Thursday, July 26, 2012

iBrand Gaming to distribute RCM106 reel ... - Coin-Op Community

25/07/2012

Oxford based ? iBrand Gaming (www.ibrandgaming.com), specialist OEM solution provider, are pleased to announce that they?are now global distributors for the RCM06 USB / Serial reel controller board developed by e2c.

iBrand Gaming will be working to promote the GLI approved RCM06 USB / Serial gaming reel controller board ?throughout the UK and European markets. The board utilises e2c?s powerful iSocket client middleware to provide the?best in class gaming reel control functions and is designed to work with the Quixant range of gaming controllers or any?other PC gaming control board.

The RCM06 USB / Serial reel controller board is ideal for game development houses that are looking to develop hybrid?(reel / video) games for the UK, Spain and other markets that require traditional reels to be used with PC gaming?technology.

The reel controller board supports up to 6 stepper motor based reels including all unipolar reel types. A development?kit is available that includes unique software tools thus providing a quick time to market solution.?

?I?m delighted with the agreement we now have with e2c and being able to offer the RCM06 reel controller? stated?iBrand Gaming?s Managing Director, John Malin. ?By adding this controller to our product portfolio we are able to?further enhance our total product offering and solution packages and can further the development of our customer?s?game design.?

Dr Donny McDonald, founder/CEO of e2c, stated that ?iBrand Gaming is an excellent partner for e2c?s reel control solutions,?given their close co-operation with leading European gaming machine manufacturers.? After many successful deployments in the?USA class II market, we are very excited about being able to offer this technology to the wider gaming market?.

?

Source: http://www.coin-opcommunity.co.uk/news/5768-ibrand-gaming-to-distribute-rcm106-reel-controller/

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Big Horn Energy Services Selects AcctTwo as Business Process ...

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The selection and placement of news stories on this page were determined automatically by a computer program. All articles, images, audio, video and related copyrights belong to their rightful owners.

Source: http://globalizationtoday.com/big-horn-energy-services-selects-accttwo-as-business-process-outsourcing-digitaljournal-com-press-release/

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Tuesday, July 24, 2012

China storms kill 20, including 10 in Beijing

[ [ [['Connery is an experienced stuntman', 2]], 'http://yhoo.it/KeQd0p', '[Slideshow: See photos taken on the way down]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Connery is an experienced stuntman', 7]], ' http://yhoo.it/KpUoHO', '[Slideshow: Death-defying daredevils]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['know that we have confidence in', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/LqYjAX ', '[Related: The Secret Service guide to Cartagena]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['We picked up this other dog and', 5]], 'http://yhoo.it/JUSxvi', '[Related: 8 common dog fears, how to calm them]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['accused of running a fake hepatitis B', 5]], 'http://bit.ly/JnoJYN', '[Related: Did WH share raid details with filmmakers?]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['accused of running a fake hepatitis B', 3]], 'http://bit.ly/KoKiqJ', '[Factbox: AQAP, al-Qaeda in Yemen]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['have my contacts on or glasses', 3]], 'http://abcn.ws/KTE5AZ', '[Related: Should the murder charge be dropped?]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['have made this nation great as Sarah Palin', 5]], 'http://yhoo.it/JD7nlD', '[Related: Bristol Palin reality show debuts June 19]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['have made this nation great as Sarah Palin', 1]], 'http://bit.ly/JRPFRO', '[Related: McCain adviser who vetted Palin weighs in on VP race]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['A JetBlue flight from New York to Las Vegas', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/GV9zpj', '[Related: View photos of the JetBlue plane in Amarillo]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who shot and killed', 15]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/white-house-stays-out-of-teen-s-killing-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120411/martinzimmermen.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AP', ], [ [['He was in shock and still strapped to his seat', 6]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/navy-jet-crashes-in-virginia-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120406/jet_ap.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AP', ], [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/russian-grannies-win-bid-to-sing-at-eurovision-1331223625-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/1/56/156d92f2760dcd3e75bcd649a8b85fcf.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP', ] ]

[ [ [['did not go as far his colleague', 8]], '29438204', '0' ], [ [[' the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who shot and killed', 4]], '28924649', '0' ], [ [['because I know God protects me', 14], ['Brian Snow was at a nearby credit union', 5]], '28811216', '0' ], [ [['The state news agency RIA-Novosti quoted Rosaviatsiya', 6]], '28805461', '0' ], [ [['measure all but certain to fail in the face of bipartisan', 4]], '28771014', '0' ], [ [['matter what you do in this case', 5]], '28759848', '0' ], [ [['presume laws are constitutional', 7]], '28747556', '0' ], [ [['has destroyed 15 to 25 houses', 7]], '28744868', '0' ], [ [['short answer is yes', 7]], '28746030', '0' ], [ [['opportunity to tell the real story', 7]], '28731764', '0' ], [ [['entirely respectable way to put off the searing constitutional controversy', 7]], '28723797', '0' ], [ [['point of my campaign is that big ideas matter', 9]], '28712293', '0' ], [ [['As the standoff dragged into a second day', 7]], '28687424', '0' ], [ [['French police stepped up the search', 17]], '28667224', '0' ], [ [['Seeking to elevate his candidacy back to a general', 8]], '28660934', '0' ], [ [['The tragic story of Trayvon Martin', 4]], '28647343', '0' ], [ [['Karzai will get a chance soon to express', 8]], '28630306', '0' ], [ [['powerful storms stretching', 8]], '28493546', '0' ], [ [['basic norm that death is private', 6]], '28413590', '0' ], [ [['songwriter also saw a surge in sales for her debut album', 6]], '28413590', '1', 'Watch music videos from Whitney Houston ', 'on Yahoo! Music', 'http://music.yahoo.com' ], [ [['keyword', 99999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/china-storms-kill-20-including-10-beijing-042117597.html

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Ride, Sally, Ride. Florida remembers a pioneer

sally_250.jpegReaction to the death of Sally Ride, who blasted off into space from Cape Canaveral on June 18, 1983.

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson: "Sally Ride was one of the great pioneers as the first American woman in space. The whole nation was with her when she launched, ?lifting her up on a chorus of ?Ride, Sally, Ride.? ?

Rep. Sandy Adams, R-Orlando: "Very sorry to see the passing of our 1st female astronaut, Sally Ride. A pioneer and inspiration to girls everywhere, she'll be missed."

Rep. Frederica Wilson, D-Miami:??It is with a heavy heart that I learned of the passing of space pioneer Sally K. Ride. As the first American woman in space, Sally inspired a generation of young women to reach for the stars. I remember watching on TV on June 18, 1983 when Sally made history, and many students pursued careers in the sciences because of her. As a member of the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, it is my mission to continue to advance STEM education and space exploration. I hope that Congress uses Sally?s memory to continue dedicating our country toward the research that was near and dear to her heart.?

Rep. Dennis Ross, R-Lakeland: "RIP Sally Ride. A hero for millions of young women throughout the country and a true American patriot."

?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/tampabaycom/blogs/buzz/~3/l2o1Vvb7WlE/ride-sally-ride-florida-remembers-pioneer

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WTM Speed Networking Monday to focus on driving business deals

WTM Speed Networking Monday to focus on driving business deals

Image via wtmlondon.com


Jul 24, 2012

World Travel Market, the leading global event for the travel industry, is introducing an extra Speed Networking event following the phenomenal success of the concept over the past three events.

Speed Networking was introduced at WTM 2009 and led to an increase in the amount of business WTM generates for the travel and tourism industry, culminating in WTM 2011 being responsible for ?1,653 million in travel industry deals ? a 16 percent increase on the previous event.

More than 200 (204) buyers and 438 exhibitors took part in the Speed Networking on the Monday morning of WTM 2011. The event took place before the exhibition opened to give exhibitors and buyers from the WTM Meridian Club even more time to discuss and conclude business deals.

Furthermore, the WTM Meridian Club Networking Breakfast was introduced on the final morning at WTM 2011 to give buyers and exhibitors an informal opportunity to discuss business deals with new contacts.

For WTM 2012, the WTM Meridian Club Networking Breakfast will be followed by the WTM Speed Networking Thursday event, for discussion about further business opportunities beyond WTM.

WTM Speed Networking Monday will focus on driving business deals during the four days of WTM.

Reed Travel Exhibitions Director World Travel Market Simon Press said: ?WTM Speed Networking has been a great success since it was introduced in 2010. Both exhibitors and WTM Meridian Club buyers have really embraced the concept of quick initial business meetings to discover if there is an opportunity for further detailed discussions.

?World Travel Market?s purpose is to facilitate business deals between exhibitors and buyers, and the expansion of the WTM Speed Networking program can only lead to WTM generating even more industry deals.?

Source: http://www.eturbonews.com/30303/wtm-speed-networking-monday-focus-driving-business-deals

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EXTRA ETHER: Publishing's Great Divide | Jane Friedman

Porter Anderson, Writing on the Ether, Jane Friedman, author, publisher, agent, books, publishing, digital, ebooks, Will Entrekin, Exciting Press, The Prodigal Hour, Joanna Penn, J.F. Penn, Prophecy, The Creative Penn, TheCreativePenn

??$116 million?buying positive cash flow?sound strategic move??

I watched the emails rolling by on a private publishing-industry Listserv. Its subscribers were discussing Thursday?s news that Pearson, parent of Penguin Books, was buying Author Solutions (also referred to as ?ASI?).

??the business will continue to be run by ASI ??

Some eyebrows were raised, yes:

?the Society of Authors in the UK, openly refers to ASI as a ?vanity publisher??

Some wondered at the announcement?s silence about Book Country, Penguin?s own author-development program, once proudly ballyhooed, now absent from the press releases:

?Penguin?s John Makinson said?they hadn?t put much thought into how it might work with Book Country?

Porter Anderson, Writing on the Ether, Jane Friedman, author, publisher, agent, books, publishing, digital, ebooks, Will Entrekin, Exciting Press, The Prodigal Hour

A case-study vignette from the Author Solutions site?s Publishing Services page.

Some people contributing to this email thread have business links to Author Solutions, something Jane Friedman flagged in her agenda-setter, Is the Author Solutions Acquisition a Good Thing for Authors?:

If you didn?t know, a growing part of ASI?s business since roughly 2009 has been establishing white-label services. Thomas Nelson, Harlequin, Hay House, and even my former employer, Writer?s Digest, ended up striking deals with ASI to offer paid publishing services you might know better as WestBow, DellArte, Balboa, and Abbott Press.

But the only thing that seemed to slow down the debate was a lone voice, a member of the list who was in an awkward position because she or he runs a rival outfit, of sorts, to Author Solutions:

?ASI?heavy handed sales practices?exploit the hopes and dreams of unwitting authors?

Penguin's acquisition of @ is a vote of confidence in @'s mission to expand the scope of how we serve writers.

?

Reports of ?heavy handed sales practices? were the type thing Friedman would soon be writing about.

The short list of recurring issues (by which Suess refers to allegations cited over time by authors about Author Solutions companies) includes: making formerly out-of-print works available for sale without the author?s consent, improperly reporting royalty information, non-payment of royalties, breach of contract, predatory and harassing sales calls, excessive markups on review and advertising services, failure to deliver marketing services as promised?

But these are not the kinds of things our pundits were talking about.

A great, gaping divide was revealed on Thursday between (a) the professional practitioners of the industry! the industry! in its digital disarray and (b) those authors who must supply this business with its essential, indispensable raw material: the writing.

@ Authors have always paid publishing. @ Royalty is a percentage of revenue for that title. The bulk of revenue supports the service.

?

  • I asked one specialist from the email discussion, someone I thoroughly enjoy and whose work I respect, ?Have you spoken to any authors about the Pearson-AIS deal?? The answer: ?No, not yet.?
  • I asked a highly placed Penguin Books manager in New York, another operative I admire and whose work I follow closely, ?Do you know if anybody in acquisitions at Pearson or at Penguin asked any authors about Author Solutions before buying it? Did they speak with any writers?? The answer: ?No, they did not.?

So perhaps this can explain why industry figures were confounded by the resentment of some in the creative camp about the Pearson-Penguin move: No one seemed to think it important to ask authors what they thought of it.

Porter Anderson, Writing on the Ether, Jane Friedman, author, publisher, agent, books, publishing, digital, ebooks, Will Entrekin, Exciting Press, The Prodigal Hour

A case-study vignette from the Author Solutions site?s About Us page.

No one seemed to think of the authors at all. Even when they had to say the word ?Author? every time they said ?Solution.?

Maybe they believe that the corporation on Liberty Drive in Bloomington, Indiana, will receive Author AbSolution once it enters the Temple of Pearson. And, lo, the Penguin?s wings shall turn to those of an angel and the halo of hope shall crown each lonely writer with the glory of successful publication.

Our colleague Peter Turner ? a staunch advocate for independent bookstores, by the way ? did have the grace to ask about the consternation the acquisition has triggered. He put it this way in a comment on the Ether:

Maybe I?m missing something here but I have to confess I find it perplexing, the dustup over the acquisition of Author Solutions by Penguin and its effect (or not) on Book Country?s model. It?s a minor acquisition by a major publisher at an extraordinary moment of wide-spread spaghetti wall tossing. And the exclamations of surprise and horror at some self-publishing-providers-industry?s predatory attitude toward authors and would-be authors strikes me as very Claude Rains.

I?ve collected key articles and posts at the top of Writing on the Ether, an ?EtherDome? section, so you can peruse for yourself what coverage has moved.

Porter Anderson, Writing on the Ether, Jane Friedman, author, publisher, agent, books, publishing, digital, ebooks, Will Entrekin, Exciting Press, The Prodigal Hour

A case-study vignette from the Author Solutions site?s News page.

In addition to the writings mentioned above, there?s work from Jeremy Greenfield and Laura Hazard Owen ? these are two journalists I know to have? followed the news call with Penguin Group?s Chairman and CEO John Makinson and ASI?s CEO Kevin Weiss.

There are also pieces from?Sarah Weinman, Laura Dawson, Reuters? staff in London and TheFutureBook?s and TheBookSeller?s Philip Jones.

In a rare return to blogging on publishing issues, Guy LeCharles Gonzalez helps clarify the big divide we see in the reactions to this unusual story. Gonzalez writes that when he first learned of the acquisition:

My cynicism was driven partly by my own experience working with several of ASI?s units, before and after they acquired them (back when I worked for Writer?s Digest in 2007-2008)?

There?s a chasm of interpretation between observers on the creative side of the conference-floor aisle, if you will, and those on the business side.

OW MY NIPPLES HURT. RT @: Pearson is "purchasing an operation skilled at milking writers." @ on AuthorSolutions

?

If a Big Six publisher like Penguin moves from selling books to readers to selling publishing ?products? to writers, then maybe it?s not so surprising that consulting those authors ? consulting the commodity, as it were ? begins to look silly.

Not such a big jump, either.

In the old days the author would dither in off the street clutching the sole copy of his/her typed manuscript (if not having left it on the train). The publisher says, ?Leave it there,? and it enters the huge opaque apparatus of editing, design, printing, distribution, marketing, etc that used to comprise publishing. Eventually the author is given a long lunch and shown the finished product that has emerged from the machinery. If they recognize their own book from the baffling choice of cover design, it?s a win.

Porter Anderson, Writing on the Ether, Jane Friedman, author, publisher, agent, books, publishing, digital, ebooks, Will Entrekin, Exciting Press, The Prodigal Hour

Dave Morris

That?s author and video game designer Dave Morris, in a note to me. A key concern nowadays, he says, is that writers find themselves expected by publishers to carry so much more weight than before in publicity and other aspects of the work, but they say:

?We still offer 10% on print, 25% on ebooks. It?s non-negotiable, so if you don?t like it, there?s the door.?

As it happened, I?d been reading a new post from Morris? wife, the English author Roz Morris,?while mulling all this. In Do self-publishers still need to explain why? she writes:

There?s still an old guard who wants to keep us (self-publishing authors) as second-class writers. Plenty of literary competitions and review sites specifically bar indie authors.

Porter Anderson, Writing on the Ether, Jane Friedman, author, publisher, agent, books, publishing, digital, ebooks, Will Entrekin, Exciting Press, The Prodigal Hour

Roz Morris

Roz Morris found that when she followed her bestselling success as a ghostwriter by self-publishing her own fiction:

I had to explain (the decision to self-publish) to the industry. If you listen to interviews with editors or pundits from The Bookseller or Publishers? Weekly, they reinforce the notion that authors are feeble and ineffectual without the guidance of a publisher. Which is complete rot ? often a new author will get hardly any editorial help.

@ @ @ @ Oh, the confusion - what's a poor writer to do?

?

One of the thorniest elements of all this may be that authors actually work against themselves in their representations of their own work.

Porter Anderson, Writing on the Ether, Jane Friedman, author, publisher, agent, books, publishing, digital, ebooks, Will Entrekin, Exciting Press, The Prodigal HourAs many sensible things as Roz Morris may have to say in her article on self-publishing authors, her writeup lies on a site called Do Authors Dream of Electric Books?

Porter Anderson, Writing on the Ether, Jane Friedman, author, publisher, agent, books, publishing, digital, ebooks, Will Entrekin, Exciting Press, The Prodigal HourThis is the shared blog site of a group of 28 self-publishing writers, each of whom takes a turn blogging each month.

From the looks of this cluttered site, ?professional? is the last term that might come to mind.

Graphically, it?s a cross between the proverbial ?dark and stormy night? and a knockoff of the cascading code from? ?The Matrix? imagery.

The visual elements don?t belong together and appear to be stray scraps found online, sometimes tiled like the background on an amateur recipe site.

By my count, there are at least six fonts or variants used ?above the fold? on the blog page.

It?s encouraging to see that this UK-based site has two Flash widgets from Amazon, one for UK readers to get to that site and the other for US readers: internationalism is a must these days.

Porter Anderson, Writing on the Ether, Jane Friedman, author, publisher, agent, books, publishing, digital, ebooks, Will Entrekin, Exciting Press, The Prodigal Hour

The Heather Harp is on offer at the Do Authors Dream of Electric Books? blog site, in alternation with ads for member-writers? books.

But those widgets are alternating images of the group members? book covers with products including:

@ @ Right, and realizing that they now also need to broker w customers for 1st time. That cd actually help w au's too.

?

So what shall writers say to the publishers, metadata experts, mainstream journalists, academic-journal chiefs, Big Six operatives, and other top-ranked pundits in the industry who didn?t ask any authors how they felt about Pearson-Penguin?s buy of the widely disparaged Author Solutions Inc.?

Porter Anderson, Writing on the Ether, Jane Friedman, author, publisher, agent, books, publishing, digital, ebooks, Will Entrekin, Exciting Press, The Prodigal Hour

Roz Morris? self-published novel

I assume the Electric Authors are professionals. Their combined output is tremendous, and I know, personally, that Morris ? an editor who has worked at major publishers ? is a complete pro. But I have to look past the group?s presentation of themselves to think this.

And that?s the case with too many of our creative pool. Whether you?re at a group site or a single writer?s homepage, It?s hard reading with one?s eyes wide shut, Mr. Kubrick.

Had the industry folks come calling with sharp, discerning questions about ASI?s business practices, could they be expected to overlook:

  • Cute cat and dog pictures as social-media avatars?
  • Goofy bios that might go down well in an undergraduate yearbook but not a day later?
  • Gurgling Facebook entries that somehow mix serious work items with the grandkids? birthday parties?
  • Blog sites with no contact information, no bylines, no archives?

And the books. Here?s Roz Morris:

What doesn?t help is when self-published authors say they don?t mind the rough edges that you sometimes get with an indie book. The less-than-perfect editing, the cockeyed typesetting, the home-made aspect. That it?s part of the charm. I don?t find it charming and I think this attitude doesn?t do us any favours.

It really behooves Penguin to address the wide perception of Author Solutions as a predator. http://t.co/FoSjEp8I

?

My point is that there is fault on each side of this canyon.

  1. The professionals in the offices, the business people of the industry are, collectively, a very old dog with some new tricks to learn fast. And the first and most elemental of those tricks may just be to include authors, consult authors, talk regularly with authors, learn what?s up with these people. As we used to say at a large news network, be nice to every intern on the floor because by next week, one of them may be your new boss.
  2. The authors ? this vast, platform-whipped crowd without credentials, factioned off by genre, preyed upon by self-styled ?gurus? ? must achieve more professionalism in presentation and performance and deportment. As Jane Friedman has said in earlier writings, one of the great problems of the amateur is that she or he doesn?t know what professionalism looks like. Get a site review. And not from your mother.

As disappointed as I was to see so little communication between the suits and the cargo shorts about the Author Solutions story, I could understand why some of the business stakeholders might hesitate to approach the far-flung writer corps.

The two great camps of publishing may finally have to get together, you know. In fact, why don?t we meet in the same boat? Roz Morris:

My agent said to me that one of the most reassuring things for his side of the industry is that self-published authors find it hard to tackle the problem of discoverability.

If a company like Pearson wants to make money off the aspirations of authors, it needs to know what those authors see when it makes an acquisition. I may be wrong, but I don?t think the Birds Who Walk Upright knew what this move would look like in the field.

Porter Anderson, Writing on the Ether, Jane Friedman, author, publisher, agent, books, publishing, digital, ebooks, Will Entrekin, Exciting Press, The Prodigal Hour

Dave Morris? interactive app rendition of Mary Shelley?s Frankenstein

And if the writers want to take their place at the table and control their careers as they have every right to do, they?re going to need to clean up their acts. If that means availing themselves of Author Solutions in the House of Penguin, buyer beware and do your research ? the responsibility is yours.

The last line goes to Dave Morris:

I prefer to be with a major publisher for most projects; they add value. But now we need to break open that mysterious machinery, separate it into components, and see where value is really being added. And that will be a different equation for each author.

| | |

Penguin?s acquisition of ASI isn?t innovation but a reaction born out of fear. @ Depends on endgame If infrastructure (eg: BookTango, email lists), not bad. If fee-based self-pub, then highly questionable. @ My worry is that pubs are moving away from their core competency: reader-author arbitrage, which remains an unsolved problem @ Either way, it's not "innovative" by any meaningful definition. Book Country has more potential, if better resourced.

Writing on the Ether now can be followed not only here at JaneFriedman.com (free) on Thursdays, but also via RSS at the Publishers Marketplace?s Publishers Lunch Automat, in the section, ePublishing and the Future. (A subscription is required for Publishers Marketplace and its many services ? easily worth the cost.) The @PublishersLunch industry news service is led by Michael Cader and Sarah Weinman.


Main image: MayaMoody

?

Source: http://janefriedman.com/2012/07/22/extra-ether-publishings-great-divide/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=extra-ether-publishings-great-divide

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Making Money Online From An Internet Business Option

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Good website design like any other type of design starts with building trust and credibility. As yourchief designer, I will capture your brand, engage your audience, and one-up the competition. Your customers want to do business with successful companies. I will make sure that your image is the best around and that you will compete effectively in today's fast changing challenging world. Always remember, good design is step one, followed by step two, a good SEO setup and marketing. A great site is not very good if it can't be found so allow some of your budget for Search Engine Optimization.

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Illustration or image creation is probably the second most important part of your website. Without engaging images your audience will just yawn. We want to provide Yahoo not a yawn. So we need good input to our creative side, what would move and motivate people to buy??My name is Scott Annis, I am the creator-in-chief here, it's just me doing your assignment. Whether it's one diagram, 50 charts or one killer website, I answer to you. I am reasonably priced and most always available to consult with.?Call me today at 303-570-0983 to talk about any ideas.

Background Information:

My background is in Graphic Design and Marketing from Colorado State University, I started working in the Denver area in advertising and many years in specialty products manufacturing. A Denver area resident, I enjoy pleasing clients as a freelance designer & illustrator. Whatever your creative needs, Scott Annis Creative is a reliable source for professional graphic design services, creating custom web design, print and outstanding illustrations to fit your organization's needs. I believe project detail, visual contrast and solving the customer's problems are always job one.

Source: http://scottannis.com/2012/07/making-money-online-from-an-internet-business-option/

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Monday, July 23, 2012

'Dark Knight Rises' reportedly earns $160 million

This undated film image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Christian Bale as Batman in a scene from the action thriller "The Dark Knight Rises." A gunman in a gas mask barged into a crowded Denver-area theater during a midnight premiere of the Batman movie on Friday, July 20, 2012, hurled a gas canister and then opened fire, killing 12 people and injuring at least 50 others in one of the deadliest mass shootings in recent U.S. history. (AP Photo/Warner Bros. Pictures, Ron Phillips)

This undated film image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Christian Bale as Batman in a scene from the action thriller "The Dark Knight Rises." A gunman in a gas mask barged into a crowded Denver-area theater during a midnight premiere of the Batman movie on Friday, July 20, 2012, hurled a gas canister and then opened fire, killing 12 people and injuring at least 50 others in one of the deadliest mass shootings in recent U.S. history. (AP Photo/Warner Bros. Pictures, Ron Phillips)

This undated film image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Tom Hardy as Bane in a scene from the action thriller "The Dark Knight Rises." A gunman in a gas mask barged into a crowded Denver-area theater during a midnight premiere of the Batman movie on Friday, July 20, 2012, hurled a gas canister and then opened fire, killing 12 people and injuring at least 50 others in one of the deadliest mass shootings in recent U.S. history. (AP Photo/Warner Bros. Pictures, Ron Phillips)

This undated film image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Christian Bale as Batman in a scene from the action thriller "The Dark Knight Rises." A gunman in a gas mask barged into a crowded Denver-area theater during a midnight premiere of the Batman movie on Friday, July 20, 2012, hurled a gas canister and then opened fire, killing 12 people and injuring at least 50 others in one of the deadliest mass shootings in recent U.S. history. (AP Photo/Warner Bros. Pictures, Ron Phillips)

(AP) ? "The Dark Knight Rises" was on track to earn $160 million, which would be a record for 2-D films, over the weekend following a mass shooting at a Colorado screening of the Batman film.

Citing box office insiders, The Hollywood Reporter, Los Angeles Times, New York Times and other media outlets reported Sunday that the latest Batman sequel earned $160 million to $162 million.

That amount would best the $158.4 million debut of "The Dark Knight" in 2008 and give "Dark Knight Rises" the third-highest domestic weekend opening ever, after the 3-D films "The Avengers" with $207.4 million and "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows ? Part 2" with $169.2 million.

The Hollywood Reporter also cited box office sources who said "Dark Knight Rises" earned $70 million from nine of the 17 countries where it debuted over the weekend, including the United Kingdom, Australia, South Korea and Spain.

Tickets for 3-D films cost a few more dollars than 2-D screenings, netting extra cash at the box office. Movies released in 3-D typically earn under half of their income in 3-D screenings, sometimes as little as a third.

Sony, Fox, Disney, Paramount, Universal and Lionsgate joined "Dark Knight Rises" distributor Warner Bros in publicly withholding their usual revenue reports out of respect for the victims of the deadly shooting early Friday and their families.

Box-office tracking service Rentrak also did not report figures following the Aurora, Colo., shootings that killed 12 and injured 58 at a midnight screening of the new Batman sequel on Friday.

"This tragedy did not seem to impact the box office in a major way," said Paul Dergarabedian, an analyst for Hollywood.com who specializes in box office. "For this film to still be in the rarified air of the top-three openings of all time is phenomenal, given the unfortunate circumstances surrounding the release of this film."

Dergarabedian noted that the box-office ranking of director Christopher Nolan's final installment of his Batman trilogy would not be official until Warner Bros. and other studios release their final weekend box-office tallies Monday.

Anne Hathaway, who plays Catwoman in the film, became the third member of "The Dark Knight Rises" cast and crew to express her condolences after arriving home in the United States from Paris, where Warner Bros. quickly canceled a premiere Friday night.

"My heart aches and breaks for the lives taken and altered by this unfathomable senseless act," the actress said in a statement. "I am at a loss for words how to express my sorrow. My thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their families."

___

Online:

http://www.hollywood.com

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-07-22-Box%20Office/id-d5c73bc9e8b847c3bc82e610ec922a1b

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Sunday, July 22, 2012

Obama, Romney views toward gun rights have evolved (The Arizona Republic)

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Free Pets to Good Home ? Blog Archive ? Tend Not To Decide On ...

Take into consideration your canine?s style while you Singapore tuition start off your own training program. The end result might be disastrous. Almost any pet owner can teach that he is a solid leader by way of motivating and fulfilling very good tendencies.

Take into account that maybe you are attempt to teaching or otherwise not, your actions continue to be which has a huge affect on your dog?s tendencies. Bolster suitable conduct from the dog. If they are usually in house puppies, begin cage education these individuals .

As long as they become disappointed you are switching to rapidly. The true secret to be able to thriving canine training would be to start off all of them right away. Any training clicker plus some snacks could be an extremely successful means of teaching your dog.

Pets will be public creatures along with enjoy praise. On the other hand, household pets including individuals write about similar habit devices. In case you have located yourself to always be irritated because you are not generating progress, go ahead and take a rest before trying the item once more.

Just like you start teaching your dog, make a spoken stick which allows your canine friend to grasp the actual time how they correctly finish ones control. This leads to each of you possessing a undesirable practical knowledge. Always maintain proper dog training times simple.

Supplementing good habits together with pleasures is an excellent strategy to start out, and as time passes you possibly can educate them with some other prize method including compliments as well as love. In the same way support of fine habits when training a pet dog should be instantaneous , so too ought to penalties cost of tuition to get bad behavior end up being instant. This will imply initially providing the brand new dog or cat their unique room as well as consuming your outdated pets out of the house ahead of taking the latest pet dog within. In case you have received a new dog or maybe pup, it is best to improve education these at once. This gives your dog to have employed to your own scent as well as creates him more probable for you to trust anyone.

Pet dogs are likely to go as a technique associated with talking, this also really should be controlled. If dog training, do it in a nutshell periods, no greater than a few minutes each one time. Once they have got learned a single receive, you?ll be able to proceed to the subsequent. In case your pet dog will not be learning adequately, it won?t suggest they may be dumb.

When you?ve got become some sort of dog , such as , and he goes to the bathroom outside accurately usually do not get away from your new puppy around only photo shop tutorials. If you are can not assess if your canine can be unwell then contact any veterinarian for assistance.

Source: http://siscer.net/articles/pets/tend-not-to-decide-on-these-products-since-they-are-lovable-or-maybe-as-they-get-rhinestones-to-them-2/

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New lab working on security shoe sole to ID people

PITTSBURGH (AP) ? High-tech security? Forget those irksome digital eye scans. Meet the biometric shoe.

A new lab is working to perfect special shoe insoles that can help monitor access to high-security areas, like nuclear power plants or special military bases.

The concept is based on research that shows each person has unique feet, and ways of walking. Sensors in the bio-soles check the pressure of feet, monitor gait, and use a microcomputer to compare the patterns to a master file for that person. If the patterns match the bio-soles go to sleep. If they don't, a wireless alarm message can go out.

"It's part of a shoe that you don't have to think about," said Marios Savvides, head of Carnegie Mellon University's new Pedo-Biometrics Lab, in Pittsburgh.

The lab, which has $1.5 million in startup funding, is a partnership with Autonomous ID, a Canadian company that is relocating to several U.S. cities. Todd Gray, the company president, said he saw the potential when his daughter was in a maternity ward decorated with representations of different baby feet all along a wall.

Autonomous ID has been working on prototypes since 2009, with the goal of making a relatively low cost ID system. Gray said they've already run tests on sample bio-soles, which are no thicker than a common foot pad sold in pharmacies, and achieved an accuracy rate of more than 99 percent. He said Carnegie Mellon will broaden the tests to include "a full spectrum of society: big, tall, thin, heavy, athletic, multicultural, on a diet, twins and so on."

Gray wouldn't speculate on what the system will cost or when it might reach the marketplace, but each worker at a site would have his or her own pair of bio-soles.

"Within the third step, it knows it's you, and it goes back to sleep," he said. "If I put on yours, it would know almost instantly that I'm not you."

The idea may seem far-fetched, but scientists have known for centuries that individuals have unique ways of walking, and in recent years the U.S. Department of Defense has been funding millions of dollars of gait research, as has the Chinese government.

The Institute of Intelligent Machines is doing extensive research into gait biometrics, including reports of systems where a floor monitors footsteps without people's knowledge.

One expert who is not connected with the CMU lab said the biometric sole seems promising.

"I must admit I find this news very exciting," said John DiMaggio, an Oregon podiatrist who has worked with law enforcement to use foot information in forensic investigations. While it is too early to fully judge the CMU research plan, DiMaggio said using feet as a biometric identification source makes sense.

While researchers have noted that gait can vary with injuries, fatigue and other factors, Savvides said the bio-soles can detect signs of those things, too.

The bio-soles might also have medical uses. Several papers presented this month at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference in Vancouver suggest changes in how elderly people walk ? such as a slowing pace or variable stride ? can provide early warnings of dementia.

Gray said the technology is less invasive of privacy than eye scans and other biometrics, in part because the individual data stays inside the bio-soles.

But one group that has followed biometrics and privacy issues said there could still be problems.

"Any biometric capture device is a potential tracking device, just like every iPhone is a potential tracking device. That's just the way these things are," said Lee Tien, an attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco nonprofit that monitors free speech and privacy issues.

Tien said that the bio-soles themselves "might make a person feel a little bit better" than other security systems and that Gray's claim that the system can ID a person within three steps is "pretty impressive."

But he added that if the project is successful, bio-soles could also be implanted in shoes secretly.

"I wouldn't expect Nike to build these in. But it's potentially covert," he said, meaning it could be used to help spy on people.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-07-21-Biometric%20Shoes/id-3cc7f968c7054fedbf6bf070968376f3

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Friday, July 20, 2012

Modifying surfaces by means of nanostructured reliefs to prevent the spread of bacteria

ScienceDaily (July 20, 2012) ? Researchers at the Institute for Agrobiotechnology (a mixed research centre set up by the Public University of Navarre, the CSIC-National Scientific Research Council, and the Government of Navarre) are designing, by means of laser application, nanostructured reliefs on surfaces so that they acquire antibacterial properties and are more resistant to the formation of bacterial biofilms. Researchers say that in the preliminary tests carried out so far with the bacteria Staphylococcus aureus there has been a 65-70% reduction in bacteria adhesion.

Apart from selecting the materials that best inhibit the adhesion of bacteria, the research is also looking into other aspects. These include the resistance to disinfectants of the bacteria adhered to nanostructured surfaces, how these surfaces retain their properties during prolonged use, or the behaviour of the bacteria on the surface of biomaterials. Topographical patterns that encourage the adhesion of bacteria will also be identified.

The authors anticipate that the applications coming out of this research will have an impact on a broad field from surgical material treated in advance using laser (prostheses, catheters) to water or aquaculture tanks with surfaces that prevent the adhesion of bacteria.

Preventing the creation of a bacterial biofilm

Bacterial biofilm is created when bacteria grow adhered to a surface and are surrounded by a matrix that they themselves produce and which makes them more resistant. "Bacteria," according to the head researcher Jaione Valle-Turrillas, "stick to any surface; it can be the skin, internal organs, surfaces of materials, etc. and they produce this biofilm, a kind of film that makes them more resistant to antibiotic treatments, disinfectants, etc." Biofilms can be found in nature (bacteria adhered to the surfaces of stones in rivers), in our own bodies (intestinal and buccal flora), in filters and pipes, in water tanks, on farms (milking equipment) and in the clinical ambit (prostheses, surgical catheters), etc.

The Biofilms Microbianos research group of the Institute of Agrobiotechnology is working mainly with two bacteria: S. aureus and Salmonella. Various lines of research focusing on the prevention or elimination of biofilms and ranging from the development of vaccines to research into biofilm dispersants, are being pursued in the laboratory, and right now, research is being done in this project to modify surfaces to prevent the formation of biofilm.

"Thanks to DLIP [Direct Laser Interference Patterning] technology, a surface is interfered with and modified using different laser beams on a nanometric scale," explains Jaione Valle. "You can create different patterns and drawings, of different periodicity, from nanometres to micra. We've already tested different surfaces and have found a material and a pattern that will stop the bacteria from sticking to the surface; it does not eliminate them completely, but the reduction is between 65 and 70%."

First of all, the surface is modified by means of laser and then the bacteria are applied to see how they produce the biofilm and in what quantity. Various materials have been used during the tests, and it has been seen how the number of bacteria and the production of biofilm diminish according to bacteria type and type of structure applied to the surface.

To quantify the reduction in the number of bacteria and the extent to which they remain adhered to the nanostructured surface, the researchers used a reagent (Alamar Blue), which emits fluorescence when it comes into contact with live bacteria. "This reaction is measured in a fluorometer so that the more bacteria there are, the greater the fluorescence that is produced," points out the researcher. The problem is that this technique cannot differentiate when the adhesion differences are small. That is why we are now using another method: we collect all the bacteria that have stuck to the surface, we sow them in a culture medium and count the number of colonies; it's more laborious, but it's also much more reliable."

The project "Development and evaluation of antibacterial properties of surfaces with nanostructured reliefs generated by Direct Laser Interference Patterning (DLIP)" is scheduled to run for three years, and will be brought to a conclusion at the end of December 2013. It is being run in collaboration with the German R+D centre Institut Fraunhofer for Material and Beam Technology, which has provided the laser technology to generate the reliefs on the surfaces. The IdAB-Agrobiotechnology Institute, for its part, is conducting the study and experimental tests. The total budget, funded by the Department of Innovation, Companies and Employment of the Government of Navarre, amounts to 179,800 euros.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/z1U1_N_3y1o/120720092134.htm

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Bringing Savannah Home: Family Finds Lost Dog and New Life ...

Johnny Brooks Stevenson, Jr., gave his wife a hug before leaving their Hinesville, Ga., home for the deserts of Afghanistan. Stevenson Jr. ? or ?Pops? as most people called him, had taken a job as a military contractor after a 20 year Army career.

?Girl, I?ll be alright. I?ll see you in six months,? he said. It was the last time she saw him. ?I got the phone call on February 15th, and they basically told me that he had fallen to the ground,? said Belinda Stevenson.

The man on the other end of the phone told her that all attempts to revive her husband had failed. She was shocked. ?He was my everything,? Belinda said of her husband of 29 years. ?He was my best friend, he is my soul mate. He will be my soul mate for eternity>?

The grief-striken woman said that in mourning his loss, she took comfort in the fact that she had a reminder of him ? his constant companion, a dog named Savannah, was her rock. She said whenever Pops was home, Savannah was glued to him.

?She would grab the water hose from him and she would basically run after him with the water hose, getting herself soaking wet,? recalled Belinda.

Which is why she was devastated when a storm blew over the fence in the family?s backyard in May, and Savannah ran away.

?I felt like when I lost Savannah I lost another part of my husband,? said Belinda.

?That dog was something he cherished,? said their son, Terrell Stevenson, 24. ?For her to have gotten away, it just hurt everybody in our family.?

For weeks Stevenson and her son searched for their dog, but to no avail. No calls came, and they could not find anyone who had seen her.

Weeks later Terrell was checking Facebook animal rescue pages when a picture caught his attention. Carpathia Paws, an animal rescue, listed Savannah as a found dog who would be euthanized shortly if she did not find a home. Just two hours before she was to be euthanized, animal lover Julie Ogden of West Wood , N.J., pulled the husky from the shelter and brought her home. Ogden says she was determined to find the dog?s owner.

?Somebody really loved this dog. You could tell she really trusted people. So we were kind of wondering how she ended up in animal control when she did have a loving home,? said Ogden, who volunteers for The Last Resort Rescue.

Terrell eventually contacted Ogden through Facebook, and was amazed when she offered to drive Savannah all the way to Georgia as part of a caravan campaign to raise awareness about the plight of shelter animals. After a 14 hour journey, Savannah walked out of the transport trailer and into the open arms of her family.

In an interview with NBC, the Stevensons expressed their gratitude and said they had found another silver lining in these recent tragedies:

Both the passing of Pops and Savannah?s disappearance led them toward a new mission in life. Terrell is following in his father?s footsteps: he has already completed two tours in Iraq with the Army and is now stationed at Hinesville?s Fort Stewart.

Belinda Stevenson says her broken heart was mended when Savannah came home. ?It?s like I?m getting a piece of him back, I?m getting a little piece of Pops back. I really am. And that does my heart so much good,? she said.

Source: http://www.lifewithdogs.tv/2012/07/bringing-savannah-home-family-finds-lost-dog-and-new-life-mission/

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Thursday, July 19, 2012

Google improves maps for several countries, helps you follow the path well trodden

Google improves maps for several european countries, helps you follow the path well trodden

So it seems the team at Mountain View won't rest until the whole world is mapped to within an inch of its cartographic life. Good for us though, and especially folk in Croatia, Czech Republic, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Lesotho, Macau, Portugal, San Marino, Singapore and Vatican City. Those nations have had their maps improved to be more detailed and precise. For example, when planning your saunter around Venice's St. Mark's Square, you'll now see the canals better aligned, along with 3D buildings and more detailed labels for places of interest. There's some more general housekeeping too, with multilingual names available, and clearer distinction between local and major roads. Planning a trip? Just curious? Drop a pin in the source link to discover more.

Google improves maps for several countries, helps you follow the path well trodden originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Jul 2012 07:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/07/19/google-improves-maps-for-several-countries/

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SkyWest pilot takes jarring ride in stolen plane

This undated image provided by the Colorado Springs Police Department on Tuesday, July 17, 2012 shows Brian Joseph Hedglin. The SkyWest Airlines employee wanted in a Colorado murder attempted to steal a passenger plane from a small southern Utah airport then shot himself in the head after crashing the aircraft in a nearby parking lot, officials said Tuesday. Hedglin was wanted in connection with the death of Christina Cornejo, 39, in Colorado Springs. Her body was found Friday by police doing a welfare check at the request of her family. Her death has been ruled a homicide. (AP Photo/Colorado Springs Police Department)

This undated image provided by the Colorado Springs Police Department on Tuesday, July 17, 2012 shows Brian Joseph Hedglin. The SkyWest Airlines employee wanted in a Colorado murder attempted to steal a passenger plane from a small southern Utah airport then shot himself in the head after crashing the aircraft in a nearby parking lot, officials said Tuesday. Hedglin was wanted in connection with the death of Christina Cornejo, 39, in Colorado Springs. Her body was found Friday by police doing a welfare check at the request of her family. Her death has been ruled a homicide. (AP Photo/Colorado Springs Police Department)

Colorado Army National Guard 2nd Lt. Christina Cornejo, ex-girlfriend of Brian Heglin, is seen in an undated photo provided by the Colorado National Guard. Heglin, a SkyWest Airlines pilot suspected of killing Cornejo, stole an empty 50-passenger jet Tuesday, July 17, 2012 from a small Utah airport, crashed it as he drove near a terminal, then was found dead with a self-inflicted gunshot wound, officials said. Police found the body of Cornejo, 39, on July 13 in Colorado Springs, Colo. Authorities say she had been stabbed multiple times. (AP Photo/Colorado National Guard )

A SkyWest regional jet sits on the tarmac on the opposite end of the St. George Municipal Airport Tuesday, July 17, 2012. A SkyWest Airlines employee wanted in a murder case attempted to steal a passenger plane, then shot himself in the head after crashing the aircraft in a nearby parking lot, officials said Tuesday. Brian Hedglin, 40, scaled a razor wire fence at the St. George Municipal Airport early Tuesday, then boarded the 50-passenger SkyWest jet while the airport was closed, St. George city spokesman Marc Mortenson said. (AP Photo/The Spectrum, Jud Burkett) NO SALES

A front-end loader, dump truck and a street sweeper are used to clean up the parking lot at the St. George Airport Tuesday, July 17, 2012. A SkyWest Airlines employee wanted in a murder case attempted to steal a passenger plane, then shot himself in the head after crashing the aircraft in a nearby parking lot, officials said Tuesday. Brian Hedglin, 40, scaled a razor wire fence at the St. George Municipal Airport early Tuesday, then boarded the 50-passenger SkyWest jet while the airport was closed, St. George city spokesman Marc Mortenson said. (AP Photo/The Spectrum, Jud Burkett) NO SALES

St. George police block the entrance to the St. George Municipal Airport Tuesday, July 17, 2012. A SkyWest Airlines employee wanted in a murder case attempted to steal a passenger plane, then shot himself in the head after crashing the aircraft in a nearby parking lot, officials said Tuesday. Brian Hedglin, 40, scaled a razor wire fence at the St. George Municipal Airport early Tuesday, then boarded the 50-passenger SkyWest jet while the airport was closed, St. George city spokesman Marc Mortenson said. (AP Photo/The Spectrum, Samantha Clemens) NO SALES

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) ? A SkyWest Airlines pilot and murder suspect who stole an empty 50-passenger jet and crashed it as he drove it at a small Utah airport was found dead with a gunshot wound to his head about halfway down the aircraft aisle, police said Wednesday.

Brian Hedglin was wanted in the murder of his girlfriend in Colorado when he used a rug to scale the razor wire-topped fence at the St. George Municipal Airport early Tuesday. The plane crashed in an airport parking lot before it got off the ground.

Authorities were trying Wednesday to determine just how Hedglin gained access to the plane while the airport was closed, among other details.

St. George police Capt. James Van Fleet said investigators were still awaiting toxicology reports to determine whether drugs or alcohol were a factor. He said they were also awaiting data from the cockpit recorder.

"Right now, we just don't know when he was shot," Van Fleet said. "Did he shoot himself at the beginning and the plane went on a ride on its own? We don't know."

The short ride was jarring enough to collapse the plane's front landing gear as it careened over landscaping, crossed a road and hit a curb before crashing into cars in the parking lot, he said.

"He might have been standing in the cockpit and was thrown back," Van Fleet said.

Meanwhile, SkyWest officials said the company deactivated Hedglin's access cards and put him on administrative leave after Colorado authorities named him a murder suspect, but declined to explain how he was able to steal one of their planes.

Van Fleet said he didn't know if the plane was locked, and SkyWest declined to discuss it.

Van Fleet also said that once his officers had finished processing evidence on the plane, it was released to SkyWest, which painted over its logo and moved the aircraft back onto secure airport property.

SkyWest spokeswoman Marissa Snow said the jet was scheduled for a flight later Tuesday morning, but noted it was empty and sitting on the tarmac when Hedglin stole it.

The CRJ200 aircraft is made by Bombardier and is capable of flying up to 534 mph with a range of 1,700 miles. Normally it has a two-person flight crew and one flight attendant.

Hedglin had been a pilot for the airline since 2005, and has flown these specific planes numerous times, Snow said.

Snow declined to say whether the plane was secured at the time of the incident, noting only that "there are numerous federally mandated procedures for securing an aircraft."

"This access was unauthorized," she said, declining to provide specific details about how Hedglin was able to board the plane. She also declined to say whether the plane was fueled up, noting it was all part of an ongoing investigation by local authorities in Utah, federal agencies and the airline.

Marianella de la Barrera, a Toronto-based spokeswoman for Bombardier, said security features vary airline to airline and sometimes even are different within an airline's fleet.

Even though planes can be equipped with or without locking mechanisms, she said training and experience would be needed to operate one.

"An average person wouldn't be able to walk up and start one up," she said.

The incident has raised overall concerns that the nation's airports may not be as safe as they should be.

The Transportation Security Administration doesn't require airports to maintain full-time surveillance of their perimeter fences, leaving airport security largely in the hands of individual facilities. St. George airport officials have said the small facility about 120 miles northeast of Las Vegas meets all federal security guidelines.

Van Fleet said just one officer provides security for the airport as it is closed through the night until 6 a.m. the next morning when TSA officials and others return. He said his agency would be discussing whether additional security measures need to be added but noted "this was a very determined person."

TSA spokesman Dave Castelveter said the agency was involved in the investigation, but declined to discuss specific security protocols, including how a plane is supposed to be secured when it is out of service, emphasizing that each airport has different security needs.

"Aviation security is not a one size fits all process," Castelveter said.

Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers of Alabama, chairman of the Subcommittee on Transportation Security, said the Utah incident "shows major security weaknesses at our airports that need to be addressed."

"We have been pushing TSA to do a much better job overall of working with its partners, including airport authorities, to improve security," Rogers said in a statement Wednesday. "American taxpayers deserve better and have a right to be outraged at this."

One aviation security expert said it might be time to revisit protocols aimed at securing airport perimeters.

"Maybe we need to implement some more levels of perimeter security because any type of security incident like this is a lesson to both the good guys and the bad guys. They read the papers just as much as we do," said Jeff Price, an aviation professor at the Metropolitan State University of Denver and former assistant security director at Denver International Airport.

Hedglin was wanted in the death of his of his girlfriend and fellow Colorado National Guard member, Christina Cornejo, in Colorado Springs, Colo. Her body was found July 13. Authorities said she had been stabbed multiple times. Hedglin was the key suspect but had not been charged.

The Gazette of Colorado Springs, citing court records, reported Hedglin dated Cornejo for four years and was arrested in March after he was accused of harassing her.

The records show that a restraining order was issued against Hedglin, and he was set for trial in August. He was released on $10,000 bond.

Attorney Steven Rodemer, who represented Hedglin in that case, said he was facing misdemeanor charges of criminal mischief, theft and harassment.

Hedglin was a part-time soldier who worked as a cook in the Colorado National Guard.

Cornejo was a full-time soldier who served in the Colorado Army National Guard's 100th Missile Defense Brigade in Colorado Springs. She enlisted in June 2006, became a second lieutenant last year and was named a distinguished honor graduate in two training programs. She had recently begun training as a current operations officer.

___

Associated Press writers Holbrook Mohr in Jackson, Miss., and Colleen Slevin and Dan Elliott in Denver contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-07-18-Utah-Airport%20Investigation/id-108349a992984102b54243a5a93e6229

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How to build a middleweight black hole

How to build a middleweight black hole [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 19-Jul-2012
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Contact: Kendra Snyder
kendrasnyder@gmail.com
586-805-0245
American Museum of Natural History

New model for intermediate black hole formation parallels growth of giant planets

A new model shows how an elusive type of black hole can be formed in the gas surrounding their supermassive counterparts. In research published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, scientists from the American Museum of Natural History, the City University of New York, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the California Institute of Technology, and the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics propose that intermediate-mass black holeslight-swallowing celestial objects with masses ranging from hundreds to many thousands of times the mass of the Suncan grow in the gas disks around supermassive black holes in the centers of galaxies. The physical mechanism parallels the model astrophysicists use to describe the growth of giant planets in the gas disks surrounding stars.

"We know about small black holes, which tend to be close to us and have masses a few to 10 times that of our Sun, and we know about supermassive black holes, which are found in the centers of galaxies and have a mass that's millions to billions of times the mass of the sun," said coauthor Saavik Ford, who is a research associate in the Museum's Department of Astrophysics as well as a professor at the Borough of Manhattan Community College, City University of New York (CUNY) and a faculty member at CUNY's Graduate Center. "But we have no evidence for the middle stage. Intermediate-mass black holes are much harder to find."

The birth of an intermediate black hole starts with the death of a star that forms a stellar or low-mass black hole. In order for this "seed" to grow, it must collide with and consume other dead and living stars. But even though there are many billions of stars in large galaxies, there's an even greater proportion of empty space, making collisions a very rare occurrence.

The researchers' new model suggests that previous searches for middleweight black holes might have been focused on the wrong birthing ground.

"The recent focus had been on star clusters, but objects there move very quickly and there's no gas, which makes the chances of a collision very slim," said Barry McKernan, a research associate in the Museum's Department of Astrophysics who is a professor at CUNY's Borough of Manhattan Community College and a faculty member at CUNY's Graduate Center.

The new mechanism turns attention instead to active galactic nuclei, the piping hot and ultra-bright cores of galaxies that feed supermassive black holes. The gas in this system is key, causing the stars to slow down and conform to a circularized orbit.

"You can think of the stars as cars traveling on a 10-lane highway," McKernan said. "If there were no gas, the cars would be going at very different speeds and mostly staying in their lanes, making the odds of collision low. When you add gas, it slows the cars to matching speeds but also moves them into other lanes, making the odds of collision and consumption much higher."

The resulting collisions allow a stellar black hole to swallow stars and grow. The black hole's size and gravitational pull increase as its mass expands, escalating its chance of further collisions. This phenomenon, called "runaway growth," can lead to the creation of an intermediate-mass black hole.

As they increase in size, the black holes start altering the gas disk that controls them. The researchers' model shows that black holes of a certain mass can create a gap in the gas disk, a signature that might give scientists the first glimpse of intermediate black holes.

The model describing this growth is a scaled-up version of the mechanism for the formation of gas giant planets like Jupiter and Saturn. Like intermediate black holes, these planets are thought to have grown in gas disks. The planets, though, developed in disks surrounding newly forming stars. Mordecai-Mark Mac Low, chair of the Department of Astrophysics at the Museum, has modeled that case.

"In some regions, we showed that rocky planets could be moved by the gas into common orbits, where they collide to form objects more than ten times the mass of the Earth, massive enough to attract gas and form gas giant planets," Mac Low said. "The creative work described here applies the same principles to the far more massive disks found at the centers of galaxies, to form black holes rather than giant planets."

###

Other authors on the paper include Museum research associate Wladimir Lyra from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology and Hagai Perets from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

This work was supported in part by NASA and CUNY.

Research paper: B. McKernan, K.E.S. Ford, W. Lyra, H.B. Perets, "Intermediate mass black holes in AGN disks - I. Production & Growth," Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc. (2012). doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2012.21486.x


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How to build a middleweight black hole [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 19-Jul-2012
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Contact: Kendra Snyder
kendrasnyder@gmail.com
586-805-0245
American Museum of Natural History

New model for intermediate black hole formation parallels growth of giant planets

A new model shows how an elusive type of black hole can be formed in the gas surrounding their supermassive counterparts. In research published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, scientists from the American Museum of Natural History, the City University of New York, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the California Institute of Technology, and the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics propose that intermediate-mass black holeslight-swallowing celestial objects with masses ranging from hundreds to many thousands of times the mass of the Suncan grow in the gas disks around supermassive black holes in the centers of galaxies. The physical mechanism parallels the model astrophysicists use to describe the growth of giant planets in the gas disks surrounding stars.

"We know about small black holes, which tend to be close to us and have masses a few to 10 times that of our Sun, and we know about supermassive black holes, which are found in the centers of galaxies and have a mass that's millions to billions of times the mass of the sun," said coauthor Saavik Ford, who is a research associate in the Museum's Department of Astrophysics as well as a professor at the Borough of Manhattan Community College, City University of New York (CUNY) and a faculty member at CUNY's Graduate Center. "But we have no evidence for the middle stage. Intermediate-mass black holes are much harder to find."

The birth of an intermediate black hole starts with the death of a star that forms a stellar or low-mass black hole. In order for this "seed" to grow, it must collide with and consume other dead and living stars. But even though there are many billions of stars in large galaxies, there's an even greater proportion of empty space, making collisions a very rare occurrence.

The researchers' new model suggests that previous searches for middleweight black holes might have been focused on the wrong birthing ground.

"The recent focus had been on star clusters, but objects there move very quickly and there's no gas, which makes the chances of a collision very slim," said Barry McKernan, a research associate in the Museum's Department of Astrophysics who is a professor at CUNY's Borough of Manhattan Community College and a faculty member at CUNY's Graduate Center.

The new mechanism turns attention instead to active galactic nuclei, the piping hot and ultra-bright cores of galaxies that feed supermassive black holes. The gas in this system is key, causing the stars to slow down and conform to a circularized orbit.

"You can think of the stars as cars traveling on a 10-lane highway," McKernan said. "If there were no gas, the cars would be going at very different speeds and mostly staying in their lanes, making the odds of collision low. When you add gas, it slows the cars to matching speeds but also moves them into other lanes, making the odds of collision and consumption much higher."

The resulting collisions allow a stellar black hole to swallow stars and grow. The black hole's size and gravitational pull increase as its mass expands, escalating its chance of further collisions. This phenomenon, called "runaway growth," can lead to the creation of an intermediate-mass black hole.

As they increase in size, the black holes start altering the gas disk that controls them. The researchers' model shows that black holes of a certain mass can create a gap in the gas disk, a signature that might give scientists the first glimpse of intermediate black holes.

The model describing this growth is a scaled-up version of the mechanism for the formation of gas giant planets like Jupiter and Saturn. Like intermediate black holes, these planets are thought to have grown in gas disks. The planets, though, developed in disks surrounding newly forming stars. Mordecai-Mark Mac Low, chair of the Department of Astrophysics at the Museum, has modeled that case.

"In some regions, we showed that rocky planets could be moved by the gas into common orbits, where they collide to form objects more than ten times the mass of the Earth, massive enough to attract gas and form gas giant planets," Mac Low said. "The creative work described here applies the same principles to the far more massive disks found at the centers of galaxies, to form black holes rather than giant planets."

###

Other authors on the paper include Museum research associate Wladimir Lyra from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology and Hagai Perets from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

This work was supported in part by NASA and CUNY.

Research paper: B. McKernan, K.E.S. Ford, W. Lyra, H.B. Perets, "Intermediate mass black holes in AGN disks - I. Production & Growth," Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc. (2012). doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2012.21486.x


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

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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.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-07/amon-htb071912.php

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