Sunday, 7 April 2013

Are we getting an Android laptop this year?

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AndroidRumor: Google Will Release an Android-Powered Laptop This Year

Since Google?s Chromebook initiative has so far failed to turn the PC market on its head, the company may be planning to shake things up even more by releasing a notebook based on its hugely popular Android operating system. The latest rumors from Digitimes indicate that Google is building an Android-powered notebook PC that ...?[Read More]

Xbox LiveMicrosoft: We?re Not Giving Away ?Free Xbox Points,? That?s a Scam

If you see anyone peddling ?free Xbox points,? steer clear. Microsoft announced that nefarious folks are out in force, attempting a farce based on the company?s birthday week: ?Microsoft?s 38 now, and is giving away loot in celebration!? They aren?t. In a statement posted to Facebook today, Microsoft plainly stated that it is giving?...?[Read More]

LG Lucid2Verizon Now Offering LG Lucid2, a Smartphone for First-Timers

The original LG Lucid came to Verizon just a little over a year ago as a midrange device, and on Tuesday we got word that its sequel, the Lucid2, is now ready to come down the pipeline in similar capacity. Said to be Big Red?s version of the LG Optimus F5, the free device is aimed at the first-time smartphone buyer and is available online ...?[Read More]

Yahoo! MailYahoo! Mail Partners Up With Dropbox for In-Mail Integration

It?s no secret that Yahoo! is overhauling all of its flagship products, including mail. The service has gotten a refresh on both the web and mobile, and on Tuesday, the company has announced a partnership with file-backup and sharing service Dropbox. The partnership will make it easier to send, receive and manage attachments in ...?[Read More]

Shelly's Blog

The Walled City of CarcassonneWalled Cities & Gunpowder, Firewalls & Hackers: Ways to Think About Cyber Security & Piracy

What can we learn from the relationship between walled cities and gunpowder? There are myriad lessons, but today I?m interested in Cyber-security, Cloud Storage and Firewalls. How should one defend a collection of bits in the 21st Century??[Read More]

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Shelly Palmer Digital Leadership Podcast Episode #30 ? Bob Bowman, President and CEO of MLB Advanced Media

Bob Bowman is the President and CEO of Major League Baseball Advanced Media. The two talk about the MLB At Bat app, MLB.tv and streaming video and also Mobile Seat Upgrades and the sport's integration into Passbook on iOS.?Listen Now or Get it on iTunes

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Workplace Worries: Working with Chronic Conditions ? The Health ...

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Written by Natalie Miller Moore

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We spend more time at work than we do with our families?often eight hours a day, five days a week. It?s no wonder that the health of our coworkers affects us a great deal. In the case of chronic conditions, you may not even know that your co-worker is dealing with one, but it may affect their work lives all the same. These are not likely to be disclosed immediately, and there are privacy regulations about who can disclose them. A supervisor should not be sharing an employee?s diagnoses without his or her permission.

Supervisors must take care in sharing private medical information, while also educating employees about what a health condition might mean for certain work situations. Nick Worth, 42, works early mornings for a program that stocks Naval ships with groceries. He has had epilepsy since the fifth grade. ?I was always determined to get ahead, but the seizures have never been under complete control,? he says.

Worth says that he was not afraid of sharing his condition with others, and that he was interested to see how his coworkers would react. ?This job made me aware of the fact that people really care about me on the job. That aspect is lovely. I do believe that I would be miserable if I were not working. I have learned to be more comfortable in my workplace,? he says.

His supervisor at Ship Provision, Allen Bordley, says that although Nick has epilepsy, the team is aware and prepared if he has a seizure on the job.

?With his permission only, we would alert the team members and team leaders assigned with him that day. We have had some medical situations in the past, and what we did is remained calm and contacted medical on the ship for assistance. We also contacted his wife and updated her on his status,? he says.?

The Ship Provision program, through The Arc of the Virginia Peninsula, includes training on working with people with chronic illnesses and disabilities. Bordley says that despite the challenges, there are definitely positives, such as team cohesiveness and the willingness to work together.

Because there are many different kinds of chronic illnesses, it?s important to get a basic understanding of the disease. Some conditions, like epilepsy, diabetes, asthma or heart disease can be managed long term. Others are progressive, like autoimmune diseases or dementia. Learning about the condition can be helpful in order to understand what the coworker is going through. If you do read up on your coworkers condition, don?t assume that you can give them medical advice; the purpose would be to help understand what they might be going through.?

The Patient Advocate Foundation in Hampton provides information for patients and Erin Moaratty, Chief of mission delivery, shares tips for those working with a chronic illness or working with someone who has one.?

?A coworker diagnosed will be experiencing a myriad of emotions from shock, worry, fear, anxiety, guilt, loneliness, sadness, helplessness and even anger. On top of their diagnosis and treatment plan decisions they are probably going to face physical pain in addition to the emotional strain of diagnosis. Along with a major diagnosis come other difficulties, such as financial, insurability, fear of losing their job or reduction in income, and/or family strain exacerbating an already difficult situation,? she says.?

She recommends that both supervisors and coworkers create an environment where anyone experiencing a chronic health condition is comfortable sharing their needs. ?Build a program that allows patients to feel as normal as possible and meets their actual needs which may be as simple as including them in the things you used to do,? she says.?

Moaratty says that after you learn of a coworker?s medical condition, you should base your response on your relationship. ?If you are close friends with a coworker and you?ve spent breaks and lunches together for years, that?s bound to be different than what you say to a coworker with whom you wait for the elevator and exchange small talk. Offering to make a dinner, supplementing a gift of flowers or signing a card maybe more appropriate in the case of an acquaintance,? she says.

Sometimes support involves creating an environment that is flexible. John Trindle works as a programmer for Northrop Grumman and was diagnosed with Crohn?s disease over 15 years ago. His immediate supervisors know about his condition?which often includes digestive flare-ups ?and he says they understand his need for flexibility.

?I get plenty of slack from my immediate boss for cutting out of a meeting for 30 minutes, which would be generally unacceptable from someone else,? he says.

Besides dealing with flare-ups, people living with Crohn?s disease often follow a special diet. Trindle says that one of the tricky things that come up in the regular course of business are work meals. ?The working lunch meetings often feature things like pizza or other greasy food which I can?t really eat. The veggie alternative might have too much roughage. So, in the end, I have to take time off to eat outside the ?working lunch? or just skip a meal.? When there?s a group to consider, like a birthday lunch, Trindle says that he tries to read a menu ahead of time to find suitable dietary options.?

Becky Hughson, Trindle?s supervisor, builds a team attitude that everyone will have challenges, but that by working together, they can still get the job done. ?As a mother of young children, I encounter a variety of situations where I have to miss work unexpectedly, probably as often as or more often than anyone battling a chronic condition. From my perspective we all have lives outside of work and that has to be worked around the best we can,? she says.

Hughson says that the office is fairly close-knit and that helps no matter what someone is going through. ?Within our team, at least, I think that everyone is aware of each other?s lives and struggles. We also work with teammates from other offices and companies though. When John, or anyone else, is out for any reason, I simply inform the team that they are unavailable. It doesn?t seem necessary to provide details on why,? she says. ?

This job made me aware of the fact that people really care about me on the job. That aspect is lovely. I do believe that I would be miserable if were not working. I have learned to be more comfortable in my workplace.

In terms of managing workload, Hughson says that she tries to have people who can fill in for each other. ?I have to determine which tasks can wait and which need to be addressed immediately. I think it is good practice to have back-ups for everyone as much as possible, though it can be difficult at times because each person has their own talents. I encourage the team to work together so that if someone is out the other can step in to assist,? she says.

Hughson hopes to continue this team support for people with chronic illnesses or any health challenges. ?We have another coworker battling cancer. We all loved him before he had these problems and continue to support him through his battle. I hope that knowing that he has an extra 30 people ready, willing and able to support him and his family helps him in some way,? she says.

Licensed counselor Don Martin from Optima?s Employee Assistance Program says that it?s common when a person is first diagnosed with an illness for offers of care and support flood in, but this immediate attention often fades over time. With a chronic illness that spans months, if not years, it?s important to offer only what you can commit to. ?Many people need more support later, so if you offer to help, be prepared for the whole duration,? Martin says.

He cautions that knowing a coworker?s health situation shouldn?t change your relationship or how you see them. ?Don?t forget that they are the same person, they are not the disease. It?s important to be careful how we talk about them,? Martin says.?

With good communication and workplace flexibility, people living with chronic conditions can feel supported and able to work with the team to get the job done. As Houghson says, at times, any one of us could need that support or flexibility.

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Source: http://www.thehealthjournals.com/2013/04/working-with-chronic-illness/

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Saturday, 6 April 2013

Broker round-up part 2: Mwana Africa, Fox Marble, Goldplat, Lansdowne Oil & Gas...

Broker round-up... | Facebook

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Friday, 5 April 2013

Slain Texas prosecutor and wife buried after bomb threat

(Reuters) - Private funeral services were held for a Texas prosecutor and his wife on Friday, despite a bomb threat targeting the church in Wortham where friends, family and law enforcement officials gathered to bid the slain couple a final farewell.

A public memorial was held on Thursday for Kaufman County District Attorney Mike McLelland and his wife Cynthia at the church where they worshipped in Sunnyvale, Texas. They were found shot dead at their home on Saturday, two months after one of McLelland's assistant prosecutors was gunned down near the Kaufman County courthouse.

The threat against the First Baptist Church of Wortham, the eastern Texas town where McLelland grew up, came late on Thursday, said Sergeant Clayton Aldrich of the Freestone County Sheriff's Department.

Someone apparently using a no-contract, pay-as-you-go cellphone called in the threat, making it extremely difficult to trace, Aldrich said.

"Criminals use them ... people who deal narcotics and stuff like that," Aldrich added.

No bomb was found and the funeral went ahead as planned.

The threat heightened tensions following the shootings, which law enforcement officials have characterized as attacks on the criminal justice system.

McLelland and his wife were found shot to death on Saturday at their home near Forney, 22 miles from Dallas, two months after Assistant District Attorney Mark Hasse was gunned down on January 31. McLelland had publicly vowed to capture Hasse's killer.

About 300 mourners packed into the small church for the McLellands' funeral. A procession led by McLelland's flag-draped coffin later stretched from the church and town center to the cemetery where the couple was buried after a grave-side service.

The McLellands were married 28 years and had two daughters and three sons, one of whom became a Dallas police officer.

No arrests have been made for the killings of the McLellands and Hasse, nor have investigators named a suspect or person of interest. Current and former law enforcement officials have speculated a prison gang called the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas may be responsible.

The threat triggered an exhaustive search of the church on Thursday night by agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives who employed bomb-sniffing dogs, Aldrich said.

The call was traced to a cellphone tower in Mexia, about seven or eight miles south of Wortham, said Wortham Police Chief Kelly Butler.

"It just basically said there's a bomb at the church where they're having the funeral," Butler said.

The Texas Rangers on Thursday made their second arrest this week of a person suspected of threatening investigators in the McLelland case.

A 52-year-old man was charged with making a terroristic threat against an assistant district attorney via Facebook, the Kaufman County Sheriff's Office said on Friday.

The Rangers arrested a 56-year-old man on the same charge on Tuesday after he was suspected of making a telephone threat against a county official on a tip line for the case.

(Reporting by Tom Brown; Editing by Vicki Allen, Philip Barbara and Andre Grenon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/slain-texas-prosecutor-wife-buried-bomb-threat-204739003.html

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'Pitch Perfect' Cast To Perform At MTV Movie Awards

The 2013 MTV Movie Awards just got a whole lot more musical. We knew that Selena Gomez would take the stage for her first performance since her hiatus, and the latest announcement from the award show adds two more musical acts that we're still wrapping our heads around. "Thrift Shop" shoppers Macklemore & Ryan Lewis [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/04/04/pitch-perfect-cast-mtv-movie-awards/

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Study: Dementia tops cancer, heart disease in cost

Cancer and heart disease are bigger killers, but Alzheimer's is the most expensive malady in the U.S., costing families and society $157 billion to $215 billion a year, according to a new study that looked at this in unprecedented detail.

The biggest cost of Alzheimer's and other types of dementia isn't drugs or other medical treatments, but the care that's needed just to get mentally impaired people through daily life, the nonprofit RAND Corp.'s study found.

It also gives what experts say is the most reliable estimate for how many Americans have dementia ? around 4.1 million. That's less than the widely cited 5.2 million estimate from the Alzheimer's Association, which comes from a study that included people with less severe impairment.

"The bottom line here is the same: Dementia is among the most costly diseases to society, and we need to address this if we're going to come to terms with the cost to the Medicare and Medicaid system," said Matthew Baumgart, senior director of public policy at the Alzheimer's Association.

Dementia's direct costs, from medicines to nursing homes, are $109 billion a year in 2010 dollars, the new RAND report found. That compares to $102 billion for heart disease and $77 billion for cancer. Informal care by family members and others pushes dementia's total even higher, depending on how that care and lost wages are valued.

"The informal care costs are substantially higher for dementia than for cancer or heart conditions," said Michael Hurd, a RAND economist who led the study. It was sponsored by the government's National Institute on Aging and will be published in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine.

Alzheimer's is the most common form of dementia and the sixth leading cause of death in the United States. Dementia also can result from a stroke or other diseases. It is rapidly growing in prevalence as the population ages. Current treatments only temporarily ease symptoms and don't slow the disease. Patients live four to eight years on average after an Alzheimer's diagnosis, but some live 20 years. By age 80, about 75 percent of people with Alzheimer's will be in a nursing home compared with only 4 percent of the general population, the Alzheimer's group says.

"Most people have understood the enormous toll in terms of human suffering and cost," but the new comparisons to heart disease and cancer may surprise some, said Dr. Richard Hodes, director of the Institute on Aging.

"Alzheimer's disease has a burden that exceeds many of these other illnesses," especially because of how long people live with it and need care, he said.

For the new study, researchers started with about 11,000 people in a long-running government health survey of a nationally representative sample of the population. They gave 856 of these people extensive tests to determine how many had dementia, and projected that to the larger group to determine a prevalence rate ? nearly 15 percent of people over age 70.

Using Medicare and other records, they tallied the cost of purchased care ? nursing homes, medicines, other treatments ? including out-of-pocket expenses for dementia in 2010. Next, they subtracted spending for other health conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes or depression so they could isolate the true cost of dementia alone.

"This is an important difference" from other studies that could not determine how much health care cost was attributable just to dementia, said Dr. Kenneth Langa, a University of Michigan researcher who helped lead the work.

Even with that adjustment, dementia topped heart disease and cancer in cost, according to data on spending for those conditions from the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

Finally, researchers factored in unpaid care using two different ways to estimate its value ? foregone wages for caregivers and what the care would have cost if bought from a provider such as a home health aide. That gave a total annual cost of $41,000 to $56,000 per year for each dementia case, depending on which valuation method was used.

"They did a very careful job," and the new estimate that dementia affects about 4.1 million Americans seems the most solidly based than any before, Hodes said. The government doesn't have an official estimate but more recently has been saying "up to 5 million" cases, he said.

The most worrisome part of the report is the trend it portends, with an aging population and fewer younger people "able to take on the informal caregiving role," Hodes said. "The best hope to change this apparent future is to find a way to intervene" and prevent Alzheimer's or change its course once it develops, he said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-04-03-US-MED-Alzheimer's-Toll/id-6d05c45596474a4c8b420a33e34653a3

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Conn. lawmakers to vote on gun control package

Shoppers leave Hoffman's Gun Center with their purchases in Newington, Conn., Tuesday, April 2, 2013. Customers are packing gun stores around Connecticut following the unveiling of new gun-control legislation, which could take effect as soon as Wednesday evening. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Shoppers leave Hoffman's Gun Center with their purchases in Newington, Conn., Tuesday, April 2, 2013. Customers are packing gun stores around Connecticut following the unveiling of new gun-control legislation, which could take effect as soon as Wednesday evening. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Cars jam the parking lot as shoppers leave Hoffman's Gun Center with their purchases in Newington, Conn., Tuesday, April 2, 2013. Customers are packing gun stores around Connecticut following the unveiling of new gun-control legislation, which could take effect as soon as Wednesday evening. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) ? Responding to one of the worst crimes in state history, Connecticut lawmakers were expected to pass a package of gun control and other measures, described by supporters as the most comprehensive in the country.

Debate on the far-reaching legislation, negotiated by Democratic and Republican legislative leaders, was expected to begin late Wednesday morning. It could last for hours. Both gun rights advocates and gun control supporters are expected to show up in large numbers.

Some of the measures would take effect right away, including expansion of the state's assault weapons ban, background checks for all firearms sales, and a ban on the sale or purchase of ammunition magazines holding more than 10 rounds. The bill also addresses mental health and school security measures, including $15 million to help pay for school security infrastructure upgrades.

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, a Democrat, has said he'll sign the legislation into law, even though it would allow people to keep their high-capacity magazines so long as they're registered with the state by Jan. 1, 2014.

"I think you can make an argument, a strong argument, this is the toughest law passed anywhere in the country," he said.

But gun rights advocates question whether the legislation would have done anything to stop Adam Lanza, the 20-year-old who blasted his way in to the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown on Dec. 24. State police say he fired off 154 shots with a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle as he gunned down 20 first graders and six educators. He had earlier killed his mother, Nancy, and later committed suicide.

Search warrants of the Lanzas' Newtown home showed it was packed with weapons and ammunition.

"If it did something to prevent this incident, where the fault lies with the individual and the mother, not with the legitimate gun owners in this state, then we could probably support something," said Robert Crook, executive director of the Coalition of Connecticut Sportsmen.

Crook said he expects the bill will pass, predicting it will likely be challenged in court.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-04-03-Gun%20Control-Conn/id-abed00ce144946f386830ecea10bfc4d

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