Monday, February 18, 2013

Highly flexible organic semiconductors: Research paves way for thin-sheet plastic displays or wearable electronics

Feb. 15, 2013 ? Organic semiconductors hold promise for making low-cost flexible electronics -- conceivably video displays that bend like book pages or roll and unroll like posters, or wearable circuitry sewn into uniforms or athletic wear. Researchers have demonstrated the ability to "print" transistors made of organic crystals on flexible plastic sheets, using technology that resembles inkjet or gravure printing.

However, for the technology's potential to be realized, scientists have to show that these organic semiconductors will withstand the rugged handling they invite -- they will need to perform reliably in spite of frequent flexing and sharp bending.

In an article published Dec. 11, 2012 in Nature Communications, scientists led by Rutgers University physicist Vitaly Podzorov report they have demonstrated extremely flexible organic semiconductors that withstood multiple bending cycles in which the devices were rolled to a radius as small as 200 micrometers. The scientists worked with numerous crystalline devices they made and found no degradation in their performance.

Podzorov claims his is the first rigorous study of solution-crystallized organic semiconductors under various types of strain -- sharp bending and repeated flexing along with compression and stretching. He acknowledges some earlier encouraging studies of mechanical robustness, but felt those lacked rigorous tests of flexibility involving different types of organic semiconductors, especially those that show the most promise for development of low-cost printed electronics. The scientists at Rutgers focused on two soluble small molecules (developed in the group of Prof. John Anthony at the University of Kentucky), depositing and crystallizing them on thin plastic sheets from solution, and claim the results should apply to numerous other organic formulations that researchers are investigating.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/-gYr2q-ZPwk/130217085253.htm

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Montero Sports GLS-V 4x2 A/T 2013, New, 2013, Philippines, RF177507

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Reference Number: RF177507
Title: Montero Sports GLS-V 4x2 A/T 2013
Body Style: SUV
Price: PHP 1,428,000
Condition: New
Built: 2013
Transmission: Automanual
Drive Train: 2WD
Engine Cylinders: 4
Fuel: Diesel
Exterior Color: any color
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Doors: 4
Comfort:
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Windows:
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Alloy Wheels

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None of the Listed

Additional information: this offer is only valid this February 2013

Free LTO
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Country: Philippines
Province: METRO MANILA
Municipality/City: Las Pi?as City
Address: Real St. Pamplona Las Pinas City

Payments

Fill in the form and click on "Calculate"

Source: http://tsikot.com/autos/mitsubishi/montero-sport/montero-sports-gls-v-4x2-a-t-2013-new-2013-philippines-rf177507-34419.html

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Infect cells with light in Sporos on iOS, Android

From developer Appxplore comes Sporos, the upcoming iOS / Android game that will see players trying to light up cells on a board using limited numbers of nodes. Each level contains a different layout of cells, and may limit your progress to just one or ?

Read more at Games.com News (blog).

Source: http://www.twytter.net/blog/infect-cells-with-light-in-sporos-on-ios-android/

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Bryan Adams, Alicia Grimaldi Welcome Second Child!

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The time an OU football player talked smack to LeBron, and lost

You know that ridiculous 10-point run LeBron went on right before halftime?

You can thank OU football player Gabe Ikard for that.

Via Brian Windhorst of ESPN.com, a fan started chirping at LeBron from a courtside seat towards the end of the first half, telling him he couldn?t shoot. LeBron proceeded to splash a 3, drill a sick step-back, can a jumper over Thabo and then another 3 right in Perk?s face.

?He told me to shoot it,? LeBron said. ?He said, ?Shoot it, you can?t shoot.? So I said OK. So I shot it.

?And I made it. And I made another one. And I made another one. And he stopped talking to me.?

Whoops. Fitting I guess that in a big game, a move from an OU football player backfired. I?m assuming it was really all Brent Venables? fault though.

Props to Ikard though who hilariously owned it on Twitter:

LeBron 1, Gabe Ikard 0. Or really, LeBron 10, Ikard 0. Maybe next time though don?t rile up LeBron. Better yet, give your seat to Jimmy Goldstein or something.

Source: http://dailythunder.com/2013/02/the-time-an-ou-football-player-talked-smac-to-lebron-and-lost/

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Key Performance Indicators: Reading between the lines

I read reports, so you don't have to?

Here are some interesting tidbits of information from a Third quarter Review of Key Performance Indicators for Community Supports and Treatment Services (CSTS) for fiscal year 2011 to 2012. CSTS is the service arm (as opposed to the administrative arm) of our local Community Mental Health Agency. It primarily serves people with Developmental Disabilities and Mental Illness under a managed care system that mandates that all eligible people who qualify for Medicaid must receive services suitable to their condition.

The report admits to some major problems that I attribute to the poor economy, the atmosphere of hostility toward public employee unions, and an aging workforce that sees early retirement as the best option available: "? there has been an abnormally high retirement rate at the beginning of the calendar (middle of the fiscal year), resulting in significant turnover through all levels in the organization.? This turnover can attract new and enthusiastic staff members and it can also result in a relationship disruption for the consumer. Finally, CSTS has had a difficult time competing for exceptional staff due to economic conditions. "

Then there is this:

According to this graph, less than 30% of the developmentally disabled adults (DD.a) who live in the county receive services through CSTS. Some of them might receive services through other agencies, although it is doubtful that many do. Where are the missing 70% of people who, by definition, have significant disabilities, but do not receive services?

Last but not least, there's this:

The report claims that the "organization does an exceptional job serving individuals in a community setting and minimizing the use of a restrictive setting.? Those adults who are in restrictive settings require that level of care, a structured milieu and constant supervision and monitoring.? "

This means that 16% of adults with developmental disabilities (DDa) who are served by CSTS live in group homes. 84% of those served are in "nonrestrictive settings" and you can bet that most of those live at home with their families. For my sons who need a lot of care and 24/7 monitoring, caregivers who are themselves monitored and given support and backup, a group home is not restrictive. We don't know if the agency is doing an exceptional job until we talk to the families who might want a decent group home for their adult family members to live in, but do not trust the system to provide good care or don't know it is available.

Source: http://theddnewsblog.blogspot.com/2013/02/key-performance-indicators-reading.html

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Friday, February 15, 2013

COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Oregon State O-line coach turns down USC offer

Oregon State offensive line coach Mike Cavanaugh turned down an offer to become USC's offensive line coach, according to sources.

Cavanaugh was offered the job last weekend following an interview with USC coach Lane Kiffin. Current offensive line coach James Cregg will probably switch to tight ends next season.

It was unlikely Cavanaugh would leave Oregon State especially when Kiffin might be fired after next season. Oregon State offensive coordinator Danny Langsdorf donated a kidney to Cavanaugh's wife in 2007.

Sources said former USC assistant coach Kennedy Pola and the university are working out a financial settlement following his dismissal last week. One possible scenario to replace Pola would elevate quarterbacks coach Clay Helton to offensive coordinator and continue to allow Kiffin to call plays.

Kiffin could not be reached for comment Monday.


Source: http://www.dailybreeze.com/ci_22569139/college-football-oregon-state-o-line-coach-turns?source=rss_viewed

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

State of the Union: Randy Widup on energy's place

Randy Widup, president and CEO of Shermco Industries.

Randy Widup, president and CEO of Shermco Industries, says new energy technologies should be used where they make sense to lessen the nation's dependence of oil. Here is what Widup had to say after hearing President Obama's State of the Union address:

"There is no denying that new research and technology is needed to move us forward and for the U.S. to stay ahead of the rest of the world. And as it seems with most issues, the solution is likely somewhere in the middle. Electricity drives everything we do, and we must focus on all aspects of advancement for this very vital energy source, whether it is electricity itself or the sources utilized to generate the electricity.

Wind power is important, solar is important, bio-fuels and a transition to LNG is important, along with other energy technologies. But these advancing energy technologies should be used where they make the most sense, and when applied in aggregate will ultimately lead to a lessening of dependence on oil. We are seeing the benefits of technological advancements right now within industry, and the benefits are felt in a greater degree for those regions where an acceptance to new ideas is embraced.

For example, look at the states that provide positive economic incentives for the advancement of new energy technology, such as Texas has done with wind power. We have provided jobs, created an industry that supports local economies, brought global manufacturing into our state, and we are making a difference in the overall quest to lower carbon emissions. One just has to take a look around North Texas and you will find companies who manufacture wind turbine blades, wind turbine towers, finance and build wind farms, and is home to the largest electrical wind turbine repair facility in the United States."

Lance Murray edits and writes for the DBJ's website and can be reached at 214-706-7106

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_29/~3/SgrKzgEnyow/state-of-the-union-randy-widup-on.html

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One Direction Hits The Road In '1D3D' Trailer

Watch the global pop sensation become a family in first official trailer for Morgan Spurlock's documentary.
By Josh Wigler


Harry Styles in "One Direction 3D"
Photo: Sony

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1701826/one-direction-movie-trailer.jhtml

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Do Violent Video Games Make People More Violent in Real Life?

Young people, especially boys, are playing bloodier and more realistic video games than ever before, and scientists are looking for links between real life violence and violent video games. However, the research so far is inconclusive.

What do you think? Do violent video games make people more violent in real life? Why or why not?

In ?Shooting in the Dark,? Benedict Carey writes about research looking for connections between violent video games and violent behavior.

The young men who opened fire at Columbine High School, at the movie theater in Aurora, Colo., and in other massacres had this in common: they were video gamers who seemed to be acting out some dark digital fantasy. It was as if all that exposure to computerized violence gave them the idea to go on a rampage ? or at least fueled their urges.

But did it really?

Social scientists have been studying and debating the effects of media violence on behavior since the 1950s, and video games in particular since the 1980s. The issue is especially relevant today, because the games are more realistic and bloodier than ever, and because most American boys play them at some point. Girls play at lower rates and are significantly less likely to play violent games.

A burst of new research has begun to clarify what can and cannot be said about the effects of violent gaming. Playing the games can and does stir hostile urges and mildly aggressive behavior in the short term. Moreover, youngsters who develop a gaming habit can become slightly more aggressive ? as measured by clashes with peers, for instance ? at least over a period of a year or two.

Yet it is not at all clear whether, over longer periods, such a habit increases the likelihood that a person will commit a violent crime, like murder, rape, or assault, much less a Newtown-like massacre. (Such calculated rampages are too rare to study in any rigorous way, researchers agree.)

Students: Tell us ?

  • Do you ever play violent video games? Do your friends?
  • Do you think violent video games make people more violent in real life?
  • Do you think these games make people less sensitive to real-life violence, blood and gore?
  • If you play violent video games, how do they make you feel when you play?
  • Should legislation regarding violent video games be part of Congress?s response to the school shooting in Newtown, Conn., or do you think violent video games are not part of the problem that leads to mass shootings?

Update: Teachers, we now have a lesson plan based on this same article: Collateral Damage? Researching a Connection Between Video Games and Violence

NOTE: Students, please use only your first name. For privacy policy reasons, we will not publish student comments that include a last name.

Source: http://learning.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/13/do-violent-video-games-make-people-more-violent-in-real-life/

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Murder, Mirth and Care Bears: What you can write about with an ...

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Writing for news bulletins, writing for standup comedy, writing murders for tv drama, writing for comics and fantasy gaming novels. These were some of the uses to which a group of graduates from my old Oxford College have put our English degrees. This is a write up of a rather fun day we spent talking about it.

I was lucky enough to be taught English at St Edmund Hall, Oxford from 1986 to 89 by a triumvirate of remarkable tutors. Two were very close to retirement. Reggie Alton ? who as an expert paleographer, was called in to authenticate the suicide notes of Kurt Cobain and Bill Clinton?s former White House counsel, Vince Foster. Bruce Mitchell ? a world authority on Anglo Saxon, who had Bayeux tapestry curtains in? the room where we students made painfully slow translations of The Dream of the Rood.? But? the third was the newly appointed and very young and talented Lucy Newlyn. She?s an expert on the Romantic poets and now runs the department there. As part of how she?s refreshed and renewed the college?s approach to teaching and engaging with students about English literature, Lucy set up a Writers? Directory and organized A Celebration of Writing at the Hall last Saturday ? the college?s first Writers? Day for English degree graduates. It was attended by a range of teaching and research staff, alumni and current post and undergraduate students.

The Guardian journalist and bestselling memoirist Emma Brockes? gave a talk on the challenge of writing longform fiction in the age of blogging.

Emma graduated in the mid 1990s when the internet didn?t really mean much. It gradually became a more important part of the way she works. She?s also sold shedloads of conventional books in the conventional way ? her memoir What Would Barbra Do: How Musicals Saved My Life saw her appear on Oprah and top the NY Times bestseller list. Her new book She Left Me The Gun: My Mother?s Life Before Me is out later this spring. But as someone who started out as a reporter, and still blogs twice a week for The Guardian from New York, she articulated how there is a need to manage ?stock? and ?flow? as a non fiction writer. Twitter can be the ?flow? that draws attention to the ?stock? ? the long form, deeper content of the book or the investigation.

?So what?? is, she believes, still the most useful critical question to ask yourself to assess the value of what you?re writing.

She suggested a kind of 3-field crop rotation system for re-freshing writing creativity ?focusing at different times between twitter, blogging and writing the long form book.

Established names have found blogging and tweeting really helpful. But in a Q&A we discussed how far young writers starting out on their careers without an established reputation based on a real job, can successfully use personal blogging to get a break. I agree with Emma, that talent is the one thing that truly matters for longterm success. But I think it?s a harder path to negotiate at the start of your career.

Perhaps inspired by Emma, I found myself live tweeting the next session in which Dan Abnett?and?Johanna Koljonen held a marvellous conversation about the skills of writing ? not drawing ? writing for comics such as Johanna?s Finnish Manga,? 2000AD and the Warhammer 40K fantasy novel sequences.

Dan got his first break writing for Care Bears comics. He said the ?rules? he learned about staying true to each fantasy ?world? still applied to everything he did. Another great one was about not depending on prior knowledge from the reader: ?Remember every comic is somebody?s first comic.?

We got to see rather beautiful pages from Dan?s The New Deadwardians and Johanna?s Oblivion High ? which had a Finnish mythic background to the story. It was fascinating to see finished comic pages of Johanna?s story line with no dialogue or words at all, along side the page of script notes she?d written to guide the artist. Both discussed the challenges of how to write for graphic artists they might never meet, and the need to be consistent with a strong defined visual world. Dan had written one of the first Torchwood novels, before the first episode was finished, based only on a set visit and some materials. He said he was relieved to see his novel had successfully matched it.

Dan said his rules boiled down to: ?No more than 9 words in a bubble Not more than 3 bubbles a panel No more than 6 panels a page. Show the feet. Break the rules for a reason.?

Via twitter renowned comic artist Jamie McKelvie ? an admirer of Dan?s,(his work includes sich titles as X-Men and Young Avengers) discussed whether that rule was even necessary, saying ?Can do 20 on a page with no problem.? Dan said he?d draw 20 panels on a page for a reason, such as conveying frenetic action. We then got on to Warhammer 40K. I?ve interviewed Jamie before about Warhammer 40 K. And Dan, who?s one of their best novel writers, explained the joy of getting the ?realism? right; making the stories and the ?logic? of the spaceship mechanics ? and mechanics are very big in Warhammer ? ?better than it needs to be?. I think this is an essential message that emerged from the day. We were all used to making whatever we wrote ? eve the Care Bears ? as good as it could be. Not because we were necessarily fans, but because great writing is about the joy of making it as good as you can.

In my session ? The World In Words: The Art of Newswriting ? I discussed what I regarded as the underappreciated joys of great news writing ? especially for bulletins and in underappreciated places, such as the BBC?s Newsround for children. Plus how the skills of critical appreciation learned? through years of comprehension, pr?cis and deciphering the codes in Spenser and Wyatt might be essential for spotting the ?real? story in the Old Bailey terrorist trial that helped inspire the film Four Lions.? I also talked about news?omissions?. How bulletins might lead us to think only certain stories mattered and keep us ignorant of others. I gave examples of editorial disagreements about how stories were prioritized and most importantly dropped. I argued that in my experience some newsroom editors and executives had a high brow snobbery about crime stories, and downplayed them in favour of a very narrowly focused Westminster world bias.

After lunch, music and poetry readings came a panel discussion about the rights and wrongs of putting Creative Writing on the English degree course as some kind of option. (Cambridge is doing so) There was also a lively argument about the whole ?workshop? arena of reading out your work and getting it critiqued by fellow students. This has always struck me as an appalling idea and not what an English undergraduate degree is for. It?s bad enough remembering how I once started to cry in a tutorial after reading out my essay on Philip Larkin. My view has been further reinforced as I find myself reading James Lasdun?s horrific memoir of being cyberstalked by his former Creative Writing student. It?s called?Give Me Everything You Have.

Afterwards it was interesting to find all of us who made money writing (mostly 80s students) Dan, Stewart Lee, and TV crime drama writer Lawrence Davey, together with Emma Brockes gathered in a a corner vehemently opposed to the idea of ?studying? Creative Writing as undergraduates. We felt learning to appreciate great writing of the past was what promoted original thought and style and should not be compromised. And news of a Creative Writing A-level filled us with dread.

Finally Stewart Lee ? my old Anglo Saxon tutorial partner, managed to pull off the trick of giving a talk about ?not writing? for standup comedy.

The writer and standup comedian pointed out that his chosen profession relies still on the wild fantasy ?(among most people)? that the act is not written at all. That it is merely the Real You extemporizing because you are so naturally witty and funny.

I?d already been tweeting with the writer, broadcaster and hugely successful comedian Al Murray who was at the Hall at the same time as Stewart and me, but as a History graduate, wasn?t part of this first ?Writers? Day. Perhaps live-tweeting Stewart Lee is rather unfair to the subtle nature of his act and performance style, but Al naturally raised concerns as Stewart suggested that ?real? standups should really have written their own act, the odd paid-for joke aside. Al tweeted: ?Keen to point out I don?t use writers for live stand up, use them for tv?. You can read Stewart?s book or check out his shows if you don?t already know about his rather lively views on such stadium fillers as Michael Macintyre; amiable Every Men who rely on large teams of writers. Stewart felt you can see the joins because the material isn?t coherent. He joked ?We can dream of them bring stripped of their awards like drugtaking Tour De France cyclists.? But Stewart was making the point that perhaps the concept of the writer-standup is what?s dated in the modern market place where there are fortunes being made. That it was in fact, always a short term aberration, like the idea that emerged in the 60s that singers and pop bands like The Beatles could write their own songs. Go back to the 60s and 70s, he pointed out, and the comedians who emerged out of the working men?s clubs drew on a ?tacitly acknowledged folk archive? of shared jokes. (You will have to imagine Stewart?s dry tone to the delivery here. Sorry, to Stewart, too, for even attempting to put his standup style into a news-style blogpost).

Via Twitter ?I couldn?t resist asking another standup and former Channel 4 News colleague, Tommy Greaves: ?Where do you stand on the ?all my own work? vs stand ups relying on teams of writers controversy??

His replies were interestingly purist. He?s also a big admirer of Stewart Lee. ?I think doing someone else?s jokes is a worthless endeavour. I?m not remotely interested in any [standup] comedian who uses writers. Singers can make someone else?s song their own. Comedians can?t do that with jokes. Comedy isn?t folk music. If it?s not personal and original, I?m just not interested in seeing a [standup] comedian.?

Many writers had submitted favourite quotes for the programme on the writing process. The one that sums the day up for me was this one, submitted by Tom Clucas. It?s G W E Russell quoting Matthew Arnold:

?Have something to say and say it as clearly as you can.?

And I?ve already asked Lucy Newlyn to organise the event again next year. And to let us have an alternative panel on Creative Writing courses.

I?ll be interviewing James Lasdun about his book Give Me Everything You Have: On Being Stalked for The Strand on the BBC World Service at the end of the month.

?

Source: http://www.samiraahmed.co.uk/?p=3571

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