Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Mike Warren > Atlanta Real Estate Investors Alliance (Atlanta REIA)

Mike WarrenMike Warren is a nationally known author, investor, and instructor specializing in investing in judgments and liens which are secured by real estate. Mr. Warren holds a double MBA in real estate and finance and is CEO of a diversified investment and consulting firm.

Mr. Warren started in the business of collecting judgments and liens many years ago when he was presented with the opportunity to buy a judgment attached to an investment property for $1,000. What resulted would forever change his financial future. He very quickly was able to collect on the judgment making an astounding $7500 profit without the assistance of an attorney! This simple investment opened the doors to a wealth of opportunities.

Mike Warren is a real estate investor who is an expert in the field of judgments & paper investing. Mike is the founder of a website dedicated to teaching wealth principles one student at a time. Mr. Warren has authored several books and has appeared on radio and TV. He speaks to both small and large groups internationally and throughout the United States. Mr. Warren is also co-host of the popular radio show ?Millionaire Smackdown?.

Over the past 15 years, Mike has been a real estate speaker and has spoken to real estate associations, landlording groups, investment clubs and been on stage with some of the biggest names in the business like Donald Trump, Rudy Giuliani, Robert Kiyosaki, Sir Richard Branson and many more.

Mr. Warren has personally taught thousands of individual investors, real estate agents and mortgage brokers how to profit from the unique world of judgments and liens and paper investing. He holds specialized hands-on intensive three day ?Bootcamps? which teach investors advanced strategies of making money from varying types of bad-debts.

Source: http://atlantareia.com/biographies/mike-warren/

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Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Prostitution arrests rock Maine tourist town

KENNEBUNK, Maine (AP) ? This upscale southern Maine town is known for its ocean beaches, old sea captains' mansions and the neighboring town of Kennebunkport, home to the Bush family summer compound.

But the talk of the town these days is the arrest of a local fitness instructor who's been charged with running a prostitution business out of her Zumba dance studio and secretly videotaping her encounters. Now the town is on the edge of its seat, waiting for the revelation of which of their friends and neighbors are among her more than 100 alleged johns.

"There's still some of that puritanical New England left around," said Will Bradford, who owns a copy shop in town. "There are places in the world that would laugh at this."

Alexis Wright, 29, was dressed conservatively in a jacket, blouse and slacks as she pleaded not guilty Tuesday in Portland to 106 counts of prostitution, violation of privacy, tax evasion and other charges for allegedly providing sex for money at her fitness studio and a nearby one-room office she rented. The man police say was her business partner, 57-year-old Mark Strong Sr., pleaded not guilty to 59 counts of promotion of prostitution and violation of privacy.

Prosecutors haven't detailed why Wright would have been videotaping her encounters. But they gathered more than 100 hours of video and nearly 14,000 screen shots from seized computers, Deputy District Attorney Justina McGettigan said.

"The state's in over its head. This case isn't ready for prosecution," Daniel Lilly, Strong's lawyer, said at the hearing.

Wright's lawyer, Sarah Churchill, has declined to comment, and the defendants did not speak as they left the hearing. Wright, who lives in the nearby community of Wells and is the single mother of a young son, and Strong are free on personal recognizance.

Police have begun issuing summons to Wright's customers and will release the names in the weeks ahead. Townspeople say they've heard that lawyers, doctors, law enforcement officials, a television personality and other well-known people in town are included in a detailed clientele list police found.

A lot of people would rather not see the names made public because it will hurt families, children and careers, said Dan Breton, the owner of a convenience store and deli.

"I think most of my customers were shocked this was going on," Breton said. "But any time something like that happens, people get curious. It's almost like the newspapers are teasing us that there are prominent names on the list. But maybe it'll be nothing."

The superintendent of schools issued a memo to teachers and staff last week, instructing them to be on the lookout for students who have relatives on the list of names and may be teased or have trouble coping.

Wright opened her Pura Vida fitness studio teaching Zumba, a Latin-inspired fitness program that combines aerobics and dance, in 2010 about a block from the downtown business district in this town of about 10,000 people 25 miles south of Portland, the state's largest city. She later rented a one-room office across the street, above a hair salon and a flower store.

That same year, an anonymous blog appeared accusing Wright of not being the sweet, friendly Zumba instructor she portrayed herself to be. "She's living a double life and is a porn star. She may be a prostitute for all I know," the first blog entry reads.

Police began investigating after hearing reports of cars coming to the studio and the office at all hours of the day and night and men going in for a half-hour or hour at a time, according to a police affidavit released when Strong, of Thomaston, was arrested in July.

The landlord who rented the office space to Wright told investigators one of his tenants sometimes heard "moaning and groaning" coming from Wright's office, the affidavit says.

When the landlord checked the office himself, he found a massage table and a video camera set up on a tripod. He told police he later found an online porn video of Wright that was recorded in the office, which he recognized by the walls, the floor and the window.

When police raided the studio and office in February, they seized electronic ledgers of sexual acts, video recordings and records of clients and the sexual acts performed by Wright, according to the affidavit. Judging by what they found, police said, Wright's sexual activities generated as much as $150,000.

Investigators said there was both a "business and personal" connection between Strong and the activity at the studio. Video footage showed Wright and Strong having sex, according to the affidavit.

Bee Nguyen, who rented the studio space to Wright and Strong, said Tuesday he often saw cars pulling up to the back of the studio and men going in but didn't think anything of it.

"She had a boyfriend," said Nguyen, adding that Wright and Strong owe him about $10,000 in back rent.

It wasn't clear whether Wright still has custody of her son; the agency that oversees child welfare says it can't comment.

It wouldn't be surprising to hear of a prostitution operation with clients coming and going day and night in a big city, residents say ? but not in Kennebunk, a tourist town with traditional white-steeple churches, tree-lined streets and quaint bed-and-breakfasts.

"Still, the fact that it's happening in Kennebunk shows we're not above it all," Greg Patterson said while getting a haircut at a downtown barber shop.

___

Associated Press writer David Sharp in Portland contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/prostitution-arrests-rock-maine-tourist-town-215330343.html

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Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Turkish president says "worst case" unfolding in Syria

GUVECCI, Turkey (Reuters) - Turkish President Abdullah Gul said on Monday the "worst-case scenarios" were now playing out in Syria and Turkey would do everything necessary to protect itself, as its army fired back for a sixth day after a shell from Syria flew over the border.

Gul said the violence in Turkey's southern neighbor, where a revolt against President Bashar al-Assad has evolved into a civil war that threatens to draw in regional powers, could not go on indefinitely and Assad's fall was inevitable.

"The worst-case scenarios are taking place right now in Syria ... Our government is in constant consultation with the Turkish military. Whatever is needed is being done immediately as you see, and it will continue to be done," Gul said.

"There will be a change, a transition sooner or later ... It is a must for the international community to take effective action before Syria turns into a bigger wreck and further blood is shed, that is our main wish," he told reporters in Ankara.

Turkey's armed forces have bolstered their presence along the 900-km (560-mile) border with Syria in recent days and have been responding in kind to gunfire and shelling spilling across from the south, where Assad's forces have been battling rebels who control swathes of territory.

Turkey's Chief of Staff, General Necdet Ozel, travelled to the southern city of Adana to inspect the region patrolled by Turkey's 2nd Army, which protects the border with Syria, the military said on its website.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the escalation of the conflict along the Turkey-Syria border, as well as the impact of the crisis on Lebanon, were "extremely dangerous".

"The situation in Syria has dramatically worsened. It is posing serious risks to the stability of Syria's neighbors and the entire region," he told a conference in Strasbourg, France.

Ban said U.N. and Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi would be heading back to the region this week.

MILITARY MOVEMENTS

The exchanges with Turkey mark the most serious cross-border violence in Syria's revolt against Assad, which began in March last year with peaceful protests for reform and has evolved into a civil war with sectarian overtones.

"From now on, every attack on us will be responded to immediately. Every attack that targets our sovereignty, our security of life and property will find its response," Turkish government spokesman Bulent Arinc said after a cabinet meeting.

Parliament last week authorized the deployment of Turkish troops beyond its borders although government officials said the move was meant as a deterrent rather than a "war mandate".

"Turkey will decide itself when the situation necessitates acts mentioned in the motion the parliament passed last week. Nobody should think war will follow a parliament approval ... but we are more sensitive about our independence and sovereignty than most countries," Arinc said.

Turkey's Dogan news agency said some 25 warplanes had been sent to a military base in Diyarbakir, the largest city in the southeast, and reported military sources as saying this was in connection with Syria and cross-border anti-terror operations.

It said a large number of F-16 fighter planes landed at the base on Monday afternoon. Local sources confirmed there was heightened activity at the base but said this was related to operations against Kurdish militant bases in northern Iraq, not Syria.

Separately, a convoy of military vehicles, including tanks loaded on trucks, travelled to the town of Akcakale on Monday to be deployed on the border, Dogan reported.

Fighting further inside Syria also intensified on Monday.

Syrian government forces advanced for the first time in months into the rebel-held Khalidiya district in the besieged central city of Homs.

"They have occupied buildings that we were stationed in and we had to evacuate," a rebel fighter told Reuters by Skype.

Skirmishes on the Syrian side of the border have been escalating and it is unclear who fired the shells that have crossed into Turkey.

Damascus has said it fired into Turkey accidentally, but has failed to live up to pledges made last week, after a Syrian shell killed five civilians in Akcakale, to ensure no more ordnance flies across the border.

Turkey launched its latest retaliatory strike on Monday after a mortar bomb fired from Syria landed in countryside in the Turkish province of Hatay some 150-200 m (yards) inside the district of Hacipasa, a Turkish official told Reuters.

TRUCKS PATROLLING

Further east, Syrian rebel sources in Raqqa province, which borders Akcakale, said they had seen five Turkish army trucks full of soldiers patrolling the border.

NATO member Turkey was once an ally of Assad's but turned against him after his violent response to the uprising, in which activists say 30,000 people have died.

Turkey has nearly 100,000 Syrian refugees in camps on its territory, has given sanctuary to rebel leaders and has led calls for Assad to quit. Its armed forces are far larger than Syria's.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said at the weekend that a potential leader in an interim Syrian government could be Vice-President Farouq al-Shara.

Reports in August said Shara, a former foreign minister who was appointed vice president six years ago, had tried to defect to neighboring Jordan, but Syrian state media subsequently said he had never considered leaving.

"The opposition is inclined to accept these names. Farouq al-Shara has the ability to understand the system of the last 20 to 30 years," Davutoglu told the state broadcaster TRT.

"Farouq al-Shara did not get involved in the recent incidents, the massacre, in a very wise and conscientious attitude. But perhaps there is nobody who knows the system better than al-Shara."

(Reporting by John Irish in Paris, Mert Ozkan in Ankara, Daren Butler in Istanbul and Mariam Karouny in Beirut; Writing by Nick Tattersall; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/turkey-returns-fire-mortar-bomb-strike-syria-official-130429199.html

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Write and Speak, Before Someone Else Does - Nur Soliman ...

Guest Writers
writersblock

Published on October 9th, 2012 | by Caesar (Kuwait Music)

By Nur Soliman

Near the end of summer, Caesar put up a post on why there?aren?t?so many female participants up on Kuwait-Music, or other places in the local online cultural space. This got me thinking about all those talented, thoughtful women I knew who were quieter than they should be, but not just them ? I thought about just about everyone else, that silent, intelligent reader who?doesn?t?comment on pages, that guy in the audience who really dug (or hated) that performance he went to, but?didn?t?tell anyone, or that musician who really wanted to share her insights on the local classical scene but?didn?t?think it was worth it: everyone who?didn?t?speak.

Because I work and have a diminishing grasp on my social life, I forgot all about that until the fall came back. The cultural season returns while the weather toys with our affections, and goes from breezy mornings and pleasant, cool evenings in the week to humid, warm weekends. Along with the return of fall television and the curious appearance of thick cable-knit sweaters in many stores (when all I still really need is a thin shirt to beat the heat), along with the beginning of the school year and the end of summer, art galleries start putting up work for opening shows, local bands start advertising their gigs around town, and visiting chamber ensembles start flying in for concerts.

This is the time of year when I start hunting around the house for any blank yellow notepads left over from before the summer which have been collecting dust, clearing out the photos in my camera, all ready for the season and for my reviews. Every year, I probably write notes for about sixty or more various events ? this includes lectures, exhibitions, conferences, concerts, and other performances. I write in those notepads, or in little Moleskines that fit in the palm of my (outstretched) hand so I can write in the dark (during concerts), or in the empty margins of concert programmes or exhibition leaflets. And then I go home and try and figure out what I was writing this whole time, trying to relive those movements of Cesar Franck, or to remember the precise shade of blue in that painting.

??????????????? Out of those sixty or seventy collections of notes, scribbles, sketches, and out of the thousands of photos I take, about twenty articles are completed and written (if I can make deadlines or dedicate enough evenings after work to finish them while the event is still relevant). And out of those twenty articles, I will only send out perhaps ten, and only three or four will be published. I have found amazingly supportive patrons in Kuwait-Music and a few others, but it is hard to say the same of other publishers who I have to persuade to flirt with the idea of publishing reviews in the first place.

??????????????? So why do I write reviews that not many people read? Why do I write reviews for publishers that continue to sound perplexed as to why I?ve submitted these strange pieces of writing for them to squeeze into a few columns? Why do I apologetically smile at staff photographers of newspapers while I position myself at an interesting angle in front of a sculpture or canvas with my tiny little silver Panasonic while they are trying to get the more important shots of guests, or keep trying to alter my camera settings to capture the motions of the musicians in mid-performance, spotlit in the dark? Why do I write when I?m not sure that anyone would want to read about a concert that?s happened, not one that?s going to happen?

I don?t write because I want to cover events simply because they happened. I don?t write re????? views because they are press releases for after the fact. I don?t write reviews because I hope that the performers (or patrons) think favourably of me. I don?t write because I can use the marketing, becoming a favourite of those who perform (or exhibit) and so on, currying favour and writing about my friends in ways that can only flatter them. Don?t get me wrong, I usually try and make the most of all events I go to (unless they were a nightmare, in which case I write scathing reviews that sadly ? or maybe fortunately ? are never published) because I genuinely want to see what?s positive about these efforts. But I want to write truthfully, and recapture the entire experience as it was, and I want to share what I thought of the experience in how it contributes to the meaning of culture and genuine artistic activity in Kuwait.

? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?Most importantly though, I write because I care. I write because I love music, and I love the arts and culture. And I know other people do. I may not know these people, and they sure don?t know me, but I need to write and I want to articulate this experience to others.

??????????????? My angle may be quite different to yours. I?m a woman (okay, a girl), I no longer play any instruments, I have my own set of personal beliefs that may be different to yours, I?m an English Literature major and love Star Wars, the Hobbit, and Dungeons & Dragons as much as the next guy, and prefer watching British television. Most of what I write is about classic music, both Western and Eastern, as well as jazz, traditional music, and indie music. I can listen to Palestrina or Benny Goodman all day, but I?m not into B. B. King or Herbie Hancock. I don?t listen to Madonna or Usher, but I listen to Oasis and U2. I wade into dangerously hipster and only-foreign-films-please territory here, but I love Simon & Garfunkel, Noah & The Whale, and George Brassens, as well as traditional Persian, Chinese, and Central Asian music. So when I conclude that the only Arabic music I listen to is Mustafa Said or Abdelwahab, Um Kulthoum and Fairuz, you can see where I?m coming from! Or maybe you can?t.

??????????????? But that?s why I want YOU to write! I have my own opinions that I try and frame in ways that can reach the biggest audience and include as many of us as we can, by trying to invite you to be part of that experience, but I?m just me, and I want to hear what YOU think, what all these silent audience members really thought, and maybe told their family and friends about when they got home that night! Will your opinion change what goes on in the public performance sphere? I doubt it, but that doesn?t undermine the importance of writing and getting your voice somewhere out there, in freshly-printed ink in a magazine or on the pages of Kuwait-Music or your own blog, or even just commenting on blog posts and status updates ? even those comments can mean a lot, if you write them with genuine, honest, and respectful intention and want to join this conversation to help.

??????????????? Speaking means a conversation can be initiated, and it keeps our participation and engagement in this scene alive when we write exactly what we think of a performance. Did you think the performance was mediocre? Say so, but tell us why! Did you have a fantastic evening? We all need to hear it, the musicians especially. Whatever you think, get it out there and let?s see how much we all have in common.

Tags: Nur Soliman, writers


About the Author

Caesar (Kuwait Music) Caesar is the Founder and Chief Ideas Officer of Kuwait Music. A passionate musician and week nerd, Caesar spends most of his time thinking about and executing plans that connect these 2 skills together. Follow Caesar at the below links: Google+


Source: http://kuwait-music.com/community-2/guest-writer-features/nur-soliman/2012/10/write-and-speak-before-someone-else-does-nur-soliman-exclusive

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What you'll see during supersonic skydive

FILE - In this Thursday, March 15, 2012 photo provided by Red Bull Stratos, Felix Baumgartner prepares to jump during the first manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos over Roswell, N.M. On Monday, Oct. 8, 2012 over New Mexico, Baumgartner will attempt to jump higher and faster in a free fall than anyone ever before and become the first skydiver to break the sound barrier. (AP Photo/Red Bull Stratos, Jay Nemeth)

FILE - In this Thursday, March 15, 2012 photo provided by Red Bull Stratos, Felix Baumgartner prepares to jump during the first manned test flight for Red Bull Stratos over Roswell, N.M. On Monday, Oct. 8, 2012 over New Mexico, Baumgartner will attempt to jump higher and faster in a free fall than anyone ever before and become the first skydiver to break the sound barrier. (AP Photo/Red Bull Stratos, Jay Nemeth)

(AP) ? When Felix Baumgartner makes his 23-mile supersonic skydive over southeastern New Mexico Tuesday morning, more than two dozen high-definition and high-resolution digital cameras will be recording the event. Some views will be streamed live, but with a 20-second delay.

WHAT WILL YOU SEE?

Video and still cameras attached to the capsule will record his jump. Cameras on his pressure suit, a helicopter and ground-based tracking system will capture his descent.

HOW MANY CAMERAS?

Some 30 video and still cameras in total, including five attached to the thighs and chest of his pressure suit.

WILL THE FEED BE LIVE?

Organizers of the Red Bull-sponsored event are promising a live feed through their web site, http://www.redbullstratos.com/ live from all cameras except those on Baumgartner's body. But organizers said there will be a 20-second delay in their broadcast of footage in case of a tragic accident.

WHAT COULD GO WRONG?

The balloon could rip. Problems with his pressure suit could cause a gruesome death.

WHEN DOES IT START?

The live feed is set to begin at 6:30 a.m. MDT/8:30 a.m. EDT.

WHEN IS LAUNCH?

Approximate launch is 6:57 a.m. MDT/8:57 a.m. EDT, weather permitting.

HOW LONG WILL IT TAKE?

The ascent could take up to three hours. He is expected to land between 10-10:30 a.m. MDT/12-12:30 p.m. EDT.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2012-10-08-Supersonic%20Skydiver-Cameras-Glance/id-05e1a01834b64bb092a0f04aad96bb9c

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Breast cancer survivor shares her story | WLFI - Lafayette, Indiana

LAFAYETTE, Ind. (WLFI) - Jamie Davis is a beautician and salon manager of Sport Clips in Lafayette. She's also a breast cancer survivor. She was diagnosed in May 2009 when she sought help through the YWCA Women's Cancer Program . The program serves uninsured and under-insured women in 23 counties, including Tippecanoe County.

"I was taking a shower and I felt a really big lump in my breast," Davis said.

Davis said she knew she needed to get checked out but there was just one problem:

"I didn't have health insurance."

Davis mentioned the lump to one of her clients and that's when his wife called her up and told her about the YWCA Women's Cancer Program. Davis received a mammogram and a biopsy and that's when she got the news she'd been dreading.

"She told me I tested positive for breast cancer," Davis said.

From then on, life moved pretty fast. Less than a month after her diagnosis, she had a bilateral mastectomy. Davis' story does have a happy ending. She survived her battle and she credits the YWCA for helping her at every turn.

She was assigned a patient navigator named Sue who attended every doctor visit, every screening and treatment appoint.

"She was like my mentor," recalled Davis.

"I could've never done it without her."

Now Jamie is taking stock of all she's thankful for. She is thankful to be around for the birth of her grandson. She's happy to be around for her daughter's wedding. She's also grateful the YWCA was around for women like her.?? ?
?? ?
"Now it's my job to let everybody know."

Davis is sharing her story and helping the Women's Cancer Program raise funds to help other women. Sunday, October 7th, Sport Clips held a cut-a-thon with 100 percent of the proceeds benefiting the YWCA Women's Cancer Program.

"My mom got her first mammogram at 60 and she went through the Y," said a proud Davis.

Davis hopes other women will follow her lead so there can be more stories with happy endings like hers.

If you are uninsured or if your insurance doesn't cover the cost of preventative cancer screenings like a pap test or mammogram, contact the YWCA Women's Cancer Program to see if you qualify for free assistance.

Source: http://www.wlfi.com/dpp/news/local/breast-cancer-survivor-shares-her-story

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Scientists discover gene 'bursting' plays key role in protein production

ScienceDaily (Oct. 8, 2012) ? Scientists at the Gladstone Institutes have mapped the precise frequency by which genes get turned on across the human genome, providing new insight into the most fundamental of cellular processes -- and revealing new clues as to what happens when this process goes awry.

In a study being published this week online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Gladstone Investigator Leor Weinberger, PhD, and his research team describe how a gene's on-and-off switching -- called "bursting" -- is the predominant method by which genes make proteins. By gaining an understanding of this underlying mechanism, this discovery has the potential to vastly help researchers learn what happens at the molecular level when this mechanism is disrupted -- such as in cancer or when exposed to a particular drug.

The manufacture, or synthesis, of proteins takes place inside every cell. DNA and genes -- which house the instructions for making proteins -- are stored within the nucleus of each cell. When a gene is switched on, those instructions are transcribed as a copy onto RNA, another type of genetic material that then directs the protein synthesis. Proteins perform a variety of functions within the cell -- from the breaking down and digesting fats to resisting foreign invaders, such as bacteria or viruses. The timing and frequency with which a particular protein is synthesized is crucial to maintaining the health of the cell.

"Much like flicking on a light switch, genes get 'switched on' at specific intervals to initiate the fundamental biological process of protein synthesis," said Dr. Weinberger, who is also an associate professor at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), with which Gladstone is affiliated. "Until recently, the process was thought to be continuous -- once a gene is switched on, it stays on, churning out protein products at a steady pace like a garden hose. But recently, some studies have suggested the opposite -- that DNA produces RNA molecules in rapid-fire 'staccato' bursts. We decided to investigate how common this rapid-fire bursting was across the genome."

In laboratory experiments, Dr. Weinberger and his team inserted a green fluorescent protein, or "vector," into the DNA of Jurkat T lymphocytes -- a type of white blood cell that helps maintain a healthy human immune system. From this they generated new cells in which the vector was integrated into any one of thousands of gene segments -- with each segment glowing green when it was activated, or "switched on." This allowed the researchers to see exactly how gene activation occurred across the entire human genome.

"Our analysis reveals support for the "bursting" hypothesis -- the genes acted as a sort of strobe light -- transcribing RNA in rapid-fire bursts," said Roy Dar, PhD, a Gladstone postdoctoral fellow and one of the paper's lead authors. "We observed that the bursting frequency increases until, over time, it reaches a particular threshold. At that point higher protein levels are reached by increasing the size of the bursts, eventually coming to a halt when no more protein product is needed. These results are a huge step towards understanding the basic molecular mechanism behind gene regulation."

"Dr. Weinberger and colleagues have shown that there is a single rule governing the behavior of all genes in the genome. Their findings in human cells complement and extend similar findings made recently in other organisms," said Arjun Raj, PhD, assistant professor of bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania and an expert in imaging single molecules within cells.

The team believes that this new-found understanding of this fundamental biological process -- that genomic bursts account for the majority of instances of protein production -- holds clues to discovering how the disruption of these bursts could be harmful.

"For example, in certain cancers, genes may be switched on at the wrong times, eventually leading to the formation of tumors," said Brandon Razooky, a Gladstone and UCSF graduate student and the paper's other lead author. "This is also a good example of how the basic science being performed here at Gladstone provides a solid foundation with which to prevent, treat and ultimately cure some of the world's most devastating diseases."

Michael Simpson, PhD, from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, is also a senior author on this paper. Funding came from a variety of sources, including the NIH Director's Common Fund Program (through the NIH Director's New Innovator Award Program), the National Science Foundation's Graduate Research Fellowship Program, the US Department of Energy, the Pew Scholars Program in the Biomedical Sciences, and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/Zvk-vMQeZso/121008161848.htm

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Monday, October 1, 2012

Amazon Kindle Paperwhite review

Amazon Kindle Paperwhite review

If you had told us at roughly this time last year that the e-reader race would be heating up going into the 2012 holiday season, we would have disagreed. If anything, 2011 seemed like the beginning of the end. Spurred on by the tablet explosion, companies like Amazon, Barnes & Noble and even Kobo were looking toward that space for inspiration, introducing flagship devices on which reading was just one of many features. Heck, even the readers themselves started to look more tablet-like, with many abandoning of physical keyboards in favor of infrared touchscreens.

But here we are at the end of September, and this product category has never been more exciting. Back in May, Barnes & Noble captured our hearts and midnight reading marathons with the Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight, a wordy name for a great little device that made reading in bed at night a little easier. (A problem, according to Barnes & Noble, that was tearing the country's families apart.) But don't let it be said that Amazon doesn't believe in the American family. Earlier this month, the company launched the Kindle Paperwhite, the latest addition to a product lineup that has more or less become synonymous with the term "e-reader."

At that launch event, CEO Jeff Bezos described the four years of R&D that went into the front light technology powering that bright screen. It was clear from our hands-on time with the device that, although Amazon is placing extra emphasis on the Fire line these days, it still has a lot invested in the e-reader fight. The sharpened, illuminated text is impressive, and Amazon has gone so far as to describe this as the Kindle it's always wanted to build. That's all well and good, but how does it compare to similar offerings on the market? Is this worth the $119 asking price (with ads)? Let's find out.

Continue reading Amazon Kindle Paperwhite review

Amazon Kindle Paperwhite review originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 30 Sep 2012 21:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/gb-mmyPDpKI/

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