Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Behavior of seabirds during migration revealed

Apr. 30, 2013 ? The behaviour of seabirds during migration -- including patterns of foraging, rest and flight -- has been revealed in new detail using novel computational analyses and tracking technologies.

Using a new method called 'ethoinformatics', described as the application of computational methods in the investigation of animal behaviour, scientists have been able to analyse three years of migration data gathered from miniature tracking devices attached to the small seabird the Manx Shearwater (Puffinus puffinus).

The Manx Shearwater is currently on the 'amber' list of UK Birds of Conservation Concern. Up to 80% of the world population breeds in the UK, travelling 20,000km each year in their migrations to South America and back.

In a continuing long-term collaboration, researchers at UCL and the University of Oxford collected data over three consecutive years. In this study, published in the Royal Society journal Interface, they show that the migration of the Manx Shearwater contains a complex pattern of three behavioural states; rest, flight and foraging.

Results indicate that in winter, birds spend much less time foraging and in flight than in breeding season. Also, a much larger proportion of birds' time in the southern hemisphere was spent at rest -- probably a reflection of their release from the demands of reproduction and also the increased costs of flight during the winter.

Dr Robin Freeman, from the UCL COMPLEX (Centre for Mathematics and Physics in the Life Sciences and Experimental Biology), and first author of the study, said: "Understanding the behaviour of these birds during migration is crucial for identifying important at-sea locations and for furthering conservation efforts. By tracking the movements, foraging behaviour and environmental drivers of such species, and developing new techniques to do so is critical as they continue to be subject to environmental and anthropogenic pressure."

He added: "Methods to understand animal behaviour from complex data series -- what we're calling 'ethoinformatics' -- are increasingly important as we continue to gather large amounts of data about animals in the wild."

Professor Tim Guilford, who leads the team at the University of Oxford, said: "At the Oxford navigation group, we have been able to gather an unprecedented amount of information about these elusive ocean wanderers. We trying to understand the processes that govern the behaviour seabirds at sea, and the decisions they must make during migration and foraging."

During the study, birds were fitted with miniature geolocators and lightweight GPS loggers. The geolocation devices have been developed by the British Antarctic Survey and record salt-water immersion and light levels. Using behaviours identified from GPS tracking during the breeding season, the team demonstrated that these behaviours could be predicted solely from data collected by the much smaller immersion-loggers.

Unlike other devices that limit broad use because of their mass, cost and longevity (life span), these devices can record continuously for many years and weigh less than two grams.

During the birds' migratory journey the team identified areas of high foraging behaviour, with concentrations off south-eastern Brazil during the southbound journey and in the Western Atlantic during the return. Rest also occurs throughout migration, with greater concentration towards the very end of the route in both directions. This could reflect distinct stopover types, like foraging stopovers to take advantage of the high prey availability or rest stopover to recover from long flight periods.

The researchers also discovered that the birds' behaviour responded to different environmental conditions. There was a significant relationship between behaviour and environmental variables such as net primary production (the rate at which all the plants in an ecosystem produce net useful chemical energy), chlorophyll and sea surface temperature. During migration, resting behaviour was found to occur in much more productive waters than other behaviours.

Dr Freeman said: "We're very excited about these new techniques and their application to understanding the behaviour of such and important and captivating bird. This is just the beginning of our on-going investigation into understanding the behaviour of these animals in the wild."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University College London, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Robin Freeman, Ben Dean, Holly Kirk, Kerry Leonard, Richard A. Phillips, Chris M. Perrins, and Tim Guilford. Predictive ethoinformatics reveals the complex migratory behaviour of a pelagic seabird, the Manx Shearwater. J R Soc Interface, 2013 DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2013.0279

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/jTBsuG4Snw4/130430194403.htm

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Jason Aldean Files for Divorce from Wife Jessica Ussery

The country star and his wife have called it quits! See more celeb pairs who are back to going solo.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/gone-splitsville-celebrity-breakups/1-b-16462?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Agone-splitsville-celebrity-breakups-16462

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Yeah Yeah Yeahs' Fever To Tell Turns 10

We take a look back at the album that made the Yeah Yeah Yeahs stars 10 years ago today.
By James Montgomery

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1706456/yeah-yeah-yeahs-fever-to-tell-10-year-anniversary.jhtml

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Google Now available on iOS devices starting today

Google Now available on iOS devices starting today

When it comes to major news, we didn't expect to hear much from Google in the run-up to I/O, but clearly, the company just couldn't wait that long. Google Now, a service that Android users have enjoyed for a year, just became available on iOS devices in the form of an update to the Google Search app, confirming those leaked videos we saw a few weeks ago. It won't have integration with notifications or alerts at launch -- it may come in a future update, but the company wasn't willing to divulge its future plans -- so you'll need to enter the app and swipe up to refresh your list of cards. The iOS version won't have every type of card that you'll find on Android, either: boarding passes, activity summary, events, concerts, Fandango and Zillow aren't included this go-round. Improvements and additional features will likely trickle in over time, but it's certainly better than nothing for iOS fans who've looked at Jelly Bean users with a slightly jealous eye. We've included Google's blog post in its entirety below, and you can jump to the source to download the app.

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Comments

Source: The Official Google Blog, iTunes

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/IfRW3CkQ4nQ/

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WH: Anthony Foxx in line for transportation post

FILE - In this Sept. 4, 2012 file photo, Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx addresses the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C. President Barack Obama on Monday will nominate Foxx as his new transportation secretary, a White House official said Sunday, April 28, 2013. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 4, 2012 file photo, Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx addresses the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C. President Barack Obama on Monday will nominate Foxx as his new transportation secretary, a White House official said Sunday, April 28, 2013. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama on Monday will nominate Charlotte, N.C., Mayor Anthony Foxx as his new transportation secretary, a White House official said Sunday.

If confirmed by the Senate, Foxx would replace outgoing Secretary Ray LaHood.

Foxx is Obama's first black nominee among the new Cabinet members appointed for the second term. The president faced criticism early in his second term for a lack of diversity among his nominees.

The official insisted on anonymity to avoid public discussion of the pick before the official announcement.

The official noted that Foxx has led efforts to improve his city's transit infrastructure to expand economic opportunity for businesses and workers. During Foxx's term as mayor, Charlotte has broken ground on several important transportation projects, including the Charlotte Streetcar Project to bring modern electric tram service to the city as well as a third parallel runway at Charlotte/Douglas International Airport. The city has also moved to extend the LYNX light rail system to the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, the official said.

Foxx, an attorney who has worked in several positions with the federal government, was first elected mayor in 2009. He also served as a member of the Charlotte City Council.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-04-28-Obama-Foxx/id-462bf5307e4d47fea0aa92e359433c32

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Monday, April 29, 2013

Respect women's choice to have home birth: doctors

By Genevra Pittman

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Although hospitals and birthing centers are the safest places to have a baby, pediatricians said today that women who choose to give birth at home should be supported and that setting made as safe as possible, as well.

Planned home birthing, they said, may be an option for healthy moms-to-be who are due to have a single, on-time baby. A certified nurse-midwife, midwife or doctor should be present and a previous agreement made with a nearby hospital in case transfer is needed, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) policy statement.

Its Committee on Fetus and Newborn wrote Monday that less than 1 percent of all births in the U.S. are homebirths, but that rate has been increasing among white women in recent years.

"The experience of having a baby is very different at home than it might be in a birthing center or a hospital," said Dr. Kristi Watterberg, the policy statement's lead author and a pediatrician and neonatologist at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque.

"We would like to help foster professional interactions and support systems that could make every baby's chances the best they can be."

The issue remains hotly debated, but evidence suggests that most home deliveries go well. Home births have been linked to about one extra infant death for every 1,000 live births, according to the statement published in Pediatrics. Past reports suggest between 10 and 40 percent of women are transferred to a hospital before delivery due to unexpected complications - but most of those aren't emergency transfers, Watterberg noted.

It's not completely clear what's responsible for the small increase in deaths among home-birthed babies, said neonatologist Dr. Michael Malloy, from the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston.

His own research has suggested close to half of babies who don't survive a home birth had a birth defect, but some may also die from asphyxia - and could have been saved with faster help.

The new statement is in line with a 2011 committee opinion from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), which said it "respects the right of a woman to make a medically informed decision about delivery."

Watterberg said that because there are such strong emotions around the topic of home birth, women have to make sure they sort through those different views carefully.

"It's important, as a potential mother, to make sure that your care provider understands what your thoughts are, what your position is, and that you in turn understand what to expect from either a hospital delivery or a home delivery," she told Reuters Health.

There are some instances in which a home birth might not be the best idea, Watterberg added, such as for women who don't live near a hospital - or if there's a blizzard in the forecast.

HOSPITAL RISKS

Mairi Rothman, a midwife, said one of the problems with the debate on home birth is that people aren't talking about the risks that come with delivering in the hospital.

"For example, you have a much higher risk of having cesarean (section) in the hospital, you have a much higher risk of having anesthesia," said Rothman, who serves on the board of directors of the American College of Nurse-Midwives.

At home, she told Reuters Health, "there's no hospital-acquired infection, there's no mixing your baby up with another baby, there's much more support (for breastfeeding)."

Rothman said the data suggesting home births result in more infant deaths are skewed by the inclusion of babies that were born at home accidentally - such as when a woman goes into labor prematurely or didn't know she was pregnant.

"I can tell you with complete confidence, there is nothing in a birth center that I don't bring to a home birth," she said - including resuscitation equipment, oxygen, sutures and an IV set-up.

"What we're essentially doing is setting up a birth center in someone's home."

Malloy, who wasn't part of the AAP committee, said he agrees with the gist of the statement.

"It still allows for the woman to make her own decision, but hopefully it's an informed decision," he told Reuters Health.

"I don't think the intent here is necessarily to scare women off from having a home delivery, but they just need to be aware of the risks associated with doing so."

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/cxXOG Pediatrics, online April 29, 2013.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/respect-womens-choice-home-birth-doctors-040913138.html

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Sunday, April 28, 2013

Can a SmartPhone Do What Your Doctor Does?

Apr 27, 2013 7:00am

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Dr. Meera Dalal tests a smartphone app that measures blood pressure at TEDMED. (Image courtesy Meera Dalal)

By Meera Dalal, M.D.

During our medical training, we?re taught to gather and use information from three sources: a patient history, a physical exam and lab tests. By far the most difficult to master is the physical exam. A good exam requires knowledge of anatomy and physiology and awareness of normal variations that allow a doctor to recognize abnormalities.

Technology can help, and at TEDMED 2013, the SmartPhone Physical exhibit by MedGadget/Nurture showcased some of the latest advances. The goal was to bring complex tests that are?pricey?to perform with traditional equipment into primary care clinics.

The result: accessible, affordable $200 phone accessories, most of them approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as ?equivalency standards,? or equal to the industry standard. This technology could improve access to these tests, cut down on referrals, and provide overall better care.

?It?s great for primary care physicians, new doctors with less experience, teaching and even some patients,? said Shiv Gaglani, a medical student at Johns Hopkins and curator of the exhibit. ?Some physicians can go through their entire training without really learning to look into an eye.?

But I was skeptical. In medicine, we learn to question everything. If my own mother came to me saying hugs were good for a cold, I would take the hug then ask to see the evidence.?So I decided to try it out. Gaglani would be my ?doctor? for this 10-minute exam using the following gadgets:

Blood Pressure Monitor by Withings and Blood Oxygen Monitor by iSp02

We started off, like in all physical exams, by taking the vital signs: blood pressure; heart rate; and oxygenation. The screen buzzed with colorful readings and real-time measurement, and then uploaded my information into an iPad, where I could get it through an app.? It was a start, but I?wasn?t?that impressed. The technology for ?automated vital signs? had been around for a while, and a few years ago I taught my 7-year-old cousin how to use the machine on my grandmother.

ECG Cellphone Case by AliveCor

By squeezing my thumbs onto the metal plates of this iPhone cover, I was able to get a partial ECG that was uploaded and emailed to me. Interesting! One of the problems physicians have is that patients with heart symptoms often improve and the ECG normalizes by the time they see the doctor. This device was simple enough that patients with?symptoms?could get this cell phone case and be taught how to use it. So the next time it happened, we could get an ECG from during the cardiac event. One of the women who tried it earlier had palpitations during her exam and was diagnosed with a rhythm abnormality.

iExaminer by Welch Allyn

The eye exam, or ?fundoscopy,? is the only way we can look directly at blood vessels inside the body without having to cut anything open. It can tell us a lot about diseases such as high blood pressure and diabetes. Unfortunately, it takes a lot of practice, so many of us end up referred to an ophthalmologist. The iExaminer was able to take an impressive visual photo of the inside of my eye and turn it into a .pdf.

SpiroSmart

This SmartPhone looked at lung function, which usually is done at a special lab during an uncomfortable exam. Guidelines for chronic lung diseases such as asthma, cystic fibrosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ?suggest these tests should be done regularly, but because it is often inconvenient to make a separate trip, they?re ?underused. It would be great if this was more accessible.

?Unlike the lab machine, which uses pressure, this device uses sound and has been shown to be almost as accurate,? said SpiroSmart co-creator?Mayank Goel. ?This opens up so many doors; imagine even being able to do this test over the phone!?

Other devices included ThinkLabs? ds32A digital stethoscope that records body sounds (like heart murmurs), the MobiUS SP1 handheld ultrasound machine that looked at the carotid arteries in the neck and was surprisingly accurate compared to the full ultrasound machines, and an otoscope that looked at my ear drum and took a picture.

Overall, I was grudgingly impressed. The devices seemed to combine the best parts of human experience and technology; using technology to gather reliable information, especially for those with less experience, and the physician to interpret the results.

Studies looking at ?inter-rater reliability,? the concept of how likely is it that different people interpreting the same physical exam sign will get the same diagnosis, show that technology is often better for gathering consistently objective information.

The long lineup at the SmartPhone Physical Booth at TedMed included the surgeon general and Dr. Daniel Kraft, faculty chair of medicine at Singularity University in San Diego, who was impressed by the? potential for improving access to care, whether in remote areas or overseas.

?It can enable primary care anywhere. And even though we need to do more testing to ensure accuracy, the potential is great,? Kraft said.

One of the problems, however, is that each device has to be attached to the phone in a separate way, and data is uploaded to different apps, creating a huge amount of information to sift through.

?Our ability to gather data is overtaking our ability to pare it down and use it to improve our health,? said?TEDMED editor-in-chief?John Benditt.

And it?s true. The creation of complex devices and technology is surpassing our ability to learn it and use it to its full potential before the ?next big thing? comes out. What I?d really like to see is an ECG machine and BP machine that combines data with the lung machine and uploads it to the same profile. Arguably, the next big challenge in medicine may not be the creation of new technology, but finding a way to integrate existing ones.

Source: http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/health/2013/04/27/can-a-smartphone-do-what-your-doctor-does/

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Apps of the Week: Plants vs Zombies, ArtRage, Iron Man 3, and more

Every week, the editors and writers at iMore carefully select some of our favorite, most useful, most extraordinary apps, accessories, gadgets, and websites. This week's selections include a few games, an art app, a fun music creation app, and an app about the most important star in the universe.

Mr. Runner 2: The Masks - Simon Sage

Mr. Runner was a pretty popular game a few years ago, netting over 5 million downloads thanks to its unique stop-and-go play style and slightly warped sense of humor. Mr. Runner is back with some decidedly richer graphics and a surprisingly interesting plot line. Mr. Runner is trapped in a dream where his head is locked in a box by the dastardly La Magie, and he's got to chase down the key. In this journey, he stumbles on the occasional mask which gives him some semblance of an identity in the meantime. The game will take players through 32 bizarre worlds with plenty of tongue-in-cheek pop culture references. Each stage has three bonus objectives to snag, which should keep you coming back for more if the unique art style isn't enough. If you're in the mood for something a little different, definitely give Mr. Runner 2: The Masks a shot.

ArtRage - Michelle Haag

My daughter is obsessed with drawing My Little Pony characters these days. She's almost 10, and asked me recently if she could have a really good art app for the iPad so she could get more comfortable when she's creating, as opposed to sitting in front of the laptop. We searched around and found ArtRage, and it has quickly become her favorite new tool when inspiration strikes.

ArtRage has a ton of built in features including numerous art tools for drawing and painting, tracing, blending, different types of canvas/papers, and one of our favorite features which is the ability to work with layers. Learning how to sketch is an important step for artists, and with the layers Abby is learning to sketch and refine her drawings. The tools are very natural and mimic real world paints and papers very well, even going so far as to judge how much paint is on your brush or canvas and reacting accordingly, among other things.

If you're interested in having an art studio that you can take with you anywhere, you should definitely take a look at ArtRage. There are so many tools and options in this app, I can't even list them all here. Some reviewers have complained about the app crashing, but we haven't experienced that. I would recommend saving your work frequently if that's a concern. ArtRage is available for iPad and iPhone, for $4.99 and $1.99 respectively.

Iron Man 3 - The Official Game - Chris Parsons

We got our first look at Gameloft's Iron Man 3 at GDGC 2013 and ever since then I've been waiting to get my hands on it. Having now arrived and readily available for download, I have to say it's pretty awesome and even better than I expected. You get to play as Iron Man through 3 different locations and fight 4 villains from Iron Man legend, all in some wonderfully graphic detail. Perhaps the best part of it all though, is gaining access to all of the Iron Man suits available. There is 18 in total that ken be discovered including Mark II, Mark III and the Silver Centurion. The game is available for free but keep in mind it does have a few in-app-purchases with it. I've not played through enough to see if they're 'required' - yet!

Figure - Joseph Keller

Propellerhead?s Figure is a great app for music creation for the iPhone and iPad. Figure gives users control over the different instruments available under the Drum, Bass, and Lead sections. Set the rhythm of each instrument, the number of scale steps between octaves, and range of the bass and lead instruments, along with basics like the key and the tempo. There are also a variety of electronic drum, bass, and lead instruments to choose from. Figure also includes support for Audiobus, allowing you to record and edit your music using other music apps like Loopy and Garageband. Try Figure if you?re looking for quick, simple electronic music creation that?s also a lot of fun to use.

Plants vs. Zombies - Ally Kazmucha

There are very few games that remain on my iPhone consistently and Plants vs. Zombies is definitely one of them. In anticipation of Plants vs. Zombies 2 which is supposedly launching sometime this summer, I've cleared out all my data and have started playing the original Plants vs. Zombies all over again.

The fact that there is no support for the iPhone 5 is definitely a downer and makes me that much more impatient for the second release. My favorite part about Plants vs. Zombies is that even after beating the entire game, you can always go back and unlock all kinds of achievements. That's what I plan to do and cross my fingers that Plants vs. Zombies 2 isn't that far off from being released for iOS. If you haven't checked it out, it's one of those iOS games that every iPhone or iPad owner should download and considering they're both at the low price of $0.99 now, there really isn't anything to lose.

Sun by KIDS DISCOVER - Leanna Lofte

I love science, and I love when kids show an interest in science, which is why I'm choosing Sun by KIDS DISCOVER this week. It teaches a lot of fun facts about the Earth's light source and includes great images, graphics, 3D models, videos, and more. And with summer right around the corner, the timing seems perfect for discussion about this season's favorite heat supplier.

If you've got kids who can read, check it out.

Your choice?

Now that we've chosen our favorites for the week, we want to hear yours! Did you pick up a killer app, accessory, or game this week? Let us know in the comments below!

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/1QaGTcNDibE/story01.htm

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Saturday, April 27, 2013

The Reluctant Fundamentalist

Riz Ahmed (right) and Kiefer Sutherland in The Reluctant Fundamentalist. Riz Ahmed (right) and Kiefer Sutherland in The Reluctant Fundamentalist

Courtesy of IFC Films

As the country struggles to understand what could have motivated two seemingly assimilated young Chechen-Americans to plant a bomb at the Boston Marathon and cut a swath of destruction through the city, the release of Mira Nair?s The Reluctant Fundamentalist, an adaptation of Mohsin Hamid?s 2007 novel about a young Pakistani man in the U.S. who?s drawn to religious terrorism after 9/11, would seem to be ideally timed. Unfortunately, you leave The Reluctant Fundamentalist, a meandering character portrait turned political thriller, with only the vaguest, most abstract sense of what might drive a disgruntled immigrant to take up arms against his adopted homeland?and almost no sense at all of what the hell went on in the movie?s hectic, twist-heavy final act.

As the film begins, Changez Khan (the British actor and rap DJ Riz Ahmed, whose sharply tuned performance and unearthly beauty are the best reasons to see the movie) is a university professor in Lahore, Pakistan, whose star is on the rise. He?s known for his rabble-rousing lectures about Pakistani political autonomy, though he stops just short of resorting to anti-American rhetoric. After an American professor is kidnapped in Lahore, Changez agrees to sit down for an interview with an American journalist, Bobby Lincoln (Liev Schreiber), to clear his name of any association with the crime. Sitting in an obscurely menacing teahouse with Bobby?who may or may not also be, as Changez suspects, a CIA operative?Changez recounts the story of his time in the U.S., which we witness in a series of flashbacks: After getting a degree at Princeton, he worked as a financial analyst for a Wall Street firm that specialized in downsizing failing companies, under the tutelage of a cutthroat boss (Kiefer Sutherland).

On a business trip during 9/11, Changez witnesses the towers fall on his hotel TV and, to his own shock, finds himself struck above all by what he describes to Bobby as the sheer audacity of the act, the spectacle of ?arrogance brought low.? In the days after the attack, Changez?s relationship to his adopted country begins to change: He?s humiliatingly strip-searched at an airport, then later held for police questioning for no other reason than walking down a New York street while being South Asian. His relationship with his girlfriend Erica, a recently widowed American photographer (an egregiously miscast Kate Hudson), becomes strained, especially when she mounts an autobiographical multimedia exhibition that makes him feel exploited and exoticized. (The audience begins to feel that Changez should break up with Erica simply for being an atrociously bad artist.)

In the movie?s last third, Nair rushes to cram in a convoluted political espionage plot that we haven?t given a thought to since that opening kidnapping scene: Will Bobby find out the whereabouts of the missing American professor before Changez?s more radical cohorts do away with him? And are we to believe Changez?s protestations that, however close he may have come to flirting with radicalism in the past, there is still something in him that resists the use of violence?

At several points, the screenplay (by William Wheeler, from a screen story by Mohsin Hamid and Ami Boghani) goes out of its way to draw an explicit parallel between the ruthlessness of Wall Street financiers and that of Islamic terrorists. Both Changez?s toxic boss at the firm (excellently played by a shark-like Sutherland) and the Pakistani radicals who later try to convert him to their cause use the same frighteningly vague word, ?fundamentals,? to describe the values that drive them. But, like Changez?s disturbing reaction to the televised destruction of the towers, this facile analogy (is financial rapaciousness, however destructive, really comparable to the slaughter of innocent people?) gets glossed over too quickly on the way to a bet-hedging and dramatically unsatisfying ending. For all the contemporary relevance of the issues it explores, there?s something morally and aesthetically muffled about The Reluctant Fundamentalist: Nair is so busy making sure we never lose sympathy for her handsome and charming protagonist that the film ultimately founders in a tangle of humanist platitudes.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=f2262589d7688df0dc19c54479a2cffa

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Mystery clouds deadly clash in western China with 'suspected terrorists'

Some say that Beijing deliberately exaggerates the terrorist threat in order to justify the iron grip it keeps on the Muslim majority province of Xinjiang in?western China.

By Peter Ford,?Staff Writer / April 24, 2013

A woman looks up as a dust storm hits Kashgar, Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, last week. Xinjiang, once a predominantly Muslim province in China's far west, has seen massive settlement by ethnic Han immigrants in recent decades.

Reuters

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Mystery surrounds official Chinese reports Wednesday of a violent clash between ?suspected terrorists? and the authorities in the restive Muslim province of Xinjiang yesterday that left 21 people dead, including 15 officials.

Skip to next paragraph Peter Ford

Beijing Bureau Chief

Peter Ford is The Christian Science Monitor?s Beijing Bureau Chief. He covers news and features throughout China and also makes reporting trips to Japan and the Korean peninsula.

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According to a statement on the provincial government website, a group ?planning to conduct violent terrorist activities? armed with knives seized three local officials who had surprised them in a house near the city of Kashgar (see map).

They then killed the three hostages and 12 of the policemen and local community workers who came to the rescue, setting fire to the house before armed police regained control of the situation, killing six of the suspects and arresting eight of them, the statement said.

The Chinese authorities have given only sketchy details of the incident, and have not accused any particular group of responsibility. Beijing has previously blamed Islamist separatists for earlier violent attacks on officials.

Xinjiang, once a predominantly Muslim province in China?s far west, has seen massive settlement by ethnic Han immigrants in recent decades. Local people complain that their culture and language are being eroded and that Han now outnumber original inhabitants, who are ethnic Uighurs, with linguistic and cultural ties to central Asian peoples.

Violence flares sporadically, despite a stiflingly heavy handed police and army presence. In 2009 almost 200 people were killed ? mostly ethnic Han ? in deadly rioting in the provincial capital of Urumqi. Last month the government announced that courts in Xinjiang had sentenced 20 men to prison terms as long as life for plotting jihadi attacks.

The men ?had their thoughts poisoned by religious extremism,? according to the Xinjiang provincial website, and had ?spread Muslim religious propaganda.?

Determining the truth behind such allegations, and incidents such as Tuesday?s clash,?is difficult. Chinese media are not allowed to carry reports other than those by the state-run news agency Xinhua and foreign reporters have found themselves restricted and harassed when trying to work in Xinjiang.

A leading Uighur activist, Dilxat Raxit, who lives in Germany, questioned the official account, telling the AP that local residents had reported that the police sparked the incident by shooting a Uighur youth during a house search.

It was not clear how the suspects, armed only with knives, had managed to kill 15 policemen and local officials before they were subdued.

China has often accused a shadowy group known as the East Turkestan Islamic Movement of being behind violence in Xinjiang, but foreign observers are dubious, with some saying that Beijing deliberately exaggerates the terrorist threat in order to justify the iron grip it keeps on Xinjiang.

The US State Department put the group on its terrorist watch list in 2002, but has since removed it amid doubts about whether the group is a real organization.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/tasBOUfpA_A/Mystery-clouds-deadly-clash-in-western-China-with-suspected-terrorists

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Samsung Galaxy S4 now available from AT&T and Sprint

Samsung Galaxy S4

One of the hottest phones of the year comes to two of the big four carriers in the states

We've all heard plenty about the Galaxy S4, and it seems like many of you have already made up your minds that the latest Galaxy device is indeed going to be your next smart phone purchase. Well today's the day if you're an AT&T or Sprint customer (or aspiring customer) to make it yours. Both carriers have the phone available in either "white frost" or "black mist", with 16GB of internal storage regardless of your color preference. Pricing is a touch different for each carrier, however.

If you are to order online, AT&T will be charging $199 on-contract for the S4, or $639 without a commitment. Sprint is looking like $149 on-contract if you're a new customer bringing your own number, or $249 for existing customers. Off-contract at Sprint is pegged at $599. As many are aware, there are often subtle pricing differences depending on the store you visit and the standing of your account, so it may be worth it to walk into a store today and find out. Pulled the trigger on one of these today? Many already have. Be sure to join the discussion in the forums.

More: AT&T; Sprint

Read our Galaxy S4 reviewSamsung Galaxy S4 Forums

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/4NcB71YshNA/story01.htm

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Venezuela: Opposition to boycott vote audit

Venezuela's opposition leader Henrique Capriles speaks at a news conference at his office in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, April 24, 2013. Capriles urged Venezuela's electoral commission to begin the audit of the April 14, 2013 disputed presidential vote, that handed Capriles' rival, Nicolas Maduro, a razor-thin victory. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

Venezuela's opposition leader Henrique Capriles speaks at a news conference at his office in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, April 24, 2013. Capriles urged Venezuela's electoral commission to begin the audit of the April 14, 2013 disputed presidential vote, that handed Capriles' rival, Nicolas Maduro, a razor-thin victory. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

Venezuela's opposition leader Henrique Capriles arrives for a news conference at his office in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, April 24, 2013. Capriles urged Venezuela's electoral commission to begin the audit of the April 14, 2013 disputed presidential vote, that handed Capriles's rival, Nicolas Maduro, a razor-thin victory. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

(AP) ? Henrique Capriles says Venezuela's opposition will boycott an audit of election results because the National Electoral Council did not accept his demand for the examination of registers containing voters' signatures and fingerprints.

Capriles says the opposition will challenge the election results in the Supreme Court and pressure authorities to organize a new election.

The opposition leader made the decision after election officials did not respond to his repeated demands for a complete audit.

Capriles made the announcement during a televised interview on Thursday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-04-25-Venezuela-Election/id-ba96af81181b4ad19ebb009e11f427d7

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Friday, April 26, 2013

Hagel: Syria used chemical weapons

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AP) ? U.S. intelligence has concluded "with some degree of varying confidence," that the Syrian government has used sarin gas as a weapon in its 2-year-old civil war, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Thursday.

Hagel, speaking to reporters in Abu Dhabi, said the White House has informed two senators by letter that, within the past day, "our intelligence community does assess, with varying degrees of confidence, that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapons on a small scale in Syria, specifically, the chemical agent sarin."

"It violates every convention of warfare," Hagel said.

No information was made public on what quantity of chemical weapons might have been used, or when or what casualties might have resulted.

President Barack Obama has said the use of chemical weapons would be a "game-changer" in the U.S. position on intervening in the Syrian civil war, and the letter to Congress reiterates that the use or transfer of chemical weapons in Syria is a "red line for the United States." However, the letter also hints that a broad U.S. response is not imminent.

White House legislative director Miguel Rodriguez, who signed the letter, wrote that "because the president takes this issue so seriously, we have an obligation to fully investigate any and all evidence of chemical weapons use within Syria."

The letters went to Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Carl Levin, D-Mich.

The assessment, Rodriguez says, is based in part on "physiological samples."

He also said the U.S. believes that the use of chemical weapons "originated with the Assad regime." That is consistent with the Obama administration's assertion that the Syrian rebels do not have access to the country's stockpiles.

In Washington, McCain quoted from the letter the White House sent to several senators who had pressed the administration about Syria's possible use of chemical weapons.

"We just received a letter from the president in response to our question about whether Assad had used chemical weapons," McCain told reporters following a closed briefing with Secretary of State John Kerry on Syria and North Korea.

___

AP White House Correspondent Julie Pace and AP writer Donna Cassata contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hagel-says-syria-used-chemical-weapons-155008837--politics.html

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Amazon shares fall after 1Q results

(AP) ? Amazon.com took a hit Friday after its revenue forecast caught investors off guard.

THE SPARK: Amazon's first-quarter earnings were stronger than expected and revenue was in the ball park. For the current quarter, however, the company projected revenue of $14.5 billion to $16.2 billion. The midpoint of the range is lower than the $15.92 billion that analysts' estimates, according to FactSet.

Canaccord analyst Michael Graham said Amazon's first-quarter results were "marked by solid growth, especially in North America, while International growth stalled" even after adjusting for currency fluctuations. He added that with Amazon's heavy investments leading to prolonged low profit margins, the company's stock "may stall for a bit" in the face of decelerating revenue growth.

While analysts are accustomed to conservative outlooks from the world's largest online retailer, Graham described it as slightly more bearish than the usual low end.

BACKGROUND: The company has been investing heavily in enhancing its distribution network, its shopping website and its Kindle business as part of a long-term growth plan. Because of that, and deep discounts it offers customers, Amazon's profit margins have been thin.

SHARE ACTION: Shares of Amazon.com Inc., based in Seattle, fell $19.53, or 7.1 percent, to $255.17 in midday trading. The stock has traded in the 52-week range of $206.37 and $284.72.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-04-26-US-Amazon-Mover/id-a766c8bd96e249029d8b6e4f34503f08

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Thursday, April 25, 2013

Michael Bay Says Armageddon Apology Was "Twisted," Out of Context

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/michael-bay-says-his-armageddon-apology-was-twisted/

Nexus 7

Steve Kush, New Mexico GOP Official, Calls Labor Advocate, 19, a "Radical Bitch"

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/steve-kush-new-mexico-gop-official-calls-19-year-old-labor-advoc/

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Reporter in North Korea investigates fight against multidrug resistant tuberculosis

Reporter in North Korea investigates fight against multidrug resistant tuberculosis [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 25-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: SciPak
scipak@aaas.org
202-326-6440
American Association for the Advancement of Science

This release is available in Korean and Chinese on EurekAlert! Chinese.

Richard Stone, International News Editor for the journal Science, last month traveled to Pyongyang, in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), to check in on the country's only laboratory capable of detecting strains of drug-resistant tuberculosis.

While the overall incidence of tuberculosis (TB) worldwide has gone down in recent decades, the bacteria that cause TB are steadily developing resistance to treatments. North Korea is a newly recognized hot spot for multidrug resistant (MDR) TB strains. The article about Stone's trip to North Korea appears in the 26 April issue of the journal Science, which is published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

The rise of TB in North Korea has been swift. According to a 2012 report by the World Health Organization, between 1994 and 2011, reported cases went from fewer than 50 per 100,000 people to 380 cases per the same. Today, the incidence of TB in North Korea is second only to that in sub-Saharan Africa.

Several complicating factors have allowed TB to take such a strong hold here, first of which was a four-year famine that started in 1994 and left the malnourished survivors highly susceptible to TB infection. A shortage of TB drugs at the time and a tendency of locals not to comply with the therapy recommended by doctors have only made matters worse.

Today, the country's health ministry estimates that up to 15% of patients with TB fail to respond to commonly used first-line TB drugs, which suggests they are carrying drug-resistant strains. Neighbors, like China, are worried; MDR is difficult to treat even at top-tier health programs.

But promise is shown in ongoing efforts, including the establishment in 2010 of the aforementioned lab, the National Tuberculosis Reference Laboratory (NTRL). Built with the help of the Stanford-led Bay Area TB Consortium and DPRK's Ministry of Public Health, it provides a rare example of scientific collaboration between the United States and North Korea. The collaboration was made possible, Stone reported, by Christian Friends of Korea (CFK), a humanitarian organization that has been supplying aid to DPRK for 18 years.

In March, along with several CFK members including CFK executive director Heidi Linton, Richard Stone went to visit the NTRL lab. Also on this trip was Stanford microbiologist Kathleen England, whose priority is to see that the NTRL facility wins international accreditation. She hopes this will happen by 2015. If it does, the lab can join the global fight against TB.

While England said she is happy with the lab's progress so farthe facility has begun molecular testing, and it recently acquired a machine used to detect multidrug resistant TB strainsshe acknowledges that much remains to be done to bring it up to speed and make inroads into the MDR problem. She presses on, training the 14 NRTL staff and establishing quality control measures. Soon, she said she plans to conduct a survey on drug resistance.

In addition to visiting the National Tuberculosis Reference Laboratory, Stone visited the pediatric ward of a TB hospital in Pyongyang. Though the pediatric ward wasn't very crowded during Stone's visit, staff explained that they expect to see more patients later in the spring, when people who'd stayed huddled during the winter months are willing to come out. One physician working at the hospital pointed out that children are easier to treat than adults because they are eager to follow doctors' orders.

Farther afield from Pyongyang, Stone visited four rural rest homes, where TB patients go for care. Linton came along to assess the health of these small facilities, evaluating things like how many doctors, patients, and beds each one had, and whether drug stocks were sufficient.

"This was my fifth trip to DPRK, and my first opportunity to experience the bleakness of life in the countryside," Stone said. "The TB epidemic only adds to the hardship of villagers who depend on government food rations for survival."

To supplement diets of people in rural rest homes, CFK donates several tons of canned meat each year.

In one rest home Stone visited, he found mixed news. The number of MDR cases had stabilized, but patient conditions had worsened. Scientists are not sure what strains are circulating in North Korea, and continued work is needed to identify them so that effective treatments can be developed.

Stone noted that his trip to North Korea came at a delicate time, as South Korea and the United States were conducting annual military exercises that included stealth bomber flights over South Korea.

"Our visit took place during heightened tensions with the West. It didn't escape our attention that the seven of us were the largest group of Americans there at the time," Stone said.

He said he didn't feel overly anxious, however. "Our hosts with the Ministry of Public Health seemed genuinely concerned about our welfare. I came away with the feeling that the scientists we encountered have good hearts and a real desire to help their countrymen."

The efforts of these scientists will be critical in fighting the TB epidemic in North Korea, particularly as multidrug resistant strains proliferate. Indeed, some hope that the presence of the National Tuberculosis Research Lab will be a building block, paving the way for opportunities for scientific collaboration between North Korea and other countries participating in the global TB fight.

###

The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) is the world's largest general scientific society, and publisher of the journal, Science (http://www.sciencemag.org) as well as Science Translational Medicine (http://www.sciencetranslationalmedicine.org) and Science Signaling (http://www.sciencesignaling.org). AAAS was founded in 1848, and includes some 261 affiliated societies and academies of science, serving 10 million individuals. Science has the largest paid circulation of any peer-reviewed general science journal in the world, with an estimated total readership of 1 million. The non-profit AAAS (http://www.aaas.org) is open to all and fulfills its mission to "advance science and serve society" through initiatives in science policy; international programs; science education; and more. For the latest research news, log onto EurekAlert!, http://www.eurekalert.org, the premier science-news Web site, a service of AAAS.


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

?


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


Reporter in North Korea investigates fight against multidrug resistant tuberculosis [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 25-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: SciPak
scipak@aaas.org
202-326-6440
American Association for the Advancement of Science

This release is available in Korean and Chinese on EurekAlert! Chinese.

Richard Stone, International News Editor for the journal Science, last month traveled to Pyongyang, in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), to check in on the country's only laboratory capable of detecting strains of drug-resistant tuberculosis.

While the overall incidence of tuberculosis (TB) worldwide has gone down in recent decades, the bacteria that cause TB are steadily developing resistance to treatments. North Korea is a newly recognized hot spot for multidrug resistant (MDR) TB strains. The article about Stone's trip to North Korea appears in the 26 April issue of the journal Science, which is published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

The rise of TB in North Korea has been swift. According to a 2012 report by the World Health Organization, between 1994 and 2011, reported cases went from fewer than 50 per 100,000 people to 380 cases per the same. Today, the incidence of TB in North Korea is second only to that in sub-Saharan Africa.

Several complicating factors have allowed TB to take such a strong hold here, first of which was a four-year famine that started in 1994 and left the malnourished survivors highly susceptible to TB infection. A shortage of TB drugs at the time and a tendency of locals not to comply with the therapy recommended by doctors have only made matters worse.

Today, the country's health ministry estimates that up to 15% of patients with TB fail to respond to commonly used first-line TB drugs, which suggests they are carrying drug-resistant strains. Neighbors, like China, are worried; MDR is difficult to treat even at top-tier health programs.

But promise is shown in ongoing efforts, including the establishment in 2010 of the aforementioned lab, the National Tuberculosis Reference Laboratory (NTRL). Built with the help of the Stanford-led Bay Area TB Consortium and DPRK's Ministry of Public Health, it provides a rare example of scientific collaboration between the United States and North Korea. The collaboration was made possible, Stone reported, by Christian Friends of Korea (CFK), a humanitarian organization that has been supplying aid to DPRK for 18 years.

In March, along with several CFK members including CFK executive director Heidi Linton, Richard Stone went to visit the NTRL lab. Also on this trip was Stanford microbiologist Kathleen England, whose priority is to see that the NTRL facility wins international accreditation. She hopes this will happen by 2015. If it does, the lab can join the global fight against TB.

While England said she is happy with the lab's progress so farthe facility has begun molecular testing, and it recently acquired a machine used to detect multidrug resistant TB strainsshe acknowledges that much remains to be done to bring it up to speed and make inroads into the MDR problem. She presses on, training the 14 NRTL staff and establishing quality control measures. Soon, she said she plans to conduct a survey on drug resistance.

In addition to visiting the National Tuberculosis Reference Laboratory, Stone visited the pediatric ward of a TB hospital in Pyongyang. Though the pediatric ward wasn't very crowded during Stone's visit, staff explained that they expect to see more patients later in the spring, when people who'd stayed huddled during the winter months are willing to come out. One physician working at the hospital pointed out that children are easier to treat than adults because they are eager to follow doctors' orders.

Farther afield from Pyongyang, Stone visited four rural rest homes, where TB patients go for care. Linton came along to assess the health of these small facilities, evaluating things like how many doctors, patients, and beds each one had, and whether drug stocks were sufficient.

"This was my fifth trip to DPRK, and my first opportunity to experience the bleakness of life in the countryside," Stone said. "The TB epidemic only adds to the hardship of villagers who depend on government food rations for survival."

To supplement diets of people in rural rest homes, CFK donates several tons of canned meat each year.

In one rest home Stone visited, he found mixed news. The number of MDR cases had stabilized, but patient conditions had worsened. Scientists are not sure what strains are circulating in North Korea, and continued work is needed to identify them so that effective treatments can be developed.

Stone noted that his trip to North Korea came at a delicate time, as South Korea and the United States were conducting annual military exercises that included stealth bomber flights over South Korea.

"Our visit took place during heightened tensions with the West. It didn't escape our attention that the seven of us were the largest group of Americans there at the time," Stone said.

He said he didn't feel overly anxious, however. "Our hosts with the Ministry of Public Health seemed genuinely concerned about our welfare. I came away with the feeling that the scientists we encountered have good hearts and a real desire to help their countrymen."

The efforts of these scientists will be critical in fighting the TB epidemic in North Korea, particularly as multidrug resistant strains proliferate. Indeed, some hope that the presence of the National Tuberculosis Research Lab will be a building block, paving the way for opportunities for scientific collaboration between North Korea and other countries participating in the global TB fight.

###

The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) is the world's largest general scientific society, and publisher of the journal, Science (http://www.sciencemag.org) as well as Science Translational Medicine (http://www.sciencetranslationalmedicine.org) and Science Signaling (http://www.sciencesignaling.org). AAAS was founded in 1848, and includes some 261 affiliated societies and academies of science, serving 10 million individuals. Science has the largest paid circulation of any peer-reviewed general science journal in the world, with an estimated total readership of 1 million. The non-profit AAAS (http://www.aaas.org) is open to all and fulfills its mission to "advance science and serve society" through initiatives in science policy; international programs; science education; and more. For the latest research news, log onto EurekAlert!, http://www.eurekalert.org, the premier science-news Web site, a service of AAAS.


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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-04/aaft-in041913.php

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TokBox Brings WebRTC To The Cloud, Enables Multi-Party Video Chats & SIP Interop

OpenTokTelefonica’s TokBox announced a huge upgrade to its OpenTok on WebRTC service today. TokBox’s new cloud-based Mantis media distribution framework is designed to overcome some of WebRTC’s limits with regard to video distribution. By default, WebRTC is a peer-to-peer platform, but that makes it hard to scale video chats beyond two participants. With Mantis, TokBox essentially puts its own cloud infrastructure in the middle of these calls and is then able to route and manage calls that include multiple participants without using a prohibitive amount of bandwidth and using a complicated mesh-based architecture. In the future, as TokBox CEO Ian Small told me earlier this week, this will also enable TokBox to shape video streams according to the different users’ bandwidth conditions and the developers’ needs. “With Mantis, what we’re doing is putting smarts into the WebRTC infrastructure,” Small said. “Today, we’re routing traffic. Tomorrow, we’ll shape traffic.” On cool feature Mantis already enables today is SIP interop, so developers will actually be able to write WebRTC-based apps that allow users to call in from their standard phone lines. This, for example, is useful for video conferencing services where you can now have a number of WebRTC-based video streams and a few participants on regular phone lines simultaneously. Currently, Small told me, the system scales well for chats with up to 10 users. In a webinar setting where just one user is broadcasting, it can easily scale up to more than a hundred users. The company beta-tested Mantis with the help of LiveNinja and Roll20. Current OpenTok developers won’t have to do anything to take advantage of the new system, given that TokBox already abstracts most of the WebRTC calls anyway. They will just have to create the topology they need for their apps (P2P, multi-party chat, etc.) and get started. It just “happens in the cloud automatically,” as Small noted, and now that it’s in the cloud, the company will be able to add many new features to its implementation in the near future. WebRTC, of course, is still in its early phases, something Small also acknowledged in our interview. In his view, we are not even in the early adopter phase right now. Instead, he believes, WebRTC is still in its experimentation and early mover phase. Once WebRTC arrives in the stable release channel of Firefox (it’s about to hit the developer channels soon and should be in

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/wTQ9fSe290c/

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Limping al-Qaida offshoot rearms with Twitter

Battered by a French-led military campaign in Mali, al-Qaida's North African arm is trying something new to stay relevant: Twitter. The PR campaign by the terror network seeks to tap into social grievances and champion mainstream causes such as unemployment, all in bid to reverse decline and win new followers.

The hearts-and-minds approach echoes an outreach program the group had been trying for years in Mali, where it provided food, services and cash to win over the locals. This new campaign is more ambitious: It aims to allow al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, to move the fight at least partly off the battlefield by appealing to widespread concerns, such as the repression and a sense of injustice that galvanized the Arab Spring revolts.

"This is our only means to communicate with the international public opinion, since we are terrorists according to the dictionary of America and its agents in the region," AQIM's media arm, Al-Andalus Media Foundation, said last week as part of an unusual question-and-answer session on Twitter. The remark came in response to a question about its choice to go virtual, one of dozens from journalists and others.

The al-Qaida affiliate ? known for its kidnapping raids in Mali and deadly attacks in its home base in Algeria ? has had little trouble finding an audience. In its first two weeks on Twitter, it drew more than 5,000 followers, including some journalists and scholars.

AQIM's Algerian militants used a soft power strategy, including chocolates and even baby clothes, to try to gain acceptance from Malians whose help they needed to establish a foothold in the country's vast north, according to accounts of locals documented in 2011 by The Associated Press. They are now casting a wider net, turning the hearts-and-minds approach to countries across the region.

And as the Syrian conflict monopolizes extremists' attention ? and draws jihadists ? AQIM's soft power push may be aimed at bringing its patch of northern Africa back into the spotlight.

"We need all the specialties like such as medicine, chemistry, electronics and manufacturing arms and automatic media," it said in answer to a question posted on Twitter, adding that it also needs "other scientific and management skills and, before all that, the students of Shariah (Islamic law) knowledge."

But even before the Twitter account was officially opened March 28, statements from AQIM's media handlers addressed social, not military, concerns.

AQIM emerged in 2006 from a previous movement of radical Algerian insurgents, and spread its extremism around a large area of the Sahara. By last year it reigned over northern Mali along with two other radical groups, meting out brutal punishment to those who refused its strict interpretation of Islamic law. Now, a French-led military intervention that began Jan. 11 has radical leaders and fighters on the run, in hiding or dead.

In Algeria, Mali's northern neighbor, AQIM was behind murderous attacks, including high-profile suicide bombings in 2007 against the U.N. mission and government buildings that left scores dead. It now manages only sporadic, if deadly, attacks.

The group has direct links to jihadist groups in northern and western Africa and to al-Qaida central, notably to Aymen al-Zawahri, who replaced Osama bin Laden as leader and who announced the formation of AQIM in 2006. The group is viewed as an ongoing threat by Western governments and nations around the region. The United States is backing the military intervention by France and a half-dozen African nations with intelligence surveillance. About 100 American troops were deployed in February to Mali's neighbor, Niger, to man a base for unarmed drones to conduct surveillance of AQIM and other jihadists. France says it will keep a long-term, 1,000-strong counterterrorism force in Mali even after the current fighting dies down.

In statements and tweets in Arabic and awkward English, AQIM has lashed out against "Crusader France" and the nation's president, Francois Hollande, who ordered the French intervention in Mali. On its first official day on Twitter, AQIM's media arm issued a statement announcing the death of French hostage Philippe Verdon ? not confirmed by France ? and warning that others could be killed if the approximately 4,000 French troops in Mali are not withdrawn. AQIM is holding five other French citizens hostage in Mali.

The organization's media arm threatened France numerous times in its sprawling question-and-answer session on Twitter, calling on "all the Muslims to target France and its interests and subjects inside and outside France."

The media arm, in response to a question from The AP, said its new-style communications have "nothing to do with the military situation in Mali." However, AQIM's recent efforts to take up the causes of the people have coincided with its loss of a large number of fighters in Mali, as well as its hold over the country's north.

The propaganda campaign has focused, above all, on AQIM's birthplace, Algeria, where the group is in a long arc of decline and has all but lost its firepower.

Late Sunday, in their latest tweet, AQIM's communicators linked to a statement that made the group sound more like an Algerian opposition party than a terrorist organization. As the country looks to next year's presidential election, AQIM's media handlers denounced the "thieves party" of President Abdelaziz Bouteflika and bemoaned "the lost confidence of those poor people who are suffering."

The media arm also is denouncing lack of free expression and reliable Internet access in Algeria and expressing support with unemployed protesters in oil- and gas-rich southern Algeria. A recent tweet expressed sympathy for the plight of Algeria's municipal guards, armed citizens who once were the eyes and ears of Algerian security forces but are now being disbanded without recompense. The tweet said they will be spared pursuit by AQIM if they lay down their weapons.

"This is a direct consequence of the Arab Spring," Jean-Paul Rouiller, director of the Geneva Center for Training and Analysis of Terrorism, said of AQIM's communications campaign. "They are less violent in what they write, more social, trying to be more connected to the problems that people might face, and specifically in Algeria."

The Arab Spring, the popular revolts that started in Tunisia in 2010 and ousted autocrats around the Arab world, skipped Algeria. There, citizens mainly have sought calm after a long spiral of violence that killed an estimated 200,000 and peaked in the 1990s.

With neighboring Tunisia and Libya restive after their Arab Spring rebellions, AQIM appears to think "that there are actions that they can trigger to push the situation a bit further," Rouiller said. The organization "wants to be part of a second wave."

The al-Qaida offshoot is older than other affiliates but is playing social media catch-up with its more media-savvy terror counterparts. Al-Shabaab in Somalia, for instance, is among designated terror groups using Twitter, although the outfit is not an al-Qaida offshoot. Syrian's Jabhat al-Nusra, or Nusra Front, which pledged allegiance to al-Qaida earlier this month, has been using Twitter during the two-year civil war; it is attracting hundreds of North African jihadist fighters, particularly from Tunisia, where a moderate Islamist government is trying to contain a burgeoning movement of ultraconservative Muslims known as Salafis.

"All the focus is on Syria, and the Mali conflict is sort of in the backwater of international attention," said Magnus Ranstorp of the Swedish National Defense College. "In some strange way, it's almost competition ... You have these two theaters that are live and hot and active and need recruits."

Addressing that situation, AQIM's media arm made an unusual admission in its first statement to followers since the French operation in Mali, admitting it was "in direst need" of help from jihadists in the "lands of disbelief" to support its operations in Mali and Algeria.

Rouillier and others said they doubted Twitter would become AQIM's main recruiting tool. But the fact the account was attracting followers indicated it was filling a vacuum.

"We're not speaking here of Rihanna," Rouillier said recently. The number of followers "tells a lot about the impact. There's something going on here."

___

Follow Ganley on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/Elaine_Ganley

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/limping-al-qaida-offshoot-rearms-twitter-100349651.html

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