Saturday, June 29, 2013

UK government backs three-person IVF

The UK looks set to become the first country to allow the creation of babies using DNA from three people, after the government backed the IVF technique.

It will produce draft regulations later this year and the procedure could be offered within two years.

Experts say three-person IVF could eliminate debilitating and potentially fatal mitochondrial diseases that are passed on from mother to child.

Opponents say it is unethical and could set the UK on a "slippery slope".

They also argue that affected couples could adopt or use egg donors instead.

Mitochondria are the tiny, biological "power stations" that give the body energy. They are passed from a mother, through the egg, to her child.

Defective mitochondria affect one in every 6,500 babies. This can leave them starved of energy, resulting in muscle weakness, blindness, heart failure and death in the most extreme cases.

Continue reading the main story

The woman who lost all her children

Every time Sharon Bernardi became pregnant, she hoped for a healthy child.

But all seven of her children died from a rare genetic disease that affects the central nervous system - three of them just hours after birth.

When her fourth child, Edward, was born, doctors discovered the disease was caused by a defect in Sharon's mitochondria.

Edward was given drugs and blood transfusions to prevent the lactic acidosis (a kind of blood poisoning) that had killed his siblings.

Five weeks later Sharon and her husband, Neil, were allowed to take Edward to their home in Sunderland for Christmas - but his health slowly began to deteriorate.

Edward survived into adulthood, dying in 2011 at the age of 21.

Now Sharon is supporting medical research that would allow defective mitochondria to be replaced by DNA from another woman.

Research suggests that using mitochondria from a donor egg can prevent the diseases.

It is envisaged that up to 10 couples a year would benefit from the treatment.

However, it would result in babies having DNA from two parents and a tiny amount from a third donor as the mitochondria themselves have their own DNA.

'Clearly sensitive'

Earlier this year, a public consultation by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) concluded there was "general support" for the idea and that there was no evidence that the advanced form of IVF was unsafe.

The chief medical officer for England, Prof Dame Sally Davies, said: "Scientists have developed ground-breaking new procedures which could stop these disease being passed on, bringing hope to many families seeking to prevent their future children inheriting them.

"It's only right that we look to introduce this life-saving treatment as soon as we can."

She said there were "clearly some sensitive issues here" but said she was "personally very comfortable" with altering mitochondria.

Scientists have devised two techniques that allow them to take the genetic information from the mother and place it into the egg of a donor with healthy mitochondria.

Continue reading the main story

The result is a baby with genetic information from three people.

They would have more than 20,000 genes from their parents and 37 mitochondrial genes from a donor.

It is a change that would have ramifications through the generations as scientists would be altering human genetic inheritance.

Dr David King says the move crosses "a crucial ethical line"

Objections to the procedure have been raised ever since it was first mooted.

Dr David King, the director of Human Genetics Alert, said: "These techniques are unnecessary and unsafe and were in fact rejected by the majority of consultation responses.

'Designer baby'

"It is a disaster that the decision to cross the line that will eventually lead to a eugenic designer baby market should be taken on the basis of an utterly biased and inadequate consultation."

One of the main concerns raised in the HFEA's public consultation was of a "slippery slope" which could lead to other forms of genetic modification.

Draft regulations will be produced this year with a final version expected to be debated and voted on in Parliament during 2014.

Newcastle University is pioneering one of the techniques that could be used for three-person IVF.

Prof Doug Turnbull, the director of the Wellcome Trust Centre for Mitochondrial Research at the university, said he was "delighted".

He said: "This is excellent news for families with mitochondrial disease.

"This will give women who carry these diseased genes more reproductive choice and the opportunity to have children free of mitochondrial disease. I am very grateful to all those who have supported this work."

The fine details of the regulations are still uncertain, yet it is expected to be for only the most severe cases.

It is also likely that children would have no right to know who the egg donor was and that any children resulting from the procedure would be monitored closely for the rest of their lives.

Sir John Tooke, the president of the Academy of Medical Sciences, said: "Introducing regulations now will ensure that there is no avoidable delay in these treatments reaching affected families once there is sufficient evidence of safety and efficacy.

"It is also a positive step towards ensuring the UK remains at the forefront of cutting-edge research in this area."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-23079276#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Brad Pitt & Angelina Jolie Set Wedding Date After Supreme Court Ruling

Brad Pitt & Angelina Jolie Set Wedding Date After Supreme Court Ruling

Angelina Jolie & Brad Pitt getting married finallyBrad Pitt and Angelina Jolie revealed back in 2006 that they would not tie the knot until everyone in the U.S. could legally marry. The Supreme Court struck down the Defense of Marriage Act and reinstated gay marriage in Florida and insiders reveal Brad and Angelina have now set a wedding date! On June 26, ...

Brad Pitt & Angelina Jolie Set Wedding Date After Supreme Court Ruling Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/06/brad-pitt-angelina-jolie-set-wedding-date-after-supreme-court-ruling/

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Aussie PM Gillard loses leadership ballot to Rudd

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) ? Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard has been ousted as Labor Party leader by her predecessor, Kevin Rudd, in vote of party lawmakers hoping to avoid a huge defeat in upcoming elections.

The ballot took place on Wednesday three years and two days after Gillard ousted Rudd in a similar internal government showdown. It makes him leader of the party, but not prime minister.

Party official Chris Hayes says Gillard lost 57 votes to 45.

Rudd will likely have to demonstrate that he can command a majority of lawmakers in the House of Representatives before the governor-general makes him prime minister. If he cannot, opposition leader Tony Abbott could be asked to form a government or the elections could be moved up from September to August.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/aussie-pm-gillard-loses-leadership-ballot-rudd-100903294.html

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Not quiet yet in TV this summer

NEW YORK (AP) ? Television hasn't hit its summer doldrums yet. Between a mysterious dome, a high-wire act and climaxes to the NBA season and "The Voice" singing competition, viewers are finding reasons to tune in.

More than 13 million people watched Monday's opening of "The Dome," a collaboration between Stephen King and Steven Spielberg on CBS, according to preliminary research by the Nielsen company.

That represents the biggest summertime drama debut for any broadcast network since CBS aired "2000 Malibu Road" in 1992, Nielsen said. That's a strong number for the fall, much less the summer. In the series, a see-through dome clamps down over a small town.

The conclusion of a hotly contested NBA Finals between San Antonio and Miami was a winner for ABC. The seventh game, happening after a dramatic overtime conclusion in Game 6, drew 26.3 million viewers on Thursday, Nielsen said. The sixth game had just over 20 million viewers.

The Finals itself averaged 17.6 million viewers through all seven games. That's a bigger average than any series since 2004, with the exception of the meeting of old rivals Boston and the L.A. Lakers in 2010.

Nik Wallenda's windy walk over the Grand Canyon on a tightrope brought people in to the Discovery Network on Sunday. Before the walk, during the show between 8 and 9:10 p.m. EDT, Discovery averaged 6.3 million viewers. Between 9:10 and the show's end 70 minutes later, nearly 10.7 million people were watching, Nielsen said. That represented the most-watched live event in Discovery's history.

NBC's "The Voice" had a strong finale. The 15.6 million people who watched the competition's final night of singing was 31 percent more than the viewership for last year's ending. It led NBC to its best week in the ratings since January, Nielsen said.

The "Mad Men" sixth season finale may not have been good for Don Draper, but AMC will take it. The show had 2.7 million viewers Sunday night for the show's best ratings in a season finale, Nielsen said.

Those last two NBA games helped ABC win the week in prime-time, averaging 6.9 million viewers. NBC had 6.7 million viewers, CBS had 5.1 million, Univision had 3.4 million, Fox had 3.1 million, Telemundo had 1.8 million, ION Television had 1.1 million and the CW had 760,000.

USA was the most popular cable network last week, averaging 2.5 million viewers in prime-time. The Disney Channel had 2.4 million, History had 2.1 million, TNT had 2 million and Discovery had 1.9 million.

NBC's "Nightly News" topped the evening newscasts with an average of 7.5 million viewers. ABC's "World News" was second with 6.9 million and the "CBS Evening News" had 5.6 million viewers.

For the week of June 17-23, the top 10 shows, their networks and viewerships: NBA Finals: San Antonio vs. Miami (Game 7), ABC, 26.32 million; NBA Finals: San Antonio vs. Miami (Game 6), ABC, 20.64 million; "The Voice" (Tuesday), NBC, 15.6 million; "The Voice" (Monday), NBC, 12.68 million; "America's Got Talent" (Tuesday), NBC, 11.75 million; "Skywire Live with Nik Wallenda ? The Walk," Discovery, 10.65 million; "60 Minutes," CBS, 8.41 million; "NCIS," CBS, 8.13 million; "The Big Bang Theory," CBS, 7.66 million; "Winner Is," NBC, 6.69 million.

___

ABC is owned by The Walt Disney Co. CBS is owned by CBS Corp. CW is a joint venture of Warner Bros. Entertainment and CBS Corp. Fox is a unit of News Corp. NBC and Telemundo are owned by Comcast Corp. ION Television is owned by ION Media Networks.

___

Online:

http://www.nielsen.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/not-quiet-yet-tv-summer-191036571.html

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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Samsung to launch LTE-Advanced Galaxy S4

Galaxy S4

Qualcomm-powered LTE-Advance?d handset headed to Korea 'as early as this month'

Samsung is aiming to launch the first smartphone supporting the faster LTE-Advanced wireless data standard, company co-CEO JK Shin has revealed. Speaking to reporters at Samsung headquarters in Suwon, South Korea, Shin revealed that a new, LTE-A-capable Galaxy S4 could go on sale as early as this month in Korea. Reuters reports that the new Galaxy S4 will use a Qualcomm chipset, as opposed to the Exynos 5 Octa used in the Galaxy S4 phones currently sold in Samsung's home country.

LTE-Advanced has the potential to delivery significantly faster 4G speeds than existing LTE networks, but has not yet seen widespread implementation by carriers around the world. Wikipedia lists Russia's Yota Networks as the only commercial LTE-A network at present, currently marketed as supporting speeds of 300Mbps. Operators in most Western countries, including the U.S., are focused on growing their vanilla LTE networks, while UK operator EE has said it'll begin trialing some of the tech behind the new standard before the end of the year.

Shin says his company is in talks with several foreign carriers regarding the LTE-Advanced Galaxy S4. However with supporting networks expected to be few and far between, this new GS4 might end up being a niche variant for the foreseeable future.

Source: Reuters

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/tyjyKQ8cZ3U/story01.htm

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Why do Americans Yell - Health, Fitness, and Sports - Wrong Planet


I don't know why, but a smirk crossed my face when I read this.

I can just picture the scene now.
_________________
?Though much is taken, much abides; and though we are not now that strength which in old days moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are."
Alfred Tennyson

Source: http://www.wrongplanet.net/postt233323.html

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Monday, June 17, 2013

Rowhani's 'path of moderation' also shows limits

Iranian newly elected President Hasan Rowhani, listens during a press conference, in Tehran, Iran, Monday, June 17, 2013. Rowhani showcases his reformist image by promising a "path of moderation," the easing of nuclear tensions and steps to narrow the huge divide with the United States. He also make clear where he won?t go, saying he opposes any halt to uranium enrichment, at the heart of the nuclear standoff. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

Iranian newly elected President Hasan Rowhani, listens during a press conference, in Tehran, Iran, Monday, June 17, 2013. Rowhani showcases his reformist image by promising a "path of moderation," the easing of nuclear tensions and steps to narrow the huge divide with the United States. He also make clear where he won?t go, saying he opposes any halt to uranium enrichment, at the heart of the nuclear standoff. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

Iranian newly elected President Hasan Rowhani, listens during a press conference, in Tehran, Iran, Monday, June 17, 2013. Rowhani showcases his reformist image by promising a "path of moderation," the easing of nuclear tensions and steps to narrow the huge divide with the United States. He also made clear where he won?t go, saying he opposes any halt to uranium enrichment, at the heart of the nuclear standoff. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

Iranian newly elected President Hasan Rowhani, places his hand on his heart as a sign of respect, after speaking at a press conference, in Tehran, Iran, Monday, June 17, 2013. Rowhani showcases his reformist image by promising a "path of moderation," the easing of nuclear tensions and steps to narrow the huge divide with the United States. He also make clear where he won?t go, saying he opposes any halt to uranium enrichment, at the heart of the nuclear standoff. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

In this photo taken on Sunday, June 16, 2013, and released by the official website of the Iranian supreme leader's office, supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, left, speaks during his meeting with President-elect Hasan Rowhani in Tehran, Iran. On Sunday, Rowhani had his first meeting as president-elect with Khamenei, who offered "necessary guidelines" to him, state TV said, without elaborating. (AP Photo/Office of the Supreme Leader)

Iranian President elect Hasan Rowhani, center, is accompanied by Hasan Khomeini, grandson of the late revolutionary founder Ayatollah Khomeini, right, and Ayatollah Mousavi Bojnourdi, during visit of Ayatollah Khomeini's shrine, just outside Tehran, Iran, Sunday, June 16, 2013. Iran's newly elected reformist-backed president Hasan Rowhani said Sunday that the country's dire economic problems cannot be solved "overnight," as he took his first steps in consulting with members of the clerically dominated establishment on his new policies.(AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

(AP) ? Iran's newly elected president showcased his reform-leaning image Monday by promising a "path of moderation" that includes greater openness on Tehran's nuclear program and overtures to Washington. He also made clear where he draws the line: No halt to uranium enrichment and no direct U.S. dialogue without a pledge to stay out of Iranian affairs.

Hasan Rowhani's first post-victory new conference was a study in what may make his presidency tick.

Rowhani may be hailed as a force for change, but he also appears to carry a deep and self-protective streak of pragmatism. He knows he can only push his views on outreach and detente as far as allowed by the country's real powers, the ruling clerics and their military protectors, the Revolutionary Guard.

Many of Rowhani's statements reflected these boundaries, which could later expand or contract depending on how much the theocracy wants to endorse his agenda.

When he appealed to treat "old wounds" with the U.S., he also echoed the ruling clerics' position that no breakthroughs can occur as long as Washington is seen as trying to undermine their hold on power. Rowhani's urging for greater "nuclear transparency" as a path to roll back sanctions was also punctuated by a hard-liner stance: No chance to stop the uranium enrichment labs at the heart of the stalemate with the West and its allies.

Rowhani spoke eloquently about a "new era" on the international stage but avoided direct mention of the sweeping crackdowns at home since the disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009.

At the end of the news conference, a spectator ? whose identity was not immediately known ? yelled out for the release of opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi, who has been under house arrest for more than two years. Rowhani smiled but made no comment.

"You can make any kind of promises you want," said Merhzad Boroujerdi, director of the Middle East Studies program at Syracuse University. "At the end of the day, it's the ruling clerics that decide whether they go anywhere."

There is no doubt, however, that the overall tone of Rowhani's remarks resonates well in the West. The White House and others have already signaled cautious hope that Rowhani's presence could open new possibilities on diplomacy and efforts to break the impasse over Tehran's disputed nuclear program after four failed negotiating rounds since last year.

If nothing else, the contrast was vivid with Ahmadinejad and his hectoring style.

"We are on a path of moderation. ... We have to enhance mutual trust between Iran and other countries," Rowhani told journalists. "We have to build trust."

Rowhani appeared to borrow phrases from another cleric-president, reformist Mohammad Khatami, who preceded Ahmadinejad and opened a range of social and political freedoms that have been largely swept aside in the lockdown atmosphere of recent years.

"The basis of politics is constructive interaction with the world," said Rowhani, wearing a white turban and surrounded by violet flowers ? the signature color his campaign. "Circumstances have changed in the world by this election. . The new atmosphere will definitely be turned into a new opportunity."

Many questions remain, though. Rowhani sidestepped the issue of Iran's close alliance with Syrian President Bashar Assad, saying only that the efforts to end the civil war and restore stability rest with the "Syrian people."

In Paris, Israel's defense minister, Moshe Yaalon, underscored worries among some Israeli officials that their Western allies could hope for Rowhani-inspired breakthroughs while Iran continues "to make progress in their military nuclear project."

Although the 64-year-old Rowhani cannot directly set key policies, he might be able to use the strength of his landslide victory and his influential connections, including with former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, to shape opinions. Rowhani served as Iran's first nuclear envoy from 2003-2005 during a period of intense deal-making with Europeans.

Rowhani's aides have said he proposed an accord in 2005 with then-French President Jacques Chirac to allow uranium enrichment in exchange for the highest level of monitoring by the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog agency. The deal did not gain support from other countries such as Britain and the U.S.

In an interview last year with the Iranian magazine Mehr Nameh, Rowhani said he also received a U.S. proposal in 2004, carried by the head of the U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency at the time, Mohamed ElBaradei, for direct dialogue on nuclear and other issues. Rowhani said he passed along the offer to the ruling clerics and "the decision was that we should not negotiate with the U.S."

Rowhani has not given any clear details on his advice for the current talks, which face pressure from factions in the Israel and the U.S. urging greater consideration of military options.

But Rowhani appears to favor the general contours of the reported French-backed deal for greater openness as the way to ease Western sanctions over Iran's nuclear efforts. The sanctions have slashed oil revenue and contributed to a spike in inflation. "If sanctions have any benefits, they will only benefit Israel," he said at the news conference.

He outlined "step by step" measures to reassure the West about Iran's nuclear ambitions. The West suspects that Iran is seeking a nuclear weapon. Iranian leaders, including Rowhani, insist Iran seeks reactors only for energy and medical applications.

Enriched uranium is used as fuel for energy and research reactors but it can be further boosted to make a nuclear warhead.

"The first step will be showing greater transparency. We are ready to show greater transparency and make clear that the Islamic Republic of Iran's actions are totally within international frameworks," he said. "The second step is promoting mutual confidence. We'll take measures in both fields. The first goal is that no new sanctions are imposed. Then, that the (existing) sanctions are reduced."

Rowhani, though, reaffirmed the positions that have contributed to the logjam in talks so far: Iran's insistence that Washington "should recognize all of Iran's rights, including the nuclear rights."

He further added that any hope for one-on-one dialogue with the U.S. depends on the improbable starting point already set out by the ruling clerics. "The Americans need to specify that they will never intervene in Iran's internal affairs," Rowhani said.

"It's not easy," he said. "There is an old wound. This wound could be treated through prudence. We will not seek increasing tensions. Wisdom requires that the two nations and the two governments look to the future."

On Syria, he said the ultimate responsibility to resolve the more than two-year-old civil war should be in the hands of the "Syrian people."

"We are opposed to foreign intervention," he said. "We hope peace and tranquility will return to Syria through cooperation with countries of the region and world."

Rowhani formally takes office in August. In the meantime, it appears Ahmadinejad's political foes could be plotting a payback, underscoring the often cutthroat nature of internal Iranian affairs.

Iran's official news agency said a criminal court summoned Ahmadinejad over a lawsuit filed by the country's parliament speaker and others.

The report gave no further details, but Ahmadinejad and the speaker, Ali Larijani, have waged political feuds for years. The court has set a November date for Ahmadinejad's appearance, it said.

___

Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-17-ML-Iran/id-5ac9d7915a494e218dd53dcccdaa57e0

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Divers begin Lake Michigan search for Griffin ship

ON LAKE MICHIGAN NEAR POVERTY ISLAND, Mich. (AP) ? Divers began opening an underwater pit Saturday at a remote site in northern Lake Michigan that they say could be the resting place of the Griffin, a ship commanded by the 17th century French explorer La Salle.

U.S. and French archaeologists examined sediment removed from a hole dug near a timber slab that expedition leader Steve Libert discovered wedged in the lakebed in 2001. They found a 15-inch slab of blackened wood that might have been a human-fashioned "cultural artifact," although more analysis will be required to determine whether it was part of a vessel, project manager Ken Vrana said.

Libert, who has spent about three decades searching for the Griffin (also known by its French equivalent Le Griffon), said he hoped that by Sunday, the excavation would reach what sonar readings indicate is a distinct shape beneath several feet of sediment. The object is over 40 feet long and about 18 feet wide ? dimensions similar to those the Griffin is believed to have had, Vrana said.

But he said it was too early to declare the site a shipwreck, let alone the object of their quest.

"Soon we will find out whether our assumption is correct or not," Vrana said aboard the Proud Maid, a 45-foot commercial fishing boat that ferried journalists and crew members to the search area near Poverty Island in Michigan waters north of the entrance to Green Bay. "We've got to get those test pits dug and hit (the) structure, because anything else is pure speculation."

After meeting with team members Saturday night, he told reporters that "within a couple of days we should know" whether a ship graveyard lies beneath the surface.

Although Libert and his associates have dived at the site numerous times and conducted several surveys with remote sensing equipment, they hadn't conducted archaeological excavations until receiving a permit from the Michigan Department of Natural Resources this month after years of legal squabbles. The agency claims ownership over all Great Lakes shipwrecks in the state's waters, although it acknowledges France would have rights to the Griffin because it was sailing under the authority of King Louis XIV.

Taking part in the dive Saturday were Michel L'Hour, director of the Department of Underwater Archaeological Research in the French Ministry of Culture and a noted authority on shipwrecks, and associate Olivia Hulot. The U.S. leaders said they hoped the visitors, with their knowledge of design and construction features of French ships from the 17th and 18th century, could help confirm whether the Griffin had been found.

"The Griffin is very important to the early history of America," L'Hour said in an interview before taking his first look at the site. "If this is the Griffin, it will teach us many things."

Rene Robert Cavelier de la Salle ordered the Griffin built near Niagara Falls in 1679 to support his quest for what was widely ? but erroneously ? believed to be a passageway to China and Japan. It was the first European-style vessel to traverse the upper Great Lakes, crossing Lake Erie and venturing northward to Lake Huron, then across Lake Michigan to the eastern shore of modern-day Wisconsin.

La Salle ordered the ship to return for more supplies and to deliver a load of furs, while he continued his journey by canoe. The Griffin was never heard from again. There are various theories about its fate, but none that have been proven. Libert, who spent years studying the writings of La Salle and a companion, believes it sank in a fierce storm only a few miles after setting sail.

Libert said Saturday the recovery of the slab of wood and prospects for reaching what may be the ship's hull shortly were promising signs.

"Right now I'm pretty excited, from what I know so far," he said, but added: "Scientific (proof) is 100 percent. It's not 99.9 percent."

___

Follow John Flesher on Twitter at http://twitter.com/JohnFlesher

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/divers-begin-lake-michigan-search-griffin-ship-224824646.html

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After opening gambit, Detroit manager's next move vexes creditors

By Nick Carey and Tom Hals

(Reuters) - Now that Detroit's emergency manager has laid out a tough road that could include a bankruptcy filing for the city, the bondholders, pension managers and others with a stake in the outcome are left to assess his next steps while seeking to minimize any possible losses.

Kevyn Orr faces a difficult task, for he must either coerce the financially troubled city's creditors into cutting a deal that would leave many with just pennies on the dollar, or file for Chapter 9 bankruptcy, where his powers would be greater but the likelihood of long, costly litigation far higher.

Rather than a corporate setting, the city's emergency manager is acting in a political realm where the interests of Detroit's citizens and even credit ratings throughout the state of Michigan may hang in the balance.

There was a forceful start to negotiations with debtholders at a Detroit hotel on Friday, with the city represented by Orr saying it would stop making payments on some of its $18.5 billion in debt, which would put it in default.

Orr also presented a proposal on Friday to creditors, bondholders, pension funds and union representatives, laying out his case for concessions from them in a plan that ran to 134 pages.

Orr told reporters on Friday there was a 50/50 chance of bankruptcy for Detroit, which would be a first for a major U.S. city. At the same time, he insisted this was "not a jaded effort just to go through the process to get to a bankruptcy filing."

The emergency manager's proposal went to great lengths to detail the city's financial ruin, declaring in a stark subheader: "THE CITY IS INSOLVENT" and cataloguing Detroit's disastrous record of keeping its citizens safe and its streetlights on.

Detroit, the center of the U.S. auto industry, is the poorest large city in the country, with more than a third of its residents living below the official government poverty line.

At a minimum, Orr's opening move could be seen as part of a checklist he needs to tick off in order to meet legal requirements needed to declare a bankruptcy of America's most troubled metropolis. But some restructuring experts see in Orr's approach an attempt to put together a pre-packaged bankruptcy, a strategy that has been adopted for Chapter 11 bankruptcies in the corporate world but never before used for a municipality seeking Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection.

"Kevyn Orr is a bankruptcy lawyer and he's going down a checklist of the things he needs to do," said Michael Sweet, an attorney at Fox Rothschild who helped the city of Richmond, California, restructure its finances to avoid bankruptcy. "He's keeping all the options on the table."

A pre-packaged bankruptcy occurs when an entity has negotiated a deal with creditors and other interested parties in advance, put it into written form and received enough votes from creditors to get a judge's approval - forcing it on objecting creditors. Pre-packaged plans greatly reduce uncertainty and legal fees.

Without a pre-packaged plan, Chapter 9 proceedings for the city of 700,000 could be lengthy, litigious and expensive, and cash-strapped Detroit would have to foot the bill. Proving insolvency and demonstrating a municipality's inability to pay its bills would be critical to filing for Chapter 9.

"He (Orr) will get a pre-packaged plan," said James McTevia of Michigan-based consulting firm McTevia & Associates. "But it will be contentious and it will cost a lot."

"Ultimately, given the size of Detroit, the scale of its problems and the number of issues involved, this could go all the way to the Supreme Court."

PRESSURE POINTS

Unlike many lawyers in the consensus-building world of bankruptcy, Orr earned his keep as a litigator and he led automaker Chrysler's fight in 2009 to get approval to close a quarter of its dealerships early in its bankruptcy. The Chrysler experience was a factor when Michigan Republican Governor Rick Snyder tapped Orr in March to fix Detroit's finances.

Those who have worked with Orr said he knew how to zero in on an adversary's pressure points and narrow their options. They cited his decision to make one presentation to all creditors on Friday.

"If you want to do it right, you get all creditors in the same room and you tell the story one time so there's no misunderstanding," said Pat O'Keefe, president of O'Keefe and Associates, a turnaround firm based in the Detroit suburbs.

O'Keefe added he expected Orr "will try to get some pre-negotiation done with creditors, then use Chapter 9 to implement his plan." He noted that Orr's warning on Friday to reporters that Detroit should know "within the next 30 days or so" if it can avoid bankruptcy could serve as one more proof of "good faith" if he does file for Chapter 9.

Pre-packaged bankruptcy using Chapter 11 was pioneered by Jay Goffman of law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom in New York. He said it could work for municipalities.

"Whether it is a city or state or county, there's no reason that you can't get smart people together, figure out the right solutions from a business standpoint and essentially prepack the solution," Goffman said.

But getting everyone on board for a pre-packaged plan is easier said than done, said Douglas Bernstein, a bankruptcy attorney at Plunkett Cooney in the Detroit area.

"When it comes to a pre-packaged plan, the big question is whether he (Orr) would have enough acceptance going into court," he said. "He would need sufficient votes from all the creditor classes and that will not be easy."

One problem is that Detroit's creditors or stakeholders have different priorities. The main areas of uncertainty surround its unions and pension funds, which may not have much bargaining room and may feel their best chance lies in bankruptcy proceedings rather than a negotiated pre-packaged deal.

"It's quite possible that we will see infighting between Detroit's creditors," said John Pottow, a University of Michigan law professor who specializes in bankruptcy.

'POWERFUL' TOOL

Orr has options available to him that can give him leverage over the competing groups. If he goes to bankruptcy court as the sole representative of Detroit, experts say he would have more options and power, which he alluded to publicly last week.

"I have a very powerful statute," Orr said Monday. "I have an even more powerful Chapter 9. I don't want to use it, but I am going to accomplish this job. That will happen."

Orr would be able to drag recalcitrant creditors into court. While no one can force Detroit to sell assets involuntarily in bankruptcy, he can sell them voluntarily.

Much has also been made of a clause in Michigan's constitution that specifically protects pensions and retirement benefits, and it is unclear how that provision would be treated in a federal bankruptcy.

Fox Rothschild's Sweet said a judge would have to "determine whether the 10th Amendment (of the U.S. Constitution) trumps the notion that federal law is supreme." The amendment states that powers not delegated to the federal government by the Constitution or prohibited to the states are reserved for the states or the people.

"The last thing (union pension funds) may want is for a judge to rule on that," he said. "Because if the judge ruled against them, it would open the floodgates" for similar cases.

Time is also of the essence, as Detroit's default could hurt Michigan along with other municipalities in the state and make them "suffer higher interest costs and more difficulty borrowing," Richard Larkin, senior vice president at investment firm HJ Sims, wrote in a note on Friday.

The longer a deal takes, the more likely Chapter 9 becomes, the University of Michigan's Pottow said, as that will be an indication of how much resistance Orr faces from stakeholders.

"My heart says that Kevyn Orr will be able to get everyone around a table and hammer out a deal," Pottow said. "But my brain says that he is going to have no choice but to file" for Chapter 9.

(Additional reporting by Karen Pierog, Bernie Woodall, Steve Neavling and Deepa Seetharaman; Editing by David Greising, Mary Milliken and Peter Cooney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/opening-gambit-detroit-managers-next-move-vexes-creditors-120744872.html

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School of Internet Marketing Instructor on The Marketplace Fairness ...

Jonathan Goodman Discussed Internet Taxation via introduction of the Marketplace Fairness Act

JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY (June 14th, 2013) (PRWEB) June 15, 2013

As a controversial bill makes its way through the Senate and House with the potential to go before the President, The Marketplace Fairness Act has stirred up opinions both for and against the bill. Jonathan Goodman, Professor of School of Internet Marketing and President of Halyard Consulting, discussed the act, what it is and its history on his weekly podcast to help listeners understand how the bill would affect them.

?Amazon is for it, Senators are for it, it seems like most of consumers are okay with it ? in fact it might be a benefit to them in the end?. ? Jonathan Goodman

The Marketplace Fairness Act would require online businesses to charge sales tax to all customers who purchased from them. Currently, taxation is limited to people who live in the same state as where the business is located. Online companies have differing views of the act, according to Goodman. Amazon is a supporter while eBay is opposed. It is a complex situation for both businesses and consumers who are used to not paying taxes online.

The tax rate would be based on the state where the consumer lives and could be either higher or lower than where the company is based. Goodman also discussed how it would affect affiliate marketers who might easily be located in another state than either the customer or the business. This podcast helps to clear up some confusion or questions people may have about The Marketplace Fairness Act and allows them to determine if they support or oppose it.

To listen to the podcast, please visit:
http://www.spreaker.com/user/jonathangoodman/the_marketplace_fairness_act

About The School of Internet Marketing

The School of Internet Marketing allows business owners to take control of their web presence in order to develop new leads and customers for just $47 per month. The School works to empower business owners with the understanding that a little education can go a long way. It offers a variety of 100% web-based courses for small business owners wanting to learn how to market their business online. Visit http://www.theschoolofinternetmarketing.com to learn more.

About Jonathan Goodman

Jonathan Goodman is a professor at The School of Internet Marketing and the President of Halyard Consulting. He started his career over 20 years ago at the dawn of the Internet age producing websites for Fortune 500 companies. He holds an MBA, an MS, and a BFA. Halyard Consulting is an Internet marketing firm, exclusively focused on WordPress development and search optimization. Jonathan is also the author of the well-received book The World of Internet Marketing and has a weekly podcast by the same name.

###

Contacts:
James Martell, VP Business Development
Clearbrook Web Services, Inc./ The School of Internet Marketing
Phone: (604) 535-6352
Email: james(at)theschoolofinternetmarketing(dot)com

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2013/6/prweb10837359.htm

Source: http://www.virtual-strategy.com/2013/06/15/school-internet-marketing-instructor-marketplace-fairness-act

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Sunday, June 16, 2013

AT&T GoPhone plans to support LTE, drop most data add-ons on June 21st

Samsung Galaxy Express

AT&T hinted that it was shaking up its GoPhone plans later this month, and it's making good on its word. As of June 21st, customers using the prepaid service will have access to the same LTE service as their subscription peers; AT&T will mark the occasion by selling the Samsung Galaxy Express to GoPhone users at $250 off-contract. The simplified smartphone plans are here as well, although they're better than previously expected. The carrier is dropping all data add-ons except for the $5 / 50MB pack, which is only available for a $25 monthly tier with 250 voice minutes and unlimited messaging. However, it will only cost $40 a month for a plan with 200MB of data and 500 minutes, and a $60 plan will offer 2GB of data with unlimited voice. AT&T's new strategy won't appease some data lovers, but those trying to avoid long contracts and harsh upgrade policies should be happy.

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Source: AT&T

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/FPIBz5nICM4/

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Thursday, June 6, 2013

Malian army clashes with Tuareg rebels near Anefis

(AP) ? The Malian military was clashing on Wednesday with rebels from the National Movement for the Liberation of the Azawad, or NMLA, near the village of Anefis, 113 kilometers (70 miles) south of the rebels' base in the provincial capital of Kidal, local officials said.

It marked the first time the Malian army has fought the NMLA since the rebel group invaded northern Mali last year, forcing the military to withdraw from more than half of the country's territory, in a humiliating blow that left the armed forces in tatters. The NMLA, led by Tuaregs who have long claimed that the central government has marginalized and ignored their traditionally nomadic people, briefly declared independence before being chased out by a trio of al-Qaida-linked groups. The jihadists ruled Mali's north for nearly 10 months until January, when France launched a military intervention to liberate the occupied territory.

"Since 6:30 a.m. they are exchanging fire with heavy weapons," said the mayor of Anefis, Izga Ag Sidi, who was reached by telephone on Wednesday morning. "We are hearing the sound of artillery explosions. For the moment, they appear to be exchanging fire from a distance."

The mayor said that the fighting was taking place around 15 kilometers (9 miles) west of the village, a desolate area of white sand in a region that sits at the base of the vast Sahara desert.

The NMLA said the Malian military had opened fire on them, and had ordered its forces to leave Anefis in order to avoid civilian casualties.

"A convoy of at least 300 (Malian) army vehicles with armored personnel carriers arrived last night. We ordered our men to leave Anefis in order to make sure that the battle would take place outside of the town in order to spare the lives of the population of Anefis," said NMLA leader Ibrahim Ag Mohamed Assaleh.

A spokesman for the Malian military confirmed that the combat was continuing. "Yes, there is an operation by our forces that is ongoing in this zone since yesterday night, but I am not yet able to provide any more information," said Capt. Modibo Traore.

The NMLA invaded northern Mali in March 2012 and briefly declared the birth of a new Tuareg nation before being chased out by al-Qaida-linked forces, including al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb which quickly took over a territory the size of Afghanistan, imposing strict Islamic law, known as Shariah. When they were flushed out in January and February by French forces, the Malian military was able to return to two of the three largest cities in the north ? Timbuktu and Gao.

In a move that has created a growing divide between Mali and France, French forces were able to liberate the city of Kidal, but they stood by and did not intervene when a battalion of NMLA fighters returned to their former stronghold, quickly setting up a shadow administration, including their own governor. Kidal is now a de facto Tuareg state.

For weeks, the Malian military has been inching up towards Kidal, never getting any closer than Anefis. The NMLA has said they will go to war with the Malian army if they try to take Kidal.

___

Associated Press writer Rukmini Callimachi contributed to this report from Dakar, Senegal.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-05-Mali-Tuareg%20Rebels/id-4bd00fa37b794904a85afafa9cfc757c

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Wednesday, June 5, 2013

App Developers UK: Google Glass Gets HDR Photography & Voice Powered Photo Captions

Posted by: Thomas / Jun 05, 2013 / Categorised as: Apps Development

Steve Martin - Google GlassSo if you are one of the privileged consumers fortunate enough to own a pair of Google Glass, there?s some positive news in store. Google has previously promised to update Glass every month, an intriguing and ambitious proposition for app developers and consumers alike. True to their word, Google has recently released an update for Glass that includes HDR photography capabilities and voice powered photo captioning.

Google Glass

Google Glass App DevelopersThe chances are you?re not one of the lucky people to own a set of Google Glass. Even if you?re equipped with the $1500 required to purchase a developer edition of Google Glass, actually having an opportunity to buy them is something afforded to the elite of silicone valley. Unless you?re Mark Zuckerberg or Bono, you?re probably not eligible to join the Google Glass club right now.

So these are two very important photo-centric capabilities now firmly associated with Google Glass. Akin to something from Robocop or a Terminator movie, HDR photography and on-the-fly voice activated photo captions are interesting innovations and perhaps a signal to symbolise where Google see the Glass technology going in the future.

HDR Photography on Google Glass

For those of you unfamiliar with HDR photo technology, it stands for ?High Dynamic Range? and is probably a feature of your existing smartphone?s in-built camera capabilities. It may be something you?ve never considered, but HDR mode enables your smartphone (this tech comes as standard in iPhone?s and most Android devices) to take multiple photos in very rapid succession at multiple exposure levels. The clever part is that HDR then combines all of those images and merges them together to create one photo with the optimal level of brightness.

HDR Image Google Glass

So this is really cool because it means if you?re using Google Glass in an area where lighting sucks, Glass will intelligently acknowledge that and boost the exposure level of your image accordingly. It also means if you?re pointing your Google Glass anywhere near the sun, that your photos won?t look like a complete wash-out.

Voice Activated Google Glass

Google Glass App usesThe update also includes on-the-fly voice activated photo captioning. Whilst this is unlikely to rock your world in a significant manner, it?s still quite cool. This enables you to quickly and easily add context to the images that you capture using Google Glass. So you simply tap to select the appropriate caption, speak your desired caption, confirm your caption and then share it to the world.

Source: http://waracle.net/app-developers-uk-google-glass-gets-hdr-photography-voice-powered-photo-captions/

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