Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/pb8aFU44sAE/
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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/pb8aFU44sAE/
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5 hrs.
Rosa Golijan , NBC News
Considering that we can have music, movies, TV shows, Photoshop???even underwear???via some sort of monthly or yearly subscription, it's about time we can finally rent Microsoft Office 365, too.
In exchange for $100 per?year (or $10 per?month), you'll be able to install Office 2013 on up to five PCs, Macs or Windows tablets. You'll have?access to Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook, Publisher and Access. Additionally, you'll get an extra?20GB of cloud storage through SkyDrive (on top of the 7GB you already get for free) along with 60 minutes of Skype world calling per month.?
You can still buy Office 2013 the old-school way, though don't expect to see any physical media in the software box; you'll just buy a product code and be sent online to download the actual software. The Home & Student version of that is $140 and is limited to one device (and just Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote); Home & Business is $220 (which includes Outlook as well), and Pro ? with all of the same?apps offered in the subscription ??is $400.
Besides being able to install on up to five devices, there are other benefits to the subscription plan:?Free upgrades to the latest versions of the Office software are included, so you can buy in at any time without worrying about missing the next version. Better still, since the subscription?license covers different types of devices, you don't have to buy a bunch of different versions.?(Besides Mac support, Microsoft has said in the past that this Office 365?license would even?provide you with not-yet-released editions, including a possible iPad version.)
If you have a family with lots going on, it is likely to be a money saver, even when you factor in the deals you get from home/student pricing.?
If you are simply?a power user with a lot of different devices, you'll be able to sync Office 365?documents between them with ease. (And you'll, of course, also be able to share documents quickly, thanks to SkyDrive.)?It doesn't stop with the documents though: Your settings and preferences sync as well. This means that no matter where you sign into Office 365, you'll have the same experience. This is, once again, a great benefit for those who split their time between one too many devices.
Pricing and cloud support aside, the latest Office itself isn't a radical redesign. Everything feels familiar, with some small tweaks. It appears that Microsoft is attempting to reduce the bloat we occasionally experience when it comes to its software suite. Does it succeed? Well, we'll have to use the software for a bit longer to make a solid judgment call in regards to that.
While?the?latest version of the software isn't?lacking anything?from?the?traditional?desktop?view???in fact, our initial impression is that it might be the best version of Office we've used so far???we're still waiting for a finger-friendly tablet version of the?legendary?suite.?Though?it?would?be?a?huge?success?given?the?popularity?of?iPads?and?other?tablets,?Microsoft?isn't?going?to?rush?that?out?in?haste,?because?the?company's?developers?say?they?want?to?get?it?right.
You can snag a free one-month trial of Office 365 through Office.com and we suggest taking advantage of this deal. Odds are that you'll find it feeling comfortable and familiar ? and a little lighter on the checkbook as well.
Want more tech news?or interesting?links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts,?or circling her?on?Google+.
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Cats are one of the top threats to US wildlife, killing billions of animals each year, a study suggests.
The authors estimate they are responsible for the deaths of between 1.4 and 3.7 billion birds and 6.9-20.7 billion mammals annually.
Writing in Nature Communications, the scientists said stray and feral cats were the worst offenders.
However, they added that pet cats also played a role and that owners should do more to reduce their impact.
The authors concluded that more animals are dying at the claws of cats in the United States than in road accidents, collisions with buildings or poisonings.
The domestic cat's killer instinct has been well documented on many islands around the world.
Felines accompanying their human companions have gone on to decimate local wildlife, and they have been blamed for the global extinction of 33 species.
But their impact on mainland areas has been harder to chart.
To find out more, researchers from the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute (SCBI) and the US Fish and Wildlife Service carried out a review of studies that had previously looked at the predatory prowess of cats.
Continue reading the main storyEnd Quote Dr Pete Marra SCBIOur study suggests that they are the top threat to US wildlife?
Their analysis revealed that the cat killings were much higher than previous studies had suggested: they found that they had killed more than four times as many birds as has been previously estimated.
Birds native to the US, such as the American Robin, were most at risk, and mice, shrews, voles, squirrels and rabbits were the mammals most likely to be killed.
Dr Pete Marra from the SCBI said: "Our study suggests that they are the top threat to US wildlife."
The team said that "un-owned" cats, which they classified as strays, feral cats and farm cats, were killing about three times as many animals as pet cats, but that their owners could do more to limit the impact.
Dr Marra said: "We hope that the large amount of wildlife mortality indicated by our research convinces some cat owners to keep their cats indoors and that it alerts policymakers, wildlife managers and scientists to the large magnitude of wildlife mortality caused by cat predation."
A spokeswoman for the UK's animal welfare charity the RSPCA said that a properly fitted collar and bell could reduce a cat's success when hunting by at least a third.
Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21236690#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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4 hrs.
Rosa Golijan , NBC News
We've heard plenty of rumors about Apple's intentions to start offering a higher capacity fourth-generation iPad, but now the new gadget is official: You can snag a 128GB iPad with Retina Display beginning on Feb. 5.
The Wi-Fi-only version of the higher capacity iPad will cost $799 while the LTE-capable version will go for $929. As usual, you'll be able to choose a white or black model.
It's worth pointing out that, at $929, the LTE-capable 128GB iPad costs you nearly as much a base MacBook Air model.?Alternatively, you could also snag ?an iPad Mini ? which starts at $329?? or three for the same price. (Mind you, neither of those devices will have a high-resolution Retina Display like the fourth-generation iPad.)
Want more tech news?or interesting?links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts,?or circling her?on?Google+.
Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/gadgetbox/apple-makes-128gb-ipad-retina-display-official-1C8156546
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DETROIT ? SoftVue, the whole breast ultrasound imaging device created by two scientists from the Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute and Wayne State University School of Medicine, is currently undergoing review by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for market clearance.
It?s anticipated that this first application clearance could come this spring, with several other FDA submissions to follow over the next couple of years. This promising imaging tool has the potential to aid in detecting breast cancer earlier, especially in women with dense breasts.
Peter Littrup and Neb Duric of the Karmanos Cancer Institute and Wayne State University School of Medicine, and their team have been working to perfect the SoftVue technology for more than a decade.
The Karmanos Cancer Institute spun off a company in 2009 called Delphinus Medical Technologies to help secure funding to bring this device closer to commercialization. Since then, Delphinus has grown to 19 employees, many of whom are engineers, and plans are underway to gradually increase the sales staff once the first FDA market clearance is obtained.
Said Gerold Bepler, M.D., president and CEO of the Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute: ?Information obtained from this new SoftVue system will continue the next round of clinical research for use in diagnostic breast imaging. SoftVue is another example of the exceptional cancer research and innovative technology created right here at the Karmanos Cancer Institute in Detroit, and built in Michigan.?
More than $32 million in funding, including venture capital and other grants, helped turn SoftVue?s technology into a commercial product, pending FDA clearance to market. The first round of venture capital funding included Michigan companies Arboretum Ventures, Altarum Institute, Beringea, LLC?s InvestMichigan Growth Capital Fund and North Coast Technology Investors. Other funding, past and present, was received from several private donors along with grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation and the Michigan Economic Development Corp. Currently, the Karmanos Cancer Institute has the only commercial-grade SoftVue system in the world.
SoftVue uses ultrasound waves, rather than X-rays, to create its images. Karmanos officials say ultrasound waves have the potential to detect early stages of breast cancer, even in women with dense breast tissue, where early stage cancers are often not picked up by mammography.
The interaction of sound waves with cancerous tissue yields a unique signature that can be measured using the SoftVue technology. The SoftVue system collects information not often detected by conventional ultrasound imaging, resulting in a more accurate and complete image of the tissue characteristics.
The SoftVue exam takes about a minute, produces images for the radiologist in less than 15 minutes, does not involve the radiation or compression used in mammography, and is a fraction of the cost of breast magnetic resonance imaging.
With SoftVue, the breast is submerged in warm water and an ultrasound transducer ring surrounds the breast without touching it. The SoftVue system transmits and receives ultrasound signals around the entire breast that allow it to capture detailed, three-dimensional images.
The system is able to perform repeated imaging, a necessary tool for biopsy, monitoring and treatment assessment.
SoftVue?s detailed images aid the radiologist in making an accurate breast cancer diagnosis. It?s believed that SoftVue could help reduce the number of false positives that can occur with mammography and thereby reduce unnecessary biopsies.
Once market clearance is received for the first FDA submission, other SoftVue systems will be produced for other medical centers that will take part in clinical studies needed to secure further FDA approvals for SoftVue. Up to now, SoftVue studies were only for diagnostic purposes, showing the quality and safety of this technology compared to other ultrasound breast cancer imaging devices.
The company plans to carry out clinical trials involving approximately 15,000 to 20,000 subjects to support an FDA Pre-Market Approval Application, which, once approved, will give Delphinus the green light to sell SoftVue for breast cancer screening in the United States. William Greenway, Delphinus? CEO, anticipates that could take until 2015, depending on the number of people participating in the clinical studies at various medical centers, as well as funding to manufacture the systems.
?Once we secure this first FDA clearance, we?ll receive signed commitments from other health centers that have expressed interest in SoftVue,? Greenway said. ?The approximate cost for the SoftVue machine is $400,000, comparable to mammography. We anticipate that we?ll need another $15 to $17 million in venture capital to carry out the trials and produce the machines, which will be manufactured in Michigan.?
Mammography is still the gold standard in breast cancer screening; however, for hospitals and medical centers such as the Karmanos Cancer Institute where SoftVue will be available, SoftVue will serve as a follow-up to breast cancer screening upon initial FDA market clearance.
Currently, SoftVue is available at the Karmanos Cancer Institute and Karmanos patients may sign up to be part of the ongoing clinical studies. Once the first FDA clearance is secured, additional SoftVue systems will be produced and placed in other medical centers interested in this technology.
For more information on SoftVue technology contact Delphinus Medical Technologies at (734) 233-3088. For patients interested in participating in SoftVue?s clinical studies for breast cancer screening, call the Karmanos Cancer Institute at 1-800-KARMANOS (1-800-527-6266.)
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DHAKA (Reuters) - At least 50 people including policemen were injured in Bangladesh on Monday as Islamist activists protested against the prosecution of their leaders on charges stemming from a war of independence 40 years ago, police and witnesses said.
Protesters set off crude explosives and threw bricks at police who tried to disperse them with teargas, batons and some shots in the air, witnesses said.
"The Islamists vandalized dozens of vehicles and set fire to two buses in Motijheel commercial area and other places in the city," a police officer said.
Islamist party spokesman were not available for comment.
Police detained about 20 activists, reporters on the scene said, and the disturbances disrupted traffic on city-centre roads. Similar protests broke out in the northern town of Rajshahi and in Chittagong in the southeast.
Bangladesh became part of Pakistan at the end of British rule in 1947 but it broke away from Pakistan in 1971 after a war between Bangladeshi nationalists, who were backed by India, and Pakistani forces.
Some factions in Bangladesh opposed the break with Pakistan.
A Bangladeshi war crimes tribunal began work in mid-2011 to investigate some of the violence during the nine-month war when up to three million people were killed and thousands of women were raped.
Last week, the tribunal reached its first verdict, sentencing a former member of the Jamaat-e-Islami party and a popular Islamic preacher, Abul Kalam Azad, to death in absentia.
Azad has been missing since April last year but the government says it is trying to find him.
Azad was charged with collaborating with Pakistani forces in the murder of Hindus, a minority in the majority-Muslim state. In one case, he was accused of killing at least 12 Hindus while shooting indiscriminately along with Pakistani soldiers.
Jamaat has been accused of helping the Pakistani army in acts of violence, which it denies.
Another 11 people, nine of them Jamaat leaders, are facing trial.
Over the last few months Jamaat activists and members of its student wing have launched violent protests in Dhaka and other cities, demanding an end to the trials.
Human Rights Watch has said the law under which the accused were being tried fell short of international standards of due process. It cited defense lawyers, witnesses and investigators as saying they had been threatened during the trial.
The ruling party of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who set up the tribunal, has denied the accusations of bias.
(Reporting by Anis Ahmed and Ruma Paul; Editing by Robert Birsel)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/scores-hurt-islamists-bangladesh-streets-over-tribunal-085355294.html
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The following was written by BYU Staff:
2013 BYU Conference on Family History and Genealogy ?Strengthening Ties That Bind Families Together? Tuesday, July 30 through Friday, August 2, 2013
Proposals are now being accepted for the 2013 BYU Conference on Family History and Genealogy which will be held Tuesday, July 30 through Friday, August 2 at the BYU Conference Center in Provo, Utah.
Each presentation will be 60 minutes in length, which includes time for questions and answers. Each presentation should reflect the latest status of research and publication on the topic. Please do not submit more than eight proposals. The deadline for proposals is Monday, February 4, 2013. We welcome proposals that allow participants to gain new skills and helpful information in the following areas of family history and genealogy:
- Getting started in family history
- Classes specifically designed for those who never have done research; Other beginner topics
- Using computers, technology and the Internet for research
- Research methodology: research process, pedigree analysis, evidence evaluation, tracing immigrants, etc.
- International record sources and research methodologies
- Beginning, intermediate, and advanced research methodology in: British Isles (England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales); Germany; Scandinavia; United States (state and regional topics); Canada; and Other countries and international regions (these presentations may not be compensated)
- Family organizations and collaboration
- Writing, editing and publishing family history
- Family History Center support and family history consultant training
Presentations should not only inform, but should provide step-by-step instructions to help participants use the class materials. All syllabus material should reflect the content of classes, both in detail and in sequence of instruction.
Presentation style must be PowerPoint or Internet. BYU Conferences and Workshops will provide in each classroom a laptop computer with Internet connection and an LCD projector. Speakers should plan to bring their PowerPoint slide show on a flash drive, CD-ROM, or DVD-ROM in a format readable by Windows. Be sure to have a backup copy of your presentation available. If yours is an Internet presentation, you must have screen shot backups in case of Internet failure.
Proposals must include:
- Full name of the presenter
- A brief biographical sketch of the presenter for the syllabus (50 words maximum)
- Title of the presentation
- Class description (50 words maximum), to be used for an advertising brochure and web page, that includes detailed information about the main topics to be discussed in the class
- Audience skill level (beginner, intermediate, or advanced)
- If your presentation deals with a country, research topic or technology that is likely to draw fewer than 15 students, indicate whether you will teach the class without compensation
- Medium of presentation; PowerPoint; Internet (requires screen shot backup in case of Internet failure); Any audiovisual equipment needed in addition to a computer and LCD projector, which will already be in each room
- Current e-mail, mailing address, telephone number(s)
- A list detailing your previous experience presenting at conferences or workshops in the past three years, including titles of presentations
- Compensation
Speakers participating in the conference will receive:
- Complimentary registration
- Conference syllabus on CD
- $100 per presentation
- If your proposal is accepted, a syllabus must be submitted or the class will be canceled; a bonus of $50 per presentation will be given if your camera-ready syllabus materials: follow the syllabus guidelines listed on the acceptance letter and are submitted by midnight on Monday, June 3, 2013
- Out-of-state speakers selected to give four or more presentations will also receive accommodations, $100 towards travel, and a cafeteria meal card covering the days of the conference
- If an in-state speaker is speaking both in the morning and in the afternoon of a specific day, lunch will be provided
Presenters of classes that are expected to draw less than 15 students will receive $50 compensation for their camera-ready syllabus (if submitted on time) and complimentary registrationPlease e-mail presentation proposals in Microsoft Word format no later than Monday, February 4, 2013 to: jon.collier@byu.edu.
Initial acceptance of presentation proposals will be sent by the program committee by the end of March 2013.
Source: http://www.genealogyblog.com/?p=24394
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Under fire for not doing more to help Syria?s rebels, President Barack Obama announced on Tuesday that he's sending opponents of strongman Bashar al-Assad another $155 million in humanitarian aid and defended his handling of the bloody conflict. Obama said the aid sends a message to the world.
?The relief we send doesn?t say ?Made in America,? but make no mistake?our aid reflects the commitment of the American people,? he said in a video posted on the White House website. The message includes Arabic subtitles.
Obama, who faces chiefly Republican criticism for not offering the rebels American weapons or taking other steps to beat back Assad?s armed forces, said the money would help Syrians under fire and those who have fled to neighboring countries.
?I want to speak directly to the people of Syria,? he said in the video. ?This new aid will mean more warm clothing for children and medicine for the elderly; flour and wheat for your families and blankets, boots and stoves for those huddled in damaged buildings.
?It will mean health care for victims of sexual violence and field hospitals for the wounded,? he continued. ?Even as we work to end the violence against you, this aid will help address some of the immediate needs you face each day."
The new aid will bring total U.S. assistance to Syrian rebels to $365 million.
?We?re under no illusions. The days ahead will continue to be very difficult. But what?s clear is that the regime continues to weaken and lose control of territory,? Obama said.
?The opposition continues to grow stronger," he added. "More Syrians are standing up for their dignity. The Assad regime will come to an end. The Syrian people will have their chance to forge their own future. And they will continue to find a partner in the United States of America.?
While senior Obama aides say Washington has not been arming the rebels, there have been media reports that the CIA and other agencies have been steering arms from third parties to certain opposition forces and working to exclude Islamist extremists?like al-Qaida?from assistance.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/obama-announces-aid-syrian-rebels-161248504--politics.html
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