Saturday, 24 March 2012

5 Gadgets That Will Bring the Family Together | Earnest Parenting

Parenting Advice for parents who want to be heroes.

big display of technical gadgets on tableWhen it comes to family the time you spend together matters most, especially as the oldest members of the family continue to age. Cross-generational bonding is at an all-time low, but it doesn?t have to be. There are some pretty simple ways to bring the extended family together, grandparents to grandkids, and make the time spent more interactive and more valuable. Here are five gadgets to span generations and bring everyone in your family together:

Nintendo Wii ? since it hit the market in 2006 the interactive games have served as a great way for people to interact. Most of the games can be picked up by people of all ages, from young children to older seniors, and span interests from bowling to music and the Olympics to dancing. Have you ever seen a grandfather in a dance-off with a 13-year-old granddaughter? It?s definitely worth watching!

eNeighbor ? more geared towards safety and accountability than entertainment, the eNeighbor is a gadget designed to monitor the home for habit and pattern irregularities, such as a senior forgetting to take medication or falling asleep while bathing. If something seems out of normal the gadget will automatically contact emergency contacts, such as family or doctors. Though it may take some time to get in sync with a senior?s habits, keeping them safe is worth it.

Xbox Kinect ? with just as many games as the Wii and ever-increasing ways to play them, the Xbox Kinect is a motion-sensored control console that makes motion the game. An 80-year-old can get in a boxing ring with a 20-year-old and stand a fighting chance, or they can even be a jedi night alongside their grandson Anakin.

Irobot ? this automatic floor cleaner is small enough to get into both large and small places. It takes floor sweeping off the chore list for the elderly and their family, making their home safer and giving them more time to connect with family. It?s definitely a nifty little robot that comes in handy.

Film and Negative Scanner ? convert their print film and photos into digital memories. Undoubtedly your senior has amassed a trunk full of photos, perhaps more. One of the easiest ways to preserve their memories and your family is to digitize them. Some digital scanners can scan multiple separate images at once and some digital picture frames an scan photos directly onto display.

Older generations don?t have to be completely disconnected from the digital means of the younger generations. These gadgets can help them connect more and interact with the rest of the family in multiple ways that can be preserved for a lifetime. Bring everyone together for family time. Have fun.

About the author:

George Shaw has worked in the senior care field for 23 years and currently helps seniors and their families find retirement communities in texas that fit their health and family needs.

Earnest Parenting: help for parents who want to connect with their relatives.

Image courtesy of Ross Mayfield via Creative Commons license, some rights reserved.

Earnest Parenting: Encouraging heroes. You can be one, too.

Tags: family togetherness, gadgets, helpful, parenting help

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Source: http://www.earnestparenting.com/2012/03/22/5-gadgets-that-will-bring-the-family-together/

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Disney image displayed for first time in 40 years

In this animation drawing released by Disney, an image from the 1928 Oswald the Lucky Rabbit short, "Sky Scrappers," is shown. The film was the 22nd Oswald short cartoon produced, and was part of Walt Disney?s early career success. Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, the wacky predecessor to Mickey Mouse, was brought out of the Disney archive this week and showcased at an event unveiling "Disney Epic Mickey 2," an upcoming video game that allows players to control Mickey and Oswald. (AP Photo/Disney)

In this animation drawing released by Disney, an image from the 1928 Oswald the Lucky Rabbit short, "Sky Scrappers," is shown. The film was the 22nd Oswald short cartoon produced, and was part of Walt Disney?s early career success. Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, the wacky predecessor to Mickey Mouse, was brought out of the Disney archive this week and showcased at an event unveiling "Disney Epic Mickey 2," an upcoming video game that allows players to control Mickey and Oswald. (AP Photo/Disney)

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? One of Walt Disney's oldest drawings is seeing the light of day after being locked away for nearly 40 years.

A rough 1928 image of Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, the wacky predecessor to Mickey Mouse, was brought out of the Walt Disney Co. archive this week and showcased at an event unveiling "Disney Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two," an upcoming action-adventure game for the Wii, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 that allows players to control both Mickey and Oswald.

The mischievous Oswald was co-created by Disney before Mickey, but he was lost in a 1928 contract dispute with Universal Studios. Oswald hopped back to Disney in 2006 when CEO Bob Iger brokered a deal that sent sportscaster Al Michaels to Universal-NBC. Oswald's first appearance since his return came in 2010's "Epic Mickey" as the ruler of a forgotten realm.

"We've always known about the character and loved him and wished that we could do things with him, but he wasn't a character that belonged to us," said Walt Disney Co. archive director Becky Cline. "In 2006, we were over the moon when Bob Iger made (the deal)."

Cline noted that most of the drawings from Disney's early Oswald cartoons were destroyed, likely because there was a lack of storage when his studio moved to a new facility in Burbank, Calif., in 1939. She said the image of Oswald comes from a box of drawings that was found in the 1970s and has been preserved in the Disney archives for the past 40 years.

The image, drawn on paper in graphite, comes from the 1928 animated short film "Sky Scrappers." It shows Oswald shielding himself from falling bricks with an umbrella. Warren Spector, the creative director at "Epic Mickey 2" developer Junction Point Studios in Austin, Texas, said he's aiming to include the image of Oswald somewhere within the sequel.

"It's amazing," said Spector. "Everybody at Disney is so proud that he's back. I'm no different. It's just so exciting to be a part of bringing that character back into the world and to see people respond so affectionately toward him. Now, to have Mickey and Oswald brothers united to save the world, it's unbelievable. I feel really privileged."

___

Online:

http://disney.go.com/mickey/

___

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Derrik J. Lang on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/derrikjlang .

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-03-23-Disney-Oswald%20the%20Lucky%20Rabbit/id-f891dec5d36a4ef9906fb70d03c7b339

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PFT: Saints' Payton won't appeal yearlong ban

greg_williamsGetty Images

The NFL eventually intends to impose discipline on multiple players involved in the Saints? bounty program.? After that happens, the players will have the right to appeal, either to Ted Cottrell or Art Shell (if the punishment is imposed for on-field conduct, like making an illegal hit for money) or to the Commissioner (if the punishment is imposed for off-field conduct, like funding the bounty system).

Either way, hearings will be held.? At the hearings, the NFL will be required to submit evidence.? And much of the evidence will come from former Saints defensive coordinator Gregg Williams.

As explained in Wednesday?s announcement from the league:? ?Coach Williams acknowledged that he designed and implemented the program with the assistance of certain defensive players. He said that he did so after being told by Saints Head Coach Sean Payton that his assignment was to make the defense ?nasty.? Coach Williams described his role as overseeing record keeping, defining payout amounts, deciding on who received payouts, and distributing envelopes with cash to players who ?earned? rewards.?

And so the league will need Williams to show up at the hearings and tell the hearing officer what Williams told the NFL when Williams finally confessed to being the man who ?designed and implemented the program.?? The fact that the league knows Williams did so ?with the assistance of certain defensive players? means that those ?certain defensive players? can expect to be punished, with the punishments supported by Williams? testimony.

That?s likely one of the reasons why the NFL opted not to impose a lifetime ban on Williams.? If banned, he?d have no reason to show up and testify.? By suspending him for a year and explaining that his prospects for reinstatement will depend in part on ?the extent to which Coach Williams cooperates with the NFL in any further proceedings,? the NFL essentially is using reinstatement as the carrot that will entice Williams to testify effectively in the appeal hearings.

The fact that the Rams inexplicably haven?t yet fired the man they say they never would have hired if they?d known about the bounty system could be part of the plan to make Williams think he has a realistic chance of getting back in.? With a plausible belief that his job is waiting for him, Williams will have an extra incentive to ensure that the forthcoming suspensions survive the appeal process.

In the end, the NFL may decide that Williams should never be reinstated.? Or perhaps the Rams will fire him and no one else will hire him.? Regardless, the NFL can?t cut him loose for now, because the league needs the man it has suspended indefinitely, or the league definitely will be unable to make the player suspensions stick.

For more, here?s a little something from Thursday?s PFT Live.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/03/23/sean-payton-again-accepts-full-responsibility-for-bounties/related/

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Friday, 23 March 2012

Antidepressant proves effective in alleviating osteoarthritis pain

ScienceDaily (Mar. 22, 2012) ? Antidepressants can play a key role in alleviating painful conditions like osteoarthritis and may result in fewer side effects than traditionally prescribed drug regimes, such as anti-inflammatories and opioids, according to a perspective paper published online ahead of print publication by the International Journal of Clinical Practice.

American doctors Leslie Citrome and Amy Weiss-Citrome analysed the latest clinical evidence on duloxetine, a well-established antidepressant that received US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval in 2010 for use with chronic musculoskeletal pain, including osteoarthritis.

"It is not uncommon to treat osteoarthritis with a combination of drugs that work in different ways" explains Dr Leslie Citrome, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences at New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York, USA. "Our review supports this approach and confirms that antidepressants are not just for depression and can play a key role in relieving this painful condition."

The authors looked at studies exploring the effects of duloxetine being used on its own or in combination with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). These included the two randomised double-blind, placebo controlled clinical trials that formed the basis of FDA approval for duloxetine for the treatment of chronic pain associated with osteoarthritis.

Study results were analysed using number needed to treat (NNT) and number needed to harm (NNH). These quantify how many patients need to be treated with one intervention versus another before encountering one additional patient who experiences a desired outcome (NNT) or undesired disadvantage, such as a side-effect (NNH). A smaller number indicates greater advantages for NNT and greater disadvantages for NNH.

"Applying these simple methods to often complex research gives us a real indication of whether a drug will benefit or harm our patients, which is what we as clinicians are most interested in" explains Dr Citrome.

When duloxetine was compared with a placebo tablet containing no active ingredients, using data from the two FDA approval studies, the NNT was six. This means that six patients would need to be treated with duloxetine instead of receiving the placebo before encountering one additional patient experiencing an improvement in pain using a composite measure that brings together a number of indicators of efficacy. Such a low NNT makes a compelling case for this treatment approach.

The authors say that this finding, over 13 weeks, compared favourably with other studies of NSAIDs -- the NNT was five for etodolac after four weeks and four for tenoxicam after eight weeks.

When the side effects of the various drugs were taken into account, this showed that when duloxetine was used on its own for 13 weeks it provided a number of advantages over NSAIDs, which can lead to gastrointestinal bleeding, and opiates such as morphine, which can cause constipation.

The most common side effects of duloxetine -- nausea, fatigue and constipation -- were small when compared to the placebo, resulting in NNHs of 16, 17 and 19 respectively. This means, for example, that 16 patients would need to be treated with duloxetine instead of receiving the placebo before encountering one additional patient experiencing nausea.

The studies used to gain FDA approval also showed that pain reduction using duloxetine on its own was not dependent on an improvement in depressive symptoms.

"Although the use of duloxetine as a monotherapy for pain has been approved by the regulatory agencies, it is quite common for patients to receive a combination of drugs and NSAIDs are the most frequently prescribed drugs for the pain associated with osteoarthritis" says co-author Dr Amy Weiss-Citrome, a specialist in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.

For that reason the authors also examined the findings of a recent study that showed the potential synergy of duloxetine and NSAIDs.

The study, a ten-week double-blind trial of 524 patients with osteoarthritis of the knee, found that those who took a combination of duloxetine and NSAIDs reported greater pain reductions than the control group who took a NSAID with a placebo.

The NNT for the outcome of substantial improvement in pain with combination treatment versus NSAIDs alone was six, underlining the benefits of this approach.

"We believe that our analysis of these studies demonstrate that clinicians managing patients suffering from osteoarthritis should also consider prescribing adjunctive antidepressants that can effectively impact on central pain pathways" concludes Dr Leslie Citrome.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Wiley-Blackwell, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Citrome L and Weiss-Citrome A. Antidepressants and the relief of osteoarthritic pain ? Findings from a study examining adjunctive duloxetine. International Journal of Clinical Practice, 2012 DOI: 10.1111/j.1742-1241.2012.02899.x

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://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/03/120322095856.htm

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Poms & Associates Selects Hosted PBX Provider ... - Voip Phreak

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Home / News / Poms & Associates Selects Hosted PBX Provider Broadcore for New Telecommunications Services

Los Angeles, CA (PRWEB) September 07, 2011

Poms & Associates Insurance Brokers, Inc. recently selected Broadcore, a nationwide provider of Hosted Unified Communications and Business VoIP Solutions, to provide fully hosted voice and data services for their three office locations in California, New Mexico and Colorado. Servicing approximately 120 employees, installation of the new system began last November and, as scheduled, has recently been completed.

The Broadcore solution for Poms & Associates provides:

Fully hosted PBX system

Secure T1 connections

Auto-failover and Disaster Recovery

Unified Communications

Broadsoft Platform and Toolbars

Secure Web administration

Polycom HD SIP Phones

Online and live training

There were many reasons why we selected Broadcore once we decided to upgrade to a VoIP solution from our outdated analog system, said Robert Elliott, System Administrator for Poms & Associates. While the initial cost savings were definitely a factor, the biggest benefit is that Broadcore owns the servers, so all maintenance and upgrades are included. They also provide the best customer service I have ever experienced from a telecom company.

Another deciding factor was the ability to join all three offices across multiple states on the same network, allowing them to operate as if under one roof.

It was a real pleasure providing training to all Poms staff members said Lily Bazargani, Account Manager at Broadcore. They embraced the new system with anticipation and enthusiasm. They are actively taking advantage of all the features including the remote management and programming portal. With the advanced features and flexibility inherent in our platform, we will easily and effectively support them as they expand and continue to grow.

For more information on Broadcores hosted VoIP solutions, please call 1-800-942-4700.

Connect with Broadcore online:

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/broadcore

Twitter: http://twitter.com/broadcore

YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/Broadcore

About Broadcore

Broadcore is a provider of hosted unified communications services for businesses. Through an extensible, highly scalable IP communications system, Broadcore offers a unified communications platform for voice (VoIP), data, and mobility communications across the enterprise and multi-location businesses. Broadcores solutions allow the enterprise to increase employee productivity, accelerate business processes, and improve customer care through tight integration of dispersed communications endpoints for office, mobile, or call center employees.

Broadcore offers lowered total cost of communications ownership by assuming the cost burdens associated with data redundancy, infrastructure expansions, technology obsolescence risks, system scalability, and new feature integration and updates. By removing the costs associated with infrastructure and additional IT staff to maintain increasingly complex communications technologies, Broadcore allows its clients and their IT organizations to focus on their core competencies while remaining current with the latest communications technologies.

With over twenty years of providing telephony communications and hosted UC to over 120,000 users, Broadcore offers faster and easier deployment of communications capabilities within the enterprise, resulting in employee productivity and business agility with minimum interruption to business operations. http://www.broadcore.com

Broadcore contact

Michael Bacich

Vice President of Sales & Public Sector

michael.bacich(at)broadcore(dot)com

424-201-3602

###

Written by Voip Phreak ? Filed Under News?

Source: http://www.voipphreak.ca/2012/03/22/poms-associates-selects-hosted-pbx-provider-broadcore-for-new-telecommunications-services/

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Pulp NonFiction: Fungal analysis reveals clues for targeted biomass deconstruction

ScienceDaily (Mar. 23, 2012) ? Without fungi and microbes to break down dead trees and leaf litter in nature, the forest floor might look like a scene from TV's "Hoarders."

Massive-scale genome sequencing projects supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and being carried out at the DOE Joint Genome Institute (JGI) highlight the importance of learning how the cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin that serve as a plant's infrastructure can be broken down by these forest organisms to extract needed nutrients. Among the fungi being studied are species that can selectively break down the cell wall components cellulose and lignin -- the number one and two most abundant biopolymers on Earth.

In a study published online the week of March 19, 2012 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, an international team of scientists presented a comparative genomic analysis of two white rot fungi whose genomes were generated and annotated at the DOE JGI under the Community Sequencing Program (CSP). Both the fungus Phanaerochaete chrysosporium (sequenced by DOE JGI in 2004), and its close relative Ceriporiopisis subvermispora are found all over the world and are of interest to bioenergy researchers because they possess enzymes that can break down plant biomass and could therefore be useful for accelerating biofuels production. The study revealed substantial differences among the sets of genes involved in lignocellulose degradation, providing further insight into the mechanics of how white rots do their dirty work.

"The fact that we have such a large group of people involved in this project is a clear demonstration that there's certainly interest in enzyme discovery," said study senior author and DOE JGI collaborator Dan Cullen of the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory (FPL). "In this particular case though, one would come away thinking more about the role of white rot fungi in the carbon cycle. Lignin is a recalcitrant compound in forest ecosystem biomass and very few fungi have the capability to degrade lignin. Even fewer fungi have the ability to selectively remove lignin at such an efficient rate. C. subvermispora is one exception in its ability to do just that."

Cullen and his colleagues compared the fungal genomes to learn more about the basis of C. subvermispora's ability to selectively break down lignin. Understanding this process of selective ligninolysis is of longstanding interest to the pulp and paper industry. According to the American Forest & Paper Association, approximately $175 billion worth of forest products such as pulp and paper are produced annually, and account for five percent of the nation's GDP.

Analyzing the diversity of wood-decaying fungi and cataloging enzymes involved in lignocellulose degradation is one of the goals of the DOE JGI Fungal Genomics Program led by Igor Grigoriev. "We are in the process of conducting functional comparative genomics of more than 20 such fungi sequenced or currently being sequenced at the DOE JGI," he said. "This should provide us a better understanding of the diverse and complex mechanisms of lignocellulose degradation in fungi, the influence of these mechanisms on carbon cycling in the forest ecosystem, and ultimately lead to improvements in biopulping."

Kent Kirk, a former FPL researcher who is considered a leading figure in the study of lignin degradation by fungi, provided perspective on how the current research could impact the pulp and paper industry. "This grew out of fundamental research by the University of Minnesota and the FPL where they applied the concept of 'biopulping' -- the partial decay of wood by lignin-degrading fungi to decrease the energy required for mechanical pulping. Cerioporiopsis subvermispora quickly became the 'biopulper' of choice." Kirk described how wood chips treated with the fungus for two weeks required 30% less energy for pulping than untreated chips and how outdoor trials were repeatedly successful at the 50-ton scale. "The technology has not yet been commercially adopted, but as energy costs continue to rise, it should be increasingly attractive for implementation," Kirk said.

With detailed biochemical analyses conducted by study co-author Angel Martinez's team at the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) in Madrid, Spain, the researchers found that the C. subvermispora genome had more manganese peroxidases and laccase -- enzymes that may speed the degradation of lignin -- than the P. chrysosporium genome. Martinez added that his group's work also revealed the presence of other lignin-degrading enzymes that had not previously been found in C. subvermispora cultures.

"Since Phanaerochaete doesn't have laccases, they're not absolutely necessary for lignin degradation," said Cullen, "though it could be that they're very important and play a role in Ceriporiopisis. The most persuasive part of the data are the expansion and expression of the manganese peroxidases, whose role in lignin degradation is more generally accepted."

Cullen added that the paper also suggests the cellulose-degrading portion of C. subvermispora's genome is "somewhat repressed" relative to P. chrysosporium, another angle of further study to understand the Ceriporiopisis genome's selectivity for lignin. "It could be both," he said, "There's not a simple clear final answer. To really make direct progress on understanding the mechanism of selective lignin degradation, will require development of more experimental tools, such as those for genetic analysis. That is what's next."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by DOE/Joint Genome Institute.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. E. Fernandez-Fueyo, F. J. Ruiz-Duenas, P. Ferreira, D. Floudas, D. S. Hibbett, P. Canessa, L. F. Larrondo, T. Y. James, D. Seelenfreund, S. Lobos, R. Polanco, M. Tello, Y. Honda, T. Watanabe, T. Watanabe, R. J. San, C. P. Kubicek, M. Schmoll, J. Gaskell, K. E. Hammel, F. J. St. John, A. Vanden Wymelenberg, G. Sabat, S. Splinter BonDurant, K. Syed, J. S. Yadav, H. Doddapaneni, V. Subramanian, J. L. Lavin, J. A. Oguiza, G. Perez, A. G. Pisabarro, L. Ramirez, F. Santoyo, E. Master, P. M. Coutinho, B. Henrissat, V. Lombard, J. K. Magnuson, U. Kues, C. Hori, K. Igarashi, M. Samejima, B. W. Held, K. W. Barry, K. M. LaButti, A. Lapidus, E. A. Lindquist, S. M. Lucas, R. Riley, A. A. Salamov, D. Hoffmeister, D. Schwenk, Y. Hadar, O. Yarden, R. P. de Vries, A. Wiebenga, J. Stenlid, D. Eastwood, I. V. Grigoriev, R. M. Berka, R. A. Blanchette, P. Kersten, A. T. Martinez, R. Vicuna, D. Cullen. Comparative genomics of Ceriporiopsis subvermispora and Phanerochaete chrysosporium provide insight into selective ligninolysis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1119912109

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://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/03/120323001416.htm

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Thursday, 22 March 2012

US suspends recovery of war dead in N.Korea

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-suspends-recovery-war-dead-n-korea-181308378.html

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