Sunday, July 29, 2012

Governor Brown Signs Legislation to Improve California's Transportation System

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/CaliforniaHigh-SpeedRailAuthority-WhatsNew/~3/T0O-6lDz_cM/df303013-9f31-4532-8b29-417c330c6ee5.pdf

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Saturday, July 28, 2012

Lenovo IdeaPad K1 gets smeared with Ice Cream Sandwich

Lenovo IdeaPad K1 gets smeared with Ice Cream Sandwich

Lenovo is putting out a vanilla version of Android 4.03 for customers eager to rid their IdeaPad K1 of Honeycomb. Fans of stock iterations of Google's mobile OS will love the fact that the update will rid the slate of all of the PC maker's customizations -- as well as any other data on the tablet. If you're feeling brave enough to make the upgrade, simply head on down to the source link and follow the instructions, but be warned, if something goes wrong, you're on your own.

[Thanks, Parth]

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Lenovo IdeaPad K1 gets smeared with Ice Cream Sandwich originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Jul 2012 12:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/07/27/lenovo-ideapad-k1-ics/

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EYES ON LONDON: Deep bongs, cavernous venue

LONDON (AP) ? Around the 2012 Olympics and its host city with journalists from The Associated Press bringing the flavor and details of the games to you:

___

1,000 STEPS

AP's Stephen Wade reports from the Olympic venues:

Arrive early. Be patient. Wear comfortable shoes.

That's my advice for anyone coming to the ExCel arena to watch one of seven events ? table tennis, weightlifting, judo, taekwondo, boxing, wrestling and fencing. The venue's cavernous. I counted taking about 1,000 steps walking from one end to the other. About right. The main "boulevard" runs past dozens of exhibitions halls. Must be 600-700 meters long (2,000 feet).

I mean, it dwarfs the venues in Beijing. That's saying something.

?Stephen Wade ? Twitter http://twitter.com/StephenWadeAP

___

IT APPROACHES

AP's Cassandra Vinograd and Jill Lawless have been reporting on the runup to the opening ceremony. Here's an excerpt from their dispatch Friday morning:

"Deep bongs and pearly tones: Led by Big Ben, bells across Britain rang out in joyous cacophony Friday to mark the official opening day of the London Olympics. At precisely 8:12 a.m., 12 hours before what is expected to be a spectacular Olympic opening ceremony, the bells heralded a day of celebration that has been years in the making. Big Ben ? the famous bell inside Parliament's clock tower ? bonged 40 times over three minutes to ring in the games. It was joined across the country by bells and horns in churches, ships, boats, trucks and cars 12 hours before the symbolic time of 2012 British Summer Time ? 8:12 p.m."

?Cassandra Vinograd and Jill Lawless ? Twitter http://twitter.com/cassvinograd and http://twitter.com/jilllawless

___

LAST WORKOUT EVER?

U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps just tweeted: "Last workout ever....(hashtag)1day no more garbage yardage"

The 14 time Olympic gold medal winner has always said that he'll be hanging up his trunks after the 2012 Games. He also thanked his longtime coach, Bob Bowman, in the tweet before signing off, "now let's have some fun this week!!"

Phelps' first event is the 400-meter individual medley on Saturday.

?Fergus Bell ? Twitter http://twitter.com/fergb

___

REFEREE DIES

A Turkish referee has been found dead in his London hotel room after suffering what appears to have been a heart attack.

Garip Erkuyumcu, 73, was a member of the International Boxing Association's refereeing and judging commission. He was in London to assist referees at the Olympics.

Erkuyumcu's body was discovered by a colleague ? and will be flown to Turkey next week.

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BUS STOP

London organizers want the 2012 Summer Olympics to be public transport games ... including, if they want, for athletes.

Netherlands Olympian Yao Jie is staying in the Olympic Village in east London but her sport, badminton, is in Wembley Arena in northwest London (I once saw James Brown play there; great show).

She said the trip took her 2? hours on an Olympic bus on Wednesday. So she switched Thursday to public transport ? and rode back from Wembley first on the Tube followed by the high-speed Javelin train to the Olympic Park, joining the rest of us plebs. Yao was impressed.

"It's so quick!" she exclaimed as the Javelin pulled in to Stratford, home to Olympic Park. So quick, in fact, that I got her photo on the train and tweeted it but didn't learn much else about her. Her official bio says she reached the last 16 in singles at the Athens Olympics in 2004.

?John Leicester ? Twitter http://twitter.com/johnleicester

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BELL CELEBRATION

Sheila Whysall doesn't specifically remember hearing the last special chiming of Big Ben in 1952, when the famed bell rang to mark the death of George VI.

But she knows that as a girl in Northern Ireland, her mother would have insisted that she listen to it on the radio.

So she was across the street from Parliament when Big Ben rang outside its usual quarter-hour duties for the first time on Friday in 60 years to welcome the Olympics.

The two and a half minute ringing blended with traffic noise and the ringing of small bells wielded by spectators.

People across Britain were urged to ring everything - doorbells, bike bells, there was even a smartphone bell app ? at twelve minutes past eight. "Big Ben is London," says Whysall.

?Warren Levinson ? Twitter http://twitter.com/warrenlevinson

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MARCHING IN THE RAIN?

After a few days of glorious and, well, summer weather for the summer games, rain is back in London's forecast starting on Friday.

U.S. fencer Mariel Zagunis may have to deal with it for a change.

Her sport is an indoor sport, so rain, sun, whatever, it's irrelevant to her in competition. But she's also the U.S. flag bearer for the opening ceremony on Friday night, so she might have to do her job amid raindrops.

"There's so many things that you can't control," Zagunis says. "And the weather is obviously one of them. If it rains, it rains. We're still going to have a great time and it's not going to affect anything."

Zagunis said she has a more simple concern: "I'm just going to focus on not tripping."

?Tim Reynolds ? Twitter http://www.twitter.com/ByTimReynolds

___

ANOTHER MISCUE

Hey, North Korea, it's nothing personal. Turns out the British aren't too good at identifying people's flags and nationalities ? even their own.

A day after infuriating North Koreans by branding them with the flag of their South Korean foes, Olympic organizers are at it again, this time stumbling over the identity of a fellow Briton.

Joe Allen, who speaks fluent Welsh, is one of five Welshmen on Britain's Olympic soccer team. But the team's newly minted team program labels him English. The Olympic organization committee published a brief apology in English.

?Shawn Pogatchnik ? Twitter http://twitter.com/ShawnPogatchnik

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GLIMPSE INTO CYCLING

American cyclist Tyler Farrar had a Tour de France to forget, spending more time on the tarmac than his bike during the first week. But he's still the best hope for the U.S. team in Saturday's road race.

The course into the Surrey countryside should favor sprinters such as Britain's Mark Cavendish , but Farrar has beaten the star from the Isle of Mann in the past - on July 4 during last year's Tour.

Says his American teammate Chris Horner: "If the race ends up in a true bunch sprint, Tyler is our best bet to put someone on the podium."

?Jenna Fryer ? Twitter http://twitter.com/jennafryer

___

DANCING SHOES

The Brazilian men's soccer players got to practice their dance moves for Friday night's opening ceremony in their 3-2 victory over Egypt the night before. The famously festive team and its colorful fan base got rocking and rolling in their opener, putting three in the net in the first half and doing some serious dancing and celebrating after each one.

It wasn't quite as celebratory in the second half, when Egypt scored twice to turn a runaway into a bit of a nail-biter. All the more reason for the Brazilians to blow off a little more steam on Friday night.

?Jon Krawczynski ? Twitter http://www.twitter.com/APkrawczynski.

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FLAME LIGHTER?

The Olympics are finally here, and with Friday night's opening ceremony fast approaching, the speculation is mounting over who will earn the honor of lighting the Olympic flame.

Bookmakers have assigned odds on who will be the final torchbearer, so this is something you can actually bet on. The British Olympic Association said last week they've made their selection, so a handful of people already know the identity.

That's only heightened the debate, even between some of the contenders.

Sir Steve Redgrave is a five-time rowing gold medalist, but he's publicly questioned if two-time decathlon gold medalist Daley Thompson should get the nod over him. Thompson, meanwhile, has said he's more deserving than Sebastian Coe, two-time Olympic champion in the 1,500 meters and head of the London organizing committee.

And don't forget the celebrities or the royals.

Among the other names bandied about has been Prince William, David Beckham, Paul McCartney, or, maybe, an electronic device. In 1992, archer Antonio Rebollo opened the Games by shooting a flaming arrow toward the cauldron.

?Jenna Fryer ? Twitter http://twitter.com/jennafryer

___

LONG RIDE

Thousands of visitors to London this week have made incredibly long trips to get here. Only one claims to have done it all on a rickshaw.

Farmer Chen Guanming is claiming that he made the entire journey from his home in Eastern China on his three-wheeled rickshaw. He says it took him two years to complete the ride, and he has photos of him in front of famous landmarks like the Eiffel Tower to prove his case.

"I came. I did it. I'm very happy to have come to beautiful London," he said.

He made the trip without a ticket for the opening ceremony. He figures if he made it this far, he should be able to come up with a way to get into Olympic Stadium on Friday night.

?Sylvia Hui ? Twitter http://twitter.com/sylviahui

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eyes-london-deep-bongs-cavernous-venue-113709697--oly.html

2012 Olympics Chad Everett London Olympics Kristen Stewart Rupert Sanders Photos nbc BBC 2016 Olympics

Do You Really Need To Learn Internet Marketing To Succeed Online?

time July 27th, 2012 Tags: affiliate marketing, Business Area, Business Marketing, Business Online, Expert, How To Make Money, Internet Business Owner, Internet marketing, learn internet marketing, Many People, Marketing Business, Marketing Internet, Marketing Methods, Marketing On The Internet, Marketing Online, online business, online businesses, Online Marketing, Site Marketing, Start Business
time Posted in Internet Marketing Solutions

There are a lot of people everywhere that get on the internet and start an online business, but they don?t want to learn how to make money with it. Instead, they want the customers to magically come to them, but that is not going to happen for any business and that is why it is a must for you to learn internet marketing.

There are a variety of reasons why it is a must for every internet business owner to learn all they can about internet marketing. You need to understand why no business online can succeed without marketing online.

Below are the top reasons you will never succeed if you do not use internet marketing methods to build your business.

One: Attract visitors to your site ? Using many marketing methods will start attracting many visitors to your site. The visitors are what you need to have in order to make an income from any business on the web.

Once you get visitors to your site you can use the information you post on it to get them to spend their money with you.

Two: Brand yourself as an expert ? Many people are unaware that it is important to brand yourself as an expert in your business area. For example, if you are an affiliate marketing business owner than you need to brand yourself as an expert in affiliate marketing.

Using many online marketing methods is the best way to do that. After people start to view you as an expert they will be more likely to trust you over others and that means they are going to be more likely to spend their cash at your website and not one of your competitors sites.

Three: Keep your business at the front of other online businesses ? Marketing on the internet is just like marketing offline. In order to keep your website in front of as many people as possible every day you have to continuously market your business.

This is no different on the internet for any business owner and utilizing many methods in one system will help you always keep your website in front of as many people as you can every single day.

The more advertising you can do for your business the more people you will have coming to your site and that is always the most effective way to increase any business owner?s website visitors and business income.

These are the top reasons why all internet business owners have to learn internet marketing in order to succeed online. Without online marketing, no business owner will be successful, so if you really wish to achieve your goal of a successful business than you will take your internet marketing education very seriously beginning right away.

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

Source: http://infoabounds.com/uncategorized/do-you-really-need-to-learn-internet-marketing-to-succeed-online/

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Friday, July 27, 2012

Baby robot Affetto gets a torso, still gives us the creeps (video)

Baby robot Affetto gets a torso, still gives us the creeps

It's taken a year to get the sinister ticks and motions of Osaka University's Affetto baby head out of our nightmares -- and now it's grown a torso. Walking that still-precarious line between robots and humans, the animated robot baby now has a pair of arms to call its own. The prototype upper body has a babyish looseness to it -- accidentally hitting itself in the face during the demo video -- with around 20 pneumatic actuators providing the movement. The face remains curiously paused, although we'd assume that the body prototype hasn't been paired with facial motions just yet, which just about puts it the right side of adorable. However, the demonstration does include some sinister faceless dance motions. It's right after the break -- you've been warned.

Continue reading Baby robot Affetto gets a torso, still gives us the creeps (video)

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Baby robot Affetto gets a torso, still gives us the creeps (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Jul 2012 06:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/07/26/baby-robot-affetto-gets-body/

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EYES ON LONDON: A mayor's rejoinder to Romney

In this photo provided by LOCOG, Daniel Mccubbin holds the Olympic Flame inside St Pancras International Railway Station on Day 69 of the London 2012 Olympic Torch Relay, Thursday July 26, 2012, in London. (AP Photo/LOCOG, Gareth Fuller)

In this photo provided by LOCOG, Daniel Mccubbin holds the Olympic Flame inside St Pancras International Railway Station on Day 69 of the London 2012 Olympic Torch Relay, Thursday July 26, 2012, in London. (AP Photo/LOCOG, Gareth Fuller)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney walks out of 10 Downing Street after meeting with British Prime Minister David Cameron in London, Thursday, July 26, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Malawi's Joyce Tafatatha trains at the Aquatics Center at the Olympic Park ahead of the 2012 Summer Olympics, Thursday, July 26, 2012, in London. Opening ceremonies for the 2012 London Olympics will be held Friday, July 27. (AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa De Olza)

U.S. gymnast Kyla Ross performs on the beam during training at the 2012 Summer Olympics, Thursday, July 26, 2012, in London. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

Chalk lie scattered near the feet of U.S. gymnast Jordyn Wieber during training at the 2012 Summer Olympics, Thursday, July 26, 2012, in London. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)

(AP) ? Around the 2012 Olympics and its host city with journalists from The Associated Press bringing the flavor and details of the games to you:

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REJOINDER TO ROMNEY

"There's guy called Mitt Romney who wants to know if we are ready. Are we ready? Yes we are!" ? London Mayor Boris Johnson to a raucous crowd in London's Hyde Park after the arrival of the Olympic flame.

?Rob Harris ? Twitter http://twitter.com/robharris

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DOUBLE DUTY

The teamwork continues even after the German gymnasts leave the floor.

Several English-speaking reporters wanted to talk to Oksana Chusovitina, who is competing in her sixth Olympics at 37 ? unheard of for a female gymnast. There was just one problem: Chusovitina, who is originally from Uzbekistan, doesn't speak English, and there were no translators available.

A TV researcher who speaks Russian initially offered to help, only to realize he was needed for something else on the other side of the room. Elisabeth Seitz then leaned over and said, "If you need translating, I can try to help." She did better than that, translating about five minutes' worth of questions for Chusovitina.

Chusovitina competed for the Unified Team at the 1992 Olympics, then her native Uzbekistan in Atlanta, Sydney and Athens. She moved to Germany in 2002, so her son, Alisher, could be treated there for leukemia. She has lived there ever since, and switched nationalities in 2006 to express her appreciation for her adopted country.

?Nancy Armour ? Twitter http://www.twitter.com/nrarmour

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CYCLIST'S-EYE VIEW

AP journalist and avid bicyclist Warren Levinson reports in from two wheels:

I am astonished at how much official support there is for bicycling in London, given how narrow the streets are. The "Boris Bikes" ? London's popular bike-sharing program, named for its mayor ? are just the beginning. There are bicyclists everywhere at all hours and of all levels, in numbers you can only imagine in New York.

That said, there is no way I would have attempted to ride here if I weren't used to city cycling.

One of my New York City rules: I don't tangle with buses. Here, they are impossible to avoid. You're moving along and gradually become aware of a double-deck whale, breathing quietly through its blowhole, just over your right shoulder. (Buses in London are much quieter than they are in New York.)

A newspaper, The Independent, ran a race to Olympic Park between a bicycle, a car, the Underground and a riverboat. The bike won by a big margin. So far, I am enjoying the ride.

?Warren Levinson ? Twitter http://twitter.com/warrenlevinson

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OPENING FROM AFAR

The U.S. Olympic women's soccer team hasn't attended an opening ceremony in 12 years. It just takes too much time and energy to fly to the main host city from the remote venues where footie is played.

So what to do? Gather in front of a television and dress as if you were there.

"We're going to feel the spirit," goalkeeper Hope Solo said. "Everyone's talking about dressing up in our opening ceremony outfits ? and not shipping them home until the following day."

?Joseph White ? Twitter http://twitter.com/JGWhiteAP

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FEDERER'S FLAW

Roger Federer has been holding court, and he delivered up a secret: He can't play tennis "at all" with his left hand.

Other tidbits from the winner of 17 tennis majors at an entertaining news conference:

?He is not a huge autograph hunter.

?He is looking forward to chatting with other Olympians ? "It doesn't matter if they are famous or not."

?And he is in two minds about being able to wear colored kit at Wimbledon, where the usual etiquette requiring that players wear white is relaxed for the Olympics.

"I feel a bit awkward playing in a red shirt out at Wimbledon," he said. "But I don't dislike it."

Federer, 31 next month, wouldn't rule out another Olympic appearance ? it would be his fifth ? at the Rio de Janeiro Games in 2016. "There's definitely a chance," he said.

?John Leicester ? Twitter http://twitter.com/johnleicester

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CONFIDENT SOUTH AFRICA

If South Arican athletes don't perform at these Olympics, they can't blame the food or the accommodation. Minister of Sport Fikile Mbalula has visited London's athletes village and pronounced it good.

"I have seen the village, have tasted part of their meal and they told me that it is better than Beijing," Mbalula said at a welcome reception for the national team. "I have seen where they sleep, they told me they are content."

Sports officials have set the team a goal of 12 medals ? and Mbalula ended a characteristically fiery pep talk with: "Let's go to war!"

?Jill Lawless ? Twitter http://twitter.com/JillLawless

___

FIT AT 40

There are always a handful of athletes at the Olympics trying to win one for the aged, and Chris Horner is "that guy" for the U.S. men's road cycling team.

Horner, who will turn 41 in October, gives off a grandfatherly vibe surrounded by 20-something teammates Tejay van Garderen, Taylor Phinney, Tyler Farrar and Timmy Duggan.

Horner turned professional in 1995, but failed to make the U.S. team for the next four Summer Olympics. He figured that London was his final shot, and was nearly overcome with emotion when USA Cycling announced he had made the five-man team for Saturday's road race.

"Your whole life, you're always trying to get on the Olympic team," Horner said from the team's training base in the Surrey countryside.

?David Skretta ? Twitter http://twitter.com/APdaveskretta

___

NO STAR LINE AT SECURITY?

I'm standing in line with a bunch of media members waiting to get cleared through security when two men come hurrying in to the back of the line. Dressed in Serbia gear and clearly in a rush to get somewhere, they try to ask the security personnel to expedite the process for them.

Not happening. They have to stand in line like everyone else.

As I get through the screening, I turn to see who is there. It's Novak Djokvic, only one of the three best tennis players in the world. His watch sets off the alarm, but he rushes out before I have a chance to ask what in the heck he's doing there with us lowly regular people.

?Jon Krawczynski ? Twitter http://twitter.com/APkrawczynski

___

DOPING TEST OVER, FINALLY

Remember the problems two fasting Moroccans were having to comply with the urine test that's part of doping checks here? It took two and a half hours, but they've managed it.

The team coach had said earlier that the two chosen players ? who are observing the Muslim holy month of Ramadan ? had found it "more or less impossible" because they hadn't consumed anything since 2:30 a.m.

?Joseph White ? Twitter http://twitter.com/JGWhiteAP

___

ALL ABOUT PHELPS

Michael Phelps is such an Olympic colossus that the US swim team press conference broke down this way:

A half hour of questions and answers with Phelps, then a half hour with the rest of the team.

Does this reinforce the idea that Phelps is somehow separate from his teammates?

Teammate Natalie Coughlin likes it this way.

"We used to do all the press conferences together and would just sit here daydreaming" while Phelps fielded all the questions.

?Warren Levinson ? Twitter http://twitter.com/WarrenLevinson

___

TOO LATE TO SWITCH SPORTS?

American track star Lolo Jones hasn't been able to hurdle the heat so far. Tweet: "No air conditioners. It's HOT in the rooms. No need to practice. Just lay in ur bed and sweat. Where r the applications for Winter Olympics???"

?Jon Krawczynski ? Twitter http://twitter.com/APkrawczynski

___

SING ALONG WITH PAUL

Londoners have been careful not to leak too many secrets about Friday's opening ceremony, but some have slipped out anyway.

With thousands taking part in dress rehearsals being held at night, it's been difficult to keep all the juicy details under wraps. And while it's been impossible to see what's going on inside Olympic Stadium, there have been clues floating in the air all week.

"I've heard Paul McCartney do 'Hey Jude' twice," said a bartender on Euston St. "At least it sounded like him."

Tom Withers http://twitter.com/twithersAP

___

WRESTLING GOLD?

U.S. women's wrestling coach Terry Steiner is hopeful that the growth of the sport domestically will lead to the country's first gold medal.

Steiner said that in 2002, two years before women's wrestling made its debut at the Athens Games, just five American colleges offered women's wrestling. That number currently stands at 21, and Steiner said girls' wrestling is also the fastest-growing sport at the high school level in the U.S.

The Americans have a pair of two-time Olympians in Clarissa Chun at 48 kilograms and Ali Bernard at 72 kg. Both reached bronze medal matches before falling in Beijing and are considered legitimate medal contenders

"Our goals are very simple. We've got four athletes and we'd like to leave here with four medals. And I think we have the athletes that can perform and have performed at a high level," Steiner said.

?Luke Meredith ? Twitter http://twitter.com/LukeMeredithAP

___

WHERE'S ROGER?

Roger Federer has an endorsement contract with Rolex. That doesn't mean he's on time.

The Swiss player, who returned to No. 1 in the world again after winning his seventh Wimbledon earlier this month, was to meet with media at 5:30 p.m. but at about that time it was announced he would be 30 minutes late. Federer, with 17 Grand Slams, won a gold medal in doubles in 2008 with fellow countryman Stan Wawrinki. He'll be back at Wimbledon to try to win gold in singles, and his chances improved when Spain's Rafael Nadal pulled out due to injury.

?Betsy Blaney

___

TALL AND SMALL

A tower of men's tennis will face, or rather peer down at, the tour's smallest player in first-round action at the Olympics.

No. 11 seed John Isner of the United States is matched against Olivier Rochus of Belgium in a draw that was announced Thursday at Wimbledon. Isner is 6 feet 9 inches (2.06 meters) tall, and his opponent is 5 feet 6 inches (1.68 meters) tall.

Last year, Isner defeated Rochus to win the title at Newport in the United States. The Association of Tennis Professionals described it as the "biggest-ever height differential" in a tour final.

The ATP biography for Rochus, whose career-high ranking was No. 24 in 2005, says his ambition as a child was "to be tall."

At 6 feet 10 inches (2.08 meters), Ivo Karlovic of Croatia is the tallest man on the tour.

?Christopher Torchia

___

BRAZILIAN PARTY

Hundreds of Brazilian fans are taking over St. Mary Street in Cardiff, Wales, ahead of the team's opening match against Egypt in the men's football tournament. Making a lot of noise and dancing to loud music, the Brazilians are bringing some life to what normally would be a calm city center on a Thursday afternoon.

Smaller groups of Egyptian supporters were also on hand, peacefully engaging with the Brazilians ahead of the Group C match at the nearby Millennium Stadium.

The gathering of fans is one of the few signs of changes brought on by the Olympics to Cardiff, located some 150 miles (250 kilometers) from all the action in London.

?Tales Azzoni ? Twitter http://twitter.com/tazzoni

___

WHEN IN LONDON ...

U.S. gymnast Gabby Douglas joked after making the Olympic team she hoped to "catch an accent" when she arrived in London.

Douglas doesn't quite have the hang of it yet, but her teammates are picking it up quickly.

Aly Raisman put on a show for reporters shortly after the U.S. completed podium training on Thursday, putting the proper lilt on "absolutely brilliant" and "Introducing the gymnasts" (with the emphasis on the second syllable of gymnast).

How good was it? Even a member of the Olympic Broadcast System (a Brit) applauded.

?Will Graves ? Twitter http://twitter.com/WillGravesAP

___

WELCOME TO NODNOL?

Call that a welcome? A sprawling shopping mall next to London's Olympic Park has been forced to alter signs greeting Arabic-speaking visitors, after a campaign group pointed out that the message was almost unreadable.

Westfield Stratford, which has more than 260 stores and is located right next to the main Olympic venues, has confirmed it is replacing banners put in place to welcome Olympic visitors after it was contacted by the Council for Arab-British understanding.

The council said signs that were supposed to say "Welcome to London" in Arabic were instead written backwards and did not have the letters joined up, leaving the message virtually indecipherable.

Chris Doyle, the council's director, says the banner has taken a simple message and "jumbled it up and separated the letters ? what you got was a load of gibberish."

?David Stringer - Twitter http://twitter.com/david_stringer

___

OLDER MEDALS

The British Museum is a huge draw for tourists, and the medal display is very timely.

The exhibit features actual medals awarded, including one for the pentathlon in the 1873 Wenlock Olympian Games, and artist renderings of this year's medals.

?Jenna Fryer ? Twitter http://twitter.com/jennafryer

___

MAJOR DONATION

Nearly 2,000 Moroccan kids are benefitting from a decision by British rower Mohamed Sbihi not to fast during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan in order to pursue his Olympic dream.

Sbihi, who is part of the men's eight at the London Games, felt he wouldn't be able to maintain his competitive edge if he abstained from food and drink from dawn to dusk during Ramadan, which began last Friday.

So, as a compromise, he is instead digging deep into his pocket and paying to feed 1,800 people via an English-based charity ? Walou 4 Us ? that works with kids in Morocco.

"It's written in the Quran that those unable to fast have to feed 60 people or fast for 30 days for every day they miss intentionally," Sbihi said.

"So, it worked out 1,800 people or 5 years' fasting. I'm very fortunate that I have funds to pay and make the donation. I made the donation about a month and a half ago."

?Steve Douglas ? Twitter http://twitter.com/sdouglas80

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? "Eyes on London" shows you the Olympics through the eyes of Associated Press journalists across the 2012 Olympic city and around the world. Follow them on Twitter where available with the handles listed after each item, and get even more AP updates from the Games here: http://twitter.com/AP_Sports

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-07-26-OLY-Eyes-on-London/id-f97819142f644310b78845c96b21153f

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High-carb diet tied to breast cancer risk for some

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Older women who eat a lot of starchy and sweet carbohydrates may be at increased risk of a less common but deadlier form of breast cancer, a new study suggests.

The findings, from a study of nearly 335,000 European women, do not prove that your French fries, sweets and white bread contribute to breast cancer.

But they do hint at a potential factor in a little understood form of breast cancer, according to a researcher not involved in the work.

Specifically, the study found a connection between high "glycemic load" and breast cancers that lack receptors for the female sex hormone estrogen.

A high glycemic load essentially means a diet heavy in foods that cause a rapid spike in blood sugar. The usual culprits include processed foods made from white flour, potatoes and sweets. A sweet, juicy piece of fruit can also raise blood sugar quickly. But since fruits are low in calories, they don't contribute as much to your diet's glycemic load.

So-called estrogen receptor (ER)-negative tumors account for about one-quarter of breast cancers. They typically have a poorer prognosis than ER-positive cancers because they tend to grow faster and are not sensitive to hormone-based therapies.

In this study, postmenopausal women whose diets were very high in glycemic load had a 36-percent higher risk of ER-negative breast cancer, compared with women whose diets had the lightest load.

In general, a diet with a high glycemic load is not a particularly healthy one, noted Christina Clarke, a research scientist at the Cancer Prevention Institute of California in Fremont, and a consulting assistant professor at Stanford University.

"These types of diets have been associated with many negative health outcomes," said Clarke, who was not involved in the study.

So although the current findings do not prove cause-and-effect, they can give women another reason to make healthier diet choices, according to Clarke.

Lead researcher Isabelle Romieu, of the International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon, France, did not respond to an email request for an interview.

From a scientific standpoint, Clarke said the results are interesting because so little is known about what causes ER-negative breast cancers. Most breast tumors - the ER-positive ones - have their growth fueled by estrogen.

"We really don't know anything about what causes (ER-negative) tumors," Clarke said. "This study gives us a really important clue for future research."

Diets with a high glycemic load are associated with a bigger secretion of insulin, a hormone that regulates blood sugar. High insulin levels, in turn, have been linked to certain cancers, possibly because insulin helps tumors grow.

The current findings hint at a role for "insulin pathways" in ER-negative breast cancer, according to Clarke. "But there's definitely more work that needs to be done," she said.

The findings, which appear in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, are based on a long-running European study on nutrition factors and cancer risk.

Of nearly 335,000 women in the study, 11,576 developed breast cancer over a dozen years. Overall, there was no link between breast cancer risk and glycemic load - estimated from diet questionnaires the women completed at the study's start.

But the picture changed when the researchers focused on postmenopausal women with ER-negative cancer. Among women in the top 20 percent for glycemic load, there were 158 cases of breast cancer, versus 111 cases in the bottom 20 percent.

When breast tumors also lacked receptors for the hormone progesterone, the gap was a bit more pronounced.

Still, the numbers "weren't huge," Clarke noted. And there are many other factors that could be different between those groups of women, although the study did account for some of them, including weight, exercise habits, calorie intake and smoking.

Clarke pointed out that there is no single factor in any woman's risk of breast cancer. But, she said, the findings offer more incentive to eat a balanced diet that limits refined carbs in favor of healthier fare - like lean protein, vegetables, "good" fats and high-fiber grains.

"Really, you want to avoid these (high glycemic load) diets anyway," Clarke said.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/MZY2qw American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, online July 3, 2012.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/high-carb-diet-tied-breast-cancer-risk-192219378.html

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Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Chrome Web Store offers app recommendations from your Google+ mates, allows you to return the favor

Chrome Web Store offers app recommendations from your Google mates, allows you to return the favor

Looking to your online pals for some Chrome Web Store suggestions? If so, the folks at Google have just made accessing said list of recommendations much easier. The outfit unveiled a new feature for the app repository that allows you to see all of the add-ons that your Google+ mates are raving about. You'll also be able to provide some tips of your own thanks to the addition of the trusty +1 button on the detail page of each offering. Just in case you forget to hit the "From Your Circles" link before browsing, each application will bear a stamp of approval -- should it be deemed worthy of the extra clicks. If you're short on acquaintances or are still new to the social network, the Chrome dev team's lists will appear for you as well.

Chrome Web Store offers app recommendations from your Google+ mates, allows you to return the favor originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 Jul 2012 02:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Should Small Businesses Really Fear Obamacare?

The bill in fact contains substantial benefits (some might even say giveaways) for small businesses. That starts with a program already under way to offer special subsidies to firms with fewer than 25 employees that want to offer health benefits. As long as your employees earn less than $50,000 on average (law firms, medical practices, and other elite professional partnership are thus ineligible), you can get a tax credit to defray 35 percent of the cost of the insurance if you?re a for-profit firm, and 25 percent if you?re a nonprofit. When the law really gets rolling in 2014, those subsidies rise to 50 percent for for-profits and 35 percent for nonprofits.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=6006f204935af2eca66f8a50cd4c53e0

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Falling For The Hunt

Falling For The Hunt

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Monday, July 2, 2012

Insights into primate diversity: Lessons from the rhesus macaque

Monday, July 2, 2012

New research published in BMC Genetics shows that the rhesus macaque has three times as much genetic variation than humans. However despite much of this extra variation being within genes, it does not affect protein function. Consequently damaging variations are at similar levels in macaques and humans - indicating a strong selection pressure to maintain gene function regardless of mutation rate or population size.

Humans and rhesus macaques shared a common ancestor approximately 25 million years ago. Although there are now over seven billion humans on the planet only 100,000 years ago the human population was as low as one million. The effective human population, the number of people required to explain current genetic variation rate, was until recently less than 8,000.

The population size of rhesus macaques is in the millions and is exceeded only by humans (among primates). However there are 13 subspecies which have evolved to exploit environments as diverse as savannah and forests, and across a range of climate zones.

A team of researchers led by Christina Barr and David Goldman from the NIH determined that the effective population size for these primates was 80,000, ten times that of humans. Analysis of genetic variation, using single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), showed that the macaque genome had three times higher genetic variation than humans. Most of these SNP were previously unknown and were disproportionally found in functionally important regions of DNA and each known gene had at least one SNP.

Dr. Goldman explained, "Although macaques have more variation than humans in the protein coding regions of genes, the ratio of variation in these regions compared to non-coding regions is significantly lower. Additionally the macaque variation is less likely to alter protein function. This brings down the amount of damaging variation to a level close to what was actually seen in humans."

Dr Barr continued "Our comparative approach across primate species (human and macaques) gives us a genomic view of evolutionary selection and reaffirms the effects of population history on genetic variation. Not very long ago, on an evolutionary timescale, there were more macaques than people, and the genomes of both species are a legacy of those times past."

###

BioMed Central: http://www.biomedcentral.com

Thanks to BioMed Central for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/121385/Insights_into_primate_diversity__Lessons_from_the_rhesus_macaque

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