Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Mizzou Student Recreation Complex: The Coolest of the Cool ...

A black-lit Spin room? Yeah, that?s awesome sauce. Credit: MU Student Recreation Complex

As part of?Fit Bottomed College Week, we?re highlighting a few of the coolest college rec and fitness centers across the country!?

Yes, I went to the University of Missouri. And, yes, I did teach classes at the MU Student Recreation Complex. But since graduating in 2003, that nice rec that I taught group exercise classes at was expanded to a massive (and I mean, MASSIVE) fit extravaganza in August of 2005. And let me just say, I am green (or maybe more appropriately for Mizzou, Tiger-striped) with envy that I wasn?t born later to enjoy it.

The MU Student Recreation Complex?has a ton of?amenities?and features. They?ve got the basic sports courts, cardio equipment and weight equipment. They also have a rock-climbing wall, track, tennis courts and a competitive pool. And then there are the other options that seriously make my jaw drop and wish I was back in college again (despite what I said on Monday). According to?Emily Bach, associate director of the complex, its Tiger Grotto is probably the most unique?and I?d have to agree. The Grotto is more like a resort than a college rec center with?a zero-depth pool entry with a high-powered vortex, a lazy river, waterfall, hot tub, sauna and steam room. Seriously, I would pay them to work there these days.

Just another day in college??Credit: MU Student Recreation Complex

Then, there?s TigerX, the group-exercise program. Yes, I am biased, but it?s amazing. With more than 100 classes offered a week (yep, you read that right), you can take anything from Zumba (even offered in the water!) to Ballet Bootcamp to Tabata to Sunrise Cycle. It?s an aerobics heaven. And if that wasn?t enough to get your fit bottom smiling, try zouLIFE, the complex?s wellness programming that?pairs personal care and well-being services like massage and skin care with personal fitness and nutrition.

So, it?s no wonder that a whopping 5,500 students use the complex in an average week. It?s seriously the place where all the cool kids hang out?and by ?cool kids,? I mean all the college students who know what?s up!

Any Mizzou Tigers out there? Anyone who wants to be one now? I SO need to go back and visit this complex!??Jenn

Source: http://fitbottomedgirls.com/2012/10/mizzou-student-recreation-complex-the-coolest-of-the-cool/

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Military of Italian Social Republic

From NSwiki, the NationStates encyclopedia.

The military of the Italian Social Republic include the Italian Armed Forces and the National Republican Guard.

These forces total about 723,000 active personnel (including the National Republican Guard). All branches of armed forces fall under the command of Supreme Command of Armed Forces, vested in the Duce of the Republic, and are managed by the Chief of General Staff. The Ministry of War is responsible for planning logistics and funding of the armed forces and is not involved with in-the-field military operational command.

The Italian Armed Forces consist of the National Republican Army (Esercito Nazionale Repubblicano, E.N.R.), National Republican Navy (Marina da Guerra Nazionale Repubblicana, M.N.R.), National Republican Air Force (Areonautica Nazionale Repubblicana, A.N.R.) and National Republican Gendarmerie (Gendarmeria Nazionale Repubblicana, Ge.N.R.). The regular armed forces have an about 593,000 personnel.

The National Republican Guard (Guardia Nazionale Repubblicana, GNR) has an about 130,000 personnel in six branches: its own Naval Force, Aerospace Force, Ground Forces; and the "D" Force (Forza "D", praetorian and special forces), as well as the Cyber Warfare Force. The National Fascist Party as a whole is a paramilitary volunteer force, controlled for what concerns military preparedeness by the National Republican Guard.

Source: http://www.nswiki.net/index.php?title=Military_of_Italian_Social_Republic&diff=637954&oldid=prev

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Video: PFT Live: Weak offense could ruin Bears' hopes

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

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/21134540/vp/49521877#49521877

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Create a System; Follow It | Learning Interest


Create a System; Follow It

So, the title of this post comes directly from an article in yesterday?s Chronicle of Higher Education. As a post-secondary educator, I find that I definitely need to cultivate my news from a variety of sources. So, I appreciate the Weekly Brief that pops up in my inbox every Monday morning. As the curator of the UGA Graduate School social media presence, I?m always looking for articles and resources of interest to the greater graduate community on campus. Thus, the article ?Your Official Job-Application Checklist? by?David D. Perlmutter definitely caught my eye.

I immediately read through the article for a couple of reasons. First, I want to make sure that it?s appropriate and timely for the audiences with which I plan to share the article. Second, and probably most important to me, as a PhDc on the market, I want to make sure that the processes and tasks I?ve been completing are in line with what?s recommended. Thankfully, I have been surrounded by fantastic mentors. As a result, everything I read in the article is exactly what they?ve been telling me for years (and more or less what I?ve been doing). But, what caught my attention the most was the #1 item on the checklist; ?Create a System; Follow It.?

Back in July, just as the position openings in my field began to post, I was chatting with a student colleague at Purdue. She offered to share with me a spreadsheet she got from a former classmate who had graduated and taken a position at St. John?s University in New York. As soon as I received the file, I opened it in Excel and began to brainstorm on how I could work this in to my ?to be determined? system of tracking and applying for jobs. Being a disciple of Google (which, I might add, I?m slowly becoming disenfranchised by my chosen ?church?), Google Docs (now Drive) came to mind.

Step 1.

Create a Google Form; for the benefit of my student colleagues who may be reading this, here are the fields that appear in said form:

  1. Hiring Institution (text)
  2. URL of ad (text)
  3. Search Committee Contact (text)
  4. Mailing Address (paragraph text)
  5. Position Type (check boxes)
    1. Research
    2. Teaching
    3. Administrative
  6. Discipline Area (text)
  7. Position Rank (radio buttons)
    1. Assistant
    2. Assistant/Associate
    3. Open Rank
  8. Application Deadline (text)
  9. Required Materials (check boxes)
    1. Letter of Interest
    2. CV
    3. Teaching Statement
    4. Research Statement
    5. Writing Sample
    6. Reference Names
    7. Reference Letters
    8. Online HR Application
    9. Transcript Official
    10. Transcript Unoffical
    11. Trancripts (All) Official
    12. Transcripts (All) Unofficial
    13. Other

Step 2

I started by setting up saved job searches on both The Chronicle and HigherEdJobs (sometimes positions will post on one weeks before the other, which can make a huge difference if you?re working under deadlines). I have my settings configured to send me emails when new jobs are posted that fit my search criteria (so, if you?ve wondered how or why I?m always?posting a new position the GSA Facebook group?now you know!). This is a great point for me to mention that your search should be broad enough to capture any job for which you might be qualified to apply. Once you read the posting, you can then decide whether or not it meets all of your personal criteria (discipline area, preferred requirements, geographical location, etc.) before posting it to your form.

Step 3

This is where organizational skills come in handy.?To the far right of my form?s spreadsheet, I manually added columns for tracking my submissions and search status as well as identify which references I?m using for the position.

  1. Date of Online Submission
  2. Date of Email Submission
  3. Date of Mailed Submission
  4. Search Status Updates
  5. Institution Hiring Decision
  6. Reference 1
  7. Reference 2
  8. Reference 3
  9. Reference 4
  10. Reference 5

This is where you also need to consider?color coding. If I have completed a packet, but have to wait on ordering transcripts or letters of reference, I set the row to a shade of yellow and make a note in the Updates column. Once a packet is complete and submitted, I change the row to green. If there?s something urgent or deadline approaching, I set the row red. I?ve even begun to add a color to indicate positions where I have begun the interview process (blue). For positions that I am not invited to interview or an announcement is made, I plan to change the row to a dark gray color. Color coding helps me see at a glance where I am in the process and plan accordingly.

Step 4

Continuing with the organizational skills theme, my rule of thumb is to contact my references when I write the letter of interest for a specific opening. Let me back up here and briefly talk about how I?ve selected my references. Back at the beginning of the school year, my advisor and I had a discussion where we listed out every faculty member here at UGA I could call upon for a reference and a few individuals I?ve worked with in the past who would be relevant. We then went through and indicated which types of jobs would be appropriate for each reference. For example, I have the instructor coordinator here at UGA and the Associate Division Head back at Blinn College I can ask when the job description emphasizes teaching. If the position talks about conducting research and methodologies, I can ask one of my committee members who is also my ?methods person? and has worked with me. Keep in mind that, in a good year, you could be applying for dozens of jobs (I?m currently at 16 packets submitted and it?s still early in the season). So, you want to have a rich list of references from which you can pull and rotate.

Back to contacting references. As I mentioned earlier, as soon as I have completed my letter of interest for a position (which ideally happens 2-3 weeks before applications begin review), I email the references I?ve identified for that position. The subject of the email is always the same :?Reference Request for [Institution Name].? In the email, I:

  1. Include a link to or attach a PDF of the position description
  2. Provide a link to my current CV online
  3. Identify the specifics of the request; i.e., do I only need to provide their contact information at the time of application or do I need a letter of reference ? and if so how (online system, email w/recipient?s address, or snail mail, with an offer to provide a SASE) and when it needs to be submitted

The email needs to be concise and clear. Here?s a quick actual example of the email I send (note that the bracketed items are fields pulled directly from the Google Doc):

[Reference Name]

The next position I?m applying for is at [Institution Name]. This position is for an [Assistant-Assistant/Associate-Open Rank] Professor of [Discipline Area]. The job posting is available online at [URL to job ad]. My CV is available at [link to my CV].

For this position, the search committee has asked that letters of reference be mailed directly to them at:
[Contact Person & Address]

Please note that the search committee is chaired by [Search Committee Chair if different from person who collects applications]. The deadline for this application is [Date search committee will begin reviewing applications]. I?ll be happy to provide a stamped, addressed envelope at your request, and will send a reminder about this request on [Date approximately 8-10 days before deadline] if you have not notified me that the letter has been sent.

If you do not currently have your CV hosted online, I recommend you find whatever service works for you and use it. This will become an easy way to share one of your most requested documents. Options? Use Dropbox and host it in a public folder. Post it on Scribd. Or, my personal favorite, set up a Visual CV.

Step 5

Lastly, I also use the far left column of my Form to help me set the order of application. You can change the sort order in Google Drive, but sometimes the cells get out of alignment. So, I number the rows to indicate which applications I need to work on first (obviously, you want to set priority based on when the search committee will begin reviewing applications for each specific position). I can also use that column to help me keep track of how many total jobs have been submitted. It never fails. Just when I think I have a firm grasp of the positions that will be reviewed soon, someone posts an opening with a deadline/review date only a week away. So, you have to be flexible enough to adjust your priorities if that is a job for which you want to apply.

Other Advice

I?d often been told that applying for a tenure-track position could be a part-time job in and of itself. They weren?t kidding. I started out by trying to work on application packets whenever I found free time (or wanted to procrastinate from some other task ? you know, like reminding my dissertation study participants that they need to complete the course survey). Now, I?ve found that I really like dedicating Sunday afternoons to checking my spreadsheet and working on application packets as needed. This lets me focus on the task and dedicate my full attention to detail. You don?t want to be?that applicant who forgot to change the name of the search committee chair in the greeting or institution name in your closing paragraph ? I?m sure I?ve made mistakes along the way, but I hope not too?egregious.

So, now you know my system. You?re welcome to take my advice with a grain of salt or follow it to the point that works for you. If you?d like a copy of my Google Form, just drop me an email (tadousay@gmail.com) and let me know what address you use for Google Accounts. I don?t mind sharing, and if adapting my system works for you, then all the better!

Source: http://www.learninginterest.com/2012/10/create-a-system-follow-it/

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Taliban ambush kills 10 Afghan troops

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) ? Taliban insurgents killed 10 Afghan troops in an ambush in western Herat province, police and government officials said Tuesday.

A spokesman for the provincial governor, Muhiudin Noori, said the Afghan troops ? which included both soldiers and police ? were searching late Monday for a group of insurgents who had earlier set up a roadblock, stopping and seizing passing vehicles, when they were ambushed.

Five policemen, including the district commander and five soldiers died in the ensuing firefight, Noori said. There were no insurgent casualties, but police later arrested 25 suspects found in the area, he said.

Also Tuesday, an American service member was killed in an insurgent attack in the east, the U.S. military said in a statement. It did not provide further details about the attack. The latest death makes at least 12 American service members killed so far this month and 265 killed so far this year.

The Herat ambush was the bloodiest single incident for Afghan security forces this year in western Afghanistan ? an area where the insurgents have been less active than in their strongholds in the east and west of the country.

In recent months, Taliban guerrillas have been switching tactics and increasingly targeting Afghan security forces as the international coalition continues its drawdown toward a planned withdrawal of the majority of combat troops in 2014.

Meanwhile, President Hamid Karzai condemned "in the strongest possible terms" a NATO raid on Sunday in Logar province in which he said four children were killed.

A presidential statement said coalition troops carried out the operation in Baraki Barak district in an effort to apprehend two armed militants. But this resulted in the deaths of the four children who were tending to their animals in the same area, it said.

Din Mohammad Darwesh, spokesman for the provincial governor, said the victims were between 10 and 13 years old.

NATO on Tuesday acknowledged that its forces "may be responsible for the unintended, but nonetheless tragic, death of three Afghan civilians" during the operation in Baraki Barak district. Coalition commander U.S. Gen. John R. Allen expressed his condolences to the families of those killed.

There was no immediate explanation for the discrepancy in the number of victims in the two statements.

In recent months, Karzai has criticized the international military coalition for what he said was the killing of civilians in Afghanistan, for not going after terrorist safe havens in neighboring Pakistan and for not providing the Afghan forces with all the weapons they need.

The criticisms drew an angry response from U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, who earlier this month said the Afghan leader should occasionally say "thank you" to allied forces who are fighting and dying in Afghanistan, rather than criticizing them.

___

Associated Press writer Slobodan Lekic in Kabul contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/taliban-ambush-kills-10-afghan-troops-134430220.html

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'Yes on 79' campaign inaccurately suggests real estate tax is real ...

continues to insist someone out there is talking? about imposing a real estate transfer tax, despite abundant evidence to the contrary.


Realtors and other groups who want to enshrine a real estate transfer tax ban in the Oregon Constitution ran a hefty ad in the Portland Tribune last week and in The Sunday Oregonian. The Yes on 79 campaign states:

"Oregon homeowners have been targeted with a new tax on the sale or transfer of real estate, a new tax that some have made a legislative priority."

The print ad joins TV and radio commercials that also talk about what appears to be a pending, imminent, any day now tax on real estate. The group's first TV ad features a cute yellow house in a Lucha Libre wrestling match with a masked man. Home sales have taken a beating, right? "Now there's talk of a property transfer tax," says the announcer.

Where, exactly, is this talk happening? PolitiFact Oregon wanted to know.

In the group?s second TV and radio ad, called "Double Whammy," Larry Dennis of Northeast Portland says, "We all are paying more taxes, house values are going down, and now they want to tax us again. It's not fair, it's not right."

We realize home values are not what they were, but who wants to tax us again?

On the campaign's website is this language: "Once again, there is talk of a sales tax on real estate targeting homeowners."

By now the overuse of the passive voice is killing us.

Who is talking about a sales tax? Because as anyone who follows this topic knows, there is a state prohibition on such a tax. The state law not only prohibits a state tax, but it also forbids cities and counties from levying one. (Only Washington County has one -- 0.1 percent -- and that?s because it was grandfathered in.)

In fact, we checked out a Voters' Pamphlet statement by Oregon Realtors' that "one of the state's largest governments made charging this tax one of their top priorities just this year."

We ruled the statement Pants on Fire because the only evidence the campaign provided was a list of legislative agenda items from the City of Portland. No bill was drafted to charge a tax.

Portland, like other cities and counties, is mainly opposed to the idea that the state can "pre-empt" local government in matters of taxation and regulation. Wanting to get rid of such a pre-emption is not the same as wanting to charge a tax, in our view.

PolitiFact Oregon contacted campaign spokesman Jon Coney, just in case a real estate tax had been proposed and adopted when we weren't looking.

Coney said the campaign was referring to "all the talk that's been going on at the legislative level." You can read that lengthy list of legislative attempts that went nowhere in this PolitiFact Oregon analysis. We gave it a Half True ruling.

-- Janie Har
Follow me on Twitter/janiehar1

Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/politics/index.ssf/2012/10/yes_on_79_campaign_inaccuratel.html

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Monday, October 22, 2012

Domestic Sluttery: Top Ten Vegetarian Recipes

I am in dire need of vegetables. The good ones. The green ones with all of the vitamins. The ones that will eradicate the after effects of Kat's 30th birthday party this weekend (we played Mario Kart and drank too many of these). We have so many vegetarian recipes (here are our top ten potato recipes), so I've rounded up our very best. If I work my way through them, I might be feeling on top form by the end of the week. I've already rounded up the top ten potato recipes.

Cauliflower poppers. This is our most popular vegetarian recipe. Just make sure you open a window before you start cooking.

Buddha Bowls. Huge bowls of tasty stews, there's nothing better in autumn. The same goes for harira and our rajma kidney bean curry.

Baked onion rings. You need to make these immediately. And then you can put them with this...

Mayonnaise. You can dip the cauliflower poppers in this as well.

Guacamole. Our favourite dippy thing. Serve it with our black bean tacos or smokey mole sauce.

Cheesy beet gratin. Everything is made better with a shedload of melted cheese thrown in.

Courgette fries. They're one of our favourites. They don't taste

Braised red cabbage. It's basically autumn in a bowl and once you've made it, it'll be on your plate every week.

Roasted vegetable couscous. Couscous and roasted vegetables is a simple and tasty mid-week meal.

Vegetable biryani. The veggie equivalent of wrapping yourself up in a Slanket. You should probably eat it while wrapped up in a Slanket.

See more of our top ten recipes posts!

Source: http://www.domesticsluttery.com/2012/10/top-ten-vegetarian-recipes.html

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make more money: Building Resilience in Children and Teens ...

Building Resilience in Children and Teens: Giving Kids Roots and Wings

Building Resilience in Children and Teens: Giving Kids Roots and Wings

List Price: $15.95


Building Resilience in Children and Teens: Giving Kids Roots and Wings

List Price: $15.95

Your Price: $9.83- Building Resilience in Children and Teens: Giving Kids Roots and Wings

Families, schools, and communities can prepare children and teens to THRIVE through both good and challenging times. Building Resilience in Children and Teens offers strategies to help kids from 18 months to 18 years build seven crucial ?Cs? ? competence, confidence, connection, character, contribution, coping, and control ? so they can excel in life and bounce back from challenges. The book describes how to raise authentically successful children who will be happy, hardworking, compassionate, creative, and innovative. Dr. Ginsburg reminds parents that our goal is to think in the present and prepare for the future, to remember that our real goal is to raise children to be successful 35-year-olds. It?s about more than immediate smiles or even good grades; it?s about raising kids to be emotionally and socially intelligent, to be able to recover from disappointment and forge ahead throughout their lives. The stable connection between caring adults and children is the key to the security that allows kids to creatively master challenges and reach their highest potential. This book offers concrete strategies to solidify those vital family connections.

Resilience is also about confronting the overwhelming stress kids face today. This invaluable guide offers coping strategies for facing the stresses of academic performance, high achievement standards, media messages, peer pressure, and family tension. Young people too commonly survive stress by indulging in unhealthy behaviors or by giving up completely The suggested solutions offered here are aimed at building a repertoire of positive coping strategies. Kids who have these healthy strategies in place may be less likely to turn to those quick, easy, but dangerous fixes that adults fear. The book includes a guide for teens to create their own customized positive coping strategies.

The second edition of this award-winning book continues to focus on parents, but now also offers wisdom about how schools and communities can best support families. It is updated throughout and entirely new chapters offer strategies on how best to: support military families, confront the negative portrayal of teens, prevent perfectionism and support authentic success. Finally, the book now guides parents how to recharge and rebound when their own resilience reaches its limits.

Your Price: $9.83 ? Building Resilience in Children and Teens: Giving Kids Roots and Wings

This entry was posted in Free Internet Advertising Books. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://freeinternetadvertising.earn-cash-make-money.net/2012/10/21/make-more-money-building-resilience-in-children-and-teens-giving-kids-roots-and-wings/

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Sunday, October 21, 2012

Extend speaking and writing app more than befor,I mean your link ...

Extend speaking and writing app more than befor,I mean your link.writing and speaking are two important part for students.
I am sure it is nice find some options for studying in 2important academic exam,IELTS ,TOFEL from your link or app.Also you can put vocabulary for this part and design an program for studying vocabulary for these two exam.you can ask your user make flashcard and instead of each flash card you will open one unit of IELTS course for them.

Source: http://livemocha.uservoice.com/forums/2163-feature-requests/suggestions/3279248-extend-speaking-and-writing-app-more-than-befor-i-

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The Big Screen

David Thomson's 'The Big Screen' tells the story of the rise and decline of an art form that once played a central role in human life.

October 19, 2012

The Big Screen By David Thomson Farrar, Straus and Giroux 608 pp.

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By Troy Jollimore, for?The Barnes and Noble Review

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The story of the movies is the story of -? fill in the blank. America? Our lives? Modernity itself? Any of these would be an overstatement, but a provocative one; and after all, the movies themselves encourage, even demand, provocative overstatement. It must be their oversized images, the vastness of the emotions they, and we, project onto the screen. (Put aside the fact that the screens are getting smaller. I'll come back to that.) So David Thomson's The Big Screen is a big book about a big subject ? a big-picture view of the big pictures ? and its subtitle makes a big promise.

In fact, Thomson has been working for years on the fulfillment of that promise, on telling the story of the movies. His compelling, highly readable, and highly opinionated body of work includes "The Whole Equation: A History of Hollywood"; "Have You Seen??: A Personal Introduction to 1,000 Films"; "Biographical Dictionary of Film"; and "Beneath Mulholland: Thoughts on Hollywood and Its Ghosts" ? as well as biographies of figures including David O. Selznick, Orson Welles, and Gary Cooper. He's also written whole volumes on key films: Hitchcock's "Psycho," Howard Hawks's "The Big Sleep," and many others.

"The Big Screen" begins not with Thomas Edison or the Lumi?re brothers, but with the photographer Eadweard Muybridge. Muybridge is most famous now for having invented stop-action photography and for using it to prove that a galloping horse sometimes lifts all four legs off the ground at once. But he matters for other reasons, too. For Thomson, Muybridge's photographic series provoked and relied on a kind of fascination with the image that was something new, something whose relation to desire and voyeurism would be essential to motion pictures:

He shot people, but he also shot light, air, and passing time. He took special pleasure in the splay and splash of water poured out of a jug or tossed on a little girl. The wonder of seeing the commonplace in the light was more thoroughly celebrated by Eadweard Muybridge than by anyone before him. It's still the case that his sequences fill viewers with awe and excitement, no matter that they have no story or purpose. The pictures feel ravished by the play of light on ordinary physicality and by the tiny, incremental advances through time.? Take whatever example you like from subsequent cinema, and its inheritance from Muybridge can be felt ? take Astaire and Rogers spinning together in "Let's Face the Music and Dance" in "Follow the Fleet" (1936); take the door closing on John Wayne's Ethan Edwards at the end of "The Searchers" (1956); or think of that instant from Chris Marker's "La Jet?e" (1962) when the still picture of the young woman comes to life briefly and she looks at being looked at.? Before the official invention of the movies (though many were on that track, and Thomas Edison took note of Muybridge's work), so many elements of cinema had been identified: time, motion, space, light, skin. And watching.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/GvjriZyvTE4/The-Big-Screen

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PwC: U.S. Commercial Real Estate Recovery To Advance | Big4.com

PwC: U.S. Commercial Real Estate Recovery To Advance

October 21, 2012

By Rob Starr, Content Manager, Big4.com

According to the findings of theEmerging Trends in Real Estate? 2013 report, released recently by PwC US and the Urban Land Institute (ULI), despite a slow real estate recovery track, U.S. property sectors and markets will register better prospects this year over last.? Recent job creation should increase absorption and push down vacancy rates in the office, industrial, and retail sectors. Robust demand for apartments should hold up,? even as new construction ramps up ? and even the housing sector makes progress in most regions.

Mitch Roschelle, partner, U.S. real estate advisory practice leader, PwC comments on the improving picture:

?With the outlook for commercial real estate continuing to improve in 2013, investors are expected to allocate substantial sums of capital to the real estate asset class, according to our survey respondents,? he said. ?As yield in bonds and other financial instruments tighten in a still volatile market, commercial real estate?s income producing and total return attributes offer investors potentially attractive risk-adjusted returns.?

Respondents to Emerging Trends cite a number of best investor bets for 2013, including top urban markets outperform the average, bolstered by move-back-in trends and gen-Y appeal. Top core districts in these cities have become too pricey, so look in districts where ?hip? residential neighborhoods meet commercial areas.

?

5 Newest Positions on Big4

Source: http://www.big4.com/pricewaterhousecoopers/pwc-u-s-commercial-real-estate-recovery-to-advance/

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Saturday, October 20, 2012

Google Gives Update On Shopping Going Full Paid Inclusion, Hints At

Now that Google?s new pay-for-play Shopping is in full swing (the changeover took place October 17), the company used its earnings call to share thoughts on its success thus far, and its future vision for the product. Additionally, Google execs came out with some tidbits about the status and future of other elements of its advertising business.

Nikesh Arora

According to SVP and Chief Business Officer Nikesh Arora, the company is listing more than a billion products from tens of thousands of merchants and over 100,000 sellers. (The distinction is that marketplaces ? such as (Etsy or eBay ? could be comprised of many sellers.)

Said Arora:

? we believe being able to do product listing ads gets us closer to intent because if somebody types a Nikon D800 then we know they are looking to buy or looking to get more information about a specific product. And the fact that we can show them reviews, pictures and pricing information gets us closer to action. And we believe in the medium term that?s going to create more monetization and a better monetization for us as opposed to having just 10 blue links of ads that would send them to other websites. So I think that?s going to have a good impact in the medium term, I don?t think I?m going to comment whether that has an impact [on Google's financials] in Q4 or not.

The advertisers participating in Google Shopping are seeing an impact, though, according to the execs. Adorama camera, one of the biggest photo retailers in the U.S. saw its click through rate jump by 176% when the company began using product listing ads, and their conversion rate was up 100% in June as compared to the previous years.

And CEO Larry Page says more changes will be coming to Google Shopping. ?There?s much more we can do to get you the right information at just the right time,? he said on the call, later adding that ?I think we are still in the early stages of that.?

Goals For Google Shopping

One goal, according to Arora, is to reduce the number of steps from search to transaction, ?making the online experience even more valuable to consumers and marketers.? But Google, at least according to product manager Jon Venverloh, doesn?t want to host the transaction itself. At the recent SMX East conference, Venverloh pointedly noted that the customer and the transaction will belong to the merchant, and not to Google.

One way in which the speeding from search to transaction is already happening is Google?s mobile click-to-call ads. Arora said click-to-call ads are now generating 20 billion calls a month to AdWords advertisers.

The Future Of AdWords Across Devices?

The other aspect of the earnings call I found intriguing was Page?s hinting at how the company will be developing its advertising products to optimize for a multi-screen consumer experience. The gist is a vision of an advertiser creating one ad that would be delivered and optimized across multiple devices automatically:

I think we are really starting to live in a new reality, one where [there is a] kind of ubiquity of screens. Apps users really move from intent to action much faster and more seamlessly. I think this will create a huge new universe of opportunities for advertisers?. Focusing on platform-specific queries won?t make much sense because advertisers will be dynamically adapting across a whole bunch of different devices to reach the right audiences at the right time. And that?s kind of how we are thinking about it and I alluded to changes that we?ll make to our ads system to improve the advertiser experience and the user experience around that.

And a little more on the same topic:

?we want to make advertising super simple for customers. Online advertising has developed in very device-specific ways, with separate campaigns for desktop and mobile. This makes arduous work for advertisers and agencies, and means mobile opportunities often get missed. So we?re working to significantly simplify the campaign experience, working very hard on that. Advertisers should be free to think about their audience, while we do the hard work of dynamically adapting their campaigns across devices.

Not sure what that will mean in reality but it sounds like Google wants to use labor-saving technology to customize and optimize across platforms. I can?t imagine current marketers would object unless they didn?t have the option to go manual instead.

Related Topics: Google: AdWords | Google: Product Search | Top News



SMX - Search Marketing Expo

Source: http://searchengineland.com/google-updates-on-shopping-hints-at-adwords-future-on-q3-call-137128

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The Politics Of Climate Change - news - the-press | Stuff.co.nz

The climate change debate is not being helped by the exaggeration both from alarmists and sceptics. So what do scientists and policy-makers actually believe these days? JOHN McCRONE finds out.

Funny how hearing a scientist say that sea levels are going to rise by "only" a metre each century counts as reassuring news these days.

Global warming is alarming stuff. This year all we nervous types have been watching the record melt of the Arctic sea ice.

Suddenly, up north, things seem to be lurching out of control. The summer pack ice cover is disappearing 50 years ahead of schedule. The extent of this took a big dip in 2007, then another even bigger dive this year to drop below half what it used to be in the 1980s.

Some climate researchers fear it marks a planetary tipping point.

In widely reported comments, Cambridge University ocean physicist Peter Wadhams has said the loss of a white reflective polar cap will allow so much extra ocean warming that it is "the equivalent of about 20 years of additional CO2 being added by man".

Wadhams says it also risks the catastrophic release of methane deposits trapped in the Arctic's permafrost and thawing seabed - a blanket of greenhouse gases to send Earth into a death spiral.

We failed to take action over carbon emissions and now it looks to be too late. Wadhams says it is truly time for panic measures - the science fiction remedies of geoengineering, such as burning sulfur in the stratosphere to create a shielding haze, or exploding an asteroid to make a sunshade of space dust.

Also widely reported is Nasa's James Hansen, the "father of global warming science". Again, Hansen is saying everything is going far faster and far further than predicted as the climate feedback systems begin kicking in.

He worries even the now internationally agreed target to limit warming to 2 degrees Celsius is enough to result in a "disaster scenario".

The world is already seeing out- of-whack weather extremes, Hansen says. Injecting just a bit of extra heat into the climate system is sending it off in all sorts of odd directions.

And if the Greenland and Antarctic ice masses start to go, Hansen says we could see a swamping five metre sea level rise by the end of the century.

So it is against this backdrop of the most dire warnings that it is a relief to hear a somewhat different story from those right at the heart of the world's climate change science and climate change policy. People like Victoria University's Climate Change Research Institute (CCRI) director David Frame.

Speaking at a global warming session during Christchurch's recent IceFest, Frame says yes, something really is happening with the climate, but the public are hearing only the extreme views - either the alarmists or the deniers - while the science itself sits somewhat forgotten in the middle.

"Regrettably a lot of the public opinion is very distanced from the actual views of the expert community and the papers in the literature.

"It tends to be either complete scepticism, it's not happening at all, or if it is, it's a rather weak effect. Or else it's the alarmist end- of-the-world portrayals. And neither of those really accord with the best evidence."

Frame says climate change is still a relatively new issue - it was barely discussed in the mainstream media before ex- United States vice-president Al Gore's 2006 documentary film, An Inconvenient Truth.

So the public has been forced to take sides on a complex subject and decide for themselves what to believe, and naturally opinions have become polarised. Arguing yes it is, no it is not, the emotion drives people to seek out whatever evidence appears to most dramatically support their own case.

This year, for the alarmists, it has been the Arctic sea ice melt. While in reply, the sceptics can point instead to a record winter sea ice gain down off the Antarctic continent. Both camps are shouting "gotcha" and the resulting confusion is paralysing.

But there is also the middle- ground rational insider's view of climate change, the considered picture of the scale of the problem and the ways it might be tackled.

Frame says the balance of the evidence is that our actions are warming the planet in a dangerous fashion. Yet these changes still look relatively "well-behaved", not switching into some runaway mode.

Likewise, the concern over the international response.

Many worry that the climate change jamborees, such as the 17th round of the United Nations Climate Change Conference held in Durban last year, are producing too little action. Even New Zealand appears to have about given up on its own "world best practice" emissions trading scheme (ETS).

However, Frame says this is judging climate politics against the wrong expectations. People want noble, utopian answers for a problem so severe. Everything else has to be dropped to deal with this one issue.

But the reality is countries are going to act only on the basis of pragmatism and self-interest. The good news, says Frame, is this can also work.

Starting with the science, what are the "take homes" of current understanding? Tim Naish, director of Victoria University's Antarctic Research Centre, a colleague of Frame, attempts to tick them off.

First, says Naish, there is no question that CO2 levels are soaring. Naish is a glaciologist by training and co-leads the Andrill ice drilling project in Antarctica, which is measuring atmospheric carbon levels for the past 20 million years.

Naish says graphs of CO2 show the level holding steady for the 10,000 years since the end of the last ice age, then suddenly hooking skyward about 150 years ago following the Industrial Revolution.

The pace is quickening, says Naish. In just the past 40 years, the concentration of CO2 has shot up from 320 parts per million to nearly 400ppm. And oxygen levels are falling to match, he says, because of course the carbon comes largely from the burning of fossil fuels.

These are definites. And the evidence is also that, historically, CO2 levels are tightly coupled with planetary temperature.

"Our world has been a nice, constant, balmy 14'C on average for the past 10,000 years. Why? It's because the thermostat is the greenhouse gas CO2," says Naish.

He says a sobering fact is the Earth has warmed by only 1'C so far - this is the consensus figure of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). And yet the last time CO2 levels stood at 400ppm was three million years ago when the world was two to three degrees warmer.

Naish pauses a moment to let the implication sink in. Clearly there is a lag in the response and CO2 has been allowed to rise so fast that the greenhouse effect is still catching up. Further warming is already locked in by what we have done.

OK, not so reassuring then. Especially as some are saying unless the brakes go on hard, we are looking at CO2 levels of 1000ppm by 2100.

However, Naish says understanding the timings and the nature of the lags, is important to the actual assessment of the risks. The biggest fears are all about things changing abruptly, suddenly spiralling out of control. But the consensus view is the "steady change" predictions are actually holding up.

Frame says the Arctic sea ice is a good example. The IPCC forecast there is in fact broadly on track. For a while there was less melting than modelled, and recently there has been a spurt of catching up. But overall the outcome remains within the range predicted some time back.

Frame offers a rugby-watcher's metaphor.

"A lot of stuff that ends up in the media is about how things are worse off than we thought, or not really happening. The extent of Arctic sea ice is a story like that this year. But any given year is too short to matter.

"I liken it to panicking every time the Springboks get the ball. Connoisseurs of rugby and climate connoisseurs know it's a long game. Just because you turn the ball over, just because something happens this year, doesn't mean it's a trend."

Naish says the confidence researchers now have in their climate modelling is why he feels he can speak with some certainty about his own speciality of sea level rise.

Naish says the sea has already risen 20 centimetres in the past 100 years - 1'C of warming causing this much thermal expansion. But only one metre of further rise is expected this century.

He shows a chart of New Zealand to illustrate what a one metre rise would mean. Only the tiniest red nibbles come out of the coastline. A problem, but not a terminal one. In a city like Christchurch, it would take six metres before the waves arrived in Cathedral Square.

The real danger is if the ice covering land masses like Greenland and West Antarctica melts. About a quarter of the world's fresh water is held in these kilometre-thick ice sheets, enough to raise sea level by 12m if it all goes.

Naish says even with higher temperatures, it would take centuries for these ice sheets to thaw. So the threat of inundation is not really so imminent. But the flipside to that is we have also likely condemned future generations to a long-continuing problem. Because change lags the warming, even if temperatures were stabilised right now says Naish, the one metre rise would be one metre per century for many centuries to come.

Frame says sea level rise is an example of the value of having a good grasp of what to expect.

Some climate activists believe the public needs the shock horror scenarios - Hansen's five metres of inundation by 2100 - to stir it from its apathy and send out the call for urgent action.

"But this kind of talk is paralysing rather than helpful. All you do when you double the stakes is make people hunker down even more," Frame says.

"I think most scientists who get into this are still fighting the old battle of how to raise awareness about climate change. But look, everybody in the world has heard about the problem. Now, how do we deal with it? That requires quite different kinds of information."

Frame says that after sea level rise, the most obvious effects of global warming will be on the world's ability to produce food and the increasing extremes to be expected of the weather.

This year extreme weather became a suddenly more convincing tale, with new models of how Arctic warming is disrupting the circumpolar jetstream in the northern hemisphere.

Rutgers University's Jennifer Francis says a hotter Arctic is causing the encircling jetstream to slow down and throw off larger sideways wobbles - the snaky meanders, like a river slowed by hitting the plains and known as Rossby waves.

So weather systems are getting stuck in one place over countries for much longer than usual. The sideway meanders are also either drawing down a larger polar blast or drawing up more tropical air.

The result explains the general "weirding" of the northern hemisphere weather - the droughts that shrivelled the corn harvest in the US this year or the wash-out summer in the UK.

So Frame says climate change is being experienced first through these localised disturbances, the bigger dries and explosive flooding events, which are taking things in all sorts of contrary directions. But in the longer term, world agriculture is going to have to adapt to more permanent shifts in rain belts and climate patterns.

Australia is expected to have even less rain in the future. In New Zealand too, the South Island between Kaikoura and Picton, the lower east coast of the North Island, and Northland, are all forecast to become much more drought-prone.

However, Frame says New Zealand as a whole is something of a lifeboat so far as global warming goes. Surrounded by a deep and wind-tossed ocean, change here will lag the rest of the planet.

"For simple physical reasons, it just takes more energy to heat a bucket of water than a bucket of rock. And the warming rate is slowest over the bits that have storminess over the ocean."

So our own prediction is for just a degree of warming by 2040 and 2'C by 2090. Eventually New Zealand will catch up of course says Frame, but its position gives it a little more time to adjust. It is refreshing talking to someone who appears to be operating in a world where the basic climate change arguments are settled.

The parameters of the problem have been agreed, the bands of uncertainty quantified, and now the job is to identify the rational political solutions.

Frame's own career path suggests how far, in just a decade or so, the debate has evolved.

An Invercargill lad, Frame started out as an atmospheric researcher at Canterbury University, finding time also to study moral philosophy before he got a high-flying job as a Treasury think-tanker, moving to Wellington to learn about real-life policy making.

From there, Frame went back into science at Oxford University before in 2011 taking over as director at Victoria's CCRI.

It is a breadth of background experience that positions Frame now to have an influential say in what governments actually do. And he says much of the attraction of coming back to New Zealand is that it is a small, nimble democracy likely to be an early adopter of new ways of thinking.

Frame feels generally optimistic because he views past policy disappointments as just part of the world's learning process. Even if first-pass solutions like the ETS agreements fail to stick, people will move on and discover other approaches that work.

But what strikes him is the extent to which climate change seems still entangled in other agendas - the utopian thinking that says more about where we are coming from than where we need to go.

For instance, he says, there is the way green political philosophy has become so hairshirt anti- growth that it has created a partisan split between left and right.

"Thirty years ago, it wasn't obvious that when environmentalism first became an issue - especially because it came up as an issue in the rich world's middle-classes - that it was going to be politically left-wing."

But Frame says global warming fitted so neatly into beliefs about the need for social control and brakes on exploitation that it got seized upon. The threat was talked up to support a particular world view.

And yet Frame argues it seems a simple truth that economic growth itself has only been a force for the good.

"On average, human beings in modern society live almost twice as long as they did. They are happier. They are well fed. There is much less violence.

"There are a whole bunch of changes that have been hugely beneficial for people. So the only question here really is how can we now decouple future growth from carbon?"

Frame says he finds the politics of climate change are weighed down by a colonial guilt as well. For many of the European countries that once used to run empires, fixing global warming is seen as the rich world's responsibility.

Again, it is about social justice and utopian ideals, says Frame - which is fine up until the point where, in international negotiations, people expect other nations to respond the same way.

But he says it is an objective fact that carbon emission levels in the developed economies have levelled right off and it is the emissions from the emerging ones, like China, Brazil and India, that will soon be causing the bulk of the problem.

"There is a misconception that it is all being done by the industrialised north and the developing world is just a passive victim. But under a big 'burn it all' future, three-quarters of the atmospheric stock of carbon will come from the developing world."

So there is no point trying to found climate policy on notions of what is morally right, historically just, or even "people just being nice to each other", says Frame. It has to be recognised that countries are going to be motivated by self- interest as much as the collective good and learn to work with that.

"The idea of coupling climate to aid and development obligations that arise out of colonial history, really doesn't have a very strong resonance with other countries like the US.

"Americans don't perceive themselves as being a colonial power. Their historical narrative is that they were the destroyer of these big European empires. So if you try to hang your hat on an emotional feeling, you'll get a very different answer from them." Climate policies can be effective only if they are focused on tackling the problem at hand, says Frame. Take the plight of low-lying island nations like Tuvalu and the Maldives.

Even a one metre sea level rise will swamp these small countries, removing them from the map. But is the rest of the world really going to change its ways to save them?

"I saw an estimate where it would cost US$30 trillion to 2030 to get the Earth on a 1.5'C warming trajectory. Well, let's say, ballpark, there's 150 million people living in the bottom two metres above sea level. The spend to achieve that would be US$200,000 per person.

"Now the average statistical value of a life across the world - the amount we normally spend on people to keep them alive - is about US$6000. So we'd be spending some 50 times more on this particular initiative than any other initiative.

"So why would we do this? Why would it be rational?"

At a climate summit, the simple mathematics would rule, says Frame. Which means island nations ought to be going into the talks seeking some kind of other rescue deal.

"I think there would be some will for that, but very often negotiators don't know that is the question they should be asking."

Frame says this cold-eyed assessment of how the players are going to act might sound brutal. However, it is the only way robust policy bargains can be struck across a world with so many different viewpoints and circumstances.

This is why Frame is not too concerned by the apparent failure of the Kyoto Protocol ETS agreements - the attempt to put a world price on carbon by charging countries to pollute.

New Zealand is being much criticised for backing even further away from its own ETS commitments this year. To be effective, the New Zealand scheme would have to cost $20 per tonne of emissions, yet it has been so watered down the price sits at around $1 a tonne.

He says it was too much to expect the world to move in the same direction at the same speed. "Each country is going to have to decide what it can do."

He believes the game has now changed to a more pragmatic approach, where individual nations will do deals that may be wrapped in with trade and aid agreements. "Access to markets could be swapped for climate commitments."

It might be piecemeal, but it will create the economic incentives to play the good global citizen by embracing renewable energy programmes, carbon taxes and other climate-friendly policies. The planet should still get there in the end, Frame says.

"Yes, the ETS has been watered down and that's a shame. But it comes down now to what's good second-best policy? What's fair in an unfair world?"

?

Ice reflects 80 per cent of the sunlight that strikes it back into space, while open ocean absorbs 90 per cent.

In 2012, Arctic sea ice shrank to its smallest recorded extent in recent times, its coverage falling to 3.4 square km.

2007's previous low of 4.2 square km followed an unusual summer of warm southerlies and clear skies. The 2012 melt was without these helpful conditions.

Since the 1980s, the September minimum sea ice extent has been declining by 13 per cent per decade.

Because Arctic sea ice is getting less time to reform each winter, it is thinning rapidly as well.

In Antarctica, sea ice near the Antarctic Peninsula is seeing a decline, but is in fact increasing slightly in other parts.

The Arctic is an ocean surrounded by land which contributes to its warming, while the Antarctic is a continent isolated by encircling wind and ocean currents.

Source: US National Snow and Ice Data Center

- ? Fairfax NZ News

Comments

Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/news/7842041/The-politics-of-climate-change

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Internet Franchise | Find New Articles at Just Articles Article Directory

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How to Promote Internet Franchise Business
Be it Australia, India, Brazil, Canada, China or Germany, franchise business opportunities, including Internet franchise ventures, are growing in leaps and bounds across the world. A study by the International Franchise Association (IFA) reveals that the US franchising industry facilitates 760,000 business houses, 18 million jobs and is responsible for a payroll of $ 500 billion! The US has the worlds largest franchise industry, followed by Canada, which is said to represent more than $ 100 billion in sales per year.
In the rapidly growing market competition, it is imperative for all internet business opportunities to promote themselves well. The following are some tips for promoting franchise opportunities.
Tips for Promoting Internet Franchise Opportunities
There are several simple methods of promoting online franchise businesses. It is usually recommended that franchise opportunities should begin their promotional endeavor by analyzing the key selling point/s one that sets the business apart from competitors. Knowing why customers would prefer a business concept to others is imperative to being successful in particular fields. Subsequent to this, internet franchise ventures can concentrate on the following:
Protection of business logo: For operating a franchise, it is crucial that business houses have full trademark protection. The company logo, designs and monetary systems must be strictly guarded.
Development of strong marketing strategies: Online franchise business offering internet franchise opportunities must have very strong marketing strategies. Highlighting the key strengths of the company and the potential benefits of affiliation with the business in particular is imperative to creating and increasing affiliate network.
Investment on high search engine rank: Getting listed on the first few search engine result pages (SERPs) will ensure maximum exposure, thus, popularity of the internet franchise opportunity. To this end, employing search engine optimization (SEO) tactics becomes crucial.
Social media promotions: With the boom in social networking sites, LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook have become the most favored junctions for establishing relationships, searching for referrals and carrying out competitive recognizance. Blog as well as consumer forums are increasingly becoming popular for sharing consumer experiences, and having almost unlimited audience. By posting relevant information on social networking sites, internet franchise opportunities can greatly increase their affiliate base.
In addition to utilizing these methods of promoting internet franchise opportunities, business houses must remember to convince potential affiliates of their unfailing support and guidance. Lack of online guidance is the reason why most affiliates fail in franchise opportunities. Therefore, assuring affiliates that they will be provided with the necessary tools and training, crucial to their success, will make the existing ones comfortable and attract more. To learn more tips and tricks of the game, join www.yonsal.com. . More coming on Franchise Blog.

Yonsal & Sanoy an Internet Franchise pertains to a franchise that is operated online. http://blog.yonsal.com/franchise/132-internet-franchise/

A video presentation about the ins and outs of franchising and what you need to know.
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Source: http://justarticles.net/10/internet-franchise/

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Friday, October 19, 2012

Low Interest Personal Loan in Pune | HDFC Bank | Citi Bank | Bajaj ...

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Video: Obama, Romney to trade laughs at Alfred E. Smith Dinner

Diet soda may be doing these 7 bad things to your body

What's the single biggest source of calories for Americans? White bread? Big Macs? Actually, try soda. The average American drinks about two cans of the stuff daily. Diet soda may have no calories, but it can come with its own set of side effects.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/49469765#49469765

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How to look up sports scores and schedules, team rosters, and player stats using Siri

How to look up sports schedules, player stats, game information, and more with Siri

Siri has become a full blown sports fan with iOS 6. Whether you're on the road and desperate for the latest news, or at a bar and just as desperate to win a bet, Siri now has you covered. From current game scores to upcoming schedules, player stats to team rosters and standings, you can query and compare to your soccer, football, baseball, and hockey from the following leagues:

How to look up current scores and game information with Siri

Siri makes it easy to keep up with games or to check in on a score for a game you may have missed. By default Siri will pull the score for the game currently going on or the last game a certain team played.

  1. Press and hold down the Home button to activate Siri.
  2. launch siri on iphone 5
  3. Ask Siri something like "What's the score for the Chicago Bears game?" or "What was the score for last night's Chicago Bears game?"
  4. ask siri game scores
  5. Siri will search for a game currently going on or she will give you scores for the most recent game that specific team played and present you with the information.
  6. siri game scores

How to look up game schedules with Siri

Siri can give you a list of scheduled games if you just ask her for them. While some sports may show a few upcoming games, many sports, like football, will only show the next upcoming game for either a league or specific team.

  1. Press and hold down the Home button to activate Siri.
  2. launch siri on iphone 5
  3. Say something like "When do the Chicago bears play next?" or "Tell me when the next Chicago Bears game is." or "When is the next NFL game scheduled for?"
  4. Siri will give you information on the next game scheduled for that particular league or team.
  5. siri schedule for sports

How to look up player statistics with Siri

  1. Press and hold down the Home button to activate Siri.
  2. launch siri on iphone 5
  3. Ask Siri something like "Does Matt Ryan or Jay Cutler have more touchdowns?" or something even simpler like "Show me stats for Jay Cutler."
  4. Siri will either give you a comparison of the players you've asked about or the stats for the specific player you want to know about.
  5. siri league standings

How to look up league standings with Siri

  1. Press and hold down the Home button to activate Siri.
  2. launch siri on iphone 5
  3. Ask Siri something about the league you want rankings for. You can say things like "Show me current NFL standings." or "Show me the standings for the MLB."
  4. Siri will pull the standings for whatever sports association you are looking for.
  5. siri player stats


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/_gFG7IkvrMc/story01.htm

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Thursday, October 18, 2012

PM stands by 'lowest' tariff vow

David Cameron: ''I want to be on the side of hard pressed, hard working families who often struggle to pay energy bills''

David Cameron has insisted energy firms will be compelled to give customers "the lowest tariff" as he sought to clear up confusion over energy policy.

The exact details of how this will be achieved, in next month's Energy Bill, have yet to be decided.

But Downing Street claims consumer groups and energy firms SSE and Ovo support the policy.

Some business groups warn it could damage competition and even lead to higher prices.

It comes after 24 hours of apparent confusion over where the government stands, with Labour accusing ministers of throwing energy policy into "chaos".

During Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday, Mr Cameron made a surprise announcement promising to legislate "so that energy companies have to give the lowest tariff to their customers".

The main energy firms said they knew nothing of the plan - or of the government's intention to put it into legislation.

Continue reading the main story

There has been a lot of uncertainty after the prime minister's statement in the Commons yesterday.

Officials in Whitehall were saying this policy is very much in development, and the prime minister had spoken a little bit early on this.

What we've seen today is a government that is so desperate to try and say that it is on the side of people who are feeling the pinch in a time of austerity, particularly when energy prices are rising, that they announced a policy before all their ducks were in a row.

Energy Secretary Ed Davey appeared to distance himself from the proposal and Downing Street said energy firms would be obliged only to "offer" the cheapest tariffs.

Energy minister John Hayes, summoned to the Commons to clear up the confusion, said a number of options were being considered.

These included an evaluation of whether voluntary agreements made by the energy companies in April should be "made binding" through legislation.

"This is a complicated area and we will discuss with the industry, consumer groups and the regulator in order to work through the detail," Mr Hayes said.

But arriving for an EU summit in Brussels, Mr Cameron stood by his remarks, telling reporters: "I want to be on the side of hard-pressed hard-working families who often struggle to pay energy bills.

"That's why I said in the House of Commons yesterday we're going to use the forthcoming legislation - the Energy Bill coming up this year - so that we ensure that customers get the lowest tariffs."

In his statement to MPs, Mr Hayes said the government needed a "robust" relationship with the six big energy firms and would take the "necessary steps to ensure people get the best possible deal".

Shadow energy secretary Caroline Flint said Mr Cameron had thrown energy policy into "confusion", causing "chaos" in the energy industry.

Angela Knight, chief executive of the Energy UK - the trade association for the energy sector - told BBC News the industry had been taken by surprise by the PM's announcement and more clarity was needed on the government's position.

She said the industry had already made progress by introducing "easily understandable tariffs, much fewer tariffs and assisting people as to how they can find out exactly which one is suitable for them".

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

I asked the boss of one of the UK's biggest gas companies what would happen if they were forced by the government to offer all their customers the lowest tariff they offer?

End Quote

Business groups warned forcing companies to give customers the cheapest tariffs could damage competition in the market.

Deputy director general of the CBI Neil Bentley said "scare stories" about the government's commitment to the energy market could "create a lot more uncertainty for companies looking to invest in the UK".

But consumer group Which? urged Mr Cameron to "stick to the promise" he made in Parliament.

"Just giving people information on the lowest tariff is not enough when trust is at an all-time low in the industry and switching levels are falling," Which? said.

Greenpeace said the government's energy policy was now "as confusing as British Gas tariffs" and the UK needed to do more to reduce its reliance on gas.

Under this voluntary arrangement the six main energy providers agreed to contact customers once a year to tell them what the best tariff is for them, and how to get it and to contact customers coming to the end of a fixed-term contract with the same advice.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-19986929#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Too late to stop global warming by cutting emissions? Scientists argue for adaption policies

ScienceDaily (Oct. 17, 2012) ? Governments and institutions should focus on developing adaption policies to address and mitigate against the negative impact of global warming, rather than putting the emphasis on carbon trading and capping greenhouse-gas emissions, argue Johannesburg-based Wits University geoscientist Dr Jasper Knight and Dr Stephan Harrison from the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom.

"At present, governments' attempts to limit greenhouse-gas emissions through carbon cap-and-trade schemes and to promote renewable and sustainable energy sources are prob?ably too late to arrest the inevitable trend of global warming," the scientists write in a paper published online in the scientific journal, Nature Climate Change, on Monday, Oct. 14, 2012.

The paper, entitled "The Impacts of climate change on terrestrial Earth surface systems," is published in the Perspective section of Nature Climate Change and argues that much less attention is paid by policymakers to monitor, model and manage the impacts of climate change on the dynamics of Earth surface systems, including glaciers, rivers, mountains and coasts. "This is a critical omis?sion, as Earth surface systems provide water and soil resources, sustain ecosystem services and strongly influence biogeochemical climate feedbacks in ways that are as yet uncertain," the scientists write.

Knight and Harrison want governments to focus more on adaption policies because future impacts of global warming on land-surface stability and the sediment fluxes associated with soil erosion, river down-cutting and coastal erosion are relevant to sustainability, biodiversity and food security. Monitoring and modelling soil erosion loss, for example, are also means by which to examine problems of carbon and nutri?ent fluxes, lake eutrophication, pollutant and coliform dispersal, river siltation and other issues. An Earth-systems approach can actively inform on these cognate areas of environmental policy and planning.

According to the scientists, Earth surface systems' sensitivity to climate forcing is still poorly understood. Measuring this geomorphological sensi?tivity will identify those systems and environments that are most vulnerable to climatic disturbance, and will enable policymakers and managers to prioritise action in these areas.

"This is particularly the case in coastal environments, where rocky and sandy coastlines will yield very different responses to climate forcing, and where coastal-zone management plans are usually based on past rather than future climatic patterns," they argue.

The recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change special report on extreme events and disasters and the forthcoming fifth assessment report, due 2013, include more explicit statements of the role of Earth surface systems in responding to and influencing climate forcing.

"However, monitoring of the response of these systems to climate forcing requires decadal-scale data sets of instrumented basins and under different climatic regimes worldwide. This will require a con-siderable international science effort as well as commitment from national governments," Knight and Harrison urge.

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

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Jasper Knight, Stephan Harrison. The impacts of climate change on terrestrial Earth surface systems. Nature Climate Change, 2012; DOI: 10.1038/nclimate1660

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/ABNNXDCXBIg/121017102943.htm

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