Friday, November 30, 2012

Missouri couple wins half of $587 million Powerball lottery

DEARBORN, Missouri (Reuters) - A Missouri couple who won half of a record $587.5 million Powerball jackpot said on Friday they plan to stay put in their rural community, but know their lives will be changed.

"I think we'll have a good Christmas," Cindy Hill said at a news conference where she and her husband, Mark Hill, were presented as winners of the jackpot by the Missouri Lottery.

Cindy Hill, 51, is a former office manager who got laid off in 2010. Mark Hill, 52, was a mechanic for Hillshire Brands, a food company, but has now quit his job.

They have three grown sons and a 6-year-old daughter adopted from China who were among about 25 relatives at the news conference, held in the gymnasium of the high school where they were sweethearts in the 1970s.

Cindy Hill first learned of the winning ticket on Thursday when she checked her numbers at the Trex Mart in Dearborn, a community of about 500 people 30 miles north of Kansas City. She then called Mark Hill from her car. They had bought five tickets.

"I think I'm going to have a heart attack," she told him. He told her to meet him at his mother's house so he could check the numbers for himself. "He said this is the 'Show Me State,' show me."

When they verified the numbers, they traveled to lottery offices in Jefferson City, Missouri, spent the night in a hotel and tried to comprehend what happened, Cindy Hill said.

"I thought ?This isn't what I thought it would be like, now I'm really nervous," she said. "I'm grateful, but there will be some not-so-good stuff to go along with it." Earlier, she said "You are going to get people coming out of the woodwork and some of them many not be too sane."

She said she and her husband plan to make the most of the winnings by giving to charity, to relatives for college education and other needs, and to the community.

"We are pretty well-grounded and worked hard all our lives," Cindy Hill said.

Mark Hill deferred to his wife for most of the news conference, which was observed by about 300 students from grades 7 to 12 in the bleachers.

"It's all just kind of a fuzz," Mark Hill said.

He said he has not grasped winning the money. On Thursday, for example, he went to buy toothpaste and other items to take to the hotel and found himself checking the price.

A CAMARO AND A HORSE

Cindy Hill said her husband wants a red Chevrolet Camaro car and she wants a horse. Daughter Jaiden wants a pony, Cindy Hill said. They also plan to travel, including a holiday with a lot of relatives in tow, she said.

The Hills won $293,750,000 before taxes. But they will take it in a lump sum of about $193 million rather than the larger amount over 30 years.

The Hills shared the Powerball payout with someone who bought a ticket at a food store in Fountain Hills, Arizona, on the outskirts of Phoenix. The Arizona winner has not yet come forward.

Some states allow lottery winners to remain anonymous but Missouri requires that the winner be publicly identified to claim the prize.

Dearborn reveled in its sudden arrival in the spotlight.

"It was a total surprise," Don Palmer, a customer at the Trex Mart convenience store, said on Thursday. "Nothing ever happens in Dearborn."

The winning numbers were 5, 16, 22, 23, 29, and the Powerball number 6.

The odds of winning the jackpot with a $2 ticket is one in more than 175 million.

(Reporting by Kevin Murphy; Editing by Mary Wisniewski and Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/managers-delighted-stores-sold-winning-lottery-tickets-015750148.html

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SCOV Law: Death Be Not Covered


In re Estate of Dunn v. Windham Northeast Supervisory Union, 2012 VT 93. Workers? compensation schemes have a simple structure: the State requires employers to carry workers? compensation insurance to reimburse employees for medical and economic losses resulting from work-related injuries?even if a third-party tortfeasor caused the injury. ?In the latter case, the insurer ends up paying the bill for someone else?s screw up.?

To be fair, Vermont?s workers? compensation program gives the insurer a right to recover its losses from whatever award the employee gets as compensation from the wrongdoer.? It also allows the insurer to go after the wrongdoer directly if the employee?doesn't?sue.? This is what is known in the business as subrogation: insurer gets to stand in the employee?s proverbial work shoes and sue the wrongdoer on the employee?s behalf.


Today?s case involves a work-related injury gone really, really bad: the employee, a member of the Windham Northeast Supervisory Union, had surgery for a work-related injury to her knee and died from ?complications.?? Following this tragedy, Employee?s family received death benefits from two sources: the school?s workers? compensation insurer, Vermont School Boards Insurance Trust; and Employee?s own life insurance policy, which went directly to her husband, its beneficiary.? Employer and the workers? compensation insurer (acting as Claimants against the Estate) went after the death benefits from the life insurance policy to offset what Insurer paid for the surgeon/hospital?s deadly mistake.? The Estate and Claimants met informally with the Department of Labor, then submitted cross motions for summary judgment to the Department of Labor Commissioner on the question of whether the governing statute, 21 V.S.A. 624(e), entitled Claimants to the reimbursement they wanted. The statutory provision that is the crux of this case allows the insurer to recover in two situations: 1) where the employee gets compensation from the tortfeasor; and 2) where the employee is also reimbursed by a private policy such as uninsured- or underinsured-motorist insurance, and would otherwise get reimbursed twice for the injury (?double recovery?).? The Commissioner read the statute to only allow recovery from a private policy?s proceeds where the proceeds were paid in connection with a third-party?s tort.? Claimants appealed. On appeal, the Department of Labor certified the question on appeal as whether Claimants were entitled to reimbursement from the life insurance policy for the benefits paid on account of her death.? This being a question of pure statutory interpretation, the SCOV owes no deference to any interpretations below; the Court reviews questions of law de novo.? Despite Claimants? creative arguments though, the SCOV agrees with the Commissioner and shoots down the Employer and Insurer?s attempt to dip into the life insurance pot. Claimants tried to label the life insurance policy death benefits payout as ?recovery of damages? for Employee?s death, which can be tapped under the statute.? But, the SCOV says, the word ?damages? is a term of art that is usually understood to mean ?pecuniary compensation, recompense, or satisfaction for an injury done or a wrong sustained.?? Life insurance policy proceeds provide a lump sum to the named beneficiary, or the deceased?s estate, as compensation for the loss of a loved one and post-mortem expenses, but there is no ?wrong? to trigger payment other than the insured?s death.? This interpretation is in keeping with the policy of fairness underlying the statute, the SCOV notes.? Where the employer isn?t directly responsible for the injury, such as when an employee is injured on the clock by an uninsured motorist, it?s only fair to let the workers? compensation insurer recover from whatever ?economic damages? the employee receives under their private uninsured motorist insurance policy. But wait! cry Claimants.??Doesn't?this exception for double recovery from an uninsured motorist policy mean that workers? compensation insurers can at least tap into the portion of life insurance benefits that are technically ?economic damages,? i.e., lost wages, medical expenses, etc.?? Sorry, the SCOV says, but in terms of life insurance ?death is not a ?loss,?? it?s merely the triggering event for a payout of a certain promised sum of money.? Unlike with workers? compensation, or even uninsured motorist coverage, an employee?s family?doesn't?have to prove the nature and scope of, or responsibility for, a particular injury to recover death benefits from a life insurance policy: all it has to do is provide a copy of the death certificate. The SCOV concludes that Claimants don?t get reimbursed from life insurance proceeds for having to pay for the surgeon/hospital?s epic failure.? Such is the life of a workers? compensation insurance carrier: win some, lose some, and hope that someone else will foot the bill.

Source: http://scovlegal.blogspot.com/2012/11/death-be-not-covered.html

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WHO: 2 more cases of new virus in Jordan

LONDON (AP) ? International health officials have confirmed two more fatal cases of a mysterious respiratory virus in the Middle East.

The virus has so far sickened nine people and killed five of them. The new disease is a coronavirus related to SARS, which killed some 800 people in a global epidemic in 2003, and belongs to a family of viruses that most often causes the common cold.

The two cases date back to April and are part of a cluster of a dozen people, mostly health workers, who fell sick in an intensive care unit at a hospital in Zarqa, Jordan. Officials are investigating whether the 10 other people who grew sick in Zarqa also were infected and how the virus might have spread.

"It's too early to say whether human-to-human transmission occurred or not, but we certainly can't rule it out," said WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl.

One of the Jordanian cases was a 40-year-old female. All of the other patients to date have been men. The new virus has so far been identified in patients from Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

Scientists haven't found any links between the sporadic cases of the coronavirus so far, first detected in September. "We don't know how the virus gets around and there are more questions than answers right now," Hartl said.

Several of the patients sickened by the new coronavirus have had rapid kidney failure and others have suffered severe pneumonia and respiratory illnesses. The virus is most closely related to a bat virus and scientists are also considering whether bats or animals like camels or goats are a possible source of infection.

Scientists are also considering whether fruit contaminated by animal droppings may have spread the virus.

Still, not all of the cases had contact with animals and WHO said it was possible the virus was spread between humans in the Jordan hospital and in a cluster of cases in Saudi Arabia, where four members of the same family fell ill and two died.

WHO says the virus is probably more widespread than just the Middle East and recommended that countries test any people with unexplained pneumonia.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/2-more-cases-virus-jordan-175506843.html

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Inspiration from Raymond Loewy for the Best Business PR

?

A lady, sitting next to Raymond Loewy at dinner, struck up a conversation.

?Why,? she asked ?did you put two Xs in Exxon??

?Why ask?? he asked.

?Because,? she said, ?I couldn?t help noticing??

?Well?, he responded, ?that?s the answer.?

-Source: Alan Fletcher, the author of ?The Art of Looking Sideways?

Raymond Loewy, the father of industrial design, created the Exxon logo in 1966 but it wasn?t introduced until six years later. From 1909 to 1980, Mr. Loewy?s accomplishments were enormous.

Not to understate his global impact, here?s a mere sample:

  • Air Force One?s sleek look for President John F. Kennedy
  • Boeing?s 307 interior
  • Coca-Cola bottle?s sleek look
  • John F. Kennedy postage stamp
  • Pennsylvania Railroad locomotives
  • Sears Coldspot refrigerator
  • Schick electric razors
  • Studebaker models (including my favorite as a teen, the Avanti)
  • U.S. Postal Service?s eagle logo

Not only did he create memorable designs, he was not shy. As a young news director at a Palm Springs all-news radio station in 1976, I once answered a telephone call, which was to become a career highlight.

?Hi, this is Raymond Loewy. I?m a listener. I really like your station. I?m taking a little time off from work and thought you might be interested in interviewing me.?

Mr. Loewy telephoned me after he had finished designing the Air France Concorde interior, and the interior of NASA?s Skylab space station. That was heady stuff.

He was proud of his work, and was not ashamed to promote it. That was one of my first lessons about public relations. He knew how to make people notice his highly visible creations ? he was a walking press release. His enthusiasm was contagious.

As a former broadcast journalist and now as a writer and business-performance consultant, I have a long history with press releases. If they?re put together well, they?re a source of power to create visibility.

Press releases ? multimedia

Now comes?validation on how to increase the power of press releases. You can greatly enhance your press-release visibility ? by as much as 9.7 times ? if you use the right multimedia content according to a 2012 study by PR Newswire.

PR Newswire analyzed thousands of press releases that the company published from 2011 to 2012. It wanted to evaluate the impact of photos, videos and other downloadable content. The company released the data ? as you might expect ? in a press release.

The data shows that simply adding a photo to a text-only press release increases visibility by 1.8 times, while adding a video to a text-only release delivers 4.3 times the number of views.

Including both photo and video content further enhances a story, driving visibility by 7.4 times more than plain text releases.

The web analytics team at PR Newswire also compared releases with additional layers of assets including downloadable files such as PPTs, PDFs, and DOCs along with photos and videos.

Although the number of such stories was fewer than those with just photos and videos, they received even more visibility and interaction, representing the potential for releases with photos, videos and downloadable files to drive up to 9.7 times more visibility over text-only releases.

?Photos, videos, infographics and other types of multimedia assets present information in a more compelling and attractive way so it?s no surprise that they boost content visibility so significantly,? says Rod Nicolson, vice president, global reporting, PR Newswire.

?The volume of multimedia content distributed through PR Newswire is higher than it has ever been and it is extremely encouraging to see that our customers are embracing the power of multimedia to capture the attention of their audiences, build brand awareness and power content marketing initiatives,? Mr. Nicolson adds.

Certainly, Mr. Loewy would agree. You have to visually define your identity to get noticed.

Mr. Loewy?s official site: www.raymondloewy.com

From the Coach?s Corner, here are related press-release tips:

?You?re just anybody without your identity.?

- Grenville Main

?

__________

Author Terry Corbell has written innumerable online business-enhancement articles, and is also a business-performance consultant and profit professional. Click here to see his management services. For a complimentary chat about your business situation or to schedule him as a speaker, consultant or author, please contact Terry.

?

Source: http://www.bizcoachinfo.com/archives/13034

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Sprint plans $10 monthly charge for iDEN push-to-talk subs in the new year

Sprint plans $10 monthly charge for iDEN pushtotalk subs in the new year

For Nextel push-to-talk subs, the writing's been on the wall for some time now, what with that legacy service destined to sunset on June 30th, 2013. But for those unwilling to heed Sprint's many early warnings and make the switch to its CDMA-based Direct Connect plan before this coming January, there'll be an additional monthly penalty fee. Sprint's confirmed to us that, starting in the new year, (stubborn) iDEN subs who've yet to migrate away from the network will incur an extra $10 charge per billing cycle. In lieu of that, the carrier's advising users to transition now and take advantage of its myriad incentive programs while they last. It's not a permanent change though, as this recurring fee will last only as long as the Nextel National Network does, at which point that 800MHz spectrum will be rolled over for the carrier's planned LTE build-out. But PTT holdouts irked by this news won't have to tie their fates to Sprint -- AT&T's been anticipating this churn and is waiting with open arms.

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Via: PhoneScoop

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/29/sprint-plans-10-monthly-charge-for-iden-push-to-talk-subs-in-th/

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NASA's TRMM satellite confirms 2010 landslides

ScienceDaily (Nov. 27, 2012) ? A NASA study using TRMM satellite data revealed that the year 2010 was a particularly bad year for landslides around the world.

A recent NASA study published in the October issue of the Journal of Hydrometeorology compared satellite rain data from NASA's Tropical Rainfall Measurement Mission (TRMM) to landslides in central eastern China, Central America and the Himalayan Arc, three regions with diverse climates and topography where rainfall-triggered landslides are frequent and destructive hazards to the local populations.

The work, led by Dalia Kirschbaum, a research physical scientist in the Hydrological Sciences Laboratory at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., is part of an ongoing effort to catalog worldwide rainfall-triggered landslides -- one of the world's lesser known but often catastrophic natural hazards. Locating them is a step in an effort to be able, one day, to predict and warn.

Currently, Kirschbaum explains, no consistent regional or global scale warning system exists for landslide disasters. To create one, scientists need to understand more than the individual factors that may contribute to local landslides -- the intensity and total amount of rainfall over hours to days, slope angle, soil type and saturation, among others.

"For other hazards like hurricanes, there's a clearly defined season," says Kirschbaum. "From satellite data and observations we know that hurricane season in the Atlantic spans from June 1 to Nov. 30. But we don't have that type of record for landslides around the world, and we want to know when and where to expect them in different regions."

Scientists also need a systematic way to assess landslide hazards for a region, and one way to do that, says Kirschbaum, is to look at the distribution and intensity of rain from satellite data and see how that correlates with where and how often landslides are being reported.

Creating Science by the Slice (of News)

The first step to developing landslide hazard assessments is to improve record keeping, Kirschbaum says. For the past several years, she has been developing the first global database for landslides triggered by rain, called the Global Landslide Catalog (GLC). Landslides are often too small to pick out of satellite imagery, so news stories are currently the best sources of information.

Daily, she and other research assistants examined media reports for possible landslides and dug out details such as where the landslide occurred, whether the landslide was triggered by a rain shower or a tropical cyclone, if there were fatalities, and if the type of landslide was characterized as a mudslide or a debris flow, among other characteristics. The GLC now has six complete years of data -- 2003, and 2007 through 2011 -- with new entries continually added. It contains more than 4,000 events that describe 20,600 reported fatalities among 60 different countries for 2007 through 2011.

However, Kirschbaum notes, landslide events are not uniformly reported around the world, with some not making the news unless they cause deaths or property damage. After compiling the 2010 record, Kirschbaum noted that 2010 appeared to be a particularly devastating year for landslides in parts of China, Central America and the Himalayan Arc. Kirschbaum compared the GLC with satellite-based rainfall information from TRMM and other satellites to see if the higher numbers of landslide reports corresponded with a higher amount of rainfall for those areas.

Fact-Checking the Stories with Impartial Witnesses

The TRMM Multisatellite Precipitation Analysis (TMPA) data includes rain data from 50 degrees north latitude to 50 degrees south latitude -- from southern Canada to the tip of South America--providing three-hourly and daily coverage of precipitation. Kirschbaum and her team relied on TMPA's 14-year record to provide a picture of global rainfall that could be related to landslides that occurred.

The big advantage of TMPA data, compared to ground data such as that from rain gauges, is that it measures rainfall in the same, consistent way over large regions. This provides a broader perspective that helps researchers like Kirschbaum and eventually forecasters equipped with satellite rainfall data to detect the kinds of rainfall signatures that are likely to produce destructive landslides.

Stating that extreme or prolonged rainfall can lead to landslides is not anything new, Kirschbaum says, but what is novel is that by examining the Global Landslide Catalog and TMPA precipitation record together, she can look at how reported landslide events compare with rainfall amounts. This in turn helps her find areas where landslides may be occurring but are not being reported.

Revealing the Long, Data-Drawn Truth

2010 was indeed an extraordinary year for landslides, says Kirschbaum, with three times as many reported events and twice as many reported fatal events as previous years within the Global Landslide Catalog.

Zhouqu County, China, was hit by the deadliest landslides in decades, according to state media, which buried some areas under as much as 23 feet (7 meters) of suffocating sludge. 1,765 people died. Property damages totaled an estimated $759 million. The TMPA rain data showed that the region's susceptible, steeply sloped geography was pummeled by extreme rainfall from a local cloudburst.

"This is really the first time that you can see how rainfall varies with respect to rainfall-triggered landslides because no other database has this type of globally consistent view," says Kirschbaum.

While most of the intense rainfall that triggers landslides is local in scale, global atmospheric circulation patterns can often affect these local conditions. As Kirschbaum explains: "What I think is unique about 2010 is there is a really strong El Ni?o going into a really strong La Ni?a, which consequently impacted rainfall patterns around the world."

Eventually, as the database of both landslides and rainfall data grows, Kirschbaum will be able to see more defined patterns in landslide occurrence month-by-month, and if those patterns are changing.

"I think in some ways we can compare the situation with landslides with that of earthquakes 50 years ago," says David Petley, professor and co-director of the Institute of Hazard, Risk and Resilience at Durham University's Department of Geography. "Our understanding of earthquakes improved dramatically when a global seismic array was deployed that allowed us to map earthquakes in space and time, providing insight into plate tectonics and thus earthquake mechanisms. We have not been able to map landslides in the same way, which means that we lack that time and space understanding. Dalia's work is important because she is collating this data, which is providing new insights."

Until there's enough data about where and when landslides have occurred in the past, there will not be enough information to issue useful warnings about future events at the global scale. Kirschbaum plans to expand the Global Landslide Catalog in order to provide a more complete dataset to evaluate landslide forecasting models. Adequate warning, one day, could help vulnerable people escape roaring slurries of slumping earth, to recover, rebuild or relocate.

This work was funded by the upcoming Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission, which will improve upon current rainfall datasets, with real-time assessment of rainfall accumulations that lead to landslide triggering. The GPM Core satellite is set to launch in 2014 and will extend coverage of precipitation measurements using a constellation of satellites to deliver a global rain dataset every three hours.

For more information about the GPM mission, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/gpm

For more information about NASA's TRMM satellite, visit: http://trmm.gsfc.nasa.gov

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Dalia Kirschbaum, Robert Adler, David Adler, Christa Peters-Lidard, George Huffman. Global Distribution of Extreme Precipitation and High-Impact Landslides in 2010 Relative to Previous Years. Journal of Hydrometeorology, 2012; 13 (5): 1536 DOI: 10.1175/JHM-D-12-02.1

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/2xi6p7rfLb8/121127191258.htm

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Love grabs 24 rebs, Timberwolves beat Kings 97-89

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) ? Disgusted with his performance since coming back from a broken right hand, Kevin Love decided to play without his protective glove Tuesday night against Sacramento.

Despite no extra padding for his healing shooting hand, the All-Star forward played a bruising inside game and rediscovered his outside shot as well.

Love had 23 points and an NBA season-high 24 rebounds to help the Minnesota Timberwolves stop a five-game losing streak by beating the Kings 97-89.

After missing the first nine games this season, Love returned last week. Bothered by the awkwardness of that fingerless padded glove, he shot 35 percent from the field in his first three games. He hit only 19 percent of his 3-point attempts and was just under 65 percent from the free throw line.

Love was unstoppable on the boards Tuesday, but it was the shooting that pleased him most. He went 8 of 17 from the floor and 5 of 6 at the foul line. Although he shot 2 for 8 from 3-point range, Love said most of those attempts were on target and felt good coming out of his hand.

"The glove was pretty restricting for me," Love said. "Every day my hand is getting stronger. The ball still doesn't feel quite right in my hand, but it's getting better."

And for one night, the struggling Timberwolves (6-7) were better as well. They took the lead late in the first quarter and never trailed again.

It helped that Love grabbed an amazing 21 defensive rebounds and helped Minnesota to a 51-36 overall edge on the boards. Love had six points in the fourth quarter and played nearly 44 minutes overall.

"I knew he got a lot of rebounds, but I didn't know how many," Minnesota coach Rick Adelman said. "It was one of the most complete games I've seen him play. He wasn't forcing anything. He passed the ball. He set screens. He did whatever we needed."

Love even benefited from a little luck, tossing in an off-balance 15-footer that went in as the shot clock was winding down to give the Timberwolves a four-point lead with 27 seconds left.

"I went to the bench when they called a timeout and looked at Coach, and he said, 'Just like I drew it up.' We both kind of laughed," Love said.

Tyreke Evans and DeMarcus Cousins each scored 20 points for the Kings, who had won two of their previous three games. Isaiah Thomas and Marcus Thornton both had 12.

"He (Love) was everywhere and just going for the ball," Evans said. "Everywhere the ball went it seemed like he was there. He does a good job of that. That's why they had a chance to win, because of the way he was crashing the boards."

Love was clearly a major force, but he had plenty of help as well. Luke Ridnour scored 18 and Nikola Pekovic had 16 points and eight rebounds for the Timberwolves, who had fallen into a tailspin after starting the season 5-2. Andrei Kirilenko had 14 points and Malcolm Lee added 10.

Two free throws by Cousins pulled Sacramento to 91-89 with just under 3 minutes left. But Pekovic got free for a layup off a pass from Kirilenko, and Love followed with his unorthodox shot, giving the Timberwolves a 95-89 lead.

"We were in a tough situation; we needed a win," said Kirilenko, who added six rebounds, five assists and three blocks in 41 minutes. "We were finally able to finish a game with our execution."

A tip-in by Love with 3:12 left was his 24th rebound. Anderson Varejao of Cleveland had the previous high this season with 23 rebounds.

Despite the play of Love, the Kings remained close and pulled to 90-87 when Thomas made a breakaway layup. Fouled on the play, Thomas converted the free throw with just under 3 minutes to play.

Alexey Shved made a pair of 3-pointers early in the fourth quarter and a fast-break dunk by Kirilenko gave Minnesota an 85-76 lead at the 7:03 mark.

Five turnovers in the fourth quarter, several of them at crucial times, hindered the Kings' comeback effort.

"We make plays throughout the whole game and then it's either a turnover or a couple of stops we didn't get," Thomas said. "We've just got to learn from it and we've got to fix it or, like I said, we're not going to win these close games."

After struggling with his shot in the first half, Love got going in the third quarter. He made several perimeter shots and finished with nine points and 10 rebounds. Ridnour also shot well, scoring eight points to help Minnesota take a 75-67 lead into the fourth.

Cousins, ejected from his previous game after arguing a foul call, picked up two quick fouls in the third quarter and went to the bench with four fouls at the 8:55 mark.

Pekovic had 12 points and Love had eight points and 11 rebounds in the opening half as the Timberwolves built a 48-45 advantage. Cousins scored 10 points for the Kings.

NOTES: The Kings didn't attempt a free throw until the 7:52 mark of the third quarter. ... Cousins scored eight straight Kings points in a 2-minute stretch of the first quarter. Three of his baskets were long perimeter shots. ... Minnesota shot 63 percent in the first quarter when it scored the final seven points for a 27-26 lead. ... Former Kings big man Brad Miller, who retired last season, sat in a courtside seat by the Minnesota bench. ... A starting forward the first nine games this season, Derrick Williams didn't play for the third time in four games for the Timberwolves.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/love-grabs-24-rebs-timberwolves-beat-kings-97-053502979--spt.html

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VW Golf VII Station Wagon: Will it look like this? Spy shots!

VW Golf VII Station Wagon

Nice rendering here of the next-generation VW Golf VII Station Wagon. Check the latest spy shots below!

Based on the redesigned hatchback, the estate will feature familiar styling but adopt a larger boot that will reportedly accommodate an additional 120 liters (4.2 cubic feet) of luggage. The model will also come with a roof rack for even more cargo carrying capability.

VW Golf VII Station Wagon

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheGermanCarBlog/~3/XSJwfMfdNuk/

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Health and Fitness: Your Perfect Post-Thanksgiving Detox Menu

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Source: http://health-and-fitness-detoxification.blogspot.com/2012/11/your-perfect-post-thanksgiving-detox.html

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Spirit-Led Parenting: as we confess our fears | O My Family ? This ...

I?m so excited to introduce you, friends and readers (who are friends I just haven?t met yet) to a dear friend and one of the first bloggers I read religiously: Megan Teitz of Sorta Crunchy. I so believe in the message of her and Laura?s book, Spirit-Led Parenting, that I have invited them here to share with you.

:: :: :: :: :: ::

Laura and I are so grateful that Allison has invited us into this sweet space. This is the second stop on our book club discussion of Spirit-Led Parenting. If you haven?t read the book, no worries! I?m confident you?ll be able to relate to the conversation here today.

It?s hard to believe it has been over eight years since I timidly posted a question on a hugely popular message board for parents about a book I had been given.

?This book says if you stick to its program, your baby will be sleeping through the night by eight weeks. Has anyone else read this book? Do you think it could be true??

I remember asking that, and I remember that I didn?t know I was kicking over a hornet?s nest of controversy when I asked it. All I knew at the time was that I was getting closer and closer to the birth of our oldest daughter, and I was beginning to have that feeling of anticipation and dread that you get near the top of the first hill of a roller coaster.

I was on this ride and there was no getting off now and I just wanted someone to tell me it was all going to be okay.

I was already nervous about what life with a new baby would be like. It?s that fear common to all of humanity, isn?t it? The fear of the unknown.

In the pages of the books on life with a baby I had been given by family and friends, it began to occur to me that I didn?t even know how scared I should be:

Without a schedule for baby?s days, our life would certainly descend into miserable chaos!
Without specific time shared by mommy and daddy on the couch in full view of the baby, our marriage would endure great strain and our baby would try to usurp the natural authority of the parents!
Rocking a baby to sleep meant a lifetime of dealing with sleep issues!
If parents don?t direct baby?s days from birth, they are signing themselves up for parenting a tyrant!

And on and on I read as I began to be filled with more and more fears. And yet, I found the remedy for those fears right there in the pages of the book. In the words of these experts, I found the assurance I desperately sought: follow these directions and everything will be okay.

And then she was born. And we brought her home and she was healthy and big and needy and fragile and we set about working the plan.

And nothing worked.

The fears of what I imagined life with a newborn might be like paled in comparison to the fear that now plagued our very real life with a baby. I began to sink under the weight of failing at every turn.

What was I doing wrong?
What is wrong with me?
What is wrong with my baby?

Those dark months of wrestling against fear and coming up the loser time and time again formed the foundation for this book. I didn?t know it at the time, but God was doing a new thing in my heart, teaching me about the only place I would ever find the confidence to navigate the ups-and-downs of parenting: in Him.

What I find to be especially powerful and interesting is that in the months since our book was published, we?ve heard from parents who read the same books that we did and struggled against the same fears we struggled against ? and we?ve heard from parents on the other end of the spectrum who read books touting the importance of natural birth and the necessity of practices like co-sleeping and babywearing in forming attachment to babies, and they, too, struggled under the enormous burden of the advice of the experts.

Tomorrow, we?ll be over at Just Wondering where Laura will share more about how we were able to shake off the fears of the first months of motherhood, and what God showed us as we moved out of that bondage and into a fresh start on our parenting journey.

Today, we invite you to share with us: what fears did you have as you prepared for and welcomed new little ones into your family? What were the source of those fears? Feel free to dig a little deeper and reflect on how fear impacted your relationships with your children, your partner, and with God.

Spirit-Led Parenting is the first release from authors Megan?Tietz and Laura Oyer. Megan writes about faith, family and natural?living at?SortaCrunchy and lives in Oklahoma City with her husband and two daughters. Laura blogs her reflections on the real and ridiculous things of life at In The Backyard, and makes her home in Indiana with her husband, daughter, and son.

image source

Source: http://omyfamilyblog.com/2012/11/spirit-led-parenting-as-we-confess-our-fears/

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Alarming 15-fold increase in inflatable bouncer-related injuries among children

ScienceDaily (Nov. 26, 2012) ? A new study by researchers at the Center for Injury Research and Policy of The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital examined pediatric injuries associated with inflatable bouncers, such as bounce houses and moonwalks. Researchers found that from 1995 to 2010 there was a 15-fold increase in the number of inflatable bouncer-related injuries that were treated in U.S. emergency departments among children younger than 18 years of age. In 2010 alone, more than 30 children per day, or about one child every 45 minutes, were treated in hospital emergency departments for injuries associated with inflatable bouncers.

The study, available online November 26, 2012 and published in the December 2012 print issue of Pediatrics, found that while fractures (28 percent) and strains or sprains (27 percent) were the most common types of injuries, approximately 1 in 5 injuries (19 percent) were to the head and neck, demonstrating that use of these products can pose serious risks. Falls (43 percent) were the most common cause of injury followed by stunts and collisions. The majority of the injuries occurred either in a recreational setting (44 percent) or at home (38 percent).

"The findings from this study show that there has been an alarming increase in the number of injuries from inflatable bouncers," said Gary A. Smith, MD, DrPH director of the Center for Injury Research and Policy at Nationwide Children's Hospital. "It is time for us to take action to prevent these injuries. Ensuring that parents are aware of the potential risks, improving surveillance of the injuries, developing national safety guidelines and improving bouncer design are the first steps."

The study authors point out that the injury patterns for inflatable bouncers and trampolines are very similar, and although there are national safety guidelines for trampoline use, no such guidelines exist for inflatable bouncers.

"The medical and public health community has yet to provide recommendations on the safe use of inflatable bouncers," said Dr. Smith, also a professor of Pediatrics at The Ohio State University College of Medicine. "The growing epidemic of inflatable bouncer injuries make it clear that it is time to do so."

Until national safety guidelines are in place, parents should consider the risks before allowing their child to use an inflatable bouncer. If parents allow their child to use an inflatable bouncer, they should consider limiting use to children 6 years of age and older, requiring that an adult be present to supervise while the bouncer is in use and allowing only one child on the bouncer at a time. If more than one child will be on the bouncer at the same time, the children should be approximately of the same age and size.

This is the first study to use a nationally representative sample to examine injuries associated with inflatable bouncer-related injuries that were treated in U.S. emergency departments. Data for this study were obtained from the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS), which is operated by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. The NEISS provides information on consumer product-related and sports and recreation-related injuries treated in hospital emergency departments across the country.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Nationwide Children's Hospital.

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


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/fQZkhwtk3GM/121126110931.htm

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Kipling Seoul Laptop Large Backpack Black ? Travel & Leisure ...

Kipling Seoul Laptop Large Backpack Black The Seoul Large Backpack from Kipling has laptop protection and padded shoulder straps making it great for travel or school. Main zipped compartment contains laptop pocket with Velcro closure, and a padded back and bottom panel. Zip-front pocket contains 2 pen sleeves, cell phone pocket, iPod/PDA pocket and large internal zippered pocket. Additional large zippered front pocket for more storage. Padded straps that are adjustable to a maximum length of 32 inches and top grip handle. Zippered pockets at the top and left hand side of bag are perfect for quick access to small items.

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Source: http://boyajianmarc.com/travel/2012/11/17/kipling-seoul-laptop-large-backpack-black/

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Source: http://journo-irreducibility.blogspot.com/2012/11/kipling-seoul-laptop-large-backpack.html

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Source: http://lopez393.typepad.com/blog/2012/11/kipling-seoul-laptop-large-backpack-black-travel-leisure.html

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\ '); $('#wpl-mustlogin').hide().slideDown('fast'); } ); $('#wpl-mustlogin input.input').live( 'focus', function() { $(this).prev().hide(); }).live( 'blur', function() { if ( $(this).val() == '' ) { $(this).prev().show(); } }); $('#wpl-mustlogin input#wp-submit').live( 'click', function(e) { e.preventDefault(); $.post( 'http://ybulidocuby.wordpress.com/wp-admin/admin-ajax.php', { 'action': 'wpl_record_stat', 'stat_name': 'loggedout_login_submit' }, function() { $('#wpl-mustlogin form').submit(); } ); }); $('#wpl-mustlogin a#wpl-signup-link').live( 'click', function(e) { e.preventDefault(); var link = $(this).attr('href'); $.post( 'http://ybulidocuby.wordpress.com/wp-admin/admin-ajax.php', { 'action': 'wpl_record_stat', 'stat_name': 'loggedout_signup_click' }, function() { location.href = link; } ); }); }) })(jQuery); /* ]]> */

Source: http://ybulidocuby.wordpress.com/2012/11/20/kipling-seoul-laptop-large-backpack-black-travel-leisure/

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Source: http://obilunudu.posterous.com/kipling-seoul-laptop-large-backpack-black-tra

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Source: http://betriobiberz.typepad.com/blog/2012/11/kipling-seoul-laptop-large-backpack-black-travel-leisure.html

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Source: http://delmer72.typepad.com/blog/2012/11/kipling-seoul-laptop-large-backpack-black-travel-leisure.html

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Source: http://helbergsimon.blogspot.com/2012/11/kipling-seoul-laptop-large-backpack.html

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Source: http://ronymrs.typepad.com/blog/2012/11/kipling-seoul-laptop-large-backpack-black-travel-leisure.html

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Tibetan students in west China clash with police

(AP) ? Four more ethnic Tibetans have self-immolated to protest Chinese rule and at least 20 were hospitalized after clashing with police in a protest over a government booklet calling the Tibetan language irrelevant, a report and exile groups said Tuesday.

More than 80 Tibetans in China have set themselves on fire since 2009 in protest against what overseas supporters say is China's strict control over Tibet's Buddhist culture and a suffocating security presence in Tibetan regions.

Four more self-immolations were reported Sunday and Monday in Gansu, Sichuan and Qinghai provinces.

At least 20 students were hospitalized Monday after a protest turned violent in Qinghai province's Hainan prefecture, U.S. broadcaster Radio Free Asia said in an emailed statement that cited Tibetan exile sources who were in touch with Hainan residents. London-based exile group Free Tibet said up to 1,000 students took part in the demonstration.

Radio Free Asia said students were angry over a booklet distributed at Tsolho Medical Institute in Hainan that called Tibetan irrelevant and condemned immolation protests by Tibetans as "acts of stupidity." It said students burned the books in their protest.

Hainan government and police officials referred calls to other departments where the phone rang unanswered on Tuesday.

The broadcaster also quoted anonymous sources inside China's Tibetan areas as saying teenaged nun Sangay Dolmas died from self-immolation on Sunday in Qinghai's Tongren county. On Monday, 18-year-old Kunchok Tsering died after burning himself in Gansu province's Xiahe county while in Sichuan's Seda country a 20-year-old former monk, Wang Gyal, self-immolated though his condition was not immediately known, it said.

Also Monday, in Gansu province's Luqu county, 24-year-old Gonpo Tsering died after setting himself ablaze, the report said.

The Washington, D.C.-based International Campaign for Tibet said that as of Monday the toll in China's Tibetan areas from self-immolations had reached 84, though the organization's count did not include Gonpo Tsering.

Most of the protesters have doused themselves with gasoline and set themselves alight after shouting slogans calling for Tibetan independence and blessings for the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled Buddhist leader. China blames him for encouraging the wave of self-immolations that Beijing has apparently been powerless to stop despite stepped-up security and an extensive spying network.

Independent verification of events and conditions in Tibet is nearly impossible because of restrictions on travel.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-11-26-China-Tibet/id-a7c4dfb4cad94defa19c286d76471c46

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Apple snagged partial rights for 'Lightning' trademark from Harley Davidson

DNP Apple Lightning trademark

Who says big companies can't be bros when it comes to trademarks? Since Apple had no need for its Lightning connector to appear on "motorcycle parts, slot machines or tachometers," it buddied up with Harley Davidson to secure partial use of the cycle maker's IP for its new iDevice interface, according to recent info from the European trademark office. That allowed it to use a name that's sympatico with its Thunderbolt moniker, while presumably letting Harley retain the rights for its heavier metal accessories. Also, should Cook & co. run up against a mid-life crisis, at least they'll have quick relief on speed-dial.

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Via: Gizmodo

Source: OHIM (European trademark office)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/26/apple-lightning-harley-davidson/

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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Local Commerce Startup ShopNear.me Launches Mobile App To Help Users Buy From Nearby Boutiques And Independent Designers

shopnearmeThe idea behind ShopNear.me is simple: Rather than going to big box retailers or shopping for goods online, it gives users an easy way to buy from boutiques and independent designers that are sold locally. By aggregating multiple small shops and brands, it provides a huge variety of goods that they might not have found otherwise.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/hkkPcjWGMm0/

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Hamas says Gaza truce agreed, Israel says no deal yet

GAZA/JERUSALEM (Reuters) - A Hamas official said Egyptian mediators had clinched a truce with Israel on Tuesday that would go into effect within hours, but Egypt and Israel said a Gaza ceasefire deal was still up in the air after a week of fighting.

"The talks are still continuing," an Egyptian official, who declined to be identified, told Reuters. He said Cairo was hopeful of an agreement later in the day.

Israel pressed on with its air strikes in Gaza on the seventh day of its offensive and Palestinian rockets still flashed across the border as U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton headed to the region after attending an Asian summit.

The Jewish state launched the offensive last week with the declared aim of halting the rocketing of its towns from the Palestinian enclave, ruled by the militant group that does not recognize Israel's right to exist.

Medical officials in Gaza said 21 Palestinians were killed on Tuesday. An Israeli soldier died when a rocket exploded near the Gaza frontier.

Gaza medical officials say 130 people have died in the strikes, mostly civilians, including 31 children. Three Israeli civilians were killed by a missile last week.

Clinton was expected in Jerusalem late on Tuesday to meet Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said that Israel was open to a long-term deal aimed at ending Palestinian rocket attacks that have plagued its southern region for years.

Khaled Meshaal, leader of the Hamas Islamist movement that governs the Gaza Strip, said on Monday that Israel must halt its military action and lift its blockade of the Palestinian coastal enclave in exchange for a truce.

Both Netanyahu, favored to win a January national election, and U.S. President Barack Obama have said they want a diplomatic solution, rather than a possible Israeli ground operation in the densely-populated territory of 1.7 million Palestinians.

Speaking to Reuters from Cairo, where intensive efforts have been under way to end the violence, Hamas official Ayman Taha said "an agreement for calm has been reached". He said it would be declared at 15:00 EDT and take effect at 18:00 EDT.

Netanyahu spokesman Mark Regev told Reuters Taha's announcement was premature and Israeli military operations in Gaza would continue in parallel with diplomacy.

"We're not there yet," Regev said on CNN. "The ball's still in play."

Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri, speaking after Taha made his remarks, said the group was still waiting to hear whether Israel would accept the terms of a deal.

"Cairo informed us they expect the response to be positive," Abu Zuhri said.

Israel's military on Tuesday targeted about 100 sites in Gaza, including ammunition stores and the Gaza headquarters of the National Islamic Bank.

Police said more than 150 rockets were fired from Gaza by the evening.

"No country would tolerate rocket attacks against its cities and against its civilians. Israel cannot tolerate such attacks," Netanyahu said with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who arrived in Jerusalem from talks in Cairo, at his side.

"If a long-term solution can be put in place through diplomatic means, then Israel would be a willing partner to such a solution," he said. "But if stronger military action proves necessary to stop the constant barrage of rockets, Israel will do what is necessary to defend our people."

HAMAS TARGETS JERUSALEM AGAIN

In an attack claimed in Gaza by Hamas's armed wing, a longer-range rocket targeted Jerusalem on Tuesday for the second time since Israel launched the air offensive.

The rocket, which fell harmlessly in the occupied West Bank, triggered warning sirens in the holy city about the time Ban arrived for truce discussions. Another rocket damaged an apartment building in Rishon Lezion, near Tel Aviv.

Rockets fired at the two cities over the past week were the first to reach them in decades, a sign of what Israel says is an increasing threat from Gaza militants.

In the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, Hamas executed six alleged collaborators, whom a security source quoted by the Hamas Aqsa radio said "were caught red-handed" with "filming equipment to take footage of positions". The radio said they were shot.

Militants on a motorcycle dragged the body of one of the men through the street.

Along Israel's sandy, fenced-off border with the Gaza Strip, tanks, artillery and infantry massed in field encampments awaiting any orders to go in. Some 45,000 reserve troops have been called up since the offensive was launched.

A delegation of nine Arab ministers, led by the Egyptian foreign minister, visited Gaza in a further signal of heightened Arab solidarity with the Palestinians.

Egypt has been a key player in efforts to end the most serious fighting between Israel and Palestinian militants since a three-week Israeli invasion of the enclave in the winter of 2008-9. Egypt has a 1979 peace treaty with Israel seen by the West as the cornerstone of Middle East peace, but that has been tested as never before by the removal of U.S. ally Hosni Mubarak as president last year in the Arab Spring uprisings.

Mohamed Mursi, elected Egyptian president this year, is a veteran of the Muslim Brotherhood, spiritual mentors of Hamas, but says he is committed to Egypt's treaty with Israel.

Mursi has warned Netanyahu of serious consequences from an invasion of the kind that killed more than 1,400 people in Gaza four years ago. But he has been careful so far not to alienate Israel, or Washington, a major aid donor to Egypt.

(Additional reporting by Marwa Awad in Cairo, Writing by Jeffrey Heller; Editing by Peter Graff)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gaza-truce-pressure-builds-cairo-focus-000548745.html

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Monday, November 19, 2012

How to kill gaming's toughest heroes [ClassicRadar] | GamesRadar

How to kill Duke Nukem?

1. Replace his Roids with estrogen pills.

2. Replace all of his beer with lemonade.

3. You take away all of his guns and weapons and replace them with water guns and throw pillows so that his world is none violent.

4. Replace all of his porn with child friendly content.

5. Replace all of the hot chicks with fat chicks.

6. The first five steps cause Duke to fall into a deep depression, he lets himself go, and then six months down the road he kills himself.

Source: http://www.gamesradar.com/how-kill-gamings-hardest-heroes-classicradar/

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Nintendo Wii U review -- Engadget

Nintendo Wii U review

Nintendo's new console is an anomaly in the game console ecosystem, but not for Nintendo. The company that -- in just the last decade -- popularized stylus-powered gaming, microphone-powered gaming and motion-based gaming, is once again pushing game control inputs forward. And just like its previous consoles, lessons learned from past hardware build the foundation of its latest effort: the Wii U and its bizarre-looking, but conventionally named, "GamePad."

The Wii U console itself, for instance, looks almost exactly like the original Wii. It's longer (6.75 inches vs. 6 inches for the Wii), a bit rounder on the edges, and there's an HDMI port out back, but overall it's quite similar to its squatter predecessor. It's enough that you'd get the two confused if they were sitting in the same entertainment center. Naturally, the beefed-up internals and Wii backwards compatibility mean you'll likely be replacing the ol' virtual tennis machine should you choose to pick one up.

Of course, the GamePad is the real star of the show here, bolstered by Nintendo's ambitious "TVii" experiment. Everyone's favorite Italian plumber looks super in HD, no doubt, but how software employs the multifaceted touchscreen tablet / traditional game controller hybrid is what really matters. So, how does the Wii U fare? Find out below.

Note: Nintendo delayed TVii into December, and the majority of promised functionality was not made available to reviewers ahead of the console's November 18th release date (including crucial components like online infrastructure, the Miiverse social network, Nintendo Network, Nintendo TVii, and Wii backwards compatibility). As such, we're updating our review as we use those features, post-launch.

Hardware: The Console

Nintendo Wii U review

The Wii U is a relatively quiet little box that slips easily into home media centers. Sure, there's a stand (at least in the deluxe set), but we opted to lay it on its side -- it takes up less space, and all the writing is geared toward it laying horizontally. How could we disobey the font? It'll take up yet another HDMI spot on your HDTV (a cable is thankfully included in the Wii U box), though component is also an option (sold separately). Think of the ports on the back of the Wii U box as identical to what you had on your original Wii, save for some very small tweaks. For one, the AC power port is slightly altered to account for the Wii U's new, larger adapter. Otherwise, the only difference is the addition of HDMI-in on account of the console's beefed up internals: an IBM Power-based multi-core processor and an AMD Radeon custom high-def CPU. You can directly plug in that old Wii sensor bar, should you choose to eschew the brand new one you'll get in the box.

There are two flavors of storage as well, with the $300 model getting just 8GB of internal flash memory while the $350 model gets 32GB. Not that any of that matters terribly, as both flash and full-on external HDDs are supported. The four USB ports situated around the long black rectangle should provide more than enough support. Should they not be enough, an SD slot sits up front below the optical disc tray, tucked behind a slidable wall of shiny plastic with two of the aforementioned USB ports. Like the GamePad it supports, the Wii U console is glossy, fingerprint-loving plastic. The dust and cat hair in our test apartment love the exterior of the Wii U. We do not. Unless you live in a dust-less vacuum, there's no way your Wii U console won't exist in a state of perpetual shabbiness. We've had our black deluxe set for a week and it looks as though it's been sitting in an ancient tomb. Finish aside, it's a quiet, sleek black rectangle that takes up little of our precious entertainment center space -- you'll find no complaints here.

Hardware: The GamePad

The Wii U's touch-based GamePad controller has its roots in the Nintendo DS, as evidenced by the GamePad's stylus concept, the aging resistive touchscreen (albeit larger at 6.2 inches, with an 854?480 resolution in a 16:9 ratio), and the microphone residing along the bottom. A player-facing camera -- no doubt borrowed from the DSi -- sits parallel to the mic, just above that enormous touchscreen. Two Nintendo Wii Nunchuk-esque convex, clickable analog sticks punctuate the left and right sides of the GamePad, and the plus and minus buttons (replacing start / select) from the Wiimote sit along the lower right. The SNES' hallmark four-button layout and d-pad line up on either side of the touchscreen just below the analog sticks. This sure is a Nintendo device, eh? Or is it every Nintendo device, all at once?

Of course, the GamePad is more than an homage to Nintendo's previous hardware, and there's plenty new to gawk at -- a volume slider controls how loud the GamePad's speakers are, a haloed Home button sits along the bottom (allowing for quick access to the GamePad's settings and the console's main menu) and a red battery light indicates when you'll need a recharge (solid to warn, blinking when death is imminent).

Digital triggers await your pointer fingers on each side around back, with a clickable shoulder button above each (similar to the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 controllers). A deep ridge allows you to comfortably hold the hefty, 1.1-pound controller for long periods -- not that you'll be using it for much longer than three hours if you don't plug it in. We pulled just under five hours out of it with brightness turned all the way down, the sound off and no rumble, but averaged around 3.5 hours in general use. There's also a power-saving mode which auto-adjusts the screen's brightness based on whatever it's displaying, which seemed to do little in conserving battery life; turning down the sound and keeping brightness at the lowest setting is the best way to extend run time beyond the average, we found. Should you choose to give yourself a break and fully recharge the controller, it'll need around 2.5 hours to re-up.

We pulled just under five hours out of it with brightness turned all the way down, the sound off and no rumble, but averaged around 3.5 hours in general use.

As for new functionality, there's a spot for NFC connectivity, but but we can't test it when no software supports it (not even the Activision megahit series Skylanders). Of course, it's not hard to imagine, say, a Pok?mon tie-in down the line, or something else similarly terrifying to parents' wallets. Perhaps the most novel non-gaming function of the tablet-esque controller is its IR-based universal remote control ability -- the GamePad can be used to control your HDTV (well, "most" HDTVs) in some basic, but very important, ways. Rather than futzing with several remote controls to turn on your television and game console, the Wii U's built-in universal remote functionality -- which functions whether or not the Wii U itself is powered on -- streamlines everything down to just the game controller. Of course, this is no replacement for your Harmony One; in our experience, it was primarily used for powering on the Wii U, the television, and switching to the appropriate input / changing volume / etc., and thankfully had little to no impact on battery.

Nintendo Wii U review

This functionality alone made a huge impact on how we approached the console as part of the entertainment center. It's also changed our game playing habits quite a bit, as many games on the GamePad screen are mirror images of the TV -- we found ourselves indulging ADD and flipping to the evening news while trouncing goombas. It also helps the family dynamic of battling for control of one television. Little Sally can keep playing New Super Mario Bros. U while Dad watches Sunday football (or other such situations).

That won't work with all software, of course, such as featured launch title Nintendo Land -- a carnival-themed collection of 12 games spotlighting major Nintendo franchises, from Animal Crossing to Zelda. It employs all of the GamePad's gimmicks across its single and multiplayer games. That includes asymmetrical gameplay, wherein what you see on the GamePad isn't what you see on your television. As such, much-vaunted features like off-screen play work only on a case-by-case basis. (We were unable to test this feature with Netflix, Hulu Plus, Amazon Instant or any other non-game software ahead of launch, as none were available.)

Nintendo Wii U review

Sadly, overall, the GamePad controller gives off a relatively low-grade impression; it looks and feels like a toy. The four main buttons resemble aspirin pills and aren't of the polish we expect from modern game consoles; glossy plus / minus buttons accentuate this tragedy even further. Shallow, squishy shoulder buttons akin to those on Sony's DualShock 3 compare poorly to those found on the current Xbox 360 controller as well as competent third-party equivalents (the Razer Onza, for instance). And the convex analog sticks had our thumbs easily slipping during long Mario sessions. The glossy, handprint-friendly, dust-magnet finish on the GamePad isn't helping its looks, either (we prefer the matte finish on the GamePad's rear). It's not all bad -- the d-pad is as solid as ever, and the clicky digital triggers work beautifully (as long as you're not playing an FPS or a racing game, that is). The GamePad's comfy, too, despite its weight and size. If only it'd go further from its home base console than the 26 feet Nintendo's promising.

Yes, we tried bringing the Wii U GamePad everywhere, but Nintendo's (admittedly conservative) estimation is pretty spot-on -- the streamed video that the Wii U pushes to its GamePad wouldn't go very far at all without running into hiccups or cutting out altogether. That isn't to say we encountered issues within that estimated distance -- in fact, streaming worked flawlessly -- but don't expect to sneak in late night gaming from your bedroom while the Wii U sits quietly across the house. Though folks in more rural areas may fare better, our NY-based test apartment with three wireless devices (aside from the Wii U) wouldn't allow anything beyond 20 feet or so. Within that range, though, the Wii U magically streams hiccup-free gaming to both the GamePad's screen and an HDTV -- no small feat, and one that opens up a Pandora's box of ideas for both game developers and media providers.

Hardware: The Pro Controller

The Pro Controller is a Nintendo-crafted hybrid of the PlayStation 3's DualShock and the Xbox 360's controller. It's got a good heft, but isn't too heavy, and sadly features the same glossy plastic and cheap buttons we've already complained about. Apparently Nintendo wants our consoles and their accessories constantly looking dirty? It rumbles as you'd expect and functions admirably in time-sensitive situations (such as Ninja Gaiden 3). Also expected: its battery lasts much, much longer than the GamePad, with ours holding charge anywhere from six to 10 hours before needing a plug in. Like the GamePad, you can, of course, simply plug in the controller into the console via USB and continue playing while charging.

Hardware: The Charging Cradle

Nintendo Wii U review

Surprisingly, there's a lot to be said for the convenience of the Wii U's GamePad charging cradle. Rather than fussing with wires that connect to an otherwise wireless console, you simply place the GamePad in a comfy dock, no connection required (a la the 3DS charging cradle). It comes with its own AC adapter and doesn't actually require a physical plug into the GamePad -- the controller charges via touch points rather than a plug (again, in around 2.5 hours). If Nintendo Land's discounted price and the larger internal storage haven't already sold potential buyers on the deluxe Wii U version, the cradle (otherwise sold separately for $20) absolutely should. It's a small convenience, but quite a nice one.

Software

We can't share the same positivity about the mostly unchanged UI -- it's a simplified version of the user interface we got to know in the original Wii. Movable, rounded square tiles (five across, three down) represent the entire experience, aside from the ability to swap between your user Mii walking around a (currently empty) plaza and the tiles. Nintendo plans to populate this plaza with your online friends (and news from its SpotPass feature), but we've been unable to use this feature ahead of launch -- as of now, it's a pretty, empty room with a very lonely Mii. Logging in with your Mii is a snap, and you can set a particular one to default login on boot. Logging out and switching users is as simple as tapping the user icon in the upper left corner of the UI and selecting another user -- simple, intuitive and quick.

Currently, pre-launch update, what little that is available in terms of non-game software loads surprisingly slowly for a brand-new console. Opening the Mii Maker, the System Settings, Daily Log or the Parental Controls requires a roughly 15-second wait while the application loads (yes, we timed it), and backing out takes about as long. When you do enter any of the applications, there's only so much to do -- the Mii Maker functions much like that of its 3DS equivalent, matching up a camera scan of your face with an approximation or allowing you to import one from other Nintendo consoles (3DS included). You can also create your own from scratch, should you be so inclined.

The Daily Log shows a breakdown of your daily actions on the Wii U, as well as per game, so you can find out exactly how much of your life you've spent trying to find various incarnations of the Triforce. Parental Controls mostly allow for enabling or disabling the Wii U's various features -- accessing non-game entertainment, or Miiverse, or the eShop -- as well as an ESRB-based blocking system for games. System Settings is where you'll go for data management (such as transferring your old Wii data over), but also where you'll go to tweak the settings you arranged in initial setup (wireless networks, date/time, etc. -- basic system level stuff). Most importantly, it's where you can recalibrate your GamePad and sensor bar should there ever be an issue.

Games

Nintendo Wii U review

With 23 games to choose from this weekend and even more in the "launch window" (ending March 31, 2013), the Wii U's arriving at retail with a huge presence. Of course, only a small handful of those 23 are worth plunking down your $60 for -- they're still launch titles, after all -- and we've got a few suggestions.

New Super Mario Bros. U

Obvious? Yes. Delightful? Also yes. New Super Mario Bros. U is Mario's first big HD outing, and he's looking incredible, as are Bowser's airships and Yoshi's big, goofy face. Beyond being a great showpiece for your new console, NSMBU is an excellent Mario game. It's nowhere near as innovative as series standouts like Super Mario World (an SNES launch title) or even Super Mario 64 (an N64 launch title), but it's a heck of a lot better than recent NSMB entries (we're looking at you, New Super Mario Bros. 2 on 3DS).

Nintendo Land

If you're wondering what the Wii Sports of Wii U is, Nintendo Land is it: the game serves as a glorious demonstration of the unique controller's many, many functions, and offers a preview of what other creative ideas will assuredly spring up over the next several years. More importantly, Nintendo Land helps prove that the GamePad's more than just a mixed bag of legacy functionality and emerging tablet fads -- the tilt sensor shines in Captain Falcon's Twister Race, and the whole "second screen" idea works beautifully in Luigi's Ghost Mansion. It's easy to forget how cheap the overall build of the GamePad feels when you're enjoying totally new gaming experiences with it. Nintendo Land's demonstrative abilities are a necessity when buying the new console -- the game alone sells the deluxe set, as you'd pay more for the game and regular bundle separately.

Nintendo Wii U review

ZombiU

Ubisoft Montpellier's long-in-development Wii U zombie shooter matured considerably since its initial unveiling as "Killer Freaks From Outer Space." The freaks are now the undead hordes of London, post-zombie apocalypse, and you're an unwitting survivor struggling to hang on. Rather than gleefully taking to heavy weaponry, you'll be employing survival skills more than anything else -- weapons (and ammunition) are at a minimum, and the GamePad's second screen is employed smartly as a map / backpack (as well as lots of other neat tricks that you should really just see for yourself). ZombiU also serves as a showcase of the system's non-cartoon HD ability (some up-close textures reminded us this is still a launch game, sadly). Be warned that it is also relatively terrifying, though we scare easy.

Ports

Wii U's launching with a variety of ports from current Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 games, such as Mass Effect 3 and Assassin's Creed 3. The vast majority of this holiday's big games are being ported (as well as some of last holiday's, like Batman: Arkham City Armored Edition). None of these are developed with the Wii U in mind, though some have additional content or new ways of interacting with existing content. If you're dead set on only playing Wii U games this holiday, then these might be your only way to check out some great games. That said, there's little benefit to playing them here over other consoles -- and if you're into multiplayer, there's an argument for existing consoles having more online players (based solely on install base).

Wrap-up

Nintendo Wii U review

Nintendo promised consumers a modern HD gaming console, and the Wii U -- what's there of it thus far -- delivers on that promise. Games look gorgeous (HD Mario!), the risky controller is another successful control innovation and there's a ton of promise on the horizon. What's missing, sadly, is a huge part of the puzzle -- so huge, in fact, that it's impossible for us to pass judgment on the whole package just yet.

Without Nintendo Network, Miiverse, Nintendo TVii, or any streaming / on-demand video content -- not to mention promised backwards compatibility -- the Wii U doesn't compete at all with even last-gen consoles (Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 just became last-gen, in case that isn't clear). But Nintendo launched a patch just four hours ahead of launch containing at least some of that functionality, so we're reserving judgment until we've spent time with its post-update features.

Joseph Volpe contributed to this review.

Source: http://www.engadget.com/wii-u-review/nintendo-wii-u-review/

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The North London Derby: Match Report

Adding to another emphatic week in the Premier League, Arsenal eased past fellow North London rivals Tottenham Hotspur 5-2 in the 125th North London derby. After witnessing several spectacular encounters between the two sides in recent years, yesterday?s game had a weight of expectation and it didn?t disappoint. This game was almost set up like a soap opera as a multitude of goals were scored as well as a red card for former Gunner Emmanuel Adebayor.

Spurs set up very attacking, starting both Jermaine Defoe and Emmanuel Adebayor. It was Adebayor who struck against his former side after an intelligent run by Defoe, Jan Vertonghen?s long ball found the Englishman whose effort was saved by Wojciech Szcz?sny but Adebayor was there to follow in the rebound.

This was as good as it got for the Togolese International as several minutes later, Adebayor saw red for his poorly mistimed challenge on Santi Cazorla. A man down and 73 minutes still to play, this was a major setback for Tottenham, who had started the game very brightly and almost went two up through Aaron Lennon?s effort.

Wenger vowed before the game Arsenal will finish above their North London rivals, as they?ve done so every year for the past 17 years. Per Mertesacker?s 24th minute equalizer came after amounting pressure by Arsenal. Theo Walcott?s perfectly weighted cross was met firmly by the head of the giant German,who bagged his first goal for Arsenal since his move from Werder Breman last summer.

The Spurs goal continued to be bombarded with Arsenal attempts, but it was Lukas Podolski?s scuffed effort that bobbled off William Gallas and Olivier Giroud?s sweeping strike that gave Arsenal the lead before the interval.

At half time, Villas-Boas decided to change formation, taking off both fullbacks and replacing them with Dempsey and Dawson. Tottenham fell further behind as an attacking exchange between Giroud and Walcott sent Podolski away on the left hand side and his fine low cross was exquisitely controlled by Spaniard Santi Cazorla.

Spurs however courageously continued, refusing to be rolled over despite the score and were rewarded with their efforts as Gareth Bale?s solo run found the right corner of the Arsenal goal, much to Szcz?sny?s annoyance.

Spurs began to mount late pressure on Arsenal and Wenger became aware changes needed to be made. Oxlade Chamberlain and Andre Santos replaced Podolski and Giroud and Oxlade?s link up with Walcott bagged Arsenal?s fifth and his second of the night. Arsenal took the spoils 5-2 with Cazorla putting in a man of the match performance.

Arsenal began the day in 8th place, a point and a place behind Tottenham. Having made their worst start to a campaign since 1982/83, and after difficult losses against Schalke, Manchester United and losing a 2-0 lead against Fulham, Wenger demanded a response from his players.

?This was a very important result for us today.?

?We still have to find stability in our expression. We need some more time to work on that, we are off the top, so we have not much time to improve, but hopefully this will give us a lot of confidence.?

Arsenal host Montpellier in this week?s Champions League fixture and Spurs are at home against West Ham in another London Derby.

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Written by Farhan Daw

Follow him on Twitter @RarnieD

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Source: http://www.o-posts.net/news/teams/uk/arsenal/north-london-derby-match-report/

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