Friday, March 29, 2013

?Facebook Phone? rumors again flare up after Facebook sends out event invitation

By Martyn Herman LONDON, March 28 (Reuters) - Whether by design, necessity, self-interest or because of all three, nurturing youngsters has become fashionable for England's elite with no expense spared in the hunt for the new Wayne Rooney or Steven Gerrard. The length and breadth of the country, scouts from top clubs are hoovering up promising footballers barely old enough to tie their bootlaces in a bid to unearth the 30 million pounds ($45.40 million) treasures of the future. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/facebook-phone-rumors-again-flare-facebook-sends-event-115057149.html

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Memories of near death experiences: More real than reality?

Mar. 27, 2013 ? University of Li?ge researchers have demonstrated that the physiological mechanisms triggered during NDE lead to a more vivid perception not only of imagined events in the history of an individual but also of real events which have taken place in their lives! These surprising results - obtained using an original method which now requires further investigation - are published in PLOS ONE.

Seeing a bright light, going through a tunnel, having the feeling of ending up in another 'reality' or leaving one's own body are very well known features of the complex phenomena known as 'Near-Death Experiences ' (NDE), which people who are close to death can experience in particular. Products of the mind? Psychological defence mechanisms? Hallucinations? These phenomena have been widely documented in the media and have generated numerous beliefs and theories of every kind. From a scientific point of view, these experiences are all the more difficult to understand in that they come into being in chaotic conditions, which make studying them in real time almost impossible. The University of Li?ge's researchers have thus tried a different approach.

Working together, researchers at the Coma Science Group (Directed by Steven Laureys) and the University of Li?ge's Cognitive Psychology Research (Professor Serge Br?dart and Hedwige Dehon), have looked into the memories of NDE with the hypothesis that if the memories of NDE were pure products of the imagination, their phenomenological characteristics (e.g., sensorial, self referential, emotional, etc. details) should be closer to those of imagined memories. Conversely, if the NDE are experienced in a way similar to that of reality, their characteristics would be closer to the memories of real events.

The researchers compared the responses provided by three groups of patients, each of which had survived (in a different manner) a coma, and a group of healthy volunteers. They studied the memories of NDE and the memories of real events and imagined events with the help of a questionnaire which evaluated the phenomenological characteristics of the memories. The results were surprising. From the perspective being studied, not only were the NDEs not similar to the memories of imagined events, but the phenomenological characteristics inherent to the memories of real events (e.g. memories of sensorial details) are even more numerous in the memories of NDE than in the memories of real events.

The brain, in conditions conducive to such phenomena occurring, is prey to chaos. Physiological and pharmacological mechanisms are completely disturbed, exacerbated or, conversely, diminished. Certain studies have put forward a physiological explanation for certain components of NDE, such as Out-of-Body Experiences, which could be explained by dysfunctions of the temporo-parietal lobe. In this context the study published in PLOS ONE suggests that these same mechanisms could also could also 'create' a perception - which would thus be processed by the individual as coming from the exterior - of reality. In a kind of way their brain is lying to them, like in a hallucination. These events being particularly surprising and especially important from an emotional and personal perspective, the conditions are ripe for the memory of this event being extremely detailed, precise and durable.

Numerous studies have looked into the physiological mechanisms of NDE, the production of these phenomena by the brain, but, taken separately, these two theories are incapable of explaining these experiences in their entirety. The study published in PLOS ONE does not claim to offer a unique explanation for NDE, but it contributes to study pathways which take into account psychological phenomena as factors associated with, and not contradictory to, physiological phenomena.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Li?ge, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Marie Thonnard, Vanessa Charland-Verville, Serge Br?dart, Hedwige Dehon, Didier Ledoux, Steven Laureys, Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse. Characteristics of Near-Death Experiences Memories as Compared to Real and Imagined Events Memories. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (3): e57620 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0057620

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/nU6TwYi_i1I/130327190359.htm

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Tribeca to close with 'King of Comedy' restoration

NEW YORK (AP) ? The Tribeca Film Festival will close with a 30th anniversary restoration of Martin Scorsese's "The King of Comedy."

This year's festival will bow out on April 27 with a classic from one of its founders: Robert De Niro. In the 1983 dark comedy, he stars as the aspiring comedian Rupert Pupkin, whose obsessive celebrity hounding leads to kidnapping.

Tribeca co-founder Jane Rosenthal said it had always been a goal of Scorsese's to use the festival, with which he's closely associated, to showcase restored and rediscovered films.

The 12th annual Tribeca Film Festival opens April 17.

___

Online:

http://www.tribecafilm.com/festival

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tribeca-close-king-comedy-restoration-182027297.html

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Store donated blood for more than 3 weeks? Say NO (nitric oxide)

Mar. 10, 2013 ? Transfusion of donated blood more than three weeks old results in impaired blood vessel function, a new study of hospital patients shows.

Blood banks now consider six weeks to be the maximum permitted storage time of blood for use in transfusion, but recent studies have suggested transfusing blood stored for more than a few weeks has adverse effects in patients undergoing cardiac surgery or critical care.

The new finding suggests a mechanism explaining why older blood might be detrimental to patient health: a deficiency in nitric oxide, a short-lived chemical messenger that relaxes blood vessels.

The results are being presented at the American College of Cardiology meeting in San Francisco. The presenter is cardiovascular research fellow Robert Neuman, MD. Senior authors include Arshed Quyyumi, MD, professor of medicine and director of the Emory Clinical Cardiovascular Research Institute, and John Roback, MD, PhD, associate professor of pathology and laboratory medicine and medical director of the Emory University Hospital blood bank.

In the current study, 43 patients at Emory University Hospital were set to receive cross-matched red blood cells for clinical indications. Members of the group were in hospital for various reasons, such as cancer treatment and surgery. They were randomly chosen to receive either fresh (less than ten days old) or aged (more than three weeks old) red blood cells. On average, they received the equivalent of two units. A unit is 450 milliliters of blood.

Neuman and his colleagues tested blood vessel function by measuring flow-mediated dilation (FMD). By ultrasound, they tested how much a blood vessel in the arm opens up after a blood pressure cuff is first tightened then removed. Flow-mediated dilation is an indicator of the health of the endothelial lining of the blood vessels and is a process that is dependent on nitric oxide.

Healthy, younger individuals can have flow-mediated dilation of up to 10 percent -- the average for the hospitalized group was 5 percent. Patients receiving aged blood saw their FMD halved to 2.4 percent 24 hours after the transfusion, while patients receiving fresh blood saw no significant change in FMD.

This effect of older blood on blood vessel function is similar in size to that of eating a fatty meal (temporary), or the longterm effects of a cardiovascular disease risk factor such as smoking or diabetes.

Healthy flow-mediated dilation reflects sufficient production of nitric oxide, which is generated by the blood vessels' endothelial lining and causes them to relax. Nitric oxide is also important for delivery of oxygen by hemoglobin. Red blood cells carry nitric oxide bound to hemoglobin, and play a critical role in recycling the nitric oxide. Over time in storage, the nitric oxide is lost. Transfused red blood cells last a couple months in the patient. The Emory team did not measure FMD beyond 24 hours.

The so-called "red blood cell storage lesion" consists of several changes including oxidation, disruption of cellular structures, and loss of other chemicals such as the energy currency ATP and the hemoglobin regulator 2,3-diphosphoglycerate. A recent study has also shown that red blood cells stored for more than three weeks lose physical flexibility.

Thus, loss of nitric oxide is probably not the only important change, but it may be significant in terms of effects on cardiovascular health, the authors argue.

"Aside from the direct infusion of nitric oxide-deficient blood, we may be also seeing an indirect effect from other aspects of storage that impact nitric oxide availability and endothelial function such as increased inflammation triggered by aged blood," Neuman says.

A 2008 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that cardiac surgery patients receiving older blood had a higher risk of dying in the hospital, and were more likely to need ventilation support or have sepsis or kidney failure. Two large-scale clinical trials (links below) are addressing the issue of the maximum time blood should be stored.

Although blood banks tend to use a "first-in, first-out" policy, limiting storage time could reduce the blood supply. One possibility could be to reserve fresh blood for those patients at most risk of cardiovascular problems, Neuman says.

Another way that nitric oxide deficiency could be remedied is with an additive such as nitrite, which the body uses as a storage reservoir for nitric oxide, or some other preservative. Red blood cells are now stored in a solution with glucose, anticoagulant and acidity buffering properties.

"There is a lot of information that blood that has been stored for a while can cause problems for patients," Neuman says. "This starts to answer the question: what is causing the problem?"

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Emory Health Sciences, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/Efp2V2XujIk/130310164225.htm

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SEO Tips - Top 5 Tips to SEO Beginners - best seo tips,web hosting ...

Here are 5 SEO tips for SEO fledglings to move toward getting stacked up in web indexing tools.

Don't buy another realm: Do not buy another dominion unless you need to. Web indexes do compute the area age and to what extent your site have been around. You can redirect your old dominion to your new realm, however the best wager is to utilize the old dominion. In the event that you are beginning your locale sans preparation and don't have an old dominion, you need to lose certain movement until your locale inches toward getting listed.

Enhance your destination for gathering of people: The most normal confusion SEO tenderfoots do is that they attempt to enhance the locale to draw in internet searching tools. The vast majority of the time, in a try to draw in web indexing tools, they neglect to streamline the destination in a manner to draw in guests. Web indexing tool associations are adjusting their contrivances and giving necessity to pages that are client well disposed.

Essential word Phrases: Research your decisive word expresses broadly. Catchphrase determination is the base for a SEO crusade. Getting #1 in Google for irrelevant magic words doesn't benefit you in any case. Don't pick nonexclusive essential words like "machines", "health" and so on... Alternately pick long tail catchphrases which are frequently called as purchaser arranged watchwords.

Now and then it is demanding to find long tail essential words in few specialties utilizing any catchphrase instrument. You need to think out-of-crate that time. Research Yahoo answers and discover what individuals are scanning for in your specialty. Use Google infer, AdWords to figure out catchphrases.

Substance: Do not duplicate the substance from else where. Compose your particular substance. Compose one of a kind and initial substance for your post. You can outsource this work to different journalists. You can find value journalists in locales like Elance, Odesk and whatnot... You will find authors who work for as flat as $3 for every 500 word article.

Join-worthy destination: As you know, backlinks play a major part in online searching tool rankings. So remember this focus and make your post a 'connection worthy' locale.

a. Most recent news/tips to the guests.

b. High caliber substance.

c. Teach your guests utilizing motion pictures.

d. Gather input from your guests.

Every last trace of the above aides your locale to end up being a connection worthy locale.

Source: http://zubair141.blogspot.com/2013/03/seo-tips-top-5-tips-to-seo-beginners.html

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Howard leads Lakers over Bulls 90-81

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Kobe Bryant was asked what it felt like to be a "playoff team," his Lakers having just moved into the No. 8 spot in the Western Conference after a 90-81 victory over the Chicago Bulls on Sunday.

Bryant, who had 19 points, nine assists and seven rebounds, let out a less-than-enthusiastic "yippee."

The win improved the Lakers to 33-31, the first time they've been two games over .500 all season. They are one-half game ahead of Utah for the final playoff spot. And while the Lakers may feel a sense of accomplishment in reaching playoff position after such a poor start to the season, Bryant is quick to note there is plenty still left to do.

"We're very focused," Bryant said. "We know what we have to do and what lies ahead. Everybody's locked in."

That would include Lakers center Dwight Howard, who is playing more like the player the Lakers hoped they were getting when he was acquired in a trade with Orlando. Howard scored 16 points on 8 of 14 shooting, blocked four shots and grabbed 21 rebounds, the fourth time this season he's had 20 or more rebounds.

"I think I am getting a little bit better," said Howard, who was 0 for 5 from the free throw line. "I'm just going to keep working on my conditioning, get my timing back and just keep going hard."

The Lakers, who have won eight of 10 since the All-Star break, led by four points at halftime. But point guard Steve Nash keyed a 21-7 third-quarter spurt that put the Lakers up by as many as 18 points. Nash scored 10 of his 16 points in the third quarter.

"We have to try to climb higher," Nash said. "This team is far from a finished product, so we have to improve every night. Get tighter on both ends of the floor. The more we play together the better we should be and the more we should learn how to play together.

"What is the point of getting to the playoffs if you hold tight and this is a finished product? We need to try to improve while we solidify a playoff spot and be a better team, and hopefully a tougher team to compete with in the playoffs."

The Lakers led almost throughout, only briefly falling behind by two points in the second quarter.

Metta World Peace (12 points), Earl Clark (11 points) and Jodie Meeks (10 points) all scored in double figures for the Lakers.

Nate Robinson led the Bulls with 19 points, Joakim Noah had 18 points and 17 rebounds and Carlos Boozer had 12 points and 10 rebounds for Chicago.

Bryant was scoreless in the first quarter and had just six points at halftime, but the Lakers maintained a lead behind Howard's play in the paint.

"I thought Howard in particular in the first half set the tone," Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau said. "He just dominated the paint with shot-blocking, rebounding, physicality. That set the tone for the game and they dominated us on the boards from the start. Kobe came out as a playmaker so they played well."

The Lakers finished the third quarter with a 73-61 lead when Clark took a pass from Bryant and made a jumper at the buzzer. The Bulls got within eight points on a basket by Boozer with 8:02 left, but got no closer the rest of the way.

Bryant missed all three shots in the first quarter, going scoreless in the opening 12 minutes. World Peace was cold as well, missing four open 3-pointers, but the Lakers held an early lead thanks to Howard's efforts down low. Howard was 3 of 3 from the field for six points and grabbed seven rebounds.

"Dwight is just feeling better," Lakers coach Mike D'Antoni said. "You can see it all over the place. His back is better, he's in rhythm, whatever it is he's a monster defensively."

Bryant finally got into the scoring column on a jumper in the lane with 7:15 left until halftime, then quickly hit another outside shot less than a minute later. But the Lakers couldn't shake the Bulls, who pulled to within 34-32 on a layup by Robinson, Howard picking up his third foul on the play.

Howard remained in the game but the Bulls briefly pulled ahead, going up 36-34 on a basket by Carlos Boozer.

The Lakers regained the lead shortly thereafter on a 3-pointer by Jodie Meeks, and led 44-40 at the half, but not without a little drama. After World Peace was called for a foul on an illegal screen, denying Bryant a chance to take the final shot of the half, Bryant and World Peace barked at each other as they made their way up the court. Nash got between the two to calm them down.

NOTES: Lakers forward Pau Gasol (foot injury; torn plantar fascia) remains on track to return before the end of the regular season. "Gasol is coming on," Lakers coach Mike D'Antoni said. "It's five weeks on Tuesday, and they said six to eight weeks, so hopefully that's the case. If there are no setbacks, he should be back." ... Bulls guard Derrick Rose, recovering from surgery on his left knee last May, is close to returning. But coach Tom Thibodeau said he can't look ahead to how the team will adjust with Rose, the 2011 NBA MVP, back on the floor. "We'll cross that bridge when we get there," Thibodeau said. "For us right now, the guys that are playing, they have to concentrate on their improvement and our next opponent. Derrick has to concentrate on his rehab."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/howard-leads-lakers-over-bulls-90-81-221931159--spt.html

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Frugal Fridays: Awesome travel bargains and more

TODAY financial editor Jean Chatzky shares her tips and deals to help you save money over the weekend and beyond, including deals on package vacations and free eyeglasses and paint.

By TODAY staff

For Frugal Fridays, TODAY financial editor Jean Chatzky offers up a number of money-saving tips, ranging from free paint for your home, deals for your vacation and how to eat your way to success.?

Researchers over the years have found certain foods affect our behavior. Tuna puts us in a good mood.? Spinach increases our ability to concentrate.? Blueberries boost memory.? Now new research from Babson College suggests eating in general improves our ability to negotiate.?

Professor Lakshmi Balachandra noticed a lot of negotiations don't happen over desks or in offices; they happen over lunch or over dinner. When she tested her theory, she found that subjects who negotiated over food came to resolutions that were significantly more profitable for both parties.? She thinks it's because there's something that drives humans to want to work together when we're eating together.?

The lesson for real life may be to head out for a meal if you're at an impasse with your spouse, or trying to get your boss to give you more flexible conditions - or a raise.?

There are new travel deals this season if you know where to look. The folks at Expedia.com and AirfareWatchdog.com clued us into the fact that package trips -- hotel plus airfare -- are actually less expensive this year than last.? This is happening because packagers are competing with sites such as Sniqueaway.com, which offer "members only" hotel rates.?

Current deals include:?

From New York to San Juan, Puerto Rico

  • Four nights at the 4-star Intercontinental San Juan Resort and Casino
  • Originally: $2,033, now $1,440 or $720 per person -? 29 percent discount

?From Los Angeles to Los Cabos, Mexico

  • Four nights in the 4 ?-star Fiesta Americana Grand
  • Originally $1,709, now $924 or $471 per person - a 45 percent discount

From Chicago to Orlando

  • Four nights in the Westgate Palace, a 3-star that has 4-star reviews on TripAdvisor
  • Originally $1,818 now $960 or $480 per person - a 47 percent discount

If you?re in the market for something completely free, and if your house is in need of a pick-me-up perhaps you could use some free paint.? Ace Hardware, over the next two Saturdays, March 9 and March 16, is giving away a free quart of Clark + Kensington paint and primer.? Just print out the coupon and get the free quart as long as supplies last.? (Most stories say at least the first 40 customers will get it.)

Spotlighting A Frugal Viewer

We love it when our frugal viewers share their frugal stories.? Amanda Rosen from Jacksonville, NC shared with us how she maximizes her credit card rewards - and earned $600 in rebates last year.?

From Amanda: "We have four credit cards with different cash-back bonuses (1-5 percent). Each month I put sticky notes on them so we know which card to use at which location. For instance, normally I would use Chase at a restaurant (3 percent), but when Discover gives 5 percent, we know to use that card instead. Everything that can go on a credit card, does. As long as you have the discipline to pay in full every month and pick cards with no annual fees, it works great! We are on a very limited budget and still make $500-$600 a year in bonuses.

?

Source: http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2013/03/08/17237619-frugal-fridays-awesome-travel-bargains-and-more?lite

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Basic Points to the Success of Your Business Innovation | Invest ...

inovationIn the context of today?s business environment, it is often said that change is the only constant thing. The market is so unstable that anything that seemed relevant and current trends can turn into garbage in the future.

Innovation is a must for those who want to survive and succeed in business situations are dynamic and constantly changing. Companies that do not innovate will die. Innovation is a strategic decision that requires use of company resources are massive and could have a major impact on business performance, so that innovation will be very helpful for companies who want to understand the basics of successful innovation implementation.

1. Harmony with the company?s general business strategy: A common mistake that many found so that innovation becomes unsuccessful is that often there is no integration between the company?s innovation and overall business strategy. Yet it is important to consider innovation as part of its business strategy so that no deviation from the company?s goals.

2. Openness to outside ideas: Innovation is covered under a controlled situation cannot be applied now. Successful innovation today requires openness to external ideas. Companies must be prepared innovative welcome ideas from people outside the company while receiving assistance to commercialize their ideas.

3. Recruiting people from different backgrounds: While an open approach to innovation is recommended at this time, independence is always important. By employing people from different sectors, companies will be able to save the cost of hiring externally and maximize many talented people within the company.

4. Efficient portfolio management of innovation: innovation that so many are carried out by R & D department of the company at a time, which complicate the allocation of corporate resources. Innovation portfolio should be organized in such a way by the company so that the allocation of funds, personal attention and focus time would be better between the innovations with other innovations.

5. Balance disruptive and incremental innovation: Companies should try to achieve an ideal exchange between the two types of innovation. Incremental innovations include minor changes in existing technologies, while disruptive innovation is a breakthrough technology that includes a new discovery. Since this type of disruptive innovation of higher risk, equilibrium between these two species would ensure management of the risks covered.

6. Empowering Employees: Another requirement for successful innovation related to employee empowerment. Employees will be more actively generate ideas when they are empowered to make routine decisions. If they have to delegate decision-making small though, they will not hesitate when it comes to taking the initiative later.

Source: http://www.investgeorgetown.com/2013/03/basic-points-to-the-success-of-your-business-innovation/

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Ex-con accused of sneaking back into NYC jails

This undated photo made available by the New York State Criminal Justice Services sex offender registry website shows Matthew Matagrano. Matagrano was arrested on Saturday, March 2, 2013 on charges that he impersonated a Department of Correction investigator. Officials say that for at least a week, he used phony credentials to get into multiple city lockups, including Rikers Island and the Manhattan Detention Center, where he mingled with inmates for hours. (AP Photo/New York State Criminal Justice Services)

This undated photo made available by the New York State Criminal Justice Services sex offender registry website shows Matthew Matagrano. Matagrano was arrested on Saturday, March 2, 2013 on charges that he impersonated a Department of Correction investigator. Officials say that for at least a week, he used phony credentials to get into multiple city lockups, including Rikers Island and the Manhattan Detention Center, where he mingled with inmates for hours. (AP Photo/New York State Criminal Justice Services)

FILE - This March 16, 2011 file photo shows a barbed wire fence outside inmate housing on New York's Rikers Island correctional facility in New York. Officials say that for at least a week, former inmate Matthew Matagrano used phony credentials to get into multiple city lockups, including Rikers Island and the Manhattan Detention Center, where he mingled with inmates for hours. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File)

(AP) ? Most people who've done time in jail can't wait to get away. But this week, New York City authorities accused one former inmate of sneaking back in.

Yonkers resident Matthew Matagrano, 36, was arraigned in Manhattan on Saturday on charges that he impersonated a Department of Correction investigator.

Officials say that for at least a week, Matagrano used phony credentials to get into multiple city lockups, including Rikers Island and the Manhattan Detention Center, where he mingled with inmates for hours.

Investigators said the case was still unfolding, but some of the allegations were detailed in a criminal complaint describing Matagrano's entry into the Manhattan jail on Thursday.

It said that when questioned, Matagrano had admitted to arriving at the jail at around 3:30 p.m. and gaining entry by showing a gold shield and saying he was an investigator from the department's intelligence unit.

According to the complaint, he stayed until 11 p.m., giving cigarettes to inmates and smoking with them in a common area. He is also charged with stealing a radio from an office while inside.

Surveillance cameras recorded video of Matagrano during the visit, the complaint said.

It wasn't clear if or when Matagrano would face similar charges for entry into other city jails. A spokesman for the Bronx district attorney, which often handles cases related to crimes committed on Rikers Island, said Saturday that he had no information on the case.

Matagrano has a rap sheet that includes a conviction for sodomy and sexual abuse. He's on the state's sex offender registry.

It's not clear why he wanted to get into jails, but he had previously been caught posing as a Board of Education worker to enter two schools and rifle through student files. In 2004, he pleaded guilty to attempted burglary in connection with that case.

His court-appointed lawyer, Andrej Bajuk, couldn't immediately be reached by phone for comment. No one responded to a message left at the public defender's office that handled his arraignment.

Department of Correction spokespeople did not immediately return phone messages Saturday.

A judge set bail at $50,000 for Matagrano. He also faces charges of burglary, possession of forged instruments, larceny and promoting prison contraband. He is due back in court Wednesday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2013-03-05-Rikers%20Impersonator/id-99ae3308f7be4c73915b13f643ade13c

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

'Bird of pray:' Does this Madeira Beach church look like a chicken?

One website calls the steeple the "bird of pray." That's right: P-R-A-Y. Another one simply calls it "the chicken church."

During these last couple weeks, people around the World have seen photos of the Church by the Sea, a non-denominational sanctuary on Madeira Beach. Websites like the Huffington Post have helped the pictures of the steeple "go viral."

"Apparently a lot of people have said that it looks like a bird...with the beak and wings and the two eyes," said Bonnie Ruth, the pastor's wife. "I think it's amusing that somebody got this much attention based on architecture that's 70 years old."

It turns out, the church's founder planned it this way. Well - sort of.

"The local fishermen believed a legendary bird looked after them as they built the tower," said Kathi Dunn, a longtime member of the church whose father was pastor between 1961 and 1991. "They constructed the windows to look like eyes of a bird so that - regardless of where they stood - the bird was watching over them."

The tile corners add in the noses.

"The church was constructed purposefully that way with the beak, the tail and the wings pointing north, south, east and west," Ruth said. "It is really special if you look at old pictures. The only thing around here is this building that was built by hand by the parishioners."

The Church by the Sea started in the early 1940s when a group of fishermen felt like they needed a local church near John's Pass.

"At the time they had to go way up to Pass-a-grille or down to St. Pete by boat," Dunn said.

So in February 1943, they began meeting at an old fisherman's union hall on Treasure Island. They would clear out all the beer bottles on Saturday, bring in a piano, and hold service on Sunday morning.

But that would change.

The fishermen, according to church history, purchased a piece of property where a sand dune stood. The first payment: $361. Originally they built a tower and a parlor. The 24 foot mast had a beacon on it, which helped guide fishermen into safety. The congregation started building the current church in 1947.

"Over the years - when the people in the church tried to build and fix things - the walls are crooked," Dunn said. "There's anchors in the walls because the fishermen to be very protective of the hurricanes."

Members are proud of the church's history, including that steeple.

"We've always called it - lovingly - the duck church but more than that it's a family here and the history's important to all of us," Dunn said. "Underneath that duck tower is a wonderful, loving church."

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/51074545/ns/local_news-tampa_fl/

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Facebook getting ready to change News Feed

(AP) ? Amid chatter of "Facebook fatigue," real or imagined, the world's biggest social networking company is getting ready to unveil a new version of News Feed, the flow of status updates, photos and advertisements its users see on the site.

Facebook Inc. is hosting an event at its Menlo Park, Calif., headquarters on Thursday to show off "a new look for News Feed." The company offered no other details on what the changes will be in an invitation sent to journalists and bloggers. It will be Facebook's second staged event at its headquarters since the company's May initial public offering. The company unveiled a search feature at the first one in January.

If past site changes are any indication, the News Feed tweaks may take some getting used to and will likely lead to user grumbles. Facebook users often complain about changes to the site, whether it's cosmetic tweaks or the overhaul of privacy settings.

Gartner analyst Brian Blau says one change he'd like to see from Facebook as a user is the ability to control how much he's seeing from the businesses and other non-friend accounts he follows. Currently users can only tweak how much they see from their friends, not from businesses they follow.

"We have a 'like' but there is no degree of 'like,' it's binary," he says. "I need a 'like plus' or even a 'like minus.'"

The event comes a month after a Pew study reported that many Facebook users take a break from the site for weeks at a time. The report, from the Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project, found that some 61 percent of Facebook users had taken a hiatus for reasons that range from boredom to too much irrelevant information to Lent.

Overall, though, Facebook's user base is growing, especially on mobile devices. At last count it had 1.06 billion active monthly accounts. The number of people who access Facebook daily is also on the rise.

That said, even the company has acknowledged that some of its users, especially the younger ones, are migrating to substitutes, but so far this has not meant an overall decline in user numbers.

"For example, we believe that some of our users have reduced their engagement with Facebook in favor of increased engagement with other products and services such as Instagram," the company said last month in the "risk factors" of its annual 10-K filing. "In the event that our users increasingly engage with other products and services, we may experience a decline in user engagement and our business could be harmed."

Facebook owns Instagram, but so far it has not shown any ads on it.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-03-07-Facebook-Event/id-796cd8b2b05a49b989c97ce909ec03c9

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Eric Garcetti leads Wendy Greuel in L.A. mayor race; May runoff slated

Photo Galleries: Wendy Greuel election night party
Photo Galleries: Eric Garcetti with supporters

UPDATED: With all precincts reporting in Tuesday's election, Los Angeles Councilman Eric Garcetti beat City Controller Wendy Greuel by nearly 11,000 votes in the race for mayor, setting up a May 21 runoff between the two.

The city clerk posted final results at 2:20 a.m. today.

Garcetti got 93,978 votes, almost 33 percent, while Greuel got 83,308, or 29 percent. To prevent a runoff, one would have needed an outright majority.

Attorney and talk radio host Kevin James was fourth at 16 percent, while Councilwoman Jan Perry had 15 percent and three other candidates were far behind the top four.

Garcetti and Greuel gave speeches to supporters late Tuesday night.

In Hollywood, Garcetti took swipes at his opponent and said his administration would be "by the people, for the people and of the people of Los Angeles."

At the Los Angeles Brewing Co., Greuel emerged to the song "I Love L.A." and told supporters, "It's early, but it sure looks good. We're 11 weeks

from making history, electing the first woman mayor and, of course, first mom."

The influential Service Employees International Union Local 721, which represents many L.A. city workers is expected to announce its mayoral endorsement today. Sources say the group, which did not endorse in the primary, is going to throw its support behind Greuel.

The race was hard-fought and at times negative. Greuel, 51, had the backing of major unions, and she and Garcetti each raised more than $4 million.

Dakota Smith and Mariecar Mendoza contributed to this story.

Source: http://www.dailynews.com/news/ci_22729199/eric-garcetti-leads-wendy-gruel-l-mayor-race?source=rss_emailed

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Monday, March 4, 2013

Video: Trendy spring accessories that work with any outfit



>> thank goodness for spring being around the corner. it's time to add color back your daily routine stwloosh from the latest trends in home and fashion, to beauty projects and fun gadgets, today contributor and people style watch contributing editor jill martin.

>> author of a new book coming up in a couple of weeks.

>> thank you. the 26th.

>> i saw it in your dressing room .

>> we have you on our schedule, baby. in the meantime.

>> in the meantime, spruce up your home. all customized. you see all the different things here. then this is the best. each of your families are in this x-o board. look. you just cut out these little pictures . it's about $30. what a great gift. this will spruce up any room. great gifts for spring.

>> great.

>> look at little ella.

>> ella got something.

>> ella got something.

>> adorable.

>> control yourself please, hoda.

>> i have three trends for spring that i think everyone can relate to and sort of match up with things already in your closet. white is the new neutral.

>> your favorite.

>> i put on my white shoes already. you can't see.

>> the pumps are from kohl's. this bag is $30 from h & m. i wanted to show all the different things. modify watches. you can switch in and out. all the different things that you could sort of get and it's just inspiration.

>> you say you can wear white now.

>> all year-round. zoo know. winter white girls.

>> we want to wear it, dog gone it.

>> this is the tropical, which really means flowers with a little kick. this is from target under $30. just great items all around. use this as inspiration, and also a little, you know, sexiness from victoria secret .

>> which you will not be wearing.

>> i love. i'm so glad this is back. the lucite collection from dillard, and look at these sandals with the lucite. just a touch of it.

>> moving into beauty. loreal paris usa under $10 or at drug stores . great colors for the spring. and then these inspired by the wizard of oz that comes out this week. just a few things i want to share with you. what wizardry is this? all the different things. like an emerald city , and each of the palates are, like, glenda the good witch. i can't wait. i love these. you are going to love this. these are for iphones. you store in it your credit card and --

>> genius.

>> i have one key.

>> not my keys, but --

>> would you show that to camera so people can see that?

>> you open it.

>> see how you have everything in there.

>> if you go running or something, you have everything with you.

>> and the sweat doesn't get to your credit card .

>> right.

>> yeah.

>> and then --

>> how do i know?

>> and then you charge these beauties for three hours, and then you get a few more hours of time on your iphone.

>> they're charging.

>> oh, they're cute.

>> they are cute.

>> and then this is fabulous.

>> what is it is this.

>> sugarfina.

>> this is my idea.

>> oh, is that amazing? these are -- these are a champagne necklace in there.

>> these are candy?

>> they're candy olives. each is inspired by a different alcohol. that's for rum. you have here -- i know we're leaving, but champagne bears, martini olives.

>> tomorrow ricky schroeder is a doll, and mary lou henner

Source: http://www.today.com/video/today/51036431/

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Column: Our complex politics' short-hand problem

(AP) ? From an early age, Americans are conditioned to see the world in sharp lines ? black-and-white labels in a society where the reality is many shades of gray. The details, the subtleties? Well, those be damned.

Look at Walt Disney World, which attracts visitors by reducing a complex national heritage to its most basic elements. There's so much more to Main Streets throughout America ? much more to frontier times, visions of the future and even other nations ? than the narrow scenes at the theme park.

This thinking extends beyond its gates, and is endemic today in Washington, where Democrats and Republicans constantly maneuver to be seen as the good guys, while painting the other side as simply the bad guys. In the quest for an edge, leaders stoke those stereotypes and play to people's proclivity to view everything ? including their politics ? in extremes.

Americans aren't merely receptive to this shorthand. Many are complicit, enthusiastically categorizing politicians as saviors or enemies ? and consuming a mass media that perpetuates these simplistic views.

It's no coincidence that we have a political landscape that the extremes dominate. But is the system as broken as polls say? Or do Americans simply think it's in shambles because of the barbs that politicians throw and the labels they use?

And all that raises a larger question: With the caricature and hyperbole of today's political conversation, how can Americans cut through the clutter, seek out the nuances and see through the distortion to view what's really happening?

It starts with acknowledging that politics is simply an extension of American life, rather than a separate world of heroes and villains.

Bryan Roberts, a former pastor in Fort Worth, Texas, advocates this model and has urged the church to view elections this way: "Presidential politics is about two people who both want you to choose them to serve their country in the best way they know how. They aren't saviors. They aren't superheroes. They're just civil servants."

Admittedly, this more pragmatic approach would be hard to accomplish in a divided nation where name-calling is the norm. The latest fiscal standoff is only the most recent example.

Almost daily, President Barack Obama's argument has gone something like this: "There are too many Republicans in Congress right now who refuse to compromise even an inch when it comes to closing tax loopholes and special interest tax breaks. And that's what's holding things up right now." And House Speaker John Boehner counters like this: "The administration is trying to play games with the American people, scare the American people. This is not leadership."

The point of both statements: We're with you, they're against you. It's a simple notion. And one that's perpetuated by both ends of the political spectrum.

In 2000, the right reveled in George W. Bush's election, convinced he would rescue the nation; the left went doomsday, convinced he would kill it. With Obama's 2008 victory, the tables turned: Liberals cast him as the chosen one who could do no wrong, while conservatives castigated him as an illegitimate president.

Neither president saved or ruined the nation, of course. But the hero-and-villain mentality permeates every part of our politics, and gets in the way of discussion about what's actually going on.

?The Koch brothers, who bankroll conservative groups, are worshipped on the right, maligned on the left; George Soros, the liberal titan who has given money to like-minded outfits, is seen as a godsend by Democrats, a bogeyman by Republicans.

?The liberal group MoveOn once waged a campaign to turn Gen. David Petraeus, then the commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, into a villain, with ads declaring him "General Betray Us." More recently, the tea party is casting Obama as an unredeemable bad guy and, at times, promoting the falsehood that he wasn't born here and thus can't legally serve.

?Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell once made Obama enemy No. 1 for Republicans by saying that his top goal was to deny the president a second term. And, in 2010, Vice President Joe Biden led a Democratic strategy to cast the tea party as an extraordinarily dangerous arm of the GOP.

The media also speak in such absolutes ? and not just in the United States. The British tabloid The Sun, for example, has a feature called "The Heroes And Villains of Westminster."

In America, outlets sympathetic to conservatives ? on radio, TV and the Internet ? paint Democrats as the nefarious ones, while their liberal counterparts do the same to Republicans.

Yet in the popular culture, there is recent evidence of more subtle views beginning to peek out.

In the Showtime drama "Homeland," the two main characters wear two hats, both battling terrorism and being complicit in it. In fact, some of the best American television of recent years has imbued shades of gray into even the most villainous characters, from the violent but occasionally kind Tony Soprano to the ruthless vampires in "True Blood" to the cruel but oddly moral Al Swearengen of "Deadwood."

And how do we explain conflicted feelings about Lance Armstrong? Even after the famed cancer-beating cyclist admitted lying about doping, he remains a hero to many cancer survivors, a villain to many athletes, and a puzzle to many others.

In such realms, our good-and-evil notions have blurred and become more subtle. But how can the nation bring that sensibility to politics, where the stakes are arguably higher ? not successful entertainment, but rather a successful nation?

While people like to categorize ideas, things and each other in easy-to-explain boxes, both politics and the people involved in it have behaviors more subtle and motives far more ambiguous than the labels we use.

Wouldn't this country be better served if politicians stopped pigeonholing each other as heroes and villains, and if people and the media viewed them simply as men and women who serve the nation? That could produce, among other things, more realistic expectations, more civilized discourse and possibly even a more productive Washington.

Wouldn't it be something if, instead of giving the hero-and-villain tags to politicians, we start doing so with the issues? What if we viewed poverty, disease and crime as the villains that we, the heroes of our own national story, seek to conquer?

That way, the heroes and villains we've adored since childhood visits to Disney parks would remain. But maybe we'd be fighting each other just a little bit less.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? Liz Sidoti is the national politics editor for The Associated Press. Follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/lsidoti

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-04-US-Heroes-And-Villains/id-d8ab9e16284f45b9b5924a7d877564d2

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Improved synchronicity: Preventive care for the power grid

Mar. 1, 2013 ? President Obama in this year's State of the Union address talked about the future of energy and mentioned "self-healing power grids" -- a grid that is able to keep itself stable during normal conditions and also to self-recover in the event of a disturbance caused, for example, by severe weather.

But as the national power-grid network becomes larger and more complex achieving reliability across the network is increasingly difficult. Now Northwestern University scientists have identified conditions and properties that power companies can consider using to keep power generators in the desired synchronized state and help make a self-healing power grid a reality.

The Northwestern team's design for a better power grid could help reduce both the frequency of blackouts and the cost of electricity as well as offer an improved plan for handling the intermittent power sources of renewable energy, such as solar and wind power, which can destabilize the network.

"We will be looking at a completely different power grid in the future," said Adilson E. Motter, who led the research. "The use of renewable energy is growing. More people will be driving electric cars, and the power grid will be delivering this energy, not gas stations. We need a power grid that is more capable and more reliable. This requires a better understanding of the current power grid as well as new ways to stabilize it."

Motter is the Harold H. and Virginia Anderson Professor of Physics and Astronomy at Northwestern's Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences.

The crux of the challenge is that for the U.S. power grid to function the power generators in each of its three interconnections (Eastern, Western and Texas) must be synchronized, all operating at the frequency of 60 hertz. Out-of-synch power generators can lead to blackouts that affect millions of people and cost billions of dollars -- losses similar to those of the Northeast blackout of 2003.

Having a network that can synchronize spontaneously and recover from failures in real time -- in other words, a self-healing power grid -- could prevent such blackouts. To help achieve this, power companies could apply the Northwestern guidelines as they add power generators to the network or tweak existing generators.

A paper describing the researchers' mathematical model, titled "Spontaneous synchrony in power-grid networks," is published in the March 2013 issue of the journal Nature Physics.

When a problem develops in the power-grid network, control devices are used to return power generators to a synchronized state. Motter likens this to using medicine to treat someone who is ill. He and his colleagues are suggesting conditions to keep synchronicity in good shape so interventions are kept to a minimum.

"Our approach is preventive care -- preventing failures instead of mitigating them," said Motter, an author of the paper and an executive committee member of the Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems (NICO). "The guidelines we offer could be very useful as the power grid expands."

The researchers derived a condition under which the desired synchronous state of a power grid is stable. They then used this condition to identify tunable parameters of the power generators that result in spontaneous synchronization. This synchronization can be autonomous, not guided by control devices.

"The blackout at this year's Super Bowl was caused by a device that was installed specifically to prevent blackouts," said Takashi Nishikawa, an author of the paper and a research associate professor of physics and astronomy at Northwestern. "A large fraction of blackouts have human and equipment errors among the causes.

"Reduced dependence on conventional control devices can improve the reliability of the grid," he said. "Our analysis also suggests ways to design control strategies that potentially can improve the existing ones."

Power generators are very different from each other; some are large and others small. Motter and his colleagues identified a "body mass index" for power generators, which they suggest should be kept approximately the same (making, in essence, all generators look the same to the network) in order to strengthen spontaneous synchronicity in the system. If the body mass indices change, they should be changed in a coordinated way.

The researchers demonstrated their model using real power grids of hundreds of power generators, similar to the size of the Texas portion of the U.S. power grid.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Northwestern University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Adilson E. Motter, Seth A. Myers, Marian Anghel, Takashi Nishikawa. Spontaneous synchrony in power-grid networks. Nature Physics, 2013; 9 (3): 191 DOI: 10.1038/nphys2535

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/66bNJO0KLNg/130302125404.htm

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Sunday, March 3, 2013

Bozeman Luxury Real Estate - Pricing Your High-End Home and ...

Whenever I sit down with a Seller to discuss marketing their property, one of the most important topics is, ?What can this list for?? Many times the Seller has a figure in mind, based on their investment and what they want to pocket, after deducting Title Insurance, commissions, closing costs, possible radon mitigation and repairs mentioned in inspections, and paying off their mortgage. Unfortunately, I frequently have the task of letting a Seller know that what they want their property to sell for and what the market will bear are not necessarily one and the same. Since the 2006 height of the housing market, overall prices for homes plummeted between 20 to 35%. We are seeing an uptrend, with a decrease in inventory levels and a strengthening in pricing, but we are still far from the 2006 pricing.? Today?s Buyer is savvy, educated, and expecting a ?deal.?

My former partner and dear friend Stuart Tilt would inevitably say to a Seller during a listing appointment, ?Pricing your property is an art, not a science.? This is true to a certain extent. There are, though, facts and figures that help determine a price range. I will discuss key considerations, not necessarily in order of importance, as each factors into an overall consideration in successfully marketing and selling a property.

Motivation: Your motivation for selling your property is at the core of the pricing. If you have to sell due to financial, health, job, or personal reasons then your asking price needs to be very attractive. You may be forced into a position of having to price below the market in order to entice a buyer. On the opposite end of the spectrum, if you would like to sell but have no need to, your pricing can be more aggressive as long as you are willing to wait for the buyer to materialize who is willing to pay a premium for you home. I must note that, in the past 4 years, I know of no closed transaction in the Bozeman Area in which I think a Buyer over-paid for a property, while I do know of many instances of Buyers paying far below replacement cost for a home.

Square Footage: Agents provide Buyers with data on houses, and, in today?s world of Internet and search engines, Buyers frequently research the existing real estate market before contacting an agent. One of the facts they seek is a home?s square footage and the cost-per-square-foot. The price-per-square-foot ranges in listed ?luxury? homes between $200 to $600 a square foot.? Buyers demand the square footage price to reflect the level of workmanship, materials, architecture, setting, finishes, landscape, neighborhood setting, and overall design. They mentally compare not only the total asking price but also the square footage price when determining if the property is a solid value, a great deal, or over-priced.

Location/Acreage/Setting: The clich?, ?Location! Location! Location,? is valid.? How close are you to town? What do the homes around you look like? Your neighbors can add or detract from your property?s perceived value, and unfortunately there is little you can do about that. How easy is it to drive to your house? Is the road paved? Is the house exposed or is it nestled into a hillside or woods? Location matters, along with acreage, the view shed, privacy, accessibility, and even the road to reach your home. My experience has shown a trend in recent years of Buyers? wanting to be within a 20 minute or less drive time to Downtown Bozeman.? As our community continues to thrive with rich cultural experiences, festivals, restaurants and shops, newcomers want to participate and they anticipate frequent trips downtown. There are also Buyers seeking? the ?Montana Experience? of mountain settings, ample wildlife, horses, easy access to state and national lands, and live water.

Amenities: Buyers are excited and swayed by amenities and features that appeal to them and add character to a property. A true chef is thrilled when they see a big, well-designed pantry and chef-quality appliances. Horse people appreciate multiple pastures and ground that grows a crop of hay. Nearly everyone moving to Bozeman wants live water on their property, which is very difficult to find. Home theaters are not as popular as they once were, but sound systems and exercise rooms still have big appeal.? Desirable features and hard-to-find amenities increases your ability to legitimately set a higher asking price. Truly ?rare? properties command a higher price to a certain extent. Unfortunately, a property that is too idiosyncratic and unique often times results in narrowing an already small market.

Your Competition: The typical Buyer for high-end properties in the Bozeman Area is from out-of-state. They are viewing properties over 2 days, with 6 to 8 homes that have been previously identified through Internet searches and discussions with their agent. Your property will be judged and weighed against the other viewed properties. All the factors of pricing, location, amenities, and ambiance will factor into a Buyer?s reaction. Buyers have emotional responses to homes, but before they will even take the time to view your home, they generally have pre-screened your place and decided that your price fits within their budget. It is always wise to compare your house to the other properties most likely to be seen by a potential buyer. In this manner you can determine if your pricing ?fits? your property and the existing market. You and your agent should also identify what sets your home apart from the competition. What is special? Desirable? Noteworthy?

Comps and Appraisal: The high-end market in the Bozeman Area is on an upswing, however, it remains relatively small. Below is a chart of number of units listed and sold by price points for the past year. As your asking price increases, your number of viewings and odds of closing on your property decreases. Also, Buyers search real estate listings by price points, and many Buyers set a ceiling and simply will not look at a home priced at $1,500,000, but will look at one priced at $1,499,000. Great agents know which properties have sold, what is currently on the market, and how your property will be received by other agents and Buyers within price ranges. This is where the ?Art? in pricing comes into play. Another consideration today is whether your home will appraise for the Buy/Sell price in a contract. Over the past 4 to 5 years, many properties have fallen out of contract when the appraisal has come back below the contract price.? Appraisals are based on the actual sales of similar houses within a twelve month period and ten mile radius. Our small market does not provide for? good comps to work from. The appraiser makes adjustments comparing your home to ones sold according to finishes, square footage, and items I?ve mentioned above. Before pricing your home, it is wise to know not only what is currently on the market, but also what has recently sold.

SF Active vs Sold3 Pricing Your High End Home and Property

Click to view larger image

Conclusion: The price placed on your home when it is first listed will be a ?First Impression? to agents and potential Buyers. Agents will decide if your pricing is reasonable. If they deem it over-priced, they tend to show your home to their Buyers as an example of an over priced home so as to make their own listings more price-desirable. It is important to list your home with full knowledge of the market, your competition, and the reasons that justify your asking price. When I am doing a listing appointment with a Seller, I explain these key points in detail and provide the Seller with a price range, which is based on facts and blended with art. I offer potential sellers an honest assessment of their property in today?s market. Arriving at a list price is an art, perfected over years of marketing and specializing in the Bozeman luxury real estate market.

Source: http://bozemanluxuryrealestate.com/pricing-your-high-end-home-and-property/

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Sexting high among black, Hispanic teens; experts disagree on impact

More than 20 percent of black and Hispanic teens say they have used their cellphones to send a "sext" message showing a nude or semi-nude photo or video of themselves to another person, and more than 30 percent say they have received such sext messages, according to a new study.

The research was done by University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, and funded by the Centers for Disease Control and the U.S. Department of Health Services. Why the focus on the two groups?

"Although sexting among U.S. youth has received much popular media attention, there are only limited data on its prevalence among ethnic minority youth," say the researchers in their study, published online journal, Cyberpsychology, Behavior and Social Networking.

The concern about sexting, the researchers say, is whether it "impacts other behaviors and health outcomes among youth and adults and, if so, what is the direction of the impact."

Balderdash, says Deb Levine, the executive director and founder of the Internet Sexuality Information Services, based in San Francisco, which uses the Internet and mobile apps and texts to share information about sexual health, disease prevention and assault.

"From a public health perspective, we have not as yet identified 'sexting' as a risky sexual behavior as regards HIV, STDs and unplanned pregnancies," Levine told NBC News. "Therefore, the need to identify young people who sext seems unnecessary."

In a recent editorial piece, "Sexting: A Terrifying Health Risk ? or the New Normal for Young Adults?" for the Journal of Adolescent Health, Levine wrote that "If we are to use sexting to create relevant health messaging for youth, the messages could focus less on shame and more on mutual consent, communication about sexual desires, and regular testing for HIV and other STDs, especially for sexually active members of high-risk groups."

In the university study, the results "indicate that sexting is prevalent among ethnic minority youth," the researchers said.

And while the authors acknowledge that more research is needed to understand the context and circumstances of that sexting, "the first step in any public health inquiry is to understand the scope and prevalence of a potential health problem. Some data exist on the prevalence of sexting among youth in general. However, prevalence data for ethnic minority youth specifically are scarce."

The researchers' data is based on findings from 1,034 tenth-graders from a "large, urban school district in southeast Texas."

The FBI recently warned that that 'sexting can be associated with bullying or "sextortion," then subsequently received additional publicity when some of its employees were caught doing it.

This story was updated at 4:45 p.m. ET Friday.

Check out Technology, GadgetBox, TODAY Tech and In-Game on Facebook, and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/sexting-high-among-black-hispanic-teens-experts-disagree-impact-1C8638599

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