Thursday, January 31, 2013

New Bill Targets Bonds For Proposed MCC Wellness Center

A bill aimed squarely at a proposed $42 million McHenry County College health club and classroom expansion looked to be on a fast track Tuesday with a first reading only a day after it was introduced by the two Illinois House members who represent the community college district.

The bill, sponsored by strange bedfellows freshman Republican Dave McSweeney of Barrington Hills and veteran Democrat Jack Franks, Marengo, would clamp down on "double barrelled" alternate revenue bonds, so called because they can tap not only a specific conjectural revenue stream for payoff but also "all funds available" to a taxing district. The bonds are popular financing vehicles since they can be issued without, for practical purposes, any chance at a taxpayer vote.

McSweeney confirmed Tuesday the bill for which he's chief sponsor targets the McHenry County College Board's proposal for a public-private Wellness Center. That's now in the feasibility study stage, but McSweeney said it would be important elsewhere, too.? "This has been a problem all over the state," he said.? "I'm going to try pass this as soon as possible."??

McSweeney cited recent Chicago Tribune articles about disastrous alternate revenue bond projects including nearby Lakewood's Redtail golf course which only brought in half the money the village needed for the bond issue to buy it.? The McSweeney-Franks measure would require projected revenue to be at least one and a half times the bond payoff.? More important, McSweeney said, it drops the bar? on stopping a bond issue to only 500 signatures in 90 days to call a referendum.? Right now it's, in the case of MCC, about 13,500 within 30 days.? "There's got to be a 'back door' referendum," said McSweeney.

MCC's Wellness Center proposal includes features reminiscent of a failed plan five years ago when a sports promoter promised to study whether a $29 million minor-league baseball stadium paid for with MCC alternate revenue bonds would be a good idea. He reported it was and asked for a contract to develop it.? The MCC Board tore itself to shreds for a year before dumping the plan and then-College President Walt Packard, too.? Current Board President Mary Miller was an MCC Board member then but said Tuesday, nevertheless, the college's current contract with fitness center operator Power Wellness, Addison, doesn't bar the company from running the proposed new facility if it decides it's a viable proposition.

Co-sponsor Franks couldn't be reached Tuesday but in a press release said, "Municipalities have little oversight when it comes to borrowing millions of dollars which oftentimes end up being a back door tax hike on residents."

In the pic:? A 75,000 square-foot health and fitness center that Power Wellness, Addison,? runs for Washtenaw Community College, Ann Arbor, MI, one of about 20 it operates.

Source: http://www.firstelectricnewspaper.com/2013/01/new-bill-targets-bonds-for-proposed-mcc.html

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

British queen not likely to follow Dutch example

FILE - In this Monday, June 4, 2012 file photo Britain's Queen Elizabeth II shakes the hand of her son Prince Charles at the end of the Queen's Jubilee Concert in front of Buckingham Palace, London. The abdication of Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands sparked some speculation in the British press Tuesday Jan. 29, 2013 about whether Queen Elizabeth II, at 86, might follow suit and step down so her son Charles could become King. But commentators quickly noted that in the past Elizabeth ? who seems to be in excellent health ? had indicated that she regarded being queen as a job for life. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, File)

FILE - In this Monday, June 4, 2012 file photo Britain's Queen Elizabeth II shakes the hand of her son Prince Charles at the end of the Queen's Jubilee Concert in front of Buckingham Palace, London. The abdication of Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands sparked some speculation in the British press Tuesday Jan. 29, 2013 about whether Queen Elizabeth II, at 86, might follow suit and step down so her son Charles could become King. But commentators quickly noted that in the past Elizabeth ? who seems to be in excellent health ? had indicated that she regarded being queen as a job for life. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, File)

FILE- In this Monday, Feb. 5, 2007 file photo, Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, left, is greeted by Netherlands' Queen Beatrix, center, as Britain's Prince Philip is seen rear right, upon the arrival of the British royal couple at Rotterdam airport, Netherlands. The Dutch Royal House says Queen Beatrix will deliver a nationally televised speech, on Monday, Jan. 28, 2013, and speculation is growing that the popular monarch will announce she is to abdicate. Beatrix, who turns 75 on Thursday, has ruled this nation of 16 million for more than 32 years and would be succeeded by her eldest son, Crown Prince Willem-Alexander. (AP Photo/Robin Utrecht, Pool, File)

LONDON (AP) ? One European queen has announced her retirement. Any chance Europe's most famous queen ? Elizabeth II of Britain ? might join her?

Not likely, experts say.

The spectacle of Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands stepping down in April at age 75 so her 45-year-old son can become king is sparking some speculation in Britain about whether Elizabeth might follow suit so her eldest son, Prince Charles, can start his reign.

Elizabeth is 86. Charles, 64, has been heir to the throne since he was three.

The British press poked fun at these concerns Tuesday, with the Daily Mirror featuring a photo of Beatrix with the headline: "Queen Gives Up Her Throne to Son." Then, in smaller type, "Easy, Charles...It's Queen Beatrix of Netherlands."

Others said, "Sorry Charles...it's in Holland, not here!"

But commentators quickly noted that Elizabeth ? who seems to be in excellent health ? has said in the past that she regards being queen as a "job for life."

At her Diamond Jubilee last summer marking 60 years on the throne, former Prime Minister John Major said the idea that the queen would abdicate was "absolutely absurd." He said she would serve her entire life unless a health crisis made it impossible.

Author Robert Lacey, who has written several books about the British monarchy, said Beatrix's decision would likely firm up Elizabeth's resolve.

"It would reinforce her feeling that the Dutch don't know what monarchy is about, and that she should go on forever," he said. "The crown is a job for life in the British system."

He said the queen's mother, who lived to be 101, had made a "snarky" comment when Beatrix's own mother stepped down as monarch decades ago.

Lacey said the idea of abdicating is particularly unpleasant for Elizabeth because her uncle, King Edward VIII, abdicated in 1936 so he could marry Wallis Simpson, a divorced American woman.

The resulting scandal, remembered as a low point for the monarchy, brought her father, King George VI, to the throne.

No one in British history has been heir apparent as long as the now-greying Charles, who is set to become a grandfather when his daughter-in-law, the former Kate Middleton, gives birth this summer.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-01-29-Britain-Queen%20Elizabeth/id-9d03650e40b74a3382cc17bbd85b912d

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

A Conversation With Nick Goldman: Using DNA to Store Digital Information

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Researchers, whose goal is to store the equivalent of a million CDs in a gram of DNA, have developed a technique with an error-correction software, successfully storing and retrieving 739 kilobytes of data.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/29/science/using-dna-to-store-digital-information.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Injured Trucker Deals With Reality of Workers Comp - Michigan ...

Michigan workers comp attorney shows how seasonal workers find their wage loss benefits stopped without notice.

The Lansing State Journal recently published an article about a truck driver who found his workers comp benefits disputed by Auto Owners Insurance. Wage payments were stopped because he was considered a seasonal employee and he should expect to be laid off during the winter.

It does not matter that his work injury prevents him from performing other jobs. Including the jobs he usually does during the off season. His injury also prevents him from collecting unemployment because he is not able to work.

This article is important because it shows the real struggles of Michigan citizens. Politicians and appellate courts often lose sight of the people that their decisions affect.

Agency reaction

Jack Nolish, Deputy Director of Michigan?s Workers Compensation Agency, says insurers sometimes argue, that certain workers ? such as athletes, teachers, and landscapers ? are due wage compensation only for the months they normally work.

Nolish says this a ?very grey area? and suggested that someone in this position hire an attorney. The dispute would have to be resolved with an administrative hearing.

Seasonal employment

Questions about payment of wage loss benefits are becoming much more common. Some Michigan courts have found that a seasonal worker is not entitled to any lost wages during the off season.

Other Michigan courts have ruled that benefits should be paid if an injured employee could link his or her wage loss to a work injury both during and after the season.

If this happens to you

Auto Owners Insurance has a 56.2% dispute rate according to the 2011 Notice of Dispute Report published by the State of Michigan. A large percentage of these denials are never even challenged in court.

Insurers try to save money on workers comp claims. This comes at your expense. Don?t become just another statistic.

Call (855) 221-COMP to speak with one of our Michigan workers comp attorneys.? We offer free advice and do not charge a fee unless you are successful with your case.

- Alex Berman is the founder of Michigan Workers Comp Lawyers. He?s been representing injured and disabled workers exclusively for more than 35 years.? Alex has helped countless people obtain workers comp benefits and never charges a fee to evaluate a case.

Related information:

Our list of Michigan?s Worst Workers Compensation Insurance Companies ? 2012 Edition

?

Source: http://workerscomplawyerhelp.com/workers-comp-lawyer-blog/2013/01/injured-trucker-deals-with-reality-of-workers-comp/

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Better, Stronger, Faster 2013

Photo Credit: Natasha Hurley-Walker/Wikipedia

I can feel the speed-of-everything accelerating. The vibration of human activity is rising.

In setting Saasu?s group strategy we have to observe what?s going on around us ? but not just in our software industry. That?s too narrow, so we look broadly to avoid limiting our creativity which is required for step-out results.

So what are the themes in twenty thirteen, and what does they mean for Saasu?

1. Micro-fication

There is a trend away from big devices to smaller devices or multi-device systems. e.g. Saasu recently changed to 12 cores per server in our private cloud. Chip makers stack cores to make immensely powerful multi-core servers, making lots of small devices that mimic the power and effect of a single large device. In astronomy, array telescopes are replacing the dishes (photo above). Retail is seeing smartphones and tablets replacing point of sale terminals. You can see a trend ?in the home also, moving to many small devices away from a single shared PC.

2. Software applications continue to eat the world

The ?Why? cloud question of 2012 is becoming ?How?. Adoption is at 5% for online accounting and will quickly accelerate to 10-15% this year. Marc Andressen was spot on with his comment that software is eating the world:

  • CD?s > Downloads
  • 1 million Foxconn employees > 300,000 Foxbot robots. (Foxconn make iPhones)
  • Navman > Google Maps
  • Books > eBooks
  • Sales staff > Sales Automation Systems
  • In person conversations > Social networks
  • Retail > eTail
  • Paper > Paperless
  • Filing paper > Searching Data
  • Motorola > Google
  • Shoe shops > Zappos
  • People driving > Software driving
  • Fitness coach > Fitness apps and devices

3. Devices take-over desktops

2013 will likely be the crossover year where devices exceed desktops. Saasu left the desktop as the primary design focus some time ago and shifted to tablets and mobile. Customers will expect all the features supported across all the platforms. Old accounting software companies currently building and supporting online accounting for desktops are building the very thing we see consumers starting to abandon.

4. Attention economy

Socialising applications and content portals are re-wiring many of us into habitually checking for updates, info and insights. Designers of the systems have learned to tap into at least a dozen intrinsic motivators which turns seemingly harmless apps into ego feeding, attention sucking machines. Note it?s not just gamification, this is just one piece.

Humans are responive to guilt and the fear of missing out (aka FOMO). Essentially it is forming a type of mental slavery via guilt and missed experience in a social sense.

Getting the attention of your customers amongst all of this emotional warfare for minds is tough. Having a website that ignores most intrinsic motivators doesn?t cut it any more. It has limited usefulness in the attention economy. To keep customers interested you must give them value in every interaction. Buy the right to get their attention next time. Information is a near-free commodity now, so that won?t work. You need to give them what they really want ? simplification and automation. That?s about more time which and thus happiness.

Curation is rising to address the information fire hose phenomena. The rise of niche social networks is almost certain to cause problems for Facebook this year. You can see the panic already through their acquisitions. Users attention will shift to the networks that best align with their personal and business interests. Standing in front of Facebook?s firehose isn?t as much fun as it used to be.

5. Corporatocracy

Sadly, capitalism is changing. ?Too big to fail? are for me the most important words acted on in the last decade. Capitalism is now very impure. We are now more than ever exist in a Corporatocracy run by governments and banks. Unfortunately for small businesses, service companies, retailers and manufacturers you aren?t in that club. If you think this is USA only, it?s not. The EU, UK, Australia are all actively heading in this direction. You need tools that cut costs, create efficiency and save time for your business. You directly or indirectly fund Payroll Tax, Company Tax, PAYE, Capital Gains, Super/Pensions, Fringe Benefits, Workers comp/insurances and now Carbon Tax. Expect more tax and expect more compliance. That?s the nature of the system we live in.

One of the big unspoken risks this year is inflation. Unfortunately you can?t keep printing money to save the financial system without a price to pay. Quantitative easing will come home to roost in 2013. The potential for civil unrest if any of the major global economies rolls over is there. Governments will do everything they can to stop that eventuating but the contagion risk is something we have in our risk waterfall. We don?t know what this means for internet and power continuity of service. Outlier ?black swan? events are by nature hard to allow for.

In any case we think your data needs to be in two or more locations. A single country, data centre or supplier isn?t acceptable mitigation by our standards. We also think you also need to be able to download your data to your PC. This may sound contrarian for the CEO of a cloud company to be talking this way, but my career has been about understanding risk. All business models have risks and the cloud?s biggest risk is a dependency on the internet. I know our customers will enjoy keeping a copy of their Saasu file for backup purposes on their own systems.

These are risks I?m describing, not expectations ? so don?t read them as paranoia, but instead as precaution. You should expect all your service providers to openly disclose, assess and deal with risk.

What is Saasu doing in 2013?

Saasu runs strategic and risk models which look at changes occurring inside and outside our industry. We use these to facilitate good decisions. We know that decision making is the single most important activity a business engages in. For competitive reasons I can?t elaborate on all our decisions for 2013, but here are some that give you some insights into our thinking:

  • Your data is stored in at least two different geographic locations and with at least two different cloud infrastructure suppliers [Completed]
  • Building the ability to get all your financial data out in a single download, plus the ability to load that data back up into the Saasu application.
  • Tablets, phone and laptop centric design instead of desktop centric design.
  • Design that moves more toward searching instead of listing data.
  • Focus on building a clean, clear, engineered product that?s great value.

Saasu Version 2 is in build, and it?s a business application that is a step out beyond other online accounting systems. We recognize that the business owners are the risk takers, they?re the ones with huge emotional and capital investments in their dream. We aren?t shy in saying we exist to solve accounting, operational and compliance problems for business owners. We partner with accounting and bookkeeping firms who have that same vision for their clients as we do.

We will support more devices in a clean, clear and engineered way that scales with business growth. We?ll do this by keeping to our values and listening to you.

Thanks for your business in 2012 and we wish you well for 2013.

Photo Credit: Murchison Widefield Array on Wikipedia

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Source: http://www.saasu.com/2013/01/22/better-stronger-faster-2013/

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MTV Movie Brawl Final Four Locked In Dead Heat

VOTE IN MTV MOVIE BRAWL 2013 NOW All right, now. Things are getting serious. We are down to just four movies in MTV Movie Brawl 2013. These are the four films you have chosen to compete for the most anticipated of the year. But we are still two rounds of voting away from crowning an [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/01/22/mtv-movie-brawl-final-four/

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Monday, January 21, 2013

What Are These?

These objects seems to vary from shapeless blob to chaotic scribble—but they are in fact short-lived structures that have been captured in fine 3D detail for the first time. Can you work out what they are? More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/7_vsy9zx_zY/what-are-these

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Is there True Friendship Between Genders? ? Chengdu Forum

This is an age old question. Can people of the opposite sex truly be friends without ever feeling something for each other at some point?

In my experience, the answer to that question is yes, I have (girl)friends that I haven't even thought about dating, even though I find some of them attractive. Where it gets complicated is that, even if I feel that way, there's no guarantee that she feels the same. She could be completely in love with me, which, well, would complicate our relationship a lot. Of course, the opposite can happen as well. I might have a huge crush on a girl, but she might just see me as a friend. (The friend zone!)

In my personal experience, if the girls are slightly older or younger than me, what will usually form is some type of pseudo ''brother sister'' type of relationship.

To me, based on what your writing, it sounds like your way past that point. You no longer see each other as ''just friends'', you already seem to care for each other at a romantic level. This is
of course natural.

And yes, many romantic relationships do begin with friendship, in fact, many people think that the best relationships begin that way, since you already are comfortable with each other.

Only you can decide what to do, you could essentially just friend zone him and say you want to simply stay as friends and force it over your own feelings and his, which might be painful but worth it in the end. Or you could just cut him off completely, which of course will be painful as well. Or maybe just go for it? Dunno!

Just my 2 cents.

Source: http://www.chengduliving.com/forum/topic/is-there-true-friendship-between-the-opposite-gender

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Te'o to be interviewed by Katie Couric

FILE - In this Nov. 17, 2012, file photo, Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o takes the field during senior day before an NCAA college football game against Wake Forest in South Bend, Ind. The wrenching story of Te'o's girlfriend dying of leukemia _ a loss he said inspired him to play his best all the way to the BCS championship _ was dismissed by the school Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013, as a hoax perpetrated against the linebacker. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 17, 2012, file photo, Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o takes the field during senior day before an NCAA college football game against Wake Forest in South Bend, Ind. The wrenching story of Te'o's girlfriend dying of leukemia _ a loss he said inspired him to play his best all the way to the BCS championship _ was dismissed by the school Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013, as a hoax perpetrated against the linebacker. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File)

In a photo provided by ESPN, Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o pauses during an interview with ESPN's Jeremy Schaap, right, on Friday, Jan. 18, 2013, in Bradenton, Fla. ESPN says Te'o maintains he was never involved in creating the dead girlfriend hoax. He said in the off-camera interview: "When they hear the facts they'll know. They'll know there is no way I could be a part of this." (AP Photo/ESPN Images, Ryan Jones) MANDATORY

In a photo provided by ESPN, Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o pauses during an interview with ESPN on Friday, Jan. 18, 2013, in Bradenton, Fla. ESPN says Te'o maintains he was never involved in creating the dead girlfriend hoax. He said in the off-camera interview: "When they hear the facts they'll know. They'll know there is no way I could be a part of this." (AP Photo/ESPN Images, Ryan Jones) MANDATORY CREDIT

In this Sept. 15, 2012 photo, Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o points to the sky as he leaves the field after a 20-3 win against Michigan State in East Lansing, Mich. In a shocking announcement, Notre Dame said Te'o was duped into an online relationship with a woman whose "death" from leukemia was faked by perpetrators of an elaborate hoax. (AP Photo/South Bend Tribune, James Brosher) MANDATORY CREDIT

FILE - In this Aug. 16, 2012, file photo, Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o answers a question during NCAA college football media day in South Bend, Ind. The wrenching story of Te'o's girlfriend dying of leukemia _ a loss he said inspired him to play his best all the way to the BCS championship _ was dismissed by the school Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013, as a hoax perpetrated against the linebacker. (AP Photo/Joe Raymond, File)

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) ? Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o will be interviewed by Katie Couric, the first on-camera interview given by the All-American since news broke about the dead girlfriend hoax.

Te'o and his parents will appear on Couric's syndicated daytime talk show Thursday. ABC News announced the interview Sunday, but gave no details as to when it will take place and where.

Te'o gave an off-camera interview with ESPN on Friday night. He insists he was the victim of the hoax, not a participant. The Heisman Trophy runner-up said he had an online romance with a woman he never met and in September was informed that the woman died from leukemia.

Te'o told ESPN that the person suspected of being the mastermind of the hoax has contacted him and apologized.

Couric, now a special correspondent for ABC News, formerly worked as the anchor for the CBS Evening News and was a co-host of NBC's Today Show.

The strange tale of Te'o apparently being duped by an elaborate hoax, pulled off by a California man, has put the Heisman Trophy finalist in national headlines ? from the Wall Street Journal to TMZ. In the

The man he said apologized to him for pulling the scam, 22-year-old Ronaiah Tuiasosopo, has not spoken publicly. He and his family have decline the AP's numerous requests for interviews.

Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick said Te'o reached out to his coaches and university officials on Dec. 26, and the school commissioned an investigation that he said confirmed Te'o was not involved in the hoax. The school received the findings of the investigation on Jan. 4, three days before Notre Dame played Alabama in the BCS title game.

A Notre Dame spokesman said some school administrators thought they should release what they knew about what the hoax as soon as they became aware of it, but the university ultimately decided to let Te'o and his family be first to go public with the story.

Notre Dame spokesman Dennis Brown told the South Bend (Ind.) Tribune in a story published Sunday that university officials decided disclosing the information about the hoax before the BCS championship in Miami would not be in the best interest of the teams or the individuals involved.

The hoax about Te'os dead girlfriend became public Wednesday when it was reported by Deadspin.com. Swarbrick held a news conference later that day to discuss what Notre Dame knew, and gave full support to Te'o. Later, Swarbrick said the family had intended to speak publicly about the hoax Jan. 21.

Brown said the university was "utterly stunned" when Te'o informed them about details of the hoax on Dec. 26 and had a "difficult time getting our arms around it."

Te'o met with Swarbrick for nearly two hours on Dec. 27 after returning to campus to give a full account of his relationship with the online woman he knew as Lennay Kekua, and then again the next day, Brown said.

How the university should proceed was the topic of discussions between top administrators for a week, Brown said.

The university hired outside investigators on Dec. 29.

"We asked them to focus on any threats to the university or its reputation, by providing more information about the so-called Kekua family that might help us understand motives, or whether they might have had any contact with others at Notre Dame," said Brown, who declined to name the firm.

The investigators were in touch the next day, telling the university they could find no evidence of a Lennay Kekua or any of the relatives she had told Te'o about in several "sophisticated databases" the firm used. Brown said the investigators concluded "the entire family was fictitious, because of their inability to find them, and that the investigation should turn to trying to identify the woman who had been talking to Manti."

Investigators determined the address the woman had given Te'o was real, with a house there that belonged to members of a family named Tuiasosopo, including Ronaiah Tuiasosopo.

Brown said the investigators hired by Notre Dame didn't try to reach Tuiasosopo or his relatives.

The university officials told the newspaper the investigators did not examine cellphone records, emails or other electronic communication to determine the length or extent of Te'o's communication over the past few years with the person claiming to be Kekua, nor did the university ask Te'o to take a lie detector test.

The school informed Teo's parents, Brian and Ottilia, about the investigation results on Jan. 5.

___

Information from: South Bend Tribune, http://www.southbendtribune.com

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-01-20-Notre%20Dame-Te'o/id-bd880b433a1f4cb9b7c2fd663fed2289

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Senior Democrat says Senate will finally pass a budget this year (reuters)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/278310540?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Friday, January 18, 2013

Nokia cuts 300 jobs, outsources IT function to TCS, HCL Tech

Nokia jobs.jpgNew Delhi/Helsinki: Nokia today said it will outsource the IT function to Indian technology firms TCS and HCL Technologies, a move that will see the Finnish handset maker cutting up to 300 jobs.

Nokia plans to transfer certain activities and up to 820 employees to HCLT and Tata Consultancy Services as part of the process, it said in a statement.

The financial details were, however, not disclosed.

"Nokia outlined a range of planned changes today to streamline its IT organisation. Nokia believes these changes will increase operational efficiency and reduce operating costs, creating an IT organisation appropriate for Nokia's current size and scope," the statement said.

Nokia, which has a strong presence in India including a manufacturing facility in Tamil Nadu, said it plans to reduce its "global IT organisation by up to 300 employees... These are the last anticipated reductions as part of Nokia's focused

strategy announcement of June 2012".

The company had announced slashing of up to 10,000 jobs globally by the end of 2013 as part of the restructuring process.

The majority of the employees affected by the announcement today are based in Finland. "Nokia will offer employees affected by these planned reductions both financial support and a comprehensive Bridge support program," the company said.

Nokia is beginning the process of engaging with employee representatives on these plans in accordance with country- specific legal requirements, it added.

The handset maker has been witnessing tough competition from rivals Samsung and Apple in the smartphone category. It lost its leadership position to Samsung but has been aggressively launching new

... contd.

Source: http://financialexpress.com/news/nokia-cuts-300-jobs-outsources-it-function-to-tcs-hcl-tech/1060772/

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

UNCG Baseball Clinics coming January 20 and 21 for Grades 7-12 and run 10am-3pm (YOU can still get in)

UNCG Baseball Clinics are coming January 20 and 21 for Grades 7-12 and run 10am-3pm and there is still time to get/be involved?

*****When you go to the UNCG Sports Camps site, always Click On the Baseball Camps link and that will take you to Link Jarrett and his team of baseball experts?*****

Brand NEW staff in town and be sure to check these out?.www.uncgsportscamps.com:
(Click On Skills Camps under Baseball left hand column at Sports Camps site.)

UNCG Baseball Pitch/Catcher Clinic
Grades 7th -12th
January 20, 2013
10am ? 3pm
Register Online at UNCGSportsCamps.com

UNCG Baseball Infield/Outfield Clinic
Grades 7th-12th
January 21, 2013
10am ? 3pm
Register Online at UNCGSportsCamps.com

*****You can register up to and on the day of, the event/camps.*****


Categorized as: Uncategorized


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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GreensboroSports/~3/VPFKbX6b-YY/

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Tuesday, January 15, 2013

hironrahman: Building Stronger Blended Families ... - ebonolyc's ...

January 10, 2013 at 9:22 am

shoesHow was your holidays? Relax with the family? ?Good time with the kids?

Christmas time and summer holidays can be exhausting for couples step parenting and as we head into the New Year perhaps there?s a resolution of ?there?s got to be an easier way!? For some blended families it can feel like your feelings and confidence has actually been put through a kitchen blender rather than the harmonious melding of family life.

Children may be showing their feelings ? their hurt, disappointment, insecurity and anger at their own situation through behaviour and home becomes a minefield.

Step mothers in particular can still get a bad rap with the ?evil witch? label immortalised by ?Cinderella and Snow White. It?s easy to fall into the habit of labeling the ?other? parent especially when there?s tension, disagreement and a history of hurt. The name-calling sport may feel harmless and tongue-in-cheek at the time but it is not healthy for the children and ultimately it prevents children being able to rightfully enjoy home-life ? whichever home that may be.

This very complexity means that Napier Family Centre?s Step Family course is for couples. Heather Osborne, Parenting Education Coordinator at Napier Family Centre says couples have to come together to get value from the programme. This is different from our other courses where, although it is great if both parents can come, strategies and ideas can be successfully followed through individually.

The reality is that the step parents are trying to build their own new relationship within the context of being a parent already. It is hard to find the space to develop this new partnership as per our expectations of a relationship from pre children days. As well, the children yearn for the security of a strong family unit and may fantasise about their biological parents getting back together. Heather says children?s behaviour may reflect?their grief from the separation of their parents.

She suggests that finding ways to honour and understand traditions from each other?s past as well as actively creating and building on new family traditions is key to finding a new strength as a step family.

Remember that ?evil witch? label? It?s time to let it go. We know as parents that children respond positively to adults who are calm, approachable and have good coping strategies when people are getting stressed. Most importantly, the new step-family life, complex as it is, can grow in new strength, give children security and be rewarding for you.

Kath Curran ? Funding & Communications Manager

Check it out. Napier Family Strengthening Your Step Family FREE course Wednesday evenings 7.00pm ? 9.30pm 6 weeks starting 4th March 2013. Ph 843 7280 or?email us?to register.

?

Entry filed under: Parenting, Childcare, Families, Counselling, Children, Step Families. Tags: families, parenting, step families, couples, children.

Source: http://blog.napierfamilycentre.org.nz/2013/01/10/building-stronger-blended-families/

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Cond? Nast wants a cut of writers' film, TV deals

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Cond? Nast, stricken by the publishing industry's budgetary woes, is claiming rights to its contract writers' articles if they are optioned for a film or television show.

New contracts obtained by the New York Times showed that the magazine giant staked its ownership to articles that attract Hollywood's attention, claiming exclusive rights over a story for 30 days to one year.

Under the new contract, writers would receive $2,500 to $5,000 for a 12-month option. Articles that are developed into feature films would earn the authors less than 1 percent - or about $150,000 - of the purchase price.

"As we expand into digital, film and television entertainment," a Nast spokesman said in a statement to TheWrap, "we are excited to bring the extraordinary work of our writers and photographers to these platforms, showcase their content in new ways, and create expanded opportunities for their work to be enjoyed by new audiences."

Television shows and made-for-TV movies are capped at even lower amounts, and one unnamed agent told the Times that its "bottom-of-the-barrel pricing."

"There's no reason my clients who are the premier writers in the country should be shackled by this agreement that forces them to accept very low prices and also take their project off the market," the agent told The Times.

Nast owns a vast array of top-shelf magazines, including the New Yorker, Vanity Fair, Vogue and Wired.

Many writers at the publishing heavyweight already work under one-year contracts devoid of basic employee benefits, such as a 401(k) plan or health insurance. However - as opposed to newspapers, which own rights to reporters' work - contract magazine writers usually maintain rights to their work.

A representative from the Authors Guild, which has helped lead the march against signing the new contracts, did not immediately respond to calls and emails from TheWrap for comment.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cond-nast-wants-cut-writers-film-tv-deals-231157813.html

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Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Black ties, booze and access marks of inauguration

FILE - Dr. Ruth Westheimer, center, in the front-row watches President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama at the Western Inaugural Ball in Washington, in this Jan. 20, 2009 file photo. The sideline events throughout inauguration weekend are the big draws for advocates and lobbyists looking to rub elbows with lawmakers and administration officials. The events at restaurants and hotels, museums and mansions are opportunities for anyone willing to write a check to turn a night out into a chance to build a Rolodex of Washington's powerbrokers. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

FILE - Dr. Ruth Westheimer, center, in the front-row watches President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama at the Western Inaugural Ball in Washington, in this Jan. 20, 2009 file photo. The sideline events throughout inauguration weekend are the big draws for advocates and lobbyists looking to rub elbows with lawmakers and administration officials. The events at restaurants and hotels, museums and mansions are opportunities for anyone willing to write a check to turn a night out into a chance to build a Rolodex of Washington's powerbrokers. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? This is K Street on steroids.

South Carolinians will be celebrating President Barack Obama's inauguration with cocktails amid the Hope Diamond and dinosaur fossils at the Smithsonian's Museum of Natural History. Minority government contractors will huddle at a downtown restaurant known as a lobbyists' hotspot. And the nation's largest gay rights group is promising a star-studded night at the storied Mayflower Hotel.

And these aren't even officially part of the inaugural.

With ticket costs reaching into five figures for some of these events ? and free for the coveted VIPs, of course ? the sideline events throughout inauguration weekend are the big draws for advocates and lobbyists looking to rub elbows with lawmakers and administration officials. The events at restaurants and hotels, museums and mansions are opportunities for anyone willing to write a check to turn a night out into a chance to build a Rolodex of Washington's powerbrokers.

On the surface, there is nothing nefarious about such celebrations, which are largely sponsored by industry groups or special interests. But access to these movers and shakers is only the swipe of a credit card away; the powerful, similarly, will want to be seen with the right people.

Some groups, such as the State Society of South Carolina, say they simply want to celebrate Obama's next four years in power and sip bubbly while huddled inside the Smithsonian. Others, such as the National Association of Minority Government Contractors, want to highlight their work in Washington ? all while hanging in deep booths at Tuscana West, a restaurant that doubles as the de facto cafeteria for Washington's K Street lobbying corridor. And the Human Rights Campaign is looking to take a victory lap after its gay and lesbian members helped fund and fulfill Obama's re-election.

"The ball is always an excellent opportunity for the people of South Carolina to come together to celebrate the newly elected president and to showcase the beauty, importance and success of our great state," said Robin Muthig, the chair of the South Carolina ball and a former aide to Republican Rep. Gresham Barrett. Muthig started planning the occasion well before a White House winner was declared.

Every four years, these events highlight the booming influence trade in Washington. For a couple hundred dollars, anyone can pay his way into increasingly over-the-top public parties inside some of Washington's favorite destinations. And other invitations allow interest groups to pack hotel ballrooms with people with whom they want to connect.

Take for instance the Indiaspora Ball, highlighting Indian culture. Hosts include Neera Tanden, a former top Obama and Clinton administration policy official who now serves as president of the liberal Center for American Progress; failed congressional hopeful Raj Goyle of Kansas; and Sonal Shah, who worked both for Google's philanthropic arm and Obama's White House Office of Social Innovation and Civic Participation. Tickets to that event at the Mandarin Oriental hotel start at $250, and $1,000 VIP tickets promise "exclusive benefits and special guest access."

Or look to the U.S. Virgin Islands Friendship Inaugural Ball. For $100 guests can mingle with the islands' nonvoting member of Congress, Donna Marie Christensen. Ticket prices climb to $10,000 for "four-star sponsors."

Consider the Hip-Hop Inaugural Ball. Tickets start at $250, and VIP access comes with $2,500 to join music mogul Russell Simmons' gala just five blocks from the National Mall. Or the Peace Ball, with tickets starting at $135 and a guest list that includes Obama's former green jobs czar Van Jones. Or the Green Ball, hosted by Bill Stetson, a member of the President's Advisory Committee on the Arts and husband of Jane Watson Stetson, the Democratic National Committee's finance chairwoman.

These events are separate from the official ceremony at the Capitol on Jan. 21 and its scaled-back, two-ball celebration that evening. But even the official events now allow wide-open corporate money, a reversal from four years ago.

For Obama's first inaugural celebration, there were some 285 events packed with supporters and courters, according to the Sunlight Foundation, a pro-transparency group that tracks such events. So far, the number of this year's events is just a fifth that size, reflecting the dimmed enthusiasm for the second term and the slow-to-recover economy. And unlike four years ago, there is not a raft of lawmakers leaving Congress or state houses to join the Cabinet.

But that isn't to say these parties' place in official Washington has shrunk. With many administration officials eyeing an exit to the private sector and many on the outside looking for a way in, these black-tie events often double as an informal job fair.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-01-08-Inauguration-Access/id-0275d99620014163840dce86a313bf61

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Money for college athletes: not if, but how

Alabama head coach Nick Saban and Notre Dame head coach Brian Kelly pose with The Coaches' Trophy during a news conference for the BCS National Championship college football game Sunday, Jan. 6, 2013, in Miami. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Alabama head coach Nick Saban and Notre Dame head coach Brian Kelly pose with The Coaches' Trophy during a news conference for the BCS National Championship college football game Sunday, Jan. 6, 2013, in Miami. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Notre Dame head coach Brian Kelly speaks during a news conference for the BCS National Championship college football game Sunday, Jan. 6, 2013, in Miami. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

Alabama head coach Nick Saban speaks during a news conference for the BCS National Championship college football game Sunday, Jan. 6, 2013, in Miami. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

MIAMI (AP) ? After decades when paying college athletes was thought to violate the spirit of amateurism, the enormous television revenue generated by sports ? football and basketball in particular ? and the long hours of work by the players have changed the debate.

The head of the NCAA now supports a stipend for athletes to cover costs beyond tuition, books and fees, and both coaches in Monday's BCS championship between No. 1 Notre Dame and No. 2 Alabama spoke in support of the idea in the days before the game.

The question is no longer whether to cut athletes a check, it's how best to do that.

"I still think the overriding factor here is that these young men put in so much time with being a student and then their responsibilities playing the sport, that they don't have an opportunity to make any money at all," Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly said Sunday.

"I want them to be college kids, and a stipend will continue to allow them to be college kids."

To get a sense of the landscape, look at the way things were when Notre Dame last won the national championship, in 1988. That season, Fighting Irish players earned scholarships worth about $10,000 per year and the school got $3 million for playing in the Fiesta Bowl to go with the revenue it made for TV appearances throughout the season. Even then, there was discussion about the disparity between benefits for the players and for the schools.

This season's Irish will get scholarships worth about $52,000 per year and the school will receive $6.2 million for playing in the title game ? to go with the $15 million NBC reportedly pays just to televise the school's regular-season home games.

While the value of that athletic scholarship has never been greater, the money being made by the schools that play big-time college football has skyrocketed, too.

NCAA President Mark Emmert believes it is time for a change.

While Emmert draws a clear distinction between the $2,000 stipend he has proposed and play-for-pay athletics, he unapologetically advocates for giving student-athletes a larger cut of a huge pie that is about to get even bigger.

The NCAA's current men's basketball tournament agreement with CBS and Turner is worth an average of more than $770 million per year, and the current Bowl Championship Series television deal ? money that goes to conferences and then is distributed to schools, with no NCAA involvement ? is worth $180 million per year.

The new college football playoff, which starts in the 2014 season, will be worth about $470 million annually to the conferences.

Emmert chides athletic programs that make major decisions guided by efforts to generate more revenue, such as switching conferences, and then complain they can't afford a stipend.

"When the world believes it's all a money grab, how can you say we can stick with the same scholarship model as 40 years ago?" he said last month.

In October 2011, the NCAA's Division I Board of Directors approved a rule change that would give colleges the option of providing athletes with a $2,000 stipend for expenses not covered by scholarships.

"It doesn't strike me as drastic by definition," said Mike Slive, commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, Alabama's league, and one of the most vocal advocates for a full-cost-of-attendance scholarship. "There is a fixed definition for a scholarship. There's no reason why it shouldn't be reviewed."

But many schools objected to the policy, and last January, the board delayed its implementation. Colleges worried about how the stipends would affect Title IX compliance and whether they'd be able to afford them.

"I do understand the economics, that it might be more difficult for some than others, but for those that can do it, it's the right thing do to and that ought to be the guiding factor," he said.

Right now, the millions of dollars schools are making through sports are often going back into athletic programs. Colleges are caught in a never-ending race with their fellow institutions to attract the best talent with the best facilities, stadiums and coaches.

The Associated Press looked at federal filings by schools in the Atlantic Coast Conference, Big 12, Big Ten, Pacific-12 (formerly the Pac-10) and Southeastern Conference.

In 2003, the members of those conferences at the time reported average athletic department revenues of $45.6 million and expenses of $42.3 million. By 2011, the current members' average revenue had increased 76.1 percent to $80.4 million. Expenses had grown at an even faster rate, up 76.5 percent to $74.6 million.

The average salary for head coaches of men's teams increased almost 131 percent in that span, with football driving that number.

Alabama coach Nick Saban will make about $6 million this season, including bonuses, if the Crimson Tide beats Notre Dame. Kelly's contract with Notre Dame pays him about $2.4 million per year, according to the school's federal filings (because it is a private school, Notre Dame does not have to release his contract).

Having benefited most from the boom, it's perhaps not surprising coaches such as Kelly and Saban support finding a way to get more money to their players.

"A lot of the young people that we have, that play college football, the demographics that they come from, they don't have a lot and I think we should try to create a situation where their quality of life, while they're getting an education, might be a little better," Saban said. "I feel that the athletes should share in some of this to some degree. I don't really have an opinion on how that should be done. There's a lot of other people who probably have a lot more experience in figuring that one out, but I do think we should try to enhance the quality of life for all student-athletes.

"I believe the leadership in the NCAA finally sort of acknowledges that so that's probably a big step in that direction."

The old argument was that a scholarship provided enough benefit. And while there is wide variation, depending on the college and major, there is little doubt among those who study the issue that a bachelor's degree is a huge economic boon, even for those who have to borrow to pay for it.

In a 2011 report, Georgetown's Center on Education and the Workforce calculated a worker with a bachelor's degree will earn on average $2.3 million over a lifetime. That's roughly $500,000 more than associate's degree-holders, $700,000 more than those with some college but no degree, and $1 million more than those with just a high school diploma.

According to the latest NCAA statistics, 70 percent of football players in the top division graduated within six years. The NCAA's Graduation Success Rate takes into account transfers and athletes who leave in good academic standing.

In the 11 years that GSR data have been collected, the rate for football players in the top division has increased by 7 percentage points ? so more players are getting the benefit of a college degree.

The problem is scholarship rules have lagged behind the times, said Pac-12 Conference Commissioner Larry Scott, now in his fourth year in the job. His conference, like most of the major ones, supports a stipend.

"The scholarship rules don't allow you to cover the full cost of attendance," he said. "Doesn't cover things like miscellaneous meals, trips home, clothes and other things. For me there has been a gap.

"This does not cross the philosophical Rubicon of paying players."

Players, naturally, agree.

"It kind of goes both ways," said Alabama defensive back Vinnie Sunseri, whose father, Sal, is a college football coach and former NFL player. "A lot of people would say we don't deserve it because we already get enough as college kids that just happen to play a sport. A lot of people don't realize all the work that goes into all the stuff that we have to do throughout the day.

"I have no time during the day. I wake up at 6 a.m., lift, go to class, right after class you come back up to the football complex to watch film and get ready for practice. By the time you get out, you've got to go to study hall. By the time you get out of study hall, it's basically bed time. It is really like a full-time job."

Alabama long snapper Carson Tinker made the team as a non-scholarship walk-on, but earned a scholarship this season.

"I'm very thankful for my scholarship," Tinker said. "All of us have bills. All of us have expenses, just like every other student. I don't live with football players. I live with two of my good friends. While I'm at practice every day, they have a job. They're able to pay their bills, buy food, stuff like that."

Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick is on the NCAA committee studying how to implement a stipend. It's complicated.

To help build more support, Emmert's latest proposal would make the funds need-based. In other words, lower-income students would get more money than wealthy ones.

The problem is, that could limit students' access to federal aid, such as Pell Grants.

"If what you're doing is subsidizing the federal government because you offset the Pell Grant, what's the point?" he said Sunday. "What have you achieved if they are getting less money from the Pell Grant and more from you and the student-athlete hasn't netted out an additional dime?"

Also, this isn't just about paying football players.

"I'm not interested in having a different standard for football players than volleyball players," Swarbrick said.

However it works out, Kelly sees stipends as inevitable.

"This is going to happen," Kelly said. "It's just when is it going to happen? I think like minds need to get together and figure it out."

___

Cohen reported from New York. AP Education Writer Justin Pope also contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-01-06-T25-BCS-Money%20for%20Athletes/id-55f929e5f0bd4359a848cf6005386903

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W.Va. children's health improves, obesity declines | WSLS 10

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) A statewide screening program shows that the health of West Virginia children is improving.

Figures from West Virginia University's CARDIAC program show that 27.8 percent of fifth-graders screened in the 2011-2012 school year were obese. That's down from 28.9 percent in the 2010-2111 school year.

During the same period, the number of fifth-graders with high blood pressure fell from 24 percent to 20.3 percent. The abnormal cholesterol rate fell from 26.1 percent to 23.5 percent.

The kindergarten obesity rate declined from 17.5 percent to 13.6 percent.

However, the second-grade obesity rate rose a point to 24.5 percent.

CARDIAC program director Dr. Bill Neal tells the Sunday Gazette-Mail (http://bit.ly/114VUsB ) that the numbers are encouraging. But he says the state cannot get complacent.

___

Information from: The Charleston Gazette, http://www.wvgazette.com

Source: http://www2.wsls.com/lifestyles/2013/jan/06/wva-childrens-health-improves-obesity-declines-ar-2450299/

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Saturday, January 5, 2013

Engadget's smartphone buyer's guide: winter 2013 edition

Engadget's smartphone buyer's guide winter 2012 edition

Old Man Winter's reaching deep into his bag of tricks this season, but we've found the perfect escape from his world of rosy cheeks and frosty trees: just step into your local electronics store. Here, you can bask in the glow of the latest smartphones, each clamoring to join you for a new year of fun and adventures. Naturally, making sense of the dizzying array isn't an easy task, but our smartphone buyer's guide is here to help you find a handset that's sure to thrill.

As you've probably noticed, a number of today's best smartphones are now available on multiple carriers. Likewise, we're introducing a new section that highlights devices that are available from three or more providers. The carrier section is also receiving a slight tweak, as you'll now find our top picks of carrier exclusives. Naturally, more smartphones than ever also means you'll find more choices than ever, but regardless of your budget or needs, you're sure to find a number of thrilling selections. So grab a cup of cocoa and join us after the break, where we round up the most exciting options of the new year.

Continue reading Engadget's smartphone buyer's guide: winter 2013 edition

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