Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Samsung touts market share, infographic style

Samsung infographic

Samsung shipped a hell of a lot of phones last year, and a bunch of them were smart phones -- 213,000,000 according to their latest infographic. That's a number which equates to over 30-percent of all smart phones shipped in 2012, and as we see is more than the total population of Brazil.

Samsung of course hopes to keep this trend going into 2013, with new releases like the Galaxy Note 8.0 and the upcoming Galaxy S4, as well as the multitude of entry-level phones and tablets for emerging markets. We'll have to see if this strategy works for them as well this year as it did in the last.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/6akD5jN4wDc/story01.htm

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

3 political sisters in Pa. convicted of corruption

PITTSBURGH (AP) ? The story has more irony than a Greek tragedy. Three sisters from a devoutly Catholic family have seen their personal and political careers ruined by a scandal that began with, of all things, a letter to some nuns.

Thursday's conviction of suspended Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice Joan Orie Melvin along with her aide and sister, Janine Orie, on campaign corruption charges mean they might join a third sister ? former state Sen. Jane Orie ? in state prison. No sentencing date has been set.

The former senator was sentenced last year to 2? to 10 years for using her state-paid staff to run her campaigns, though she was acquitted of having them campaign for Melvin, then a lower appellate court judge, who was running for the Supreme Court in 2003 and 2009. Joan Orie Melvin and Janine Orie were convicted in a spinoff investigation and found guilty of similarly misusing Melvin's former staff and the senator's.

Even before the convictions, their careers ? and the family from which they sprang ? were extraordinary.

Dr. John Orie, now 90, and his late wife, Jean, raised nine children including five attorneys, Joan and Jane among them; two cardiologists; a teacher; and a human resources manager, Janine, who worked for her sister Joan Orie Melvin in the lower Superior Court before moving up with her to the Supreme Court.

"It's all pretty unbelievable," said John Burkoff, a university of Pittsburgh law professor who has closely followed the cases. "Whatever you thought about the Orie sisters, whether you liked or didn't like them, you have to look at all of this as tragic."

Jim Roddey is a prominent businessman who heads the Republican Party in Allegheny County, where Republicans are outnumbered more than 2 to 1 by Democrats and where Pittsburgh, the county seat, hasn't elected a GOP mayor since the Great Depression.

Before 2010, when Republican Tom Corbett was elected governor, Jane Orie was the state Senate majority whip ? the highest-ranking elected Republican politician not just in Pennsylvania, but also of several states in the Northeast, Roddey said. And Melvin, elected in November 2009, was one of seven members of the state's highest court.

And now? Jane Orie resigned her Senate seat in May, and Melvin's status on the state's highest court figures to change, one way or another.

State lawmakers have already asked her to resign or face articles of impeachment. If those are approved by the state House, Melvin would be tried by the Senate, which could remove her from office if she hasn't already been removed by the state's Court of Judicial Discipline.

Now that she has been convicted, Melvin has 30 days to respond to charges of misconduct filed with that court by the state's Judicial Conduct Board. If it is determined Melvin has violated professional conduct rules or the state Constitution, or brought disrepute to the judiciary, the court can remove her from office.

Melvin's criminal defense attorneys and her disciplinary court attorney didn't return calls Friday.

The Ories have argued the prosecution is the result of a political vendetta by Allegheny County District Attorney Stephen Zappala Jr., a Democrat, who has repeatedly denied ulterior motives.

When the investigation first became public in late 2009, the sisters claimed they were being targeted because Zappala's family has interests in legalized gambling, which the Ories opposed expanding in Pennsylvania.

The allegations grew uglier, when Melvin ? after it was known Sen. Orie was being investigated but before the justice was charged ? called for an audit of two child care centers that paid kickbacks to two judges in northeastern Pennsylvania's Luzerne County who sent troubled youths to the facilities. The facilities were co-owned by Gregory Zappala, the prosecutor's brother, who was never charged in the scheme and has repeatedly denied wrongdoing.

To this day, some Orie supporters still believe those politics ? not justice ? drove the prosecution.

Roddey acknowledges the sisters' success in a politically hostile environment has something to do with that chatter.

"That's part of it," Roddey said. "But the other half of the equation is that her prosecutor was Stephen Zappala, and Joan's biggest public battle was she chastised the Supreme Court for what happened in Luzerne County."

Whatever the motivations, two juries have now found enough evidence to bring the overachieving siblings from triumph to tragedy despite a raft of supporters ? Sen. Orie spent $420 on a chartered bus to bring 50 character witnesses to her trial ? and, even, efforts to seek divine intervention.

During the investigation, which centered on the sisters' emails, prosecutors stumbled onto messages Sen. Orie and Melvin sent to the "angel lady," a Philadelphia psychic who read her client's written questions aloud before claiming to receive a whispered answer from an angel.

The senator and justice sought assurances from the $85-an-hour medium that Zappala's investigation wouldn't result in criminal charges.

But rather than being touched by an angel, the sisters were undone by some nuns.

That happened in late October 2009 ? days before Melvin won her Supreme Court seat ? when a Senate intern complained to Zappala that Sen. Orie's staff was doing campaign work for Melvin.

The complaint centered on a letter Sen. Orie wrote on Melvin's campaign stationery asking Pittsburgh-area nuns to vote for Melvin.

When Orie and Melvin learned of the whistleblowing intern, the senator had a staffer prepare another letter ? a "cover-up" letter, according to prosecutors. This time, Sen. Orie ? on her own stationery ? spoke about civic events of interest to nuns but didn't mention Melvin.

Prosecutors contend the letter was created to make it appear the intern was simply mistaken about what she saw and was never mailed. Eventually, Sen. Orie's and Melvin's staffs told a grand jury about other illegal campaign work done in Orie's Senate offices and Melvin's chambers.

"Frankly, it's a smart group of people. How could they put themselves in this kind of situation?" Burkoff said. "This is the kind of thing we'll be puzzling about for years."

___

Jackson reported from Harrisburg, Pa.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/3-political-sisters-pa-convicted-corruption-212941147.html

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Royal Bank of Scotland to cut jobs in India

Royal Bank of Scotland has planned to lay off a number of employees in India.

The move comes as part of a plan to wind down its retail and commercial business in India.

A bank spokeswoman said that the affected employees are being informed, but didn't provide details such as how many people will be affected by the job cut.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the spokeswoman added that there is no impact on RBS's markets, international banking and private banking businesses in India.

The British bank has been looking for buyers for its retail and commercial business, which it says is no more core to its India strategy.

The division, which provides loans to individuals and small businesses, had total assets of 190 million pounds at the end of September.

RBS "continues to review all options," the spokeswoman said about its plan to sell the division in India, the paper added.



Tags: Royal Bank of Scotland, RBS jobs cut, RBS India, banking news



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Source: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/royal-bank-of-scotland-to-cut-jobs-in-india/1078639/

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Free batch file extension changer for Windows 7?

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://forums.computing.co.uk/showthread.php?t=231876&goto=newpost

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Can Endangered Animals Coexist with Big Ag? [Excerpt]

An excerpt from Eric Dinerstein's Kingdom of Rarities explores whether the anteater and other South American oddities can survive as Brazil's Cerrado grassland is converted into cattle ranches and soybean farms


giant-anteaterGIANT ANTEATER Image: Courtesy of Malene Thyssen

Excerpted from The Kingdom of Rarities, by Eric Dinerstein. ? January 2013, Island Press.

~

?Look for an overripe, black banana moving through the grass.? Edson Endrigo, our nature guide extraordinaire, was explaining his technique for spotting giant anteaters in Serra da Canastra National Park, just one of the rarities in this area. Obediently looking up on the hillside, I spotted a two-meter-long mobile banana. We jumped out of the van and circled behind a female anteater with a baby clinging to her back. My two companions, David Wilcove and John Morrison, and I closely tracked her progress.

If the greater one-horned rhino seems odd and prehistoric, the giant anteater offers good company as one of the most peculiar-looking mammals on the planet. Both are ranked as threatened on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. The tamandua-bandeira, or papa-formigas, as it is known in Brazil, cuts a comical figure, sporting an elongate, arching snout and bowlegged limbs, all ending in an immense shaggy tail. The rest of the body is shaggy, too, featuring a striking long pelage of dark bands on light. The female in front of us moved along like an animated throw rug.

An anteater walks on thickened pads on the outsides of its paws, as its digits are turned under its feet. An observer might think of this awkward creature, with its poor eyesight, bad hearing, and odd gait, as defenseless against secretive jaguars and pumas. That would be a miscalculation. With its acute sense of smell, the anteater can make up for its nearsightedness. If cornered, it will stand up on its hind legs and slash with its massive claws any human or feline predator foolish enough to tangle with it.

The mama anteater stopped and flicked her tongue in the dirt. Unlike the vast majority of mammals, the giant anteater lacks teeth. It has no real need for them because it inserts its long, narrow tongue into crevices, removes ants and termites with its sticky saliva, and swallows them whole. Crouching downwind, I inhaled deeply to catch its scent and wondered if consuming 30,000 ants a day gives this creature, or its flatulence, the odor of formic acid. I smelled nothing unusual.

*

Human activities sometimes bring species back from the brink of extinction. But more often they exacerbate rarity even to the point of disappearance, drive into rarity species once common, or further constrain those species that normally have narrow ranges or live at low densities. The most dramatic change happening today that is pushing already uncommon species toward even greater rarity is the conversion of rain forests and natural savannas into commodities production for industrialized agriculture. Big Ag, as it is now known, is largely mechanized, highly profitable, and controlled by multinational corporations. Some biologists and geographers describe extension of this trend as the future; increasingly, we live on a cultivated planet. The loss of natural habitats through nonagricultural use?that is, human settlements?and in nontropical areas is also high, but the conversion is greatest in the tropics and through big agriculture.

Few field biologists bother to check the daily price of soybeans or palm oil. This is an oversight because the market value of these commodities?along with that of beef, corn, sugar, and coffee?may over the coming decades define the future of rare species more profoundly than will any other driver of habitat loss. At present, nowhere is the conversion and fracturing of rain forests by industrialized agriculture in the world?s hotbeds of rarity more evident than in Southeast Asia and Brazil. In Kalimantan and Sumatra, Indonesia, expansion of oil palm and wood pulp plantations threatens the most species-rich rain forests in the world. In Brazil, vast areas of the Amazon are turning into cattle ranches and soybean farms. In addition to causing habitat loss, such rampant conversion imperils climate stability. Nearly 70 percent of the greenhouse gas emissions released annually from tropical forests originate from agriculture-driven forest conversion in just two places, Riau Province, Sumatra, and the state of Mato Grosso, at the edge of the Amazon in Brazil.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=b1dd729d03cdefd94d2369cc642c731e

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Up to 12,000 US, allied troops for Afghanistan

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and British Defense Secretary Philip Hammond lead their delegations during a bilateral meeting at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Defense Ministers Meetings, Friday, Feb. 22, 2013, at NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium. Panetta and his NATO counterparts are considering leaving 8,000 to 12,000 troops in Afghanistan after 2014, but a dispute arose Friday between the U.S. and German defense officials over whether that contingent would be an international force or an American one. (AP Photo/Chip Somodevilla, Pool)

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and British Defense Secretary Philip Hammond lead their delegations during a bilateral meeting at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Defense Ministers Meetings, Friday, Feb. 22, 2013, at NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium. Panetta and his NATO counterparts are considering leaving 8,000 to 12,000 troops in Afghanistan after 2014, but a dispute arose Friday between the U.S. and German defense officials over whether that contingent would be an international force or an American one. (AP Photo/Chip Somodevilla, Pool)

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, third from right, and U.S. Ambassador to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Ivo Daalder, fifth from right, arrive for the second day of the NATO Defense Ministers Meetings, Friday, Feb. 22, 2013, at NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium. Panetta and his NATO counterparts are considering leaving 8,000 to 12,000 troops in Afghanistan after 2014, but a dispute arose Friday between the U.S. and German defense officials over whether that contingent would be an international force or an American one. (AP Photo/Chip Somodevilla, Pool)

German Defense Minister Thomas de Maiziere arrives at the airport of Adana, Turkey, Friday, Feb. 22, 2013 after attending a meeting of NATO defense ministers in Brussels, Belgium, earlier in the day. De Maiziere told reporters Panetta had informed him at the Brussels meeting that the United States would leave between 8,000 and 10,000 troops in Afghanistan at the end of 2014. But Panetta, speaking to reporters later, called de Maiziere's comments inaccurate. (AP Photo/dpa, Rainer Jensen)

(AP) ? The U.S. and its NATO allies revealed Friday they may keep as many as 12,000 troops in Afghanistan after the combat mission ends next year, largely American forces tasked with hunting down remnants of al-Qaida and helping Afghan forces with their own security.

Patience with the 11-year-old war has grown thin in the U.S. and Europe, yet Washington and its allies feel they cannot pick up and leave without risking a repeat of what happened in Afghanistan after Soviet troops withdrew in 1989: Attention turned elsewhere, the Taliban grabbed power and al-Qaida found refuge.

In disclosing that he and his NATO counterparts were discussing a residual force of between 8,000 and 12,000 troops in Afghanistan beyond 2014, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said most allied defense ministers assured him they are committed to remaining part of a U.S.-led coalition.

"I feel very confident that we are going to get a number of nations to make that contribution for the enduring presence," Panetta told a news conference at NATO headquarters in Brussels at the conclusion of a defense ministers meeting.

The U.S. and its allies have managed to stick together throughout the war, despite differing views. The Europeans have seen the military mission as mainly aimed at promoting stable governance; the Americans have viewed it as mainly combat. Some allies, including France, have already pulled out their combat troops.

The Obama administration has not said how many troops or diplomats it intends to keep in Afghanistan after 2014; it is in the early stages of negotiating a bilateral security agreement with Kabul that would set the legal parameters. There currently are 66,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, down from a 2010 peak of 100,000.

In addition to targeting terrorists, the post-2014 missions are expected to be defined as training and advising a still-developing Afghan army and police force and providing security for the U.S. and allied civilian and military presence, officials said.

The largely unspoken assumption on which the post-2014 plan is built is that Afghanistan's own forces will be strong enough to hold off the Taliban on their own starting in 2015 and to prevent the country's relapse into civil war. The worry is that if the Taliban regained power they would allow al-Qaida to return in large numbers, defeating the original purpose of the U.S. military action in 2001.

It's a touchy topic at this stage of a still-unfolding war, with Afghans fearful of being abandoned by their foreign partners and Washington and its NATO allies wary of committing too heavily to a corrupt Kabul government facing an uncertain future.

Budget pressures in the U.S. and Europe also complicate the outlook.

"There's no question in the current budget environment, with deep cuts in European defense spending and the kind of political gridlock that we see in the United States now with regards to our own budget, is putting at risk our ability to effectively act together," Panetta said. "As I prepare to step down as secretary of defense, I do fear that the alliance will soon be, if it is not already, stretched too thin."

Panetta is expected to retire as soon as his successor is confirmed. The Senate could vote on the confirmation of former Sen. Chuck Hagel as the next Pentagon chief as early as Wednesday. Panetta is leaving just as Gen. Joseph Dunford is settling in as the successor to Gen. John Allen as commander of U.S. and allied forces in Afghanistan.

Another source of anxiety among the allies is Afghanistan's 2014 presidential election; President Hamid Karzai, who has run the country since U.S. forces toppled the Taliban in late 2001, is not running and there is no obvious successor.

Just last week President Barack Obama announced in his State of the Union address that by this time next year 34,000 U.S. troops will have left, with the rest of the combat force to depart by the end of 2014, along with their counterparts from NATO and other partner countries. Obama did not say how many troops he was willing to commit to a post-2014 mission in Afghanistan, but he is believed to be weighing options that range from about 3,000 to about 9,000.

At the Brussels meeting, German Defense Minister Thomas de Maiziere caused an initial stir by telling reporters that Panetta had said the U.S. would keep 8,000 to 10,000 troops in Afghanistan after 2014. Panetta denied that, saying he was talking about a combined U.S. and NATO force of 8,000 to 12,000, and de Maiziere later said his own comments to reporters were "misleading."

Panetta said officials are planning to leave troops in all sectors of the country as well as in Kabul. Currently, Italy is leading the allied security presence in western Afghanistan, Germany in the north and the U.S. in the east and the south.

The Obama administration also is considering a plan to underwrite the cost of maintaining an Afghan security force of 352,000 for the next five years as part of an effort to maintain security and help convince Afghans that they will not be abandoned.

Last May, NATO agreed that the Afghan force would be reduced to about 230,000 after 2014. A force of that size would cost about $4.1 billion a year, compared to $6.5 billion this year for the bigger force of 352,000. The U.S. pays about $5.7 billion of that $6.5 billion bill.

___

Associated Press writers Don Melvin and Julie Pace contributed to this report. Baldor reported from Brussels.

___

Robert Burns can be followed on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/robertburnsAP and Lolita C. Baldor is at http://www.twitter.com/lbaldor

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-02-22-US-NATO-Afghanistan/id-c68700d85cf6411bbc56f64c4d25b959

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The PlayStation 4 can output in 4K, but not games

The PlayStation 4 outputs in 4K, but not games

Yes, the PlayStation 4 is capable of pushing out a 4K video signal. Sony president of Worldwide Studios Shuhei Yoshida confirmed as much to Joystiq in an interview this morning, where he said that the PlayStation 4 will play video that was recorded in the super high-def resolution, but the games currently being made for it aren't in 4K.

Sony made a big 4K push at CES 2013 -- it was all Sony president Kaz Hirai would talk about in our interview, and Sony's booth reflected the company's 4K initiative. It seems that the company's not getting too far ahead of itself, however, recognizing that few consumers buying a PS4 this holiday will own the still-nascent TV tech.

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Source: Joystiq

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/fxnZop-Rpe0/

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Fannie Mae: Sequestration, Debt Ceiling Unlikely to Stop Growth

Even with tax hikes and spending cuts creating a significant headwind to the economy, Fannie Mae?s Economic & Strategic Research Group is maintaining its outlook for slow and steady growth in 2013.

In their February 2013 Economic Outlook, economists Doug Duncan, Orawin Velz, and Brian Hughes-Cromwick admit that unresolved fiscal policy concerns (such as sequestration or the delayed debt ceiling debate) may ?weigh to some degree on growth for the year.? However, positive signs in manufacturing, employment, and energy production ?support a risk assessment that suggests that if our forecast is wrong it is likely too conservative on growth,? they assert.

The group also expects the currently unfolding sequestration drama will have a smaller impact than other analysts predict.

?Our February forecast accounts for a modified version of sequestration unfolding in 2013, which we expect will result in less fiscal constraint?roughly a 0.2 percentage point drag,? explained Duncan, chief economist for the company. ?Our outlook is bolstered by the employment picture, which is trending better than previously reported, as well as the momentum in manufacturing and energy production. We also expect the housing recovery to broaden this year.?

However, Duncan added that ?the degree to which these drivers will serve to offset the headwinds from ongoing and forthcoming fiscal contraction is still to be determined.?

Overall, the research group projects an average quarterly GDP growth of 2.0 percent throughout 2013, with the latter two quarters making up for a slower first half of the year.

On the housing front, continued lean inventory and the increase in rate of household formation bode well for homebuilding activity and residential construction employment, the outlook says, giving housing an opportunity to contribute more to economic growth.

However, one unknown variable on the supply side is how many underwater borrowers are waiting to list their homes. According to Fannie Mae?s most recent National Housing Survey, the number of homeowners saying now is a good time to sell increased in January, suggesting prices may be reaching a tipping point for current owners to offer their homes for sale.

Given their expectations of continued improvements in housing starts, home sales, and home prices in 2013, the group projects that purchase mortgage originations will rise to $628 billion from a forecast of $530 billion last year. However, rising mortgage rates will take their toll on refinances, spurring the group to revise its projections for refinance originations downward to an estimated $880 billion in 2013 from $1.4 trillion in 2012.

While the housing recovery is expected to firm up going forward, a few challenges remain: First, the latest Senior Loan Officer Survey from the Federal Reserve shows lending standards aren?t easing up, keeping prospective buyers out of the market. In addition, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) recently announced its plan to raise mortgage insurance premiums in an effort to shore up its finances, creating problems for first-time and existing homebuyers alike.

One major development not expected to greatly impact origination in the near term is the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau?s unveiling of qualified mortgage guidelines, which include a seven-year exclusion on loans that meet GSE and FHA underwriting requirements.

Source: http://www.themreport.com/articles/fannie-mae-sequestration-debt-ceiling-unlikely-to-stop-growth-2013-02-21

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Sebastian County Asks Voters to Extend 1% Sales Tax - Ft. Smith ...

Posted on: 9:56 pm, February 21, 2013, by Mallory Cooke, updated on: 10:30pm, February 21, 2013

Sebastian County leaders will ask voters to extend a 1-percent sales tax in a special election on May 14.

Money from the tax will go to the Sebastian County Adult Detention Center, sheriff?s office, rural fire departments, senior centers, and the Sebastian County EMS Service.

?We want to make sure that we have enough beds and stuff to house people that society says is dangerous,? said Sebastian County Sheriff Bill Hollenbeck. ?This is not a new tax. This is a continuation of an already existing tax that supports the daily operations of public safety.?

The tax comes up for renewal every 10 years.

?It?s been generating about $21 million,? said Sebastian County Judge David Hudson. ?It?ll be in the $20 million category and those funds are distributed to all 11 cities and the county government.?

Hollenbeck says the tax would pay for deputies and possibly additional staffing at the jail.

?When we have so many people who are incarcerated and we don?t have the staff, a proper staff to run the jail, then of course is becomes dangerous for those deputies,? said Hollenbeck.

The county says money from the tax would also go towards street programs, parks, and the Scott-Sebastian County Public Library.

Source: http://5newsonline.com/2013/02/21/sebastian-county-asks-voters-to-extend-1-sales-tax/

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Senator Reid says Republicans are blocking Hagel

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid accused Republicans on Thursday of putting the country at risk by trying to delay a vote to confirm Chuck Hagel as President Barack Obama's new secretary of defense.

"For the sake of our national security it is time for us to put aside political theater," Reid said.

The Nevada Democrat made an impassioned appeal for Hagel's confirmation amid questions over whether he could get the 60 votes needed to overcome roadblocks preventing a vote.

Reid accused Republicans of trying to score political points by coming up with one reason after another to delay confirmation of a new Pentagon chief, including for the first time ever using the blocking tactic known as a filibuster to prevent a vote.

If confirmed, Hagel would replace retiring defense secretary Leon Panetta.

Democrats, who have remained united in support of Hagel, a former Republican senator from Nebraska, control 55 seats in the 100-member Senate and could confirm Hagel without any Republican backing. A Cabinet nominee requires the support of only a simple majority to be confirmed.

However, they need the support of 60 senators to clear the procedural hurdles and allow the vote.

Hagel broke from his party as a senator by opposing former President George W. Bush's handling of the Iraq War, angering many of his Republican colleagues. Some members of his party have also raised questions about whether Hagel, 66, is sufficiently supportive of Israel, tough enough on Iran or capable of leading the Pentagon.

Earlier, two Republicans had said they would vote for Hagel and several others said they would oppose procedural hurdles, but those votes may not have held as bitter battling over Obama's nominee have continued.

A senior Senate Democratic aide said Republicans had informed Democratic leaders that there were not enough Republicans willing to join the Democrats to yield the 60 votes needed to allow the vote to go through.

A senior Republican aide said it was not clear if enough Republicans would cross the aisle to join the Democrats.

A White House spokesman said Obama still stands strongly behind Hagel, and said the "unconscionable" delay does not send a favorable signal to allies or U.S. troops.

(Editing by Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/democrats-pave-way-senate-showdown-hagel-000522418.html

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Friday, February 15, 2013

Microsoft's Surface RT comes to 13 new European markets

More than three months after Microsoft launched Surface RT in the UK and other European markets the device is now taking on several new countries on the continent.

Thirteen new European markets will get the RT including Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden, Ireland, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, Spain and Portugal. There's no word on when it Europe will get RT's Intel cousin, the Surface Pro, which launched earlier this month in the US.

The pricing for the devices varies country by country: Irish consumers can get a 32GB device for ?479, while Swedes will need to shell out 4495 krone (?532) for the same model, for example.

Besides now reaching around half of Europe's total population, the new RT markets are ones where consumers are unlikely to have interacted with Microsoft's new Windows 8 interface on a tablet, despite Windows 8 tablets from Microsoft's hardware partners like Acer, Dell and Samsung being available.

The Surface RT could be about to change that: even with the mixed reviews, there's no end of marketing and hype around the Surface and retailers are trumpeting the arrival of the Windows 8 tablet.

surface-rt
Retailer Siba's site shows off the arrival of the RT. Image: Siba/Liam Tung

Take Sweden as an example: the country's three largest retailers El Giganten, Siba and MediaMarkt for the first time promoted a Windows 8 tablet on their respective homepages. None have done anything close to that for Microsoft's ODM partners whose tablets have been swamped by Androids and out-promoted by Apple's tablets.

The Surface RT also addresses the lack of diversity when it comes to retailers' Windows 8 options. Again, using Sweden as an example, the two new Surface RT will double the Windows 8 tablet presence in El Giganten.

Until now, Swedes wanting Windows 8 would have to content themselves with non-Surface offerings. Microsoft, alongside partner Intel, showcased a range of Windows 8 tablets in a pop-up shop in the country's capital Stockholm over Christmas. The ARM-powered RT, surprisingly, wasn't one of them.

Source: http://www.zdnet.com/microsofts-surface-rt-comes-to-13-new-european-markets-7000011331/

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NBA Trade Rumors - Broussard: "Eric Gordon Trade Highly Unlikely:

Eric Gordon's absence yesterday raised eyebrows across the league and among fans. Indeed, post-game chatter was equally divided between Gordon potentially being moved by the trade deadline and the fact that a team headed for the lottery had just put together a 36 point win.

Now, Chris Broussard and his "heh, Deron Williams texted me!" act have come under some serious side-eye of late, but nonetheless, here's his thing for ESPN Insider today:

We all know Eric Gordon wanted to sign with Phoenix last summer and many around the league believe he would still rather not be in New Orleans. That's prompted several clubs to call the Hornets about Gordon's availability. Those calls, in turn, led New Orleans to start calling around to gauge Gordon's trade value.

I'm told a Gordon trade this season is highly unlikely, with one source with knowledge of the situation telling ESPN.com this week that, as things stand, there's "less than a 10 percent chance'' New Orleans would move Gordon before the deadline. Still, the fact that the Hornets made calls around the league implies that they are at least warming up to the idea of moving him at some point.

I've got a quick piece coming tomorrow on why I think moving Gordon now would be a bad move; for now, at least, it appears that there might not be enough immediate interest for him. A lot could change by the time the trade deadline rolls around of course.

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Source: http://www.atthehive.com/2013/2/14/3990114/nba-trade-rumors-eric-gordon-trade-highly-unlikely

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NKorea to face sanctions for nuke, but China key

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) ? For the past decade, the world's most powerful nations have turned to sanctions in an attempt to punish North Korea for a series of rocket launches and nuclear tests. Their stated goal: to stop North Korea's march toward acquiring an arsenal of nuclear-armed long-range missiles.

The sanctions, however, have failed to slow Pyongyang down. It conducted a third nuclear test Tuesday despite warnings of more international punishment.

Once again countries are looking to the United Nations to tighten already harsh multilateral sanctions.

But the U.S. and its allies will also consider boosting their own national penalties against North Korean companies and individuals.

Here's a look at these countries' current non-U.N. sanctions and the reasons why many argue that for any real change to happen in North Korea, a reluctant China must also embrace tough, unilateral penalties against its ally.

CHINA

China is seen as the only major power with any real influence on North Korea as it pursues nuclear weapons. It provides most of North Korea's fuel, a good deal of its food and accounts for an increasing share of its trade and investment.

But despite recurring nuclear and missile tests by Pyongyang, Beijing has been reluctant to take unilateral action against a neighbor it sees as a valuable buffer between U.S. troops stationed in South Korea and Japan.

"China can make a difference," said Andrei Lankov, a professor at Kookmin University in Seoul. "The question is whether it will make a difference."

Beijing's current options range from issuing harsh condemnation to supporting sterner U.N. sanctions, something it did after the North launched a rocket in December that the U.N. said was a cover for a banned missile test.

But many outsiders are pushing for more, including calls for China to restrict its food and fuel aid.

Beijing, for example, could turn "off the spigot of the Daqing pipeline that supplies (North Korea) with much of its oil, as Beijing did nearly a decade ago in March 2003," according to Elizabeth Economy, an Asia specialist at the Council on Foreign Relations.

But Kim Dong-gil, deputy director of the Center for Korean Peninsula Studies of Peking University, said that although China will likely sign on to whatever measures are agreed upon at the U.N., he strongly doubts China will take unilateral action against the North.

China's "unpleasant choice," Lankov said, is "between a nuclear, relatively stable North Korea, and a non-nuclear but unstable North Korea." For China, political collapse in North Korea "is a greater evil than North Korea's nuclear adventures."

Still, there is growing disgust among the government and the public in China with Pyongyang's behavior.

The nuclear test, which took place less than 100 kilometers (62 miles) from the Chinese border, was widely criticized on China's popular Twitter-like Weibo microblogging service, with users calling it anti-social and urging the government to reconsider its assistance to the Pyongyang.

"Can China really allow this insane country to have nuclear weapons," wrote a user identified as Little Eagle King.

UNITED STATES

The U.S. does not maintain a comprehensive embargo against North Korea, as is sometimes presumed, and Americans are still free to travel there.

But legislation and executive orders, some dating back six decades, strictly regulate trade and aid, and assets are blocked for dozens of sanctioned North Korean companies, government agencies and individuals.

Washington is considered a sanctions trailblazer.

"Attention will now turn to Washington to see if the Obama administration lives up to its promise of significant repercussions if Pyongyang so blatantly and quickly disregards the latest U.N. resolution," said Bruce Klingner, a former U.S. intelligence official and now a North Korea analyst at the conservative Heritage Foundation think tank in Washington.

Justification for U.S. restrictions includes Cold War-era legislation that regulates U.S. dealings with communist countries, worries about the spread of weapons of mass destruction and North Korea's poor record on human rights, religious freedom and human trafficking.

Trade between the countries is minimal. U.S. companies can export to North Korea, but have to apply for a license to do so.

For nearly all items, other than food and medicine, there is a presumption the request will be denied, according to a 2011 report by the Congressional Research Service. There are tight controls on access to computers and software. Arms transfers and sales are forbidden.

The Treasury Department must approve any imports from North Korea, and weighs all requests on proliferation concerns and on questions of who might profit. Transfers from the North Korean government itself are generally prohibited. Using a North Korea-flagged vessel for any transaction is prohibited.

The U.S. blocks North Korea from receiving support from international financial institutions like the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. Aid from the U.S. itself is also heavily restricted. North Korea is barred from government programs offering credit and investment guarantees.

The U.S. blocks assets and business transactions with individuals and entities on a sanctions list maintained by the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control because of their suspected involvement with North Korea in weapons proliferation and other arms-related material, money laundering, counterfeiting, narcotics trafficking and trade in luxury goods.

Klingner called for Washington to set up more unilateral sanctions against not only North Korean entities but also "all those other banks, businesses and government agencies of other countries that have facilitated North Korea's behaviors. Washington needs to call upon other nations to match our efforts."

SOUTH KOREA

Seoul slapped independent sanctions on rival Pyongyang after the 2010 sinking of a South Korean warship that Seoul blames on Pyongyang. North Korea denies involvement in the sinking, which killed 46 South Koreans.

Those measures banned North Korean ships from entering South Korean waters, slashed cross-border trade, restricted South Koreans from traveling to North Korea, and prohibited additional investment in North Korea. Humanitarian aid was drastically cut, except for certain cases, including that for infants and other vulnerable people. Travel restrictions have been eased in some cases.

South Korea also bans luxury items from being shipped into North Korea. That includes liquor, cosmetics, leather goods, fur products, carpets, jewelry, electronics, vehicles, boats, optical equipment, watches, musical instruments and antiques.

Seoul says it is open to all possibilities but isn't currently mulling new unilateral sanctions and believes the 2010 penalties are putting pressure on North Korea.

JAPAN

Japan bans exchanges of people, goods, ships and flights between the two countries. In principle, no North Korean citizens are allowed to visit, while Japanese are asked to abstain from traveling to North Korea.

Tokyo also limits the amount of cash that can be carried to North Korea to 100,000 yen, while payments of 3 million yen or more must be reported to the government. Japan also bars North Koreans from receiving technical education and training related to sensitive nuclear technology.

A government official, who requested not to be identified because the information was not given through formal disclosure procedures, said Tokyo will follow the lead of other major nations in determining any further sanctions.

___(equals)

Associated Press writers Sam Kim and Youkyung Lee in Seoul, South Korea, Elaine Kurtenbach and Malcolm Foster in Tokyo, Matthew Pennington in Washington, and Christopher Bodeen in Beijing contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nkorea-face-sanctions-nuke-china-key-081740452.html

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debt management services, insolvency advice


Lancashire, UK -- (SBWIRE) -- 02/13/2013 -- Small Businesses are making life more difficult for themselves than they need to - by not taking advice on dealing with debt early enough, says an Insolvency Practitioner.

Andrew Rosler of Dragons Clinic believes many Directors could avoid Insolvency by talking their creditors at an earlier stage.

?When a business gets into debt, especially when the debts start getting out of hand, Directors tend to panic. They don't know what to do, so they do nothing. They firefight. If only Directors started dealing with their creditors earlier they wouldn't need an Insolvency Practitioner.?

?It's an easy trap to fall into; most businesses have done it at one point in time or another. ?

?Yet, with a little professional advice, Directors can make a huge difference the future of their business, and save it from Insolvency or Debt Management Services.?

?The base of the problem seems to be how people see taking Insolvency advice. Just because you are taking advice it doesn't have to mean that you are closing the doors on your business or pursuing any form of debt management service. Insolvency Practitioners can also offer advice on what businesses can do to keep creditors at bay, and what their legal position is.?

?Just because you take advice from a doctor, it doesn't make you terminally ill.?

?Indeed, Insolvency Practitioners are the best people to speak to when a business has even a small debt problem, so they can ensure they never need a formal Insolvency procedure.?

?Much like doctors, we've seen all the ills and ailments a business can have. We really do have the t-shirt on debt solutions. We have seen what leads a business to ruin, and usually, what can save it. So why not take advantage of that experience? It's madness not to, especially as most Insolvency Practitioners have some form of free consultation they offer.?

?If a Director does wait, like most of the people that call us, there will be little that can be done - it usually results in Liquidation of some form. This also has the downside that the costs for dealing with your Insolvency would be a lot more than they would have been if only they had called at an earlier stage as the case will be more complicated or aggressive.?

?Despite what they may have heard, we won't just come in and take over a business, just because they have a few debt problems (having a bit of a sniffle in medical terms). We are genuinely there to help, businesses don't need to rely on hear-say or myth or even the advice of John from the pub? we can give them the facts.?

?By getting the advice early, Directors can avoid Insolvency or other formal Debt Services altogether. Even if their company is Insolvent and we need to put something into place, this will save them a lot of money and catch it early on.?

?It's important for Directors to remember that having debt is not a problem, not taking advice early on is. Debt Management Services or Insolvency can usually be avoided by simply picking up the phone.?

About Dragons Clinic
Dragons Clinic is a boutique based Business Debt Services company based in Bolton, Lancashire, UK. We offer tailored made services for businesses of all size. We pride ourselves on helping small businesses with a portfolio of services that you would normally only find if you were a blue chip company.

Source: http://www.sbwire.com/press-releases/debt-management-services/deal-with-creditors/sbwire-206095.htm

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Advance promises to expand biological control of crop pests

Feb. 13, 2013 ? A new discovery promises to allow expanded use of a mainstay biological pest control method, which avoids the health, environmental and pest-resistance concerns of traditional insecticides, scientists are reporting. The advance toward broadening applicability of the so-called sterile insect technique (SIT) appears in the journal ACS Synthetic Biology.

Luke Alphey and colleagues explain that the Lepidoptera, a large family of insects with a caterpillar stage, cause widespread damage worldwide to cotton; apples, pears and other fruits; and vegetable crops like broccoli, Brussels sprouts and cabbage. Farmers usually battle these pests with traditional insects, with little use of SIT, despite its many advantages. SIT involves mass release of radiation-sterilized insects, which mate but produce no offspring, thus reducing the population of pests. Alphey's team focused on eliminating major drawbacks that discourage wider use of SIT: They include difficulty in producing male-only sterile insects without the use of radiation, which reduces their ability to compete with wild males for mates.

The scientists describe development of a synthetic genetic system that produces vigorous adult males with lethal information encoded in their sex-determination genes. The males mate, and all the female offspring die, thus reducing the pest populations. They developed the "lethal genetic sexing system" in two pests, the pink bollworm, which damages cotton crops, and the diamondback moth, which attacks broccoli, cabbage and other cruciferous vegetable crops. The approach could be used on other pests, as well, they state.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Chemical Society.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Li Jin, Adam S. Walker, Guoliang Fu, Timothy Harvey-Samuel, Tarig Dafa?alla, Andrea Miles, Thea Marubbi, Deborah Granville, Nerys Humphrey-Jones, Sinead O?Connell, Neil I. Morrison, Luke Alphey. Engineered Female-Specific Lethality for Control of Pest Lepidoptera. ACS Synthetic Biology, 2013; : 130108140209004 DOI: 10.1021/sb300123m

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/m3lZcBQF-Zs/130213114710.htm

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Report: US on fast-track to energy independence

U.S. oil and gas production is evolving so rapidly ? and demand is dropping so quickly ? that in just five years the U.S. could no longer need to buy oil from any source but Canada, according to Citigroup's global head of commodities research.

Citigroup's Edward Morse, in a new report, projects a dramatic reshaping of the global energy industry, where the U.S., in a matter of years, becomes an exporter of energy, instead of one of the biggest importers.

The shift could sharply reduce the price of oil, and therefore limit the revenues of the producing nations of OPEC, as well as Russia and West Africa. Those nations face new challenges: Not only are the U.S. and Canada increasing output, but Iraq increasingly is realizing its potential as an oil producer, adding 600,000 barrels a day of production annually for the next several years.

"OPEC will find it challenging to survive another 60 years, let alone another decade," the report by Morse and other Citi analysts said. "But not all of the consequences are positive, for when it comes to the geopolitics of energy, the likely outcomes are asymmetric, with clear cut winner and losers."

Read More: The World's 15 Biggest Oil Producers

The U.S. is a winner in many ways. Its super power status could be prolonged because of this new growth in oil and shale gas production, made possible by "fracking" and other non-conventional drilling technologies.

Crude oil generated the largest single annual increase in liquids production in U.S. history last year, with an increase of 1.16 million barrels per day. Oil production is booming in places like Texas and North Dakota, which has the lowest unemployment in the country at just 3 percent last September, compared to the national rate of 7.8 percent then.

Citi analysts also foresee a new era of U.S. industrialization, fueled by cheaper power. They cite dozens of industrial projects across America that have already begun or are planned, in such industries as auto, chemicals and steel.

Read More:Winter Storm May Stall Gas Price Climb

The oil producing nations of OPEC, and others, will have to adjust to a world of lower prices.

Brent crude, the international benchmark, could trade in a new lower range of $70 to $90 per barrel by the end of the decade, from its recent range of $90 to $120 per barrel, Citi projects. That would be below the break-even levels required by many producing countries. The price required by Saudi Arabia is $71, and Kuwait is $44 per barrel, but many other countries have break-even levels of $110 or greater.

"This is a momentous year for what's happening, and we're having almost two million barrels a day of pipeline capacity built out in the U.S.," Morse said on "Fast Money." "The U.S. is actually going to push out about 700,000 barrels a day of light sweet crude imports this year. We think as a result of that, plus production elsewhere, we think the price is going to average, by the time you get to December, $10 less than where it is right now."

As the U.S. and Canada rise, some oil producing countries could face the threat of becoming "failed states" as their leadership grapples with greater pressure for economic and political reform while resource revenues decline, the report said. Others, especially China, could make up for some of the demand, but not all.

"Nigeria, the picture is fairly bleak. Venezuela is pretty bleak," Morse said.

As for Russia, "if it is the case that what is now a $90 Brent floor price becomes a $90 Brent ceiling price, given the dominance of hydrocarbon exports in Russian revenue, there could be a three percent hit to GDP which is by no means insignificant over the next five years, because that's how critical hydrocarbons are," he said. "Here you have a country that requires, on its own public record, $117 per barrel Urals crude, on average, to balance their budget. If the price of oil collapses to only as low as $90 a barrel, it does have that order-of-magnitude effect."

At the same time, Citi sees a big impact on the U.S. economy. The current account deficit is about 3.2 percent of GDP, and the oil import bill is 1.7 percent of GDP. Citi expects that energy self-sufficiency, combined with the impact of low natural gas prices, could cut the current account deficit by up to 2.4 percent of GDP, with an associated improvement in the dollar of 1.6 to 5.4 percent.

To realize this production boom, the energy industry's near-term challenge is moving the U.S. and Canadian oil that is locked in the heart of the continent because of insufficient pipeline transportation. Citi expects that to improve but in the meantime, the railroad industry is helping pick up the slack, shipping U.S. crude across the continent, and creating big demand for rail tanker cars.

Interdependent North America
The Citi report, titled "Energy 2020: Independence Day," also projects a larger and quicker decline in demand for oil in the U.S. over the next decade or two, due to efficiency and the shift to cheaper natural gas.

For instance, Citi expects 30 percent of the U.S. heavy duty truck fleet to turn to natural gas-based fuel by 2015, well above the 10 percent it previously forecast. That would reduce diesel demand by an estimated 600,000 barrels per day. It also expects new automotive efficiency standards to reduce U.S. oil production by two million barrels per day, up from the one million forecast last year.

"Starting this year, North American output, as we indicate in this report, should start to have tangible impacts both on global prices and trading patterns, and will eventually turn the global geopolitics of energy on its head," the report said.

Morse surprised markets a year ago with a report that envisioned the U.S. as part of an energy independent North America. Since then, the view has become mainstream. The International Energy Agency forecast last fall that the U.S. will overtake Saudi Arabia and Russia as the top oil producer by 2017. The IEA also forecast that North America could become a net oil exporter by around 2030 and the U.S. could become nearly self-sufficient by 2035.

Morse's latest report, released Tuesday, has an even more aggressive view of the U.S. move to dominance as an energy producer.

If crude oil and field condensates, natural gas liquids, renewable fuels and refinery processing gains are counted, the report put U.S. production at 11.2 million barrels per day at the end of 2012, making the U.S. the biggest oil producer already last year.

Canadian production is expected to increase to 6.5 million barrels per day, and even Mexico is now expected to join the North America energy renaissance under a new government interested in exploiting its resources.

In the past six years, oil imports into the United States have been cut in half, after peaking in 2006.

"The numbers are striking. The month of peak was 12.6 million barrels a day in October 2006 and ... now it's under six, and by late 2012 totaled 6.8 million bpd," Morse said in an interview.

Since 2006, U.S. oil field production of crude, plus natural gas liquids and bio-fuels has grown by three million barrels a day, about the same as the total output of Iran, Iraq, or Venezuela. In the same period, Canadian production has grown by 510,000 barrels a day.

"The impact of this extraordinary production growth is becoming increasingly apparent and even if the growth rate subsides in the years ahead the mushrooming impacts of this growth will have dramatic impacts," the report said. "A half decade from now combined US and Canadian output will be in surplus of projected needs. Over the next five years, demand for natural gas in the US should catch up with supply, opening up unexpected opportunities in transportation and igniting a re-industrialization of the country."

Morse, in an interview, said the U.S. could in theory need to import only from Canada within five years. "Our projection of U.S. supply growth and U.S. demand collapse is to levels where the U.S. will not need to import oil from any other country except for Canada," he said.

He expects to see a fight for market share in the U.S. and the ultimate result will be that the U.S. could re-export some Canadian crude. "But technically there should be no room for anyone else's crude," he noted.

But this does not mean the U.S. will be immune to price spikes, even with its growing supply. "Disruptions actually affect the price of oil globally and the more integrated we are in the world oil economy, the more we're going to be impacted by it. If there's a price spike, we're going to feel the price spike but the weight of our production is going to make that prices pike come from a much lower base in the future than it is now," Morse said on "Fast Money."

2013 ? a year of change
U.S. oil has been landlocked in the Midwest, lacking a strong transportation system to bring supply to refining areas. A hodge podge of pipeline and rail transport has taken over, as the industry awaits further pipeline development, including the stalled Keystone pipeline.

But Citi points out that 2013 brings big change, what it calls "the most dramatic year of change ever in light sweet crude flows." Pipeline capacity in the U.S. will expand by 1.7 million barrels a day, and up to 600,000 barrels of new rail capacity will be opened between the U.S. and Canada. The report said there is an expected near doubling of receiving capacity of rail-shipped oil from 2012 to 2013.

The industry has innovated where necessary. Lacking pipelines, over half the North Dakota crude production, of 480,000 barrels a day at the end of 2012, was estimated to have been moved by rail. Much of it went to St. James, La., and Port Arthur, Texas and Mobile, Ala. Bakken is also being railed to facilities in Albany, N.Y., and New Brunswick, Canada.

The report also points out the big backlog in rail cars, many of them tank and hopper railcars. Citi said American Railcar Industries last fall said backlog for rail-cars at the end of September was 61,400, and 75 percent were tank rail-cars. Tank rail-cars transport materials like crude, chemicals, propane ethanol and asphalt.

Independent North America
The report describes how shipments of oil from West Africa have been waning and as early as this summer, West African crude shipments into the U.S. Gulf Coast could be unnecessary. East Coast refiners could also decrease dependence on West African crude, replacing more imports with midcontinent oil, brought in by rail from Pennsylvania and Virginia to upstate New York and New Jersey. That would also have a likely impact on gasoline prices, currently at record highs for this time of year because of refining issues.

There is also pressure to move light sweet crude from the Gulf Coast to higher value locations. For instance, Morse expects to see light sweet crude move form the U.S. Gulf Coast to eastern Canada, displacing more West African imports to North America.

Citi expects that within two years, there could be pressure for more exports to other destinations or for pipelines on the East Coast or to change laws that would allow shipping of crude from the Gulf Coast to the East Coast by non-U.S. flagged ships.

By the end of 2014, Citi expects that sour Canadian crude should make its way to the Gulf Coast by way of new pipelines and that should provide a challenge for other producers shipping to the Gulf Coast, including Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait , Venezuela and Mexico. Morse says they could be pushed out by Canadian crude, or these producers could preserve market share by cutting prices.

Canadian and U.S. crude should be delivered in greater quantities to the U.S. East Coast and Gulf Coast by mid-decade. A happenstance of poor transportation for all this energy wealth leaves Canadian crude locked in North America, but with exporting ability through the U.S. Gulf Coast until pipelines are approved and built in Canada. Morse said if that were to happen, Canada could see an export boom to the Pacific basin, turning Canadian crude into the benchmark for that region.

The report notes that even before Canada builds pipelines to the Pacific: "There should be exports of crude from the U.S. Gulf Coast -- Canadian crude for sure and potentially U.S. crude if the U.S. succumbs to economic logic and lifts current multiple bans on exports," the report said.

Asked how his report has been received so far, Morse said, with an ironic laugh, that he's had some "push back but not as much as last year."

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/economywatch/us-fast-track-energy-independence-report-suggests-1C8344034

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Obama Pleads for a More Prayerful Washington

President Barack Obama at the National Prayer Breakfast yesterday morning pleaded with Democrats and Republicans to take a more prayerful stance as they address the nation's problems.

"This is now our fifth prayer breakfast, and it is always just a wonderful event. But I do worry sometimes that as soon as we leave the prayer breakfast, everything we've been talking about the whole time at the prayer breakfast seems to be forgotten?on the same day of the prayer breakfast," Obama said, provoking laughter from the 3,000 people in attendance.

"I mean, you'd like to think that the shelf life wasn't so short," the president said. "But I go back to the Oval Office and I start watching the cable news networks and it's like we didn't pray."

Obama opened his remarks by thanking Josh Dubois, head of the White House Office of Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships. Yesterday was Dubois' last day in that job.

"Joshua has been at my side?in work and in prayer?for years now," Obama said. "He is a young reverend, but wise in years. He's done an outstanding job as the head of our faith-based office."

"Every morning he sends me via email a daily meditation?a snippet of Scripture for me to reflect on. And it has meant the world to me. And despite my pleas, tomorrow will be his last day in the White House. So this morning I want to publically thank Joshua for all that he's done, and I know that everybody joins me in wishing him all the best in his future endeavors?including getting married."

At his recent inaugural address, President Obama took the oath of office using two Bibles, one from former President Abrahama Lincoln, the other from Martin Luter King Jr. At the prayer breakfast, Obama said, "As I prepared to take the sacred oath, I thought about these two men, and I thought of how, in times of joy and pain and uncertainty, they turned to their Bibles to seek the wisdom of God's word?and thought of how, for as long as we've been a nation, so many of our leaders, our presidents, and our preachers, our legislators and our jurists have done the same."

Later in his address, Obama said, "In the midst of all these debates, we must keep that same humility that Dr. King and Lincoln and Washington and all our great leaders understood is at the core of true leadership."

Obama also referenced the growing religious diversity of America. "As Christians, we place our faith in the nail-scarred hands of Jesus Christ. But so many other Americans also know the close embrace of faith?Muslims Muslims and Jews, Hindus and Sikhs. And all Americans?whether religious or secular?have a deep and abiding faith in this nation."

Attendees were struck by the sober tone of Obama's remarks. Andrea Redman, a New York financial executive, told Christianity Today, "I felt like he was hurting, like he was in pain."

Joseph Brown, a professor at Southern Illinois University, said, "I've known him for years. That was one of the most serious moments I've ever seen him in. It was really good, but it was so different."

World-renowned Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli performed at the event. Perhaps the most stirring part of his performance came shortly after the last note of "Ave Maria." As he was returning to his seat, Bocelli came back to the microphone and told the crowd that this morning had been like a dream come true for him. He said seeing men and women who disagree, but pray with one another touched him deeply.

Source: http://feeds.christianitytoday.com/~r/christianitytoday/ctmag/~3/mqHYtIYWpZU/obama-pleads-for-more-prayerful-washington.html

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feed a better mood - Networking Ahead for Business

How much control do you have over your moods?

Is it something you can change by simply changing your thoughts? Or by getting some exercise? Maybe if you lost a little of that extra weight you?ve been carrying around, you?d be in a better mood? Maybe so, but could you sustain it? The mood, I mean.

I find that when I?m in a bad mood it is usually because I?m under stress at work or at home. At these times, I crave quick foods, comfort foods, a relaxing glass of wine or two, and the perpetual cup of coffee. Intellectually I know that these particular foods and beverages will perpetuate my mood swings and rob my body of essential ingredients necessary to achieve balance and energy. But I can?t help myself. Like many people, I indulge in unhealthy behaviors via poor food choices at the most inopportune times.

?

Weight, weight, don?t tell me?

A few weeks ago, I was having a networking coffee (yes, more stimulant) with my professional colleague and friend, Linda Coveney. Linda and I belong to a consortium of talent development/organizational development specialists called the ReferHER Network. It?s one of the networking experiments that I?ve been conducting since writing my book and studying the art of business networking.

Linda recently left Legrand in North America, after more than a decade of service, most recently serving as the Director of Employee Development. Linda is a vital and energized professional who became curious about the connection between employee well being and productivity and health and nutrition.

In preparation for her transition from the corporate world, Linda earned her certification as a health coach and prepared the launch of her own company called Healthy-Behaviors. Linda?s role as a health coach focuses on supporting women and men who want to integrate healthy eating and lifestyle habits into their already busy, stressful lives. She also delivers workshops to support corporate wellness programs.

?

The Food-Mood Connection

I had noticed changes in Linda each time we saw each other for networking. It was obvious to me that she has lost some weight and she seemed happy about that fact. But I also noticed her new energy level and zest for life. Was this positive change merely a result of her recent weight-loss? Was she in the early euphoric stages of entrepreneurship? What was going on in her life that made her so positive, alive and productive?

Here?s what Linda share with me. Her ?secret? gives hope to the rest of us!

?Once I started learning about and adopting healthier eating habits, I expected to lose some weight?and I did. First step was to add more dark green leafy vegetables to my diet and then to move to a focus on eating whole foods vs. processed nutrient deficient foods.

The biggest surprise for me was how my mood changed once I started eating foods packed with vitamins and minerals, healthy fats and good carbs. And this mood shift didn?t happen after I lost 20 pounds, it happened quite early on in the process. Adding in good food helped to reduce my sugar consumption significantly and shifted my cravings to the foods that made me feel better.

No longer was my addiction to sugar and chips in charge. My body must have been relieved that it didn?t have to work so hard to attack the toxics I had been adding in throughout the day and evening. It was happy to get off the blood sugar roller coaster and slowed down enough to help me feel?more happy, more alive, more ready to tackle whatever came my way

It?s not like I was depressed or unable to function prior to this.? It?s like a car operating on fewer cylinders. It still runs, but not at peak performance.

They say you are what you eat and I believe that to be true. When you are eating food that has a stronger relationship to a chemical lab than it does to nutrient rich soil, you start to feel a little fuzzy, a little tired and sluggish, less confident. Once I made this transition, I realized that not only did I shut off my internal system from achieving optimum performance, but I shut myself off from people and events. These are lost opportunities that you can?t get back.

Think of the opportunities that corporations have to inform and support healthier eating habits of their employees? The results could be significant in terms of increased productivity, higher engagement, greater collaboration and lower health care costs.

While I do want to help people who wish to lose weight, I?m really excited about the possibility of helping them achieve their full potential for a happy, healthy life that they love!?- Linda Coveney, Health Coach with Healthy-Behaviors

?

Putting you and your employees in a better mood

Before you invest in another team-building, morale boosting activity, consider changing the food that you serve yourself and your team. The chemical changes in their bodies as a result of better food intake may be just the productivity boost you need.

The war on talent may be easier won that you thought. Your enemy is not the competition, but could be the vending machines and in-office candy fundraising boxes that you have placed in your buildings for the convenience of your workforce. They are unhealthy behaviors waiting to happen. They are toxic to employee engagement, productivity and well being.

What can you do instead to support yourself and your workforce?? Here are some great suggestions from the Wellness Diva, Dr. Nance MacLeod-Lutchin, DNM:

?Why not have a bowl of fresh fruit and green tea beside the coffee pot. Also a nice trail mix of raw nuts, seeds, goji berries, raw cacao, and more.? A properly mixed bowl of raw nutritious nuts, seeds, cacao beans, and dried raw fruit can give a person all the nutrition they need for the entire day with lots of extra benefits.

Raw Cacao will help to get rid of depressed feelings because it is a psychoactive food containing more than 300 compounds that can affect moods. Raw nuts and seeds are very healthy and nutritious. Nuts provide a feeling of satisfaction because they are high in good fat. Studies have shown that those who to who eat nuts were actually more lean than those who didn?t eat nuts.? (source:?http://www.thewellnessdiva.net/article6.htm)

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Our dietary choices are control points

If you care about the health and well being of yourself, your family and your colleagues, then you will question and challenge the outrageous claims made by major food manufacturers.

Snickers? bars are not good energy. A meal-replacement bar is not a suitable replacement for real food. Smartwater? is just a marketing ploy. Gatorade? is not what your kids or you should be drinking on a regular basis. Doritos? chips make great Superbowl Ads, but it?s still junk food. What do you think is in 5-hour energy? drink? I think it?s got to be poison that managed to slip by the FDA.

?Our dietary choices are control points,??Michaelf Stanclift, a Naturopathic Doctor based in Edinburgh, Scotland, reminds us. ? After all, we ultimately choose what foods we put into our and our families? bodies. And food is arguably our best opportunity to introduce beneficial substances to our body.?

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Feed your mind

If you are interested in learning more, please check out these articles and related links that were recommended by certified health coach Linda Coveney.

  1. Food and Mood: Is What You?re Eating, Eating You? by Michael Stanclift, N.D., a Naturopathic Doctor based in Edinburgh, Scotland. His article is featured in the HuffPost Healthy Living section, Jan 17, 2013
  2. Does Food Affect How Your Employees Work? By Dr. Nance MacLeod-Lutchin, DNM, known as the Wellness Diva.
  3. French research study (2012) reveals the mounting body of evidence suggesting our eating habits and food choices have influence on our moods over the long term. In this study, they followed 12,000 people over 10 years, looking at their eating habits and depression symptoms. Conclusion: the healthier the diet, the less likely a person was to have symptoms of depression.
  4. The World Health Organization report forecasts depression to be the second leading cause of disability by 2020, just behind heart disease.

Your Networking Goal for the Week

Networking is an exchange of energy, ideas, resources and connections. The quality of energy and well being you bring to the table will have a direct impact on your networking results and success. If you are stressed out and depleted, people will sense that. If you are healthy and vital, you will give off an entirely different ?vibe.? You will attract more opportunities if you have good energy. Good food is one of the easiest ways to change your networking vibration to a more positive frequency.

This week is Valentine?s Day week, so there will be extra challenges. Lots of junky candy and sweets lying around to tempt you.

I challenge you to make BETTER food and beverage intake choices this week (and ongoing). If you meet someone face-to-face for networking this week, select a water with lemon instead of coffee or soda. For snacks, select whole fruit instead of sugary desserts or prepackaged items. Pack your lunch and bring it with you to work. Make conscience food choices.

For the more ambitious person, you can track your food intake by jotting down what you put in your mouth for one week. Think of it like budgeting ? you must know find out where your money goes before you can make any changes to your spending habits.

Finally, reach out and network with someone who is in the health/wellness field this week. Pick their brain about healthy behaviors and habits that they practice and recommend to their clients. If they offer initial consultations, sign up for one. It?s your body?and it?s the only one you?ll ever have.

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Source: http://networkingahead.com/networking-how-to-feed-a-better-mood/

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