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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Weekly Alert: 2012 Election


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October 22, 2011
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Here Are The Best Quotes From The GOP's Fight Night Debate Here Are The Best Quotes From The GOP's Fight Night Debate
by Grace Wyler on Oct 19, 2011, 6:08 AM
The Wild West Republicans.


Romney Is Now Crushing Obama On Wall Street Romney Is Now Crushing Obama On Wall Street
by Zeke Miller on Oct 16, 2011, 9:07 PM
Romney leads Obama 2-1 among financial industry donors.


The Best Tweets From Jon Huntsman's Daughters' Sassy Twitter Account The Best Tweets From Jon Huntsman's Daughters' Sassy Twitter Account
by Jon Terbush on Oct 19, 2011, 3:14 PM
The campaign's secret weapon.


Here's Ron Paul's Crazy Plan That Will Destroy The US Economy Here's Ron Paul's Crazy Plan That Will Destroy The US Economy
by Zeke Miller on Oct 18, 2011, 9:15 AM
Eliminating five Cabinet departments is only the first step.


IT'S OFFICIAL: The Herman Cain Bubble Has Popped IT'S OFFICIAL: The Herman Cain Bubble Has Popped
by Zeke Miller on Oct 19, 2011, 12:01 AM
He's peaked.


If You Skipped Last Night's GOP Debate, Here Are The Five Awesome Throwdowns You Missed If You Skipped Last Night's GOP Debate, Here Are The Five Awesome Throwdowns You Missed
by Grace Wyler on Oct 19, 2011, 9:11 AM
The GOP's feistiest show yet.


Ron Paul's New Campaign Slogan: BLACK OUT Ron Paul's New Campaign Slogan: BLACK OUT
by Grace Wyler on Oct 19, 2011, 1:13 PM
Double entendre?


The GOP Candidates Want To Wage War Against The Poor The GOP Candidates Want To Wage War Against The Poor
by Grace Wyler on Oct 17, 2011, 7:54 PM
Defending the 53%.


SHOCK POLL: Cain 43%, Obama 41% SHOCK POLL: Cain 43%, Obama 41%
by Zeke Miller on Oct 17, 2011, 12:23 PM
In a statistical tie.


Herman Cain Just Sent Out A Press Release From The Future Herman Cain Just Sent Out A Press Release From The Future
by Grace Wyler on Oct 20, 2011, 2:27 PM
Very strange.


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The Best of Web Buyer's Guide This Week

The 2011 Spam War: 5 New Battle Weapons | Trick or Tweet: Social Networking Nightmares
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Best of Web Buyer's Guide Best of Web Buyer's Guide

icon How to Stop Hackers in Their Tracks
As one of the largest tertiary care facilities in the Northeast, this hospital is known for its top-of-the-line heart, orthopedic, gynecological, and pediatric care. The IT team manages thousands of Windows XP desktops and laptops that have anti-virus software loaded onto them. But anti-virus alone was no match for the three computer viruses that attacked the network within a six-month span. They needed an automated and cost-effective solution that would keep business operations up and running and secure patient care and data privacy, while protecting against zero-day threats and other malicious code.
View this resource now

icon Trick or Tweet: Social Networking Nightmares
The popularity of social networking sites has increased at astonishing levels. There is no arguing the usefulness of sites such as Facebook or Twitter. They can be used for professional networking and job searches, as a means to increase sales revenue, as a tool to keep the public informed of safety and other issues or as a way to reconnect with friends from way-back-when. By providing the personal information asked in these Facebook questionnaires, you may unwittingly be providing an easy channel for identity theft. Is it worth compromising your online bank account for the bit of amusement that Facebook provides? Probably not. If you still want to have fun with these questionnaires, then by all means do so. But be very careful about the type of information that you provide and how that information could be used if it fell into the wrong hands.
View this resource now

icon Facebook, Twitter & LinkedIn: The Risks vs. Rewards
Social media, when used in a corporate setting, represents a balancing act of rewards and risks for IT, business and senior management in virtually any organization or industry. In short, although social media is a relatively new communication and information management channel relative to more traditional tools like email or instant messaging, the same fundamental management requirements apply: social media must be monitored for malware and inappropriate content, and relevant business records sent through social media must be retained and easily accessible for as long as necessary.
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Top Resources of the Week

The 2011 Spam War: 5 New Battle Weapons
Recent attacks show that spammers and scammers are determined to find their way through any gap, however slight, in an enterprise's defenses. They're exploiting a variety of tactics - including blended attacks combining email, Web access, and phony Web sites - to infect systems on enterprise networks. This white paper discusses the ongoing evolution of spam threats and the technology needed to close that remaining 5% gap in defenses. To defeat spam, enterprises need a holistic approach rather than an uncoordinated collection of features and filters. By systematically tying features together through real-time machine learning and analysis, enterprises can increase the effectiveness of their spam defenses to nearly 100%.
READ MORE >>>

The New IT Help Desk: Solutions for 2012
Your end users are more demanding than ever. They want immediate attention and immediate results - or in IT terms - fast response times and instant problem resolution. They also demand consistently high levels of service, and of course, they expect constant communication on the status of their requests. How do you meet such demands when your own IT resources may be under significant strain? Many organizations around the world have turned to the best practices recommended by ITIL as a way to cut costs, align resources, improve service levels, and deliver consistent levels of service to the business. If you are looking for a new help desk solution, BMC's Remedyforce Service Desk may be just the right fit for you.
READ MORE >>>

The CIO's Guide to Mobility: 5 New Trends
IT consumerization, workforce mobility and flexible computing are changing the relationship between enterprise IT, knowledge workers and end users. For the CIO, IT consumerization represents the confluence of a difficult set of challenges (security, technology policy, data protection, end-user technology) and business strategy (new business models, talent strategy, corporate brand and identity). Learn about five trends that are shaping the future of enterprise mobility, and get nine recommendations for the new era of enterprise mobility.
READ MORE >>>

How to Use Analytics to Work Smarter, Not Harder
The key to working smarter is having the right information and insight to drive smarter business outcomes. Working smarter means your front line business leaders know where to find the new revenue opportunities and which product or service offerings are most likely to address the market requirement. It means business analysts can quickly access the right data points to evaluate key performance and revenue indicators in building successful corporate growth strategies.
READ MORE >>>


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ScienceDaily: Strange Science News

ScienceDaily: Strange Science News


Elaborate bird plumage due to testosterone?

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:47 AM PDT

In many bird species males have a more elaborate plumage than females. This elaborate plumage is often used to signal body condition, to intimidate rivals or to attract potential mates. In many cases plumage colouration also depends on the hormone testosterone. Researchers have now investigated whether this also holds true for sex role-reversed bird species.

ScienceDaily: Latest Science News

ScienceDaily: Latest Science News


Preventing cancer development inside the cell cycle

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:55 PM PDT

Researchers have identified a cell cycle-regulated mechanism behind the transformation of normal cells into cancerous cells. The study results suggest that inhibition of the CK1 enzyme may be a new therapeutic target for the treatment of cancer cells formed as a result of a malfunction in the cell's mTOR signaling pathway.

Study finds no correlation between primary kidney stone treatment and diabetes

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:54 PM PDT

A Mayo Clinic study finds no correlation between the use of shock waves to break up kidney stones and the long-term development of diabetes.

PSA test valuable in predicting biopsy need, low-risk prostate cancer, study finds

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:54 PM PDT

The prostate-specific antigen test, commonly known as the PSA test, is valuable in predicting which men should have biopsies and which are likely to be diagnosed with low-risk prostate cancer, a new study has found.

Trio of studies support use of PET/CT scans as prostate cancer staging tool

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 01:22 PM PDT

Recent studies have suggested that C-11 choline positron emission tomography/computerized tomography scans can be utilized as a staging and potentially therapeutic tool in prostate cancer.

Commonly used three-drug regimen for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis found harmful

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 01:22 PM PDT

A multi-center, clinical trial studying treatments for the lung-scarring disease idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis has been stopped for safety concerns. The trial found that people with IPF receiving a currently used triple-drug therapy consisting of prednisone, azathioprine, and N-acetylcysteine had worse outcomes than those who received placebos.

Psychologists defend the importance of general abilities

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 01:22 PM PDT

What makes a great violinist, physicist, or crossword puzzle solver? Are experts born or made? The question has intrigued psychologists since psychology was born -- and the rest of us, too, who may secretly fantasize playing duets with Yo Yo Ma or winning a Nobel Prize in science.

Why do some athletes choke under pressure?

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 12:16 PM PDT

Athletes know they should just do their thing on the 18th hole, or during the penalty shootout, or when they're taking a three-point shot in the last moments of the game. But when that shot could mean winning or losing, it's easy to choke. A new article looks at why paying too much attention to what you're doing can ruin performance.

Coupling of proteins promotes glioblastoma development, researchers find

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 12:16 PM PDT

Two previously unassociated proteins known to be overly active in a variety of cancers bind together to ignite and sustain malignant brain tumors, a research team reports.

Cooling the warming debate: Major new analysis confirms that global warming is real

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 11:47 AM PDT

Global warming is real, according to a major new study. Despite issues raised by climate change skeptics, the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature study finds reliable evidence of a rise in the average world land temperature of approximately 1 degree Celsius since the mid-1950s.

US residents say Hawaii's coral reef ecosystems worth $33.57 billion per year

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 10:50 AM PDT

The American people assign an estimated total economic value of $33.57 billion for the coral reefs of the main Hawaiian Islands. The findings came from survey of 3,100 households -- from all US residents, not just Hawaii or coastal residents. Survey allowed the public to express its preferences and values for protection and restoration of the coral reef ecosystems around the main Hawaiian Islands.

'Trading places' most common pattern for couples dealing with male depression

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 09:58 AM PDT

Researchers have identified three major patterns that emerge among couples dealing with male depression. These can be described as "trading places," "business as usual" and "edgy tensions."

Housing, health care contribute most to rising costs of living in Washington State, U.S.

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 09:58 AM PDT

It costs 8 percent more on average than it did two years ago for Washington State residents to make ends meet, according to a new report.

Plants feel the force: How plants sense touch, gravity and other physical forces

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 09:57 AM PDT

At the bottom of plants' ability to sense touch, gravity or a nearby trellis are mechanosensitive channels, pores through the cells' plasma membrane that are opened and closed by the deformation of the membrane. Biologists are studying the roles these channels play in Arabdopsis plants by growing mutant plants that lack one or more of the 10 possible channel proteins in this species.

Blood-pressure-lowering drug after stroke aids recovery, study suggests

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 09:57 AM PDT

A commonly prescribed blood pressure-lowering medication appears to kick start recovery in the unaffected brain hemisphere after a stroke by boosting blood vessel growth, a new study has found.

Decision-making: What you want vs. how you get it

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 09:57 AM PDT

New research reveals how we make decisions. Birds choosing between berry bushes and investors trading stocks are faced with the same fundamental challenge -- making optimal choices in an environment featuring varying costs and benefits.

Fluoride shuttle increases storage capacity: Researchers develop new concept for rechargeable batteries

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 09:55 AM PDT

Researchers have developed a new concept for rechargeable batteries. Based on a fluoride shuttle -- the transfer of fluoride anions between the electrodes -- it promises to enhance the storage capacity reached by lithium-ion batteries by several factors. Operational safety is also increased, as it can be done without lithium.

Elderly long-term care residents suffer cognitively during disasters

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 09:55 AM PDT

In a summer with unprecedented weather events, from tornadoes, floods, fires and hurricanes, researchers found that physiological changes associated with aging and the presence of chronic illness make older adults more susceptible to illness or injury, even death, during a disaster.

Biomarker detects graft-versus-host-disease in cancer patients after bone marrow transplant

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 09:55 AM PDT

A team of researchers has found a biomarker they believe can help rapidly identify one of the most serious complications in cancer patients after a bone marrow transplant.

Vivid descriptions of faces 'don't have to go into detail'

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 09:55 AM PDT

Celebrated writers such as Charles Dickens and George Eliot described characters' faces vividly without going into detail about their features, according to researchers.

Research involving thyroid hormone lays foundation for more targeted drug development

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 09:51 AM PDT

New research advances a strategy for taming the side effects and enhancing the therapeutic benefits of steroids and other medications that work by disrupting the activity of certain hormones.

How do protein binding sites stay dry in water?

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 09:51 AM PDT

Researchers studied the condition for model cavity and tunnel structures resembling the binding sites of proteins to stay dry without losing their ability to react, a prerequisite for proteins to establish stable interactions with other proteins in water.

Aggregating bandwidth for faster mobile networks

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 09:51 AM PDT

A new study reveals that the value of mobile spectrum, the capacity to transfer data across mobile networks, is only likely to increase as the demand for data transfer increases. However, it is only those telecommunications companies that bought up in government auctions the inexpensive licenses to operate at particularly frequencies of the spectrum that will be in strong position to dominate in the consumer and enterprise markets.

Plate tectonics may control reversals in Earth's magnetic field

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 05:45 AM PDT

Earth's magnetic field has reversed many times at an irregular rate throughout its history. Long periods without reversal have been interspersed with eras of frequent reversals. What is the reason for these reversals and their irregularity? Researchers have shed new light on the issue by demonstrating that, over the last 300 million years, reversal frequency has depended on the distribution of tectonic plates on the surface of the globe. This result does not imply that terrestrial plates themselves trigger the switch over of the magnetic field. Instead, it establishes that although the reversal phenomenon takes place, in fine, within Earth's liquid core, it is nevertheless sensitive to what happens outside the core and more specifically in Earth's mantle.

New mechanism inhibiting the spread and growth of cancer found in motile cells

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 05:45 AM PDT

A revolutionary discovery regarding motile cancer cells is challenging previous conceptions.

Florida Keys ecosystem threatened by multiple stressors

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:47 AM PDT

Scientists have found that pressure from increasing coastal populations, ship and boat groundings, marine debris, poaching, and climate change are critically threatening the health of the Florida Keys ecosystem.

Elaborate bird plumage due to testosterone?

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:47 AM PDT

In many bird species males have a more elaborate plumage than females. This elaborate plumage is often used to signal body condition, to intimidate rivals or to attract potential mates. In many cases plumage colouration also depends on the hormone testosterone. Researchers have now investigated whether this also holds true for sex role-reversed bird species.

Simple lifestyle changes can add a decade or more healthy years to the average lifespan, Canadian study shows

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:47 AM PDT

Health prevention strategies to help people achieve their optimal health potential could add a decade or more of healthy years to the average lifespan and save the economy billions of dollars as a result of reduced cardiovascular disease.

Issues faced by friends and family of the suicidal

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:47 AM PDT

A study focusing on the family and friends of people who were suicidal has highlighted the main challenges they face when trying to judge whether a person is in danger and decide what they should do about it.

Poor cerebral cortex functions leads to more impulsive behavior

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:46 AM PDT

If the front part of the cerebral cortex is less active then people have less control over their social behavior and automatically follow their inclinations more. The research was the first to make use of magnetic stimulation (TMS) to suppress this part at the front of the prefrontal cortex. During TMS a changing magnetic field on the head temporarily influences the activity of the underlying part of the brain.

Boosting mental performance with fish oil?

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:46 AM PDT

A particular fish oil (omega-3) supplement has been shown to improve blood flow to the brain during mental activity and to impact on certain aspects of mental performance in young adults, according to new research.

Likely reason for neurological injuries in children

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:45 AM PDT

Scientists have discovered new pathways of neurons migrating from lateral ventricles to the prefrontal cortex. The work done in children at early ages reveals a new cell pathway which may increase the amount of neurons in regions important for cognitive tasks, emotional processes and spatial perception.

Digital worlds can help autistic children to develop social skills

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:45 AM PDT

The benefits of virtual worlds can be used to help autistic children develop social skills beyond their anticipated levels, suggest early findings from new research. Researchers have developed an interactive environment which uses multi-touch screen technology where virtual characters on the screen demonstrate gestures and show children's actions in real time.

New study shows no simultaneous warming of northern and southern hemispheres as a result of climate change for 20,000 years

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:45 AM PDT

A common argument against global warming is that the climate has always varied. Temperatures rise sometimes and this is perfectly natural is the usual line. However, a climate researcher has now shown that global warming, i.e. simultaneous warming events in the northern and southern hemispheres, have not occurred in the past 20 000 years, which is as far back as it is possible to analyze with sufficient precision to compare with modern developments.

Seeking answers to treat the fear of childbirth

Posted: 21 Oct 2011 04:45 AM PDT

One of five Norwegian women suffers from a fear of childbirth. This fear increases health risks to mother and child, results in more planned and emergency Caesarean sections and consumes substantial resources at hospitals. Now researchers are looking for the causes.

First Ebola-like virus native to Europe discovered

Posted: 20 Oct 2011 04:18 PM PDT

Researchers have discovered a new Ebola-like virus -- Lloviu virus -- in bats from northern Spain. Lloviu virus is the first known filovirus native to Europe. Filoviruses, which include well-known viruses like Ebola and Marburg, are among the deadliest pathogens in humans and non-human primates, and are generally found in East Africa and the Philippines. The findings thus expand the natural geographical distribution of filoviruses.

Giant flakes make graphene oxide gel: Discovery could boost metamaterials, high-strength fibers

Posted: 20 Oct 2011 02:14 PM PDT

Slices of graphene oxide in a solution arrange themselves into a nematic liquid crystal. At a sufficient concentration, giant flakes will form a gel, a precursor to manufacturing metamaterals and fibers.

Hunters present in North America at least 800 years earlier than previously thought

Posted: 20 Oct 2011 11:51 AM PDT

The tip of a bone point fragment found embedded in a mastodon rib from an archaeological site in Washington state shows that hunters were present in North America at least 800 years before Clovis, confirming that the first inhabitants arrived earlier to North America than previously thought, says a team of researchers.

Friday, October 21, 2011

BREAKING NEWS: Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Sultan Bin Abdul Aziz Has Died

Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Sultan Bin Abdul Aziz, brother of King Abdullah, has officially died.

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