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Friday, October 19, 2007

Opera v9.24 Build 8816 Final

The most full-featured Internet power tool on the market, Opera includes pop-up blocking, tabbed browsing, integrated searches, and advanced functions like Opera's groundbreaking E-mail program, RSS Newsfeeds and IRC chat. And because we know that our users have different needs, you can customize the look and content of your Opera browser with a few clicks of the mouse.

Download : Opera v9.24 Build 8816 Final sh
:
Opera v9.24 Build 8816 Final International

This is a great opponent of FF and IE thanks to the outline website function is very good.

Mozilla Firefox v2.0.0.8 Final

Firefox is a free, open-source web browser for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X and is based on the Mozilla codebase. It is small, fast and easy to use, and offers many advantages over Internet Explorer, such as the ability to block pop-up windows.

Mozilla Firefox v2.0.0.8 for Windows

Wow, it's great that Firefox have improved themselves better than expected

Saturday, September 01, 2007

Iriver - Nice Brand for MP3/MP4

Click here to view full-size image
Photograph: Marc Simon

Apple's IPod used to be the benchmark for portable MP3 players, but now everyone appears to be gunning for the IPod Mini. Joining competitors like the Rio Carbon and the Creative Zen Micro is IRiver's $280 H10. I tested a shipping version of the 5GB player, and its versatility and quality won me over.

The highlight of the H10 is an attractive 1.5-inch display that, along with an improved hardware-and-software interface, makes the player a joy to use. Navigating your music library is easy with the touch-sensitive slider control, and IRiver has dropped its oversimplified folder-structure interface for one that allows you to browse by genre, artist, album, or song title.

Music sounds good on the device--provided you upgrade to a better set of headphones than the included earbuds. You can add individual songs, but not albums or artists, to an on-the-fly playlist called QuickList. The player does more than just play music: You can listen to and record FM radio, record audio with a built-in mike, and display text files. The unit also stores and shows photos, but because it offers no easy way to output those photos to a TV or PC, that ability is more a novelty than a useful feature.

Included is a replaceable, rechargeable battery that ran about 10.5 hours between charges. Rounding out the package is an exceptionally useful, protective rubber-skin case that allows full access to the device's navigation controls.

So how does the H10 match up to the $250 IPod Mini? Though it's a hair larger, it offers an additional 1GB of storage. The touch-sensitive controls aren't quite as slick as the Mini's, but they're intuitive. Finally, the H10 has features--including the radio, recorder, and color screen--that the Mini lacks. If these features are worth an extra $30 to you, consider the H10.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

How to Buy a Flat-Screen TV

Ready to buy a new flatscreen TV? PC World provides some straightforward tips to help you navigate the hurdles that you'll encounter while shopping. Should you go plasma or LCD? What sort of inputs do you need? What kind of video will best test different TVs? And when you're done watching this, read our comprehensive HDTV Buying Guide for more information.

"I haven't had any experience about using TV as a monitor for my PC. Does it good?"

Sunday, August 05, 2007

Next Step to simulate real life.


MIAMI, Florida (AP) -- A Japanese computer science student fails to take a full load of university classes and loses his student visa. A 10th-grade Indian girl is detained because of a high school essay she wrote on the Department of Homeland Security.

These are two of the characters in "ICED!" -- a new video game that invites players to step into the shoes of foreigners who run afoul of the U.S. immigration system.

It is part of a burgeoning genre of video games that examine major social and policy issues such as the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, the situation in Darfur and the Electoral College.

"The game allows you to get into the body of a person, so you can experience what they are going through. There are very few opportunities to get that perspective," said Mallika Dutt, head of the nonprofit Breakthrough, which produced the game and uses new media to highlight social issues around the world.

"ICED!" -- a play on the acronym for the Department of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement office -- is scheduled to be available for free download next month. It differs greatly from games like "Border Patrol," which popped up on the Internet last year and exhorted players to kill illegal immigrants as they entered the country.

"ICED!" seeks to show how immigration laws passed in 1996 expanded the number of crimes that can trigger deportation and limited immigrants' rights to appeal.

Players try to avoid deportation by keeping a low profile and performing community service. Shoplifting or jumping a subway turnstile loses points. Lose too many, and your character ends up in a federal detention facility.

"You can get a lot out of a game, more than from film and other media in some ways, because you are actively engaged rather than just a passive consumer," said Suzanne Seggerman, head of the nonprofit group Games for Change.

Barbara Gonzalez, a spokeswoman for ICE, said the agency was confident players would recognize the game is fiction.

"ICED!" gamers can become a Mexican high school graduate whose family overstayed its visa, or a Haitian war veteran who faces deportation when he turns to alcohol and crime after returning from Iraq.

In the first level, players keep a low profile in a city vaguely resembling New York. In the second level, they must navigate an immigration detention center. Programmer Heidi Boisvert estimates the game can take 10 to 30 minutes to play.

Boisvert and Natalia Rodriguez came up with the idea in graduate school and approached Breakthrough about helping them develop it. Boisvert said they didn't talk to immigration authorities, but they did speak to immigration experts, attorneys and advocacy groups, as well as their target audience of voting-age teens.

All of the characters they chose were based on real situations, including the case of a 16-year-old New York girl from Guinea who was accused of planning a suicide bombing and detained for six weeks in 2005 before the charges dropped.

Steven Camarota, head of research at the Washington-based Center for Immigration Studies, questioned the value of a game that focuses on individual cases rather than the complex issues surrounding immigration. While the U.S. immigration system is flawed, it is also one of the most generous in the world, said Camarota, whose organization favors strict enforcement of current laws.

"Any reasonable person should say your immigration system should always be tempered with mercy and justice," he said. "But it's like anything else. What exactly do you gain by looking at a small aspect of the debate?"

Louis DeSipio, a University of California, Irvine, political science professor and immigration expert, believes players do gain something.

"It's very important, especially for younger people, to understand the diversity of American society. It's easy to assume that everyone is like you," he said. "A game like this can show that."

But unless they want to preach solely to the converted, such games need widespread distribution -- something most nonprofits like Breakthrough lack the resources to do -- and to be part of a larger outreach campaign, he added.

That was the thinking of "PeaceMaker" creator Asi Burak, whose game allows players to act as both Israeli and Palestinian leaders as they seek to diffuse tension in the Middle East. It is one of the few such games to be sold commercially, including on Amazon.com. Burak claims it has sold thousands of copies in 60 countries at $20 per download.

Burak said he conceived "PeaceMaker" as a way to promote empathy between the two sides. To his surprise, those who played were more excited about finally understanding the broader Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Even if such games can explain political and social issues, they are only effective if they are fun to play, he cautioned.

"It's like a film," he said. "If it's not good, it's going to bore the audience."

from cnn.com

Friday, August 03, 2007

New Treatment Boosts Cancer Vaccine

The first clinical trials of a new type of cancer treatment that releases the “brakes” on immune cells indicate that this approach enhances attacks on tumors while sparing the body's own tissue.

The results of the phase I clinical trials of cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 blockade therapy were published online on April 1, 2003, in the Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences . The researchers involved in the study included James Allison , a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at the University of California, Berkeley, Glenn Dranoff, Steven Hodi and colleagues from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI), Brigham and Women's Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School.



“The beauty of this treatment is that the antibodies by themselves are benign. After they clear from the system, immune regulation returns to normal.”
James P. Allison



"Well, the problem how strong our body is"

Friday, July 27, 2007

No.1 T.V. Earners

It may be the small screen, but these stars are making big bucks on TV. TV Guide released a list of the highest paid TV stars, broken down into categories -- among them television salaries overall, network prime-time per episode, daytime salaries and news anchors salaries. Check out who's cashing in on TV.

Oprah Winfrey ($260 million per year)

Mogul Oprah Winfrey is like the media Energizer bunny -- and her salary keeps going and going accordingly. With a self-titled magazine and talk show under her belt, one can only imagine that her own T.V. network wouldn't be far-off.
(Charles Rex Arbogast/ AP Photo )

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Intel Eee PC Laptop $199-$299


Intel has joined hands with ASUSTek to introduce an array of low-cost portable, which includes a laptop that would be priced at $200, especially for use in developing countries.


The announcement of this revolutionary notebook dubbed ‘Eee PC’ was made at Computex 2007. This tiny full featured low-end laptop could well become part of the ‘OLPC’ Project.

To showcase the Eee PC, Jonney Shih, chairman and chief executive, ASUS, was invited to announce the low-cost laptop, which has been designed to help spread computing to poorer regions of the world.

In case you are wondering, the three Es in the Eee PC stand for Easy to Learn, work, play; Excellent Internet experience and Excellent mobile computing experience.

The new Eee PC laptop, which costs just $200 aims to provide access to knowledge and modern forms of education to people in developing countries. Thus, Intel has named it as a “World Ahead” initiative.

According to Sean Maloney, executive vice president at Intel and chief marketing and sales officer, “It will give people the chance to access the Internet and share in the 21st century opportunity.”

# Listed below are the features of the $200 Eee PC laptop: Display: 7-inches
# CPU & Chipset: Intel Mobile CPU and Chipset
# OS: Microsoft Windows XP/ Linux compatible
# Communication: 10/100 Mbps Ethernet; 56K modem
# WLAN: WiFi 802.11b/g
# Graphic: Intel UMA
# Memory: 512MB, DDR2-400
# Storage: 4/8/16GB Flash
# Webcam: 300K pixel video camera
# Audio: High-definition Audio CODECD; Built-in stereo speaker; Built-in microphone
# Battery Life: 3 hours (4 cells: 5200mAh, 2S2P)
# Dimension & Weight: 22.5 x 16.5 x 2.1-3.5cm, 0.89kg

The Eee PC Laptop will be available sometime later this year and the cost is expected to range from $199 to $299 depending on the feature set. Intel said it hoped to ship about 200,000 of the notebooks this year after production begins later this summer.

*Great news ^^ I want to get one as well.

Sunday, July 08, 2007

Ebay's coming to Vietnam

That's a great news! From joining in WTO, Vietnam become an impressive aim of the world.

Unfortunately, The Vietnamese are still familiar with cash instead of credit card. Consequently, Paypal - the famous way to trade in the world - is a big block for those who want to do their businesses on Internet through Ebay.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Thursday, June 07, 2007

New Breath for ALL

Wow, in the third quarter in 2007, I've been feeling a great forces from Techonology, especially in Entertainment.


Firstly, I talk about laptop trends. While Toshiba keep on improving their laptops' design, Sony do their best in MINIMIZE their products (I love to have one ^^); how you can help falling in love with these products towards to end-users.

Dell and IBM still put stable steps, Dell also introduces 2 new models and IBM with its famous reputation ranking no.1 in Stability and Good for Bussiness.

Acer doesn't want to look elder ones go along, they are on No.3 popular on the whole world behind Dell & HP (HP Laptop really spectacular!) but I don't think they can stand for long.

Secondly
, Xbox360 has matured enough now compare with PS3 and Nintendo Wii. The Golden Age of PC Games may be in dangerous when these consoles make Games more interactive with gamers.

Mike
(If you see any mistakes in grammar or vocabulary in my post, FEEL FREE to correct it. That's the great help for me ^_^)

Saturday, June 02, 2007

Dell Ships Ubuntu Linux PCs

Two desktops and an Inspiron E1505n notebook PC running Ubuntu 7.04 Linux go on sale today.
Dan Nystedt, IDG News Service

'Great News for those want to safe some fee. Another benefits, ATI Card in Dell laptop only have lastest drivers for Linux (I don't know why they don't support ATI Card for Windows, even in Dell website) - I own a Dell Inspiron E1505 with ATI X1400'

Dell Inc. will officially launch its first three consumer PCs running the Ubuntu 7.04 Linux OS on Thursday, two desktops and an Inspiron E1505n notebook PC.

The new models give buyers a third choice when shopping for a PC at Dell: a machine with Windows installed, a machine with no OS, on which they can install one of their choice, and now a machine with Ubuntu Linux already installed. Other PC makers, including Hewlett-Packard Co. (HP) and Lenovo Group Ltd. also sell PCs that run Linux, but mainly on customized machines, because retail demand for the open-source OS is tiny compared to that for Windows.

The PCs will be available in the U.S. after 4 p.m. Central Time from Dell's Web site at http://www.dell.com/open. The laptop starts at US$599, while the two desktops, the Dimension E520 and XPS 410n, start from $599 and $849 each, respectively. A comparable XPS 410 with Windows Vista Premium costs $899.

Dell announced what flavor of Linux it would use in the PCs, Ubuntu 7.04, earlier this month. It's the same OS Michael Dell, the chairman and CEO of the company, uses on his Dell Precision M90 laptop at home.

Dell is targeting the Linux enthusiast market with the PCs, and said the choice of systems is a response to customer feedback collected at www.ideastorm.com, a Web site set up to solicit customer suggestions. Over 100,000 people participated in surveys about the systems and what kind of Linux to install in the machines, Dell said in a statement.

The three PCs all use Intel Corp. Core 2 Duo microprocessors. The two desktops contain 1G byte of RAM and 250G bytes of hard disk space, while the laptop includes 512M bytes of RAM and an 80G byte hard disk drive.

Users will be able to choose from several hardware options on their Ubuntu PCs from Dell. The options offered contain the most mature and stable Linux driver support, and Dell plans to work with vendors to ensure more devices include Linux driver support in the future, it said.

Dell is offering hardware support for the PCs through its existing channels, with basic software help from several dedicated Web sites and Linux forums. Canonical Ltd. is offering software service upgrades from the Web site: www.ubuntu.com.

The company also created the Dell Linux Forum at www.dellcommunity.com for users to find resources, troubleshoot, discuss issues and share experiences about the new PCs.

Stop Smoking - Cut Your Risk of Lung Cancer

'Well, Imagine a day in future, you will spend your day in a hospital, does it good for you? To stop it, start now!"

Most people know that smoking causes lung caner. They are also aware their smoke is bad for the health of their family, friends, or anyone else who comes in contact with the cigarette smoke. However, these people say they just can't stop smoking. It isn't easy.

Along with all of the cancer causing ingredients of cigarette smoke, one of the main ingredients of cigarette smoke is highly addictive. If you want to quit smoking but just can't seem to, here are some statistics that might help you put down your smokes for good. Also included are some suggestions to help you stop smoking.

First, smoking is responsible for eighty percent of lung cancer deaths in women while ninety percent of men who die of lung cancer were smokers or were exposed to second hand smoke. Next time you light up around your children, think about these statistics. You are not only damaging your health, you are also damaging their health.

In a recent study lead by Stephen S. Hecht, a professor at the University of Missouri, the main cancer causing ingredient of cigarette smoke was found in the urine of infants who lived with parents who smoked. Infants who lived with non-smoking parents did not have this chemical in their urine. This new information is in addition to the knowledge that children of smokers are more prone to ear and lung infections than those of non-smokers.

Of the more than 4,500 chemicals that make up cigarette smoke 60 of them are known to be cancer causing. If a place of business was emitting this many cancer causing agents, the business would be shut down until it could clean up its emissions and protect its workers from these dangerous chemicals. Yet, cigarettes are freely sold and openly smoked. Luckily for non-smokers, many public places are becoming aware of the dangers of cigarette smoke and are declaring themselves to be smoke free.

Even if you have smoked all of your life, it doesn't make since to assume it's too late to quit now. Researchers have found that those who smoke increase their risk of developing cancer with the number of years they have smoked and the number of cigarettes they smoke each day. However, they have also found that if any given smoker stops smoking, their risk of developing lung cancer will decreases.

If you do want to stop smoking, smoking cessation products have improved in the last several years. You can buy nicotine patches or gum specially designed to help ease you gradually off of smoking and make the transition easier. There is also a new prescription smoking cessation medication that seems to be very promising. If you want to quit smoking and be healthier, talk to your doctor about which options are best for you.

It is well known that cigarettes are not good for you. They are also not good for your family or those who inhale your smoke. While cigarettes are addictive, stopping smoking is worth the effort as it can cut your risk of developing lung cancer. If you want to quit, there is help. A wide variety of over-the-counter and prescription medications are available to help you stop smoking.

For more information on cancer try visiting http://www.cancercondition.com - a website that specializes in providing cancer related information and resources including information on lung cancer.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Samantha_Kay

SO Cute ^_^




1 Forget all sadness 2


2 Love them 3


3 They make you happy and 1




Wednesday, January 24, 2007

The best of CES

Story Highlights

• Highlights from this year's CES show in Las Vegas
• LG offers dual HD format player
• SanDisk's new MP3 player could trump Zune
• Apple iPhone steals some of CES thunder

By Marc Saltzman
Special to CNN


LAS VEGAS, Nevada (CNN) -- So many products, so little time.

The International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) -- the annual Las Vegas-based trade show in its 40th year -- serves as a peek into the future of high-tech gadgets and gizmos. And I got quite a peek.

With close to 2 million square feet of showroom floor space at the Las Vegas Convention Center, not to mention the dozens of surrounding hotels and other facilities showcasing new technology, it can be an exhausting convention for the roughly 150,000 attendees. I'm not sure what's more difficult: trying to steal Sharp's well-guarded 108-inch LCD TV or hailing a cab for dinner.

That said, a handful of products did impress, so the following is a kind of awards nod for some of the most talked-about doohickeys at this year's CES:

Smartest idea

For months, home theater enthusiasts have wrestled with this question: Which high-definition format should I invest in -- Blu-ray Disc or HD DVD?

Both offer comparable quality, similar pricing and the same number of films -- about 150 titles each. Well, now you don't have to choose between the two thanks to the LG (www.lge.com) Super Multi Blue Player, the world's first dual-format high-definition disc player capable of playing both Blu-ray Discs and HD DVDs in one tray.

The sleek black BH100, with touch-sensitive buttons on the top of the unit to play and pause high-definition films, is expected to launch this spring for an estimated $1,199.

Could this be the one product to end the format war?

Most pervasive theme

Streaming Web and PC video to your television proved to be one of the most common themes at this year's show, including solutions offered by heavyweights Microsoft and Sony.

The irony is that one of the coolest demonstrations was from Sling Media, a company known for delivering the opposite -- streaming television to your computer.

The SlingCatcher can best be described as a reverse Slingbox; instead of tapping into your local TV with your Internet-connected laptop or smartphone, the SlingCatcher is designed to deliver Web and PC video or audio to a television located in the home or to remote locations via the Internet.

Sling Media says this product will be available by the summer for about $200.

A better Zune?

Hard-to-impress media types were often caught buzzing about SanDisk's newest MP3 player that appears to trump Microsoft's just-launched Zune player when it comes to its community features.

While Microsoft's Zune uses Wi-Fi to let users share songs that can be listened to up to three times within three days, SanDisk's Sansa Connect takes better advantage of the technology by letting you access an online buddy list to hear what your friends are listening to (with no song limit or time restrictions) and then tag songs to purchase and download.

Along with MP3 and photo playback, the Sansa Connect also lets you stream Internet radio stations via Wi-Fi -- and even view album artwork on its 2.2-inch screen in real time.

This 4GB Flash player, which includes an option to expand the memory via MicroSD cards, will be available this March for $250.

Not the first, but the best

Be honest -- all your digital photos are just collecting digital dust on your PC's hard drive. Kodak has an alternative solution: the EasyShare Digital Picture Frames play a slideshow of your favorite pictures or video clips -- even set to music, if desired.

Two out of the four models shown here in Las Vegas -- an 8- and 10-inch digital frame -- also offers integrated Wi-Fi, so if you have a wireless network you can stream photos, videos or music from your PC in another room.

Other features include a multifunction remote control and optional interchangeable faceplates that let you tailor the frame to match your room or mood.

Due out by March, prices range from $129 to $279, depending on the frame size and wireless functionality.

Geekiest gadget (we really want)

The "Star Wars" geeks at CES -- and as you can guess, there's a whole bunch of them -- might trade a night with Princess Leia for this new R2-D2 high-definition projector.

Modeled after that lovable droid from the "Star Wars" flicks, Nikko Home Electronics' R2-D2 Mobile Entertainment System features a built-n LCoS projector (which can create an image up to 80 inches on a white wall), plus it houses a DVD/CD/MP3 player, stereo speakers, integrated iPod dock and eleven R2-D2 sound effects.

Control all the action with a remote control in the shape of the Millennium Falcon.

Suggested retail price in March should be around $2,500.

Best product that wasn't at the show

It doesn't matter what the 2,700 or so exhibitors were showing us journalists on Tuesday because we weren't paying any attention.

Instead, our faces were buried in our BlackBerrys, awaiting the iPhone press release from Macworld in San Francisco. And it was a doozie: the Apple iPhone is basically three products in one: a widescreen iPod with a 3.5-inch touch-screen display; a quad-band GSM smartphone (via Cingular) and a Wi-Fi-enabled device capable of text-messaging, VoIP calls, email, Web browsing and interactive Google maps.

The iPhone also offers Bluetooth connectivity for wireless headsets, a 2-Megapixel camera and a new music navigation feature called Album Flow that lets users browse their music library by flipping album artwork with their finger.

It won't be cheap, however; the iPhone will be $499 (4GB) or $599 (8GB), and slated for a summer release.
Source: CNN.com

Microsoft in hot water over Wikipedia edits

Wikipedia is known as the encyclopedia
that anyone can tweak -- but moderators block anyone
perceived as having a conflict of interest from posting entries.
Story Highlights

• Microsoft offered to pay a blogger to "correct" Wikipedia articles
• Wikipedia "disappointed" Microsoft would take this approach
• Microsoft says
entries were inaccurate and heavily slanted


(AP) -- Microsoft Corp. has landed in the Wikipedia doghouse after it offered to pay a blogger to change technical articles on the community-produced Web encyclopedia site.

While Wikipedia is known as the encyclopedia that anyone can tweak, founder Jimmy Wales and his cadre of volunteer editors, writers and moderators have blocked public-relations firms, campaign workers and anyone else perceived as having a conflict of interest from posting fluff or slanting entries. So paying for Wikipedia copy is considered a definite no-no.

"We were very disappointed to hear that Microsoft was taking that approach," Wales said Tuesday.

Microsoft acknowledged it had approached the writer and offered to pay him for the time it would take to correct what the company was sure were inaccuracies in Wikipedia articles on an open-source document standard and a rival format put forward by Microsoft.

Spokeswoman Catherine Brooker said she believed the articles were heavily written by people at IBM Corp., which is a big supporter of the open-source standard. IBM did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Brooker said Microsoft had gotten nowhere in trying to flag the purported mistakes to Wikipedia's volunteer editors, so it sought an independent expert who could determine whether changes were necessary and enter them on Wikipedia.

Brooker said Microsoft believed that having an independent source would be key in getting the changes to stick -- that is, to not have them just overruled by other Wikipedia writers.

Brooker said Microsoft and the writer, Rick Jelliffe, had not determined a price and no money had changed hands -- but they had agreed that the company would not be allowed to review his writing before submission. Brooker said Microsoft had never previously hired someone to influence a Wikipedia article.

Jelliffe, who is chief technical officer of a computing company based in Australia, did not return an e-mail seeking comment.

In a blog posting Monday, he described himself as a technical standards aficionado and not a Microsoft partisan. He said he was surprised to be approached by Microsoft but figured he'd accept the offer to review the Wikipedia articles because he considered it important to make sure technical standards processes were accurately described.

Wales said the proper course would have been for Microsoft to write or commission a "white paper" on the subject with its interpretation of the facts, post it to an outside Web site and then link to it in the Wikipedia articles' discussion forums.

"It seems like a much better, transparent, straightforward way," Wales said.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

source: CNN.com

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Multivitamin Mishaps (harm your health)

New Report Finds That More Than Half of the Supplements Tested Fall Short of Their Claims

By JANET HELM (a registered dietitian and freelance nutrition writer in Chicago.)


Jan. 22, 2007— If you're like millions of Americans who take a multivitamin every day "just to be sure," you may have new reasons to doubt what's inside that pill or capsule.

A report just released by ConsumerLab.com revealed that more than half of the multivitamins tested did not contain what the label claimed: Either the nutrient levels fell short or exceeded what was safe.

Of the 21 brands of multivitamins the researchers randomly selected off store shelves and tested, only 10 met the stated claims on the label or satisfied other quality standards.

Most "shocking" was the amount of lead found in one multivitamin, said Dr. Tod Cooperman, president of ConsumerLab.com, a White Plains, N.Y., company that independently evaluates dietary supplements.

The Vitamin Shoppe Multivitamins Especially for Women was found to contain 15.3 micrograms of lead per serving. Cooperman said this is more than 10 times the amount of lead permitted without a warning label in California — the only state to regulate lead in supplements.

Too Much of a Good Thing

Excess lead may be particularly damaging to pregnant women and young children.

Cooperman believes the contamination may be attributed to the herbs used in the supplement, but "we've not heard from Vitamin Shoppe," he said.

The second most "disturbing" finding, said Cooperman, was the amount of vitamin A found in a multivitamin for children.

Hero Nutritionals Yummi Bears contained 216 percent of the labeled amount of vitamin A, delivering amounts that exceeded what's been defined as an "upper tolerable level" for children. Too much vitamin A can weaken bones and cause liver damage.

Each serving provided 5,400 international units of vitamin A in the retinol form, which is substantially more than the upper tolerable level of 2,000 IUs for children ages 1 to 3, and 3,000 IUs for children ages 4 to 8.

Judy Blatman, vice president of communications for the Council for Responsible Nutrition, a trade association that represents the dietary supplements industry, had not seen the full report but she questioned the findings.

(Read More...)
Source: abcnews.com

'Grammar Girl' a quick and dirty success


Story Highlights

• Mignon Fogarty created the "Grammar Girl" podcast in July
• It has been as high as number 2 on iTunes
• The podcasts have had more than 1.3 million downloads

By David E. Williams
CNN


(CNN) -- Grammar lessons often are associated with high school drudgery -- diagramming sentences and memorizing obscure rules in between passing notes in English class -- but an Arizona technical writer has turned the seemingly dry subject into a popular podcast.

Mignon Fogarty, the woman behind "Grammar Girl's Quick & Dirty Tips for Better Writing," has been explaining the finer points of commas, colons and split infinitives since July.

She recently weighed in on a dispute over apostrophes that divided the U.S. Supreme Court. Grammar wasn't the issue in the 5-4 decision, but Justice Clarence Thomas referred to "Kansas' statute" in the majority opinion, while Justice David Souter wrote about "Kansas's statute" in the minority.

Fogarty said both men were correct, but that she preferred leaving off the extra s.

"Justice Thomas' name ends with an s, so you might guess that he is more familiar with the issue," she told her audience.

Fogarty, 39, said she got the idea for the podcast, sort of an Internet radio show, during a California vacation. (Interactive: What is podcasting?)

"I was sitting in a coffee shop one day in Santa Cruz, California, on vacation and editing technical documents, because I work on vacation, and found so many grammar errors and it just hit me that grammar was something that I had expertise in that would lend itself to a short tip-based podcast," she said.

The show is currently the 47th most popular podcast on Apple's iTunes service, right behind "Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day." It has been as high as number two, Fogarty said. She said the shows have been downloaded more than 1.3 million times.

Fogarty said she's gotten some publicity, but that most of her audience comes from word of mouth.

"I get e-mails from people who say 'I just discovered your podcast and I've told everyone I work with' or 'I told every teacher at my school,'" she said. "I get a lot of e-mails like that, where people discover it and they just can't wait to tell everybody, which is really cool."

Sara Kearns, a librarian at Kansas State University, has been listening to Grammar Girl since October, and recommended it on the library's blog.

"I listen to Grammar Girl in chunks. A couple of weeks may go by and then I'll listen to 10 of them at a time," Kearns said in an e-mail interview. "The genius of Grammar Girl, apart from her ability to simplify grammar, is that she posts the transcripts so that I can stare at a gnarly piece of grammar until it clicks."

Fogarty said her audience ranges from schoolchildren in China to CEOs in the United States.

"I try to make it fun. I've even had people say 'I'm not that interested in grammar, I don't know why I listen.' But I'm glad that they do," Fogarty said. "I think people like that it's short. It's sort of a low-commitment podcast. And yet they learn something that's useful that they can put to use when they write their next e-mail."

The success of the show prompted Fogarty to produce two more podcasts "Mr. Manners' Quick and Dirty Tips for a More Polite Life" and "Money Girl's Quick and Dirty Tips for a Richer Life." She said she's started selling ads and is even getting some interest from book publishers.

One drawback of her work, she said, is that listeners are nervous about writing her.

"I feel bad about that, I don't want people to be afraid to write to me, but about half of my e-mails start with some sort of pre-apology for errors they expect to make," she said.

She said they shouldn't worry, and that she doesn't send back e-mails with big, red correction marks.

Source: CNN.com

Monday, January 22, 2007

Work From Home Success Stories

'GMA's' Tips Have Helped Thousands of People Find Jobs

By TORY JOHNSON


Dec. 18, 2006 — In "Good Morning America's" ongoing series "Take Control of Your Life," we've focused on ways to make money from home, and the response has been overwhelming.

We've been told that more than 11,000 "GMA" viewers from all walks of life are doing just that as a direct result of this series, including over 1,000 people who've discovered work as home-based customer service agents.

And the numbers are growing: I've responded to more than 5,000 e-mails on this topic, which is proof positive that flexibility — and specifically the ability to work from home — is the biggest workplace trend, given its tremendous interest to a wide range of people.

Parents, including Matthew Johnson, have told me they've become home-based agents because they crave the flexibility of working from home.

I've heard from others, including Jessica Park, with physical or emotional challenges that prevent them from working outside the home.

And retirees like Don Curtis just aren't ready to stop working — or they're looking to supplement their savings.

All of them have found success through this flexible-work option.


Businesses Take Note

Large businesses are responding as well.

Two companies we've featured, Alpine Access and Willow, say they've lured new corporate clients in retail, publishing and financial services since our segments have aired.

For example, Home Depot and Time Customer Service, Inc. have signed on with Willow, whose contracted agents will provide home-based customer service.

Alpine Access CEO Chris Carrington is bullish about the coming year based on the volume of interest his company is receiving, in part because of "GMA's" segments.

In fact, Alpine Access, Willow and LiveOps say they plan to hire and/or contract with a total of 20,000 new agents in 2007.

The growth of U.S.-based customer service agents working from home has brought improved retention over traditional call center settings.

It also results in an improved experience for customers, which is key to brand preservation and customer loyalty and satisfaction, according to top businesses that favor keeping their calls in the United States.

(Read More...)
Source: abcnews.com

A Vending Machine for iPods?

(AP Photo)

As U.S. Consumers Get Comfortable Paying With Plastic, Automated Sale Terminals Are Selling Much More Than Soda

By CHRISTIAN LUPSA

Jan. 21, 2007 — Old-school vending machines, bulky bastions of high-calorie snacks and sodas, meet your new-school challenger: chic, upscale gadgets stocked with consumer electronics and pricey cosmetics.


As more of these machines pop up in high-traffic areas such as airports, the old quarter-chuggers may someday find themselves outvended.

The new vending machines sell iPods, cell phones, USB drives, headphones, DVDs, and a host of other gadgets.

This latest development in the $30 billion-a-year vending industry — a figure that only includes food and beverage sales — is a natural outgrowth of consumer clamor for control and round-the-clock convenience, say industry observers.

Pushing this trend are the computerization and networking of machines, as well as growing consumer confidence in cash alternatives. To put it another way, the more Americans are willing to swipe their transactions, the better vending does.

"Automated retail is in the midst of an explosion," says Michael Kasavana, a professor specializing in vending commerce at Michigan State University. "Self-service applications have become prevalent in all aspects of business, especially where labor costs have become excessive."

As the executive vice president for Zoom Systems, a vending machine seller in San Francisco, Mark Mullins loves automated retail.

Self-checkout aisles at grocery stores, ticket kiosks, vending machines — you name it — if Mullins can control it, he'll fiddle with it in no time.

"Anything that's automated, I say 'Let's give it a try,'" he says.

American society has given birth to "Generation P" (for plastic), says Kasavana, and paying with plastic is good business for Mullins. A Zoom machine in the Atlanta airport recently sold in the neighborhood of $50,000 in merchandise, Mullins says, without revealing the actual figure.

Before vending machines could expand into high-tech products, they had to overcome three roadblocks:

Gravity: Most machines drop sodas and snack foods several feet before a consumer can access them. But who wants to watch a $350 music player go through the same experience? Today's machines are equipped with robotic arms, conveyor belts and baskets. No more drops.

(Read More...)
Source: www.csmonitor.com | Copyright © 2007 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.

Friday, January 19, 2007

Woman drinks so much water she dies

SACRAMENTO, California (AP) -- A woman who competed in a radio station's contest to see how much water she could drink without going to the bathroom died of water intoxication, the coroner's office said Saturday.

Jennifer Strange, 28, was found dead Friday in her suburban Rancho Cordova home hours after taking part in the "Hold Your Wee for a Wii" contest in which KDND 107.9 promised a Nintendo Wii video game system for the winner.

"She said to one of our supervisors that she was on her way home and her head was hurting her real bad," said Laura Rios, one of Strange's co-workers at Radiological Associates of Sacramento. "She was crying, and that was the last that anyone had heard from her."

It was not immediately known how much water Strange consumed.

A preliminary investigation found evidence "consistent with a water intoxication death," said assistant Coroner Ed Smith.

John Geary, vice president and marketing manager for Entercom Sacramento, the station's owner, said station personnel were stunned when they heard of Strange's death.

"We are awaiting information that will help explain how this tragic event occurred," he said.

Initially, contestants were handed 8-ounce bottles of water to drink every 15 minutes.

"They were small little half-pint bottles, so we thought it was going to be easy," said fellow contestant James Ybarra of Woodland. "They told us if you don't feel like you can do this, don't put your health at risk."

Ybarra said he quit after drinking five bottles. "My bladder couldn't handle it anymore," he added.

After he quit, he said, the remaining contestants, including Strange, were given even bigger bottles to drink.

"I was talking to her and she was a nice lady," Ybarra said. "She was telling me about her family and her three kids and how she was doing it for her kids."

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Two of Richest Women in Entertainment


Singer Mariah Carey, formerly married to Sony music mogul Tommy Mottola, has sold 160 million albums.
Though her career took a temporary nose dive after her 2001 movie, "Glitter," bombed, the 36-year-old had enough juice to earn a $225 million net worth, placing her sixth on the Forbes list.
(Matt Sayles/AP Photo)


Britney Spears' recent domestic troubles didn't stop the former teen pop queen, now 25, from amassing a $100 million fortune, tying her with the Olsen twins for 11th place.
(Kevork Djansezian/AP Photo)

MySpace Hit With Online Predator Suits

Families Sue News Corp. and MySpace After Children Abused by Adult MySpace Users
By JESSICA MINTZ AP Business Writer

NEW YORK Jan 18, 2007 (AP)— Four families have sued News Corp. and its MySpace social-networking site after their underage daughters were sexually abused by adults they met on the site, lawyers for the families said Thursday.

The law firms, Barry & Loewy LLP of Austin, Texas, and Arnold & Itkin LLP of Houston, said families from New York, Texas, Pennsylvania and South Carolina filed separate suits Wednesday in Los Angeles Superior Court, alleging negligence, recklessness, fraud and negligent misrepresentation by the companies.

"In our view, MySpace waited entirely too long to attempt to institute meaningful security measures that effectively increase the safety of their underage users," said Jason A. Itkin, an Arnold & Itkin lawyer.

The families are seeking monetary damages "in the millions of dollars," Itkin said.

"Hopefully these lawsuits can spur MySpace into action and prevent this from happening to another child somewhere," he said.

Critics including parents, school officials and police have been increasingly warning of online predators at sites like MySpace, where youth-oriented visitors are encouraged to expand their circles of friends using free messaging tools and personal profile pages.

MySpace has responded with added educational efforts and partnerships with law enforcement. The company has also placed restrictions on how adults may contact younger users on MySpace, while developing technologies such as one announced Wednesday to let parents see some aspects of their child's online profile, including the stated age. That tool is expected this summer.

"MySpace serves as an industry leader on Internet safety and we take proactive measures to protect our members," Hemanshu Nigam, MySpace's chief security officer, said in a statement. "We provide users with a range of tools to enable a safer online experience."

But he said Internet safety is a shared responsibility, requiring users to "apply common sense offline safety lessons in their online experiences and engage in open family dialogue."

(Read More...)

Source: abcnews.com

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

'World's Most Beautiful Woman' May End Her Career for Love

Aishwarya Rai

Actress Aishwarya Rai wears a diamond necklace during the unveiling of a new diamond jewellery collection in Mumbai October 3, 2006. (Prashanth Vishwanathan/Reuters)


'Brangelina' on Steroids: Indian Film Stars to WedQuestions Surround Film Career of Indian Bollywood Star
By STEVE GROVE

Jan 17, 2007— This week, Indian movie star Aishwarya Rai, a former Miss World, who is also one of the wealthiest women in India, announced her engagement to celebrity co-star Abhishek Bachchan, and all of India was abuzz.

Among the biggest questions: "Will she quit her acting career to become an obedient bahu (wife)?"

Though Rai hasn't announced any changes to her career, the rumors are rampant and history suggests it's possible. Female Hollywood stars in the U.S. make headlines for the lurid details of their private lives — obscene photos, sex videos, and eating disorders. But in India, the stars of "Bollywood" — the term used to describe the Indian movie industry — generally gain diva status for squeaky clean on-screen images and conservative off-screen values.

"The moment they get married, their life as a screen heroine is more or less over," says Gyan Prakash, a professor of Indian history at Princeton University. The thinking, he explained, is this: "Once you get married, how can you conduct on-screen romances?"

Bollywood Lights

Rai's relationship with Bachchan has recieved so much coverage in the Indian press that the couple has earned the nickname, "India's Brangelina." Indians pay even more attention to their stars than Americans do.

"Bollywood stars are revered like Gods," said Devika Chawla, a professor at the University of Ohio who researches marriage in India. "People follow them."

Time magazine named Rai one of the most influential people on the planet and Bachchan hails from the most famous acting family in India. Rumors of the engagement ran wild in recent weeks after their parents were spotted going to the temple together to seek blessings for the couple, whose horoscopes are said to be a mismatch.

Add to that the fact that Bollywood reaches an estimated 4 billion viewers per year, and the relationship starts to look more like "Brangelina" on steroids.

Though scrutiny of the Rai engagement has been intense, it is traditionally the on-screen personas of Bollywood stars that fans identify with, says Princeton's Prakash. Fans develop almost personal relationships with Bollywood characters, and have traditionally not been as engaged in the private lives of their idols.

(Read More...)

Source: abcnews.com

U.S. doctors to get free e-prescribing software

Initiative aims to get all U.S. doctors, pharmacies to use e-prescribing and eliminate prescription errors

By Grant Gross, IDG News Service
January 16, 2007


Doctors in the U.S. will have access to free, Web-based electronic medicine prescribing software within a month, a group of health-care providers and technology vendors announced Tuesday.

The goals of the National ePrescribing Patient Safety Initiative (NEPSI) are to get every U.S. doctor and pharmacy to use e-prescribing software and to eliminate thousands of injuries and deaths in the U.S. each year caused by prescription errors, supporters said at a press conference in Washington, D.C.

The e-prescribing initiative will eliminate common errors associated with handwritten prescriptions, including wrong drugs sold because a pharmacist can't read a doctor's writing, and a lack of drug interaction checks, said Dr. Nancy Dickey, president of the Health Science Center and vice chancellor for health affairs at Texas A&M University System.

"Paper kills," added Newt Gingrich, a former U.S. representative and founder of the Center for Health Transformation. "It is a clear fact that a paper prescription is dangerous."

Gingrich and other speakers pointed to a July 2006 study by the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences that said 1.5 million U.S. residents are injured each year and more than 7,000 killed because of prescription errors. Only about 20 percent of U.S. doctors use e-prescribing systems, but the NEPSI program "literally takes away any excuse" that doctors have, Gingrich said.

Many doctors have complained of the cost of implementing an e-prescribing system, but e-prescribing vendor Allscripts LLC is making its eRX Now software available as a Web-based service, accessible with any PC, mobile phone or personal digital assistant connected to the Internet. About 20,000 U.S. doctors currently use eRX Now, according to Allscripts.

Some doctors have also raised concerns about the amount of training needed for office workers, but most people with any computer experience should be able to understand eRX Now in less than 30 minutes, Dickey said.

"The staff here has trained me in the process literally standing on the sidewalk," she said.

The free package could take away from other vendors offering e-prescribing software, but Allscripts Chief Executive Officer Glen Tullman said he hopes NEPSI can build on e-prescribing programs already started. The Allscripts software is designed to be interoperable with other vendors' e-health records software, and it will be able to import patient records from many major patient data management packages, he said.

Allscripts and other technology partners will not make money from NEPSI, but the vendors see business opportunities down the road, when full-featured e-health records are in place, Tullman said. Allscripts sells e-health record software, and putting an e-prescribing system in place is the first step toward full e-health records, he said.

Other technology partners include Dell Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Sprint Nextel Corp., which is making available a limited number of e-prescribing-enabled mobile phones to doctors without Internet access, Tullman said.

Representatives of Microsoft and Dell said the program will help their employees better manage their health-care options, and it will show U.S. residents the benefits of e-health records.

Another partner is SureScripts Inc., an e-prescribing vendor founded by two pharmacist organizations that has provided e-prescribing access to about 99 percent of U.S. pharmacies.

Thirteen health-care or insurance providers have signed up as regional supporters of NEPSI, with many providing training and promoting the program.

Doctors can sign up for the program starting Tuesday, and the software will be available within 30 days, Dickey said.

Source: infoworld.com

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Top Brazilian Model: ADRIANA LIMA


Wal-Mart's New-New Adman

By awarding The Martin Agency its main creative account, the top retailer tries to put an embarrassing episode behind it and regain momentum
by Burt Helm and Pallavi Gogoi

After a difficult month that saw Wal-Mart (WMT) sack a star marketing executive and fire the ad agency that exec had helped select, the retailer has decided who will handle its roughly $580 million annual advertising budget. The Martin Agency of Richmond, Va., owned by the Interpublic Group (IPG), will run Wal-Mart's general market creative account, while Publicis-owned MediaVest will handle media buying and planning, Wal-Mart said in a Jan. 12 statement. The company also named three agencies to handle multicultural advertising: Southfield (Mich.)-based GlobalHue for African-American advertising, Los Angeles-based IW Group for the Asian-American market, and Houston-based Lopez Negrete for Hispanics.

The announcement comes after a roller-coaster ride for Wal-Mart's marketing side, including the abrupt dismissal in December of Senior Vice-President Julie Roehm and the related firing of Interpublic-owned Draft FCB just six weeks after its selection as Wal-Mart's ad agency (see BusinessWeek.com, 12/7/06, "Wal-Mart Leaves Draft Out in the Cold"). The selection is especially good news for Interpublic, as the beleaguered holding company will keep the high-profile Wal-Mart business. Interpublic shares rose 2.5% on the announcement. "We're excited to work with a high-quality group of people on a canvas that is very large, very visible, at a time when Wal-Mart is doing some of the most exciting things in its history," says John Adams, Martin's chief executive officer and chairman. Wal-Mart said it had nothing to add beyond its press announcement.

Upscale Initiative Stumbled

The agency selection process, originally announced this past May, was part of plans to refashion Wal-Mart's image beyond merely a big-box retailer known for low prices and attract consumers to shop for higher-margin items such as apparel and electronics (see BusinessWeek.com, 9/19/06, "Wanna Be Wal-Mart's Adman?"). After appointing John Fleming as chief marketing officer, the retailer brought in fresh talent from outside of its home state of Arkansas, including Roehm, then marketing chief for the Chrysler Group (DCX), and Stephen Quinn, chief marketing officer for PepsiCo (PEP) unit Frito-Lay. In October, Wal-Mart selected Draft FCB out of four finalists (including Martin) to lead the charge as its agency of record.

Chief among Wal-Mart's plans: Woo upscale shoppers by stocking its stores with fashionable apparel, including its new Metro 7 line, and place multipage ads with fashion bible Vogue. But that strategy backfired badly and third-quarter revenue and earnings fell short of expectations. "We expanded Metro 7 beyond what now appears to be the right segmentation," conceded Vice-Chairman John Menzer in the company's earnings conference call on Nov. 14.

More dramatic changes occurred during the week of Dec. 4. In short order, Wal-Mart dismissed Roehm and her deputy, Sean Womack. Both had been heavily involved with the agency selection process. Days later, it fired Draft FCB. Publicly, a Wal-Mart spokesperson would only say these actions were the result of "new information obtained over the past few weeks," and declined to elaborate. But people familiar with the situation say the two executive dismissals and the agency firing were due, at least in part, to violations of Wal-Mart's gift policies and a clash with its conservative culture. At the time, Roehm and Womack denied any wrongdoing.

(Read More...)
Source: BusinessWeek.com

Monday, January 15, 2007

Opera v9.10 build 8692


Opera is known as the fastest and smallest full-featured browser, a first choice for people using older PCs and Windows 95 and a brilliant alternative to the default IE from Microsoft. This new version has a chance to actually beat IE hands-down because it has a truckload of new and exciting features. It complies to all the current web-page standards, it has a completely new interface (you can choose from single window and multi-window view), built-in search, a download manager, an advanced mail/news reader, print preview, a huge bookmark collection and much more in a 2Mb free package! Well, the free package also includes banner ads, but Opera is believed to be completely free of spyware, unlike some of its competitors. It’s lightning fast as well as stable and it looks gorgeous. It’s simply perfect! For a complete list of features check out the official website, there’s vastly more to discover.

Opera, first of all, is client World Wide Web, that is the program for extraction of the information from WWW as the documents created with help HyperText Markup Language (language of a marking of hypertext HTML).
Low requirements to resources of system. Opera will work even on 386 computer about 6 Mb of operative memory.MDI the interface. You can open without special expenses of memory any quantity of windows inside one working window, having chosen thus a tabulared or cascade mode.

Changelog:

• CSS height:inherit now inherits the computed value
• Scripts in framesets now execute onload
• Applets inserted with innerHTML can now be called by javascript
• Fullscreen movies on youtube movies now start
• Fixed hang on Opera windows when starting Opera with a language file saved with mac style newlines
• An invalid system locale no longer causes missing text
• Capital letter "enctype" now doesn't break file uploads on ie virusscan.jotti.org
• YouTube videos progress bar now updates
• Images with broken exif data now display
• Downloading a widget now only sends one GET request
• Fixed 100% CPU when loading http://
• Fixed loading of netvibes.com
• IRC /quit messages now work properly
• Loading cnn.com now finishes properly
• Transfer status on IRC improved
• Fixed crash when performing 'copy link address' on a non-link
• Spell checking works better on debian
• Fixed crasher when trying to download a file to a full disk

Download

I downloaded and ready to use now ^_^

Beckham agreed Los Angeles move after advice from Cruise

By Jill Serjeant
Reuters

Jan 12, 2007 — LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Former England captain David Beckham sought the advice of his actor friend Tom Cruise before agreeing his big-money move from Real Madrid to Los Angeles Galaxy worth $1 million a week over five years.

"I was on the phone to him (Cruise) for about an hour last night and an hour the night before," Beckham told reporters on Friday.

"Obviously I asked him for his advice because he is a very wise man and a very good friend of mine. It's going to be a big help for us to have friends when we arrive in LA."

Beckham, who announced on Thursday that he would be joining Major League Soccer side the Galaxy in August, appeared via satellite from Madrid at a Los Angeles news conference.

"I am coming not to be the superstar but to be part of the team, work hard and hopefully win things," said Beckham, whose five-year deal is the biggest in world sport.

"It is about the football. I am coming to make a difference. I would like to take (the sport) to another level."

The former Manchester United player said soccer had huge potential in the United States, particularly with children, despite its second-class status by comparison with basketball, baseball, football and ice hockey.

BIGGEST SPORT

"I am not saying my coming to the States is going to make soccer the biggest sport in America because that is going to be very difficult to achieve," said Beckham.

"But I wouldn't be doing this if I didn't believe I could make a difference and take soccer to a different level. This is something that I believe in."

Beckham was dropped by England after the 2006 World Cup and has spent much of this season on Real's bench.

He and his wife, former Spice Girl Victoria, have become two of the most recognisable and marketable figures in sport and celebrity culture.

The Galaxy said the club had sold more than 1,000 season-tickets on Thursday in the heady first hours after news broke of Beckham's signing.

Beckham told ABC television's Good Morning America on Friday the package was "an amazing amount of money."

(Read More...)
Source: abcnews.com

Supermarket Wars: Stores Use Dancing Animals, Size to Battle for Your Dollars

Grocery store Jungle Jim's boasts
attractions worthy of a theme park. (ABCNEWS.com)
Fire Trucks, Fish Boats Used in Layout of Jungle Jim's in Ohio

Jan. 13, 2007 — Fifty years ago, a trip to the grocery store usually didn't have many surprises. The produce usually looked the same wherever you shopped. The clerks were friendly and the bag boys would even help you carry your groceries to the car.

The modern grocery shopping experience now includes bigger crowds, less personal attention and so many choices that it can be downright confusing.

"Supermarket shopping is a difficult experience. I never find what I am looking for. Places are busy all the time. It's frustrating," one shopper told "Good Morning America Weekend Edition."

In recent years, many shoppers have abandoned their local grocery chains for bulk retailers like Costco, and Wal-Mart, who understand consumers like to buy more for less.

But now the race to build bigger and better has reached a new level.

Welcome to Jungle Jim's International Market in Fairfield, Ohio. A grocery store that looks more like a theme park, the sprawling mecca for foodies has over six acres of shopping under one roof.

Hosting more than 50,000 shoppers a week, it's a world tour of food fantasy from the Fabled Sherwood Forrest to Gilligan's Island. Displays include dancing animatronic animals, an authentic shrimp boat, aquariums, wine cellars and even a fire truck suspended over 1,000 different hot sauces.


Upping the Ante to Woo Shoppers

Showmanship, excess and a sense of humor translate into big business for owner and creator Jim Bonaminio. Jungle Jim's raked in over $100 million in sales last year.

"People get lost. We're ready to give people beepers here, like a restaurant, they get lost for days," Bonaminio said.

Jungle Jim's has become such a phenomenon, shoppers are actually coming from hundreds and sometimes thousands of miles away just to experience it.

Events like cooking classes, shows and wine tasting help shoppers make a day of it.

But in the end, it's the food that's the big draw. The produce section stretches for 1.5 acres. The store boasts one of the nation's largest wine collections. There are also cigars, more than 1,600 cheeses, a Titanic-sized seafood section and hundreds of honeys.

(Read More...)
Source: abcnews.com

Sunday, January 14, 2007

Saturday, January 13, 2007

If Truth Be Told

Online Dating Offers Many Opportunities to Hook Up -- and to Be Rooked. Here's How to Protect Yourself.

By LAUREN MORASKI

Jan. 12, 2007— Katherine Flansburg met her boyfriend through PlentyOfFish.com, a free online dating site. Several months later, they moved in together. Everything seemed to be going well until one morning when they were woken up by a loud banging on the door.

Flansburg, 26, a real estate agent in Santa Clarita, Calif., was shocked to discover that their unexpected guest was her boyfriend's wife. Moments later, a fuming Flansburg rummaged through her boyfriend's desk drawers and found recently filed paperwork for a legal marriage separation, as well as an IRS earnings statement that showed her boyfriend's salary was only one-quarter as much money as he'd told her.

"He was a piece of work," she recalled.

As long as people have been dating, there have been tales of liars, cheats and thieves. In the Internet age, with the anonymity offered by e-mail, and with people blogging about their bad experiences, it seems like there are more examples of nefarious behavior than ever.

In the pre-Internet days, if a woman wanted to find out about her beau's background, or if a man wanted to make sure his new girlfriend wasn't a gold digger, they would have to hire a private investigator, an expensive and time-consuming process. But 21st century daters have new tools that give them easy, inexpensive access to outlets through which they can run background checks on potential mates by tapping into databases and computerized records.


Digging for the Truth

Flansburg was just one of 16 million Americans who have logged on for love, according to a 2006 survey by the Pew Internet and American Life Project. If she had run a background check on her boyfriend before they moved in together and gotten serious, Flansburg may have found out that he was still married or that he'd lied about his earnings. More and more online daters are doing background checks, and some are discovering lies about their mate's age, education, employment and ownership.

The Los Angeles-based Corra Group, for example, used to specialize in employment background checks. But recently it launched a separate Web site for dating-related searches.

By signing up online for as little as $39, along with the name and birth date of a significant other, you can get information about a person's address history, property ownership, as well as any bankruptcy claims, civil judgments or aliases. For $20 more, the search includes criminal records, and an $89 fee gets you a nationwide federal crime search.

Co-founder Gordon Basichis, 59, has 20 years of investigatiive experience and says that requests for background checks are on the rise, especially around Valentine's Day. While about 75 percent of his clientele is female — largely professionals in their mid-30s to 50s — the Corra Group also receives nearly 25 percent of its dating-related inquiries from men. "If they met someone online, they just want to know — 'who is this person?'" Basichis says. "People want to know if someone's full of it."

Safety tips for Internet dating (according to dating coach Liz Kelly):

Never give out a home phone number.

Use an anonymous e-mail (don't
use your entire name as your e-mail alias).

Always meet in a public place and in a neighborhood you know.

Women, in particular, should always get the man's number first and use caller ID to block (*67) for the first call.

Don't share home addresses. Always give a general area instead.



Dating Red Flags (according to Corra Group's Gordon Basichis):

Listen closely for inconsistencies in stories involving ownership, family
background and living situations.

If he or she asks you to cash a check.

Watch the way the person behaves around your kids.

If the person is telling you about him or herself and can't account for a long stint of time.

If he or she doesn't have any friends or never introduces you to his friends.

If the person says he or she owns property, or a boat, for instance, and you never see it.


Source: abcnews.com

Man Known as Secret Santa Dies in Mo.


KANSAS CITY, Mo. Jan 12, 2007 (AP)— Larry Stewart, a millionaire who became known as Secret Santa for his habit of roaming the streets each December and anonymously handing money to people, died Friday. He was 58.

Stewart died from complications from esophageal cancer, said Jackson County Sheriff Tom Phillips, a longtime friend.

Stewart, who spent 26 years giving a total $1.3 million, gained international attention in November when he revealed himself as Secret Santa. He was diagnosed in April with cancer, and said he wanted to use his celebrity to inspire other people to take random kindness seriously.

"That's what we're here for," Stewart said in a November interview, "to help other people out."

Stewart, from the Kansas City suburb of Lee's Summit, made his millions in cable television and long-distance telephone service.

His private holiday giving started in December 1979 when he was at a drive-in restaurant nursing his wounds from having been fired. It was the second year in a row he had been fired the week before Christmas.

"It was cold and this carhop didn't have on a very big jacket, and I thought to myself, `I think I got it bad. She's out there in this cold making nickels and dimes,'" he said. He gave her $20 and told her to keep the change.

After that, Stewart hit the streets each December, handing out money, often $100 bills, sometimes two and three at a time. He also gave money to community causes in Kansas City and his hometown of Bruce, Miss.

Stewart said he offered the simple gifts of cash every year because it was something people didn't have to "beg for, get in line for, or apply for."

Stewart gave out $100,000 between Chicago and Kansas City in December. Four Secret Santas whom Stewart "trained" gave out another $65,000.

On the Web:

http://secretsantausa.com/

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Source: abcnews.com

Friday, January 12, 2007

Lung Cancer Prevention

By Steve Valentino

Circumstances and life style factors that increase a person's chances of developing a disease are known as risk factors. On the contrary things that prevent disease from developing are called protective factors. Prevention involves increasing protective factors and decreases risk factors. There are various risk factors for lung cancer. Smoking is considered to be a factor that adds to the risk of lung cancer. The risk is also increased for passive smokers who are exposed to tobacco smoke indirectly.

It is possible to prevent lung cancer if it is not hereditary. In case there is history of lung cancer in the family, it may not be possible to totally eliminate chances of developing the disease. It is however possible to reduce chances by following an active lifestyle. Regular exercise lowers risks. Additionally, chances of developing lung cancer may reduce if a person consumes low fat diet that is high in fiber content.

Treatment of cancer is a painful process for the patient. Treatment ranges from radiotherapy, chemotherapy to surgery. The course of treatment depends upon the stage of disease. Sometimes a combination of treatment procedures may have to be administered simultaneously. Cancer in the third and fourth stage qualifies the extent of life span. Lung cancer treatment is not a guarantee that the disease will not recur. Surgery, in case of malignant tumors spreading to other parts of the body becomes quite difficult. Such delicate and complicated surgery often poses a risk to heart and windpipe.

Prevention is always better than cure. People may take advice and suggestions from their own doctor about risk factors faced by them. It is also necessary for people to be aware of various symptoms of lung cancer. Timely action can be taken to abate its development. There is plenty of information available online about preventive measures. Cancer institutes also organize seminars to educate on importance of prevention of lung cancer.

Lung Cancer provides detailed information on Asbestos Lung Cancer, Lung Cancer, Lung Cancer Stages, Lung Cancer Survival Rate and more. Lung Cancer is affiliated with Asbestos Exposure.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Steve_Valentino

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Alcohol May Be Protective from Head Injury


Drinks

It's still not safe to drink and drive but a few drinks (and only a few) might protect the brain against serious injuries, says new research. (Getty)

Light Drinking Helps Some Patients Survive Serious Injury: Study

By SIRI NILSSON
ABC NEWS Medical Unit


Dec. 19, 2006— Alcohol is to blame in many car crashes and other accidents but a few drinks might improve your chances of surviving a serious head injury says new research, even though too many drinks makes survival less likely.

About one-third to one-half of all patients hospitalized with traumatic injuries are intoxicated at the time of injury, but a study published in today's issue of the Archives of Surgery from the Journal of the American Medical Association suggests that alcohol can keep a head injury from getting worse.

This doesn't mean that it's suddenly safe to drink and operate heavy machinery, but the study does suggest that alcohol could somehow play a role in future treatments for serious head injuries.

"A poignant result, if true," said Dr. David Goldman, Chief of the Section of Human Neurogenetics at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism at the National Institutes of Health. "Alcohol makes it dramatically more likely to experience head injury but moderates the effects," said Goldman.

Canadian researchers studied more than 1,158 consecutive patients who came into a level 1 trauma center with severe brain injuries caused by blunt trauma — like a car accident or fall — between 1988 and 2003. Doctors tested each patient's blood alcohol concentration (BAC) and compared that measurement to the seriousness of the injury, the length of hospital stay and whether the patient died or left the hospital. Moderate alcohol consumption seemed to be key to some patients' survival.

Those patients who were alcohol-free — or heavily intoxicated — were more likely to die in the hospital than those patients with some alcohol in their blood.

740 of the patients studied had a BAC of zero, and the rest were a little (or a lot) less than sober. 315 had low to moderate BAC — blood levels up to 0.23 percent, or nearly three times the legal limit — and 103 had even higher alcohol levels in their blood. Of the patients who came into the hospital with a low to moderate BAC, almost 28 percent died in the hospital, compared to more than 36 percent of the patients who came in stone-cold-sober.

But patients with even higher alcohol levels in their blood were 73 percent more likely to die than those with none, the study also found.

(Read More...)

Source: abcnews.com

Vista vs. Mac OS X (InformationWeek review)

John Welch of InformationWeek has a great article today comparing Microsoft's Vista with Apple's Mac OS X. Given that I'm covering it here, you can already tell which OS he finds superior. :-) In his words...

While Vista is indeed a major update to Windows, there's a lot of it that is, quite frankly, just Microsoft making up for lost time. The last non-server release of Windows was in 2001 with Windows XP, with only a single major interim update in service pack 2. In the same time, Apple has been steadily releasing updates to Mac OS X on what was a yearly schedule, now around every 18 months....

Microsoft had two serious issues. First, they had to make this update of Windows revolutionary enough that it came close to justifying the delay. Second, they had to come up with something that would stand up well with its main competitor in the desktop OS market, Mac OS X. Have they succeeded at both? I'd argue that the former's almost a non-issue: Vista will sell well, because the world won't have a choice. As far as the latter, well, probably, but you'd be hard-pressed to say Vista's better than Mac OS X.

In a nutshell, Vista vs. Mac OS X is Revolution vs. Evolution. It's about a massive, long-delayed upgrade that has to account for almost 6 years of progress by its competitors, versus a well-executed strategy of regular updates. While updating an operating system is never something that can be called easy, Apple's strategy has been the better one for keeping their OS on top of things, something Microsoft has admitted to in a roundabout way.

This is critical, and often overlooked (outside the Apple camp, anyway). Microsoft's release late and not-so-often mentality means that its users are half a decade behind the Mac world (and Linux, in some areas). Microsoft, because of its massive installed base, arguably has a harder time moving to a "perpetual beta" release mentality. But others, like Google, have shown that this objection is more perceived than real.

Here are some of my favorite snippets from Welch's article:

Mac OS X...[is] the classic English butler. This OS is designed to make the times you have to interact with it as quick and efficient as possible. It expects that things will work correctly, and therefore sees no reason to bother you with correct operation confirmations....

Windows is...well, Windows is very eager to tell you what's going on. Constantly. Plug something in, and you get a message. Unplug something and you get a message. If you're on a network that's having problems staying up, you'll get tons of messages telling you this. It's rather like dealing with an overexcited Boy Scout...who has a lifetime supply of chocolate-covered espresso beans. This gets particularly bad when you factor in things like the user-level implementation of Microsoft's new security features.

An OS should just work, not tell you that it's working. An OS is largely infrastructure - Windows tries to be more than that. It wants to be furniture that walks around and chats with you, but really it just needs to be happy with being valuable furniture, and let its applications (and others') chat with the customer.

Welch also talks up the consistency of the OS X user interface:

This consistency that has been a centerpiece of the Mac OS is something that, even with Vista, Microsoft still can't manage to pull off. Although there are many different UI styles available in Mac OS X, even within those different styles, there is a consistency that Windows just can't seem to hit.

Even with Microsoft applications, there's a feeling that, by and large, the only UI guidelines that Windows applications adhere to is "what we feel like." (I know Microsoft has a lot of UI guideline information, but since no one seems to follow any of it, I'm not sure what the point of it is.)

Welch has other complaints on the Vista UI (it's harder to find some information you need, like network connection details, for example, and the name changes that seem to have been made only for the sake of showing that things have changed), but his complaints about the new security feature, User Account Control, seem more weighty. UAC doesn't offer real security enhancement, in his view, and (in his view) is...
...going to be called "User Annoyance Control." You get what is essentially an "Okay/Cancel" dialog that most users will hit "okay" for without thinking, you may or may not get useful information as to what is going on, and you get locked out of your system until you deal with this. I have a problem with seeing how annoying people is enhancing security. When I say "annoyance" I really mean "infuriate," because you get UAC dialogs all over the place, and you're never sure when or why you're going to get them.
That said, it's a tough problem to solve. How do you give users control over security settings that they won't necessarily understand? I'm not sure how Microsoft could have done it differently, but I do know that I don't have this same problem with my Mac. Not at all.

However, as Welch concedes, it doesn't really matter if Vista is better than OS X. Microsoft only really needs to worry about whether it's better than XP, so as to convince its user base to upgrade. Welch thinks it is (and I do, too, from what I've seen - that said, I hated XP, but liked Windows 2000 quite a bit). As for how it compares to OS X?

However, is it significantly, or even slightly better than Mac OS X? Maybe in a couple of low-level ways, like the randomizing memory address usage function, or being able to use USB memory sticks as additional RAM, but at the human level? Not even close.

I've yet to see anything in Vista that blows away the Mac OS, even a version of the Mac OS that's over a year old. Microsoft still can't manage to make something simple and easy to use. Vista reeks of committee and design by massive consensus, while OS X shines from an intense focus on doing things in a simple, clear fashion and design for the user, not the programmer.

Which, I think, is why I've managed to convert nearly 10 people to the Mac in the last two years alone. Now if the rest of you Mac people would just do your jobs, we'd have world domination within the next few years.

Source: infoworld.com

Microsoft fixes Office, Outlook, Windows flaws

Top-priority patches address issues in Office and Windows VPL security

Microsoft Corp. has patched critical vulnerabilities in its Office, Outlook, and Windows software.

The software vendor released three sets of critical patches Tuesday, fixing nine security bugs. A fourth update fixes a flaw in Office 2003's Brazilian Portuguese Grammar Checker. Microsoft gives this flaw a less-serious rating of "important."

Hackers have been paying close attention to Microsoft's Office products over the past few months, taking advantage of unpatched bugs in PowerPoint, Word and Excel to conduct extremely targeted attacks. Typically, the attacker will send the victim an e-mail that includes a malicious Office attachment and try to entice the victim into opening the message.

In early December, these attacks occurred on a very limited scale, exploiting unpatched vulnerabilities in Microsoft Word.

Microsoft didn't issue patches for Word on Tuesday, but it did patch five flaws in Excel, which has also been a point of attack over the past few months.

The Office flaws should be a top priority for system administrators, said Chris Andrew, vice president of security technology with Patchlink Corp.

The Windows update, which fixes a critical flaw in Windows' VML (Vector Markup Language) language is also one to watch, he said.

Last September, Microsoft was forced to rush an early patch for a similar VML bug after attackers began exploiting the flaw on the Internet. By tricking victims into visiting specially crafted Web pages, criminals could use this VML flaw to run unauthorized software on a victim's computer, Microsoft said.

Tuesday's VML update replaces the MS06-055 VML bug-fix that Microsoft published last September, the company said.

The SANS Internet Storm Center rates all four updates as critical , but it is singling out the VML bug in particular, saying that there is an "immediate danger" of attackers exploiting this flaw.

SANS says there are known exploits for bugs in all of the updates released Tuesday, except the Excel patches.

Microsoft had been planning to release eight sets of patches Tuesday, but late last week, it abruptly pulled four of these updates out of the pipeline. No reason was given for this sudden decision.

Source: infoworld.com

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

New Video of Saddam's Corpse on Internet

Iraqi students protest while holding a picture of the executed Iraqi president Saddam Hussein in Tikrit, 130 kilometers (80 miles) north of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Jan. 7, 2007. About 1,500 students gathered in the Sunni stronghold town of Tikrit to protest Saddam's hurried execution. (AP Photo/Bassim Daham)
By QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA

BAGHDAD, Iraq Jan 9, 2007 (AP)— The second clandestine video from Saddam Hussein's execution appeared on the Internet Tuesday, showing the deposed Iraqi leader's corpse, with a gaping neck wound, after his hanging.

The video appeared to have been taken with a camera phone, like the graphic video of the hanging which showed guards taunting Saddam in the final moments of his life.

The footage pans up the shrouded body of the former leader from the feet. It apparently was taken shortly after Saddam was executed and placed on a gurney. He was hanged shortly before dawn on Dec. 30.

As the panning shot reaches the head region, the white shroud is pulled back and reveals Saddam's head and neck.

His head is unnaturally twisted at a 90 degree angle to his right. It shows a gaping bloody wound, circular in shape, about an inch below his jaw line on the left side of his neck. His left cheek is marked with red blotches, and there is blood on the shroud where it covered his head.

The newest video leak was likely to increase the angry reaction over the way the execution was carried out. There already has been a global outcry about the undignified manner in which the Shiite-dominated government hanged Saddam, a Sunni.

The 27-second video was posted on an Iraqi news Web site that is known to support Saddam's outlawed Baath Party.

"A new film of the late immortal martyr, President Saddam Hussein," the web site said in a headline over a link to the video.

Voices could be heard on the video. As the shroud is pulled back, one voice says, "Hurry up, hurry up. I'm going to count from one to four. One, two … . Hurry up you're going to get us into a catastrophe."

Then another voice, apparently the man taking the pictures, says, "Just one second, just one second, Abu Ali. I'm about finished."

Then a third voice says, "Abu Ali, you take care of this."

It was the second clandestine video to have leaked, the first showing Saddam being taunted in his final moments. That clandestine video showed the former leader dropping through the gallows floor as he offered chanted prayers. It ends with his dead body swinging at the end of a rope.

(Read More...)

Source: abcnews.com

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