Monday, October 29, 2012

IBM Labs develops 'initial step' towards commercial fabrication of carbon nanotubes

IBM Labs team develops 'initial step' towards commercial fabrication of carbon nanotubes

Commercialization of carbon nanotubes is one of the holy grails of next-gen computing, and IBM thinks it's made crucial steps toward making this a reality. This isn't the first time that we've heard such a claim, of course, but IBM's considerable resources will make this particularly interesting. The specific problem it's been tackling is placing enough semiconducting nanotubes together to be useful in commercial chips, with current attempts being more in the hundreds, rather than billions that would be required. The new approach uses ion-exchange chemistry that allows controlled placement of nanotubes at two orders of magnitude greater than before, with a density of roughly a billion per square centimeter. To achieve this, the nanotubes are mixed with a soap-like substance that makes them water-soluble. Next, a substrate comprising two oxides and a hafnium oxide "trench" is immersed in the soap-solution, which results in the nanotubes attaching to the hafnium oxide canals with a chemical bond. Simple when you think about it! IBM hopes that as the materials and method are readily accessible now, that industry players will be able to experiment with nanotube technology at a much greater scale. Though, as we've become accustomed, there's no solid timescales on when this might realistically unfold.

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IBM Labs develops 'initial step' towards commercial fabrication of carbon nanotubes originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 28 Oct 2012 14:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Lenovo announces ThinkPad Edge Twist, a business-oriented convertible coming this month for $849

Lenovo announces ThinkPad Edge Twist, a business-oriented convertible coming this month for $849

Lenovo was first out of the gate with a form-shifting Windows 8 machine when it unveiled the IdeaPad Yoga at CES. Now the company's back with a convertible for its business customers, the ThinkPad Edge Twist. In many ways, it's a convertible in the most conventional sense of the word: unlike the Yoga, whose screen folds all the way back, the Twist has a 12.5-inch display that can swivel all the way around and fold down into tablet mode. As a member of the Edge family, in particular, it blends design elements from Lenovo's business and consumer lines, with metal accents, rounded edges, an island-style keyboard, a magnesium frame and, of course, that signature soft-touch finish.

Stealing the show is that 12.5-inch, 350-nit, Gorilla Glass-coated display, which uses IPS technology for wider angles. On the inside, the Twist runs your choice of a Core i5 or i7 processor, with up to 8GB of RAM and either a 128GB SSD or a 7,200RPM hard drive (320GB or 500GB). Battery life, meanwhile, is rated at up to seven hours. At 3.48 pounds, it's heavier than some larger-screened Ultrabooks, but at least that 0.79-inch frame makes room for a full-sized Ethernet jack. (It also has a memory card reader, two USB 3.0 ports, mini-HDMI output and a mini-DisplayPort.) As for business-friendly features, the laptop offers TPM and can be configured with an optional 3G radio. Look for it on October 26th, starting at $849. Until then, enjoy those hands-on shots below.

Continue reading Lenovo announces ThinkPad Edge Twist, a business-oriented convertible coming this month for $849

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Lenovo announces ThinkPad Edge Twist, a business-oriented convertible coming this month for $849 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Oct 2012 19:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/09/lenovo-thinkpad-edge-twist-announced/

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BofA moves veteran to senior European client job

LONDON (Reuters) - Bank of America Merrill Lynch named a long-standing capital markets specialist, Rupert Hume-Kendall, as chairman of its corporate and investment banking business in Europe, after a revamp of the division's management.

Hume-Kendall, who in his 15 years at BofA ML has focused primarily on equity capital markets, the part of the investment bank which runs share sales including stock market listings, will be responsible for covering big clients in the region, an internal memo seen by Reuters showed.

He will also oversee the development of "essential new senior relationships" across Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA), the memo said.

Bank of America's investment bank has been hit by departures and undergone a series of reshuffles this year, as it tries - like its rivals - to face up to tough markets that are denting trading revenue and hurting the flow of deals.

In January the bank promoted relative newcomer Christian Meissner to run corporate and investment banking globally. The division is in charge of overseeing advisory activity on merger and acquisition deals and stock and debt underwriting.

It later hired Goldman Sachs banker Diego De Giorgi to run that division in the EMEA region alongside Bob Elfring.

BofA ML also has a new president of Europe and emerging markets (excluding Asia), Alex Wilmot-Sitwell, formerly of UBS .

But star banker Andrea Orcel left BofA ML for UBS in March, while other senior executives in the United States have also jumped ship.

Many investment banks are trying to sharpen their client focus, making sure they are giving the most attention to those that will yield the biggest fees.

BofA ML ranked second by global investment banking fees in the first nine months of 2012, behind JPMorgan , according to Thomson Reuters data. In EMEA, it dropped two ranks to ninth place compared with 2011, the fee data showed.

(Reporting by Sarah White; Editing by Helen Massy-Beresford)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bofa-moves-veteran-senior-european-client-job-170142540--sector.html

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Monday, October 8, 2012

The More I Look at It, the More I Want a Color iPad Mini [Video]

I like both the black iPad Mini and the 2001 Space Odyssey prop white model. But the more I look at the color ones, like the neat red one above, the more I think they make sense. And the more I want them. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/AR4TN_SE1WI/the-more-i-look-at-it-the-more-i-want-a-color-ipad-mini

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Army opposes reservation in its schools under ... - Indian Military News

8 10 2012

PTI.

The Army is opposing implementation of 25 per cent reservation for children of weaker and disadvantaged groups in its around 150 schools under the Right to Education Act, saying it will hamper the educational prospects of wards of its own personnel.

A letter in this regard has been sent to the Defence Ministry by the Army Headquarters, Army sources told PTI here.

The 1.3 million-strong force runs around 150 schools across the cantonments in the country.

The stand in this regard was taken some time back and the government has been apprised about the reasons behind it, they said.

This position has been taken in view of the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009 which makes it compulsory for every private unaided school to admit at least 25 per cent in its entry level class children belonging to weaker and disadvantaged groups.

Explaining the reasons for opposing the provision of reservation, Army sources said this would deprive ?our own wards of quality education in our schools?.

?Already, there is a lot of pressure on our schools and giving away 25 per cent seats to civilian children will deprive an equal number of wards of Army personnel of good education,? they said.

As per a Supreme Court ruling, Army personnel are deemed to be disadvantaged group with regard to education of their children, the sources said.

-via The Times of India.

Source: http://indianmilitarynews.wordpress.com/2012/10/08/army-opposes-reservation-in-its-schools-under-rte-act/

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Handling A No Response In Your Telemarketing Campaign ...

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By: Belinda Summers Have you got any problems with your telemarketing campaign? Well, that is an issue if you think about it. We are aware that it would be painful for us in lead generation if we encounter a lot of obstacles and delays along the way that would influence our sales pipeline and generation of B2B leads. One of these that we usually take notice from the prospects is their response: 'No'. As soon as we hear that word (or its variants), we tend to give up easily. But it is not supposed to be that way. We can convert such refusal into our favor. All we have to do is to lean how to deal with it. Different objections will have its own answer:

1. "Send me some information" - when a prospect asks that, you should do it immediately. In addition, ask him what captured his attention. Is it the product you have or the business you own? Ask it in the most natural way possible.

2. "We have no budget for that" - either he is just looking for some reasons or they really do not have the funds. In this case, it would be best if you determine whether your offer is good enough for them, if price was no longer involved. From there, you can figure out what your next step will be.

3. "That is not my priority right now" - still, they can provide you with a wealth of information. In this case, you can ask them what their priorities in business are. Surely, you may not obtain any business leads at this point, but this can aid you develop a strategy that will catch their attention later. Besides, there is a possibility that you can actually help them in their priorities.

4. "We already have our own preference (competitor's product)" - here, you may not be able to persuade them to change products, but they can be very informative when you ask them why they prefer the competition. You might actually get something helpful from what they say, and use those findings to improve your proposal.

5. "It just costs too much" - in this case, they are sort of interested. You just need to fan the flames. Now, the best way to go about this is to ask them what they really mean about when it costs too much. Is it the price itself, or are the benefits of the product not that worth the price in their viewpoint? Questions such as these can help you navigate the negotiation better.

6. "Call me back in (period of time)" - this is not a direct no, maybe a delay of the inevitable. But that should not stop you from asking them why they prefer that you call them at that time. Are they busy now, or something like that?

7. "Someone else makes the buying decision" - it is then an opportunity for you to ask who that person is. The person you are dealing with might be the gatekeeper, so better get to their good graces. They might help you reach the right person.

Undeniably, if do not feel up to the job, you have an alternative to let a professional lead generation company to perform the job for you. It is also another good business investment. Find for qualified lead generation services providers, these companies have the proper skills and professional telemarketers that are well-trained to generate leads for numerous industries.

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Article Source: http://articles.directorygold.com

Belinda Summers is a professional Lead Generation Specialist that aids corporate organizations increase their revenue by means oftelemarketing, lead generation and appointment setting strategies. To know more about lead generation and appointment setting, visit: www.callboxinc.com/

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Source: http://articles.directorygold.com/Article/Handling-A--No--Response-In-Your-Telemarketing-Campaign/1234084

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Source: http://fryezachariah76.typepad.com/blog/2012/10/handling-a-no-response-in-your-telemarketing-campaign.html

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Saturday, October 6, 2012

Video: Sideshow: The day after the debate

Facebook hits 1 billion users

You know what's cooler than a million users? A billion users. And now Facebook has just that. Yep, the social network birthed in a Harvard dorm grew in eight short years to a membership that accounts for one seventh of the world?s population.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/49294399#49294399

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Survey of Polls: Presidential Race in Battlegrounds by Demographics

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Advance directives: Implementation leaves much to be desired

Advance directives: Implementation leaves much to be desired [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 1-Oct-2012
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Contact: Jrgen in der Schmitten
jids@med.uni-duesseldorf.de
Deutsches Aerzteblatt International

Advance directives are not widespread among the elderly. This was revealed by a cross-sectional study of 11 German nursing homes performed by Sarah Sommer and her colleagues and presented in the latest issue of Deutsches rzteblatt International (Dtsch Arztebl Int 2012; 109(37): 577). In the year 2007, only 11% of the nursing home residents had a personally signed advance directive, while a further 1.4% had a proxy directive, i.e., a document signed not by the resident but by a representative.

Few of the advance directives made any provision for an acute health crisis. Therefore, many directives are of little help in deciding what treatment to give in such circumstances. Agreements of the nursing staff, who ought to be aware of the directives and their contents, also left much to be desired. For 14 of 23 residents, for example, there had been no discussion of whether they should be resuscitated.

The authors surmise that the Advance Directives Act of 2009 will not bring about any substantial or lasting improvement in this state of affairs, because it neither provides incentives nor foresees resources for active guidance.

###

http://www.aerzteblatt.de/pdf.asp?id=129878

Contact: jids@med.uni-duesseldorf.de


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Advance directives: Implementation leaves much to be desired [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 1-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jrgen in der Schmitten
jids@med.uni-duesseldorf.de
Deutsches Aerzteblatt International

Advance directives are not widespread among the elderly. This was revealed by a cross-sectional study of 11 German nursing homes performed by Sarah Sommer and her colleagues and presented in the latest issue of Deutsches rzteblatt International (Dtsch Arztebl Int 2012; 109(37): 577). In the year 2007, only 11% of the nursing home residents had a personally signed advance directive, while a further 1.4% had a proxy directive, i.e., a document signed not by the resident but by a representative.

Few of the advance directives made any provision for an acute health crisis. Therefore, many directives are of little help in deciding what treatment to give in such circumstances. Agreements of the nursing staff, who ought to be aware of the directives and their contents, also left much to be desired. For 14 of 23 residents, for example, there had been no discussion of whether they should be resuscitated.

The authors surmise that the Advance Directives Act of 2009 will not bring about any substantial or lasting improvement in this state of affairs, because it neither provides incentives nor foresees resources for active guidance.

###

http://www.aerzteblatt.de/pdf.asp?id=129878

Contact: jids@med.uni-duesseldorf.de


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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/dai-adi100112.php

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Monday, October 1, 2012

Misconduct prompts most retractions

Two-thirds of scientific papers pulled from journals are for fraud, suspected fraud and plagiarism

Web edition : 5:52 pm

Scientific misconduct ? including fraud, suspected fraud and plagiarism ? is the reason behind most retractions of papers published in scientific journals, a new study shows.

Only 21.3 percent of biomedical and life sciences studies pulled from scientific journals were withdrawn because honest errors invalidated the findings, researchers report online October 1 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Retraction notices often don?t explain why a study is being withdrawn, or they cover up the real reason for pulling a paper, says study coauthor Arturo Casadevall, a microbiologist at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City and editor of the journal mBio.

To understand the scope of the problem, Casadevall and coauthors Ferric Fang and R. Grant Steen studied 2,047 retracted journal articles in the PubMed database, which references more than 25 million studies dating back to the 1940s. Of the retractions, 67.4 percent were due to scientific misconduct, the new study shows.

The study ?throws into high relief some trends we suspected were true,? says Ivan Oransky, a journalist and cofounder of the blog Retraction Watch, which digs into the reason for retractions and calls out particularly opaque and unhelpful notices. The researchers drew on Retraction Watch reports, investigations from the U.S. Office of Research Integrity and other sources to ferret out the real reasons papers are retracted.

One of those trends is that retractions are on the rise, in part because publishers have started using software to detect plagiarism and duplicate publication, resulting in papers being pulled for those reasons starting in 2005. Plagiarism accounted for 9.8 percent and duplicate publication for 14.2 percent of retractions. Journals also use computer programs to spot alterations to images submitted with scientists? manuscripts, but technology isn?t likely to prevent misconduct, says Casadevall. ?The better the filter, the better the fraud.?

If there is good news, it is that fraud doesn?t appear to be widespread, Casadevall says. Just 38 research groups were responsible for 43.9 percent of retractions for fraud or suspected fraud. But the repeat offenders often published multiple studies, building upon fraudulent data or simply republishing data multiple times.

?This kind of bursts the bubble that science is self-correcting, because fraudulent data won?t be repeated,? says Fang, who is chief editor of Infection and Immunity.

The culture of science may be to blame for a recent increase in fraud cases: Journal publications are widely used to gauge a scientist?s potential and success. ?Misconduct is a phenomenon similar to doping in sport: It is essentially about gaining an unfair advantage over competitors,? says Daniele Fanelli of the University of Edinburgh. But a rise in retractions doesn?t mean that fraud is also increasing. ?The fact that we went from zero retractions to 0.01 percent in a few decades is just an encouraging symptom of growing awareness of the problem.?

Pressure to publish in high-profile journals and bring in increasingly hard-to-get grant money breeds a climate ripe for wrongdoing. Such cut-throat competition is rife in countries fingered for fraud in the new study, including the United States, Germany, China and Japan, says Kalevi Korpela, a psychologist at the University of Tampere in Finland.

Although Fang and Casadevall say they worry that their study could be misused to erode public trust in science, sweeping misconduct under the rug would be even more harmful.

Recent high-profile cases of fraud show that ?when people make up stuff, it?s usually important,? Casadevall says. He cites the case of Andrew Wakefield, who published a study in 1998 in the Lancet linking the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine to autism and intestinal disorders. That study was repeatedly discredited and found to be fraudulent, but nevertheless, that paper sparked an ongoing backlash against vaccination.


Found in: Science & Society

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/345465/title/Misconduct_prompts_most_retractions

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Afghanistan war claims 2,000th US soldier, but pace slowing

The 2000th US soldier to die may have been the victim of another insider attack. Overall, the conflict has grown less deadly for US troops since 2010.

By Tom A. Peter,?Correspondent / September 30, 2012

Upon landing after a helicopter rescue mission, Tech. Sgt. Jeff Hedglin, (r.) an Air Force Pararescueman, or PJ, drapes an American flag over the remains of the first of two US soldiers killed minutes earlier in an IED attack, assisted by fellow PJs, Senior Airman Robert Dieguez, center, and 1st Lt. Matthew Carlisle, in Kandahar province, southern Afghanistan.

Brennan Linsley/AP/File

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A possible insider attack has?claimed the life of America?s 2,000th soldier to die in Afghanistan. The shooting reportedly took place Saturday evening in Afghanistan?s volatile Wardak Province at a checkpoint run by the Afghan Army.

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While initial reports indicated that the incident was likely an insider attack, international military officials now say insurgent fire may have been involved. The incident left one NATO soldier presumed to be American dead, along with a civilian contractor, and three Afghan soldiers. Afghan and international military authorities are now investigating the incident.

If confirmed as an insider attack, the incident is likely to carry particular significance beyond being the 2,000th American soldier killed in the nearly 11-year conflict. Though violence has fallen here with US troops seeing consistent drops in fatalities starting last year, the war continues to claim lives and this latest spate of insider killings presents a challenge that has so far eluded US and NATO efforts to solve the problem.

?It gets at the very core of trust between coalition forces and the Afghans, and it?s very difficult to counter,? says David Barno, a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security who commanded US and international forces in Afghanistan from 2003 to 2005.

Citing findings that show insurgent infiltration accounts for only a quarter of insider attacks, with personal disputes accounting for another quarter and the rest having unclear motivations, Mr. Barno says stopping the attacks will be difficult.

?You can come up with a counter-intelligence program and take a number of other measures to help find Taliban infiltrators, but if three out of four attacks are related to cultural misunderstandings, outbursts, or friction perhaps related to 11 years of exposure between the coalition and Afghans that?s much more perplexing and much more difficult to deal with,? he says.

As US forces increasingly focus on the training mission ahead of the end of their combat operations, scheduled for 2014, the insider killings present a significant threat. If the most recent American death is confirmed as a so-called green-on-blue attack where an Afghan soldier kills an American service member, such incidents will account for 53 NATO deaths this year alone, or roughly 15 percent of those killed in Afghanistan.

NATO recently introduced severely restricted joint operations with Afghan forces in an effort to address the problem. But few Afghan units are judged by NATO as ready to operate alone, leaving some international forces on the ground looking to continue joint operations as a means of wrapping up the mission. Meanwhile, the most recent incident suggests that?efforts by Afghan and NATO forces to screen the fledgling security forces for possible turncoats will require still more work.?

?The recruitment of Afghan security forces was done mostly to reach the numerical goals, not to recruit quality soldiers,? says Hilaludin Hilal, a former deputy of the Ministry of Interior. ?The very urgent and short-term solution must come from the Afghan government. They must start screening and filtering these forces and kicking out anyone who poses a threat."

At the end of 2003, the Afghan security forces numbered just 6,000 personnel. Today there are 352,000, with the force nearly doubling in size between the summer of 2009 and now.

?Insider attacks, though tragic, will not derail ISAF from achieving its mission nor will it weaken the collective resolve and bonds of our Coalition and Afghan partners,? says US Air Force Major Lori Hodge, a spokesperson for the International Security Assistance Force. ?The partnership between Afghan and Coalition forces remains very strong and together we are committed to helping the people of Afghanistan build a prosperous future.?

Fighting in Afghanistan claimed the most American lives in Afghanistan in 2010, and since then the number of Americans killed here each year has dropped. Though Afghanistan has seen an overall reduction in fighting and violence, the decrease in NATO deaths may come in part from a greater focus on training Afghan security forces and a reduction in the number of international forces here. Just this month, the last US surge troops left Afghanistan, bringing the number of American soldiers here down to 68,000.

Counts for the death toll in Afghanistan vary based on different organizational counting practices. The Associated Press count, which now logs 2,000 dead, counts those service members killed inside Afghanistan during the course of the current war. Other counts include those killed in other countries working in support of anti-terrorism operations related to Afghanistan.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/JPgx6CJcjMM/Afghanistan-war-claims-2-000th-US-soldier-but-pace-slowing

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