Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Socialcam, Viddy User Numbers Implode - Business Insider

Remember Socialcam and Viddy?

The two stars of social video sharing once had more than a 100 million users combined. Everyone?including Business Insider?was saying that one or the other would be the "Instagram of video."

Perhaps we should rephrase that.

Stripe business-development executive Cristina Cordova points out, they have less than 5 million monthly users.

That's a drop of more than 95 percent in six months.

The plummet comes because both services depended on Facebook for viral growth, and Facebook changed both the rules and its counting methods.

AppData, a service which gathers Facebook usage figures, says that video players in particular have seen "fluctuations" because of changes in what Facebook considers a "user." But far more importantly, Facebook cracked down on spammy apps like Viddy and Socialcam which essentially tricked users into installing the app in order to watch a video.

Regardless, it's clear that whatever generated those eye-popping numbers, which persuaded reporters and investors alike that something amazing was happening in video sharing, is gone.

Socialcam is fine. It sold to Autodesk for $60 million this summer, and Autodesk seemed less interested in the service's user base than in the idea that it had figured out a good way to let content creators?Autodesk's target market?easily share their videos online.

Viddy, on the other hand, has a problem. Instead of selling, it raised $30 million at a $370 million valuation. That sounds great, right? Except that Viddy's investors extracted exceptionally tough terms, allowing them to double their money if Viddy does well, and wipe out founders and employees if it does poorly.

After Facebook announced it would buy Instagram, the photo-sharing site, in a deal valued at $1 billion at the time, Instagram's user base continued to explode, from 30 million users to 80 million users in August and 100 million users by September.

Viddy now has 660,000 monthly users.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/socialcam-viddy-user-numbers-2012-11

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Next Generation Buyers: Savvy, Sophisticated and Ready to Buy ...

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Source: http://bhgrealestateblog.com/2012/11/27/next-generation-buyers-savvy-sophisticated-and-ready-to-buy/

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Feds: Teacher cheating scam lasted 15 years

By The Associated Press

It was a brazen and surprisingly long-lived scheme, authorities said, to help aspiring public school teachers cheat on the tests they must pass to prove they are qualified to lead their classrooms.

For 15 years, teachers in three Southern states paid Clarence Mumford Sr. ? himself a longtime educator ? to send someone else to take the tests in their place, authorities said. Each time, Mumford received a fee of between $1,500 and $3,000 to send one of his test ringers with fake identification to the Praxis exam. In return, his customers got a passing grade and began their careers as cheaters, according to federal prosecutors in Memphis.


Authorities say the scheme affected hundreds ? if not thousands ? of public school students who ended up being taught by unqualified instructors.

Mel Evans / AP

Princeton, N.J.-based Educational Testing Services writes and administers Praxis teacher certification examinations.

Mumford faces more than 60 fraud and conspiracy charges that claim he created fake driver's licenses with the information of a teacher or an aspiring teacher and attached the photograph of a test-taker. Prospective teachers are accused of giving Mumford their Social Security numbers for him to make the fake identities.

The hired-test takers went to testing centers, showed the proctor the fake license, and passed the certification exam, prosecutors say. Then, the aspiring teacher used the test score to secure a job with a public school district, the indictment alleges. Fourteen people have been charged with mail and Social Security fraud, and four people have pleaded guilty to charges associated with the scheme.

Mumford "obtained tens of thousands of dollars" during the alleged conspiracy, which prosecutors say lasted from 1995 to 2010 in Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee.

Among those charged is former University of Tennessee and NFL wide receiver Cedrick Wilson, who is accused of employing a test-taker for a Praxis physical education exam. He was charged in late October with four counts of Social Security and mail fraud. He has pleaded not guilty and is out of jail on a $10,000 bond. He has been suspended by the Memphis City Schools system.

Charlie Riedel / AP

In this photo taken Friday, Nov. 23, Neal Kingston, director of the Center for Educational Testing and Evaluation at the University of Kansas, talks about testing fraud in his Lawrence, Kan., office.

If convicted, Mumford could face between two and 20 years in prison on each count. The teachers face between two and 20 years in prison on each count if convicted.

Lawyers for Mumford and Wilson did not return calls for comment.

Prosecutors and standardized test experts say students were hurt the most by the scheme because they were being taught by unqualified teachers. It also sheds some light on the nature of cheating and the lengths people go to in order to get ahead.

"As technology keeps advancing, there are more and more ways to cheat on tests of this kind," said Neal Kingston, director of the Center for Educational Testing and Evaluation at the University of Kansas. "There's a never-ending war between those who try to maintain standards and those who are looking out for their own interests."

Cheating on standardized tests is not new, and it can be as simple as looking at the other person's test sheet. The Internet and cell phones have made it easier for students to cheat in a variety of ways. In the past few years, investigations into cheating on standardized tests for K-12 students have surfaced in Atlanta, New York and El Paso, Texas.

Still, most of the recent test-taking scandals involved students taking tests, not people taking teacher certification exams. Cheating scams involving teacher certification tests are more unusual, said Robert Schaeffer, public education director for the National Center for Fair & Open Testing.

Schaeffer notes that a large-scale scandal involving teacher certification tests was discovered in 2000, also in the South. In that case, 52 teachers were charged with paying up to $1,000 apiece to a former Educational Testing Services proctor to ensure a passing grade on teacher certification tests.

Teachers from Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Tennessee and Mississippi took tests through Philander Smith College in Little Rock, Ark., in 1998. The college was not accused of wrongdoing.

Educational Testing Services also writes and administers the Praxis examinations involved in the Memphis case. ETS spokesman Tom Ewing said the company discovered the cheating in June 2009, conducted an investigation and canceled scores. The company began meeting with authorities to turn over the information in late 2009, Ewing said.

"These cases are rare, but we consider them to be very serious and something we have to guard against happening for all the honest test-takers, students and teachers," Ewing said.

Ewing said ETS observes test-takers and reviews test scores to try to root out cheaters. ETS also has received anonymous tips that have led them to cheaters, Ewing said.

Prosecutors in the Mumford case say he, the teachers and test-takers used the Internet and the U.S. Postal Service to register and pay for the tests, and to receive payment. The indictment does not say how much he allegedly paid the test-takers.

An experienced educator, Mumford was working for Memphis City Schools when the alleged scam took place. Authorities say Mumford defrauded the three states by making the fake driver's licenses.

"What happens at many testing centers is that a whole bunch of test-takers show up simultaneously, early on a Saturday morning, and the proctors give only a cursory look to the identification," Schaeffer said. "It's not like going through airport security where a guy holds up a magnifying glass and puts our license under ultraviolet light to make sure it has not been tampered with."

Mumford was fired after news of the investigation came out, and others, like Wilson, have been suspended. But at least three teachers implicated in the scandal remain employed with their school district.

Kingston, the university professor, said prospective teachers may not be confident in their knowledge base to pass the test. Or, the cheaters may believe they are smart enough to pass on their own but also know they are poor test takers.

Kingston said his research has shown that cheating on exams is getting more prevalent.

"The propensity to cheat on exams both through college and for licensure and certification exams seems to be increasing over time," said Kingston. "People often don't see it as something wrong."

The pressure of passing the test could make people do things they normally would not do. And it could take a while for authorities and test-taking services to catch up with the cheaters.

"When people come up with a new method for cheating, it takes some time for folks to figure it out, partly because this has been an understudied area in the field of assessment," Kingston said.

Nina Monfredo, a 23-year-old history teacher at Power Center Academy in Memphis, has taken Praxis exams for history, geography, middle school content, and secondary teaching and learning.

Monfredo, who passed all her tests and is not involved in the fraud case, said the exams she took were relatively easy for someone who has a high school education. She said some people use study aids to prepare, but she didn't. And she didn't feel much pressure because it was her understanding that she could take the test again if she did not pass.

"If you feel like you can't pass and you hire someone it means you really didn't know what you were doing," she said. "I think it would be easier to just learn what's on the test."

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/25/15430647-cheating-scandal-feds-say-teachers-hired-stand-in-to-take-their-certification-tests?lite

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Acuvue Oasys: Silicone Hydrogel Contact Lenses for Astigmatism

Astigmatism is a focusing error of the eye that distorts vision. It is very common with more than 95% of the population having some degree of astigmatism. Often accompanied by myopia (short sightedness) or hyperopia (long sightedness), astigmatism affects people of all ages.

Earlier,people with astigmatism could not wear soft lenses and the ones that were available didn?t come in disposable, frequent replacement, multifocal, or colored varieties. Silicone hydrogel lenses are the latest development in soft lenses to have changed all that.? These lenses allow for 6 times more oxygen to pass through them over conventional soft lenses so they promote overall eye health. Other benefits of using silicone hydrogel contact lenses is more resistance to protein buildup, lenses stay moist for longer, lower risk of infection, easier handling due to the material being more firm.


Silicone hydrogel lenses also offer the convenience of bi-weekly disposal. This results in a lower incidence of complications even over extended periods of time. These lenses are ideal for people who wear their lenses for more than 12 to 14 hours a day (including overnight wear). A popular choice for both eye care practitioners as well as patients, more and more doctors believe that within the next 5 years, more patients will be wearing silicone hydrogel contact lenses than any other lens material.

One of the premier brands of silicone hydrogel lenses is Acuvue Oasys for Astigmatism Contact Lenses which can give you superior comfort for long hours at the computer. Acuvue Oasys for Astigmatism Contact Lenses are built with Accelerated Stabilisation Design (ASD) that ensures consistently crisp and comfortable vision - even for people with an active lifestyle. Silicone hydrogel? are an excellent alternative for people contemplating refractive surgery.

VisionDirect.com is a great place to shop for eye care essentials as well as contact lenses of all kinds. A major advantage of sites like VisionDirect.com over your local optometrist or beauty shop is that they always stock top quality brands and offer great discounts. Some of the eye care brands listed at VisionDirect.com include Acuvue, Air Optix, Avaira, Biofinity, Biomedics, Bausch & Lomb, Boston, Ciba Vision, Clearsight, Coopervision, Dailies, Focus, Frequency, Freshlook, Proclear, PureVision and Softens. Many of these brands offer silicone hydrogel lenses so it?s easier for you to find a suitable choice.

Look for quality lenses online and make wise choice by opting for Acuvue Oasys for Astigmatism Contact Lenses which offers you clear, stable vision all day. Visit the website: www.visiondirect.com to get updates on the latest deals and know more about Acuvue lenses for astigmatism.

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Frazel Thomas loves writing about contacts and contact lens. Frazel considers herself a veteran in raising teenagers, having raised five kids in the last fifteen years. Frazel left her full time job after ten years to become a stay-at-home Mom. Here she writes about Contact Lenses and Acuvue Oasys for Astigmatism Contact Lenses.

Article Tags : Silicone hydrogel lenses, lenses online, contact lens

Source: http://www.workoninternet.com/business/reviews/health-beauty/220184-acuvue-oasys-silicone-hydrogel-contact-lenses-for-astigmatism.html

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Oil prices fall as Israel-Hamas truce holds

(AP) ? The price of oil fell Monday as a truce between Israel and the militant group Hamas that stopped fighting in the Gaza Strip appeared to hold despite a confrontation late last week.

Benchmark oil for January delivery was down 33 cents to $87.95 per barrel at midday Bangkok time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. On Friday, the contract rose 90 cents to close at $88.28 a barrel on the Nymex after Israeli troops fired on crowds in Gaza surging toward a border fence, killing one Palestinian.

Prior to the shooting, oil prices had been falling, thanks mostly to optimism that the cease-fire agreement between the two sides would prevent a broader conflict in the region that could disrupt crude supplies. The truce was struck last Wednesday to end to an eight-day Israeli offensive against Gaza militants who had fired rockets into Israel, but remains fragile.

Traders were also keeping a close eye on developments in Egypt, said independent oil analyst Stephen Schork. Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi on Sunday moved to grant himself near-absolute power, sparking street clashes between his supporters and opponents.

Brent, which is used to set prices for many international varieties of oil, fell 33 cents to $111.05 a barrel.

Other futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange:

? Wholesale gasoline lost 0.2 cent to $2.719 a gallon.

? Natural gas lost 5 cents to $3.851 per 1,000 cubic feet.

? Heating oil was unchanged at $3.086 a gallon.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-26-Oil%20Prices/id-16f6bcb7ac094896b6535227e723f2b2

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More Reasons to Buy a Home Before the End of the Year!! | Coconut ...

There are several benefits for buying a home before the end of the year but the?tax advantages are a great incentive.

First of all,?federal income tax credits.? Closing on your new home by Dec. 31, 2012?means you can deduct mortgage interest, property taxes and points from your loans on your 2012?income tax return.? These deductions can be significant, especially in the early years of your loan when you are paying off so much interest.

Reason number two,?Florida property taxes.? Here in Florida we have what is known as the Homestead?Exemption.? State law allows Florida homeowners to claim up to a $50,000 exemption?towards the assessed value?on their primary residence.? Additionally, homes that qualify for the Homestead Exemption also?receive a benefit known as Amendment 10 or ?Save Our Homes.?? Amendment 10 limits increases in the annual assessment of a home to a maximum of 3% regardless of increases in market value.

Even better, if you currently have a homesteaded property, when you sell, you can file for ?Portability of Homestead Assessment??(Amendment 10) which limits increases in the annual assessment?of?the new?home purchase?regardless of increases in market value.? I have had clients save thousands of dollars by utilizing this amendment.

If you have any questions regarding any of the above tax benefits, please give me a call and I will be happy to refer you to an expert in the field.

It?s not easy to find an agent with my combination of skills, strengths and experience.? If you are thinking of buying or selling a home, call me at 305-987-2644 to schedule a private consultation. If you know someone who could benefit from my expertise, please feel free to pass my contact information along

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Source: http://miamiselectrealestate.com/2012/11/25/more-reasons-to-buy-a-home-before-the-end-of-the-year/

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Analysis: Fiscal battles could sideline U.S. immigration reform

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama's re-election this month gave supporters of comprehensive immigration reform an immediate dose of optimism.

They hoped that Obama, bolstered by the 70 percent-plus support he received from Hispanic voters, might now feel ready to champion the cause he largely avoided during his first term.

And they thought that Republicans, after the thumping they got at the hands of Latinos in the November 6 election, might soften their resistance in order to stay competitive in future elections.

But as advocates mobilize for what is likely to be a two-year drive to get an immigration law enacted, their optimism may be tested by a dose of reality.

However sympathetic Obama might be, he will be preoccupied with fiscal battles well into next year and less likely to engage in the kind of salesmanship analysts believe is essential to sell broad immigration policy changes to the public.

And Republicans in Congress, as a group, may not be eager to reverse long-held and deeply felt positions on immigration in an era when so many are vulnerable to primary election challenges from the right. Plus, they may be just as consumed by fiscal issues as the rest of Washington.

Democratic Senator Mark Warner noted the fiscal cliff - the tax increases and spending cuts set to take effect in January - will suck up Washington's energy early in 2013, even as his party wants to use the new Congress to tackle big issues like immigration, climate change and job creation.

"We're not going to get to any of that until we get this (fiscal cliff) fixed, until we lance this boil," Warner said in a meeting with Reuters reporters and editors last week.

PARTISAN DIVIDE

Immigration reform, which has failed repeatedly in Congress over the past decade, aims to accomplish several goals - none of them easy.

For Democrats and their labor union supporters, the 11 million undocumented foreigners, many having spent years in the United States, should be allowed to come out of the shadows and given a path to citizenship while working here legally.

Many Republicans complain that this approach would reward those who broke the law by jumping in front of those waiting to emigrate legally.

The 11 million includes the children of illegals who have been brought into the United States through no fault of their own. Obama, impatient with Congress' inaction and with an eye on re-election, last June moved on his own to allow some of them to avoid deportation for two years and obtain work permits.

For Republicans, stronger enforcement measures are necessary to keep more illegals from entering the United States through states bordering Mexico, especially if an improving U.S. economy begins creating more jobs. Democrats argue that tough controls already are in place.

Both sides want to more efficiently verify legal workers in the United States, while the business community wants better access to low-paid farm workers and well-paid high-tech workers on a temporary basis, which troubles some union leaders.

Supporters of reform hope to see progress soon.

"At a minimum, they'll want to have a bill (introduced) by early spring, around April," said Andrea Zuniga DiBitetto, who follows Congress for the AFL-CIO, the confederation of U.S. labor unions.

Senator Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Democrat and a close ally of Obama, told Reuters he aims to get such a bill onto the Senate floor for votes next year. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, in an interview, said his panel would move early to write the measure.

REPUBLICANS WEIGH RESPONSE

It was Obama's re-election that emboldened his fellow Democrats in Congress to move swiftly with comprehensive immigration legislation next year.

It also led some Republicans to conclude that they have to start responding to the concerns of the fastest-growing demographic group in the United States.

Republicans' November 6 election losses prompted House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner to note the need for immigration reform.

But one senior House Republican aide, who did not want to be named, noted that House Republicans as a whole are "still pretty conservative."

He added that immigration "won't be the first thing we do or even the second, but we have two years to act" before the 113th Congress ends.

And Boehner, however open he may be, does not control the Republicans he leads in the House.

The next chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, the panel that would craft that chamber's immigration bill, could be Representative Bob Goodlatte, a conservative who opposes amnesty for those who came to the United States illegally.

Goodlatte also has praised the controversial Arizona law cracking down on illegal immigrants, which has been partially struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Representative Steve King, also a conservative Republican, said during a post-election press conference that Obama could not be trusted to enforce any immigration reform law that Congress might produce.

And he downplayed any notion that an alienated Hispanic community contributed to Republican losses in this year's elections.

But Representative Raul Labrador, a fellow conservative and a native of Puerto Rico, quickly rebutted King, arguing that Hispanic votes are essential to a healthy Republican Party.

"One of the biggest things conservatives talk about often is that we want to fix a broken government. Well, if you know anything about immigration law, the immigration system is absolutely broken in the United States," said Labrador, adding that he is eager to tackle reform.

In the Senate, the work will start without some of the titans of earlier immigration battles. Edward Kennedy, a Democrat, died in 2009. Arlen Specter, a moderate Republican-turned-Democrat, was defeated in a 2010 Democratic primary election and left the Senate before his death last month.

Senator Richard Lugar, a moderate Republican, will leave at year's end along with Joseph Lieberman, an independent. It is unclear whether John McCain, the Arizona Republican who ran for president in 2008, will help lead the fight or sit on the sidelines.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Durbin, joined by fellow Democrats Robert Menendez and Charles Schumer, will watch closely to see whether some fresh Republican faces become serious players.

Among those Republicans are first-term Senator Marco Rubio of Florida and incoming Senators Jeff Flake of Arizona and Ted Cruz of Texas - all conservatives from states with large Hispanic populations.

In his first term, Obama disappointed many Hispanics and Democrats with his aggressive deportation policy and failure to seek broad immigration reforms, opting for a policy decision that defers deportation for some younger illegal immigrants who are enrolled in school.

A House Democratic aide, who asked not to be identified, complained that Obama, when it came to immigration reform, "for the most part sat back and told Congress to work it out and 'I'll give a speech.' He's going to have to be more hands-on" this time around.

Meanwhile, Hispanics are hoping that the 2012 election has finally opened the door to change.

"We have a check to cash, and 2013 is going to be a new year," said Daniel Rodriguez, an Arizona activist with United We Dream, a network of youth-led immigration groups.

(Additional reporting by Thomas Ferraro and Doug Palmer; Editing by Fred Barbash and Xavier Briand)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-fiscal-battles-could-sideline-u-immigration-reform-060238853.html

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Friday, November 23, 2012

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UPDATED: Environmental Group seeks to appeal OMB decision ...

An artist?s rendering of the proposed Canadian Motor Speedway complex. Graphic: Special to Bullet News

JOHN ROBBINS/Bullet News

FORT ERIE ? The Canadian Motor Speedway project has hit a bump in the road.

A Niagara-based environmental group is appealing a decision by the Ontario Municipal Board earlier this month in favour of the proposed $400-million development.



The Preservation of Agricultural Lands Society (PALS) is seeking to appeal the OMB decision, which was handed down Nov. 2.

PALS was one of several groups and individuals who appealed town council?s decision to grant zoning and official plan changes paving the way for the speedway project.

The hearing into the matter was heard by the OMB this past summer.

There is a 30-day window for appeals of the OMB decision to be launched.

Fort Erie town planner Rick Brady said his office was notified Tuesday of the appeal by John Bacher on behalf of PALS.

Brady said the group is asking for the chairman of the OMB to review the decision of the hearing officer.

?It?s not an appeal to the courts,? said Brady, noting an appeal of an OMB decision must be confined to arguments based on issues of fact and/or law.

?It?s extremely rare that these appeals are successful,? Brady said.

The proposed Canadian Motor Speedway project complex includes:

- 1.0 mile paved motor speedway oval and spectator grandstand (65,000 seating capacity) with support facilities in the infield such as truck and RV parking, garages, first aid stations, fuel handling area, media centre, fan walk, maintenance and emergency command centre;

- 2.5 mile paved motor speedway road course with support facilities;

- a motocross/BMX /snow mobile/rental kart centre speedway course located within the road course area;

- 75,000 square feet ancillary commercial component supporting the Speedway;

- 185 acres for a parking and camping area along the southwest corner of Gilmore and Laur Road and along the lands south of Bowen Road, west of Laur Road;

- 31.1 acre ?Innovation and Centre of Excellence?- post secondary educational and professional facilities related to the research and development of automotive technology and manufacturing and assembly of prototype products associated with the Centre;

- 170 acres of natural features;

- 51.3 acres for storm water management facilities.

?The decision emphasizes the importance of the Speedway in supporting economic diversity and promoting increased opportunities for economic development,? Fort Erie Mayor Doug Martin said after the OMB decision was handed down earlier this month.

?The town prides itself on its ?open for business? attitude and is more than ready to roll up its sleeves and get those shovels in the ground.?

The OMB decision was generally greeted as welcome news by many in a town looking for some good news after a seemingly endless streak of bad news.

Earlier this year, Ontario Lottery Gaming Corporation permanently shuttered the Slots at Fort Erie Race Track, a move that cost more than 200 people their jobs. At the same time, the province announced its decision to end its slots-at-racetracks program, which, since the late 1990s, had provided a source of funding for horse race tracks across Ontario. That decision put the future of the Fort Erie Race Track in jeopardy.

This summer, DMI Industrial announced the permanent closure of its wind-turbine tower manufacturing plant in Stevensville. At its peak, the plant employed some 300 people.

Kim Craitor

Niagara Falls MPP Kim Craitor says the Canadian Motor Speedway project shows major investors are willing to build in Fort Erie, which ?sends a strong message that the town is open for business.?

?I?m ecstatic,? Craitor said at the time of the decision. ?This is going to be a great catalyst for Fort Erie.?

Craitor said the project proponents have not sought any direct financial aid for the project to date, however, he said he expects CMS may come looking for the province to support off-site infrastructure upgrades, such as improvements to roads and highway ramps.

Craitor also suggested the company might consider applying to the recently approved Southwestern Ontario Economic Development Fund, if the proponents feel there are some project costs that fit the program criteria.

Originally, the fund was not going to be open to Niagara businesses, but Craitor and a group of Niagara Mayors successfully lobbied Queen?s Park to extend the territory the fund encompasses to include this region.

?That shows the government wants to invest down here in the Niagara region.?

(This story is in development. Please check back later for updates.)

Source: http://www.bulletnewsniagara.ca/2012/11/21/environmental-group-seeks-to-appeal-omb-decision-favouring-400-million-canadian-motor-speedway-project/

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Sandy victims on the move, longing for 'home'

John Makely / NBC News

Theresa Nugent, left, and her sister Geraldine Duke, salvage clothing from their flooded house in Breezy Point, N.Y. on Sunday, Nov. 18, 2012. They've just rented an apartment in Brooklyn that their sharing with their partners, two cats and two dogs, to weather the post-Sandy storm.

By Miranda Leitsinger, NBC News

BREEZY POINT, N.Y. -- Three weeks after Hurricane Sandy forced Geraldine Duke and her sister, Theresa Nugent, out of their homes with four pets and just a few possessions, they have moved out of the airport motel room where they spent several weeks and into a two-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn.

But their hearts are still in the rubble that is their longtime neighborhood in Breezy Point.

?This is my home. That?s never going to be my home. Ever,? Duke, 46, said Sunday of the Brooklyn apartment, as she tried to clear a path through the debris clogging the Asian-themed garden outside of her sister?s Breezy Point bungalow.


Duke and Nugent, 48, who share their new apartment with their partners, are among the tens of thousands of residents of New Jersey and New York who have been forced to relocate in the aftermath of Sandy, straining community and family ties, breaking household budgets and adding an extra helping of stress by forcing them to search for housing.

It?s not clear how many are temporarily without homes as a result of the storm, but the Federal Emergency Management Agency said Tuesday it has provided more than $350 million in rental assistance to people in those states plus Rhode Island and Connecticut, with nearly 70 percent of that going to New Yorkers.

Overall, some 450,000 people in those four states have applied for housing aid that includes rental or repairs, with more than $820 million approved, FEMA said.

Governors of the two hardest-hit states, New Jersey and New York, have not requested mobile homes or trailers, though some have been stationed in the area in case they do, FEMA representatives said. In the meantime, the agency will provide up to 18 months? rent for temporary housing while residences are being repaired, and is paying for motel and hotel stays for others displaced by the storm.

FEMA said it increased the rent allocation by 25 percent over the normal going rate in both states after it became apparent that the cost of rental units could become a limiting factor.

That should open up another 1,800 rental units in New York and another 1,200 in New Jersey, FEMA said.

?People know what the New York housing market was like anyway prior to Sandy. It?s merely stating the obvious that Sandy made it that much worse,? said William L. Rukeyser, a FEMA spokesman in New York.

And even with the increase, some victims told NBC News the?initial payments were?not enough to pay for an apartment in?the tight New York City housing market, where the rental vacancy rate was only about 3 percent in 2011. Government figures show that in the city, the monthly rent provided could range from $1,500 to $2,655, while in Atlantic City, N.J., it could be from $1,020 to $2,360.

Unlike the Hurricane Katrina aftermath, when victims were widely dispersed to dozens of states, Sandy's victims are tending to stay locally, initially bunking with relatives or friends. But now they are searching for more permanent shelter as they begin the long process of cleaning or repairing their homes.

John Makely / NBC News

Breezy Point resident Liz Jordan stands in her ome, which was flooded by Hurricane Sandy on Oct. 29.

In communities like Breezy Point, where generations of families were often affected, parents, grandparents and kids are frequently forced to squeeze into a rental unit and commute to their damaged or destroyed homes.

Liz Jordan and her family, which called Breezy Point home until the storm flooded their house, is split up across New York. Jordan and her husband are staying with a friend in Staten Island, their daughter is living with a classmate who attends her Brooklyn high school, and their autistic son is upstate with friends so he can follow a familiar routine.?

Jordan, 57, came out of retirement a few weeks ago to take a job with the federal government. That job has become critical after the disaster, which also claimed all of her family's cars.

It takes Jordan and her husband, who is retired, hours to get to Breezy Point from Staten Island, and they?ve told their four adult children who want to come home to help that they can?t since they have nowhere to put them. But the long list of their tasks is manifold, with an apartment being just one more thing to do.

?We have to find a place to be a family again and just be together,? Jordan said.

They?ve also had to explain to their autistic 17-year-old son what happened to their community.

??We need to get some place where the kids can get back to school, whether we have to drive them or not, you know, some place that?s safe, that we like,? ?Jordan said.

Many storm victims share similar ?conflicting realities,? said Rukeyser, the FEMA spokesman.

?People want to move into solid housing. They also want to stay as close as possible to their homes,? he said. ?Depending on where they lived before Sandy, there may in fact not be available rentals in the locations that they would most prefer, and you know, that?s a real difficulty for families and they have to make, in some cases, hard decisions.?

For some storm victims, the uncertainty over how long they will be displaced and the time it would take traveling back and forth to their damaged homes are outweighed by a desire to begin rebuilding. So instead, they are camping out in their damaged homes, without light or heat, as temperatures dip into the 30s at night.

John Makely / NBC News

Tom Dillon makes coffee on the fire in his flood damaged Breezy Point home.

Among them is Tom Dillon, 46, who usually lives with his father-in-law, wife, son, daughter, four dogs, three cats and a turtle in a two-story home in Breezy Point.

Dillon, whose home was flooded the night of Oct. 29, has since ripped out the insulation and pulled up the floors. He sleeps for a few hours each night in a sofa chair in front of a crackling fire in his fireplace, which he also uses to boil tea, make coffee and noodles.

An electrician certified the second floor of his home to receive power last Thursday and he hopes that the lights will come on in the next few weeks. Most of his family is staying in New Jersey.

?Just trying to get my family back in here,? he said. ?We just want to be home and that?s it. This is getting a little, getting a little hard, you know what I mean. We?re not together right now.?

In front of his home stands a sign, reading: "There will be no crisis this week ... my schedule is full!"

The family won?t mind being at home while the repairs are ongoing, he added: ?We?re just going to have live roughing it a little bit until the electricity?s on.?

Breezy Point?s cooperative said late Tuesday that a majority of the community was ready for electrical service hook-up, depending on a home?s ability to receive it as determined by an electrician. The gas service is being restored to many areas, too, though, like the electricity, that wouldn?t include the more than 100 homes destroyed in a fire triggered by Sandy or apparently those that have received a ?red card,? meaning it?s unsafe to go inside.

For those whose homes are uninhabitable, the road back to Breezy Point looks like a long one. Dealing with home and auto insurers and FEMA, finding a temporary place to stay while returning to jobs, and sorting out mortgages and rental cars has put a strain on families.

John Makely / NBC News

Siobhan Foley, sweeps in front of the destroyed family home she shared with her mother, Terry, in Breezy Point, N.Y. on Sunday.

Terry Foley and her adult daughter, Siobhan, surveyed the damage to the two-story pink oceanfront home that had been in the family for nearly 60 years as they waited a third time for an insurance representative.

The house was ripped off its foundation by Sandy and pitched sideways. City inspectors have issued a red card for the home.

?I want everyone to come. I want them to tell us and then I want to bulldoze it because I can?t look at it anymore. I can?t, it?s horrible. I?d rather see a gaping hole than this,? Siobhan Foley, a teacher, said Sunday.

Her mother, who works in special education, lamented that she could not go inside to retrieve cherished items, such as her mother?s china.

?We have nothing,? Terry Foley said. ?I?m sleeping on a toy blow-up bed that if you move, the pillow flies off, OK, and then I have one card table. Is that a life??

They took a two-bedroom apartment in nearby Brooklyn because they were desperate, she said. But Siobhan Foley said sharing an apartment adds to the stress.

?Living in a house is one thing, together, but an apartment, not so much fun. I gotta be honest,? she said.

Many in Breezy Point said the thing they miss most by being displaced are the community ties. Some reminisced about meeting up for a drink at the local pubs or to watch a football game, while others said it could take hours to get home since you?d meet friends along the way.

?There?s one road that goes into this community. One road in, one road out. Everyone you see, you kind of know,? said Roy Currlin, 49, and Nugent?s boyfriend, who is sharing the apartment with Duke and her husband after his Breezy Point home flooded. ?That sense of closeness is lost.?

They will try to re-create that atmosphere, many residents said, even though they fear the recovery could take a year or more.

Apart from the homes that burned down here, a number of others floated off their foundations, including one that came to rest on the deck of Nugent?s home.

Duke clipped plants and pulled weeds on Sunday as she cleaned her sister?s garden. They are trying to make the home accessible so they can get it inspected and begin the repairs, as they?ve been able to do with the home that Duke lived in nearby with her husband.

In the meantime, they?ve had to share the few clothes they have, sleep on air mattresses and tend to their mutual pets, including one ? Rocky, a 2-year-old Cocker Spaniel ? who has become anxious and fearful after the storm.

But despite the obvious losses, Nugent, who this past Sunday gathered some salvageable wet clothes from her home, said she had the most important things in their new place.

?I pretty much brought what I needed to make it feel like home, you know,? she said, ?the people and the animals.?

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/21/15322248-sandy-victims-on-the-move-but-temporary-housing-will-never-be-home?lite

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Thursday, November 22, 2012

Keselowski aside, NASCAR ready to move past 2012

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) ? The season hadn't even ended before NASCAR's top executives were previewing 2013, the new "Gen 6" cars and elements of a five-year industry "action plan" designed to engage and excite fans.

The season ended with a celebratory final image of fresh-faced champion Brad Keselowski, drunk on the combination of his sponsor's beer and the joy of giving team owner Roger Penske his first championship. And the days since Sunday's finale have been a coming out party for the 28-year-old from suburban Detroit, who is all over the television dial smoothly shilling for NASCAR.

It's a reprieve from the bad news: ESPN's ratings from the race at Homestead-Miami Speedway were down 25 percent from last year's race, the most-viewed in network history. Ratings were down or flat for all 10 Chase for the Sprint Cup championship races this season.

Why? Because the racing in 2012 was mostly forgettable, something chairman Brian France has tasked his entire competition department with fixing.

"The missing and final piece, which we're working on now, is to improve on the quality of racing," France said before Sunday's finale. "Everyone knows a stated goal of ours is to have the closest, most competitive, tightest racing that we can. And that's what we're testing now."

So in one sense, NASCAR couldn't wait to get out of Homestead and officially close a 2012 season that opened with perhaps the most bizarre Daytona 500 in history.

Heavy rains washed out NASCAR's marquee event for the first time in 54 runnings, pushing the race into a prime-time Monday night slot. Then, a freak crash between Juan Pablo Montoya and a truck loaded with jet fuel ignited a fuel fire and a nearly two-hour delay.

While track workers tried to clean the mess with Tide laundry detergent, Keselowski grabbed worldwide attention with both thumbs by tweeting updates from his car.

The TV ratings were good, the buzz surrounding NASCAR was better but it wasn't sustainable as the Sprint Cup Series quickly fell into a stretch of nearly unwatchable racing. California ran caution-free until rain brought out the yellow that eventually stopped the race. Texas had two debris cautions until the race went green 234 laps to the finish.

Bristol had just one multi-car crash and featured a 219-lap green-flag run. Kansas in the spring had three cautions, two for debris and one for a single-car spin and the race ended with a 75-lap green-flag run.

With Richmond and Talladega looming, fans believed action-packed racing was ahead. Instead, Richmond was a bland affair until Carl Edwards was accused of jumping a late restart and Talladega exposed the disconnect between drivers and fans. Sure, there was the usual late-race multi-car accident, and Tony Stewart's tongue-in-cheek assessment of the racing proved there's no middle ground in racin' vs. wreckin'.

"It's not fair to these fans for them to not see more wrecks than that and more torn-up cars," he sarcastically said after the May race. "We still had over half the cars running at the end, and it shouldn't be that way."

When NASCAR returned to Daytona in July, promoter Bruton Smith was calling for mandatory cautions to spice up the racing and France was adamantly opposed to the need for gimmicks. But, France revealed that he'd dispatched senior vice president of racing operations Steve O'Donnell to North Carolina to repurpose NASCAR's research and development center and zero in on the correct rules package for the debut of the new car next year.

Hours before the race, AJ Allmendinger was suspended for failing a random drug test. Nothing diverts attention like a scandal, and Allmendinger's woes and his job with straight-laced Penske Racing dominated the news for the next month.

When Penske finally cut him loose, the free agency watch began. Matt Kenseth had announced in June he was leaving Roush Fenway Racing, and although it was a poorly kept secret he was taking Joey Logano's ride at Joe Gibbs Racing, it wasn't officially confirmed until the end of the summer.

So the industry watched and waited to see if Logano would get Allmendinger's seat over Sam Hornish Jr., a Penske loyalist who has done anything at The Captain's beck and call. When Logano did get the job, and it was revealed the hiring was at Keselowski's urging, it should have been a clear sign that something special had developed between team owner and driver.

Otherwise, how would Keselowski have such pull?

"He's passionate about the sport, and he wants me to be involved, as he has the rest of the team, and I think that we've stepped it up," Penske said. "I'd have to say that Brad has not only pushed me as an individual, he's pushed the team in a positive direction, and he's delivering."

Keselowski delivered as soon as the Chase opened, stealing a win from Johnson at Chicagoland and hanging with the five-time champion and Denny Hamlin round-for-round all the way to Homestead. The title fights were at Texas, where Keselowski had to line up for three late restarts, winning the first two but losing to Johnson on the last one to go down seven points headed into Phoenix.

It was one of Johnson's best tracks and a place where Keselowski was unproven. But he was better than Johnson for two-thirds of the race, and then a blown tire sent Johnson into the wall. It put Keselowski in great shape headed into the finale, but not before Jeff Gordon intentionally wrecked Clint Bowyer to trigger a garage-area melee and prove the season-long theme that the sideshows tend to overshadow the actual racing.

Gordon was fined $100,000 and could have been suspended for last week's finale. Even after holding off Bowyer to win Sunday's race, he was dealing with the aftermath of Phoenix.

"It's like our whole season wrapped up in one week," he said. "You can try all you want to move past the moment, but man, it just ate me up inside all week. I just kept going back and forth from being disappointed, being angry, feeling that I had a right. I didn't have a right."

He looked around at his race team, grateful they stood behind him all season and after the Bowyer incident, and grateful they'll be with him next year.

"I think it started in our team meeting before the race, I apologized to those guys for some of the things that transpired that they had to get involved with that wasn't their doing last week, and I put them in that position, and I apologized to them and I thanked them at the same time for having my back," Gordon said. "We've had to have one another's backs because we've all made mistakes this year. And so to be able to celebrate with them in victory lane was very special, very meaningful, and gives a tremendous amount of momentum to go into 2013 with the new race car."

It's all about next season.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/keselowski-aside-nascar-ready-move-past-2012-221111280--spt.html

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Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Can I Set Up In-Home Care Services in Bradenton, FL for My Aging ...

Setting up in home care for an aging parent isn?t as difficult as you may think. While you will need to have the consent of your parents, they can count on you or another family member to take care of many of the initial contact and details of arranging care.

Getting Started

The first thing that you need to do is to talk to your parent about hiring an in-home caregiver. Your parent will need to agree to having a caregiver visit their home unless you have legal permission to make decisions on behalf of your mom or dad. This step can be challenging for the children of independent seniors who may not see the need for assistance.

Seek Help

An in-home care agency will work with your family to find the best care solutions based on their personal needs. Intake coordinators can help you find an in-home caregiver and assist with the transition of bringing someone into the home to care for aging parents. An intake coordinator can also be helpful in talking to seniors who are hesitant to accept care and assess the health and mobility of your parent to help your family decide if a full time caregiver is needed.

The process of choosing the right caregiver includes interviewing prospective candidates with your parent. The final choice is decided by you and your parent, so take the time to talk to each candidate about both professional training and experience as well as their personal preferences. Since caregivers visiting the home will spend a lot of time with your parents, they should have some similarities to encourage a good working relationship.

Patience and Compassion

Hiring an in-home caregiver can allow your aging parents to live at home much longer and with more independence than entering a long term care facility. Your parents will need to agree to the arrangement before you can hire a live-in care assistant. Listen to any concerns that your parent may have and take the time to address these concerns with the agency you are using to find a caregiver.

The decision making process can take up to several months. During this time, you can talk about what your parents need provided by caregivers. You should listen to your parents and assist whenever needed during each step to find the best caregiver possible.

Home care counselors at Comfort Keepers are available to talk with you about your?in-home care?services?including how to reduce?caregiver?stress while providing better, affordable care. We are an?elder care?agency providing?in-home care?services?in Bradenton, FL. For more information about?in-home care?services?call us at?(941) 444-0004.

Source: http://inhomecaresarasotafl.com/in-home-care-services-in-bradenton-fl

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6 Tips for Enjoying the Holidays | Libero Network

Anyone who has suffered from an eating disorder knows that holidays can be difficult. ?Most all holidays center around food, and that makes it extremely difficult for those of us who suffer from eating disorders.


I can?t tell you how many times my parents told me to ?take a break? from the eating disorder for a day, to be normal for a day. ?I remember yearning for the ability to do this, to no avail. ?I don?t think that I have to tell you that it doesn?t work that way.

If we can?t leave the eating disorder behind for a day, what can we do? ?We can be strong, and enjoy ourselves?despite the eating disorder thoughts. ?The thoughts will be there, we know that; however, by not giving in to these thoughts, we can truly enjoy the holiday, and get stronger in the process. ?The more we do this, the easier it will become.

That?s all well and good, but knowing this doesn?t make it any easier. ?What can we do to make it through the holidays, recognize our ED thoughts, and not let them dictate our actions? ?Here are a few practical tips I have found very helpful, and I hope you do as well.

  1. Affirmations have a lot of power:Tell yourself what you know is true. ?These few have helped me, and I know there are a lot more as well!
    • I need and deserve this food. ?It will nourish me.
    • Today isn?t about the food, it is about enjoying family.
    • Yes I am around different people, but it is just like any other meal.
    • I can be present and enjoy this moment.
  2. Talk to your family:?let them know it is difficult, and let them help you through it. ?You don?t have to tell everyone, maybe just your parents, or brother or sister. ?I know from experience they want to help you, but they don?t know how unless you tell them ? Maybe having them help you portion your food, or simply eating with you, whatever will help you.
  3. Listen to your healthy voice: I know the eating disorder voice is very strong when it tells you to avoid certain foods, or have more of that, but no matter how strong the ED voice is, your healthy voice is in there as well. ?Try to hear that healthy voice and follow it. ?It will be quiet, and it isn?t easy, but you can do it!
  4. Expect the unexpected: There will very likely be foods that you don?t normally eat on a daily basis, or that you don?t know exactly how they fit into your meal plan. ?This doesn?t mean these foods are bad or that they don?t have a place in your meal plan! ?Don?t limit yourself to what you know, explore and remember this is just one day of many, and trying one thing can?t hurt you.
  5. Don?t let comments get to you: ?During recovery I had a lot of family gatherings when I heard comments about my weight or eating, be it ?You?ve gained weight!? or ?You look great!? or anything of that nature. ?These comments can be very hard to deal with, I know they were for me, and sometimes still are. ?I find it is very helpful to remind myself where they are coming from. ?They haven?t seen me in months, and I have indeed gained weight, and they are happy to see that! Also realize they don?t understand how a seemingly positive comment such as ?You look so healthy!? could be taken negatively. ?It could be helpful to tell them these comments are hurtful and/or triggering. And remind yourself their comments don?t need to change what you know to be true.
  6. Don?t be too hard on yourself: If things don?t go as planned, that doesn?t mean you failed. ?Even if it seems the ED voice won, you have fought it and weakened it, and that is a victory in and of itself. ?Things don?t change overnight. ?Don?t let your?perceived?failures ruin all the positive aspects of your day! ?You can still enjoy your family, friends, and loved ones.

So I challenge you to truly?enjoy your holiday season, no matter where you are in your recovery. ?You will probably hear the eating disorder thoughts, but?you have the power to hear these voices, disregard them, and enjoy your holiday?despite them. ?You deserve to enjoy holidays and all that comes with them, not just survive them! ?

You deserve to enjoy the love of your family and friends, the meaning behind the holiday, the traditions, and everything in between. and I hope that some of these tips help you to combat the ED voice and let the joy of the holidays shine through.

?

Related posts:

Scott G.
Scott Gramke hopes to turn the negativity of his Anorexia into something positive by supporting other men and women who struggle with eating disorders in any way he can. His message is simple: recovery is possible, and you can achieve it. Some of his hobbies are coffee, cars, and bicycle racing. He is currently studying mechanical engineering. Read Scott's full bio HERE. Read more from Scott's personal blog "Scott Recovered": scottrecovered.wordpress.com Follow Scott's RSS feed: http://liberonetwork.com/category/scottg/feed Twitter: @ScottGramke Contact: scottg[at]liberonetwork.com

Source: http://www.liberonetwork.com/enjoying-the-holidays/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=enjoying-the-holidays

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BlackBerry maker wins vote of confidence ahead of BB10

TORONTO (Reuters) - Research In Motion Ltd, for months enveloped by a wave of negative sentiment, got a boost on Tuesday when one of its most influential critics raised his rating on the stock ahead of the launch of RIM's make-or-break new line of BlackBerry 10 devices.

The upgrade by Jefferies & Co analyst Peter Misek pushed RIM's share price into double digits for the first time in five months, with the stock up more than 3 percent at $10.04 in early trading on the Nasdaq.

Misek based his more optimistic view of the BB10 launch, set for January 30, on a favorable reaction by telecom carriers to the devices and the new operating system that powers them.

"Preliminary results from our quarterly handset survey indicate developed market carriers have a much more positive view of BB10 than we expected," Misek said in a note to clients.

Shares of Waterloo, Ontario-based RIM, a one-time leader in the smartphone industry, have plummeted in recent years as its aging line-up of devices lost ground to faster and snazzier devices from rivals. The company has bet its future on the new BB10.

RIM hopes BB10 smartphones will help claw back market share it has lost in recent years to Apple Inc's iPhone and devices that run on Google Inc's Android operating system.

Misek, who doubled his price target on shares of RIM to $10 from $5, also raised his rating on the stock to "hold" from "underperform".

"With greater carrier shelf space and marketing support, we now believe BB10 has a 20 percent to 30 percent probability of success," said Misek, who has long been skeptical of RIM's odds of engineering a turnaround.

Misek cautioned that there is still downside if RIM's gamble on BB10 fails, but he noted that the stock could be worth as much as $43 within the next 12 months if RIM's bet pays off and its new operating system gets licensed by other handset makers.

RIM says its new devices will be faster and smoother and have a large catalog of applications, which are now critical to the success of any new line of smartphones. While feedback from both developers and carriers on the new devices has been largely upbeat, financial analysts have been much more circumspect about the company's prospects.

Misek's view is not shared by at least one of his counterparts.

In a note to clients on Monday, Pacific Crest analyst James Faucette reiterated his "underperform" rating on RIM's shares. He said regardless of its quality, there is almost no chance that BB10 will meaningfully change RIM's trajectory.

RIM shares were up 3.7 percent at $9.95 at midmorning on the Nasdaq, while its Toronto-listed shares rose 3.1 percent to C$9.89.

(Reporting by Euan Rocha; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe; and Peter Galloway)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blackberry-maker-wins-vote-confidence-ahead-bb10-154906452.html

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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

McDonald's 'Your Daily Bacon' Twitter Campaign Highlights Fast Food's Bacon Love Affair

If you've been following McDonald's Twitter feed lately, you may have chanced on a few peculiar bacon-themed images. There's a picture of a bacon air freshener, a bacon tie and a slew of others that left us scratching our heads.

We reached out to McDonald's, which explained to HuffPost that the pictures are part of an original graphic series called "Your Daily Bacon" in honor of the chain's new bacon-y sandwich, the "CBO," or Cheddar Bacon Onion burger.

McDonald's is just the latest chain to embrace bacon in a big way; fast food eateries are really pushing the porky ingredient hard these days. This year, Burger King introduced its bacon sundae and Wendy's rolled out its Son of Baconator sandwich. Let's not forget Denny's maple bacon sundae, which came out last year.

Click through the below gallery for a look at McDonald's wacky "Your Daily Bacon" ad campaign.

  • Bacon Savings

    "Because turning back the clock just means an extra hour of bacon this Sunday."

  • Bacon Mustaches

    "Bacon mustaches are trendy."

  • Halloween Bacon

    "Hats off to the top three bacontastic costumes this Halloween - who gets your vote?"

  • Baco-Lantern

    "No time to carve a pumpkin? Make it a Baco-lantern."

  • Bacon Batd

    "Look out for a spooky full moon tonight!"

  • Bacon Scarf

    "Turn heads this fall season with a Bacon Scarf."

  • Tastebaconable

    "Use the word Tastebaconable in a sentence today to put a smile on a friend's face."

  • Bacon Horoscope

    "Wishing all Scorpios a savory zodiac birthday!"

  • Bacon Football

    "Nothing says fall like tossing the old pigskin around."

  • Bacon Election

    "No matter which party you support, exercise your right to vote."

  • Bacon Wallet

    "Bringin? home the Bacon."

  • Bacon Air Freshener

    "Keep it Bacon Fresh."

  • Bacon Art

    "Get out your paint sets, it?s Bacon By Number time!"

  • Bacon Family Tree

    "The bacon doesn?t fall far from the tree. Every generation is a crispy as the last."

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/19/mcdonalds-your-daily-bacon_n_2159077.html

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Monday, November 19, 2012

Denzel Washington Speaks On New Movie And Why He Can?t Portray President Obama

During a recent interview with Global Grind, legendary actor Denzel Washington revealed what attracted him to the role of Captain Whip Whitaker in his new movie, Flight. He also said he can?t play President Obama because he would be too old by the time it?s time to make a movie about the President, he will be too old. He added that President Obama?s story is still being told.

- Christopher Brundage

Related posts:


Source: http://www.cherryontop.com/2012/11/denzel-washington-speaks-on-new-movie-and-why-he-cant-portray-president-obama/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=denzel-washington-speaks-on-new-movie-and-why-he-cant-portray-president-obama

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Long Beach couple save wedding dress from Sandy’s wrath

The latest community buzz and updates. | Sign up for community newsletters.

Lisa Seymour, 32, and Matt Cohen, 40, hold

Photo credit: Lisa Seymour

Matt Cohen and Lisa Seymour knew it could be a risk to set their wedding date and location for the tail-end of hurricane season in the Bahamas.

But that was where they fell in love, Cohen said, and they couldn?t get married anywhere else.

From their waterfront apartment in Long Beach, they held their breath and hoped for the best as Hurricane Sandy wreaked havoc on the Caribbean. On...

Content Preview This content is exclusive for Newsday digital access and 7-day home delivery subscribers and Optimum Online? customers.

Source: http://www.newsday.com/long-island/towns/long-island-now-1.1732330/long-beach-couple-save-wedding-dress-from-sandy-s-wrath-1.4233345

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Apple Can Finish What Microsoft?s Sinofsky Started

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In 2007, Microsoft introduces a new version of Windows called Vista, a grand name for what turns out to be an embarrassing dud. (Memories of my first and determining interaction with Vista can be found here.)

Steven Sinofsky, once a Bill Gates technical assistant and, at the time, head of Microsoft Office development, is given a shovel (and a pad of pink slips) and told to clean the stables. To create a new, respectable version of Windows in a mere 30 months will require great discipline, a refusal to compromise, the rejection of distracting advice, relentless attention to the schedule, as well as the merciless pruning of features and people who get in the way. Sinofsky had it all: superb technical skills, the dogged drive of a rassar, and the political will to mow down the obstacles.

In July 2009, Microsoft unveils Windows 7, a product widely acclaimed as absolving Vista?s sins, and Sinofsky is promoted to president of the Windows division, a title parsimoniously bestowed.

Sinofsky immediately begins work on the next version of Windows, following his proven strategy of adding solid, well-defined details while maintaining backwards compatibility and avoiding the rat trap of ?feature creep?. But something happens along the way: In early 2010, the iPad comes out. Although the device is initially misunderstood by Microsoft ? Steve Ballmer speaks of ?slates and tablets and blah blah blah? ? it doesn?t take long for the Redmond company to realize that it needs an answer, it needs to defend its PC empire against the interloping tablet that has been so warmly embraced by the public.

The company changes course and Sinofsky gets a new mission: Windows 8 isn?t going to be a mere clean-up job, it?s not an ?embrace and extend? improvement, but a new ?reimagined? Windows, a PC Plus that will straddle the PC and tablet worlds. The new OS will provide a radically new look-and-feel, a touch-screen interface in addition to a keyboard and mouse (or trackpad), and it will stray from the comfy x86 monogamy to also work on ARM processors.

A little over three years later, right after delivering Windows 8, Sinofsky is abruptly sacked.(Excuse me, he?s ?amicably? sacked? by his own ?personal and private? choice).

Windows 8, Windows RT, and the Surface tablet are now on full display, as are the reviews ? and they?re not pretty. As summarized in this June 2012 Business Insider piece, the pundits were concerned and baffled right from the start:

?Worst of all, the traditional desktop is buried ? it?s just another Metro app ? but there are still some things you can only do from the desktop, and some only from Metro.? (Matt Rosoff)

?In my time with Windows 8, I?ve felt almost totally at sea ? confused, paralyzed, angry, and ultimately resigned to the pain of having to alter the way I do most of my work.? (Farhad Manjoo)

?Windows 8 looks to me to be an unmitigated disaster that could decidedly hurt the company and its future? The real problem is that it is both unusable and annoying.? (John Dvorak)

Perhaps these were simply hasty judgments meant to capture eyeballs, maybe customers would ignore the critics and embrace Windows 8. But no. Five months later, Paul Thurrott, the author of the respected Windows Supersite blog, gives us this post:

?Sales of Windows 8 PCs are well below Microsoft?s internal projections and have been described inside the company as disappointing.?

As head of HP?s Personal Systems Group (PCs and printers, a $55B/year business), Todd Bradley?s opinion of Microsoft?s latest creations carries considerable weight. Last week, in a long CITEworld interview, Bradley wasn?t impressed:

?I?d hardly call Surface competition.

CITEworld: Why not?

TB: One, very limited distribution. It tends to be slow and a little kludgey as you use it. I just don?t think it?s competitive. It?s expensive. Holistically, the press has made a bigger deal out of Surface than what the world has chosen to believe.?

As reported two weeks ago, I quickly encountered Windows 8?s split personality when I tried to use my new Surface, but I wanted the bigger picture.

Was Windows 8 running on a PC ? Microsoft?s home turf ? really an ?unmitigated disaster?? I head over to the big Microsoft Store in the Stanford Shopping Center to buy the full version of the new OS ? and they don?t have it. The upgrade version, yes, but no copies of the ?System Builder? DVD that you need for a complete, from-scratch installation. Curious.

I head back home, order a copy from Amazon, buy an additional license from Microsoft for my second machine, and two days later I?m in business. The installation process is flawless (one with VMware Fusion, the other with Parallels), but things quickly go downhill. The problems I had with the Surface are just as distracting and frustrating on a PC: One moment you?re in the new, elegant, and, yes, reimagined User Interface, the next moment you?re foraging in the old Windows 7 Desktop. And, of course, existing Office apps have no place in the new UI.

It?s no wonder that customers aren?t keen to buy Windows 8. As a recent survey shows, ?about one-third of Windows 7, Windows Vista and Windows XP users who are ready to buy a new personal computer say they intend to switch to an Apple product.?

According to the Thurrott post mentioned earlier, the inside story is that Sinofsky was let go because of his ?divisiveness?, that his departure isn?t a consequence of Window 8?s poor numbers. But if we imagine a different reality, one in which Sinofsky stands before a big Mission Accomplished banner, where critics rave about the beauty, harmony, and impeccable polish of a Windows 8 that runs flawlessly on PCs, laptops, tablets, and Surface-like hybrids?do we think for a moment Ballmer would have shown Sinofsky the door?

I think the real story behind Sinofsky?s removal contains elements of both personality and (Windows 8) performance. It?s no secret that Sinofsky made a lot of enemies while he pulled off a not-so-minor miracle with Windows 7. As a reward for his accomplishment, he was given a much more difficult assignment. Windows 8 had become a 21-blade Swiss Army knife: a great list of features on paper, dubious usability in practice. Add the need to adapt the operating system and the sacrosanct (and golden goose) Office applications to the new ARM processor and you end up with a Mission Impossible.

The same traits that made Sinofsky an extremely successful turnaround artist after the Vista mess ? his monomaniacal pursuit of a clear goal ? became liabilities in this reimagined world. He slipped and fell, the enemies saw their chance, the bayonets came out. Even supremely gifted [redacted] have a sell-by date.

Of course, none of this says anything about who came up with the mission. Was it Ballmer?s idea or Sinofsky?s? Microsoft isn?t talking.

Now let?s turn to Apple. The ?recomplicated? Windows hands the Cupertino company an intriguing opportunity. They can capitalize on Microsoft?s misstep, extend a welcoming hand to the Windows users who intend to switch to Apple, and make the iPad the sine qua non of what a Post-PC device should be. (I use the ?Post-PC? moniker for lack of a better one. For me, it doesn?t stand for the end of the PC but for its broadening into three instances: classic, tablet, smartphone.)

From the beginning, the iPad, designed to be a new genre, not a derivative, came with limitations. Yes, you could do some productivity work, but iOS?s lack of multi-tasking, a favorite whipping boy of the critics, made it difficult. To be sure, the OS supported concurrent activities inside the device, but running several applications at the same time was a no-no. The processor couldn?t handle it and, even if it could have, battery life would have been terrible.

So whether it was divine inspiration or simply a bowing to necessity, Apple shunned the temptation to make a PC-only-smaller, and created a whole new genre of personal computers. Microsoft couldn?t resist and gave us Windows Mobile with a Start button.

Almost five years have elapsed since the birth of iOS. (We?ll give a quick but deep hat tip to its ferocious and now deposed champion, Scott Forstall, and leave the discussion of his own exit for a future Monday Note.) With the latest iPad hardware, we have a fast processor and there are even faster ones in the making. Does the more muscular hardware and road-tested OS portend a future that supports the running of two applications side-by-side in a split-screen arrangement? Or perhaps a slidebar that reveals and hides the second app.

This isn?t exactly an original idea: Samsung just released a firmware update providing a split-screen multitasking view. And, of course, as explained here, the Snap feature in Windows 8 provides a neat way to run two apps side-by-side on a laptop or tablet.

Today, preparing a Keynote document that incorporates elements from other apps requires clumsy mental and physical gymnastics. Having access to the source and destination documents at the same time would be a welcome relief and a boost to business uses.

There are other quirks. You can edit a Mac-originated Pages or Numbers document on your iPad, but no such joy awaits users of Apple?s well-loved Preview. Upload a Preview PDF into iCloud from your MacBook and then grab your iPad and see if you can find it? No, you need to use DropBox or the (excellent) Microsoft SkyDrive. (One ?explanation? for this state of affairs is the strong security that pervades iOS. Inter-application communication can open backdoors to malware, which is still quite rare in iOS. But if it can be done for Pages and other iWork apps?)

Now that all OS X and iOS software is under one hat, Craig Federighi?s, perhaps we can expect these workflow speed bumps to be ironed out. Multiple concurrent applications, a document store that?s common to all apps? This is Apple?s opportunity: Stick to its guns, keep laptops and tablets clearly distinct, but make iPads easier to love by business users. The comparison between a worst-of-both-worlds Surface hybrid and the iPad would be no contest. iPad mini for media consumption, everywhere; iPad for business and everything else.

Apple can finish the job Sinofsky started.

? JLG@mondaynote.com

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