Wednesday, April 3, 2013

International Space Station finds hint of 'dark matter'

GENEVA (AP) ? A $2 billion experiment on the International Space Station is on the verge of explaining one of the more mysterious building blocks of the universe: The dark matter that helps hold the cosmos together.

An international team of scientists says the cosmic ray detector has found the first hint of dark matter, which has never yet been directly observed.

The team said Wednesday its first results from the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, flown into space two years ago, show evidence of a new physics phenomena that could be the strange and unknown matter.

Nobel-winning physicist Samuel Ting, who leads the team at the European particle physics laboratory near Geneva, says he expects a more conclusive answer within months.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/scientists-hint-dark-matter-cosmos-150157072.html

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HTC infographic details one day with the HTC One

Giant HTC One infographic

The folks who can get one are loving their HTC One, and everyone loves infographics - this had to happen

While you're waiting to have a look at the new HTC One, you're probably thinking of how you might use the phones features. We're covering them to give you the in-depth story on what they can do and how to use them, and HTC is now showing you why you may want to.

Blinkfeed and Zoes and the rest of the new Sense 5 can be a bit confusing. We get it. HTC gets it. This is the sort of material HTC needs to produce to cut some of that confusion away, and show folks that they can be productive and have fun with their smartphone. Be sure to click the source link for the mega-huge not safe for mobile version.

Source: HTC



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/OIcAeCFCXLQ/story01.htm

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Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Check Out Chris Brown On The ?Today? Show (VIDEO)

Check Out Chris Brown On The “Today” Show (VIDEO)

Chris Brown still with RihannaChris Brown sat down for an interview with Matt Lauer on the “Today” show this morning, with mixed reactions from fans. Brown opened up about his controversial relationship with Rihanna, as well as his new single about ex-girlfriend, Karrueche Tran, called “Fine China”. Matt Lauer asked Chris Brown, who was charged with felony assault for ...

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Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/04/check-out-chris-brown-on-the-today-show-video/

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Arkansas' GOP-led Legislature passes voter ID law

(AP) ? Arkansas legislators passed a law Monday requiring voters to show photo identification at the polls, overriding Democratic Gov. Mike Beebe's veto of the bill, which he called an expensive solution to a non-existent problem.

The Republican-led state House voted 52-45, largely along party lines, to complete an override that started in the GOP-controlled Senate on a 21-12 vote last week. Only a simple majority was needed in each chamber.

"We are trying to protect the integrity of one of the most fundamental rights we have here in America," said state Rep. Stephen Meeks, a Republican from Greenbrier and the bill's House sponsor. House Speaker Davy Carter, a Cabot Republican who did not vote for the bill when it passed the House last month, supported the override.

The governor, who last week called the bill "an expensive solution in search of a problem," told reporters earlier Monday he had talked with some lawmakers to explain his veto, but had not urged them to vote against an override.

"He made his case as to why he thought it wasn't going to be good for Arkansas, but they have the final say and they've had that say," Beebe spokesman Matt DeCample said after the vote.

Rep. John Walker, a Little Rock Democrat and noted civil rights lawyer, warned lawmakers to "not go back on history" by enacting the requirement. Critics of such voter ID laws say the type of in-person voter fraud they are meant to prevent is extremely rare, and that the laws are really designed to make it harder to vote for certain groups that tend to back Democrats, including minorities, students and the elderly. Black lawmakers in Arkansas have compared the new voter ID law to poll taxes used in the Jim Crow era.

"I dare say you'll find any of your colleagues in this body of my color who will support this. It doesn't matter what their leanings are. What you're doing in effect is saying we don't care about what you think, we're going to do this anyway," said Rep. John Walker, D-Little Rock, who is black. "If you have the majority of course that's what you can do, but do you really uniformly to a person by party disrespect us so much?"

One Democrat, Rep. Fred Love of Little Rock, was listed as voting for the override, but he said planned to file a letter with House clerk stating that he intended to vote against it. The letter wouldn't change the official vote count.

"I think SB2 is bad policy for Arkansas and historically have suppressed voting in minority communities; especially African Americans," Love, who chairs the Legislative Black Caucus, told The Associated Press in an email after the vote. "So this was definitely a mistake."

Sen. Bryan King, who sponsored the bill in the Senate, said after Monday's vote that he was relieved by the results.

"This bill has had the most debate about it, it's had the most scrutiny of any bill this session," the Republican from Green Forest said. "It's going to become the law of the land here in Arkansas, and that's a great thing. An overwhelming majority of Arkansans support it."

The new law will require Arkansas to provide a free photo ID to voters who don't have one and will cost the state an estimated $300,000. The requirement won't take effect until there is funding for the IDs or until January, whichever occurs last.

Rita Sklar, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Arkansas, called the override a "terrible shame" and said the group is prepared to sue to block its enforcement.

"At this point, it looks like we're going to court to defend those disenfranchised by this bill," Sklar said.

While Arkansas poll workers must ask for identification under current law, voters don't have to show it to cast a ballot. Under the new law, voters who don't show photo identification can cast provisional ballots. Those ballots would be counted only if voters provide ID to county election officials or, before noon on the Monday following an election, sign an affidavit stating they are indigent or have a religious objection to being photographed.

Arkansas is among 19 states where proposals to enact voter ID laws or strengthen existing requirements have been introduced this year, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Republicans have been pushing for similar laws in other states, although the measures have faced court challenges. Voter ID laws in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania have been blocked. Similar restrictions by Texas and South Carolina have been rejected by the federal government under the Voting Rights Act, and Mississippi is waiting for federal approval of its photo ID law.

Four states ? Georgia, Indiana, Kansas and Tennessee ? have similarly strict photo ID requirement laws in effect. Virginia will also have a strict photo ID requirement for voters in effect July 2014 under a measure signed into law last week by Gov. Bob McDonnell.

Arkansas Republicans had pushed for voter ID requirements for years, but the measure failed to reach the governor's desk under Democratic majorities. Republicans last November won control of the Legislature for the first time in 138 years and have enjoyed a number of successes, including the passage of stricter anti-abortion laws and broader gun rights.

___

Follow Andrew DeMillo on Twitter at http://twitter.com/ademillo

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-04-01-Arkansas-Voter%20ID/id-ebd86e8fe8f747389899f07cfc467b09

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Margin notes shed new light on Renaissance anatomy masterpiece

When the Renaissance physician and expert dissector Andreas Vesalius first published "De humani corporis fabrica" in 1543, he provided the most detailed look inside the human body of his time.

A previously unknown copy of the impressive anatomy textbook resurfaced a few years ago, and it apparently contains more than a thousand hand-written notes and corrections by the author himself. The annotations reveal that Vesalius was meticulously planning a third edition of the book that never made it to print, researchers say.

"This book is his work bench as much as the dissecting table," Vivian Nutton, a University College London professor emeritus, writes in a recently published analysis of the text in the journal Medical History.

Some edits show that Vesalius wanted to correct mistakes of grammar and syntax and to make his Latin more elegant. Other markings show that he wanted to draw attention to misshapen or illegible letters for his block-cutter. Vesalius also intended to add new information to the text as he learned more about the human body, including what may be one of the oldest references to the practice of female genital mutilation.

In his discussion of circumcision, Vesalius scrawled at the bottom of the page that Ethiopians "cut off the fleshy processes from new born girls in accordance with their religion in the same way as they remove the foreskins of boys, 'although in their religious ceremonies they are otherwise generally similar to those of us Christians,'" Nutton writes. "This is arguably the first reference in a medical text to female genital mutilation for non-medical purposes."

The copy of the book, on loan from an unnamed German collector, is currently available for study at the University of Toronto's Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library.

"He is seen constantly attempting to improve his text both scientifically, and stylistically, and to make it clearer and more accessible to his readers," Philip Oldfield, science and medicine librarian at the University of Toronto, said in a statement this week. "All the evidence points to the conclusion that Vesalius was preparing a new edition of De fabrica that unfortunately never materialized."

The book will be featured as part of an exhibition next year in Toronto to mark the 500th anniversary of Vesalius's birth.

Follow Megan Gannon on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/margin-notes-shed-light-renaissance-anatomy-masterpiece-015813457.html

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3 killed, 1 injured at tavern south of Seattle

SEATTLE (AP) ? Three men were killed and another man was wounded early Sunday when a brawl led to gunfire outside a tavern, police said.

Auburn Police Cmdr. Mike Hirman said dozens of people were leaving the Sports Page Tavern in Auburn, which is about 30 miles south of Seattle, at closing time around 2 a.m. when two groups began fighting in the parking lot.

He said several people pulled handguns and fired shots, and three men were killed. A fourth man suffered multiple gunshot wounds and was in stable condition at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, Hirman said late Sunday. The ages of the four run between 21 and 32.

Problems between two groups, one celebrating a birthday, started inside the tavern when two women had a disagreement.

"The dispute started between two women when one of them danced with a man," Hirman said in a statement late Sunday night.

Hirman said some of the victims and suspects knew each other. The identities of the victims would not be released until Monday afternoon at the earliest, a spokeswoman with the King County Medical Examiner's office said.

Police detained a person of interest and arrested that person on an unrelated weapons charge.

Police have recovered several handguns. They believe several different firearms were used based on shell casings recovered from the scene.

Police in the neighboring suburbs of Federal Way and Kent stopped two vehicles that matched descriptions of cars leaving the scene of the shooting.

Those vehicles were seized, and their occupants were being questioned, said Hirman. The car stopped in Federal Way was riddled with bullets.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/3-killed-1-injured-tavern-south-seattle-155908667.html

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Monday, April 1, 2013

PFT: Pats 'don't need Ed Reed' with Wilson

12018583-largeGetty Images

After the Ravens cut safety Bernard Pollard, we traced the move back to his involvement in the near ?mutiny? that was reported by Mike Silver of Yahoo! Sports during the 2012 season.

After signing a new contract with the Titans, Pollard chafed at the idea that his termination represented payback for stirring up trouble in the locker room.

Because he believes he didn?t stir up trouble in the locker room.

?Coach Harbaugh opened up the floor.? He asked us our opinion on things that were going good and things that wasn?t going good and things that we needed to change,? Pollard told 610 SportsRadio in Houston, via Bo Smolka of CSNBaltimore.com. ?We as humans, we tend to want to know or ask people things, but do we really want to know the truth?? And so I spoke up, Ed [Reed] spoke up, and if it was something that Coach Harbaugh didn?t like, we didn?t know that until now.

?And obviously we would have to say as players that somebody took it personal, because for them not to come back and say, ?OK that wasn?t a problem, there was no mutiny or anything else, I?m offended by that, because we walked away from that situation thinking, ?OK, everybody?s on the same page, we?re all good.?? Like I said, I?m a little offended that the coach never stepped up and said anything.?

In fairness, Harbaugh did say something, a few days before Pollard spoke on the issue.? And while Harbaugh didn?t specifically deny the notion that he was settling a score with Pollard, Harbaugh claimed that decision to cut Pollad was ?a cap move, pure and simple.?

It?s surely not that simple, for either side.? Pollard, for example, glossed over whatever it was that prompted Harbaugh to ?open the floor.?? How many coaches press pause on a busy season to ?open the floor? unless there?s a compelling reason to do it?

As Silver initially reported it, the discourse began after Pollard and Reed loudly objected to practicing in pads following a blowout loss to the Texans.? Harbaugh adroitly transformed the situation into an opportunity to allow players to speak their minds.? And it worked out well, given that the team won, you know, the Super Bowl.

But something prompted the inmates to try to take over the asylum after getting blasted in Houston, and Harbaugh apparently has tried after the confetti settled to get that element out of the locker room.? Along the way, he?s been wise not to publicly point fingers at Pollard or Reed.

Harbaugh also is wise enough to realize that any player who doesn?t understand the notion that coaches coach and players play should be playing for someone else.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/31/rodney-harrison-thinks-pats-got-it-right-with-adrian-wilson/related

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