Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Bloggers Table : Shimmer and Azure, Taj Vivanta Yeshwantpur | Sin ...

Sometime ago Taj Vivanta Yeshwantpur invited some of us bloggers for an evening with cocktails and Mediterranean food at Shimmer and Azure, I was so looking forward to the evening with company like Swaps, Swati, Natasha, Neha, Suma and some more friends that came along and food from Azure it was a promising evening.? We started the evening at Shimmer which true to its name was well shimmery :)

Such a lovely sight isn't it?

Such a lovely sight isn?t it?

The making of Oliveto

The making of Oliveto

We were given a demo of three cocktails and encouraged to go behind the bar counter and try our hands at it and yes I did try my hand at making one of them.

and the drink itself

and the drink itself

The first drink we started with was Oliveto a combination of Olive oil , lemon and egg whites along with Gin before it started getting made we were fearing it will be mayo like after we had that drink I thought may be mayo would have been better. Seriously if the balance of the flavors would have been anywhere close to any balance at all it may have tasted like a good cocktail alas what we got tastedjust like mausambi juice in a weird way

The next drink up for the demo was Watermelon and Basil Bramble which I was hoping will redeem some of the disappointment we had from Oliveto but unfortunately we weren?t so lucky, this drink too was way off the balance mark and it was so strange that two glasses were being passed between several people with no one wanting to finish the drink at all and yes that was anotAzure Bloggers Table1her thing I found a little strange, when you invite people for a review you don?t hand over a glass and ask the guests to share. I would have been fine with less of the drink, may be they should have served in shot glasses if they had a conDSC_0132 1straint on the number of drinks they want to serve the guests but somehow the idea of handing over the glasses to us and asking us to taste from the same didn?t go down too well with me.

The last drink Rosemary delight unfortunately couldn?t change my mind about Shimmer either inspite of the fact that it looked oh so pretty

With a heavy heart and great expectations from Azure (since I have eaten there once before and quite enjoyed the food and in general I love Mediterranean food) we moved to the first floor DSC_0145 1hoping the food will make us forget the experience at the bar but I guess we had all left our lucky stars back home that day since the usually good Azure fair was below average in most accounts. I think the only two dishes that stood out for me that day were the sea food broth, where the flavours were fabulous and the shrimps and the clams in it perfectly cooked. The other dish which I have a strong and good memory from that day is the?Plum tomato confit, artichoke and cured buffalo mozzarella with french dressing. I have to say this Azure Bloggers Table4was the dish of the day for me, one of the best confits I have had and the tomatoes were so nicely cooked that there was a discussion on the table on just how they managed it and what have they done to it, unfortunately it wasn?t my dish but I did steal a few bites from Swaps who was sitting right next to me

The beef carpaccio with onion jam and truffle oil was a beautifully plated dish with a good onion jam apart from this in the starters I liked the Falafel

the dips

the dips

which was crispy and crunchy, Maqaali which I found severely lacking in flavors infact I don?t think I understood the dish at all , the Shawarma came inside the pitas and was a bit too dry for my liking, chicken liver on buttered brioche had a good sauce but the liver was chewy, the panko crusted chicken was a dish that didn?t make any impression on me, according to me it?s a dish that has been placed there to please kids which is perfectly fine. I can actually imagine my? 5 yr old son eating it with great relish.

There were also the quintessential Mediterranean dips namely tahini, hummus and?baba ganoush, my heart actually pAzure Bloggers Table6ains to say that none of the dips were really outstanding. Yes they weren?t bad but a place which calls itself a Mediterranean joint you certainly expect better.

By the time the journey to main course had started I was very disheartened Azure Bloggers Table7and was so hoping for the dish that will blow me away a dish that will change my mind into writing a stellar review (I hate writing bad reviews), I ordered Baked Prawns and its a sad day when you leave one of the three jumbo prawns that you have been served because they are overcooked and rubbery and I really struggled to finish the two and did because I was really hungry and didn?t want to go back home and cook again. Sadly the fate of others on the table was similar, I saw people leaving lamb chops and tenderloins because either the meat was over cooked or raw. Another dish I was really looking forward to was the?Tajine but as soon as I got to know that it was only served in the tajine vessel I actually felt cheated, I am wondering how the person who ordered it felt.

And with this we moved to the last course of the day, the course I am so so critical about yes I am talking about the dessert. By this MiaOnWheels1time I had no hopes what so ever and the fact that Swaps told that their baklava was not so stellar last time she came just killed whatever little hopes I had and I have to give it to her because she called that baklava not so stellar according to my view it was BAD. The beauty of baklava for me is the gorgeous layers of phyllo pastry with the crunch of nuts and a fair amount of ghee/butter. Its the explosion of textures and flavors in every bite that makes baklava what it is.? Sadly this had none of it, to be fair to them it had a lot of nuts may be a little more than what usually is there in a baklava but if I had to eat nuts I would fry them in ghee and eat. The warm chocolate fallen cake with organic vanilla ice cream was certainly a little bit of save face for them. It was a decent chocolate cake but it was the ice cream both which came with the cake and which was served as gelato which fell on its face. First I don?t think they were different ice creams atleast there wasn?t any taste of flavor difference between them which is strange since one was the vanilla and other was red wine gelato and two they had big ice crystals in them. So disappointing

In the end with a very heavy heart I have to say that the day had more misses than hits and there were only a couple of items that left mark in my mind such a pity that they had a bad day on the day they had invited bloggers for an evening there. I sincerely hope this was just one off day and they get their act together fast

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Source: http://sinamontales.wordpress.com/2013/05/20/bloggers-table-shimmer-and-azure-taj-vivanta-yeshwantpur/

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Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Suspect in killing of W.Va. sheriff arraigned on murder charges

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) ? A man accused of gunning down a county sheriff in West Virginia plans to ask a judge for bail.

Tennis Melvin Maynard is accused of fatally shooting Mingo County Sheriff Eugene Crum on April 3, while the lawman was sitting in his car.

After a short vehicle chase, authorities say Maynard pulled a gun on a deputy who then shot and wounded him. The 37-year-old Maynard wore hospital garments at his arraignment Wednesday.

A grand jury indicted Maynard on first-degree murder, attempted first-degree murder and fleeing charges.

He plans to ask a judge for bail June 17 and faces a tentative Oct. 21 trial.

Investigators have not discussed a possible motive. Maynard's father has said his son has mental health issues.

Crum's widow was appointed sheriff after his killing and she attended Maynard's arraignment.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/suspect-killing-w-va-sheriff-arraigned-175848746.html

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Saturday, May 11, 2013

Algeria after terrorist attack: Don't count on security promises

Algerian moves to increase security after a terrorist attack on a natural gas facility in January don't address the underlying security threat of doing business there. Energy and other companies must beware of the destabilizing rivalries among Algerian leaders, who use extremist groups for their own ends.

By Yuval Orr,?Guest blogger / May 11, 2013

Algerian soldiers stand guard at the natural gas plant in In Amenas. Since a January terrorist attack and hostage standoff there, the Algerian government has increased security along the border and around energy plants. But fundamental security risks remain.

AP/File

Enlarge

Four months after militants linked to Al Qaeda attacked the In Amenas gas facility in eastern Algeria ? triggering a four-day confrontation with the Algerian army and the deaths of nearly 40 hostages ? the Algerian government has beefed up border security and pledged to deploy the army to protect energy sites.

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Threatened with a potentially weakened oil and gas sector, which accounts for more than 95 percent of Algeria?s exports, Algerian authorities had every incentive to quickly shore up confidence. This is particularly true at In Amenas, which represented over 10 percent of Algeria?s natural gas production and nearly 18 percent of its gas exports prior to January?s attack. The concerns of foreign governments, energy companies, and other investors, however, should not be assuaged by Algeria?s security window-dressing or assertions that the country?s woes can simply be traced back to a resurgent Al Qaeda.

While Algeria's maneuvers promise to improve its defenses against external forces, they do nothing to address ? and in fact are likely to see their efficacy degraded by ? the underlying threat to the security and economic progress of the country: the fundamental dysfunction of the Algerian state. Destabilizing rivalries among the country?s leaders and a habit of nurturing extremist groups for political ends have shaped the security environment that allowed the In Amenas crisis to occur and are unlikely to fade away in the short term.

Rather than a story of youthful revolution, Algeria?s is one of ongoing struggle between two factions organized around septuagenarian autocrats clinging to power: President Abdelaziz Bouteflika and Gen. Mohamed ?Toufik? Medi?ne, who has served as head of the country?s powerful intelligence agency, the D?partement du Renseignement et de la S?curit? (DRS), since 1990. President Bouteflika represents the public face of the Algerian government, while General Medi?ne, who is believed to have initially backed Bouteflika?s ascension to the presidency in 1999, maintains a less visible though equally influential presence within Algeria.

Tom Colicchio Hotels | The Braiser

Is Tom Colicchio Breaking Into The Hotel Biz?

Craft Hotel, as a concept, might make you cringe, but after opening Topping Rose House in The Hamptons, it seems like Tom Colicchio has officially been bitten by the hotelier bug.

The new restaurant is located inside a the 19th-century Bridgehampton mansion, with 22 rooms and cottages for guests to bed and breakfast (and lunch and dinner and drink) in.

?I thought it would be too difficult with such a small property to have someone running the restaurant and someone else taking care of the rooms,? Colicchio admitted to Gail Simmons in an interview for Travel and Leisure. So, he just decided to have his team take over the whole enterprise.

When asked if he?d like to strike out into the hotel business on a large scale some day, Tom replied:

?Yes! I actually like it. When you think of all those great French restaurants that are in the countryside, this is similar in a lot of ways. I?ve done hotel restaurants before, so this is just an extension of hospitality and the brand. The family members who originally built this house were the Topping Roses ? that?s why we called it Topping Rose House. I?d also love to have a Craft hotel.?

We?re calling it now; first location: Vegas Strip.

[Travel and Leisure]

Source: http://www.thebraiser.com/tom-colicchio-hotels/

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Scientist at Work Blog: Rummaging Among Skins and Skulls

Mary E. Blair is a postdoctoral researcher in the American Museum of Natural History?s Center for Biodiversity and Conservation, where she coordinates the Enhancing Diversity in Conservation Science Initiative.

March 23, 2013

The room smells of mothballs, formalin and dust. Following such an inspiring field experience in northern Vietnam?s Na Hang Nature Reserve, where I spotted the first slow loris I ever saw in the wild, this indoor environment seems decidedly unromantic. But, sometimes, the best research is accomplished by pouring over boxes of old primate skeletons and skins. I am spending the day working in the zoological museum at Vietnam National University in Hanoi, where some of my research collaborators are faculty members and students.

As a supplement to our field surveys, museum collections can help us understand variation in slow lorises across their ranges. For example, the Bengal slow loris (Nycticebus bengalensis) can be found from India all the way to Vietnam in the east and Peninsular Malaysia in the south. Other scientists have noted some variation in fur color across this wide range. Pulling together our observations from museums and the field, we might have a better chance to show that the animals? fur color and markings vary depending on where they live.

The Pygmy slow loris (N. pygmaeus) has a distribution that is restricted to the east of the Mekong River, a much smaller range than that of the Bengal slow loris. But this animal can still be found throughout almost the entire length of Vietnam, spanning from subtropical forests in the north to tropical forests in the south.

For many other primates in Vietnam, such as gibbons or doucs, there are three or more different species, occupying different parts of the long north-south spine of the country. Colleagues who have done similar work in Java and Borneo, also using a mix of moving and stiff animals, believe they have found new species in those Indonesian islands. Will slow lorises vary across Vietnam in a similar way to their primate cousins ? as geographically diverse species with regionally specific looks?

Sitting among the boxes, I know what I?m looking for. Back in the United States, I collected data on slow lorises at the American Museum of Natural History and the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History with the help of colleagues and interns. I came armed with pictures of individuals? fur color and stripe patterns, a set of loris face shapes and exact skull dimensions. Put all of these pieces together and we have what amounts to a unique record for each animal ? like a fingerprint, but for the whole body. It?s these bodyprints that help us compare individuals to one another.

Even as I measured and scribbled, hunched over dusty skeletons and furs, I knew that we would soon be back in the dark hum of the forest at our next field site. But between this manufactured quiet and that natural one sits the bustling Vietnamese capital.

To shake off the specimens and their dust, a colleague took me out for some Hanoi street food, for which this city of about 2.6 million is famous. My favorite: a potato cut in a spiral, fried on a stick and covered in hot sauce.

Your senses are surrounded here. The nose fills with the fantastic street food smells (like my beloved fried potatocicle). The eyes gape at all the colorful banners and lights. And the ears fill with the ever-present drone of motorcycle engines.

A profusion of parked motorbikes fills the sidewalks pushing most people out onto on the streets. On wider sidewalks, there are lines on the concrete for people to play badminton.

Soon the only lines we will see will be the imaginary ones we trace through the dark forest ? transects drawn in our heads to search for more slow lorises.

You can follow Mary on Twitter: @marye_blair

Source: http://scientistatwork.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/05/10/rummaging-among-skins-and-skulls/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Kerry hopes Russia won't sell missiles to Syria

Italian Foreign Minister Emma Bonino, left, and US Secretary of State John Kerry walk together prior to an official meeting in the Foreign Ministry building in Rome on Thursday May 9, 2013. (AP Photo/Mladen Antonov, Pool)

Italian Foreign Minister Emma Bonino, left, and US Secretary of State John Kerry walk together prior to an official meeting in the Foreign Ministry building in Rome on Thursday May 9, 2013. (AP Photo/Mladen Antonov, Pool)

Italian Foreign Minister Emma Bonino, right, and US Secretary of State John Kerry invite their colleagues for talks prior to an official meeting in the Foreign Ministry building in Rome on Thursday May 9, 2013. (AP Photo/Mladen Antonov, Pool)

Italian Foreign Minister Emma Bonino, right, and US Secretary of State John Kerry shake hands prior to an official meeting in the Foreign Ministry building in Rome on Thursday May 9, 2013. (AP Photo/Mladen Antonov, Pool)

Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta, centre right, speaks with US Secretary of State John Kerry, 3rd left, during a meeting during their meeting at the Palazzo Chigi in Rome on Thursday May 9, 2013. (AP Photo/Mladen Antonov)

US Secretary of State John Kerry, left, listens to Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta during their meeting at the Palazzo Chigi in Rome on Thursday May 9, 2013. (AP Photo/Mladen Antonov)

(AP) ? (AP) ? Secretary of State John Kerry said Thursday the transfer of advanced missile defense systems from Russia to Syria would be a "destabilizing" factor for Israel's security.

Kerry said the U.S. has expressed concerns about what such defensive systems in Syria would mean for Israel's security. He wouldn't address what the missiles might mean for Syria's civil war.

He spoke to reporters in Rome after the Wall Street Journal reported that Russia was preparing to sell the weapons to President Bashar Assad's regime.

Coming just days after Kerry hailed what he described as a U.S.-Russia breakthrough on Syria, the report suggested Moscow may already be angling to further strengthen the Assad regime two years into a war that has killed more than 70,000 people.

"We have previously stated that the missiles," Kerry said, "are potentially destabilizing with respect to the state of Israel."

"We have made it crystal clear that we prefer that Russia would not supply them assistance," Kerry told reporters alongside new Italian Foreign Minister Emma Bonino. "That is on record. That hasn't changed."

White House spokesman Jay Carney, speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One, said, "We have consistently called on Russia to cut off the Assad regime's supply of weapons," including air defense systems that destabilize the region.

"The provision of additional weapons to the regime will not hasten a political solution," Carney said.

Israeli officials said they have asked Russia to cancel the imminent sale to the Assad regime of advanced ground-to-air missile systems.

Such weapons would enhance the Syrian government's defensive ability and make it even harder for the U.S. and other governments to consider even the possibility of trying to enforce a no-fly zone in the country or otherwise intervening militarily.

Russia rarely comments publicly on arms sales or transfers, and there has been no official word on the deal in Moscow.

Even before Syria's 2011 uprising, the Israelis warned about a sale of S-300 batteries ? which can target manned planes, drones and incoming missiles. Moscow had held off on the deal under persistent U.S. and Israeli pressure.

The S-300 would be a state-of-the-art upgrade for Syria's aging Soviet-supplied defense system, which was easily circumvented in 2007 when Israeli jets bombed a suspected nuclear reactor site along the Euphrates River in northeastern Syria.

And it would only add to reservations in the United States and other Western nations about a more forceful, military intervention to end the war. With the advanced aircraft interception technology, Syria would be able to present a far more robust defense than Moammar Gadhafi's Libya offered two years ago.

The Wall Street Journal put the deal at $900 million for a package of four batteries, six launchers and 144 operational missiles. The missiles have a range of 125 miles, it reported, citing the Israeli-provided information, adding that the materiel would start arriving over the next three months.

Russia remains the Syrian government's most powerful international ally.

Kerry met earlier this week with President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Moscow to find a path forward. Kerry and Lavrov announced afterward that they would convene an international conference in the coming weeks to try to bring representatives of the Assad regime and the opposition to the negotiating table.

The enhanced Russian military support, if confirmed, would fly in the face of American claims that Moscow is demonstrating a new cooperativeness.

Moscow, with China, has repeatedly foiled Washington on Syria, blocking three U.N. Security Council resolutions against the Assad regime. It's unclear how its recent calculus has changed, even as U.S. officials point to statements by Lavrov and other Russian officials showing less support for Assad's continued leadership.

Kerry, however, offered only strong praise for Russia and said the focus now needed to be on how to corral the warring parties into peace talks ?and not on which governments are providing which sides with weaponry.

He said he was "grateful" for Putin's "willingness to try to move to a new paradigm" of peace talks between the Assad regime and the Syrian opposition.

Lavrov, Kerry added, made a "very important" statement by declaring that Russia isn't tied to "any one person" in Syria, suggesting it was comfortable seeing Assad leave power.

Syria "needs to emerge from the war in an inclusive, pluralistic democratic government that is protective of minorities and the rights of all Syrians," Kerry said.

"The current path in Syria is simply unsustainable," Kerry said. "The current path will only lead to greater bloodshed, greater destruction, greater instability, a greater humanitarian crisis, a greater challenge for stability of neighboring states, with the potential of extremists becoming stronger and with the potential of chemical weapons falling into the hands of dangerous people."

Those worst-case scenarios should motivate everyone to return to the negotiating table, he told reporters.

Moscow has been the source of most of Syria's military hardware since Assad's father and predecessor, Hafez, courted the Kremlin decades ago.

It has provided Syria with 36 Pantsyr mobile surface-to-air missile systems and at least eight Buk-M2E mobile SAMs. The Pantsyrs are considered particularly effective against attacking aircraft and feature a combination of 30mm cannons paired with a radar and anti-aircraft missiles on the same vehicle.

And other obsolete systems have been upgraded, and Kerry's predecessor, Hillary Rodham Clinton, sparked controversy last year when she accused the Russians of preparing to deliver attack helicopters.

Russians officials have insisted to their American counterparts that they are only honoring old contracts that are nearing expiration.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-05-09-EU-US-Syria/id-67196604812343d1b404af5eac4a2d8f

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Friday, May 10, 2013

Google's New ?Save To Drive? Button Lets Website Visitors Save Files To Google's Online Storage

deltaGoogle announced today an expansion of its online storage efforts with the release of a "Save to Drive" button that can be added to any website, allowing visitors to click and save files hosted on the site to their personal Google Drive accounts. The button is already being used by Bigstock,?Delta Dental,?Fotolia,?O'Reilly,?Outbox?and?Zen Payroll, Google notes.

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

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Thursday, May 9, 2013

Nearly five million asthmatics worldwide could benefit from antifungal therapy

May 8, 2013 ? An estimated 4,837,000 asthmatics with allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) could benefit substantially from antifungal treatment, say researchers from the University of Toronto and Manchester University.

Their work, published today in the journal Medical Mycology, has also re-estimated the total number of asthmatics worldwide -- to reveal a staggering 193 million sufferers. Twenty-four million asthma sufferers live in the United States, 20 million each in India and China, and seven million in the United Kingdom.

Clinical studies have shown that oral antifungal drugs significantly improve symptoms and asthma control in asthmatics with ABPA, treatment endorsed by the Cochrane Collaboration. This is the first time that a global estimate of ABPA numbers has been made.

In national league tables of asthma rates in adults, only Australia and Sweden have a higher prevalence than the UK. In global league tables of ABPA occurrence, New Zealand tops the list with a 3.5% rate in new patients attending chest clinics at hospitals. The rates were 2.6% in Cape Town, 2.3% in Saudi Arabia, 2.5% in China and 0.7% in an older study from Ireland. No population-based studies have been done.

In addition to standard asthma therapy, the antifungal therapy used is itraconazole -- now a generic, inexpensive antifungal -- with a response rate of 60%. The researchers also found that antifungal therapy also benefits patients with severe asthma sensitized to fungi, called SAFS.

Alternatives include voriconazole and posaconazole, which have 75-80% response rates. In a recent assessment of voriconazole and posaconazole for both ABPA and SAFS, 75% of patients were able to stop taking oral corticosteroids, a major benefit, and 38% of patients had their asthma severity downgraded on antifungal therapy.

Professor David Denning, professor of medicine and medical mycology at the University of Manchester and Director of the University Hospital of South Manchester's National Aspergillosis Centre, led the study into the total number of asthmatics worldwide. He said the study results implied that asthma admissions and deaths could be avoided with more extensive use of antifungal therapy.

"We were surprised by the number of patients with ABPA, and by the lack of community based studies done," he said. "Our National Aspergillosis Centre treats hundreds of these patients each year, generally with major improvement, and so a conscious program to seek out ABPA from all asthmatics is required."

Professor Donald Cole of the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto was the senior author of the study and contributed his expert epidemiological knowledge to the development of the model and provided a 'reality' check of the model's estimates.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/UIjuhqbUxQo/130508114214.htm

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Atom's core gets pear-shaped

Tapering asymmetry of some nuclei confirms predictions

By Andrew Grant

Web edition: May 8, 2013

Atomic nuclei come in many shapes and sizes, and scientists have now obtained precise measurements of an elusive form: pear-shaped. Studying these exotic nuclei, which are described in the May 9 Nature, could allow physicists to better understand subatomic structure and to find new particles and forces.

?It?s a beautiful, clear-cut result of a very careful experiment,? says Christopher Lister, a physicist at the University of Massachusetts in Lowell.

Diagrams in middle school textbooks depict atomic nuclei as spherical, but the real story is a lot more complex. Protons and neutrons are jam-packed into a space just 10-15 meters wide, held together by a crushing force that dwarfs that of gravity. At the same time, the subatomic particles constantly move, shifting around and sometimes warping the nucleus into the shape of a football or even a flattened disk.

All those shapes are symmetrical vertically and horizontally. Physicists want to find asymmetrical nuclei because some theories predict that such deformed nuclei could exhibit strange new physical properties. Experiments over the last few decades have hinted that certain arrangements of protons and neutrons result in a pear-shaped nucleus, narrow on one side and bulging on the other.

For the new study, physicist Peter Butler of the University of Liverpool in England and an international team probed two potentially pear-shaped nuclei: radon-220, which is made up of 86 protons and 134 neutrons, and radium-224, with its 88 protons and 136 neutrons. Scientists can determine the shape of nuclei by measuring the pattern of radiation they emit.

At the On-Line Isotope Mass Separator facility at CERN outside Geneva, Butler?s team fired protons at a thick slab of uranium carbide. The high-energy protons shattered the atoms in the block, producing a cornucopia of exotic atoms, including radon-220 and radium-224. The physicists filtered out the isotopes they wanted and stripped away the atoms? electrons, leaving behind a stockpile of nuclei. Then the researchers used magnets to accelerate the nuclei to nearly 10 percent of the speed of light toward a thin layer of metal foil. The nuclei interacted with stationary atoms in the foil as they passed through, resulting in the emission of a measurable stream of gamma radiation.

The radiation measurements confirmed that both radon-220 and radium-224 nuclei have an asymmetric pear shape. The radium appears to maintain a rigid pear shape, while the radon is shiftier: Its mass continuously jiggles around so that the fat and narrow ends trade places.

?It oscillates like a ball of jelly,? says Matt Dietrich, a physicist at Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois.

Dietrich is impressed that Butler?s team achieved such precise measurements of the nuclei?s dimensions, which are essential for in-depth analyses of the physics at work inside. In his own work, Dietrich searches for a phenomenon called an electric dipole moment, in which the center of positive charge of a particle or atom lies at a different point than its center of negative charge.

In every atom ever measured, no such dipole moment exists ? the positively charged nucleus sits at the very center of a negatively charged cloud of electrons. Dietrich and colleagues believe that the uneven distribution of positive charge in an asymmetrical nucleus makes it a good candidate for exhibiting a dipole moment. The standard model of particle physics predicts that atoms should have virtually nonexistent electric dipole moments, so finding one could mean that an undiscovered particle or force is at work.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/350258/title/Atoms_core_gets_pear-shaped

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First Observations of Short-lived Pear-shaped Atomic Nuclei

An anonymous reader sends this quote from a press release at CERN:
"An international team at the ISOLDE radioactive-beam facility at CERN has shown that some atomic nuclei can assume asymmetric, 'pear' shapes (abstract). The observations contradict some existing nuclear theories and will require others to be amended. ... Most nuclei have the shape of a rugby ball. While state-of-the-art theories are able to predict this behaviour, the same theories have predicted that for some particular combinations of protons and neutrons, nuclei can also assume asymmetric shapes, like a pear. In this case there is more mass at one end of the nucleus than the other."

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/f052ZPtaeCo/story01.htm

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Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Sony VAIO T Series SVT15115CXS - 15.5" - Core i7 3537U - Windows 8 64-bit - 8 GB RAM - 1 TB HDD

Sony VAIO T Series SVT15115CXS - 15.5

Product Rating: Rated / 5 Stars

$975.00 - $1,049.99 at 2 online stores

Last Updated: May 08, 2013

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Are 3-D printers worth it?

You can build nearly anything in 3-D, thanks to the increasingly affordable 3-D printers. That raises interesting new questions for designers and hobbyists.

By Sean Capitan,?Tech News Daily / May 2, 2013

Eudginei Ribiro blasts air into a 3-D print of a skull to blow away access powder at Z Corporation headquarters, in Burlington, Mass., January 11, 2010. In 2010, 3-D printers could create objects at a rate of one vertical inch per hour, and at a cost of two to three dollars per cubic inch.

Mary Knox Merrill / The Christian Science Monitor

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If you could make anything you want, what would it be? That's the challenge 3-D printing poses to consumers. But that open-ended question is also a challenge for 3-D printing. Do consumers know what they want, and do they care enough and have the patience to make it?

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Home devices such as the MakerBot Replicator and print-to-order companies like Shapeways and Sculpteo can take an idea and make it physical ? limited to plastic in the former case but extending to ceramic, plaster, stainless steel and even silver in the latter. Still, you must have the idea to start with.

That's no problem for "makers" ? the new hip, high-tech name for hobbyists and home inventors. If you want to design and build a gadget, replace an out-of-stock mechanical part or even create your own jewelry, 3-D printers make it possible and affordable as old technology never could have.

"When you have a MakerBot it makes sense to make anything you want," said Bre Pettis, founder of MakerBot, a company that transformed 3D printers from industrial devices to (somewhat) affordable desktop gadgets. Its flagship MakerBot Replicator 2 sells for $2,199.

And the makers have been busy. MakerBot's Thingiverse site hosts more than 80,000 digital design files that people can download to print anything from toys to tools. They can even tweak the designs in MakerBot's free MakerWare application.

"So that's the beauty of Thingiverse.com," Pettis told TechNewsDaily. "If somebody has an idea and they make it, they can share it, and the whole world benefits." (However, designs for weapons and any illegal items are not allowed.)?

The Featured section of Thingiverse, for example, includes customizable iPhone cases, a water bottle with cap, a model of the Winterfell castle from the opening credits to "Game of Thrones" and a "steampunk" version of one of the ghosts from "Pac-Man."

Both fun and useful applications, but not exactly cheap compared to the competition. High-end iPhone cases from companies such as Speck top out around $40. And even a stainless-steel vacuum-sealed thermos bottle sells for just $49.95 from REI. You'd have to make a lot of Thingiverse products to pay off the cost of the 3-D printer and the plastic spools you feed it ? to say nothing of the time you invest.

Beyond doodads, a MakerBot can produce "revolutionary" things, as Pettis calls them. His favorite example is the Robohand ? a prosthetic for children who were born without fingers. Two makers ? one in the U.S. and one in South Africa ? collaborated online to create the design. Anyone can download the design and print the components to make the prosthetic.

But very few people need to replace a missing hand ? certainly not people in every home. [See video: 3D Printing: From Doodads To Prosthetic Hands]

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/Wj3e0MDcxUY/Are-3-D-printers-worth-it

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Israel airstrikes loom over US diplomacy on Syria

MOSCOW (AP) ? Secretary of State John Kerry on Tuesday argued the U.S. case to Russian President Vladimir Putin for Russia to take a tougher stance on Syria at a time when Israel's weekend air strikes against the beleaguered Mideast nation have added an unpredictable factor to the talks.

Putin and Kerry met in the Kremlin more than three hours behind schedule. The former Massachusetts senator thanked Putin for Russia's cooperation on the Boston Marathon bombing investigation. On Syria, Kerry said the US and Russia share common interests: Stability in the region, not wanting to see extremism grow and hopes for a peaceful transition in Syria.

"It is my hope that today we'll be able to dig into that a little bit and see if we can find some common ground," the secretary said going into the talks.

Putin, through an interpreter, said that he looked forward to working together with U.S. leader on the problems of today. Kerry arrived in Moscow earlier Tuesday for the high-level talks with Russia, which is the most powerful ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime.

U.S. officials had said that Kerry hoped to change Moscow's thinking on Syria with two new angles: American threats to arm the Syrian rebels and evidence of chemical weapon attacks by the Assad regime.

Over the weekend, Israeli warplanes targeted what Israel claimed were caches of Iranian missiles bound for Hezbollah, the Lebanon-based terror group. Such weapons would allow Hezbollah to strike Tel Aviv and as far as southern Israel from inside Lebanese territory.

Israel's willingness to hit Syrian targets it sees as threats to its own existence has complicated the Obama administration's internal debate over what to do about Syria.

Israel's actions put Damascus and Moscow on notice that the U.S. and its allies may not wait for an international green light to become more actively engaged in the Syrian conflict. The administration said last week it was rethinking its opposition to arming the Syrian rebels or taking other aggressive steps to turn the tide of the two-year-old civil war toward the rebels.

At the same time, Israeli involvement in the war carries risks. Instead of prodding Russia into calling for Assad's ouster, it could bring greater Arab sympathy for Assad and prompt deeper involvement from Iran and Hezbollah, actors committed as much to preserving Assad as to fighting the Jewish state.

Although Israel hasn't officially acknowledged it carried out the airstrikes, Syrian officials on Monday were blaming Israel, calling them a "declaration of war" that would cause the Jewish state to "suffer."

Russia, alongside China, has blocked U.S.-led efforts three times at the United Nations to pressure Assad into stepping down.

U.S. officials are hoping Syria's behavior could shift Russia's stance.

"We have consistently, in our conversations with the Russians and others, pointed clearly to Assad's behavior as proof that further support for the regime is not in the interest of the Syrian people or in the interest of the countries that have in the past supported Assad," White House spokesman Jay Carney said.

U.S. officials said the administration doesn't believe the weekend activity will force President Barack Obama's hand, noting that the main U.S. concern is the use of chemical weapons by Assad, while Israel's top concern is conventional weapons falling into the hands of its enemies.

The chemical weapons argument is now under surprising attack, with former war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte saying over the weekend she and fellow members of a four-member U.N. human rights panel have indications the nerve agent sarin was used by Syrian rebel forces, not by government forces.

That theory was rejected by U.S. officials. The State Department said the administration continues to believe that Syria's large chemical weapons stockpiles remain securely in the regime's control.

The Obama administration opened the door to new military options in Syria after declaring last week it strongly believed the Assad regime used chemical weapons in two attacks in March. Two days after that announcement, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said arming the Syrian rebels was a policy consideration.

Until now, U.S. efforts to bolster the rebels' fighting skills and gather intelligence on the groups operating inside Syria have been limited to small training camps in Jordan, according to two U.S. officials who weren't authorized to speak about secret activities and demanded anonymity.

There are several options for escalation, ranging from arming the rebels to targeted airstrikes and no-fly zones. However, arming the rebels is the most likely escalation, officials said.

While the Israeli actions have made Kerry's Russia efforts more unpredictable, some in Congress tried to be optimistic.

Maryland Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said he hopes Kerry can persuade Russia to use its influence to convince the besieged Syrian leader that he should step down.

"Hopefully the cooperation on the (Boston) Marathon bombing will open the door there," Ruppersberger said.

After visiting Moscow for the first time since he became secretary of state, Kerry will travel to Rome for talks with members of the new Italian government, as well as meetings with Israeli Justice Minister Tzipi Livni and Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh to discuss Middle East peace prospects.

___

Associated Press writer Matthew Lee contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israel-airstrikes-loom-over-us-diplomacy-syria-205537658.html

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Zip-tied 4-year-old: Two arrested for child abuse

A man and woman zip-tied a 4-year-old to a baby gate, say Raleigh police. The 4-year-old has been taken out of their custody.

By Associated Press / May 6, 2013

North Carolina authorities are accusing a couple of using zip ties to bind their 4-year-old daughter's wrists and ankles to a baby gate.

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Raleigh police say 26-year-old Gerald Thomas Swinehart and 28-year-old?Marlaine?Victoria?Coffey?are accused of tying the child to a gate with plastic zip ties of a type normally used by electricians. They also say Swinehart pushed or kicked the girl so hard her lower teeth broke through her lower lip.

Arrest warrants say the abuse occurred earlier this year. The child was taken into the custody of social services on March 31.

Swinehart is charged with two counts of intentional child abuse inflicting serious physical injury and is being held under $100,000 bond.?Coffey?faces one count and is being held under $50,000 bond. It's not known if they have attorneys.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/E-KfU2ms8Gk/Zip-tied-4-year-old-Two-arrested-for-child-abuse

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GOP Benghazi probe stokes political controversy

WASHINGTON (AP) ? House Republicans insist the Obama administration is covering up information about last year's deadly assault on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, rejecting administration assurances to the contrary and stoking a controversy with implications for the 2016 presidential race.

Republicans on five House committees are pressing ahead with their own investigations despite an exhaustive independent review that blistered the State Department, more than 25,000 pages of documents sent to Congress and hours of testimony from former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, Joint Chiefs Chairman Martin Dempsey and former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Three State Department witnesses, including the former deputy chief in Libya, are scheduled to testify Wednesday before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee at a session certain to attract attention after recent disclosures from the panel's Republicans.

The hearing is the latest in a long-running and bitter dispute between the administration and congressional Republicans who have challenged the White House's actions before and after the Benghazi attack.

The scheduled witnesses were Mark Thompson, acting deputy assistant secretary for counterterrorism; Gregory Hicks, the former deputy of mission in Libya; and Eric Nordstrom, a former regional security officer in Libya who testified before the panel in October.

On Sept. 11, 2012, two separate attacks hours apart on the U.S. facility in Benghazi killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans. An independent panel led by former top diplomat Thomas Pickering and retired Gen. Mike Mullen concluded that management and leadership failures at the State Department led to "grossly" inadequate security at the mission. The panel's report singled out the State Department's Bureau of Diplomatic Security and the Bureau of Near East Affairs.

The report failed to placate GOP lawmakers, conservatives and outside groups, some of whom contend Benghazi is comparable to the Watergate and Iran-Contra scandals and deserves a thorough examination. Two of the outside groups ? Special Operations Speaks and Special Ops OPSEC ? have been raising money on the issue.

The target of much of the conservative wrath is Clinton, a potential presidential candidate in 2016 who stepped down after four grueling years as the nation's top diplomat with sky-high approval ratings. In her last appearance on Capitol Hill in January, a defiant Clinton took responsibility for the department's missteps leading up to the assault while rejecting suggestions that the administration had tried to mislead the country about the attack.

She insisted that requests for more security at the diplomatic mission in Benghazi didn't reach her desk.

"I did not see these requests," she said. "They did not come to me. I did not approve them. I did not deny them."

Yet Republicans are pressing ahead, holding hearings and issuing an interim report that criticized her.

"It looks pretty clear that there was some catastrophic decision-making that in some way contributed to the death of those four Americans," said Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., chairman of the House Intelligence Committee. "And that part I think is what the investigation will unfold."

The Oversight committee led by Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., is looking to its witnesses to "put forward information about Benghazi that the Obama administration has tried to suppress," said Frederick Hill, a spokesman for the panel.

Democrats see it differently.

"It's politics," said Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt., a member of the Oversight panel.

"If it's a fair-minded question of what we could do better (on security), that would benefit us all. But if it's intended to embarrass the president or perhaps Hillary Clinton then it will be damaging no matter who the next secretary of state is or who the next president is," Welch added.

Last week in Missouri, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., another possible 2016 candidate, said Clinton's "dereliction of duty" in handling Libya should preclude her from holding office.

Committee Democrats argue that the investigation has become politicized, pointing to their exclusion from much of the inquiry. Two Democratic staffers participated in an April 11 interview with Hicks, but the panel's top Democrat said their efforts to find out about Thompson have been thwarted and they've been unable to talk to the witness.

"We have absolutely not one syllable about this guy. He's going to appear in the committee tomorrow, we know nothing about him," Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., said Tuesday. "That's unprecedented."

Cummings and other Democrats were furious about the interim report from the committees, released last month, that said senior State Department officials, including Clinton, approved reductions in security at the facilities in Benghazi. The report cited an April 19, 2012, cable that Republicans said had Clinton's signature.

It's standard procedure that cables from the State Department in Washington go out under the secretary's authority and with her signature, or name, typed at the bottom, according to a five-page document put together by the State Department at the request of its senior leadership to rebut some of the claims about Benghazi.

Conservatives who are vital to the GOP in turning out the vote in midterm elections have pressured the party to act forcefully in investigating the Benghazi assault. In the House, more than 130 rank-and-file Republicans have signed onto a resolution calling for Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, to create a special select committee to look into the attacks, seeing the latest GOP investigation as less than satisfactory.

___

Follow Donna Cassata at http://twitter.com/DonnaCassataAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gop-benghazi-probe-stokes-political-controversy-070642294.html

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