Thursday, October 13, 2011

Bachmann questions Perry on spending (AP)

HANOVER, N.H. ? Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota is questioning Texas Gov. Rick Perry's record on spending. She asks Perry "how can we trust you to not go down the Obama way?"

Perry says he was able to lower Texas' amount of debt per capita since he became governor.

Bachmann also noted in her question that Perry supported Democrat Al Gore's presidential campaign in 1988. Perry says he became a Republican at a younger age than President Ronald Reagan did.

The candidates made their comments during the Bloomberg-Washington Post Republican presidential primary debate at Dartmouth College.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111012/ap_on_el_pr/us_gop_debate_bachmann

district 9 district 9 how to draw how to draw sinead o connor ssn nursery rhymes

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Sony Takes Caution Following PSN Attack | Video Game News ...

Posted by Rexly Penaflorida II on Wednesday, October 12, 2011 ? Leave a Comment?

Similar incident, better security

According to the PlayStation Blog, a failed log-in attempt occurred on 0.1 percent of PlayStation Network and Sony Online Entertainment accounts.

The tiny percentage might seem small but in fact it represents about 93,000 accounts worldwide. Philip Reitinger, Sony?s Chief Information Security Officer, wrote in the blog that the data was obtained ?from one or more compromised lists from other companies, sites or other sources.?

Fortunately, Sony was able to counter the attack. The accounts affected were blocked and users were sent an e-mail regarding the incident as well as a secure password reset. Fortunately, no credit cards were at risk, so in the end it seems that Sony has learned from their past mistakes and is getting better at their security.

-

Share your thoughts: Does Sony?s reaction to the hacking restore your faith in the company?s security?

Source: http://bnbgaming.com/2011/10/12/sony-takes-caution-following-psn-attack/

alyssa campanella alyssa campanella chad ochocinco nbc dr phil squash paul krugman

Moving Beyond The Check-In, Foursquare Introduces ?Radar?

4Sq logoThe next update to Foursquare’s iPhone app for iOS 5 will pester you even more about things to do nearby. The new feature is called Radar, and it pulls suggestions from FourSquare’s Explore feature. Depending on your location, it might suggest a nearby restaurant, or remind you that the coffee shop on your to-do list is nearby. It will also tell you when your friends are meeting nearby. Radar pulls in Explore suggestions nearby and sends them to you as notifications so you get them even if the app is closed. Foursquare has to be really careful here. If the Radar suggestions are helpful and get people to do actually explore their cities, it will be a big hit. But if the suggestions aren’t that good, the notifications will just become annoying and people will turn them off.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/K5bU1yVMLG0/

janeane garofalo neil degrasse tyson neil degrasse tyson braves braves harrys law orioles

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Mexican Coffee Origins

Article Directory :: Food & Drink Articles

Mexican coffee is produced primarily on small farms that have one single owner. The coffee picked and dried by hand, and because of this Mexico has become a major producer of certified organic coffee. Since it is so close to the United States, a lot of the quality coffee that is grown in Mexico gets sent directly to the US. This brings the cost down significantly, and it is actually lower in price than most other varieties of specialty coffee.

Since there are so many different growing regions in the country of Mexico, you can find a multitude of various different tastes and overtones. The way that the coffee ends up tasting depends heavily upon the area in which it was grown. Plus, this type of coffee has quite a simple taste, which makes it a great base for a lot of other very delicious blends that you will find on the specialty coffee market.

A lot of the beans that come out of the Mexican mountains will be light bodied with a slightly nutty flavor. However, it really depends upon the conditions and the soil in which the beans are grown, so you can sometimes find delicious Mexican coffee with a slightly chocolaty taste and a bright acidity as well.

In most cases you will find that the Mexican coffee beans are typically of a higher quality, and the general public loves the way that they taste and smell. You will find that in general Mexican coffee will be light bodied with a dry and slightly acidic taste. If you prefer to take your coffee black, you will probably love this coffee because of the fact that it will be a little less strong with a lower acidity. There is no reason to mask any of the taste with cream or sugar, as it tastes perfectly wonderful just as it is.

Mexico has actually been growing coffee since the 1700's, so it is essentially one of the oldest producers of quality coffee beans on a worldwide basis. A lot of the best coffee comes from the Eastern area of this country where you will find coffee being produced both in the lowlands and in the mountains. However, it is rumored that their finest grade of coffee is grown high in the mountains, because supposedly the higher grown the coffee is, the better it will taste. The highest quality coffee coming from Mexico tends to come from the area where the Mexican border meets Guatemala. The high grown coffees that come from Mexico are perceived to be some of the highest quality coffees that are exported to the United States. Unbelievably, these coffees still remain fairly low in price, especially when considering the quality that you are getting.

Those who love this type of coffee will often times add a dash of cinnamon to their coffee grounds prior to brewing, as this is known to enhance the natural flavors that are already present in the finer blends of Mexican coffee.

Coastal Roasters is a micro-roaster of specialty organic and fair trade coffees from around the world. Their online store offers a Coffee of the Month Club featuring their award winning roasts.

Bookmark this article using any bookmark manager! Subscribe to Ray Forrest's RSS feed using any feed reader!

EasyPublish? this article - publishers click here

More articles by Ray Forrest

Source: http://www.submityourarticle.com/articles/Ray-Forrest-3933/coffee-of-the-month-club-221156.php

santonio holmes florida state osu football osu football fsu football fsu football ted kennedy

Syria rights group: Dozens killed in clashes

(AP) ? Clashes over the weekend between Syrian soldiers and army defectors and a shooting at a funeral have killed at least 17 members of the military and 14 civilians, the latest sign of the militarization of the uprising against President Bashar Assad's regime, a human rights group said Monday.

The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the latest fighting took place on Sunday in the northwestern province of Idlib, the central province of Homs, and the southern village of Dael. The activist group said the shooting continued on Monday.

The uprising against Assad's regime began in mid-March amid a wave of anti-government protests in the Arab world that toppled autocrats in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. Assad has reacted with deadly force that the U.N. estimates has left some 2,900 people dead.

"The situation has been terrible since yesterday," said a resident of the central city of Homs where the observatory reported at least seven civilians were killed on Sunday. "The clashes were very intense yesterday and I heard shooting this morning as well."

The man, who asked that his name not be used for fear of government reprisals, said he saw troops in armored personnel carriers around tense areas of Homs, such as Khaldiyeh and Baba Amr. "The army is isolating some areas," he said.

The Observatory said five soldiers and three civilians were killed in Dael, while the rest were killed in the Jabal al-Zawiyah areas in Idlib. Also Sunday, a shooting at a funeral in the Damascus suburb of Dumair left three dead, it said.

The fighting was the worst since last moth's clashes in the central town of Rastan that the army retook after five days of intense fighting. The Syrian government denies any defections and blames terrorists and Muslim extremists for the violence.

The trend toward militarization of the uprising has raised fears that Syria may be sliding toward civil war.

In Turkey, the state-run Anatolia news agency said Syrian soldiers fired on a makeshift camp on the Syrian side of the border on Sunday, wounding a man who later died in Turkey. It said family members were brought to Turkey where he was hospitalized but could not be saved.

Meanwhile, Britain condemned the assassination of Kurdish opposition figure Mashaal Tammo who was shot dead by masked gunmen Friday in the northeastern town of Qamishli.

Britain's Middle East minister Alistair Burt said he "deplored the circumstances of Mr. Tammo's death," and called on Syria to conduct a thorough investigation of the killing.

"There needs to be accountability for all deaths that have occurred," Burt said in a statement released late Sunday. "The increasing spiral of violence adds to the growing sense of the loss of legitimacy of the Assad regime. It must end meeting protest with violence."

___

Bassem Mroue can be reached on http://twitter.com/bmroue

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-10-10-ML-Syria/id-e996c9b634a44562b4f217b5a33ff88e

cherry josh groban chris johnson pacer frankenstein ute ute

Monday, October 10, 2011

Game Consoles that Rule the Industry


Posted on October 9, 2011, by giovannidesanctiss78. in Softwares

The entertainment industry is certainly one of the most lucrative of all since it has so many followers. In line with that, the gaming industry has always remained very busy and active over the years which are a sign of the excitement and thrill that people get from it. There are of course so many games and gaming devices that are available throughout the world and choosing the best one may not be so easy if you consider all of them carefully. Of course the choice of which one is the best game is made even more difficult due to the fact that each brand is trying its best to win over its competitors and thus there are usually so many good offers and features in almost all the main contenders? products.

It is however important to note that some games are very popular among the populations all over the world and it is these games that are considered to be the rulers of the industry. One of the game consoles that have managed to get a good share of fans is the Play Station. This games console has over the years captivated fans from all walks of life and has also managed to stay relevant in the industry because of the level of variety that it has to offer. Of course the games are played through a decoder that is connected to a screen which may be a TV screen or any other that is compatible with the game. The game is designed to use DVD disks that are especially designed for it and that can support either one game or a multiple number of games.

The next type of game console that is also very popular among people all over the world is the Nintendo DS consoles. These consoles have been in existence for a very long time but have never really gone out of taste because of the much technological advancement that can be attributed to them. One of the most significant achievements that are worth note is the fact that there are now multiple features that can be found on a Nintendo device. There are even cool cards that are able to store media information such as music files and video files which of course can also be played on the same device. These are known as r4 cards (also known as ds cards, r4i cards, r4 revolution). Dependent on the type of console you have, a r4 card can be used to expand your consoles storage capacity or make your console into a multimedia entertainment system. A r4 card is a slot 2 device that is the same size as a conventional DS console game, but it has the power to change gameplay in a dramatic way.

For more free tips and advice on R4 cards visit our informational website that will help you understand all you need to know about R4 card as many other Nintendo cards.

.
Tagged as : memory cards, nintendo, R4, R4 card, r4 cards, software

Source: http://www.themobicrunch.com/2011/10/game-consoles-that-rule-the-industry

hannah montana games hannah montana games wix michael fassbender michael fassbender jumpstart cbi

Ultraviolet link to cold winters

Recent cold winters that brought chaos to the UK and other places in northern Europe may have their roots in the Sun's varying ultraviolet emissions.

The latest satellite data shows the UV output is far more changeable than scientists had previously thought.

A UK scientific team now shows in Nature Geoscience journal how these changes lead to warmer winters in some places and colder winters in others.

The researchers emphasise there is no impact on global warming.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

You might be able to say 'this winter is more likely to be warm' or 'more likely to be cold' with more accuracy?

End Quote Dr Adam Scaife UK Met Office

The Sun has recently been in a quiet phase of its regular 11-year cycle, which co-incided with three years in which the UK, along with other places in northern Europe and parts of the US, experienced cold conditions unusual in the recent record.

But unusually warm weather was felt both further south, around the Mediterranean Sea, and further north in Canada and Greenland.

"The key point is that this effect is a change in the circulation, moving air from one place to another, which is why some places get cold and others get warm," said Adam Scaife, one of the researchers on the paper, who heads the UK Met Office's Seasonal to Decadal Prediction team.

"It's a jigsaw puzzle, and when you average it up over the globe, there is no effect on global temperatures," he told BBC News.

Data SORCE

The recent revelations on the Sun's ultraviolet variability come from a Nasa satellite called the SOlar Radiation and Climate Experiment (SORCE), launched in 2003.

Among its instruments is the Spectral Irradiance Monitor (SIM), which analyses the Sun's output at frequencies in the infrared, visible and ultraviolet parts of the spectrum.

SIM is giving scientists a detailed picture of how the Sun's ultraviolet emissions vary over its regular 11-year cycle of waxing and waning energy; and it suggests the UV variation is about five times larger than had been inferred from previous observations.

Meanwhile, scientists including the Met Office team have been publishing papers demonstrating that winter temperatures over Europe and North America do vary with the solar cycle - but without being able to show the mechanism.

The new research involved plugging SIM's ultraviolet measurements into the Met Office Hadley Centre computer model of the world's climate.

The results of the modelling re-inforce the idea that the UV variations affect winter weather across the region; and they indicate how it may happen.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

The Little Ice Age wasn't really an ice age of any kind - the idea that Europe had a relentless sequence of cold winters is frankly barking?

End Quote Dr Mike Lockwood Reading University

UV is absorbed in the stratosphere, the upper atmosphere, by ozone. So in the quiet bit of the solar cycle, when there is less UV to absorb, the stratosphere is relatively cooler.

The Hadley Centre model shows that the effects of this percolate down through the atmosphere, changing wind speeds, including the jet stream that circles the globe above Europe, North America and Russia.

The net change is a reduced air flow from west to east, which brings colder air to the UK and northern Europe and re-distributes temperatures across the region.

Dr Scaife emphasises that ultraviolet emissions are not the sole reason why winter temperatures vary.

But understanding the UV link may improve meteorologists' capacity to predict winter weather accurately.

"Assuming these new satellite data are correct... then as the 11-year solar cycle is predictable, it's going to contribute some predictability for European and indeed UK weather," he said.

"You'll never be able to predict the precise temperature of the third week in January or whatever, but you might be able to say 'this winter is more likely to be warm' or 'more likely to be cold' with more accuracy."

SIMply the best?

The one big caveat is whether SIM's data is accurate.

Scientists in the field appear to believe it is - but as the UV changes it sees are so large compared with previous methods, they would prefer confirmation.

Commenting in Nature Geoscience, Katja Matthes from the Helmholtz Centre in Potsdam, Germany, describes the results as "intriguing, albeit somewhat provisional".

"The trends seen in the SIM observations are still under discussion and remain to be confirmed," she writes.

She also points out that SIM measures only a proportion of the ultraviolet region of the spectrum.

If the ultraviolet theory is correct, the UK is less likely to see cold winters in the next few years as the 11-year solar cycle gains strength.

Biting cold?

As well as the 11-year cycle, the Sun's output also varies on longer timescales.

Its intensity has increased since the 1600s when the period known as the Maunder Minimum began, with astronomers documenting a dearth of sunspots over many decades.

The Maunder Minimum co-incided with part of a period that has come to be known as the Little Ice Age, when winter weather overall grew colder in parts of Europe.

Mike Lockwood of the UK's Reading University, who also studies possible associations between solar changes and climate, suggested that if the Sun's ultraviolet output varies as much on long timescales as its does across the solar cycle, that could provide the connection between the Maunder Minimum and the temperature changes.

"The Little Ice Age wasn't really an ice age of any kind - the idea that Europe had a relentless sequence of cold winters is frankly barking, but there was a larger proportion of cold winters," he told BBC News.

"We now have a viable explanation of why that happened - nothing to do with global warming, but in terms of temperature re-distribution around the north Atlantic."

Follow Richard on Twitter

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/science-environment-15199065

beyonce and jay z usopen ppl alfred hitchcock corpus polaris van gogh