Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Report: Apple's TV Service Would Pay Networks When You Skip Ads

Report: Apple's TV Service Would Pay Networks When You Skip Ads

According to a report by former WSJ reporter Jessica Lessin, Apple's long-rumored stand-alone TV service will supposedly allow viewers to skip over commercials.

While commercial skipping has been available as a feature from the likes of Dish Network, networks have gone after and often crushed services into bankruptcy or caused them to retract said feature. Lessin says Apple has pitched media executives on a "premium" version that would still pay networks for its losses.

The proposed deal would likely see Apple's product augment your cable provider's traditional set-top box and possibly work similarly to Microsoft's upcoming Xbox One. A recently granted patent it seems would allow Apple to swap in different content, like music, during commercial breaks.

How Apple plans to incorporate this service is unclear. Besides, you know, the fact that Apple has yet to release an actual television product other than the Apple TV, which the rumored device/service might just end up being anyway. [Jessica Lessin]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/report-apples-tv-service-would-pay-networks-when-you-791987841

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Monday, July 15, 2013

Woolly mammoth goes on view in Japan

Woolly mammoth: A rare woolly mammoth with remarkably preserved soft tissue, orange fur, and signs of human butchering is now on view in Japan.

By Elizabeth Barber,?Contributor / July 10, 2013

A 39,000-year-old female Woolly mammoth, which was found frozen in Siberia, Russia is seen as members of media film upon its arrival at an exhibition hall in Yokohama, south of Tokyo, in July 2013.

Toru Hanai/Reuters

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An ancient baby mammoth ? so well preserved that tuffs of orange-brown hair still dot its body ? has gone on display in Yokohama, Japan.

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While fossilized mammoth teeth, bones, and tusks are relatively common, mammoths with hair and soft tissue are highly unusual finds. This mammoth,?a two-year-old called Yuka that died some 39,000 years ago,?is swathed in?light orange, almost blonde hair, as well as lingering soft tissue.

The mammoth,?recovered from Siberia's ice about three years ago, is?also notable for what it might teach us about human life those many thousands of years ago. Cuts found on the animal?s body suggest that humans took the carcass from the lion that likely originally killed it. That makes it one of few carcasses found to show human contact and could offer up clues as to how ancient humans hunted.

?It?s exceptionally rare to find intact mammoths,? Kevin Campbell, an?associate professor of environmental and evolutionary physiology at the University of Manitoba, told the Monitor.??And to find a mammoth that has been conclusively found to have been butchered by humans makes this find exceedingly unusual."

He noted, though, that such?discoveries are becoming more common as the climate warms and as melting ice reveals its hidden cargo.?

Much is still unknown about the woolly mammoth, which went extinct some 4,000 years ago. Among those unknowns is how the mammoth adapted to the severe cold of Siberia. Mammoth skeletons checkering the globe suggest that the species migrated from Africa to southern Europe and China about 3 million years ago. The mammoths in China then moved northward to Siberia about two million years ago.

That means that the mammoth, whose closest living relative is the Asian elephant, and who was once native to sweltering Africa, somehow evolved to have extreme heat-conservation mechanisms. What we know as the woolly mammoth, with its thick layer of fat and fur, and its small tail and ears, did not exist until about half a million years ago.

?We don?t understand at all on a biochemical level how they were able to survive in the arctic,? said Dr. Campbell.

Since the physiological record of how the animal managed to survive in Siberia is not generally preserved in bones, mammoths with remaining soft tissue are of particular interest to scientists for what that preserved tissue might reveal about how the animal's various internal systems adapted to the cold.

The mammoth will be on view in Japan from July 13th?to September 16th.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/Q87atcY-OSI/Woolly-mammoth-goes-on-view-in-Japan

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Friday, July 12, 2013

Major worker shortage looms for New Mexico

New Mexico will have 335,000 new job openings in 2020 but will have only 152,000 workers with the skills and education level necessary to fill them, according to a report by the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce.?

As New Mexico slowly climbs out of the recession, a good deal of the recovery discussion has focused on creating jobs.

A new study reported on by the Albuquerque Journal indicates that?s not New Mexico?s problem.

New Mexico will have 335,000 new job openings in 2020 but will have only 152,000 workers with the skills and education level necessary to fill them, according to the report by the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce.

The state?s not alone in its plight. The nation is expected to create 55 million new job openings in 2020 but will be short 5 million workers.

The sector expected to grow fastest in New Mexico: mining, quarrying and oil and gas extraction, at 38 percent. Demand for health care and social assistance jobs is expected to grow 30 percent; education services, 29 percent; real estate, rental and leasing, 25 percent; and finance and insurance, 25 percent.

For more, see the Albuquerque Journal?s report.

505.348.8322 | rsams@bizjournals.com

Source: http://feeds.bizjournals.com/~r/bizj_albuquerque/~3/_dq7e0mdnoE/major-worker-shortage-looms-for-nm.html

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Mind,Body,Spirit Wellness for the Summer 07/11 by ... - Internet Radio

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    Tavis Smiley chats with American novelist Walter Mosley, best known for his crime fiction, about his newest book, ?Little Green."

  • Country singer Randy Travis is in critical condition after a stroke, a complication of his heart condition. Dr. Reznicek explains what viral cardiomyopathy is.

  • In Part 2 of Almost White?s Half-Year in Review, Rick Najera and Rafael Agustin give the Latino take on the Zimmerman trial, Mariachi Boy, Tonto and more.

  • Starring as Jeffrey in Tyler Perry's hit show ?The Haves and the Have Nots,? actor Gavin Houston shares with Cyrus Webb how he brought his character to life.

  • R.J. Tolson?s a busy 19-year-old! The CEO of 4 companies, president of both Sages of Essence and Living Writers, and author shares his passion and work ethic.

  • World Footprints highlights the contributions made by Howard Buffett and Bill Gates to global hunger efforts, with keynote remarks by Vice President Joe Biden.

  • Coach Ryan Lillis and the North Brunswick Raiders head into the final week of the GMCSBL regular season, facing St. John Vianney live from Community Park.

  • Grammy-winning country star LaDonna Gatlin shifted careers when she became a mom. Join Scott McCausey as he explores 2 unique challenges in LaDonna's life.

  • Rick Simpson discusses the controversial topic of medicinal hemp oil, a.k.a. Rick Simpson Oil or RSO, which healed his cancer. Hear his amazing story.

  • Hear from TV?s Mr. Food, author of ?Hello Taste, Goodbye Guilt!? The cookbook features diabetes-friendly recipes and is dedicated to the late Art Ginsburg.

  • "The Shark" Sean Williams and the Live Nation Army discuss the fallout from the Wyatt Family debut, reports of the TNA stiffing wrestlers of their pay and more.

  • Join blues man Douglas "The Chef" Rapier for a weekly Blues Hour at the Diner to explore the roots, stems and branches of this thing called the blues.

  • Making plans to homestead? If so, Kristi Stone of "The Mind to Homestead" has some excellent tips on what to consider to get the best results!

  • Musician Chad Jeffers is now on tour with Carrie Underwood and has toured with Keith Urban. Hear about his book, "25 Notes for the Successful Musician."

  • On Life Beats Radio, bestselling author Beth Vogt shares her vow to never write fiction and news of her new book, "Catch a Falling Star."

  • VividLife Radio welcomes author and celebrated vocalist Ester Nicholson to discuss her book, ?Soul Recovery: 12 Keys to Healing Addiction.?

  • Gerard Aartsen?s vast knowledge on extraterrestrials on Earth has been published, and he?s a regular on radio in the U.S., UK, Australia and the Netherlands.

  • John "Trapper" Tice leads a wild and woolly team of investigators hunting cryptids on Destination America's show ?Mountain Monsters.?

  • Bestselling author Brad Thor is known for numerous thrillers. His latest, ?Hidden Order,? drops this week. Plus, a chat with bestselling author George Gildre.

  • The award-winning band Sea-Cruz is a staple on the Carolina Beach music scene. They chat about their success and their new single, "Hey Eugene."

  • Award-winning photojournalist Jo-Anne McArthur discusses We Animals, a project documenting animals in our environment, and her appearance in an upcoming film.

  • In this exclusive interview, Pro Wrestling Guerrilla Co-Founder and former TNA Impact Wrestling star Joey Ryan talks about his release and time in the company.

  • 10-year-old actress Kyla Deaver chats about her starring role in the summer thriller "The Conjuring," her career and her volunteer work with rescue dogs.

  • There?s no doubt the world?s getting smaller. And in that process, interfaith marriages are becoming more common. Ed Case tells us how navigate this trend.

  • Source: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/thewellnessjourneylive/2013/07/11/summer-wellness

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    Early Heller story to be published this month

    FILE - This Jan. 26, 1998 file photo shows author Joseph Heller along the Coney Island boardwalk in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Heller's short story, "Almost Like Christmas," will appear next week in Strand Magazine. It is a about the stabbing of a Southern white, the town's thirst for revenge and the black man who has resigned himself to blame. Written in the late 1940s or early '50s, after Heller had returned from World War II, the story has rarely been seen and offers a peak at the early fiction of one of the 20th century's most famous writers. (AP Photo/Todd Plitt, File)

    FILE - This Jan. 26, 1998 file photo shows author Joseph Heller along the Coney Island boardwalk in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Heller's short story, "Almost Like Christmas," will appear next week in Strand Magazine. It is a about the stabbing of a Southern white, the town's thirst for revenge and the black man who has resigned himself to blame. Written in the late 1940s or early '50s, after Heller had returned from World War II, the story has rarely been seen and offers a peak at the early fiction of one of the 20th century's most famous writers. (AP Photo/Todd Plitt, File)

    (AP) ? Before Joseph Heller satirized the madness of war in "Catch-22," he told a serious tale about the tragedy of racism.

    "Almost Like Christmas," to appear next week in Strand Magazine, is a grim short story about the stabbing of a Southern white, the town's thirst for revenge and the black man who has resigned himself to blame. Written in the late 1940s or early '50s, after Heller had returned from World War II, the story has rarely been seen and offers a peek at the early fiction of one of the 20th century's most famous writers.

    "Heller was to a large extent a guy who saw through hypocrisy, greed, and the backward nature of a mob better than most writers ? so it's no wonder that he turned his pen to a racist mob in a small southern town," said Andrew Gulli, managing editor of the Strand, a publication based in Birmingham, Mich., that has unearthed little known works by Mark Twain, Graham Greene and others.

    From the start, "Almost Like Christmas" is a portrait of a worn out community. One character has the "hopeless, stupid, waxen look of a drunkard." A window's "coarse patterns of grime" reminds another character of "diseased tissue," while the voice of a third man has a "shrill, whinnying, malicious hysteria."

    In this unnamed place, a terrible fight ("the primordial brutality of an alley fracas") has left a white man in a coma, local residents seething and a young black man, Jess Calgary, as the prime suspect. A white school teacher, identified as "Carter," has the awful task of convincing Calgary that he should come into town for questioning.

    "Almost Like Christmas" is as bleak as any of Heller's novels, but without the dark humor he would become famous for. Heller biographer Tracy Daugherty said that at the time Heller had yet to develop his own literary voice and was instead mimicking the style of magazine stories.

    "William Saroyan was a huge influence on Heller at the time ? stories of Depression-era hardships, written in a hard-boiled style," said Daugherty, whose "Just One Catch: A Biography of Joseph Heller," came out in 2011. "The story's lack of humor is very uncharacteristic of the Heller readers would come to know."

    Heller, who died at age 76 in 1999, spent much of his life in or near his native New York City. Daugherty said that Heller trained for the military in South Carolina, but otherwise had little first-hand knowledge of the South and almost surely did not base "Almost Like Christmas" on any direct experience.

    Daugherty does find some personal elements in the story, noting that Carter is a "flawed mentor," perhaps inspired by Heller's brother and father, "who never really helped him in the ways he needed, with his education and his ambitions."

    Heller started writing "Catch-22" in 1953 and the novel came out eight years later, not long before the Vietnam War would make the novel required reading in the 1960s and '70s. Daugherty says she found evidence that Heller was working on a story based on his war service around the time he wrote "Just Like Christmas." But editors advised him that the market for war fiction was already well served by such novels as Norman Mailer's "The Naked and the Dead" and James Jones' "From Here to Eternity."

    "So Heller set his war story aside and continued to imitate magazine writers for a while, doing things such as 'Almost Like Christmas,' while feeling that he had not broken through to his best material," Daugherty said. "Many years would pass before he'd return to his true calling, the war story ? and in doing so he would change our culture's idea of what a war story could be."

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-07-11-US-Books-Joseph-Heller/id-95e3b1915cc14ff3864104c1e1f4efb9

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