate his commitment to bipartisanship, as he did by carrying former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates ? a Bush appointee ? over into his administration.

RECOMMENDED: Five ways events overseas could shape Obama's second term.

Next, Hagel is a military combat veteran. He served in Vietnam alongside his brother, who was a fellow platoon leader. Such experience is helpful for a potential Pentagon head serving in the wake of two decade-long wars, because he knows intimately the struggles of those returning from battle, longtime colleagues point out.

?Chuck Hagel has the experience as a combat veteran with two purple hearts and an understanding that the decisions that are made in Washington ultimately are carried out by young men and women across the globe,? Sen. Jack Reed (R) of Rhode Island and a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, told Politico. ?That is a very important intellectual, emotional asset.?

But the degree to which Hagel and Obama appear to be in sync on policy affecting the Pentagon may be what has moved him to the head of the line.

The two have long worked together, first as senators and lately in the president?s council of advisers, where Hagel serves as co-chairman of Obama?s Intelligence Advisory Board.

They forged a friendship due in large part to Hagel?s willingness to take on members of his own party. Hagel supported Obama?s 2008 presidential candidacy, and has asked tough questions about America?s wars. He opposed the invasion of Iraq, crossed party lines to call for an investigation into pre-war intelligence on Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, and even questioned Obama?s decision to surge troops into Afghanistan, comparing it with an increase of forces in Vietnam.

?It?s easy to get into war, not so easy to get out,? Hagel wrote in a 2009 opinion piece for the Washington Post. ?Accordingly, we cannot view US involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan through a lens that sees only ?winning? or ?losing.? Iraq and Afghanistan are not America?s to win or lose,? he wrote. ?Win what? We can help them buy time or develop, but we cannot control their fates.?

Hagel is also known ? and reviled in some conservative circles ? for favoring US talks with Iran, as has Obama.

In a speech this week at the Atlantic Council, which Hagel directs, he pressed this case, without ever mentioning America?s arch-adversary directly. ?Engagement is not surrender. It?s not appeasement,? he told the assembled audience. Rather it is ?an opportunity to better understand? others.

America will need allies, too, he noted, because the conflicts of the future ?are beyond the control of any great power,? he argued, and unlikely to involve unilateral US action.

But perhaps his most vocal detractors are likely to come from advocates of Israel. The home page of the Atlantic Council, for example, features a critical piece on ?Israel?s Apartheid Policy.?

?While in the Senate, Hagel voted against designating the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps as a terrorist group, and consistently voted against sanctions on Iran for their illicit pursuit of nuclear weapons capability,? Josh Block, a former spokesman for the American Israel Pubic Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and president of the Israel Project, told The Daily Beat. ?It is a matter of fact that his record on these issues puts him well outside the mainstream Democratic and Republican consensus.?

Unlike current Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, Hagel is also said to be rather unsympathetic to the Pentagon?s pleas of the pending insolvency it claims could come with sequestration, the series of $500 billion in mandatory cuts the Department of Defense faces if Congress doesn?t come up with another fiscal plan by Jan. 2.

?The Defense Department, I think, in many ways, has become bloated,? Hagel said in 2011. ?In many ways, I think the Pentagon needs to be pared down.?

IN PICTURES: US military muscle

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chuck-hagel-wouldnt-bring-job-defense-secretary-184755954.html

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Friday, December 14, 2012

Survivors of breast cancer more likely to develop diabetes, and should be screened more closely

Survivors of breast cancer more likely to develop diabetes, and should be screened more closely

Thursday, December 13, 2012

A major new study shows that post-menopausal survivors of breast cancer are more likely to develop diabetes than controls without breast cancer. Furthermore, the relationship between breast cancer and diabetes varies depending on whether a breast cancer survivor has undergone chemotherapy. The study is the largest to explore this relationship so far, and is published in Diabetologia, the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD).

An association between diabetes and cancer is becoming increasingly recognised. For instance, women with diabetes have an estimated 20% higher risk of postmenopausal breast cancer. As breast cancer survival rates continue to improve, it is becoming increasingly important to understand the long-term health consequences for survivors as they age. However, to date little research has been carried out on the risk of post-menopausal breast cancer survivors developing diabetes.

In this population-based study, Dr Lorraine Lipscombe (Women's College Hospital, Women's College Research Institute, Toronto, ON, Canada) and colleagues used population-based data from Ontario, Canada to compare the incidence of diabetes among women aged 55 years or older with breast cancer, from 1996 to 2008, with that of age-matched women without breast cancer. They further explored this relationship based on whether the patient had undergone chemotherapy.

They found that, of 24,976 breast cancer survivors and 124,880 controls, 9.7% developed diabetes over a mean follow-up of 5.8 years. The risk of diabetes among breast cancer survivors compared with women without breast cancer began to increase two years after diagnosis, with a 7% increased risk that rose to 21% after 10 years. Among those who received adjuvant chemotherapy (4,404 patients) almost the opposite relationship was found: risk was highest in the first two years after diagnosis (a 24% increased risk compared with controls) and then declined to an 8% increased risk after 10 years.

Dr Lipscombe says: "It is possible that chemotherapy treatment may bring out diabetes earlier in susceptible women. Increased weight gain has been noted in the setting for adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer, which may be a factor in the increased risk of diabetes in women receiving treatment. Oestrogen suppression as a result of chemotherapy may also promote diabetes; however this may have been less of a factor in this study where most women were already post-menopausal."

Other factors that may play a part for women with chemotherapy are the glucocorticoid drugs used to treat nausea in chemotherapy, known to cause spikes in blood sugar (acute hyperglycaemia), and the fact that women undergoing chemotherapy could be monitored more closely and thus are more likely to have diabetes detected. A reason that risk decreased in the chemotherapy group over time could be that many of the at-risk women developed diabetes in the first two years, and were thus no longer followed up. In addition, the effects of glucocorticoids are known to wear off over time.

The researchers are unsure why the breast cancer survivors who did not receive chemotherapy saw their risk of diabetes increase compared with control women without cancer. "There is, however, evidence of an association between diabetes and cancer, which may be due to risk factors common to both conditions," says Dr Lipscombe. "One such risk factor is insulin resistance, which predisposes to both diabetes and many types of cancer? initially insulin resistance is associated with high insulin levels and there is evidence that high circulating insulin may increase the risk of cancer. However, diabetes only occurs many years later when insulin levels start to decline?therefore it is possible that cancer risk occurs much earlier than diabetes in insulin-resistant individuals, when insulin levels are high."*

"These findings support a need for closer monitoring of diabetes among breast cancer survivors," concludes Dr Lipscombe

###

Diabetologia: http://www.diabetologia-journal.org/

Thanks to Diabetologia for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/125913/Survivors_of_breast_cancer_more_likely_to_develop_diabetes__and_should_be_screened_more_closely

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Police arrested in thefts from Rivera crash site

MONTERREY, Mexico (AP) ? Officials say two state police officers have been arrested on suspicion of stealing unspecified items from the scene of the plane crash that killed Mexican-American superstar Jenni Rivera.

The Nuevo Leon state government says authorities found images of the scene on the smartphone of one of the officers, who is 23, while trying to determine now the Mexican media got photographs of the secured site, including images of body parts and personal documents.

Investigators searched the homes of the officers who secured the crash site and found victims' belongings in two. Th

e government said Thursday it then arrested the 23-year-old and another officer who is 24.

The officers belong to a new state police force meant to be more effective and less corrupt than its predecessors.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-arrested-thefts-rivera-crash-170525615.html

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Dr. William F. House dies at 89; championed cochlear implant

Dr. William F. House, a dentist-turned-ear specialist who 50 years ago defied the medical establishment and many advocates for the hearing impaired to champion an implantable device, now widely accepted, that made everyday sounds audible to the profoundly deaf, has died. He was 89.

House, who led the venerable House Ear Institute in Los Angeles during much of the 1980s, died Friday of metastatic melanoma at his home in Aurora, Ore., said his daughter, Karen House.

An innovator who seemed to relish bucking convention, House was responsible for a number of major medical advances, helping to pioneer microsurgery techniques and a new approach to removing acoustic tumors. He also developed a successful surgery for an ear disease that had prevented astronaut Alan Shepard from returning to space.

But House was best known for his early and vigorous advocacy of the cochlear implant, an electronic device that stimulated the auditory nerve and helped the user recognize sounds.

He began to develop the device in the late 1950s after hearing of successful experiments by two European scientists. After publishing his initial results in 1961, he encountered heavy criticism from physicians who said the device was crude and could damage the ear. Representatives of the deaf community also were opposed, arguing that deaf people did not need to hear to be considered normal.

But House persevered and in 1984, 25 years after he first implanted a device in a patient, won crucial validation. That year the Food and Drug Administration approved the House cochlear implant for use in deaf adults, calling it the first device to replace a human sense organ.

Today, more than 200,000 people around the world have cochlear implants, according to the FDA.

"Cochlear implants have really changed the landscape for kids born with severe to profound hearing loss," said Anne Oyler, an audiologist with the American Speech-Language-Hearing Assn. in Rockville, Md., who attributed much of the progress to House's persistence. She said children who receive the technology and appropriate training can develop speech and language skills comparable to their hearing peers

Said Karl White, founding director of the National Center for Hearing Assessment and Management at Utah State University: "In the early days there were a lot of skeptics about cochlear implants, whether they made any sense at all. William House was one of the people who kept insisting there was potential here and that it needed to be pursued.... Without his contribution, it would have taken years longer, if not decades, to reach the point where we are now."

House was born in Kansas City, Mo., on Dec. 1, 1923. He moved with his family to Los Angeles when he was 3. He followed his father, Milus M. House, into dentistry, earning a doctorate in dental surgery from UC Berkeley in 1945.

After World War II he performed face and jaw reconstruction as a Navy dentist, an experience that spurred him to pursue medicine. At USC, where he earned his medical degree in 1953, he became an ear, nose and throat specialist. He eventually focused on disorders of the ear like his older half brother, Dr. Howard House, who in 1946 had founded the House Ear Institute (later renamed the House Research Institute).

To avoid confusion, institute employees called William Dr. Bill and his brother Dr. Howard. They were among nine doctors in their extended family, which includes Howard's son, Dr. John House, the institute's current president, who talked President Reagan into a hearing aid in 1983.

One of William House's most famous patients was Shepard, who in 1961 became the first American to journey into space but later was grounded by vertigo from an inner ear infection known as Meniere's disease. House, who had developed the first successful surgery for the syndrome, operated on Shepard, who was declared fit to return to space on Apollo 14 in 1971.

The astronaut invited House and his wife, June, to watch the launch at Cape Canaveral and later spoke to the doctor through a radio hook-up at NASA headquarters in Houston. "I'm talking to you through the ear that you operated on," Shepard told House in a conversation that was portrayed in Tom Hanks' HBO series "From the Earth to the Moon."

During the 1960s William began working with Jack Urban, a Burbank electronics engineer, to build the cochlear implant that was manufactured by the 3M company for several years, until about 1987. The device consisted of a wire threaded into the auditory part of the inner ear called the cochlea, a microphone and a battery carried in the user's pocket. It enabled people with profound hearing loss to discern sounds like car horns and slamming doors but was not sophisticated enough to accurately relay speech. House's implant patients described the sound quality as similar to "a radio not quite tuned in."


FOR THE RECORD:
An earlier version of this article said 3M made the House cochlear implant from 1972 to about 1987, but 3M did not become involved until the late 1970s. The story also said that William House was president of the House Research Institute in the 1980s; it was still called the House Ear Institute then.

Some of the resistance to the device came from doctors who said patients should wait for better implants that would allow them to hear words, but House dismissed such arguments.

"If a patient has no leg, shall I wait until our tissue transplantation has progressed far enough that I can transplant a leg that will work as well as yours or mine, or shall I offer him a peg or a wooden leg?" House said in The Times in 1973. "I shall offer him a peg...."

John House said his uncle never sought a patent for the House implant. "He and his brother Howard felt that anything we developed should be shared for the betterment of mankind," he said. The House cochlear implant fell out of favor in the late 1980s when more sensitive, multi-channel devices came on the market. But patients seeking implants with the latest technology still flock to the House institute, including celebrities like Rush Limbaugh, the radio host who received his "bionic ear" after experiencing sudden hearing loss in 2001.

House, who moved to Oregon in 2000 after retiring from private practice, is survived by his daughter Karen of Los Angeles, son David of Aurora, Ore., three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. His wife, June, died in 2008.

The physician said he did not believe age should bar anyone with hearing loss from the pleasures and practicalities of sound.

"Deafness is such a horrible thing," he told an audience at Brigham Young University in 1997. "If a person can hear in their last years of life, I think it's worth it. I recently put an implant in a 95-year-old man. He got married after that."

elaine.woo@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/2iH7iv1fFqA/la-me-william-house-20121212,0,4987681.story

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Thursday, December 13, 2012

Holiday Gift Ideas to Help Bowhunters Be Safe and Successful ...

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Source: http://musiaekta.blogspot.com/2012/12/holiday-gift-ideas-to-help-bowhunters.html

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Higher diabetes risk for breast cancer survivors | theGrio

Post-menopausal breast cancer survivors have an estimated 20 percent higher risk of diabetes according to new research published in the journal Diabetologia. For six years, the Canadian study looked at nearly 150,000 women ages 55 and over, of which 25,000 were breast cancer survivors.

The study showed that breast cancer survivors, when compared to women without breast cancer, have a seven percent increased risk of diabetes within the first 2 years after breast cancer diagnosis; risks rose to 21 percent ten years after diagnosis.

As more U.S. women survive breast cancer, understanding the long term health risks for survivors is becoming more and more important.

Although studies have shown that women with diabetes have higher risks of postmenopausal breast cancer and up to 50 percent increased mortality risks following a breast cancer diagnosis, there is little evidence to show how breast cancer affects diabetes.

Diabetes affects 8.7 percent Americans, and nearly 19 percent of all black American adults are diabetic. It causes complications such as heart disease, hypertension, amputations and eye problems.

?There is evidence of an association between diabetes and cancer, which may be due to risk factors common to both conditions,? said lead author Lorraine Lipscombe of the Women?s College Research Institute in Canada.? ?One such risk factor is insulin resistance, which predisposes to both diabetes and many types of cancer.?

?Initially insulin resistance is associated with high insulin levels and there is evidence that high circulating insulin may increase the risk of cancer,? Lipscombe explained.? ?However, diabetes only occurs many years later when insulin levels start to decline.?

Other cancer therapies like tamoxifen may also increase the risk of diabetes, according to another study published by?Lipscombe showing higher diabetes risks for women with breast cancer who were treated with tamoxifen.

The new study showed that for women who had received chemotherapy to treat breast cancer, the trend for increased diabetes risk with time was reversed. Instead, diabetes rates were higher within two years after diagnosis and rates fell by ten years post-diagnosis.

?It is possible that chemotherapy treatment may bring out diabetes earlier in susceptible women,? explained Lipscombe, adding that weight gain ? which has been associated with diabetes in general ? has been observed in association with breast cancer chemotherapy.

Suppression of estrogen by chemotherapy could also promote diabetes, added Lipscombe, but this would be less important for post-menopausal women.

As women undergoing chemotherapy are more likely to be more closely monitored, this could mean that diabetes was detected sooner for at-risk women. In addition, glucocorticoid drugs ? used to treat nausea during chemotherapy ? are known to cause spikes in blood sugar and although these effects that wear off over time, they may contribute to the higher diabetes rates observed soon after treatment.

Overall, the associations made in this study between breast cancer, chemotherapy and diabetes have left researchers unsure about why they observed such different long-term risk profiles for breast cancer survivors who did and did not receive chemotherapy. But researchers do remain certain of the importance of observation.

For Lipscombe, the findings should make closer monitoring of diabetes among breast cancer survivors a priority.

Onome is?a?London-based freelance journalist, focusing on public health, infectious disease and international development.?She has written for The Lancet, The Global Health Magazine and The Faster Times.?Onome was awarded?a?Bachelor of Scence from the University of St Andrews, Scotland and?a?PhD from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Source: http://thegrio.com/2012/12/13/higher-diabetes-risk-for-breast-cancer-survivors/

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N.J. man pleads not guilty in '79 death of Etan Patz

NEW YORK (AP) ? The man charged with killing a 6-year-old New York City boy in 1979 pleaded not guilty Wednesday to murder, even though police say he confessed in the sensational case ? an admission his lawyer says is false.

Pedro Hernandez, 51, wore a gray sweatsuit and answered "not guilty" at the hearing in the notorious case of Etan Patz, whose disappearance helped spawn the movement to publicize cases of missing children.

"My client had no motive and no history," defense attorney Harvey Fishbein said outside court after filing a motion to dismiss the case.

"There is a serious question as to what happened in May 1979. There is no crime scene. There are no witnesses to a crime," Fishbein said.

The defense attorney said previously that while Hernandez's defense will revolve around his mental state, he isn't pursuing an insanity defense.

An insanity defense would mean acknowledging he committed the crime but arguing that he was too psychologically ill to know it was wrong. Hernandez will maintain he didn't kill Etan Patz and argue he made a false confession because of his mental problems, among other factors, Fishbein said.

"The only part that mental disease plays in this case is its role in the confession," he said before the court date.

Psychiatric exams of the jailed Hernandez have found that he has an IQ in the borderline-to-mild mental retardation range, his lawyer has said. Hernandez also has been found to suffer from schizotypal personality disorder, which is characterized by hallucinations, according to his lawyer.

The defendant's wife and daughter attended the hearing but did not speak to reporters.

Etan's disappearance led to an intensive search and garnered huge publicity. His photo was among the first put on milk cartons, and his case turned May 25 into National Missing Children's Day.

Hernandez was a teenage stock clerk at a convenience store when Etan disappeared on his way to school on May 25, 1979. Hernandez was a married father with no criminal record and living in Maple Shade, N.J., when police approached him based on a tip this year. The tip came after federal authorities dug up a basement in the neighborhood hoping for clues, putting the cold case back into the limelight once again.

Investigators say Hernandez told them he lured the boy into the convenience store with the promise of a soda. According to police, he said he led the child to the basement, choked him and left his body in a bag of trash about a block away.

Following the arrest, court hearings for Hernandez were postponed for weeks, with both sides saying they were continuing to investigate.

Authorities seized a computer and a piece of old-looking children's clothing from Hernandez's home, scoured the basement of the building where he had worked in what was then a grocery store and interviewed his relatives and friends ? but nothing incriminating came of it, according to a person familiar with the investigation. The person wasn't authorized to discuss findings not yet made public and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

Under New York state law, a confession can be enough to convict someone as long as authorities can establish that a crime occurred.

The boy's body has never been found. Etan's parents, Stan and Julie Patz, have been reluctant to move or even change their phone number in case their son tried to reach out.

Etan was declared legally dead by his father more than a decade ago so he could sue convicted child molester Jose Ramos in the boy's death. Ramos was found responsible ? a ruling made because he didn't entirely cooperate with questioning during the lawsuit ? and Fishbein could seek to make that a factor in Hernandez's defense.

Ramos, now 69, had been dating the boy's baby sitter in 1979 and was the prime suspect for years, but he was never charged. He was later convicted of molesting two different children. He completed a 27-year sentence last month but was immediately arrested upon his release from a Pennsylvania prison, because authorities said he had given them a false address for where he'd be living.

When New York City police checked out the Bronx address he provided on his Megan's Law registration form, they found no one living there who knew Ramos. And when police tracked down the cousin whose name Ramos had listed, she told them she hadn't had any contact with him in 35 years and did not plan to allow him to live with her, police said. Ramos was ordered to stand trial on a charge of failing to register properly as a sex offender.

___

Associated Press writer Jennifer Peltz contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nj-man-pleads-not-guilty-79-death-nyc-202332007.html

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Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Nate Silver & Technology in Mass Communication | From The Lab ...

For one of my final exams this semester, we had to answer the question of whether technology is changing the role and function of media from the perspective of twelve different authors.?More than a tedious final exam, I found this topic intriguing and thought-provoking. I?ve shared my final paper below, and would love blog responses from fellow science and mass comm-ers!

Is ?Big Data? better at communicating than people are?

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The author of the Huffington Post article ?Nate Silver and the Rise of Political Data Science? writes:

?Silver has proven to the public the power of Big Data in transforming our electoral process. We already rely on statistical models to do everything from flying our airplanes to predicting the weather. This serves as yet another example of computers showing their ability to be better at handling the unknown than loud-talking experts? (p. 1).

I start with Neil Postman in asking how the authors of the books we read this semester might respond to the idea that America is experiencing an information revolution driven by technology and data. In ?Amusing Ourselves to Death,? Postman describes the emergence of an image-centered culture with the rise of technological media including the telegraph, the photograph and television. An ?information glut,? (p. 68) consisting largely of decontextualized information in electronic media, faces modern Americans. The implications of this glut include ?diminished social and political potency? (p. 68). Postman reveals a modern American prejudice toward truth as quantification, where ?[m]any of our psychologists, sociologists, economists and other latter-day cabalists will have numbers to tell them the truth or they will have nothing? (p. 23). He does not argue the point of whether numbers best express the truth in particular fields. However, he warns against the assumption that technology is always a friend to culture. Postman writes that ?every technology has an inherent bias? (p. 84) toward being used in certain ways, based on physical form and symbolic capability. Every technology has an inherent agenda. Technology as a machine ?becomes a medium as it employs a particular symbolic code, as it finds its place in a particular social setting, as it insinuates itself into economic and political contexts? (Postman, p. 84).

In relation to the primary questions of this paper, Postman might argue that technology does change the role and function of the media. However, he might also argue that computers and technological devices in general are only as good at discovering and providing information as their symbolic codes and social settings permit. Postman writes that while Americans believe in technology as the vehicle of progress, ?technology is ideology? (p. 157). Technology creates cultural change, changing cognitive habits and social relations. It changes notions of communication, history and religion. Postman argues that we must interpret the symbols that each technology brings to our culture with the knowledge of that technology?s biases. Postman refers to print, not technology, as the medium best suited to the accumulation, scrutiny and analysis of complex information and ideas.

In ?Covering Islam,? Edward Said notes that media and the material they produce are ?neither spontaneous nor completely ?free?? (p. 48).? Pictures and ideas ?do not merely spring from reality into our eyes and minds, truth is not directly available, we do not have unrestrained variety at our disposal? (p. 48). Said suggests that the mode of communication shapes the material it delivers. Television, radio and newspapers each have their own rules and conventions as well as their own corporate and political agendas. These media forms tend to deliver reductive and monochromatic pictures of reality, ?promoting some images of reality rather than others? (p. 49). ?Said might argue that technology changes the role and function of media based upon rules, conventions and practices of selection and interpretation specific to each technological medium. In relation to the role of technology in media and democracy, Said might argue that information and data, like media material and opinions, ?do not occur naturally; they are made, as the result of human will, history, social circumstances, institutions, and the conventions of one?s profession? (p. 49). He might argue that we should not take objectivity and accuracy of information for granted, but instead look to the processes of selection and expression that factored into the production of that information. Facts ?get their importance from what is made of them in interpretation? (p. 163). Interpretations in turn depend on historical context and on the original purpose of the interpretation. Said writes that all knowledge is interpretation. While technology provides data, Said argues that it is interest, whether personal, political or corporate, that drives interpretation and understanding of that information.

In ?Media Control,? Noam Chomsky discusses how media and disinformation enter into a modern notion of democracy. In this notion of democracy, government must control means of information and bar people from managing their own affairs. In this context, public relations and mass media falsify history and distract the public from organization and dissidence. Chomsky writes that the United States pioneered the public relations industry ?to control the public mind? (p. 22). Political decision-makers manufacture consent, manipulating consensus through the media, educational systems and popular culture. Although Chomsky does not focus specifically on the role of technology, he considers the dangers that technology made possible in mass media and propaganda tools. Chomsky might perceive today?s information revolution as an extension of propaganda efforts to distract and marginalize the public, doubting technology?s capacity to provide anything but elite-biased information.

In ?Discovering the News,? Michael Schudson provides an examination of how changes in society effected changes in American journalism, and vice versa, from the early 19th century forward. Schudson argues that the expansion of an egalitarian market democracy shaped the ?triumph of ?news? over the editorial and ?facts? over opinion? (p. 14). The ?advance of a market economy, the ideal and institutions of political democracy, and the emergence of an urban habitat? (p. 75) contributed to a rise in support of science as a process of data collection and empirical inquiry of human society. While technological and transportation innovations enabled the mass production and distribution of newspapers, the penny press in turn contributed to and invested in technological advances. Schudson suggests that the ?peculiar disposition of the penny press to seek timely news? (p. 35) drove its use of the telegraph. He suggests that technology does not make mass circulation newspapers necessary.? Technology may help explain the low cost and high circulation of the penny papers, but ?it says nothing at all about their distinctive content? (p. 35). In relation to the main questions of this paper, Schudson might argue that technology does not change the role and function of the media as much as a changing role of media spurs and takes advantage of new technologies. Schudson does point to the role of television competition in prompting newspapers to invest more in investigative reporting. Schudson might agree with the idea of a technology-driven revolution in information and news. However, Schudson suggests that ?the ?exploded? sense of news was more than a competitive strategy ? television, too, responded to a changing culture which welcomed critical perspectives in journalism? (p. 183).

Schudson also provides evidence that war propaganda and public relations efforts convinced American newspapermen that ?facts themselves are not to be trusted? (p. 142). Journalists turned to interpretive reporting in the 20th century. While fighting for objectivity, journalists accepted subjectivity as inevitable. Schudson points to several attacks against objectivity as an obtainable ideal. These include criticisms of bias in the format of news stories, political biases and news-gathering processes reinforcing of official viewpoints. Schudson emphasizes the social forms and processes that shape the news. I do not believe that Schudson would agree outright with the idea that technology is better at providing information than people are. He would perhaps insist on analyzing the biases within particular forms of technology and the social and cultural factors behind the emergence of new technologies.

In ?Bowling Alone,? Robert Putnam analyzes the causes and consequences of declining social capital in late 20th century America. Proponents of social capital theory hold that social networks have value to the ?productivity of individuals and groups? (p. 19). Putnam discusses the role of the Internet as a potential countertrend toward greater social connectedness. Putnam?s arguments suggest that he might agree with the idea that a technology-driven information and communication revolution is occurring in America. Putnam?s question would be whether or not that revolution will foster social capital and community in America. While information is important, it ?needs a social context to be meaningful? (p. 172). Computer-mediated communication fosters transmission of information and collaboration between people. It appears ?to complement, not replace, face-to-face communities? (p. 179). Related to our question of whether computers are better at providing information, or social connectedness, than people are, Putnam points out that computer-mediated communications may even be more egalitarian than real communities. The Internet may foster contact across physical factors such as race and gender. However, computer-mediated communication may also foster misrepresentation, homogeneity of virtual groups, noise instead of constructive deliberation, social inequality of access to cyberspace and ?depersonalization? (p. 176).

Putnam suggests that electronic technologies allow Americans to consume individualized news and entertainment in private and alone. He might agree that technology has in several instances changed the role and function of media in American life. In relation to television, Putnam writes that ?those who read the news are more engaged and knowledgeable about the world than those who only watch the news? (p. 218). Television watching for entertainment correlates with civic disengagement. It also fosters impotence. Putnam suspects that electronic media are the ?ringleaders? (p. 246) of declining social capital in America. Putnam writes that social networks ?serve as conduits for the flow of helpful information? (p. 289) and that the performance of democratic institutions ?depends in measurable ways upon social capital.? (p. 349). Thus, the technological factors behind declining social capital discount the idea that technology is better at providing information than people are.

In his autobiography, Benjamin Franklin stresses the importance of writing, self-expression and the cultivation of reason. Franklin used his own printing press and newspaper as a means of ?communicating instruction,? (p. 75) educating his fellow men. Franklin certainly lived in a time when the printed word ruled the minds of men, although important technologies such as the printing press and electricity were integral components of Franklin?s career. Franklin considered mass publication and distribution of printed materials important means of preparing and moving public opinion. Franklin did not express concern over an ?information revolution? driven by technology and numbers, although he did contribute significantly to the development of experimentation and technique in both the world of printing and the world of science. I believe Franklin would have stressed the importance of man?s literacy and attendance to matters of philosophy and reason in the context of media and democracy, over data and numbers. According to his autobiography, Franklin would seem to support the idea that technology supports a more expansive role and function of the media. Franklin had direct experience with innovations in printing technology that allowed more widespread and timely distribution of newspapers and pamphlets. Franklin took full advantage of the opportunities that faster printing and distribution of printed materials presented, using his newspaper and pamphlets to exert great political influence in his day.

In ?Public Opinion,? Walter Lippmann writes that individuals see the world through their own self-interests. According to Lippmann, the ?world that we have to deal with politically is out of reach, out of sight, out of mind. It has to be explored, reported, and imagined? (p. 18). Lippmann also writes that democracy ?in its original form never seriously faced the problem which arises because the pictures inside people?s heads do not automatically correspond with the world outside? (p. 19). He suggests that transportation, trade and communication technologies exert great influence over the circulation of ideas. Monopoly of means of communication and transportation create barriers upon the exchange of news and opinions. Coded messages and language itself impose limitations upon meaning. Because the unseen environment ?is reported to us chiefly by words,? (p. 41) the transmission and coding of printed messages can distort the images we form of events beyond our direct experience. Words have different meanings for different people. Lippmann writes that, theoretically, ?if each fact and each relation had a name that was unique, and if everyone had agreed on the names, it would be possible to communicate without misunderstanding? (p. 42). He continues, ?[i]n the exact sciences there is an approach to this ideal, and that is part of the reason why of all forms of world-wide co?peration, scientific inquiry is most effective? (p. 42). It would seem that Lippmann might agree that data, technology and technical information are better at providing information than people are, in the context of media and democracy. For people, factors including censorship and privacy, physical and social barriers, poverty of language, distraction, emotional conflicts, fatigue and other human factors limit access to the outside environment.

Lippmann also suggests that even experts disagree on the same data, approaching the information with their own agendas. He describes the role of the observer as an active one. The observer ?himself brings something to the scene which later he takes away from it, that oftener than not what he imagines to be the account of an event is really a transfiguration of it? (p. 54). The journalist suffers the same limitations, constructing his opinion ?out of his own stereotypes, according to his own code, and by the urgency of his own interest? (p. 227). Lippmann suggests that the failures of democratic political structures and the nature of the press further compel men to act on prejudices, stereotypes and constructed images. Lippmann writes that the source of the problems of representative government and the press alike is ?the failure of self-governing people to transcend their casual experiences and their prejudice, by inventing, creating, and organizing a machinery of knowledge? (p. 229-230). Lippmann might support the idea of an information revolution driven by technology and data. He suggests that through scientific method and detailed organization of facts by the ?disinterested expert,? (p. 236) the ?difficult environment can be made intelligible? (p. 236). Lippmann might appeal to scientific method and technology to change the role and function of the media from subjective opinion to objective analysis. Lippmann appeals to objective knowledge of the outside environment as a means of ?overcoming the subjectivism of human opinion based on the limitation of individual experience? (p. 249).

In ?Governing with the News,? Timothy Cook argues that ?politics and policy have been and are today central shapers of news organizations, practices, formats, and content? (p. 17). Cook writes that newspapers harnessed new technologies ?to churn out increasingly large numbers of issues? (p.33). However, Cook rejects traditional emphasis on technology and economics in the development of modern news media. He writes that ?[n]ew technologies come into play amidst already established expectations of what was news; they do not create new forms from scratch? (p. 18). Cook argues instead that ?political practices and governmental policies centrally shaped the development of the American news media? (p. 19). Government subsidies made many media communication technologies possible in the first place, including the telegraph and the Internet. According to his arguments, Cook might disagree that technology alone substantially changes the role and function of the media. Cook writes that ?technology offers a range of possible uses, but it is initially understood in terms of previous forms of communication; its ultimate shape owes as much to politics and society as anything else? (p. 170).

However, Cook does point to an ?explosion of communication networks, such as 500-channel television and the Internet,? (169) as a means of making American politics ?less beholden to the current biases of the news media? (p. 169). Cooks seems to suggest that an information revolution driven by technology and numbers could ?dilute the single-minded biases and power of the news, succeeded as it will be by a great variety of information? (p. 169). New communication technologies enable increased volume of information, speed of information and citizen control over information. However, Cook appears to have mixed feelings on the question of whether technology improves information in the context of media and democracy. Cook reflects warnings by others that new technologies may ?fragment and undermine information, knowledge, and deliberation? (p. 171). Equally concerning is the unequal public access to new technology. Cook concludes that ?technology cannot be counted on to single-handedly counteract the negative side of governing with the news? (p. 173).

In ?The Image,? Daniel Boorstin describes how Americans ?have used our wealth, our literacy, our technology, and our progress, to create the thicket of unreality which stands between us and the facts of life? (p. 3). A world of pseudo-events including television shows, tourism and popularized art blurred the distinctions between time and space and between knowledge and ignorance in modern America. Boorstin would seem to agree with the idea that America is experiencing an information revolution, driven by image-producing technologies such as photography and television. The ?rise of ?round-the-clock media? (p. 14) and technologies for reproducing events and images in print, photo, audio and video media in the 19th century lead to increasingly vivid and synthetic representations of reality. Boorstin suggests that image-based technologies such as television pressured the media to make news as well as gather it. Technology ?played a role? in changing the role and function of the media.

Boorstin writes that the successful dealer in the graphic arts gives the public what it wants: the ?fantastic, unreal image that we wish to believe of ourselves? (p. 180). Even the objective and analytic fields of science and technology progressed into ?unintelligible frontiers,? (p. 54) leaving the lay public with only dramatic images of scientific mystery and discovery. Boorstin suggests that ?[m]ultiplication of forms and improvements of technology inevitably make all experience a commodity? (p. 179). According to Boorstin, technological advances account for the flood of political pseudo-events in modern journalism. Based on his arguments, Boorstin would likely disagree that technology is better at providing information than people are. He emphasizes the fact that communication and image-based technologies lead to ?the dissolution of forms and to the increasing secondhandness of our experience in twentieth-century America? (p. 133).

In ?Land of Desire,? William Leach writes that a new aesthetic serving market business needs spread through 20th century America. Businesses coopted pictatorial advertising, show windows and other forms of eye-appeal to move goods from retailer to consumers. Technological advances in light and color production and photography helped retailers ?awaken individual desire? (p. 113). Retailers coopted communication technologies including the telephone to revolutionize customer service. New manufacturing technologies and new energy sources led to mass production of consumer products, while communication and transportation technologies enabled the ?rapid movement of goods and money? (p. 17). Like Boorstin, Leach might agree with the notion of an American information revolution, with an emphasis on the impact of image-producing technologies on the market place. Leach writes that the strategies of commercial aesthetic and visual enticement ?have intensified through new media ? above all, though television satellites, which can beam consumer desire into every hamlet and village around the world? (p. 384). According to Leach, technology did not change so much as intensify the role of media and advertising in creating desire in a culture of consumption. Merchandisers and businessmen came to view the pursuit of knowledge, data and facts as keys to success in consumer research in an American culture of desire.

The authors of ?Four Theories of the Press? propose that the press ?always takes on the form and coloration of the social and political structures within which it operates? (p. 2). In answering the question of why the press is as it is, the authors give limited recognition to technological factors and to the ?mechanical ingenuity and resources that can be put behind mass communication? (p. 1). The press reflects primarily the system of social control in which it operates. Thus, the authors might disagree that technology alone changes the role and function of the media. Instead, the owners and managers of the press use communication technologies to further the Authoritarian, Libertarian, Social Responsibility or Soviet-Totalitarian goals of their press structures. For example, the Libertarian press maintains a different role and function than the Authoritarian press based on different assumptions about the nature of man and the nature of knowledge and truth. While pointing to the implications of new communication technologies for media operating in a democracy, the authors of ?Four Theories of the Press? would perhaps not take a stance on the issue of whether technology is better at providing information than people are. Communication technologies instead have implications primarily for the structure of the press and the press? ability manage or distribute information.

As the Commission on Freedom of the Press suggests in ?A Free and Responsible Press?, the 20th century revolution in communication technology demands increased social responsibility of the press. The authors write, ?[w]e are now in the midst of this technological revolution? (p. 31). To the point of whether technology changes the role and function of the press, the authors suggest that technology helped change the commercial structure, character and power of the press. New technological instruments ?contributed to the growth of huge business corporations? (p. 30). The concentration of power within the press threatens press performance in a democracy. The Commission writes that new technology does not guarantee understanding. The Commission calls for ?the full and responsible use of the new instruments of communication to get before the peoples of the world a true picture of one another and of what goes on among them? (p. 36).

In ?The Journalist and the Murderer,? Janet Malcolm discusses the impact of the writer-subject relationship on the content and nature of print narratives. Malcolm also mentions the subjectivity of material and evidence: ?[it] is like looking for proof or disproof of the existence of God in a flower ? it all depends on how you read the evidence? (p. 127). Based upon her suggestion that ?material does not ?speak for itself,?? (p. 127) Malcolm perhaps would not agree that technology is better at providing information than people are. Malcolm points to the moral dilemma of the writer-subject relationship, not technology, as a primary force in the character of modern journalism.

Thoughts?

Source: http://www.scilogs.com/from_the_lab_bench/nate-silver-technology-in-mass-communication/

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WSJ: Apple Is Testing Designs for a TV

Surprise! According to the Wall Street Journal, Apple is working with Sharp and Foxconn to test designs for a new TV. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Ek-c7ONQp00/wsj-apple-is-testing-designs-for-a-tv

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Cannon fires $42,000-worth of drugs into Ariz.

By Lauren Steussy, NBCSanDiego.com

Over 30 cans of marijuana were shot into Yuma, Ariz., using a cannon, Customs and Border Protection officials said Tuesday.

The suspicious cans were discovered near the Colorado River in Yuma on Friday.

Border Patrol agents said the discovery was "another unique but unsuccessful attempt" to smuggle drugs into the U.S.

An investigation of the area determined that the cans were fired from about 500 feet away with a pneumatic-powered cannon. A carbon-dioxide tank was found nearby.

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Mexican authorities were also looking into the incident.

The marijuana weighed 85 pounds and was valued at $42,500. It will be destroyed, according to a statement from the agency.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/12/15858236-unique-smuggling-attempt-42500-worth-of-marijuana-shot-into-ariz-by-cannon?lite

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