বৃহস্পতিবার, ৩১ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Mixed forest provides beneficial effects

Mixed forest provides beneficial effects [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jan-2013
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Contact: Lars Gamfeldt
lars.gamfeldt@gu.se
46-070-339-3921
University of Gothenburg

Forestry and nature conservation can benefit from promoting more different varieties of trees, according to a new study in which researchers from the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, were involved.

Modern forestry is based largely on monocultures usually pine or spruce trees in Sweden mainly because this is seen to be more rational. However, a forest also contributes ecosystem services other than just wood production, such as biological diversity, carbon sequestration and berries.

A new study by the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) and Future Forests shows that in comparison to monocultures mixed forest provides beneficial effects for a number of different services, including tree growth. Thestudy was led by Lars Gamfeldt from the University of Gothenburg.

"It has often been suggested that a high diversity of tree species has a positive impact on ecosystem processes," says Lars. "But until now, this relationship has mainly only been analysed for one process or ecosystem service at a time."

The study, which was carried out by an international team of researchers, is based on data from the Swedish National Forest Inventory and the Swedish Forest Soil Inventory. By examining the importance of the presence of various tree species in relation to six different ecosystem services (tree growth, carbon sequestration, berry production, food for wildlife, the presence of dead wood and biological diversity in ground vegetation), the study was able to show that all six of these services had a positive relationship to the number of tree species.

For example, the biomass of spruce is linked to high tree growth and the biomass of pine to berry production, while higher levels of carbon sequestration occur in areas with a larger amount of birch. In order to increase all these services, forestry may therefore need to make use of more varieties of trees. Other studies of forests in central Europe, the Mediterranean region and Canada back up these results.

The study also investigated the relationship between the individual ecosystem services. For example, high levels of tree growth appear to have a negative correlation with the production of both berries and food for wildlife, and with the presence of dead wood. On the other hand, there was a positive correlation between food for wildlife and both berry production and biological diversity in the ground vegetation.

"It's not just a simple case of always getting more of everything," explains Ume University's Jon Moen, "Sometimes you have to strike a balance between different ecosystem services."

The new study has been published in the scientific journal Nature Communications, and goes against accepted thinking within Swedish forestry to some extent. "Our findings show that both forestry and nature conservation could benefit from promoting more different varieties of trees, thereby providing a greater diversity of ecosystem services," concludes Jan Bengtsson from SLU.

###

Future Forests is a collaboration between SLU, Ume University and the Forestry Research Institute of Sweden (Skogforsk), and is financed by the Swedish Foundation for Strategic Environmental Research (Mistra), SLU, Ume University, Skogforsk and the Swedish forest industry.

Contacts:

Lars Gamfeldt, The University of Gothenburg,
+46 (0)70 3393921,
lars.gamfeldt@gu.se

Jan Bengtsson, The Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,
+46 (0)70 2335118,
jan.bengtsson@slu.se

Jon Moen, Ume University,
+46 (0)70 2271513,
jon.moen@emg.umu.se



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?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Mixed forest provides beneficial effects [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Lars Gamfeldt
lars.gamfeldt@gu.se
46-070-339-3921
University of Gothenburg

Forestry and nature conservation can benefit from promoting more different varieties of trees, according to a new study in which researchers from the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, were involved.

Modern forestry is based largely on monocultures usually pine or spruce trees in Sweden mainly because this is seen to be more rational. However, a forest also contributes ecosystem services other than just wood production, such as biological diversity, carbon sequestration and berries.

A new study by the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) and Future Forests shows that in comparison to monocultures mixed forest provides beneficial effects for a number of different services, including tree growth. Thestudy was led by Lars Gamfeldt from the University of Gothenburg.

"It has often been suggested that a high diversity of tree species has a positive impact on ecosystem processes," says Lars. "But until now, this relationship has mainly only been analysed for one process or ecosystem service at a time."

The study, which was carried out by an international team of researchers, is based on data from the Swedish National Forest Inventory and the Swedish Forest Soil Inventory. By examining the importance of the presence of various tree species in relation to six different ecosystem services (tree growth, carbon sequestration, berry production, food for wildlife, the presence of dead wood and biological diversity in ground vegetation), the study was able to show that all six of these services had a positive relationship to the number of tree species.

For example, the biomass of spruce is linked to high tree growth and the biomass of pine to berry production, while higher levels of carbon sequestration occur in areas with a larger amount of birch. In order to increase all these services, forestry may therefore need to make use of more varieties of trees. Other studies of forests in central Europe, the Mediterranean region and Canada back up these results.

The study also investigated the relationship between the individual ecosystem services. For example, high levels of tree growth appear to have a negative correlation with the production of both berries and food for wildlife, and with the presence of dead wood. On the other hand, there was a positive correlation between food for wildlife and both berry production and biological diversity in the ground vegetation.

"It's not just a simple case of always getting more of everything," explains Ume University's Jon Moen, "Sometimes you have to strike a balance between different ecosystem services."

The new study has been published in the scientific journal Nature Communications, and goes against accepted thinking within Swedish forestry to some extent. "Our findings show that both forestry and nature conservation could benefit from promoting more different varieties of trees, thereby providing a greater diversity of ecosystem services," concludes Jan Bengtsson from SLU.

###

Future Forests is a collaboration between SLU, Ume University and the Forestry Research Institute of Sweden (Skogforsk), and is financed by the Swedish Foundation for Strategic Environmental Research (Mistra), SLU, Ume University, Skogforsk and the Swedish forest industry.

Contacts:

Lars Gamfeldt, The University of Gothenburg,
+46 (0)70 3393921,
lars.gamfeldt@gu.se

Jan Bengtsson, The Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,
+46 (0)70 2335118,
jan.bengtsson@slu.se

Jon Moen, Ume University,
+46 (0)70 2271513,
jon.moen@emg.umu.se



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-01/uog-mfp013013.php

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University of Alabama golfers Justin Thomas and Bobby Wyatt were named to the 20...

University of Alabama golfers Justin Thomas and Bobby Wyatt were named to the 2013 watch list on Wednesday for the prestigious Ben Hogan Award presented by Crowne Plaza Hotels and Resorts, in conjunction with Colonial Country Club, The Friends of ?

Source: http://www.facebook.com/AlabamaAthletics/posts/10151464280647209

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South Korea successfully launches native rocket and satellite into space

South Korea launches first native rocket and satellite into space

The spacefaring club has been a small one: to date, just 10 countries have managed to build their own rocket and successfully deploy at least a satellite. Make that 11. South Korea has entered the fold by successfully launching its mostly self-developed, two-stage Naro rocket and putting the vehicle's Science and Technology Satellite-2C payload into orbit. The achievement comes after two prominent failures in 2009 and 2010, and is partly symbolic when there's no plans for a short-term follow-up. However, the success gets the ball rolling for the long run -- the Korea Aerospace Research Institute is working with contractors to build completely in-house rocket stages by 2016, and reach 300 tons of thrust as soon as 2018.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Via: Space.com

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/-GydZ0X-i88/

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Prehistoric humans not wiped out by comet, says researchers

Jan. 30, 2013 ? Comet explosions did not end the prehistoric human culture, known as Clovis, in North America 13,000 years ago, according to research published in the journal Geophysical Monograph Series.

Researchers from Royal Holloway university, together with Sandia National Laboratories and 13 other universities across the United States and Europe, have found evidence which rebuts the belief that a large impact or airburst caused a significant and abrupt change to Earth's climate and terminated the Clovis culture. They argue that other explanations must be found for the apparent disappearance.

Clovis is the name archaeologists have given to the earliest well-established human culture in the North American continent. It is named after the town in New Mexico, where distinct stone tools were found in the 1920s and 1930s.

Researchers argue that no appropriately sized impact craters from that time period have been discovered, and no shocked material or any other features of impact have been found in sediments. They also found that samples presented in support of the impact hypothesis were contaminated with modern material and that no physics model can support the theory.

"The theory has reached zombie status," said Professor Andrew Scott from the Department of Earth Sciences at Royal Holloway. "Whenever we are able to show flaws and think it is dead, it reappears with new, equally unsatisfactory, arguments.

"Hopefully new versions of the theory will be more carefully examined before they are published," he concluded.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Royal Holloway London.

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


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/top_news/top_environment/~3/tT4q5zAnQvE/130130082447.htm

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The-Dream - Wedding Crasher

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

Source: http://www.last.fm/music/The-Dream/_/Wedding+Crasher

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Personal Loans to Help Australians in Need: FSO

Queensland, Australia, 29th January 2013. / Financial Services Online.

?As Australia enters cleanup mode following a series of devastating fires and floods, Financial Services Online CEO, Andrew Clark, has announced a package of secured and unsecured personal finance solutions designed to help affected Australians get their lives back together, irrespective of their credit history or employment status.?

?Financial Services Online (FSO) is an online finance and insurance portal providing free, direct access to a referral network of over 1,000 financial specialists and loan providers throughout Australia.?

?When a customer applies online at FSO, their enquiry is directed immediately to the financial specialist in the best position to help with the enquiry and to provide the most appropriate advice.?

?Specialties include:

? Fast cash advances for amounts from $500 up to $3,000 for short term relief.

? Bad credit debt consolidation loans for amounts from $10,000 up to $100,000.

? Medium term unsecured loans for amounts up to $5,000 irrespective of credit or employment history.

? Traditional unsecured personal loans for any worthwhile purpose,

? Secured loans including car loans, home loans, business loans, boat loans and more?

?Irrespective of whether someone has insurance to cover their home, contents and other property losses, natural disasters inevitably leave people with a range of financial issues caused by displacement and the interruption to their lives, businesses and employment.?

?Meeting existing finance and loan commitments can become increasingly difficult for individuals and families when their incomes are impacted through temporary interruption to their income.?

?Many Aussies will also be looking to replace uninsured cars, boats and other personal items. The FSO broker referral network aims to make this happen for customers in this situation ... good credit or bad.?

?Consolidation of existing debts into a single, smaller and more manageable monthly repayment is a good example of how we can reduce financial pressure.?

?FSO has already assisted thousands of personal loan customers wanting to consolidate existing debts, even with past or current defaults on their credit file.?

?A personal loan solution from FSO might just be the perfect tool to relieve the financial stress.?

Financial Services Online (est 2001) provides a free service, connecting people directly with specialist financial advice based on the location and specific requirements of each individual consumer across a range of financial products and services including life insurance, income protection, public liability, professional indemnity, health insurance, superannuation, home loans, car loans, unsecured personal loans, debt consolidation loans, credit repair and more.

For more information kindly visit: http://www.financialservicesonline.com.au

Or

PO Box 1183, Palm Beach, Queensland, Australia, 4221

Contact: Andrew Clark, +61 419429754, andrew@financialservicesonline.com.au

Source: http://www.freeprnow.com/pr/personal-loans-to-help-australians-in-need-fso

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বুধবার, ৩০ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Crustacean Brain May Process Pain

Click here to listen to this podcast

The last time you splurged on a live lobster for dinner, you might not have given any thought to how much the little guy was going to suffer as he boiled to death. Until recently many researchers believed the crustacean nervous system too primitive to process pain. But scientists at Queen's University in Belfast now think that crustaceans may be more sensitive to pain than previously thought. The researchers used crabs as their test animals. And they found that crabs that experienced an electric shock when they hid under a safe, dark rock would eventually learn to avoid the hiding place. And that avoidance is key: the animals? ability to remember the unpleasant shock and avoid it is consistent with the ability to feel and remember pain. If the behavior was merely a reflex, the critters would continue to visit the shelter. The study is in the Journal of Experimental Biology. [Barry Magee and Robert W. Elwood, Shock avoidance by discrimination learning in the shore crab (Carcinus maenas) is consistent with a key criterion for pain] [Also see Nicola Stead, Painful Feelings in Crabs] The situation is likely the same with lobsters. So before you break out the bibs and melted butter, it might be nice to put your future dinner on a little anesthetic ice. ?Gretchen Cuda Kroen [The above text is a transcript of this podcast]
? Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/crustacean-brain-may-process-pain-011308901.html

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Power Management Software Helps Spokane, Wash., Go Green

In a city government that uses approximately 1,500 computers across 60 different sites, energy consumption drives up the cost of doing business -- an issue that Spokane, Wash., addressed by integrating power management software in the city?s PCs.

As part of an energy-saving initiative developed by the Spokane's former mayor, Mary Verner,?the city began a monthlong trial three years ago using Verdiem Surveyor power management software to reduce the city?s PC energy consumption.

At the end of the trial, calculations determined that the city?s baseline energy consumption for PCs ranged at more than 598,000 kWh annually -- a cost of $43,500, according to Verdiem. Once integrating the software into 1,300 of the city?s PCs, Spokane reduced its annual energy consumption by almost 35 percent ? more than 200,000 kWh ? and reduced greenhouse gas emissions by 280,000 pounds.

Reports estimate that the city saves almost $15,000 annually on utility costs from reducing PC energy consumption, though no official amount has been calculated because energy costs for the city are bundled heating, air conditioning and lighting.

Michael Sloon,?director of Management Information Systems,?said that adding the Verdiem software to the city's PCs, which use?Microsoft software and tools,?did not slow performance. He also noted that key to the?Verdiem software deployment was the ?wake-on-LAN? capability, which meant that PCs in sleep mode still maintain a network connection. Although the computers aren?t in use by a staff member when in sleep mode, the Verdiem software allows for the PC to be partially ?awake.?

The city also developed energy management policies to adjust when the PCs went into ?sleep mode." Because not every department in the city opens at the same time (some open at 6 a.m., some at 8 a.m. and some areas run 24/7) the IT team adjusted the software so the PCs would remain in sleep mode at appropriate times.?

During the evenings, the computers can still be accessed for monthly security patches and updates, and employees needn't do anything special to ensure this happens -- it's automatic.?

?We wanted impact [for the user] to be very low,? Sloon said. ?And it was.?

Photo of downtown Spokane, Wash., courtesy of Shutterstock

Source: http://www.govtech.com/technology/Power-Management-Software-Helps-Spokane-Wash-Go-Green.html

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Your employer may share your salary data

The Equifax credit reporting agency, with the aid of thousands of human resource departments around the country, has assembled what may be the most powerful and thorough private database of Americans? personal information ever created, containing 190 million employment and salary records covering more than one-third of U.S. adults.

Some of the information in the little-known database, created through an Equifax-owned company called The Work Number, is sold to debt collectors, financial service companies and other entities.

"It's the biggest privacy breach in our time, and it?s legal and no one knows it?s going on," said Robert Mather, who runs a small employment background company named Pre-Employ.com. "It's like a secret CIA."


Despite all the information Americans now share on social media and websites, and all the data we know companies collect on us, one piece of information is still sacred to most people: their salaries. After all, who would post their salary as a status update on Facebook or in a tweet?

But salary information is also for sale by Equifax through The Work Number. Its database is so detailed that it contains week-by-week paystub information dating back years for many individuals, as well as other kinds of human resources-related information, such as health care provider, whether someone has dental insurance and if they?ve ever filed an unemployment claim. In 2009, Equifax said the data covered 30 percent of the U.S. working population, and it now says The Work Number is adding 12 million records annually.

How does Equifax obtain this sensitive and secret information? With the willing aid of thousands of U.S. businesses, including many of the Fortune 500. Government agencies -- representing 85 percent of the federal civilian population, including workers at the Department of Defense, according to Equifax -- and schools also work with The Work Number. Many of them let Equifax tap directly into their data so the credit bureau can always have the latest employment information. In fact, these organizations actually pay Equifax for the privilege of giving away their employees' personal information.

Equifax turns around and sells some of this data to third parties, including debt collectors and other financial services companies.?

Equifax declined to be interviewed, but in an emailed statement to NBCNews.com, it confirmed that it shares "employment data" with debt collectors and others, and said it does so in compliance with Fair Credit Reporting Act guidelines.?

"In all cases, these entities must have a permissible purpose to request employment information," Equifax spokesman Timothy Klein said.?

He also said consumers give these third parties the right to access the data "at the time of application" for credit.

"A consumer grants verifiers (creditors) and their assigned debt collectors the right to verify employment should the consumer default on their account," he said.?

Data for debt collectors
Companies sign up for The Work Number because it gives them an easy way to outsource employment verification of former workers. Firms hate taking these calls, which usually come when a former employee is applying for a new job, because they are a costly distraction for human resources departments and open the firm up to lawsuits if someone says something disparaging about the former employee. So they contract with The WorkNumber, which automates the process. In exchange, firms upload their human resources data to The Work Number, which was part of an independent St.Louis-based firm named TALX until it was acquired by Equifax in 2007 for $1.4 billion.

The Work Number offers consumers some benefits. It provides an easy way for prospective landlords to verify an applicant's income, for example. Consumers tell the Work Number they want a one-time access code, which they then give to a landlord so he or she can verify that the potential tenant can really afford the apartment.

But The Work Number serves dual purposes. It?s also a massive database that Equifax monetizes in a variety of ways, despite the reassuring-sounding messages found all over TheWorkNumber.com.

"Can just anyone get my income information from The Work Number?" reads one passage. Answer: "No. You have to give someone authorization to get your income information from the service."

Employers who sign up for the service go to great pains to reassure workers that their data is safe and secret. Columbia University, when it explained to employees it was transitioning to The Work Number, posted this on the school's website:

"You are the only person who can authorize access to your salary information."

But Kathy Sandy of Sommerville, N.J. was surprised to find that a debt collector had accessed information from her report two years ago, something she learned only when she obtained her "consumer disclosure" from The Work Number. Because the data is considered a credit report, consumers are entitled to one free report every year. The report shows what data the report contains, and what entities have seen it.

Sandy's Work Number report, which she shared with NBC News, is 22 pages long -- an amazingly detailed history of every paycheck she had received for years. The first page of the report lists "verifiers who have requested your data in the past 24 months." On the list is "Pressler and Pressler," a law firm that specializes in debt collection. The firm had sued her in small claims court over a credit card debt that she says she was already repaying.

"I found out debt collectors can access this information, which is strange," Sandy said. "I assumed with The Work Number, for that information, you had to have a (passcode) ? but they got in, and got it somehow without my consent."

In brochures where Equifax advertises sale of the data, it's not shy about the source.

"The Work Number specializes in employment and income verification. It's direct from the source: the employer. It's current, as of the last pay period. It's delivered quickly -- on demand," says one brochure, titled "Portfolio Monitoring."

In his statement to NBC News, Klein confirmed that "pay rate" information is shared with third parties, including "mortgage, auto and other financial services credit grantors," as authorized under the Fair Credit Reporting Act.

He denied that salary information is sold to debt collectors, however.

"Debt/Collection agencies may request employment information -- which may be nothing more than verifying that a consumer is working where they say they are ? if it qualifies under permissible purpose," he wrote. "Collections agencies are not provided salary information."

That contradicts an assertion made recently by Equifax CEO Richard Smith in 2009, when he talked about how detailed The Work Number data is.

"With FirstSearch and TALX we can provide information about a debtor?s location, income and employment," said Smith in an interview published on NYSE Magazine?s website, referring to The Work Number?s former parent company. "That can help prioritize which accounts to pursue first. If they?re employed, that business has a better shot at collecting what is owed to them."

Klein said Smith misspoke when describing TALX?s services, and reiterated that salary information on consumers is not sold to debt collectors.

'Unbelievably scary'
With or without the income data, The Work Number data is incredibly valuable to debt collectors -- and it may come as a surprise to many workers that their employers, directly or unwittingly, help debt collectors.

Equifax markets The Work Number specifically to student loan issuers. In another brochure on the firm's website, Equifax brags that The Work Number makes debt collectors' jobs easier.

"The Work Number produced a 5.5 percent lift in Right Party Contact and a 7.3 percent lift in Collections Resolution versus current skip-trace methods," the "case study" brochure says.

Equifax?s resale of The Work Number data doesn?t stop there. It also offers "portfolio monitoring" to financial firms who might want to market their products to consumers ? or to get early warning on someone who might soon land in financial trouble. It calls this "proactive managing of risk."?

"The Work Number is part of our employment and income verification service. It provides continual track of changes to your customer or client portfolio, delivered on demand per your schedule," it says. "Simply submit a portfolio of customer or client accounts and The Work Number does the rest. ... Using The Work Number to stay abreast of employment changes can expand your ability to mitigate risk while maximizing product and service potential."

Mather has been in the employer data business for more than 20 years, and he says that if Americans suspected their employers were giving away their personal information to a credit bureau, they'd be shocked.

"The story here is how (The Work Number) is getting this information," he said. "When people find out, no respectable employer will continue to do this."

Larry Ponemon is a privacy expert who operates The Ponemon Institute, a consulting firm. He said he?d never heard of companies selling employer data to debt collectors.

"Are you joking? Oh my god, I'm shocked," Ponemon said when the business was described to him. "This is unbelievably scary. I consider payroll information very sensitive and private." In studies he's conducted, salary data is always among the information consumers say is most private.

"If the public knew about this, there would be such outrage," he said. "It's just ... really depressing."

Paul Stephens, director of policy and advocacy at the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse, had heard of The Work Number, but only because some consumers have complained to his agency that the data in its database is inaccurate. Some workers find that when they try to use the information for employment verification, their titles are outdated or otherwise misrepresent their work history, which can be embarrassing for a job applicant.

When told that the data is sold to third parties, he said he was under the impression the data was not shared.

"I think it is something that would be offensive to many people. One typically considers salary information to be shared by your employer just with IRS," he said.?

A glance at the language on The Work Number's website suggested to Stephens that the firm is legally within its rights to share the information, however.

"You get into the 'permissible purpose' doctrine," he said. "Debt collectors have a permissible purpose to look at your credit information. It was my impression that the data was only being given out when employees released it."

'Secret' process?
Data brokers are under heightened scrutiny in Washington, D.C., lately. There are two separate congressional investigations of the industry, and the Federal Trade Commission announced in December that it had begun an inquiry into how brokers obtain their information. Equifax received an inquiry letter from the FTC, but only for the data broker portion of its business involving non-financial data, such as criminal background records and address information.

Melissa and Ryan Will sit with Bob Sullivan. As new homeowners, every penny counts, and they find a few extra ones by refinancing their car and taking stock of their expenses.

Credit reporting agencies, such as The Work Number, are distinct from data brokers and are governed by special rules. Ironically, those special rules may open the door for Equifax -- and the credit-reporting side of its business -- to resell the salary information, says Katrina Blodgett, a lawyer with the Federal Trade Commission. She is one the agency?s experts on the Fair Credit Reporting Act.?

The FTC filed a case against TALX and Equifax in 2008 for allegedly failing to provide employers with sufficient notice about their disclosure responsibilities under the Fair Credit Reporting Act. Equifax admitted no wrongdoing and paid a small fine. ?

Blodgett said the Fair Credit Reporting Act and subsequent updates give consumers specific legal rights, such as the ability to dispute errors in credit reports. But it also creates permissible purposes for access, including giving financial service companies the right to review credit reports of consumers they do business with.?

"It?s not as easy as it should be to say whether debt collectors can get your consumer reports, because it depends on the circumstance," she said, adding that she believed Equifax could have the right to sell the salary information to debt collectors because it is part of a credit report.

Much attention has been paid to the use of credit reports by human resource departments in recent years, and Congress gave job applicants special rights when a credit report is used during the job interview process. The reverse isn?t true, however, Blodgett pointed out.

"There are special restrictions on how credit reports can be used in hiring decisions, but there are no special restrictions on how employment reports (such as salary information) is used for non-employment purposes," she said.

She said she wasn?t surprised that Equifax is selling the information in The Work Number.

"They are a credit bureau. They sell credit information to lenders," she said.

Mather wants the sale of employee information halted. His firm also performs third-party employment verification, but he does not resell the data he collects.

"I strongly believe there is no reason to resell employee information to debt collectors without the permission of the employer and employee," he said. "This 'secret' process needs to stop. I hope eventually a simple law is passed making it required to get the permission of the employee BEFORE his information is resold. It simply should NOT be used for any other purpose except for employment purposes without permission. In my view, it is a betrayal of trust."

Consumers who want to see what information The Work Number has on their employment history can visit this page on the TheWorkNumber.com. While reports are available online, consumers may have to fill out a form and mail it to The Work Number in some cases.

* Follow Bob Sullivan on?Facebook.

* Follow Bob Sullivan on?Twitter.

More from Red Tape Chronicles:

Source: http://redtape.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/29/16762661-exclusive-your-employer-may-share-your-salary-and-equifax-might-sell-that-data?lite

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This week's sidebar poll: Are you interested in BlackBerry 10?

Android Central

It's not every day that a major tech company reinvents itself like RIM has done. With Android and iOS gobbling up damn near all of the mobile market, RIM saw it was time to shift gears and deliver a revamped version of their BlackBerry operating system. I think they've done a fine job, and hope that investors and customers let it run its course to see what it can turn into. But enough of what I think.

What say you, fine readers of Android Central? We're not asking if you plan to jump ship and rush out to buy a BlackBerry Z10, only if you're interested in what the platform delivers, and more importantly, what it will blossom into. There's a poll in the sidebar to the right, and we've embedded it after the break to make it easy to find. Answer it, and tell us what you think.

Before we go, a look at last week's poll:

Are you ready to upgrade your phone?

Android Central

If posed as a yes/no question, it looks like three quarters of the folks reading AC are ready to upgrade. That's good news for Android OEMs, and watching them all deliver great gear to win out hearts and minds should be fun!

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/fCGP_E3f3ao/story01.htm

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Author and TV Host Anthony Bourdain Takes Center Stage at NRA ...

Author and TV Host Anthony Bourdain Takes Center Stage at NRA Show 2013

Anthony Bourdain ? best known for his Emmy Award-winning series No Reservations and new programs The Taste (ABC) and Parts Unknown (CNN) ? will play a prominent role at the 2013 National Restaurant Association Restaurant, Hotel-Motel Show and International Wine, Spirits & Beer Event(IWSB). He will deliver a special feature presentation, sign his latest books, and host the third annual Restaurants Rock industry celebration, the official after-party of the NRA Show and IWSB. NRA Show 2013 will be held May 18-21 at Chicago?s McCormick Place.

As the celebrity host of Restaurants Rock, Bourdain will judge the action-packed IWSB Star of the Bar mixology competition finals ? to be held live at the May 19 event at Chicago?s The Castle.

?The NRA Show and International Wine, Spirits & Beer Event are all about celebrating our excitement and passion for food, drink and hospitality,? said Jeffery W. Davis , Convention Chair for NRA Show 2013 and CEO of the United States Beef Corporation. ?As the foodservice industry gathers in Chicago, we are thrilled to welcome Anthony Bourdain as the official host of Restaurants Rock and featured speaker at NRA Show 2013. So plan to attend the greatest foodservice show on the planet to experience food, connections, innovations, ideas, inspiration, opportunity and more.?

Bourdain has somewhat notoriously established himself as a professional advocate, social critic, and pork enthusiast, recognized for his caustic sense of humor worldwide. The ?chef-at-large? at New York?s famed Brasserie Les Halles, Bourdain is the author of the bestselling Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly ? as well as the bestselling graphic novel Get Jiro!, Les Halles Cookbook, and others.

Registered NRA Show and IWSB attendees may purchase Restaurants Rock tickets for $50 each through April 5, 2013. After April 5, tickets will be available for $60 to NRA Show and IWSB attendees.

Bourdain?s featured speaker presentation and book signing will take place on Monday, May 20, 2013.

The annual National Restaurant Association Restaurant, Hotel-Motel Show is the largest single gathering of restaurant, foodservice and lodging professionals. NRA Show 2013 will be held May 18-21 at McCormick Place in Chicago, and the 2013 International Wine, Spirits & Beer Event held in conjunction with the NRA Show will take place May 19-20. The events attract 61,000+ attendees and visitors from all 50 states and 100+ countries, and showcases the latest products, services, innovative ideas, up-to-the-minute information about trends and issues and more growth opportunities than any other industry event. For more information, visit the Show and IWSB websites at Restaurant.org/Show and WineSpiritsBeer.org, and find the NRA Show on Twitter?@NRAShow, ?Facebook,?YouTube?and its widely read blog?Floored!

Founded in 1919, the National Restaurant Association is the leading business association for the restaurant industry, which comprises 980,000 restaurant and foodservice outlets and a workforce of more than 13 million employees. We represent the industry in Washington, D.C., and advocate on its behalf. We operate the industry?s largest trade show (NRA Show?May 18-21, 2013, in Chicago); leading food safety training and certification program (ServSafe); unique career-building high school program (the NRAEF?s?ProStart, including the National ProStart Invitational April 19-21, 2013, in Baltimore, Md.); as well as the?Kids LiveWell?program promoting healthful kids? menu options. For more information, visit?www.restaurant.org?and find us on Twitter?@WeRRestaurants, Facebook?and?YouTube.


Source: http://www.restaurantmagazine.com/author-and-tv-host-anthony-bourdain-takes-center-stage-at-nra-show-2013/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=author-and-tv-host-anthony-bourdain-takes-center-stage-at-nra-show-2013

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High-tech cargo airship being built in California

The Aeroscraft airship, a high-tech prototype airship, is seen in a World War II-era hangar in Tustin, Calif., Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. Work is almost done on a 230-foot rigid airship inside a blimp hangar at a former military base in Orange Co. The huge cargo-carrying airship is has shiny aluminum skin and a rigid, 230-foot aluminum and carbon fiber skeleton. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

The Aeroscraft airship, a high-tech prototype airship, is seen in a World War II-era hangar in Tustin, Calif., Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. Work is almost done on a 230-foot rigid airship inside a blimp hangar at a former military base in Orange Co. The huge cargo-carrying airship is has shiny aluminum skin and a rigid, 230-foot aluminum and carbon fiber skeleton. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Leonel Cruz pulls down the flab on the Aeroscraft airship, a high-tech prototype airship, in a World War II-era hangar in Tustin, Calif., Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. Work is almost done on a 230-foot rigid airship inside a blimp hangar at a former military base in Orange Co. The huge cargo-carrying airship is has shiny aluminum skin and a rigid, 230-foot aluminum and carbon fiber skeleton. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

The Aeroscraft airship, a high-tech prototype airship, is seen in a World War II-era hangar in Tustin, Calif., Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. Work is almost done on a 230-foot rigid airship inside a blimp hangar at a former military base in Orange Co. The huge cargo-carrying airship is has shiny aluminum skin and a rigid, 230-foot aluminum and carbon fiber skeleton. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Bradley Hasemeyer, the host of AOL's Trasnlogic show, uses his smartphone to photograph the Aeroscraft airship, a high-tech prototype airship, outside a World War II-era hangar in Tustin, Calif., Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. Work is almost done on a 230-foot rigid airship inside the blimp hangar at a former military base in Orange Co. The huge cargo-carrying airship is has shiny aluminum skin and a rigid, 230-foot aluminum and carbon fiber skeleton. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

The Aeroscraft airship, a high-tech prototype airship, is seen in a World War II-era hangar in Tustin, Calif., Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. Work is almost done on a 230-foot rigid airship inside a blimp hangar at a former military base in Orange Co. The huge cargo-carrying airship is has shiny aluminum skin and a rigid, 230-foot aluminum and carbon fiber skeleton. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

(AP) ? The massive blimp-like aircraft flies but just barely, hovering only a dozen feet off a military hangar floor during flight testing south of Los Angeles.

Still, the fact that the hulking 230-foot-long Aeroscraft could fly for just a few minutes represents a step forward in aviation, according to the engineers who developed it. The Department of Defense and NASA have invested $35 million in the prototype because of its potential to one day carry more cargo than any other aircraft to disaster zones and forward military bases.

"I realized that I put a little dot in the line of aviation history. A little dot for something that has never been demonstrated before, now it's feasible," said flight control engineer Munir Jojo-Verge.

The airship is undergoing testing this month at Marine Corps Air Station in Tustin, and must go through several more rounds of flight testing before it could be used in a disaster zone or anywhere else. The first major flight test took place Jan. 3.

The biggest challenge for engineers is making sure the airship will be able to withstand high winds and other extreme weather conditions, Jojo-Verge said.

Worldwide Aeros, the company that developed the aircraft, said it also must secure more funding for the next round of flight testing, but is hopeful the Defense Department and others will step in again as investors.

The company says the cargo airship's potential to carry more cargo more efficiently than ever before would provide the U.S. military with an advantage on the battlefield and greater capacity to save more lives during natural disasters.

The lighter-than-air vehicle is not a blimp or a zeppelin because it has a rigid structure made out of ultra-light carbon fiber and aluminum underneath its high-tech Mylar skin. Inside, balloons hold the helium that gives the vehicle lift. Unlike hydrogen, the gas used in the Hindenburg airship that crashed in 1937, helium is not flammable.

The airship functions like a submarine, releasing air to rise and taking in air to descend, said Aeros mechanical engineer Tim Kenny. It can take off vertically, like a helicopter, then change its buoyancy to become heavier than air for landing and unloading.

"It allows the vehicle to set down on the ground. And then when we want to become lighter than air, we release that air and then the vehicle floats and we can allow it to take off," Kenny said.

The project has set abuzz the old hangars at the Marine Corps Air Station in Tustin. The structures were built to hold blimps during World War II. Now workers zip around in cherry-pickers, and the airship's silvery surface shines against the warm tones of the aging wood of the walls.

"You could take this vehicle and go to destinations that have been destroyed, where there's no ports, no runways, stuff like that. This vehicle could go in there, offload the cargo even if there's no infrastructure, no landing site for it to land on, this vehicle can unload its whole payload," said Kenny.

The prototype isn't intended to carry cargo, though a similar-sized craft could haul about 30 tons. Aeros wants to build a full-size 450-foot-long vehicle that can carry 66 tons of payload.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-01-30-Military%20Airship/id-838514f1487043239779478b42b4ed28

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Google Puts The Nexus 4 Back In Stock In UK, France And Spain

google-nexus-4Google yesterday started to offer the Nexus 4?once again in the Google Play stores in the U.S., Canada and Germany, and today it's started to roll it out to the rest of the markets where it quickly went out of stock last year. Users can now order the devices in the?UK, France,?Spain?and ?Australia,?with shipping times of around 1-2 weeks, although more exact times might be given at checkout. [Australia is not live yet, we've been told.]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/r9msDBGMNk8/

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Vicki Larson: The Best Relationship To Have After Divorce

"So, what are you and 'J' going to do?" a friend asked recently.

"J" is my boyfriend and we do a lot of things, some of which I'm much too discreet to discuss publicly. I needed clarification.

"What do you mean?"

"Are you ever going to get married or live together or something like that?"

Oh, that question. It's not the first time I've heard it. "J" and I have been in a committed monogamous relationship for almost eight years (well, with a year of non-monogamy early on), and he lives in his house and I live in mine. Neither of us wants to get married -- he's done it once and I've done it twice -- and we're not sure we want to live together either.

Our relationship doesn't look like a relationship is "supposed" to look like, and so people feel uncomfortable about it.

"Why don't you want to live together?" After all, isn't that what people who love each other do?

Relationships used to be that way, when we had little choice. But since there are so many ways to be a couple now, why do we still think they have to be that way? And once you're divorced with kids, there are many compelling reasons not to have your relationship look like that.

When his and my kids were young, mashing two families together seemed, well, scary. I know people do it all the time, creating their own versions of the Brady Bunch to various degrees of success. But since 60 percent of all second marriages end in divorce, and since blended families often create a mess for everyone -- you, your new spouse, your former spouse and his/her new spouse, as well as the kids -- and since second marriages don't necessarily lead to marital satisfaction, why would I want to marry again?

Oh sure, we could have lived together. That's not the message I wanted to send to my kids, however. Plus, the idea of putting them through another split if things didn't work out was too painful to even think about; one divorce for kids is more than enough.

It's not to say that sometimes I don't long to come home to what seems familiar -- someone to share stories of our day with over dinner and a warm body to snuggle next to every night instead of three or four a week. There are many pleasures that come with living with someone, which, between my two marriages, I did for nearly 20 years.

And then there are the not-so-pleasurable things that come from living with someone for years.

We start to get annoyed by their habits -- you know, the ones they always had, the ones we used to find "charming." We complain that they're not doing their share of (insert child-care, cleaning, yard work, laundry, etc., here). We get upset because they're spending too much time (insert watching sports, on the computer, playing video games, hanging out with friends, fussing over the kids, shopping, etc., here). All of those things lead to disappointment, anger, maybe even resentment, and so we stop having sex. And we start taking each other for granted.

Don't think cohabiting gets you off the hook, either; you don't have to be married to take each other for granted, as Susan Sarandon discovered after splitting from Tim Robbins after 23 years of cohabitation and having two children together.

"I thought that if you didn't get married you wouldn't take each other for granted as easily. I don't know if after twenty-something years that was still true," she told The Telegraph in 2010.

But, marriage, the institution, doesn't make us do or not do anything; the people in the marriage are responsible for how they act. Taking each other for granted is not part of any marriage vow as far as I know.

Maybe the problem is living together.

A new study seems to confirm what "J" and I already know -- couples that live apart are happier in their relationship than couples that live together, and they also feel more committed and less trapped. When you live apart, you actively work on commitment and trust; it's never taken for granted. You have time for yourself. And because sex whenever you want it isn't as available to you as it is when you live with someone, you don't let too many opportunities to actually have it pass you by.

So when people ask me, "Are you ever going to get married or live together or something like that?" I guess I'll have to continue to answer, "Something like that."

We're free to create the relationship we want post-divorce. I've created mine -- have you created yours?

A version of this story appears on Vicki Larson's blog, OMG Chronicles.

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Follow Vicki Larson on Twitter: www.twitter.com/OMGchronicles

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/vicki-larson/the-best-relationship-to-_b_2468019.html

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Shopping and Product Reviews: Treatment for Hyperpigmentation

It is clear that skin is one of the body parts that need special concern if we want to look gorgeous. A lot of people really care about their skin condition so that they try to do anything to make the skin look beautiful and smooth. However, we also realize that it is getting hard to take care of our skin because of the situation that we have to live every day. It means that we have to be smart enough to make the skin beautiful for real.?

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Oftentimes, tight activities force us to get contacted with the open air with unfriendly exposure of the sun. This condition brings serious risks especially if we care about the healthy skin we dream about. Besides consuming nutritious food with rich vitamin E, taking skin whitening cream should be the best solution to minimize the risk of Hyperpigmentation, skin problems such as dark spots, brown spots, and aged spots that are caused by the sun exposure. Actually there are a lot of cream products to treat the condition. However, choosing the best products with the best results must be the best option for us. In this case, getting recommended information about the best products must be the basic thing to do. As stated above, the Hyperpigmentation is one of today?s most common skin problem faced by a lot of us. To make sure that we can handle the problem, recommended cream like face whitening must be the best option. For this, the linked websitea are the recommended one to go for the best whitening products. We can get much more information about the common skin problems we potentially get as well as the products we need as the treatment. Just visit the websites by clicking available links and find the best products for skin on the websites.

Source: http://b1b2kombonganandes.blogspot.com/2013/01/treatment-for-hyperpigmentation.html

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Why are there redheads? Birds might hold the clues

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Red coloration?historically seen as costly in vertebrates?might represent some physiological benefit after all, according to research published in the journal Physiological and Biochemical Zoology.

Pheomelanin, which is responsible for red hair and freckles in humans and orange and chestnut coloration in other animals, is known to increase the damage to skin cells and melanoma risk when present in large amounts. Furthermore, its creation involves the consumption of glutathione, a beneficial antioxidant.

In an attempt to unearth the factors favoring the evolution of pheomelanin in spite of its costs, Ismael Galv?n and Anders P. M?ller of the University of Paris-Sud examined the survival from one breeding season to the next of a wild European population of barn swallows, as well as the annual survival rates of 58 species of American birds.

A recent hypothesis claims that the consumption of cysteine (a component of glutathione) that occurs when pheomelanin is produced can be beneficial under conditions of low stress. Cysteine, which is mainly acquired through diet, can be toxic at high levels, so the production of pheomelanin may help to sequester excess quantities of this amino acid.

Galv?n and M?ller measured birds' blood levels of uric acid and analyzed the coloration of their chestnut throat feathers (an indication of pheomelanin content). When they compared birds that had similar uric acid levels (and therefore similar capacities to excrete excess amino acids), they found that both the European barn swallows and the American birds with larger amounts of pheomelanin in their feathers survived better.

This study is the first to propose that the costs/benefits of pheomelanin may depend on prevailing environmental conditions, and its results suggest that the production of this pigment may even be beneficial in some circumstances. Given that all higher vertebrates, including humans, present pheomelanin in skin, pelage, and plumage, Galv?n and M?ller's findings increase the scant current knowledge on the physiological consequences of pheomelanin and open new avenues for research that will help us understand the evolution of pigmentation.

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Ismael Galv?n and Anders P. M?ller, "Pheomelanin-Based Plumage Coloration Predicts Survival Rates in Birds." Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 86:2 (March/April 2013). Available ahead of print at http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/668871.

University of Chicago Press Journals: http://www.journals.uchicago.edu

Thanks to University of Chicago Press Journals for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126506/Why_are_there_redheads__Birds_might_hold_the_clues

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British embassy in Libya aware of reports of threats

TRIPOLI (Reuters) - The British embassy in the Libyan capital said it was aware of reports of a potential threat against it, days after London urged British nationals to leave the eastern city of Benghazi due to a "specific and imminent threat" against Westerners.

"We are aware of reports of a potential threat against the British embassy in Tripoli and we are liaising closely with the Libyan government," an embassy spokeswoman said on Monday.

"There is no change to our travel advice, we still recommend against all but essential travel to Tripoli."

No further details were given. Britain has warned of a growing militant threat in North Africa, which Prime Minister David Cameron has called a "magnet for jihadists".

This comes after the deaths of at least 38 hostages in an attack on Algeria's In Amenas gas complex near the Libyan border, and the start of French military operations in Mali.

Libyan officials said they were not aware of such reports, cited by the embassy.

"The British embassy has not informed us of any threats towards it and there has been no coordination between us," Deputy Interior Minister Omar al-Khadrawi told Reuters.

"We were meeting with the foreign affairs ministry this morning and are not aware of any threats. This could be a way the British embassy is trying to justify its previous Benghazi advisory."

Last week's call, echoed by other European countries, to leave Libya's second largest city irked Libyans keen to win foreign investment to rebuild a fractured infrastructure and boost the oil industry after the 2011 revolution which toppled Muammar Gaddafi.

(Reporting by Marie-Louise Gumuchian; additional reporting by Ali Shuaib; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/british-embassy-tripoli-aware-report-threat-against-181503894.html

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Monkeys in space: A brief history

If Iran has indeed launched a monkey to space, the nation is following a path similar to that taken by the United States in the early days of its space program.

Iran announced Monday that it had successfully launched a live monkey on a spaceflight and recovered the animal alive after landing. The move is a prelude to sending humans into space, which the Islamic Republic hopes to do by 2020, Iranian Space Agency officials said.

Iran and the United States don't see eye-to-eye on many issues, but both have viewed monkeys as good astronaut test subjects over the years. The U.S. was the first country ever to launch a primate, sending a rhesus monkey named Albert to a sub-space altitude of 39 miles aboard a V2 rocket in June 1948.

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Very little was known about the physiological effects of spaceflight back in those days, with some scientists postulating that astronauts' cardiovascular systems would fail in the microgravity environment, causing near-instant death. So researchers wanted to blast some relatively large animals into space to see how they fared. [ Giant Leaps: Top Milestones of Human Spaceflight ]

Albert died of suffocation during his flight, and a number of his simian brethren also sacrificed their lives to the cause in the ensuing years.

Another rhesus monkey named Albert II, for example, became the first primate to reach space, achieving an altitude of 83 miles aboard another V2 in June 1949. He survived the launch but died after a parachute failure caused his capsule to slam hard into the ground.

Alberts III and IV died during their missions in late 1949, and Albert V was victimized by another parachute failure in 1951. Albert VI, also known as Yorick, survived his 1951 flight, though it topped out at an altitude of just 45 miles ? significantly below the generally accepted 62-mile boundary demarcating outer space.

Yorick died several hours after landing, possibly from heat stress suffered as he sat inside his cramped capsule in the New Mexico sun, waiting for the recovery crew.

The United States recorded a milestone in May 1959, finally recovering two primates alive after a spaceflight. A rhesus monkey named Able and a squirrel monkey named Baker reached an altitude of 300 miles aboard a Jupiter rocket and were retrieved unharmed. (Sadly, Able died several days later during an operation to remove an electrode from under her skin.)

As the American human spaceflight program began to build momentum, the nation started experimenting with chimpanzees, which are larger and more closely related to humans than are rhesus, squirrel or other monkeys.

The U.S. launched a chimp named Ham on a suborbital spaceflight on Jan. 31, 1961. Ham reached an altitude of 157 miles during a 16.5-minute flight and was recovered unharmed, though a bit dehydrated. With this success in hand, Alan Shepard successfully blasted off on his suborbital flight on May 5, 1961, becoming the first American ? and second human, after the Soviet Union's Yuri Gagarin ? ever to reach space.

A chimp named Enos orbited the Earth on Nov. 29, 1961, paving the way for John Glenn's historic orbital flight of Feb. 20, 1962. (Again, the U.S. was slightly late to the party: Gagarin orbited our planet on his flight of April 12, 1961.)

After it became established that humans could indeed survive the rigors of spaceflight, monkeys and apes faded into the background. The U.S. continued to launch animals for scientific experiments but increasingly concentrated on smaller creatures such as mice and insects, which are easier to care for and take up much less space (although two squirrel monkeys did ride on the space shuttle Challenger 's STS-51-B mission in April-May 1985.)

The United States' space race rival, the Soviet Union, primarily used dogs in the run-up to its first human launches, thinking that canines would prove to be less fidgety in flight than monkeys.

The Soviets launched their first dogs to space in 1951. The nation famously succeeded in lofting the first animal ? a dog called Laika ("Barker") ? to orbit aboard the Sputnik 2 spacecraft in November 1957. (Laika died during the flight.)

Despite its canine focus, the Soviet Union and its successor state Russia did launch a number of rhesus monkeys to space in the 1980s and 1990s, as part of a program called Bion. France also blasted two pig-tailed macaque monkeys to suborbital space in 1967.

Iran's recent launch was not its first attempt to send a monkey into space. A previous orbital effort in 2011 failed.

Follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter@michaeldwall or SPACE.com@Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook and Google+.

? 2013 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/50620102/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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Study Reveals That Economics Majors Are More Likely To Lie | www ...

When a friend sent me this paper the other day, I admit that I took a long hard look at myself and my economist friends. According to this study, economists, it seems, are worse than most when it comes to truth telling. This discovery was made by researchers Ra?l L?pez-P?rez and Eli Spiegelman, who wanted to examine whether certain characteristics (for instance religiosity or gender) made people averse to lying. They measured the preference for honesty by canceling out other motivations, such as altruism or fear of getting caught. The way they accomplished this was with a very simple experiment where a pair of participants acted as sender and receiver of information. The sender would sit alone in front of a screen that showed either a blue or green circle. He or she would then communicate the circle?s color to the receiver, who could not see the color or the sender. Senders received 15 Euros every time they indicated a green circle, and only 14 when they communicated that the circle was blue. Receivers earned an even 10 euros regardless of the color, and so were unaffected by either the truthfulness or dishonesty of the senders. So senders had four strategies: 1) Tell the truth when shown a green circle and get the maximum payment; 2) Lie when shown a green circle, choosing a lower payment; 3) Tell the truth when shown a blue circle and receive the lower payment; 4) Lie when shown a blue circle and gain an extra euro. All was well and good if senders saw a green circle, telling the truth earned them the maximum amount of cash (as you can imagine, option 2) was fairly unpopular). What if they saw blue though? Well, they had two options: tell the truth and lose a euro, or lie and get paid more. The experimenters reasoned that a lie-averse sender would always communicate the circle?s color accurately while senders motivated by maximizing profit would indicate green regardless. Participants, who were from a wide array of socio-economic and religious backgrounds, also came from a range of majors. Researchers grouped majors together into business and economics, humanities, and other (science, engineering, psych). ?The results showed little difference in honesty as a factor of socio-demographic characteristics or gender. A student?s major, however, was a different story. As it turned out, those in the humanities, who were the most honest of all, told the perfect truth a little over half the time. The broad group of ?other? was a bit less honest with around 40% straight shooters. And how about the business and economics group? They scraped the bottom with a 23% rate of honesty. Keep in mind that this was one study of one group of people; however, it does indicate that the study of economics makes people less likely to tell the truth for its own sake. And this holds water, economically speaking: 1 euro has clear and measurable value, it can be exchanged for a number of things. The benefit of telling the truth in this situation does not carry any financial value (which is not to say lying in finance is not costly?clearly it is). But rationalization, which we all take part in, may be easier for those who think in terms of opportunity cost and percent profit. This is not terribly surprising to me in the context of the greater history of economics, which has been characterized by the study of selfishness. The concept of the invisible hand (inherent in the notion of self-correcting markets) holds that people should act selfishly (maximizing their own profits) and that the market will combine all of their actions with an efficient outcome. While it?s true that markets can sometimes accommodate a range of behaviors without failing, if we continue to teach students the benefits and logicality of rational self-interest, what can we really expect? NOW READ: Why We Work So Hard To Avoid Difficult Truths Please follow War Room on Twitter and Facebook.Join the conversation about this story ?

Source: http://www.bullfax.com/?q=node-study-reveals-economics-majors-are-more-likely-lie

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Customer Service Flub Hurts Wal-Mart - Business, finances, forex

A customer service flub by Wal-Mart employees has put the retail giant on the front page. Small to medium sized businesses can be hurt just as easily by customer service issues. Make it a priority to keep your customer first and your brand will flourish as a result.

Customer Service Faux Pas

Wal-mart employees embarrass cancer survivor. You would probably be horrified to see a story like this one about your business on a news site or on the evening news. Wal-Mart employees allegedly gave an unnamed customer such a hard time when she tried to return a purchase that she eventually felt the need to show employees the scars she had received as part of her cancer treatment. Huffington Post

Retailer apologizes to customer for poor treatment. Wal-Mart apologized to the customer attempting to return a $13.00 book after employees questioned the validity of her photo ID because chemotherapy had caused her to loose her long blond hair shown in the picture. An apology is the least your business should do when attempting to correct a customer service error. WTVM.com

Wal-Mart introduces self-service kiosks. The mega-retailer is also introducing 10,000 self-service kiosks in hundreds of stores this year. Automation can improve customer experience, but some feel it can also limit the human touch. In fact, even as Wal-Mart gears up, some retailers are already dropping their self-service efforts.?Computerworld

Improving your Customer Service

Pay attention to customer complaints. Wal-Mart has learned the hard way that paying attention to complaints can help improve customer experience. Customers are more comfortable with voicing complaints, according to research. Small business owners can learn from this too. bOnline Blog

Under promise and over deliver. Business consultants Harry and Sally Vaishnav blog about promising more than you can deliver and its consequences. Customers will always be satisfied with your products or services when you keep your word.?Small Biz Viewpoints

20 tips for better customer service. Valentine Belonwu shares these pointers for better customer service. Here are some suggestions to improve customer experience: Be responsive, keep customers informed, and show them you care. Small Business Trends

Here are more suggestions. Some investments will improve customer experience even more. Check out the competition. Build a team. Gather customer feedback. Wal-Mart and other businesses have a lot to learn to improve service. KSL Training

The post Customer Service Flub Hurts Wal-Mart appeared first on Small Business Trends.

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Source: http://news.business-news-blog.eu/customer-service-flub-hurts-wal-mart/

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