First lady: Country should learn from Virginia Tech (CNN)

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Mitt Romney, community organizer (Powerlineblog)

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From Disrupt NY To A Multi-Million Skype Acquisition, GroupMe Tells All

GroupMe_logoThey?raised $11.45 million, acquired a company called Sensobi, and were themselves?acquired by Skype?for a price that was likely well north of $43 million. There may not be a wilder tale of a Disrupt success (though plenty of startups would beg to differ), which is why we?ve chosen GroupMe to kick off a series I?m doing on ?Disrupt Startups: Where They Are Now.?

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Report: Apple dumping Google for own Maps app in iOS 6

Granted, Apple and Google aren’t quite the bosom buddies they once were, but how far is Cupertino going to free itself from the Android-maker? Well, Apple’s picked up a number of mapmakers and is now reportedly getting ready to unveil a Google map competitor for iOS. 9to5Mac is reporting that the mapping solution will be in-place for the next major version of the mobile operating system, combining technologies gathered with the acquisition of Placebase, C3 Technologies and Poly9. The star of the show is said to be the 3D mode with graphics nabbed from C3. All Things D has “independently confirmed” the forthcoming app reinvention, with sources adding, (hopefully a bit hyperbolically) that it will “blow your head off.” According to rumors, we’ll be finding out a lot more come WWDC next month.

Report: Apple dumping Google for own Maps app in iOS 6 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 May 2012 13:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Happy Birthday, Robert Pattinson! His Sexiest Shots

The sizzling Twilight star celebrates his 26th birthday on May 13 — but these sexy photos are a gift to you!

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Rhode & Schwarz anechoic test chamber waves-on

Rhode & Schwarz anechoic chamber waves-on

We’re oft treated to fantastic news by the FCC while devices are tested in its immense labyrinth of labs but what we’ve not seen much of is the type of equipment contained within them. While the smaller Rhode & Schwarz TS8991 that we had a peek at today is used more for antenna design purposes and not by the FCC, it still offers some interesting — and frighteningly complicated — insight into the world of those who make your handsets work. The MIMO test we watched involved two theta positioners (which can be seen in the picture above) that rotate about the handset on the pedestal which also turns to add the azimuth in the test run. Each theta positioner has a quad ridged horn antenna, which — aside from likely being the greatest sounding antenna name ever — capture the signal from the handset and eventually allows the AMS32 management system to generate a 3D pattern of the radio emissions. The system will test 2G, 3G, 4G, WiFi, and Bluetooth sets and rings in somewhere above $1,000,000. Follow on for a video and a pretty detailed explanation that is mostly pretty user friendly.

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Rhode & Schwarz anechoic test chamber waves-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 May 2012 16:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Zombie ant fungus, meet the anti-zombie-ant fungus

A new study has found that a zombifying ant fungus can be kept at bay by another pathogen.

It turns out that it takes a fungus to control one.

Skip to next paragraph

For the first time, researchers have discovered how an ant colony can survive an onslaught of zombie-fungus, also known as Ophiocordyceps, a behavior altering, deadly parasite.

Ophiocordyceps enters an ant’s brain, causing it to march to its death at a mass grave. Once the ant is dead, the fungus produces more infectious spores.

In their new study, David Hughes, an entomologist at Penn State and his team describe a hyperparasitic fungus ? that is, a parasitic fungus that exploits another parasitic fungus ? that helps ants to ward off a zombie epidemic.

“In a case where biology is stranger than fiction, the parasite of the zombie-ant fungus is itself a fungus,” Hughes said in a statement.

Ants are the dominant creature of all land-based ecosystems. In tropical forests, for example, almost 70% of individual insects are ants. They provide ample opportunities for scientific investigation.

Previous research has shown that ants groom each other and themselves to defend their colonies against pathogens such as fungi.

Hughes and his group modeled ant behavior in order to see grooming’s effect on restricting infection. They found that combined with the ant’s own grooming practices, the hyperparasitic fungus significantly limited the spread of the deadly, zombifying Ophiocordyceps.

Many ants become infected with the Ophiocordyceps fungus because it grows slowly, producing immature spores for about a month after killing its host.

However, the likelihood of an individual ant becoming a zombie is relatively low because the young spores are susceptible to the hyperparasitic fungus.

“Because the hyperparasitic fungi prevents the infected zombie-ant fungus from spreading spores, fewer of the ants will become zombies,” explained Hughes.

The new study is available online in PLoS ONE.

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Bond king says budget pain isn’t enough in Europe

FILE – This undated file photo provided by the Pacific Investment Management Co., shows Bill Gross, manager of the PIMCO Total Return Fund. The struggling countries of Europe have followed a diet of deep spending cuts for two years in hopes of averting financial catastrophe and persuading bond investors to buy their debt. Gross says that countries can?t simply cut their way out of the debt crisis. That?s bound to backfire, he says. (AP Photo/Pacific Investment Management Co., File)

FILE – This undated file photo provided by the Pacific Investment Management Co., shows Bill Gross, manager of the PIMCO Total Return Fund. The struggling countries of Europe have followed a diet of deep spending cuts for two years in hopes of averting financial catastrophe and persuading bond investors to buy their debt. Gross says that countries can?t simply cut their way out of the debt crisis. That?s bound to backfire, he says. (AP Photo/Pacific Investment Management Co., File)

(AP) ? The struggling countries of Europe have cut spending for two years in hopes of averting financial catastrophe and persuading bond investors to buy their debt.

But the world’s most influential bond investor thinks it won’t work.

Bill Gross, manager of Pimco’s $252 billion Total Return Fund, the largest mutual fund, says that countries can’t simply cut their way out of the debt crisis. That’s bound to backfire, he says.

The countries that use the euro reduced their budget deficits last year, but their economies shrank, too. As a result, their debt increased as a share of their annual economic output. Eight of the 17 euro countries are in recession.

Meanwhile, unemployment in the so-called eurozone is almost 11 percent and rising. Outrage over spending cuts led voters last weekend to oust leaders in Greece and France who had promoted cuts as a way out of the crisis.

Some questions and answers with the man sometimes called the bond king:

Q: What do you make of the backlash in Europe against deep spending cuts? They were supposed to lure investors like you into buying government bonds from Greece, Portugal, Spain and the like. It doesn’t seem to be working.

A: We do look at the debt levels. It matters. But a bond investor has to look at economic growth, too. If a country can’t grow its way out of its predicament, we won’t go there. That’s why we’ve stayed out of Europe for the most part.

Q: So the so-called austerity approach ? tightening government budgets through spending cuts and tax increases ? isn’t enough for you. A country can’t keep cutting spending and hope that prosperity eventually shows up?

A: No, that doesn’t work. Eliminating a budget deficit won’t produce growth. It really requires a delicate combination of growth and budget discipline over the longer term. Policymakers have it tough.

Q: Paul Krugman, the economist and columnist for The New York Times, has been saying this for years. It’s the lesson of the Great Depression: Tightening budgets in the face of an economic slump only makes the slump worse.

A: I’m not a big Krugman advocate. But I agree that you don’t cut everything and hope the private markets reward you for it. It has to be a balance. What Europe really needs is to get the private market back in there. They’re trying to convince the Pimcos of the world to return (by having the European Central Bank lend to banks), but all the efforts so far use public money. The global marketplace is privately funded. And if the private markets can’t be convinced, this crisis is going to be with us for a very long time.

Q: What would it take to convince you to buy bonds from one of the troubled countries?

A: It takes economic growth, honestly. And it also takes policies that last longer than one or two months. We haven’t avoided Europe, entirely. We invest in Germany and France. But we avoid the bad boys and girls because there doesn’t appear to be a growth solution to these countries’ problems.

Associated Press

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VISTA views a vast ball of stars

[ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 9-May-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Richard Hook
rhook@eso.org
49-893-200-6655
ESO

Globular clusters are held together in a tight spherical shape by gravity. In Messier 55, the stars certainly do keep close company: approximately one hundred thousand stars are packed within a sphere with a diameter of only about 25 times the distance between the Sun and the nearest star system, Alpha Centauri.

About 160 globular clusters have been spotted encircling our galaxy, the Milky Way, mostly toward its bulging centre. The two latest discoveries, made using VISTA, were recently announced (eso1141 – http://www.eso.org/public/news/eso1141/). The largest galaxies can have thousands of these rich collections of stars in orbit around them.

Observations of globular clusters’ stars reveal that they originated around the same time more than 10 billion years ago and from the same cloud of gas. As this formative period was just a few billion years after the Big Bang, nearly all of the gas on hand was the simplest, lightest and most common in the cosmos: hydrogen, along with some helium and much smaller amounts of heavier chemical elements such as oxygen and nitrogen.

Being made mostly from hydrogen distinguishes globular cluster residents from stars born in later eras, like our Sun, that are infused with heavier elements created in earlier generations of stars. The Sun lit up some 4.6 billion years ago, making it only about half as old as the elderly stars in most globular clusters. The chemical makeup of the cloud from which the Sun formed is reflected in the abundances of elements found throughout the Solar System in asteroids, in the planets and in our own bodies.

Sky watchers can find Messier 55 in the constellation of Sagittarius (The Archer). The notably large cluster appears nearly two-thirds the width of the full Moon, and is not at all difficult to see in a small telescope, even though it is located at a distance of about 17 000 light-years from Earth.

The French astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille first documented the stellar grouping around 1752, and some 26 years later another French astronomer, Charles Messier, included the cluster as the 55th entry in his famous astronomical catalogue. The object is also cross-listed as NGC 6809 in the New General Catalogue, an often-cited and more extensive astronomical catalogue created in the late nineteenth century.

The new image was obtained in infrared light by the 4.1-metre Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA, eso0949) at ESO’s Paranal Observatory in northern Chile.

As well as the stars of Messier 55, this VISTA image also records many galaxies lying far beyond the cluster. A particularly prominent edge-on spiral galaxy appears to the upper right of the centre of the picture.

###

More information

The year 2012 marks the 50th anniversary of the founding of the European Southern Observatory (ESO). ESO is the foremost intergovernmental astronomy organisation in Europe and the world’s most productive astronomical observatory. It is supported by 15 countries: Austria, Belgium, Brazil, the Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Finland, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. ESO carries out an ambitious programme focused on the design, construction and operation of powerful ground-based observing facilities enabling astronomers to make important scientific discoveries. ESO also plays a leading role in promoting and organising cooperation in astronomical research. ESO operates three unique world-class observing sites in Chile: La Silla, Paranal and Chajnantor. At Paranal, ESO operates the Very Large Telescope, the world’s most advanced visible-light astronomical observatory and two survey telescopes. VISTA works in the infrared and is the world’s largest survey telescope and the VLT Survey Telescope is the largest telescope designed to exclusively survey the skies in visible light. ESO is the European partner of a revolutionary astronomical telescope ALMA, the largest astronomical project in existence. ESO is currently planning a 40-metre-class European Extremely Large optical/near-infrared Telescope, the E-ELT, which will become “the world’s biggest eye on the sky”.

Links

Photos of VISTA: http://www.eso.org/public/images/archive/search/?adv=&subject_name=Visible%20and%20Infrared%20Survey%20Telescope%20for%20Astronomy

Image of other objects from VISTA: http://www.eso.org/public/images/archive/search/?adv=&facility=30

Contacts

Richard Hook
ESO, La Silla, Paranal, E-ELT and Survey Telescopes Public Information Officer
Garching bei Mnchen, Germany
Tel: +49 89 3200 6655
Cell: +49 151 1537 3591
Email: rhook@eso.org



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?

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.

[ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 9-May-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Richard Hook
rhook@eso.org
49-893-200-6655
ESO

Globular clusters are held together in a tight spherical shape by gravity. In Messier 55, the stars certainly do keep close company: approximately one hundred thousand stars are packed within a sphere with a diameter of only about 25 times the distance between the Sun and the nearest star system, Alpha Centauri.

About 160 globular clusters have been spotted encircling our galaxy, the Milky Way, mostly toward its bulging centre. The two latest discoveries, made using VISTA, were recently announced (eso1141 – http://www.eso.org/public/news/eso1141/). The largest galaxies can have thousands of these rich collections of stars in orbit around them.

Observations of globular clusters’ stars reveal that they originated around the same time more than 10 billion years ago and from the same cloud of gas. As this formative period was just a few billion years after the Big Bang, nearly all of the gas on hand was the simplest, lightest and most common in the cosmos: hydrogen, along with some helium and much smaller amounts of heavier chemical elements such as oxygen and nitrogen.

Being made mostly from hydrogen distinguishes globular cluster residents from stars born in later eras, like our Sun, that are infused with heavier elements created in earlier generations of stars. The Sun lit up some 4.6 billion years ago, making it only about half as old as the elderly stars in most globular clusters. The chemical makeup of the cloud from which the Sun formed is reflected in the abundances of elements found throughout the Solar System in asteroids, in the planets and in our own bodies.

Sky watchers can find Messier 55 in the constellation of Sagittarius (The Archer). The notably large cluster appears nearly two-thirds the width of the full Moon, and is not at all difficult to see in a small telescope, even though it is located at a distance of about 17 000 light-years from Earth.

The French astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille first documented the stellar grouping around 1752, and some 26 years later another French astronomer, Charles Messier, included the cluster as the 55th entry in his famous astronomical catalogue. The object is also cross-listed as NGC 6809 in the New General Catalogue, an often-cited and more extensive astronomical catalogue created in the late nineteenth century.

The new image was obtained in infrared light by the 4.1-metre Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA, eso0949) at ESO’s Paranal Observatory in northern Chile.

As well as the stars of Messier 55, this VISTA image also records many galaxies lying far beyond the cluster. A particularly prominent edge-on spiral galaxy appears to the upper right of the centre of the picture.

###

More information

The year 2012 marks the 50th anniversary of the founding of the European Southern Observatory (ESO). ESO is the foremost intergovernmental astronomy organisation in Europe and the world’s most productive astronomical observatory. It is supported by 15 countries: Austria, Belgium, Brazil, the Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Finland, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. ESO carries out an ambitious programme focused on the design, construction and operation of powerful ground-based observing facilities enabling astronomers to make important scientific discoveries. ESO also plays a leading role in promoting and organising cooperation in astronomical research. ESO operates three unique world-class observing sites in Chile: La Silla, Paranal and Chajnantor. At Paranal, ESO operates the Very Large Telescope, the world’s most advanced visible-light astronomical observatory and two survey telescopes. VISTA works in the infrared and is the world’s largest survey telescope and the VLT Survey Telescope is the largest telescope designed to exclusively survey the skies in visible light. ESO is the European partner of a revolutionary astronomical telescope ALMA, the largest astronomical project in existence. ESO is currently planning a 40-metre-class European Extremely Large optical/near-infrared Telescope, the E-ELT, which will become “the world’s biggest eye on the sky”.

Links

Photos of VISTA: http://www.eso.org/public/images/archive/search/?adv=&subject_name=Visible%20and%20Infrared%20Survey%20Telescope%20for%20Astronomy

Image of other objects from VISTA: http://www.eso.org/public/images/archive/search/?adv=&facility=30

Contacts

Richard Hook
ESO, La Silla, Paranal, E-ELT and Survey Telescopes Public Information Officer
Garching bei Mnchen, Germany
Tel: +49 89 3200 6655
Cell: +49 151 1537 3591
Email: rhook@eso.org



[ 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.

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Milwaukee mayor will try again to beat Walker

Wisconsin Democratic gubernatorial candidate, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, celebrates after speaking at his primary election victory party Tuesday, May 8, 2012, in Milwaukee. Democrats overwhelmingly picked Barrett to challenge Republican Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker in a June recall election. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)

Wisconsin Democratic gubernatorial candidate, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, celebrates after speaking at his primary election victory party Tuesday, May 8, 2012, in Milwaukee. Democrats overwhelmingly picked Barrett to challenge Republican Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker in a June recall election. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)

Wisconsin Democratic gubernatorial candidate, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, shakes hands with supporters before speaking at his primary election victory party Tuesday, May 8, 2012, in Milwaukee. Democrats overwhelmingly picked Barrett to challenge Republican Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker in a June recall election. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker speaks to supporters during an election night appearance at the Waukesha County Republican Victory Center in Waukesha, Wis. on Tuesday, May 8, 2012. Walker will face Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett in a recall election on June 5. (AP Photo/The Waukesha Freeman, Charles Auer)

Gov. Scott Walker greets supporters at an election night rally at the Waukesha County Republican Victory Center in Waukesha, Wis. on Tuesday, May 8, 2012. Walker will face Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett in a recall election on June 5. Walker easily defeated token opposition in the GOP primary. (AP Photo/The Waukesha Freeman, Charles Auer)

(AP) ? The Democrats’ hope for ousting Scott Walker is a low-key, well-liked Milwaukee mayor whose last brush with fame came when he interceded in a fight outside the Wisconsin State Fair and got badly beaten with a tire iron.

With less than a month before the June 5 recall election, it will take all the political muscle Tom Barrett can muster to knock off the Wisconsin governor, who has become a national hero to conservatives and a fundraising powerhouse.

Barrett’s recall challenge is a rematch of the 2010 governor’s race. In the 18 months since the two men last appeared on the ballot together, Wisconsin has descended into political chaos fueled by Walker and his aggressive attack on collective bargaining for public-sector workers.

The governor’s foes collected more than 900,000 signatures to force the election, which is only the third gubernatorial recall in American history. Now it’s up to Barrett to bring home enough votes to remove Walker.

Turnout in Tuesday’s primary topped 30 percent, the highest for a primary in Wisconsin since 1952. Barrett, who defeated three Democratic opponents, gave an impassioned speech to supporters, saying he would heal Wisconsin after more than a year of turmoil.

“He’s fired up,” said longtime friend Kathy Smith, who was neighbors with Barrett for 11 years around the 1990s. “He’s just got this fire in his belly. He wants it.”

It won’t be easy.

Since defeating Barrett, Walker has become a GOP star. He’s a hot draw at Republican Party events nationwide, and he’s shattered fundraising records by bringing in $25 million, compared with less than $1 million for Barrett. He’s also blanketed mailboxes, phones and television airwaves with ads attacking Barrett.

Walker frames the race as being more about political courage than his political future.

Barrett also knows a thing or two about courage, both political and personal.

His first race ? a 1982 Democratic primary for state Assembly ? ended in a 39-vote loss. In his most recent contest ? the April re-election for mayor ? Barrett won with 70 percent of the vote.

A lifelong Milwaukeean, the 58-year-old lives in the same neighborhood where he grew up and attends the same Catholic church of his youth. Like Walker, he’s spent nearly all of his adult life in public service ? including eight years in the Legislature, 10 in Congress and eight as Milwaukee mayor.

Along the way, he lost two races for governor ? the 2002 Democratic primary and the contest against Walker.

During the 2010 race, doubters complained that Barrett was too laid back to win and not passionate enough. He tried to fight that perception this year with a campaign ad showing him repeatedly yelling “Pow!” when talking about Walker’s proposals. His primary night speech also showed a revved up Barrett rarely seen in the last race.

People don’t realize just how competitive he is, says state Rep. Peter Barca, a friend of Barrett’s for more than 28 years.

When they served in Congress together in the 1990s, Barrett always wanted to take extra time in the batting cages before congressional baseball games. His decision to run against Walker so soon after losing to him exemplifies that competitiveness, Barca said.

“Not many people would have the tenacity, after losing for governor, to come right back at it again,” Barca said.

Barrett’s sense of purpose and passion for helping people was on full display as he was leaving the state fair in August 2009 with his two daughters, his sister and his niece.

He heard a call for help and found a woman being beaten by her daughter’s ex-boyfriend as she tried to protect her 1-year-old grandchild.

Barrett got out a 911 call before the man struck him with a tire iron, breaking bones in his right hand and some of his teeth and resulting in stitches in his head.

“That showed the kind of guy he is,” Smith said. “He’s there.”

Barrett woke up in a hospital bed to news that Democratic Gov. Jim Doyle, the man who beat him in the 2002 governor’s primary, was not seeking a third term.

After being urged by the White House and other Democrats to get in, Barrett finally announced he would run two days after the final pins were removed from his hand.

The fingers on his right hand are still slightly askew, although he can shake hands and hold a beer ? two things needed to campaign in Wisconsin, Barrett jokes.

Following the attack, Barrett was hailed as a hero. T-shirts showed up around Milwaukee saying, “Our mayor ain’t no cream puff.”

Walker beat him by 5 points, or about 125,000 votes.

With that loss still fresh, Barrett was not the first candidate to come to mind when talk of a recall heated up last year.

But after other party leaders such as former Sen. Russ Feingold and retiring Sen. Herb Kohl demurred, Barrett quickly became the leading Democrat to enter the fray.

The unions, who have clashed with Barrett over the years, backed rival Kathleen Falk. But they quickly lined up behind him after the primary win, saying they were united against their true target.

Barrett insists voters are also more fired up than they were in 2010, an off-year for Democratic candidates across the country. Rooms that were half-full that year are overflowing this time, Barrett said.

He pledges to draw sharp contrasts between what Walker said on the 2010 campaign trail with what actually happened after he took office. He says Walker has torn the state apart and “loves pitting people against one another.”

“It’s time to bring Wisconsin together,” Barrett says in his most recent television ad.

Walker, through his television advertising and his own Tuesday night speech, has attempted to brand Barrett as a step backward, saying he supports policies that led to a $3.6 billion budget shortfall.

“The differences couldn’t be more stark,” Walker’s campaign spokeswoman Ciara Matthews said.

Both sides have four short weeks to make their cases. No one, Barrett included, imagined it would come to this.

“If 18 months ago you would have said another governor’s race is coming in 2012,” Barrett said, “I would have said, ‘What are you smoking?’”

Associated Press

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