5/08/2012

Headline 9th May, 2012 / THE AUTUMN OF TRUTHS



Part-2
THE AUTUMN OF TRUTHS
Respectful dedication to the great people of India and China


So as I wrote the China - India effect pulls both-ways. On the one hand, it means that the prices the western world pays are lower because of the cheap imports from China of T-shirts and even sophisticated electronic products. Therefore, the average price of goods that you buy, say in Europe, is no higher than it was 10 years ago.

India has a similar but smaller effect, mainly thru the cost of services - all those call centres "Offshored" to the sub-continent. But they are also a force for higher prices of oil and commodities; China's growing demand for oil is a factor in the rise in oil prices to record levels. In a regular past it used to be straight forward. The big multinationals were Americans. Europeans and Japanese and they invested in countries like  China and India. Business power was firmly concentrated in the hands of leading industrial countries and their national Champions.

Then, some years ago, Chinese computer firm Lenovo stunned the world by buying IBM's personal computer division, thrusting itself into the league of the world's top computer firms. It was followed by the China National Offshore Corporation, which was only prevented from taking over the American Oil Company Unocal by a political blacklash in the US. In Europe, Rover, once in the hands of BMW, turned to China in its last desperate attempts to stay afloat. All in all, China is a big player.

In the last many years we saw international mergers and acquisitions hit record levels, partly as a result of Chinese takeover of  foreign firms.

Most world and emerging economies are short of foreign currency; not so China. The country's International reserves stand at more than a thousand billion dollars, a function of a healthy trade surplus and large scale purchases of dollars to stop China's own currency, the Renminbi, from rising. But in today's world of inflation, imperiled currencies, downgraded countries, and anemic economic growth, even the most optimistic pundits seem to have settled on the 'idee fixe' that things can only get worse!!

With thanks to !WOW!

Good Night & God Bless!

SAM Daily Times - The Voice Of The Voiceless


China to set up two wind power projects


Official sources told Dawn the projects were in addition to the several other projects in hydel, renewable energy, coal and transmission sectors that would be discussed at the meeting. The two projects to be located in Sindh will be set up jointly by the private sectors of the two countries.

A 28-member delegation of China National Energy Administration is to take part in the working group meeting. The delegation includes 26 members of Chinese investors from the private sector.

Water and Power Minister Syed Naveed Qamar is leading the Pakistan side at the joint energy working group meeting, while the Chinese delegation is led by the administrator of China National Energy Administration.

The officials said the two sides held an informal session here on Monday to set the business tone of working group’s meeting during which 19 projects of hydel, coal and renewable sources of energy sectors would be discussed.

Among the projects to be discussed at the meeting include Neelum-Jhelum, Khan Khwar, Bunji, Kohala, Diamer-Bhasha and Matiltan Suki Kinari.

Following his meeting with the Chinese delegation, Mr Qamar told reporters that the working group would particularly focus on the projects which were held for want of financial resources.

Alternative Energy Development Board CEO Arif Alauddin, who has presented a portfolio of renewable energy projects to the working group meeting, told Dawn that Pakistan and China would sign an agreement on Tuesday for resource mapping of renewable energy resources in the country.

After his meeting with the Chinese delegation, Mr Qamar held a meeting with Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and briefed him about the Pakistan-China Energy Group second meeting pertaining to power generation and transmission issues in Pakistan.

He informed the prime minister that he would attend the meeting of KASA-1,000 in Dubai on May 16-17 to hold negotiations for the import of 1,000MW electricity from Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.

Orient Group of China chairman Zhang Hongwei, who is in Islamabad to participate in the working group meeting, called on President Asif Zardari and briefed him about his company’s business ventures in the country.

United Energy Group President Christine Fu, UEG vice-president Song Yu, UEG Petroleum-Pakistan president Tariq Khamisani, Lin Yang and Zhang Wei accompanied Mr Hongwei.

Chinese Ambassador in Pakistan Liu Jian, Petroleum Minister Asim Hussain Syed and Mr Qamar were also present during the meeting.

Swiss hikers on panther alert


POLICE in western Switzerland are warning hikers to be on the lookout for a large black cat resembling a panther.

Authorities have received reports of several sightings of the animal in woods near the town of Solothurn over the past week.

Cantonal (state) police say attempts to capture or photograph the animal using special traps have so far failed.

In a statement today, police said the creature appears to be afraid of humans but hikers should "act with caution and avoid approaching the unknown animal unnecessarily."

Police say they are investigating whether there is a link to panther sightings in southern Germany last year.

Authorities say no Swiss zoos or circuses have reported missing panthers, which aren't native to Europe.  (AP)

World's favourite fat cat dies of obesity


A CAT that got international attention for tipping the scales at almost 18 kilograms has died.

The Santa Fe Animal Shelter & Humane Society said that the orange and white tabby named Meow died over the weekend, likely from complications from his morbid obesity.

Meow, who was two-years-old, was taken to the shelter last month after his 87-year-old owner could no longer take care of him. The shelter put Meow on a diet and posted all his weigh-ins on a Facebook page that got national attention. Meow had lost some weight and was doing well when he began having breathing problems last Wednesday.

Despite constant attention, and medical testing and treatment, Meow died on Saturday. Shelter Director Mary Martin says the entire staff is devastated, adding: 'We were in a race against time to get the weight off Meow before he developed complications from his obesity, and we lost.

But we hope his fight will encourage other people to help their pets maintain the best health possible. Obesity is not something to be ignored.' When he was alive, Meow was not the fattest cat out there. That record belongs to Himmy, a tabby from Australia that weighed almost 21kg.

The shelter said Guinness World Records has since stopped accepting applications for the record over concerns it would encourage people to overfeed their animals. Shelter veterinarian Jennifer Steketee said the idea is for Meow was to gradually lose weight by eating a special diet.

Steketee said the dangers of feline obesity are not much different than they are for humans - extra pressure on the heart and joints. She told the Today show after his death: 'When we first heard Meow wheezing, we attributed it to possible allergies or the fact that he was moving around more in his foster home.' The cat' symptoms worsened and he died she said.

'His extreme obesity may have set off a string of events that ultimately ended his life.'  (AP)

China: Teachers, performers, maids top illegal immigrants

Most illegal immigrants in China work as foreign language teachers, performers or maids, according to information released by China's Ministry of Public Security, the People's Daily reported Thursday.
The numbers of foreigners in China has increased by 10 percent yearly since 2000, said Yang Huanning, vice-minister of Ministry of Public Security, in a report to the Standing Committee of National People’s Congress yesterday.
About 37 percent of foreigners in China work in joint companies, education institutions or as representatives of multinational branches in China. A total of 4,752 foreigners hold permanent residential permits, the report said.
The report said most illegal immigrants enter China as tourists or students.

One in four of the world's children are malnourished


Save The Children has released its 13th State Of The World's Mothers (SOTWM) report on Tuesday.

Ever year, the SOTWM report ranks the best and worst countries in the world to be a mother. This year, Norway tops the list yet again, as the best place in the world to be a mother. Niger comes in last place, displacing Afghanistan from last year. The United States comes in at number 25.

In addition to its annual ranking, the 2012 report focuses specifically on the issue of children's nutrition. One in four of the world's children are chronically malnourished or stunted -- with little access to proper nutrients, these children have underdeveloped brains or bodies.

According to the report, malnutrition kills as many as 2.6 million children and 100,000 mothers every year. Millions of others are left struggling with the physical and mental impairments of stunting. In some parts of the developing world -- like Afghanistan, Burundi and Yemen -- the stunting rate is a whopping 60 percent!

Of the six key solutions offered by the report to combat malnutrition, one of the cheapest and most effective is regularly breast feeding newborns. Nearly 1 million lives can be saved by breast feeding alone. Unsurprisingly, the United States is the LEAST favorable environment in the industrialized world for mothers who want to breast feed.

The report's other recommendations including investing in frontline health workers, investing in girls' education, maintaining better hygiene and supplementing meals with iron folate, zinc and vitamin A.

FRENCH SCHOOL TELLS FOREIGN CHILDREN THEY’RE NOT WELCOME

Denying a basic education in the country that invented mandatory schooling? Welcome to modern France! In Rubelles, a small town of 1,900 inhabitants near Paris, more than 20 foreign-born children aged three to 11 have been refused enrollment. Critics call it a case of blatant discrimination.

Rights groups, including Amnesty International, the French Human Rights League and Education without Borders, are up in arms over the affair. The children in question hail from countries such as Chechnya and the Republic of Ingushetia, of the former Soviet Union; Sri-Lanka; and Gabon.

As asylum seekers, these children have already had a difficult path. They dream about being in school but instead must spend their days in one of the town’s low-cost hotels. Their parents were denied space in the local homeless shelter, which is too overcrowded to accommodate them.

According to Nicole Fautrel of the French Human Rights League, “these asylum-seeker families did all that was required to send their children to school, but the town council refused to give them the enrollment certificate.”

The city’s deputy mayor, Michel Dreano, describes the situation as a budget problem. “Also, we can’t receive so many non-French speaking children,” he said, hinting at the absence of qualified staff to handle the situation.

Nonsense, says Patricia Galeazzi from the local education authority. “There are places left in the Rubelles school and two specialized teachers are here to welcome non-French speaking children.” According to one of the school’s teachers, it’s all the more absurd since “children of that age learn new languages very easily.”

In the late 19th Century, France is credited with establishing the first system of free and mandatory public education.

From Iran To Australia, Desaltinization Aims to Go Mainstream

Drink a splash of seawater? More and more countries are turning to desalinization to supply their water needs, even though the process is expensive and can also come with an environmental price to pay.

On April 16, the Iranian government announced the construction of a desalinization plant that would supply the northeast city of Semnan, whose 200,000 inhabitants live at the edge of the desert.

The water will be taken from the Caspian Sea, then treated and transported to Semnan via a 150-kilometers pipeline, across Mount Elbrus. The process is expected to cost one billion dollars.

The number of countries that have plunged into desalinization currently stands at 150, as severe droughts multiply, population continues to expand, and technology in the field expands. But according to Miguel Angel Sanz, innovation and development director at Degrémont, a Suez Environnement’s subsidiary company: “Desalinization is a useful process in case of shortage but it is not a panacea.” Still, he concedes, his business is booming.

Currently, 66.5 million cubic meters of soft water are produced in the world, from sea or brackish water, that is to say 8.8% more than in 2010. Global Water Intelligence and the International Desalination Association (IDA) listed 16.000 desalinization plants worldwide, 5% more than last year.

Veolia is one of the giants of the sector, with 800 factories around the world and a daily production of more than nine million cubic meters. Degrémont is another giant: it has already built 250 plants, which can supply water for more than 10 million people.

THANK YOU EARL! ENGLAND TOASTS 250TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE SANDWICH

He just has to move the electric reading lamp out of the dining room and then things will be ready to roll, says Keith Williams, 79.


Sixteen years after retiring to Sandwich, in the southern part of England, this wealthy London entrepreneur is ready to share the charms of his historic home – his pride and joy – with the public. The house, which dates back to 1590, retains many of its original features, such as the old brass lock on the entrance door and the wood paneling with a relief of Catherine of Aragon (Henry VIII’s first wife) in the dining room. But its most important asset, at least from a tourism perspective, is its location – in the town that gave birth to Britain’s biggest culinary contribution to the world: the sandwich.

Legend has it that the fourth Earl of Sandwich (1729-1792) was a passionate cribbage player. This First Lord of the Admiralty spent every bit of his spare time playing the card game with his aristocratic friends and was even reluctant to leave the games table for meals.

So one day, in 1762, he had a revolutionary idea: he asked his servants to put a slab of roast beef between two slices of bread so he could eat without getting his fingers greasy and thus play cribbage without interruption. Those playing with him said they’d have what Sandwich was having -- and thus was born one of the planet’s most beloved snacks.

And on the weekend of May 12-13, the small town of Sandwich in the county of Kent celebrates the 250th anniversary of the golden fast-food oldie.

Among the events on the program are a big street party, a sandwich-making competition, and a concert featuring music from the era of the fourth Earl of Sandwich. In Williams’s dining room, amateur actors will be staging a production that recreates the birth of the sandwich.

The patron of the festivities is the 11th Earl of Sandwich who, with his son Orlando Montagu, has been running his own sandwich business since 2004 called -- what else -- Earl of Sandwich. The brainchild of Orlando Montagu, 41, the fast-food chain now has 22 locations, mostly in the United States but also in London and in Disneyland Paris.

Montagu’s intention is to make a profit out of his great-great-great-great-great-great-grandfather’s invention: “It’s irritated our family for centuries that he never patented the idea,” says Montagu. A Sandwich dynasty would have made a vast fortune -- in Great Britain alone, the turnover in sandwiches per year adds up to an estimated $9 billion. “A ham and cheese portsmouth”

If history had gone just a little bit differently, they wouldn’t be called sandwiches. The first Earl of Sandwich, Edward Montagu, owed his title to English King Charles II. It was a gesture of thanks: Montague was Admiral of the fleet that brought the King back from exile in 1660. Montagu’s first choice was Earl of Portsmouth -- however, that had already been awarded so, none-too-enthusiastically, he opted for Sandwich.

“Had he gotten his first choice, you would have people around the world ordering a ham and cheese portsmouth,” says Orlando Montagu.

When all is said and done, however, Sandwich was not a bad choice -- it was once the country’s largest port. Today, it is the best-preserved medieval town in England and its entire historic center is a national heritage site.

There is not a souvenir shop to be seen anywhere – only picturesque narrow streets, restored houses, and an intact center complete with book shops, butcher shops, bakery shops, and Mom & Pop stores. People in Sandwich like tradition, so every day at 8 p.m. the “curfew bell” still rings out from the bell tower of St. Peter’s Church. But that’s where observance of tradition ends. In the Middle Ages, the sound of the bell was when people threw their trash into the streets, let the pigs out, and withdrew into their houses for the night. Ringing the bell today is the work of 31 volunteers each of whom is on duty once a month.

Musts for visitors to Sandwich include the Guildhall, a half-timbered building erected in 1579 on the old market square. Today, it is largely a museum and tours are conducted by Town Sergeant Kevin Cook personally. His position – part caretaker, assistant to the mayor and town crier -- is one that has existed since the Middle Ages. Cook, 45, knows all the anecdotes about Sandwich by heart. With particular pride, he shows visitors the fine stained glass window in the oak-paneled Court Room depicting Queen Elizabeth I’s reception at Sandown Gate in Sandwich in 1573.

Sandwich’s original location was at the mouth of the Stour River, where it fed into the North Sea. In the 16th century, however, the sea retreated, leaving a sandy river bed in its wake. Sandwich didn’t have the means to stop the process. Their last hope was the visit of Queen Elizabeth I -- the subject depicted on the window at Guildhall.

“They set up a 26-foot long buffet with 160 different dishes in the hopes that the Queen might be moved to provide funding,” says Cook. The history books record that the Queen heartily enjoyed the feast. “But unfortunately, no money was forthcoming,” says Cook, waxing indignant some 439 years later. The result can be seen from the city walls: no sight of the sea anywhere. What was once England’s largest port is now two and a half miles in from the coast.

Online Video Increasingly Used as a Teaching Aid

Al Hasvitz has four decades of teaching experience — and he has fully embraced video aids in the classroom. He claims to have more than 80 video website bookmarked, including one site he highly recommends: WatchKnowLearn. The site is funded entirely by an anonymous private donor and was built by teachers for teachers. It is also free to use.


“For four years teachers have gone out and loaded the videos and designed the directories,” says CEO Joe Thomas. “WatchKnowLearn is teacher designed, teacher rated, and teacher managed.”

However, others bemoan the fact that it doesn’t have the speed or capacity of the major player in the online video industry — YouTube. The online video behemoth accounted for 84% of the 181 million unique online video views in January of this year. YouTube EDU features more than half a million videos on 750 channels from various education partners. It contains content for university students and those in K-12.

TED-Ed is a popular new channel launched last month which generated over one million views in the first week. It pairs teachers with animators to create an engaging educational experience. TED-Ed’s mission is to create and aggregate high quality K-12 content.

But YouTube isn’t the perfect solution either. Even its advocates will admit that it requires some skill to navigate the dross and find the signal in the noise. For some educators it isn’t even a viable choice as many school districts block the site entirely, or provide heavy restrictions on how it is used in the classroom.

“It takes away the spontaneity,” says Deven Black, a teacher-librarian in the Bronx, where the New York City Department of Education blocks YouTube completely. “If a topic comes up I can’t just search for it and use the video immediately. I have to download it at home in advance and transfer it to a different format. It just becomes more complex.”

For teachers like Black, alternatives like WatchKnowLearn are currently invaluable. YouTube isn’t ceding ground either though, in December it introduced a network setting that an administrator can select and will then only allow access to approved channels. They hope this will be acceptable to the schools that currently block or prohibit YouTube use in the classroom. If the initiative is successful it will mean a much wider choice for all teachers and potential benefit for students.

“These other sites are all poor substitutes for YouTube in the classroom,” says Jason Mammano, an instructional technology facilitator of a large district in North Carolina.

Read article at the original source here.

Scotland's nurseries Short Of Teachers



Local authorities have been accused of undermining standards in nurseries by employing fewer teachers and more nursery nurses.

Parents, headteachers and teachers have joined forces to highlight the issue. They say in the six years to 2011 the number of teachers in nurseries has fallen by 12%, to 1,500. Cosla, the umbrella body representing Scottish councils, said a mix of skills and qualifications was good for children.

In a written statement to MSPs on the education committee, teaching unions and the Scottish Parent Teacher Council (SPTC) suggested local authorities were taking advantage of the Scottish government's loosely worded policy on nursery education.

The submission stated: "Despite a commitment by the Scottish government to 'access to a nursery teacher for every nursery age child' and considerable evidence demonstrating the long-term impact of trained teachers in pre-primary settings, many local authorities are diluting or dismantling their nursery provision."

In recent years local authorities have started offering longer and more flexible hours in response to demand from parents who suggested the standard two and a half hours each morning or afternoon was disappointing or difficult to work around.

Nursery nurses who work more flexible hours, and are on lower salaries than teachers, have been a key part of the strategy. The nurses now receive more in-depth training in education and care - up to degree level in some cases. In recognition of that they usually have new official job titles such as child development officers or early years officers.

Figures published in 2009 indicated substantial numbers of nurseries have no qualified teachers on the permanent staff but almost all have some input from a teacher.

The submission to Holyrood from parents' leaders and the AHDS, SSTA, SPTA, NASUWT and ATL education unions indicated children, especially those from disadvantaged backgrounds made more progress with trained teachers.

Calling for a reverse in the trend of employing fewer teachers, the statement pointed to a 2007 report by HM Inspectorate of Education which concluded: "HMIE evidence found that overall the quality of children's experiences was of a higher standard in nursery schools and nursery classes where traditionally teachers were employed.

"Teachers using their acquired knowledge of learners, learning, teaching and assessment were most able to apply this expertise to ensure effective early education practice."


Original source here.

Getting Lessons on Water by Designing a Playground


The sixth graders at Stephen A. Halsey Junior High School 157 in Queens have a tough assignment before them: design a new playground that will transform a sea of black asphalt at their school into a recreational oasis — and, while they are at it, help clean up New York City’s waterways.


So, in addition to benches, play equipment, ball courts and drinking fountains, their wish list includes a butterfly garden and a gravel-lined turf field. Those features will capture precipitation and prevent it from overloading the city’s sewer system, which, in the case of their Rego Park neighborhood, spews raw sewage into Flushing Bay when it rains.

In the process, the children are learning about arcane urban infrastructure and bureaucratese, like “combined storm-sewer runoff.” And they are gaining appreciation for the absorbent powers of trees and grass, as well as roof gardens, rain barrels and permeable pavers — bricks that soak up water.

“I always thought the rain ended up in the Atlantic Ocean and that it was cleaned first,” Aryan Bhatt, 11, said.

Theirs is one of five new eco-playgrounds that the Trust for Public Land, a nonprofit group, is shepherding through the design and construction process at schools in Queens and Brooklyn. The schools, with asphalt schoolyards, were chosen, in part, for their proximity to overtaxed wastewater-treatment plants. Sites for five more playgrounds are now being scouted.

“Each child has a design notebook, and we encourage them to be landscape architects,” said Mary Alice Lee, the trust’s director of the city playgrounds program. “It’s our goal to capture one inch of rainwater.”

The program has unfolded as the city and state formalized an agreement under which the city would pay for novel techniques to address its biggest water-quality challenge. In March, the city committed $2.4 billion in public and private money over 18 years to environmentally sound solutions. The approach is a departure from more traditional methods to control sewage overflow, like storage tanks and tunnels.

To help the students visualize the problem, the Trust for Public Land on Thursday brought its aptly named “Sewer in a Suitcase” to Stephanie Lamere’s sixth-grade classroom. Inside the case, which was created by the nonprofit Center for Urban Pedagogy, was a model of a city street, with an apartment building, stores and pipes leading to a river.

Maddalena Polletta, who works for the trust, poured copper-colored glitter into the buildings to represent waste water, and sprinkled some on the streets for good measure to take the place of dog feces, litter and oil from cars. She then poured a trickle of water into the building and over the streets, and the students watched as it flowed cleanly through one of two clear-plastic tubes into a mock waterway.

But when Ms. Polletta poured a larger amount of water, all the glitter gushed out of the second tube. That tube represented a treatment plant’s outfall pipe, which discharges raw sewage along with storm water into rivers when it rains, not just in New York but in many aging cities with combined sewer systems.

“Sometimes just a quarter-inch of rain will overflow the system,” Ms. Polletta explained. “Sewage is released into the bay about 50 times a year. Last year, we had more rain than we’ve ever had before.”

Then she placed a green sponge on a roof and poured water over it. She squeezed out the sponge to show all the rain that was captured. She did the same with an ecologically friendly paving stone.

The students revisited their playground wish list, highlighting items with green stickers that had the potential to absorb some of the estimated 600,000 gallons of rainwater a year that drains from the current schoolyard. The turf field, meditation garden, vegetable garden and grass suddenly had new meaning.

Melissa Potter Ix, a principal of SiteWorks, a landscape architecture firm that is working with the trust, used a mathematical formula to show the children how to maximize the field’s absorbency. “If we put one foot of gravel under your turf field,” she said, “we can capture one inch of rain.”

Gravel is just the beginning. In a pilot playground at a school in Brooklyn, the Trust for Public Land put a green roof on the storage shed. It outfitted a gazebo with a rain barrel to collect water for a vegetable garden. It sloped a stretch of asphalt toward a second garden. And it expanded the tree beds.

The trust has ample experience with conventional playgrounds. In recent years, it has designed and built 54 playgrounds at schools across the city and designed an additional 123 for schools on behalf of the city’s parks department. Those were created as part of a city program to increase access to green space by converting schoolyards into community playgrounds.

But the trust’s latest initiative has a more ambitious goal, as the city prepares for climate change and the increased rainfall scientists say it will bring.

“We all have to be stewards of our natural resources,” said Christopher K. Kay, the trust’s chief operating officer, referring to the children in Ms. Lamere’s class. “It’s essential that this be communicated in a way that’s engaging and creative. When they’re excited, they’ll remember it.

6 Tips for GRE Success


Every year, more than 700,000 people take the Graduate Record Exam, commonly known as the GRE. While the test is similar in many ways to its college-entrance cousin, the SAT, there are some important differences.

Unlike the SAT, the GRE is most commonly taken as a computer-adaptive test, meaning there's no need for a No. 2 pencil and those all-too-familiar bubble sheets. On the computer-based test, the difficulty of the questions is based on the accuracy of your answers to previous questions. The better you perform on the first set of 20 questions, the harder the next set of 20 questions will be.

The GRE is broken down into three primary components: verbal reasoning, quantitative reasoning, and analytical writing. For the verbal reasoning section, test takers have two 30-minute periods to answer two sets of 20 questions. Then test-takers answer two sets of 20 quantitative reasoning questions, with 35 minutes to answer each set. The analytical writing section consists of two essays, for which test takers get 30 minutes to write each. All sections are graded on a 130- to 170-point scale in 1-point increments.

A good SAT score and a healthy college GPA don't ensure that tackling the GRE will be a simple task. Use these six tips to help you master the test:
1. Go back to high school: Having trouble differentiating your X-axis from your Y? Have too many late nights in college wiped away the important teachings of Pythagoras? You're not alone. Many GRE test takers are many years removed from the basic tenants of high school math, which play an important part in the quantitative section of the test. If you're rusty, it's important to revisit the concepts of algebra and geometry that you learned in high school.

"Algebra and geometry are assumed background knowledge in college courses, and you will be hard-pressed to find a class to take at that level [that] will prepare you directly for questions of this type," says Eric Reiman, a GRE tutor with Creative Tutors. "If you're preparing for the GRE alone, a text likeAlgebra for Dummies or Geometry for Dummies could be a great help, and both come with example problems to work."
2. Sleep with your dictionary: While the GRE's quantitative section is not much more advanced than the math found in the SAT—and familiarity with concepts learned in high school should be enough to post a decent score—the verbal section went to college and graduated with honors in English. Test takers who slept through their English classes or turned toSparkNotes may be in trouble.

During your time in school, be sure to read as much as possible to expand your vocabulary so that you can decipher unfamiliar words, testing experts say. You can assimilate far more diverse vocabulary over four years of college than you could ever hope to by cramming for a few weeks or months prior to the GRE.

"As a successor to the SAT, the GRE uses adult words that aren't found on the SAT," says Reiman. "It is extremely important for success on the qualitative sections of the GRE to be well read."
3. Take a GRE prep course (if you can afford it): According to Andrew Mitchell, director of pre-business programs at Kaplan Test Prep, the GRE is designed specifically to differ from areas of study in college and is supposed to be a measure of a college graduates' critical thinking skills, not necessarily what they learned in school.

No matter how much cramming you might've done in college or how stellar your grades were, thinking critically might not come naturally. The tutoring classes tend to pay off, but are a sizable investment. Kaplan's instructor-led classes cost more than $1,000 for about eight on-site sessions. Twenty-five hours of private GRE tutoring with Kaplan can cost roughly $3,000.

"It's worth investing some time and money in preparing for the GRE," says Mitchell. "Critical thinking is something that's hard to change overnight because it's such a lifelong skill. We try to help people unlock their critical thinking skills by getting more familiar with the test and more familiar with proven methods.

Another option for building critical thinking that's a little easier on the checkbook is using the free resources on the Educational Testing Services (ETS) website. Sample questions and essay responses, advice, and scoring guides are available online from the folks who created the GRE.

4. Take a practice test! While your vocabulary may be impeccable, your writing skills polished, and your quantitative abilities sharpened to a razor's edge, none of that matters if you're unaccustomed to the test's unconventional format.

"To walk into this test unprepared, to sit down [and take it] having never done it before is suicide," notes Neill Seltzer, national GRE content director for the Princeton Review.

Educational Testing Service, the Princeton Review, and Kaplan all have free computer adaptive tests online that help simulate what is a foreign experience to many.

"It's different from the SAT, and that really threw me off the first time," says Amy Trongnetrpunya, who earned a perfect score on the quantitative section of the GRE after scoring poorly on her first try. "The computer-adaptive practice exam really helped."

5. Don't like your score? Take it again: Schools have access to any GRE scores for tests you've taken in the last five years, but experts claim that many universities only care about the best one. While this isn't true for all schools and all programs, many universities pull the highest scores from the GRE ticket they receive from ETS. The admissions officials (and sometimes work-study students) who receive the tickets are the first line of defense, and oftentimes, they record only the top score when they're compiling your file before sending it up the admissions food chain.

"Even though ETS will report every score, the person reading that file and making the admissions decision may only see the highest math and highest verbal," says Seltzer.
6. Take a tough English course: Even if you aren't an English major and don't plan on writing the next great American novel, honing your writing skills is integral to overall success on the GRE. The two essays in the analytical section take up roughly one third of the time test takers are allotted. Some testing experts argue that near the end of college you should take a high-level English or writing course.

While enduring a high-level writing course might put a small dent in the GPA (and ego) of non-English majors, it is an immense help when it's time to crank out two timed essays on the pressure-packed GRE.

"I would emphasize taking a few rigorous English and writing college courses, in addition to test prep, to best prepare yourself for the caliber of questions you'll find on the GRE," says Alexis Avila, founder and president of Prepped & Polished, a Boston area-based college counseling and tutoring film.

Read article at the original source here

Software for Automating Essay Grading Put to the Test





Although Scantron answer sheets have been part and parcel of test-taking since at least the 1960s, there have been no serious attempts to design a software tool for grading student essays until recently. No doubt many overwhelmed teachers would have welcomed the wide adoption of such tools at any time, the need for them became more acute in 2005, when essay-writing became a mandatory part of the redesigned SAT test. Now, with many states reworking their academic programs to conform with the Common Core Curriculum means that kids in all grades will be submitting more written assignments than ever, and with the shrinking education budgets leading to staffing cuts, computer-aided grading would greatly reduce the burden on instructors who remain.

With that in mind, two professors from the College of Education at the University of Akron, Ohio, Morgan and Mark Shermis, decided to put several essay-grading software packages available on the market to a rigorous test, by having them grade 16,000 essays that been previously assigned grades by teachers. The results, announced during this year’s National Council on Measurement in Education meeting held in Vancouver, Canada, showed that at least some of the programs produced marks very similar to the ones given by humans.


Grading software from nine manufacturers, which together cover 97 per cent of the US market, was used in the test. To calibrate the systems, each looked for correlations between factors associated with good essays, such as strong vocabulary and good grammar, and the human-assigned score. After training, the software marked another set of essays without access to the human-given grades.

According Morgan Shermis, the grades assigned by the computer programs were statistically identical to those given by human teachers which proves that such software has progressed a great deal since development first began. When he heard of the Akron team’s findings, Les Perelman, who teachers writing at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said he wasn’t surprised but not because he considers himself a great supporter of computer grading. On the contrary, as far as he’s concerned, these kinds of programs are “reinventing the wheel,” replicating the technology already available, on the market and installed on nearly every computer in the country and the world: Microsoft Word.

The ubiquitous word processing program is “a much better product than anything that’s going to be developed by this competition,” he says. Its grammar checker is fairly sophisticated, but can be fooled. For instance, if a student types, “The car was parked by the side of the road,” Word suggests, “(The) side of the road parked the car.”

Perelman worries that the bid to develop machine readers will, in the end, train humans to read more like machines. “It will get good agreement (between humans and machines) but not necessarily good writing.”

Still, with the CCS’s wide adoption scheduled for 2014, and thus with the imminent increase of the number of writing assignments students will have to complete and teachers will have to grade, many feel they can not afford to turn up their noses at a tool that will help them cope. Jeff Pence, who teaches English at the Dean Rusk Middle School in Canton, GA, and who uses essay-scoring software to grade the papers of his 120 students, admits that while he is not blind to the tools’ shortcomings, neither is he unaware of the shortcomings of overwhelmed human graders. So far this year, with the aid of the program, he was able to collect and grade 25 written assignments from each of his students, sometimes returning them the next day, while hand-grading even a single batch would have previously taken him nearly two weeks.


”I know, as does every teacher out there, that on that 63rd essay, I am nowhere near as consistent, accurate or thorough as I was on the first three.”

Original source here.

HTC One V secures a summer release date



NEW ORLEANS--In addition to the Droid Incredible 4G LTE that HTC just announced at CTIA, the phone-maker will also show off its HTC One V, an Android smartphone first introduced at Mobile World Congress.

Although the One V is the most entry level of the HTC One family of phones, it boasts uniformities like Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich as the operating system, the HTC Sense 4.0 interface, and the HTC ImageSense camera software, which works with HTC's image-processing chip to take photos one after the other in the blink of an eye.

Although there aren't fine details about carrier launch dates and pricing, we do know that it will emerge on a variety of carriers, most likely MetroPCS or Virgin Mobile.

Android reclaims 61 percent of all U.S. smartphone sales



Android has staged a healthy lead over Apple's iOS as the smartphone wars continue.

Looking at the first quarter of the year, NPD Group pegged Android's U.S. market share at 61 percent, a jump over the 49 percent recorded in last year's fourth quarter.

On the flip side, iOS lost ground with a 29 percent market share, down from 41 percent during 2011's final quarter.

Apple's holiday surge in customers came courtesy of heavy demand for the iPhone 4S, which debuted last October. After the new year kicked in, Android won back the lost ground to recapture the same market share it held during the third quarter.

But no tears need be shed for Apple. Though the company lost share last quarter, the baseline is now higher as a result of added iPhone distribution through Sprint, NPD said.

Collectively, Apple and Android now hold 90 percent of all smartphone sales in the U.S.

Smartphones overall failed to gain further traction as a percentage of all mobile phone sales. But they still grabbed 66 percent of all handset sales (post-paid and pre-paid) last quarter, according to NPD. All ten of the top-selling models in the first quarter were smartphones, half of them from Apple, three of them from Samsung, and one each from Motorola and HTC.

The smartphone market also has plenty of room left to expand. Almost half of all smartphone buyers last quarter moved up from a feature phone.

Who's buying all those smartphones?

More than two out of three people ages 25 to 34 own a smartphone, according to the latest research from Nielsen.

Men and women are split almost evenly, with 50.9 percent of female mobile users carrying a smartphone and 50.1 percent of men.

Asian Americans led the way in smartphone ownership with 67.3 percent using one as their main mobile handset. Almost three in five Hispanic mobile users now have smartphones, while a majority of African-Americans own one, Nielsen added.

Android also remains the top dog in the U.S., according to Nielsen, though the research firm gave it a 48 percent market share for last quarter, followed by Apple's iOS with 32 percent. But Apple continues to reign as the top smartphone maker.


Microsoft, Motorola patent showdown in Seattle court

Microsoft and Motorola are arguing before a federal judge in Seattle today whether the telecommunications company is unfairly seeking excessive royalty payments for a patent that the software giant uses in several products.

While the case delves into technical minutia over industry standards and royalty fees, it pits Microsoft against a company that's soon to be part of its archrival, Google. The Web giant agreed to buy Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion last August, and is only awaiting approval from Chinese regulators to conclude the deal.

Microsoft is arguing that Motorola is seeking unreasonable fees for technology that has become an industry standard. The patents cover video streaming and Wi-Fi technology, and Microsoft uses them in Windows and the Xbox.

According to a Reuters report, Microsoft contends that royalty payments could amount to as much as $4 billion a year.

Microsoft has argued that Motorola's seeking 2.25 percent of all net sales on the products that use the technology is excessive, given that those products use so many other technologies as well. Motorola has argued that Microsoft rejected its terms without trying to negotiate a better deal.

Last week, a German court granted Motorola's request to halt German sales of Windows 7 and the Xbox 360 over those patent violations. Prior to that decision, the judge in the Seattle case had issued a temporary restraining order that prevents Motorola from enforcing the actions of the German court until he reaches a decision in the matter he's hearing.

Geekwire's Todd Bishop, attending today's hearing, tweeted from the courthouse that U.S. District Judge James Robart is pushing the sides to settle by warning that he will put the matter before a jury otherwise.

Robart ended the hearing taking the matter under advisement. In doing so, Robart said he will likely deny Microsoft's motion that Motorola breached its contract, as well as Motorola's motion that Microsoft gave up its right to patent licenses under reasonable terms, according to a Seattle Times account of the hearing.

And he had harsh words for both sides as they left the courtroom. Robart said the conduct of both companies "has been driven by an attempt to secure commercial advantage," according to the Times report. "To an outsider looking at it, it has been arbitrary, it has been arrogant, and frankly it has been based on hubris."

Microsoft released a statement after the hearing.

"We look forward to seeing Judge Robart's decision on today's hearing and we are pleased the temporary restraining order remains in place pending the further ruling from the court," the company said.

Twelve Sharp by Janet Evanovich

Welcome to Trenton, New Jersey, where bounty hunter Stephanie Plum's life is about to implode in Janet Evanovich's wildest, hottest novel yet!

FIRST A STRANGER APPEARS
While chasing down the usual cast of miscreants and weirdos Stephanie discovers that a crazed woman is stalking her.

THEN THE STRANGER REVEALS HER SECRETS
The woman dresses in black, carries a 9mm Glock, and has a bad attitude and a mysterious connection to dark and dangerous Carlos Manoso …street name, Ranger.

NEXT, SOMEBODY DIES
The action turns deadly serious, and Stephanie goes from hunting skips to hunting a murderer.

SOON, THE CHASE IS ON
Ranger needs Stephanie for more reasons than he can say.  And now, the two are working together to find a killer, rescue a missing child, and stop a lunatic from raising the body count.  When Stephanie Plum and Ranger get too close for comfort, vice cop Joe Morelli (her on-again, off-again boyfriend) steps in.

Will the ticking clock stop at the stroke of twelve, or will a stranger in the wind find a way to stop Stephanie Plum…forever?  Filled with Janet Evanovich's trademark action, nonstop adventure, and sharp humor, Twelve Sharp shows why her novels have been called "hot stuff" (The New York Times), and Evanovich herself "the master" (San Francisco Examiner). 

Unforgiven (1992)

Unforgiven is a 1992 American Western film produced and directed by Clint Eastwood with a screenplay written by David Webb Peoples. The film tells the story of William Munny, an aging outlaw and killer who takes on one more job years after he had hung up his guns and turned to farming. A dark Western that deals frankly with the uglier aspects of violence and the myth of the Old West, it stars Eastwood in the lead role, with Gene Hackman, Morgan Freeman, and Richard Harris.

Eastwood dedicated the movie to deceased directors and mentors Don Siegel and Sergio Leone. The film won four Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Hackman), and Best Film Editing. Eastwood himself was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance, but he lost to Al Pacino for Scent of a Woman. In 2004, Unforgiven was added to the United States National Film Registry as being deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".

The film was only the third western to win the Oscar for Best Picture following Cimarron (1931) and Dances With Wolves (1990).

Paco Rabanne drops art director Arora by 'mutual' accord

Fashion house Paco Rabanne, which launched a women's ready-to-wear line last year, has dismissed its artistic director, Manish Arora of India, by a "mutual agreement," it said Friday.

"We are most grateful to Manish for the work accomplished and the energy that he displayed all along this project," it said in a statement.

"The strong media impact of the past two seasons has enabled Paco Rabanne to partake with strength in the universe of contemporary fashion," it added, without explaining why Arora was leaving.

Arora, who has his own line of apparel in an array of psychedelic colours and snappy prints, presented a critically acclaimed collection for Paco Rabanne in March.

His first creations for the Paris-based Spanish fashion house, unveiled in September last year in its first show since 2006, featured exaggerated shoulders and hips reminiscent of Thierry Mugler's silhouettes of the 1980s.

Arora, a Bombay native who lives in New Delhi, said in the statement: "Revisiting the Paco Rabanne fashion was a very enriching experience and an exceptional artistic and human adventure."

He added: "I am, today, happy to have accomplished the mission I was trusted with in order to cast this iconic brand back into the spotlight."

(Source: AFP Relax News)

Smartphones top computers for U.S. Facebook time



(Reuters) - The average time spent accessing Facebook via smartphone in the United States was 441 minutes in March, compared with 391 minutes via computer, according to comScore, underscoring the increasingly high-profile role of mobile in social networking.
comScore's new Mobile Metrix 2.0 report showed U.S. smartphone users spent 441 minutes per month, or 7 hours and 21 minutes, on Facebook in March. That compares with 391 minutes, or 6 hours and 31 minutes, for people who tapped into Facebook via a computer.
In filing documents for its initial public offering, Facebook highlighted the importance of mobile while noting it does not generate meaningful revenue from mobile users.
"If users increasingly access mobile products as a substitute for access through personal computers and if we are unable to successfully implement monetization strategies for our mobile users," the company writes in its filing documents, "our financial performance and ability to grow revenue would be negatively affected."
Beefing up its mobile strategy was part of the reason Facebook in April agreed to spend $1 billion to buy Instagram, a photo-sharing mobile app, analysts say.
Historically, Facebook hasn't shown ads to mobile users, although in March 2012 it started including "sponsored stories" in users' mobile new feeds.
March marks the first month comScore measured mobile usage -- for Apple's iOS, Google's Android and RIM's Blackberry -- on sites like Facebook.
Facebook commands the lion's share of smartphone users' time, comScore data showed. The next-most popular services were check-in services Foursquare, with 146 minutes; microblogging service Twitter, with 114 minutes; and blogging-service Tumblr, with 68 minutes.
Facebook likely racked up more minutes because people like to stay on to craft updates, read friends' updates, and respond, said Michael Pachter of Wedbush Securities. By contrast, "it doesn't take that long to tweet," he said.
comScore previously reported that Facebook computer users spent 422.8 minutes on Facebook in December.
But it says the March figure of 391 minutes doesn't represent a drop because it is now calculating the data differently after learning it had been double-counting users in some limited instances due to certain sites alerting servers twice when users got on the sites and used Facebook plug-ins. It has now fixed the glitch, a spokesman said.
The March numbers represent a rise of six minutes over February, when computer users spent 385 minutes on Facebook, comScore said.
Facebook's rich valuation -- approaching $100 billion at the high end -- is in part based on high levels of user engagement. Facebook cautioned in its filing documents that as growth in its numbers of users slows, its "business performance will become increasingly dependent on (its) ability to increase levels of user engagement in current and new markets."
comScore said Facebook has about 158.9 million unique U.S. visitors who access the site on computers and 78 million who access it via mobile phones, although there is overlap between the two groups.
Facebook declined to comment on the study.

Magnetic bacteria may help build future bio-computers


Magnet-making bacteria may be building biological computers of the future, researchers have said.
A team from the UK's University of Leeds and Japan's Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology have used microbes that eat iron.
As they ingest the iron, the microbes create tiny magnets inside themselves, similar to those in PC hard drives.
The research may lead to the creation of much faster hard drives, the team of scientists say.
The study appears in the journal Small.
As technology progresses and computer components get smaller and smaller, it becomes harder to produce electronics on a nano-scale.
So researchers are now turning to nature - and getting microbes involved.
Magnetic bacteria
In the current study, the scientists used the bacterium Magnetospirilllum magneticum.
These naturally magnetic microorganisms usually live in aquatic environments such as ponds and lakes, below the surface where oxygen is scarce.

Start Quote

We are quickly reaching the limits of traditional electronic manufacturing as computer components get smaller... Nature has provided us with the perfect tool to [deal with] this problem”
Dr Sarah StanilandUniversity of Leeds
They swim following the Earth's magnetic field lines, aligning in the magnetic field like compass needles, in search of preferred oxygen concentrations.
When the bacteria ingest iron, proteins inside their bodies interact with it to produce tiny crystals of the mineral magnetite, the most magnetic mineral on Earth.
Having studied the way the microbes collect, shape and position these nano-magnets inside themselves, the researchers copied the method and applied it outside the bacteria, effectively "growing" magnets that could in future help to build hard drives.
"We are quickly reaching the limits of traditional electronic manufacturing as computer components get smaller," said lead researcher Dr Sarah Staniland of the University of Leeds.
"The machines we've traditionally used to build them are clumsy at such small scales.
"Nature has provided us with the perfect tool to [deal with] this problem."
Biological wires
Besides using microorganisms to produce magnets, the researchers also managed to create tiny electrical wires from living organisms.
They created nano-scale tubes made from the membrane of cells, grown in a lab-controlled environment with the help of a protein present in human lipid molecules.
A membrane is a biological film-like "wall" that separates a cell's interior from the outside environment.
Such tubes could in future be used as microscopic bio-engineered wires, capable of transferring information - just like cells do in our bodies - inside a computer, Dr Masayoshi Tanaka from Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology told the BBC.
"These biological wires can have electrical resistance and can transfer information from one set of cells inside a bio-computer to all the other cells," he said.
Besides computers, such biological wires could even be used in future for human surgery because they are highly biocompatible, Dr Tanaka added.
"Various tiny wires have been already developed all over the world, but the biocompatibility is still problematic," he said.
"The fabricated nano-wires in this study were covered with components of cell membrane, so theoretically they are highly biocompatible."

Liquid-cooled LED bulbs ready for summer


Switch Lighting lines up distributors for LED bulbs that use a novel design to create even light and an attractive stand in for incandescent bulbs.


Switch Lighting's LED bulbs have similar technical specs to its competitors, but the startup is counting on clever design and good looks to stand out in a crowded field.
The company plans to make its first three general-purpose light bulbs available this summer to lighting distributors and today is expected to introduce a three-way bulb and a 240-volt bulb for markets outside the U.S.
Its first bulbs are replacements for 40-watt, 60-watt, and 75-watt incandescent lamps. Costing between $40 and $50, they are primarily aimed at commercial customers. Switch Lighting is also working on a less expensive consumer-oriented line due next year, according to a company executive.
This summer's product distribution, a bit later than originally planned, will mark the first release of the startup's novel LED bulb design.
Most LED bulbs place their LED chips -- the light source in this type of bulb -- at the base near the heat sink and socket. By contrast, the LED light sources in Switch Lighting's lamp are placed in the globe at the top half of the lamp. The globe is filled with liquid that circulates past the LED chips to the surface for cooling.
The design yielded a bulb that gives light off evenly and that better resembles traditional incandescent lamps, said Gary Rosenfeld, the executive vice president of marketing at Switch Lighting. It's been an advantage in hotels and other businesses that have exposed lamps: "People don't like anything that's too unusual," he said.
The company's 40-watt equivalent will consume eight watts and 75-watt equivalents will consume 17 watts. Later in the summer, it will have the three-way bulb and a 100-watt equivalent, Rosenfeld said. The company is also developing a lower-cost line of bulbs with more of a consumer focus, he said. (CNET)

Beyond Florence: Exploring the Tuscan Countryside



Florence is without doubt a highlight on any Italian holiday. The city’s rich Renaissance heritage makes it a must-see for anyone interested in Italian art and culture. Sometimes, however, Florence can start to feel ever-so-slightly like an open-air museum. Once you’ve ticked off the imposing David, the beautiful Santa Maria Novella and the historic Ponte Vecchio, you might want to get out of the city to appreciate one of Italy’s most beautiful regions: Tuscany. With a holiday apartment in Florence as your base, you can explore the surrounding country to your heart’s content.
Fiesole
Escape to: Fresh air and great views
This pretty little town is the perfect place to escape to when the heat and crowds of Florence get too much to bear. Located in the hills looking down on the city, the views from Fiesole are best appreciated with a rustic picnic and a good bottle of Tuscan wine. If you can stir yourself, go for a wander around the archaeology park, where you can appreciate ruins from the Etruscan, Roman and Lombard civilisations. Otherwise, take a short bus ride from Florence and simply indulge in a day of pure relaxation al fresco.
Greve in Chianti
Escape to: A gastronomic paradise
It doesn’t take a great italophile to recognise the name of one of the world’s most celebrated wine-producing regions. Greve’s situation in the region of Chianti means that you can explore some gorgeous vineyards, where the juicy grapes that go to make many of Tuscany’s famous wines grow. As if that weren’t enough, Greve is also famed for its olives, from which the delicate Tuscan oils are extracted. Add this to the truffle harvest and the multitude of delicious game – pigeon, rabbit, venison, wild boar – and you should be prepared to leave Greve a little heavier than when you arrived.
Viareggio
Escape to: Sea, sand and sole
Viareggio is a resort town on the Tuscan Riviera, well-connected to Florence by road and by train. It has ten kilometres of excellent sandy beaches where you can while away the afternoon under the Tuscan sun. Known in its glorious heyday as ‘The Pearl of the Tyrrhenian Sea,’ the town’s architecture features Art Nouveau buildings in the style of the early 20th century. A stroll along the promenade, or passeggiata a mare, takes you past a multitude of impressive hotels.
Vinci
Escape to: An idyllic piece of history
Vinci’s greatest claim to fame is that the small town was the birthplace of the great Renaissance man Leonardo da Vinci. Well over 500 years after his birth, this jack-of-all-trades continues to be renowned for his groundbreaking artwork, scientific genius and mysterious personal life. You can visit the farmhouse where he was born, and wander the rustic streets of this attractive town, where he spent his childhood. The pace of life is almost as slow now as it must have been then, so take your time: drop into a sleepy inn for some delicious country fare washed down with the local vintage.