Friday, 19 October 2012

Is McDonald's going over to the?light side? Find out ... - Health Blog

Is it true? Is McDonald?s, the company tarred and chicken-nugget feathered with Morgan Spurlock?s 2004 documentary Super Size Me (about the deleterious effects of 30 days of eating McDonald?s food had on his health) and the very same company that faced (and overcame) the prospect of a class-action lawsuit in California for including toys in its Happy Meals (because the toys were said to be enticing kids to eat unhealthy food), moving from the dark side of American nutrition to the light?

One thing?s for sure. McDonald?s wants to be seen as part of the solution to our rising obesity crisis and not as part of the problem any more. To that end, you can check out a ?Good Food, Good People, Good Neighbors? program, featuring healthy food, an exercise class, face painting and music at a North Texas McDonald?s.?It?s all happening ?Friday, Oct. 19 from 4-7 p.m. at the McDonald?s at 7233 John Carpenter Freeway in Dallas.

Franchise owner and operator Billie Hawkins plans to highlight the restaurant?s commitment to health and nutrition by showing?how food at the restaurant is prepared, how the company uses local vendors to provide fresh produce and ways that the company is committed to providing healthier food options, from new salads and grilled chicken items on the menu to a revamping of kids? Happy Meals to promote produce and low-fat dairy options. There?s ?a caloric and nutrition breakdown on each item, right down to the catsup packages, a commitment to reduce the amount of sugar and saturated fats and tips on how to make healthier choices.

One of the most intriguing ideas they?re offering is a chance to customize your meals. Among your options:

Ask for no salt on your fries

Big Mac ? ask to hold the medium bun and half the sauce

Hold the cheese on a 300-calorie Egg McMuffin to bring it down to 280 calories.

The company has been rolling out the new policy for a while now, with a ?Favorites Under 400 Calories? campaign that ran at the time of the Summer Olympics and a McDonalds.com meal option that shows you you can add or subtract calories from your meal (click on the Nutrition heading). They even have a new smartphone app that can give you calorie estimates.

So, what do you think? Does this change the way you think about McDonald?s as a food option for your family?

Kids will be encouraged to get apples and milk with their nuggets instead of fries and soda in the new Happy Meal

Source: http://healthblog.dallasnews.com/2012/10/is-mcdonalds-going-over-to-the-light-side-find-out-friday-as-a-mcdonalds-healthy-fun-and-games-event.html/

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Are You Stressed With Your Online Business?

As entrepreneurs we tend to push ourselves to the limits, and then beyond. We're driven and motivated, and we put all sorts of self-imposed deadlines and expectations on ourselves.

I'm sitting here at my desk looking at my endless task list. Actually, multiple task lists and tons of notes and ideas. I'm sure you can relate and have the same staring you in the face too.

Over the years I've discovered that I experience two very different types of stress. There's positive stress and negative stress. Positive Stress is called Eustress and is based more on perception than circumstances. Good stress drives you forward with a higher level of motivation and determination, unlike DIStress which can seriously hinder your creativity and productivity - and overall sense of well-being...

"Selye argued that persistent stress that is not resolved through coping or adaptation should be known as distress, and may lead to anxiety, withdrawal, and depressive behavior. In contrast, if stress enhances one's functioning it may be considered eustress. Both can be equally taxing on the body, and are cumulative in nature, depending on a person's way of adapting to the stressor that caused it." source

Sometimes all it takes is a simple shift in mindset to turn distress into eustress. Good stress can be a very positive thing, so it's worth exploring ways to ignite that positive response to stressors that might otherwise cause you to shut down in fear or anxiety.

The first step is to analyze your own individual way of dealing with different types of stress. We all handle things differently, so there is no one size fits all solution.

Just as one example, I know that I am more alert and productive in the early morning hours. I tend to get stressed and frustrated if I try to work on creative projects in the afternoon. So it only makes sense for me to PLAN accordingly.

I've also discovered that I work VERY well under pressure. And it has to be a real deadline, not a self-imposed deadline. If I want to get my entire house clean in a matter of a few short hours, all I have to do is invite someone over for dinner. ;-)

Given we're all different, and usually respond to stress subconsciously and automatically (without thinking), it pays to become more aware of your typical responses - and start making conscious choices based on what works best for YOU.

It could be as simple as changing your routine or schedule to increase productivity, like I did after recognizing mornings were my most productive hours. Or you may choose to put REAL deadlines in place.

But just being more aware can have a dramatic affect on how you respond to stress. Stress can ramp you up, or it can shut you down. Stop and ask yourself WHY. Such as why you feel stressed, or why you respond to certain stresses in a particular way. Analyzing what distresses you, and what motivates you, can help you create more positive scenarios - and avoid more of the negatives.

You may have noticed I haven't been blogging in the last two weeks, which is not at all my norm. A few times I had a hit of anxiety over that, but I had to stop and just let it go. I decided nobody was out there holding their breath waiting for my next post (gosh, I hope not anyway! lol). It was a self-imposed expectation only, and not one I was going to allow to derail me or "get me stressed." Period.

Being aware is the first step to taking control. Life can throw all sorts of kinks in our day, from distractions to technical issues. The key is to just keep moving forward. Any progress you make is still PROGRESS. Celebrate what you accomplish instead of lamenting over what you didn't. Plan your day around your peak performance hours. Put motivators in place, and remove negative pressures.

I would love to hear how YOU deal with "stress" in your business, and how you stay motivated and productive day in and day out...

Best,

Source: http://www.clicknewz.com/5404/online-business-stress/

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Scientists confident moon born of colossal Earth collision that vaporized Zinc

Researchers examined rocks collected by astronauts during NASA's Apollo lunar landing missions, as well as a meteorite that originated on the moon to make the find.

By Jesse Emspak,?SPACE.com Contributor / October 17, 2012

This artist's conception of a planetary smashup whose debris was spotted by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope three years ago gives an impression of the carnage that would have been wrecked when a similar impact created Earth's Moon. A team at Washington University in St. Louis has uncovered evidence of this impact that scientists have been trying to find for more than 30 years.

NASA/JPL-Caltech

Enlarge

Water on the moon boiled away in massive quantities in a cataclysmic evaporation event during ??the moon's birth, bolstering the theory that a Mars-sized body collided with the Earth to form its only natural satellite, scientists say.

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Researchers examined rocks collected by astronauts during NASA's Apollo lunar landing missions, as well as a meteorite that originated on?the moon?to make the find. They looked for traces of zinc, and found the ratios of heavy to light isotopes are greater than on Earth, which suggests the moon went through an intense evaporation event early in its formation.

The study is more evidence for the theory that the?moon formed from a colossal impact, researchers said.

Early in the?moon's formation, the surface was hot enough to vaporize zinc ? and a giant impact is one of the few things that would generate that much heat. Another prediction of the theory is that heavier isotopes would be more common, because they would condense at a higher temperature.

"What we found is that the depletion [of lighter isotopes] of Zinc is probably due to evaporation," said study co-author Fr?d?ric Moynier, assistant professor of Earth and planetary sciences at the Washington University in St. Louis. [How the Moon Formed (Video)]

Zinc on the moon

Moynier, study lead author Randal Paniello and James Day of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, found that the ratio of zinc-66 to zinc-64 in moon rocks is about three to four times greater than either Earth or Mars. On the Earth and Mars respectively, it is 0.25 to 0.27 parts per thousand. On the moon, it was a difference of 1.3 to 1.4 parts per thousand.

Almost all the samples collected from the moon had similar ratios of heavier to light isotopes, even though they came from very different places all over the moon. (One sample came from a meteorite that originated there).

The team also measured the effect in tektites, which are pebble-sized rocks formed by meteor impacts. They found the same thing: The tektites were also depleted in zinc-64 relative to ordinary Earth rocks.

The high temperatures imply the water vaporized. That would also point to a depletion of other volatiles ? elements such as hydrogen, chlorine, sulfur, which vaporize at relatively low temperatures.

Searching for moon water

However, several studies show water present in some lunar rocks.

Recent missions like NASA's Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite revealed?evidence of moon water?in 2009. India's Chandrayaan-1 found hydroxyl, an oxygen-hydrogen compound that makes water when bonded to another hydrogen atom.

How much water and other volatiles the moon has is a key question for plans of future lunar exploration by astronauts. Advocates of a "wet moon" say that the lunar mantle may have big stores of those chemicals. But other scientists think the volatiles are mostly in the top layers of lunar soil, brought in by impacts and generally dating from after the moon's formation.

"[The results] show that all this water they found on the face of the moon is secondary water," Moynier said.

Water and volatiles are probably from impacts and the solar wind, Moynier said. The studies showing volatiles in the volcanic glass might be showing local areas that are enriched, relative to the rest of the moon, he added.

Denton Ebel, curator of meteorites at the American Museum of Natural History, noted that there is evidence of?seismic activity on the moon?and evidence of hydrogen-bearing rocks at the moon's interior. Ebel was not involved it he study.

There is also a heat source at?the center of the moon. That would point to some volatiles and water being there. But the new research seems to show a moon-spanning mine of water and other volatiles is less likely.

"The dry moon is dead, but the wet moon is not alive," he said.

Ebel noted that the isotope study confirms a prediction of the impact theory of the moon's formation. There are still a lot of questions, though. For example, the moon's composition is broadly similar to the Earth's mantle ? as the impact theory predicts. But the Earth's mantle is depleted in potassium, and the moon's should look the same. It doesn't.

The study also shows how important it is to get samples, Ebel said.

Without the Apollo moon rocks and lunar meteorites, gathered mostly from Antarctica, it would be harder to test the impact theory at all, since the evidence comes from direct chemical analysis. ?

The research is detailed in the Oct. 18 edition of the journal Nature.

Follow SPACE.com on Twitter?@Spacedotcom. We're also on?Facebook?&?Google+.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/szOSft_oNEM/Scientists-confident-moon-born-of-colossal-Earth-collision-that-vaporized-Zinc

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The Sticking Power of Tape Storage in the Age of Big Data ? Data ...





Brian Truskowski is the General Manager of IBM System Storage and Networking, IBM Systems and Technology Group. He is responsible for strategy, product development, marketing, sales support, and program profitability for IBM?s storage and networking businesses.

Sometimes perception really is reality. And such is the case with Big Data.

According to researchers at IDC, more than 1.8 zettabytes of digital information was generated around the world in 2011 ? a number that grew by a factor of nine in just five years, and one that is expected to double every two years going forward. Whether you view it in practical terms (data volumes), or the abstract (insights derived from those volumes) ? the perceptions that Big Data is big and a growing concern for organizations large and small are real.

How the industry and the world reached this point is a long and varied story, filled with innumerable inventors and innovators, wizards of business and finance, and a market place hungry for better, faster, and affordable technology.

But if we were tasked to identify a point in history that served as a moment that changed the direction of computer systems, it?d be hard to argue against the significance of the first magnetic tape storage system.

While there was a great deal of experimentation going on in the early days of the computer industry ? and while there have been a great number of innovations since ? it?s fair to say that the digital storage industry as we know it today would not have occurred without an innovation created by a team of IBM engineers 60 years ago. The innovation enabled the massive calculating machines of the day to save their results digitally on reels of magnetic tape instead of on punch cards, creating entirely new ways to view and gain insight from, digital information.

Challenges of Storage

To understand the value of this innovation, it?s important to remember that during the 1940s and 50s calculating and processing wasn?t the challenge any longer, but rather storing the results of the calculations. During those early years, the only recordable techniques for the massive calculating systems involved ?physical media? ? hard copy books, paper, and punch cards. It was becoming clear that as these systems gained performance their storage solutions were not sustainable.

IBM engineers turned to a newer technology of the day, magnetic tape, for answers. The technology, which had been used to capture audio, held promise for the hulking computing systems, but was just not durable enough. When large reels of it were applied for capturing the computer data, the tape drives? powerful motors, which abruptly started and stopped, easily snapped the tape.

Magnetic Tape Improvements

IBM engineers tackled the breakage problem head-on. And on May 21, 1952, when the company released its first production computer, the IBM 701, it also released an accompanying storage system that represented a breakthrough in magnetic tape. The IBM 726 was a 935-pound floor-standing behemoth that solved the breakage problem through the use of a ?vacuum column? which created a buffer of loose tape between starts and stops. This U-shaped loop of loose tape allowed the tape to better absorb the extremely fast starts and stops of the system.

The vacuum column innovation was not only a success, but it was adopted by most high-performance tape drive manufacturers, making it one of the most widely used computer technologies of the 20th century. The technology became so prevalent that the image of the start and stop, reel-to-reel tape system, became the iconic, albeit unofficial, image that would symbolize the ?computer? for an entire generation in news and entertainment.

Researchers Still Pushing Boundaries

Today, magnetic tape technologies and processes have advanced to truly astounding levels. For example, back in 1952, our IBM 726 had a capacity of 2.3MB. A single tape cartridge today can hold up to 4TB, or about two million times the capacity. One of the reasons for that kind of jump is the great work that has been done over the years, and continues unabated in research facilities around the globe. In 2009, for example, scientists at IBM Research in Zurich broke the magnetic tape density record by recording data onto an advanced prototype tape at a density of 29.5 billion bits per square inch (See this ?YouTube video?for details). This kind of advance could lead to a single tape cartridge holding as much as 35TB of uncompressed data.

Other advances like IBM Linear Tape File System (LTFS) which brought dramatic ease of use capabilities to tape management, such as drag-and-drop, and the tagging of files for more intuitive searching, among other things, have led organizations like T3Media to turn to tape to tackle Big Data. T3Media (formerly Thought Equity Motion) is a provider of cloud-based video management and licensing services that has more than 10 million hours of content under management. In addition to turning to tape for capacity, LTFS management, and reliability, T3Media is also saving considerable costs due to tape?s inherent energy savings. Unlike spinning hard drives, which must remain powered on, tape systems only power up when activated, and as a result offer a much lower carbon footprint.

Tape Playing Renewed Role

The challenges of 2012 are not what they were in 1952. Today, game-changing dynamics such as social media, mobile computing, regulation, and yes, Big Data, are all intersecting to create a digital traffic jam of epic proportions. By some accounts, the amount of information needed to be digitally stored will exceed 8 zettabytes by 2015. These trends and forecasts are forcing every industry to look at their storage infrastructures more carefully than ever before. And for many, tape is playing a significant, strategic and renewed role.

But to be sure, the businesses that succeed will be those that leverage the most strategic storage technologies available ? from advanced tape to solid state, and from virtualization to the cloud ? to increase efficiency, minimize risk, lower costs, improve access, and strengthen security. It will also be those that exploit solutions that offer greater data classification, because not all data is created equal nor does it maintain the same relevance over time.

That is the path to this new frontier of storage, this new era of smarter computing, including smarter storage.

Industry Perspectives is a content channel at Data Center Knowledge highlighting thought leadership in the data center arena. See our guidelines and submission process for information on participating. View previously published Industry Perspectives in our Knowledge Library.

Source: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2012/10/19/the-sticking-power-of-tape-storage-in-the-age-of-big-data/

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Thursday, 18 October 2012

Romney imprecise in criticism of 'Fast and Furious' (CNN)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/256296902?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Chinese auto parts maker vows to top Johnson deal for A123

WILMINGTON, Delaware (Reuters) - A lawyer for Chinese auto parts maker Wanxiang Group Corp said on Thursday it plans to make a superior bid for the battery business of A123 Systems than what a U.S. company has offered.

Wanxiang intends to bid at the auction for A123, which filed for bankruptcy earlier this week, Bojan Guzina said at a court hearing in Delaware. The Chinese company also plans to fight Johnson Controls Inc for the role of initial bidder for A123, the attorney said.

A123, a maker of lithium-ion batteries used in hybrid and electric vehicles, declared bankruptcy amid a backdrop of quality-control problems and a disappointing market for electric vehicles. The company had won a $249 million U.S. government grant in 2009.

Wanxiang has been pursuing A123 for months. The bankruptcy came after a $465 million rescue deal by the Chinese company unraveled after the U.S. battery maker was unable to meet some conditions of the agreement.

"My client feels it has been left at the altar a couple of times," Guzina, a lawyer for law firm Sidley Austin, which represents Wanxiang, said in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington.

A123 entered bankruptcy with an agreement to sell its automotive operations, including two factories in Michigan, to Milwaukee-based Johnson Controls for $125 million.

But that deal is subject to a court-supervised auction, and Wanxiang plans to contest Johnson Controls as the initial bidder -- or "stalking horse" -- in the sale process. Funds raised in the auction will go to repaying A123's creditors.

"We believe our stalking horse proposal will be materially better than Johnson Controls'," Guzina said.

A spokesman for Johnson Controls did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Judge Kevin Carey, who welcomed competitive bidding for A123, is scheduled to rule on the initial bidder on October 30.

"It's nice that the debtor has become the popular girl at the dance with at least two bidders, maybe more," he said.

A123 also has attracted bidders for its non-automotive operations, which includes grid storage batteries.

Wanxiang must receive approval from the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States and the government of China to acquire A123. The Chinese company will submit its proposals next week, Guzina said.

The A123 bankruptcy has quickly became politicized with less than four weeks before the U.S. presidential election. Republican candidate Mitt Romney said the government grant awarded to A123 was an example of the Obama administration "gambling away billions of taxpayer dollars."

The White House has allotted about $90 billion for various clean-energy programs as part of its economic stimulus plans.

Obama campaign spokesman Adam Fletcher said this week that the investments helped to more than double renewable energy production from wind and solar, "creating good-paying jobs and bringing manufacturing back to our shores."

Wanxiang arrived in court armed with its own proposed bankruptcy loan, known as a debtor-in-possession (DIP) loan, to counter the financing Johnson Controls arranged with A123. Carey approved on an interim basis the Johnson Controls loan after concessions were made to bring it in line with Wanxiang's proposal.

DIP loans often place stringent requirements on a bankrupt company, such as ordering asset auctions on tight deadlines. The loans give a lender influence over the outcome of a case.

Guzina said Wanxiang would seek to replace the Johnson Controls DIP loan at the October 30 hearing, when A123 will also seek final approval for its bankruptcy finance.

The attorney also said Wanxiang wants to extend the bidding period for the battery maker's business closer to the end of the year, compared to A123's proposed auction on November 19. Given the time it needs for approvals, Wanxiang has an interest in slowing down the bidding process.

The case is A123 Systems Inc, Delaware Bankruptcy Court, No. 12-12859.

(Reporting By Tom Hals; Editing by Martha Graybow and Phil Berlowitz)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chinese-auto-parts-maker-vows-top-johnson-deal-233815501--finance.html

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MiniFlame Drops Cyberbombs on High-Value Targets

Security researchers have identified a new offshoot of the notorious Flame espionage malware. The malware, called "miniFlame," creates a backdoor in the systems that it infects. That backdoor can then be used by an attacker to gain access an infected machine. The attacker can then write files to the compromised computer, snatch files from it or snap screenshots of its display.


Source: http://ectnews.com.feedsportal.com/c/34520/f/632000/s/24966dd5/l/0L0Stechnewsworld0N0Crsstory0C764140Bhtml/story01.htm

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