Friday, November 2, 2012

Nicki Minaj Has No Problem Being The 'Toughest' Judge On 'American Idol'

Young Money rapper tells Ryan Seacrest about her upcoming E! special as well as what her Barbz can expect from her on 'Idol.'
By Christina Garibaldi


Nicki Minaj on the set of "American Idol"
Photo: MTV News

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1696581/nicki-minaj-american-idol-toughest-judge.jhtml

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How and why herpes viruses reactivate to cause disease

ScienceDaily (Oct. 31, 2012) ? The mere mention of the word "herpes" usually conjures negative images and stereotypes, but most people have been infected with some form of the virus. For most, a sore appears, heals and is forgotten, although the virus remains latent just waiting for the right circumstances to come back. Now, the mystery behind what triggers the virus to become active again is closer to being solved thanks to new research published in the Journal of Leukocyte Biology's November 2012 issue.

In the report, scientists show how the immune system may lose its control over the virus when facing new microbial threats, such as when it must fend off other viral invaders or bacteria.

"Because almost all people are infected by one or more herpes family viruses during their lifetime, the potential impact of these findings are significant," said Charles H. Cook, M.D., FACS, FCCM, director of surgical critical care at The Ohio State University College of Medicine in Columbus, Ohio, and a researcher involved in the work. "We hope that by understanding how these latent viral infections are controlled that we can prevent reactivation events and improve people's lives."

To make this discovery, researchers studied mice with latent herpes family cytomegalovirus (CMV) during severe bacterial infections. They found that T-cells responsible for CMV control were reduced significantly during a new infection with bacteria. This, in effect, reduced the "brakes" which kept the virus under control, allowing the virus to reactivate and cause disease. When the immune system eventually sensed the reactivation, the memory T-cell levels returned to normal, effectively restoring the body's control over the virus.

"Finding ways to control herpes flare ups is important, not only for the health of the person with the virus, but also for preventing its transmission," said John Wherry, Ph.D., Deputy Editor of the Journal of Leukocyte Biology. "This report highlights the important interplay when we are 'co-infected' with more than one microbe and provides important insights into why the immune system sometimes fails as well as how it can regain control of latent herpes virus infections."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. J. Campbell, J. Trgovcich, M. Kincaid, P. D. Zimmerman, P. Klenerman, S. Sims, C. H. Cook. Transient CD8-memory contraction: a potential contributor to latent cytomegalovirus reactivation. Journal of Leukocyte Biology, 2012; 92 (5): 933 DOI: 10.1189/jlb.1211635

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/Sdzf-nuUoAo/121031125516.htm

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The Eire of the storm | The Sun |Irish Home|Irish News

IRISH survivors of the deadly Superstorm Sandy have told how the their neighbourhoods have been ravaged.

Over 50 people have lost their lives along the east coast of the US.

The hurricane was making its way north to Canada last night.

Rose Erin Loughran, 36, told of her horror after her next door neighbour, father-of-four Jeff Channing, 51, was CRUSHED by a falling tree in his sitting room.

Speaking from her home in Woodlawn, Bronx, she said: ?Our next door neighbours had a tree come through the back of their house into their living room and kill their father.

?It was just a boom and a tree coming straight through the house.?

She added: ?They were doing all the right things. They were sitting in their living room like (Mayor) Bloomberg told them to.

Speaking on the Ray D?Arcy Show on Today FM, stunned Erin said: ?A lot of people are without power. You just see blocks of darkness in a city that is known for 23-hour light.

?I?m fortunate enough to have my electricity back but my family live in Pearl River across the bridge and they are still without power along with about five million other people.

?The aftermath of Sandy is clearly visible everywhere you look. There are trees with gigantic roots pulled out of the ground, smashed onto homes and cars, everywhere you look there?s destruction from the storm.

?About 100 houses out in Queens were destroyed with fire.?

Elsewhere, barman Philip Ward, 29, originally from Dublin?s inner city, but living in an apartment on the upper east side of Manhattan, told how giant trees came crashing down around his home.

He told the Irish Sun: ?I was pretty frightened at first, with the sound of those winds and all the trees being knocked down outside my apartment.

?My family and friends were very worried and concerned about me but were happy when I got through to them to tell them I was safe and sound.?

The barman has been stuck at home since because his pub was submerged in water.

He told the Irish Sun: ?I have not been able to go to work because my bar is in section A, which was hit the worst.

?The kitchen is still flooded and the bar has no power.

?Thank God I have been able to leave my apartment and walk around and have not been affected by a power cut at home.

?But since all the subways are cancelled there?s really nothing we can do other than stay at home, cook, drink, watch movies and play board games.?

Meanwhile, a Limerick man has told how his dream holiday to New York was ruined by the freak storm.

David Lee, 27, from Limerick City, arrived on Sunday with his mother for a Christmas shopping spree.

But the pair were forced to stay inside their hotel on Times Square because almost all of the bars, shops and restaurants are shut.

David said last night: ?We arrived on Sunday and the subway system was still working. But from Monday onwards it?s just been a disaster.

?On Monday night Times Square was like a ghost town and 57th Street was all closed off because a crane collapsed.

?The subway is shut down so you can?t go anywhere, you can?t shop anywhere, so basically you can?t do anything.

?All the Broadway shows were cancelled. I had a whole itinerary with what I was going to do when I got here.

?But we?ve just been sitting around in the hotel room. We went to whatever bar or restaurant was open but there were very few of them, and it was very hard to get to them.?

He added: ?My mam?s way of looking at it is that we?re still healthy.

?I think the only shopping we?ll be doing will be at the airport.?

?We were supposed to fly home tonight but as of now I still don?t know if my flight is cancelled or not.?

In Breezy Point, the furthest point of Queens, 111 houses burnt down and hundreds more were left severely damaged.

It is heavily populated by Irish-American firefighters and cops and was also devastated after 9/11 when the area lost 32 of their own.

City Council President Christine Quinn paid tribute to people she met on a tour of the devastated area.

She said: ?All they wanted to say was they need help with their rebuilding permit, That shows their Irish spirit and heart and determination to rebuild.?

According to the 2010 Census, Breezy Point has the highest numbers of Irish-Americans in the States at 60.3 per cent.

Source: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/irishsun/irishsunnews/4620508/The-Eire-of-the-storm.html

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Huawei security chief says embracing its hacker critics

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/huawei-security-chief-says-embracing-082737021.html

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More Molls Please | Serial Optimist

Some people are just doing life right. They are true to themselves, create for the sake of creating, write meaningful words, promote smiles, and are the real inspirations for younger people who want to do life right as well. Molly McAleer is a leader in this group of people that we adore, the people that make us smile and are this generations ?I want to grow up and be like?? pact. You might know her better as ?Molls?, or as the co-founder of HelloGiggles with Zooey Deschanel and Sophia Rossi, or as a writer (now story editor) for the mega hit ?2 Broke Girls?, or as the Internet sensation she?s become. She has a legit following on Twitter and one of the most popular Tumblr blogs in Molls She Wrote. I could go on and on, but I don?t want to keep you from the super fun conversation we had with Molls. Enjoy it, and then proceed to become an instant fan of the all around delight, Molly McAleer.

____

Picture Perfect

____

Serial Optimist: First date style, what?s your go to topic of conversation when things start to get a little?quiet?

Molly McAleer: I usually ask an emasculating question to test their sense of humor. That?s almost definitely one of the reasons why I?m single.

SO: What were you like at the age of 18? What things were you into, what music were you listening to, what was your style, and what did you want to be in life?

Molly: I was always into upkeep. I?d get my hair done a lot and worked at a salon specifically to get free hair color and cuts. 18 was my senior year, so I worked my schedule so that my two Monday and Friday free blocks were next to each other and I?d walk off campus and get manicures. I went to this lady Noelle and she was the first person who gave me nail art. I loved her, she called me Barbie.

Music-wise, I listened to a lot of local and SoCal punk bands, radio rap and oldies. I spent most weekends going to concerts on Lansdowne.

I definitely didn?t think I?d end up in LA. I think I hoped I?d do something in entertainment but didn?t think it was attainable, so my plan was to study political science, go to law school, work in local politics before becoming the governor of Massachusetts, then transition into talk radio after my retirement. It?s pretty crazy that I thought that was more possible than what I?m doing now.

SO: Funny how things work out the way they?re supposed to! This is probably a question you?ve answered numerous times, but tell me about the initial conversation or hang out between you, Zooey and Sophia that sparked the idea for HelloGiggles.?

Molly: There really wasn?t a ?moment?? Sophia mentioned starting a FunnyOrDie for women to me, then we registered the name HelloGiggles. Then she met Zooey in a workout class, introduced the two of us, and then from there we kind of figured out that we all wanted to do it together. It was mainly over email and a couple of lunches.

SO: I remember when starting Serial Optimist, I had a solid idea of what it was going to be, but then it organically kind of turned in to what it is now over time, with a more direct theme regarding content. Has that happened with HelloGiggles or did you see it being what it is currently?

Molly: Originally the idea was in-house and user generated video content, but we started from the ground up and video is expensive and laborious. We turned to the other thing we love and the thing that I knew best, which was curating interesting voices online. The only thing we knew we wanted to be that we still are is a positive online space for creative women.

SO: How did your writing career start? What would you consider your first big break?

Molly: The first time I got paid to create was at HBO?s short-lived website ThisJustIn.com. A lot of people came out of that? Bashir and Diallo who people probably know from Jimmy Fallon, Jeff Rosenthal from It?s The Reel, Eric Spiegelman of Old Jews Telling Jokes. It was a great group.

My ?big break? was when my boss at Defamer, Mark Graham, let me make daily videos that he posted on the site. It was supposed to be a vehicle for announcing events going on in LA that night, but I kinda turned it into my own thing. I find it comforting when someone says they recognize me as the Defamer Video Girl. That feels like home to me.

____

Molly McAleer is Charming

____

SO: I?ve had a lot of conversations on the term ?writer?. It seems like it can be applied in many ways these days. I also used to hate the term ?blogger?, but now I don?t mind it, because as with anything, some shit is legit, some isn?t, some things are for certain people, some things aren?t. What are your thoughts on today?s online writers and the quality of content that is being put out?

Molly: I definitely had bad self-esteem when I was ?just? a blogger. I felt like, ?Why would I call myself a writer? Should I be embarrassed to think I?m good enough to deserve that title??

Looking back, that was insane. I?m a writer because I?ve always been one. I?ve never been able to stop that urge to put pen to paper or fingers to keys. That?s what makes you a writer, not your credits.

And I think the Internet is the best thing to happen to creatives, ever. It?s a place where you can work your shit out or do something you?re really proud of. Either way, it?s an amazing opportunity for new voices to be heard and it encourages people to figure out (most of the time with the help of brutal commenters) whether they have a skill they want to make something more of, or whether it?s something they want to do as a hobby because they love it.

And ?quality? is a subjective word. Some people love things because they?re ?beautifully written?; some people love things because they?re well researched, and some, like me, just like reading things that are honest.

SO: I recently interviewed Lesley Arfin, and she brought up a great point: ?One thing I don?t believe in is writing for free. Just like the screenwriters guild, I wish there was a union for print and web writers. It lowers the standard of information when a site or magazine doesn?t have to pay a writer. Why would someone hire me for $100 per post when someone else will do it for free? Sure, they?ll do a shittier job, but it will be gone in 15 minutes anyway. It?s all for advertising and ?hits.? There?s a union for everyone else, why not us?? What are your thoughts on that?

Molly: I?ve been a big fan of Lesley?s long before I knew her in real life, so I understand how her opinion is valid for her and the writers who are on her playing field (meaning, they are well known for their writing, specifically online.) I know that at this point in my life, if I was asked to write something for free, it?d either be for HelloGiggles or because I?m super passionate about the subject matter and the money?s not as relevant as my desire to have my thoughts heard.

My overall opinion on this is based on the email I?ve gotten over and over again through the years, even before starting HelloGiggles. ?How can I get my foot in the door? How can I get exposure??

For most unknowns, the answer is a platform like The Awl or HelloGiggles. That?s what gives you the chance to make a name for yourself, to have people see your work and associate your name with something they enjoyed. Then you get paid and make the decision to never not get paid.

SO: Where do you think your career would be if you didn?t have online publications? How much do you feel like online media has helped your career? Did you always see yourself as a writer, or writing for television, or writing a book?.

Molly: I?m from a family of writers, but it never occurred to me to just write a book or something.

Online writing isn?t responsible for my career, but it?s what allowed me to dream. I?ve been blogging since I was eleven years old, but it wasn?t until kind of recently that I figured out I could write offline, too.

I guess I?d be back in Boston working in local politics and radio. I don?t think I would have figured out anything if it weren?t for the Internet.

____

Zooey Deschanel Sophia Rossi & Molly McAleer

____

SO: Speaking of writing for television, lets talk ?2 Broke Girls?. You?re a story editor for the show, and the show is crazy big time popular. What?s the writers room like?

Molly: We?re all really close. I mean, some days it?s like having nine roommates and everyone?s sick of seeing each other?s faces and hearing each other?s voices, but for the most part, we?re a real family. I think we all believe in what we?re doing there, too. That helps.

SO: Did you and the staff (or the suits) have any major changes you wanted to make going into season 2?

Molly: Um, I wish I could offer you some drama, but there is none. The network and studio, as far as I can see, believe in our show runner and the staff. We have some great stories this season, but none of them were developed as a response to criticism or notes? we just found fun things that we loved and that we wanted to see our girls do.

SO: It has to be great writing for Kat Dennings and Beth Behrs; their chemistry is off the charts. Does any improv happen on the show or is it pretty strict to the script?

Molly: Yes, Kat and Beth are a dream team. There?s no one else on television right now that I?d want to write for more. They?re incredible.

And script is the script. There?s no improv on our show. The writers punch up jokes all week long and again when we?re in front of the audience, but everything is written. All of our actors make great comedic choices, though. That?s where even the writers get a fun treat.

SO: If you had to pick one, what?s your favorite episode to date?

Molly: I absolutely cannot. I couldn?t even pick a favorite moment. There are at least two jokes in each episode that I know will be stuck in my head for the next twenty years because I love them so much.

SO: What online publications do you think are really doing it right? What do you have bookmarked, what are you checking daily, what publication do you feel puts out consistent solid content?

Molly: Grantland, AV Club, Rookie? I think that?s some of the highest quality writing online for sure. As for my personal tastes, I really like sensitive 20-somethings. That?s the ?Reality Bites?/?Singles? fan in me. I?m drawn to Thought Catalog the most. Not everything?s a slam dunk, but I usually find one or two things a week there that make me thing, ?Damn, I wish I?d written my version of that first.?

SO: It?s the fall season, all our favorite comedies and shows are back. What are a few of your favorite shows? What are your MUST DVR shows?

Molly:??American Horror Story? and ?Revenge?. I?m very high-low with my television viewing.

SO: What band are you really into at the moment?

Molly: I?ve been listening to Led Zepplin?s BBC sessions for a couple months on repeat. I also recently got into Michael Kiwanuka and Electric Guest.

SO: What things make you giggle daily?

Molly: Big Boy on Power 106 makes me giggle myself stupid on the way to work every day.

____

Morgan Murphy Shoots Molls

____

SO: What is your perfect LA day?

Molly: I used to hate Sundays, but these days I?m all about them. I wake up at ten or eleven, walk my dog, drink a large iced Americano, hit up the Melrose/Fairfax trading post and hunt for treasures, hang out with my dog again for a few hours, then a big wine-fueled dinner with the friends I?m most comfortable with, preferably in a place where we can watch the sunset.

SO: Love it. What do you think it takes to be a good writer?

Molly: Desire, passion, practice.

SO: What are a few songs that instantly make you start dancing?

Molly: There was a good four years where I had all of Girl Talk?s albums on repeat all of the time. It wakes up my soul. Like, it opens a place in my brain I keep shut most of the day.

SO: His albums are timeless, def a great way to ?get going. What do you consider inspirations in life?

Molly: Conversations, observations, solitude, acts of humanity.

SO: You have one book to recommend to an up and coming writer, what direction do you send them?

Molly: I think ?Letters to a Young Poet? is something anyone who has even the slightest inking they want to write should read. I read it when I first moved to LA and there are passages in that book that I think of daily.

SO: I think I know the answer to this, but optimist, pessimist, or realist, and why?

Molly: I?m a cocktail of all three. It depends on the time of day you get me. I wake up everyday as an optimist, though.

____

SO Note: Make sure to check out HelloGiggles daily and watch ?2 Broke Girls? on CBS every Monday 9/8 central. Also follow Molly @molls?and check out her awesome tumblr MollsSheWrote.

?

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Source: http://www.serialoptimist.com/interviews/more-molls-please-10666.html

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Thursday, November 1, 2012

Bullying Has Long-Term Health Consequences | Natural Holistic ...

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ScienceDaily (Oct. 30, 2012) Childhood bullying can lead to long term health consequences, including general and mental health issues, behavioral problems, eating disorders, smoking, alcohol use, and homelessness, a study by the Crime Victims? Institute at Sam Houston State University found.

?What is apparent from these results is that bullying victimization that occurs early in life may have significant and substantial consequences for those victims later in life,? said Leana Bouffard, Director of the Crime Victims? Institute.

?Thus, the adverse health consequences of victimization are much more far-reaching than just immediate injury or trauma. Understanding these long term consequences is important to assessing the true toll of crime on its victims and on society as well as responding to victims more effectively.?

The study, ?The Long Term Health Consequences of Bullying Victimization,? recommends investing in victim services and effective prevention programs, such as the Olweus Bullying Prevention Program, a school based initiative for violence prevention. Programs can help address the immediate trauma, both mental and physical, that victims experience.

?This type of investment may also have the added benefit of reducing the long-term deleterious effects identified in this and other studies, thus reducing the high cost of victimization born by the victims themselves, the health care system and society in general,? Bouffard said.

The current study is based on the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, a long term study that tracks a sample of U.S. residents born between 1980 and 1984. Nineteen percent of those surveyed said they had been a victim of repeated bullying.

The study found that those bullying victims had more negative perceptions of their general health and mental health and higher rates of emotional/mental or behavioral problems that interfered with school or work. They were also more likely to have an eating disorder, smoke, consume alcohol, experience subsequent violent victimization, or be homeless.

?While these are adverse consequences themselves, they may also serve as intermediate mechanism for even more long-term health issues, such as cancer, alcoholism, depression and other serious problems,? said Maria Koeppel, co-author of the study.

Full report: http://www.crimevictimsinstitute.org/publications/?mode=view&item=32

For some great information on identifyin, stopping, dealing with and preventing bullying, please check out the S.A.F.E. Network?s Bully Prevention Information


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Source: http://www.natural-holistic-health.com/bullying-has-long-term-health-consequences/

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ConEd prepped for big storm, got even bigger one

NEW YORK (AP) ? Blame a very high tide driven by a full moon, the worst storm surge in nearly 200 years, and the placement of underground electrical equipment in flood-prone areas for the most extensive storm-related power outage in New York City's history.

It's like what happened at the Fukushima nuclear complex in Japan last year ? without the radiation. At a Consolidated Edison substation in Manhattan's East Village, a gigantic wall of water defied elaborate planning and expectations, swamped underground electrical equipment, and left about 250,000 lower Manhattan customers without power.

Last year, the surge from Hurricane Irene reached 9.5 feet at the substation. ConEd figured it had that covered.

The utility also figured the infrastructure could handle a repeat of the highest surge on record for the area ? 11 feet during a hurricane in 1821, according to the National Weather Service. After all, the substation was designed to withstand a surge of 12.5 feet.

With all the planning, and all the predictions, planning big was not big enough. Superstorm Sandy went bigger ? a surge of 14 feet.

"Nobody predicted it would be that high," said ConEd spokesman Allan Drury.

At one point, nearly 1 million ConEd customers lost electricity in and near the city ? a record number for the utility. And the troubles didn't end as the storm slowly moved off. Con Ed said problems to its high-voltage systems caused by the hurricane forced the utility to cut power to about 160,000 customers in Brooklyn and Staten Island on Tuesday night.

But the signature event came when a surge of water pushed forward by the storm's winds poured over the banks of the East River near the substation on 13th Street.

As water poured into the substation Monday night, the blinding flash of an explosion lit the most famous skyline in the world. A huge section of the city that never sleeps fell into darkness.

It's exactly what a proactive ConEd hoped to avoid by shutting down three similar power networks in Manhattan and one in Brooklyn in advance of the storm surge.

However, the combination of circumstances, notably an extraordinary high tide, pushed massive amounts of water deep into the city. The underground infrastructure was suddenly vulnerable.

As the storm's predicted path zeroed in on New York City, ConEd brought on extra work crews and laid plans to shut down some underground equipment in lower Manhattan and other parts of the city.

By late Monday afternoon, the utility started to notify Manhattan customers south of 36th Street that power might be shut off if underground equipment was flooded with corrosive, destructive seawater. The company gave the same heads-up to some customers in Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx.

By mid-evening, though, conditions had worsened. More than 150,000 customers in New York City and Westchester County were already off grid. The utility began turning off the power, as a precaution, to a section of lower Manhattan, including Wall Street, in an attempt to stem damage. Shortly afterward, the company began cutting electricity in parts of Brooklyn too; a total of 220,000 other customers were already in the dark.

Less than an hour later, more equipment flooded, sparks flew, and the blast boomed across the East River and throughout lower Manhattan from what ConEd believes was a circuit breaker at its flooded substation.

The flooded equipment had failed.

When live electric equipment is inundated with salt water, electricity escapes every which way, sending sparks flying and damaging equipment. "You see a huge blast just from the short circuit," says Arshad Mansoor, senior vice president for research and development at the Electric Power Research Institute, an industry-funded research group.

As day broke Tuesday, the company was busily assessing damage and fixing equipment. But downed trees and wires, as well as lingering flood waters, made it hard for repair crews to reach some areas. The utility was able to get at least 140,000 customers back on the grid within several hours.

But hundreds of thousands of others hunkered down for a longer outage. ConEd said customers served by underground equipment should be restored to service in four days. Those who get power from overhead lines are expected to wait a week. That's because there are so many fallen lines.

The most densely populated parts of the city, mostly in Manhattan and Brooklyn, are served by underground transmission wires. These offer protection from wind and falling tree limbs that plague overhead wires and make the suburbs far more vulnerable to outages.

But underground wires can flood and be more difficult to repair, especially in low-lying areas. It can be harder for workers to get to the wires because manholes flood. When water recedes, it can be harder to find problems, pull out wires and equipment, dry them, fix them, and slide them back into place.

The damage assessment could take days to complete.

To engineers like Joannes Westerink, a University of Notre Dame researcher who is working on a computer model for future New York City storm surges, this was all predictable.

"You build infrastructure too low, and you run into trouble," he said. "It's a recipe for disaster."

He said it's well known that New York City had spread to ever-lower zones in modern history. He cited Battery Park at the tip of Manhattan as a dramatic example.

ConEd could likely have shut down more networks served by the 13th Street substation before the storm arrived, but that would have meant cutting power to tens of thousands of people and critical facilities like hospitals. Even though hospitals have backup power generators, they too can fail. Generators at New York University Langone Medical Center went down Monday night, and patients were evacuated.

"You have to make the decision to shut off power to a substation very, very carefully, especially if it serves critical facilities," Mansoor said. The decision can turn into a lose-lose situation.

Despite the latest damage, Mansoor called the New York City system the most reliable in the world because it's normally well protected from weather and set up with backup equipment. That protects the city from minor disruptions and helps keep major disruptions from cascading through the city.

No system, he said, can be designed to withstand every storm, no matter how severe.

Carol J. Friedland, a Louisiana State University engineer who has studied the impact of flooding on electrical systems, said more measures should be taken to protect equipment in low-lying places. For example, sea walls can be raised, and equipment can sometimes be relocated.

"My personal opinion ... is that there should be more resilience built into these types of infrastructure, because when the power goes out, it disrupts the entire community," she said.

Massoud Amin, a University of Minnesota electrical engineering professor who has studied power outages, said the storm underscores the need to improve the nation's electric grid by stringing more high-voltage wire and using modern sensor technology to spot problems sooner, isolate damage, and speed recovery from outages.

"Our electrical infrastructure system is a marvel of engineering for the last century," Amin said. "The grid operators and the power companies are doing the best they can."

It is too soon to say if anything more could have been done to keep the New York City grid working. Under state regulations, ConEd will be required to file a report on the outage to the New York State Department of Public Service within 60 days of power restoration. That agency's staff will evaluate how problems were handled and if improvements can be made for the future, according to agency spokeswoman Pamela Carter.

___

AP writer Jeff Donn reported from Plymouth, Mass. and Dave Carpenter from Chicago. AP writers Scott Mayerowitz and David Koenig contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/coned-prepped-big-storm-got-even-bigger-one-032446726.html

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In Sandy's path, reality of destruction sets in

As New York slowly comes back to life, it's electrical power that divides the haves and have-nots. Gridlock also remains a concern, but subway service is slowly beginning to resume and the New York Marathon is still slated to go forward. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

By NBC News staff and wire reports

From the devastated New Jersey shore to eerily empty lower Manhattan, tens of millions of Americans lived through Sandy's fury and were trying to come to grips with its destruction as the storm waters slowly receded.

The impact of the storm was virtually without parallel in the densely populated tristate region of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, with its destructive winds, heavy flooding and raging fires. Farther afield, powerful gusts felled trees and knocked out power for up to 8.2 million residents?across?the eastern United States, while heavy snow made travel treacherous at?higher?elevations. Nationwide at least 47 were confirmed dead of storm-related causes.

"This was literally the storm of our lifetime," said Longport, N.J., Mayor Nick Russo, as he surveyed the damage on debris-littered streets of his Atlantic coast town Tuesday. "No one has seen this type of damage, not even in the 1962 storm. The amount of sand, wood and concrete that has actually come up from the streets ? it's not a good scene."

Superstorm Sandy made landfall Monday evening on a destructive and deadly path across the Northeast.

Two hundred miles to the north in Mastic Beach, N.Y., Donna Vollaro, 53, covered her face with her hands and sobbed as she walked through her ranch-style home, which had been inundated by several feet of water.


The water had receded by Tuesday afternoon but left the Long Island house filled with mud. Everything inside destroyed.

"My bed was floating around in three feet of water. The floors are buckled. The walls are caved in. Everything I own is gone," she said.

Vollaro, who is disabled and unemployed, has no homeowner's insurance and said she recently spent her savings on renovating the home. Inside, the refrigerator lay on its side, the couch was soaked and the boiler was destroyed.

"Now I have nowhere to go. Just the clothes on my back. That's what I have," she said.

TODAY's Natalie Morales reports from Mantoloking, N.J., where an aerial view of the region shows fires burning and sand completely overtaking neighborhoods.

'Like a tsunami'
On New York's Coney Island, Mordechai Deutscher recalled watching floodwaters burst through the glass front doors of the Mermaid Manor Home for Adults, about two blocks from the famed boardwalk. Residents had been evacuated to upper floors.

"Everything was fine and dandy yesterday until high tide," said Deutscher, 58, administrator of the?home. "All of a sudden within five minutes it was like a tsunami."

Sal and Lori Novello rode out the storm in their Long Island home, with candles providing the only light and a wind-up radio their connection to the outside world. Sal Novello, 50, said when water started rushing into their 5,000-square-foot Dutch colonial, "it sounded like Niagara Falls." They ended up with seven feet of water in the basement.

NBC's Lester Holt reports from New Jersey, where the eye of Superstorm Sandy came ashore, ripping apart the coastline and leaving millions without power. President Obama is expected to tour the area Wednesday with Governor Christie.

"They kind of warned us, and everybody knew it was coming," said Novello, a construction executive who lives in n Lindenhurst, N.Y.?"Unfortunately it was everything they said it was."

Ken Pagliarulo, a 34-year-old computer consultant in Lindenhurst, watched from his window Monday night as a house burned to the ground. Water filled his living room and totaled his car in the garage. He shut down the power, shut down the gas and ran generators for electricity.

"Insane," he said.

In Washington, D.C., as Sandy made landfall, Russ Kelley had two bad options: stay inside after a giant oak fell on his roof or dash outside where massive winds whipped three downed ? and live ? power lines not far from his front door.

TODAY's Al Roker tours Atlantic City, N.J., with Mayor Lorenzo Langford, who re-addressed his feud about hurricane preparedness with Governor Chris Christie and laid out a plan to rebuild the city's iconic boardwalk that was torn apart by the storm.

Jason Decrow / AP

Firefighters work at the scene of a house fire in in Lindenhurst, New York, Monday.

"Here's the thing ? the fire department advised us all to come out of our row houses because of this tree lying on top. But then there's this hurricane outside with 60 mile-per-hour gusts, still pouring rain, a couple of live wires down in the street and another live wire out in my yard," said Kelley.

"It seemed just safer to be in my house, tree and all," he said.

So Kelley brushed aside the wet oak limbs and took his dog, Clinton, back into the living room ? just below the fallen, 60-foot tree ? as his TV screen continued to flash images of the historic storm that had just crashed into his life.

Dangling crane
In Manhattan, the experience was sometimes more surreal than perilous, after subways and businesses shut down and power outages afflicted much of the city.

In the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan, retired local newspaper publisher Robert Trentlyon and his wife planned to stay in their darkened apartment Tuesday, although their son lives in a nearby complex that generates its own power. The Trentlyons had phone service and running water, and they routinely use the stairs to their brownstone apartment.

Robert is 83, but, he said: "I'm a good 83," as he planned to grab a flashlight and check whether the building's basement had flooded.

Timothy A. Clary / AFP - Getty Images

An apartment building sits damaged in New York City's Chelsea neighborhood Monday.

Some 900 guests were forced to evacuate Manhattan's Le Parker Meridien hotel because a storm-damaged crane dangled dangerously from a high-rise apartment building under construction nearby.

Authorities said they were worried the wilted crane above would tumble down, perhaps pinball into neighboring buildings and crush everything in its path on the ground.

The skyscraper, near Carnegie Hall, is officially called One57 but has been dubbed a "global billionaires' club" because its upper floors will include nine enormous, posh apartments ? all sold to billionaires.

"So all of our hurricane food is upstairs in our hotel, we're on a quest to find another hotel, and technically, I'm homeless,"?said Al Lewis, a guest from Denver who had been staying in the hotel with his wife and two children.?"I'm homeless because of these billionaires next door. But, everyone's going to get displaced by a billionaire someday ? it's just my time, I guess."

Baking in the cold
Several states to the south, freezing bands of the same gargantuan storm began dumping snow onto tiny Belington, W.Va.,?(population 1,900). By 3 a.m. Tuesday, when Charlotte Cummings arrived to work at the Goody Basket,?her bakery,?there was already?six inches of snow?on the ground.

"Six inches is nothing for around here," Cummings said. "So I just started my day, started baking. Then, at about 8 a.m. the power went out because the snow is so wet and so many branches are coming down. Thankfully, I have gas so I could just keep going."

Bebeto Matthews / AP

The tail end of an SUV is perched on top of a mailbox in New York's Coney Island Monday.

By morning, a foot of snow had fallen ? and another foot or more was expected before the slow-moving storm lumbered on. After daylight, three young men walked past the Goody Basket and told Cummings: "This is the first open sign we've seen!"

"They had some pepperoni rolls and some chocolate chip cookies," Cummings said. "I stayed open till about 2 o'clock (p.m.). In fact, before I came home, I just pulled the last pan out of the oven ? three dozen pepperoni rolls."

Kelvin Redmond, an accountant and associate minister at the Shiloh Baptist Church in Rockville Centre on Long Island, lives two blocks from the water in a three-story split level, but hadn't been able to get back to check on damage because the streets were still impassable.

Ahead of the storm, he shut off all the power and moved his belongings, computers and irreplaceable items like photos to the third floor.

"It looks like it may be a total loss," he said Tuesday. "But I still have my health and strength. I'm also a minister, so I still ? it's going to be a good word on Sunday."

NBC's Kari Huus, contributor Bill Briggs and The Associated Press contributed to this story.

More content from NBCNews.com:

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/30/14810000-in-sandys-path-reality-of-destruction-sets-in?lite

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Hyundai Motor shares tumble on recall rumors

SEOUL (Reuters) - Hyundai Motor Co shares fell more than 5 percent on Thursday ahead of the release of its October auto sales figures with analysts citing market rumors that the South Korean automaker may announce a recall in the United States or face fuel-economy related lawsuits.

Two Hyundai Motor executives told Reuters that they have not heard about possible recalls or lawsuits.

"As far as I know, October sales went well," one of the two executives told Reuters on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media.

Shares of South Korea's biggest carmaker have been under pressure since late September mainly due to concerns that a strengthening won and tight supply of its cars may slow earnings growth in the coming years.

"Today's share drop appears to be the result of unsubstantiated rumors making rounds in the market that Hyundai is set to encounter some trouble in the U.S. market," said Ahn Se-hwan, an auto sector analyst at IBK Securities. "From what we've been able to ascertain, Hyundai's October sales are comparatively solid," he said.

Shin Jung-kwan at KB Securities also said there was market talk that a U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration quality investigation into Hyundai is underway, but stressed that this happens fairly regularly.

A Hyundai spokesman said it was investigating the rumors and did not have any immediate comment.

The company earlier faced probes in the United States over steering problems with its Santa Fe sport utility vehicle and shattering window issues for its Veloster utility coupe.

Hyundai Motor was also sued for allegedly misleading consumers sensitive to high gas prices that its popular 2011 and 2012 Elantra model is more fuel efficient than it actually is.

By 0343 GMT, shares of Hyundai slid 5.12 percent after falling as much as 5.6 percent, its lowest intraday level in one week. Shares of its affiliate, Kia Motors , dropped 3.14 percent. The wider market <.ks11> was down 0.78 percent.

Hyundai shares have lost momentum in recent months, down 15 percent since late September, amid concerns about slowing earnings growth.

Hyundai, along with Kia, is the world's fifth-biggest carmaker and the group has outperformed in an industry battered by Europe's debt crisis with investors concerned about a go-slow strategy on expanding capacity.

Hyundai has not announced plans for a new plant for at least two years as it focuses on building its brand and quality issues rather than aggressively chasing market share. This has left it short of cars to sell into a recovering U.S. market where Japanese rivals have muscled back in, as well as in emerging markets.

(Reporting by Joyce Lee; Additional reporting by Hyunjoo Jin and Somang Yang; Editing by Matt Driskill)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hyundai-motor-shares-tumble-recall-rumors-035818760--finance.html

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When people worry about math, the brain feels the pain

When people worry about math, the brain feels the pain [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 31-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: William Harms
w-harms@uchicago.edu
773-702-8356
University of Chicago

When people worry about math, the brain feels the pain

Mathematics anxiety can prompt a response in the brain similar to when a person experiences physical pain, according to new research at the University of Chicago.

Using brain scans, scholars determined that the brain areas active when highly math-anxious people prepare to do math overlap with the same brain areas that register the threat of bodily harmand in some cases, physical pain.

"For someone who has math anxiety, the anticipation of doing math prompts a similar brain reaction as when they experience painsay, burning one's hand on a hot stove," said Sian Beilock, professor of psychology at the University of Chicago and a leading expert on math anxiety.

Surprisingly, the researchers found it was the anticipation of having to do math, and not actually doing math itself, that looked like pain in the brain.

"The brain activation does not happen during math performance, suggesting that it is not the math itself that hurts; rather the anticipation of math is painful," added Ian Lyons, a 2012 PhD graduate in psychology from UChicago and a postdoctoral scholar at Western University in Ontario, Canada.

The two report their findings in a paper, "When Math Hurts: Math Anxiety Predicts Pain Network Activation in Anticipation of Doing Math," in the current issue of PlOS One.

For the study, the scholars worked with 14 adults who were shown to have math anxiety based on their responses to a series of questions about math.

The questions gauged one's anxiety when receiving a math textbook, walking to math class or realizing math requirements for graduation. Additional tests showed that these individuals were not overly anxious in general; instead, their heightened sense of anxiety was specific to math-related situations.

The study volunteers were tested in an fMRI machine, which allowed researchers to examine brain activity as they did math. Volunteers were given mathematics equations to verify for example, the validity of the following equation: (12 x 4) 19 = 29. While in the fMRI scanner, subjects were also shown short word puzzles. For these puzzles, people saw a series of letters (for example: yrestym) and had to determine if reversing the order of the letters produced a correctly spelled English word.

The fMRI scans showed that the anticipation of math caused a response in the brain similar to physical pain. The higher a person's anxiety about math, the more anticipating math activated the posterior insulaa fold of tissue located deep inside the brain just above the ear that is associated with registering direct threats to the body as well as the experience of pain.

Interestingly, math anxiety levels were not associated with brain activity in the insula or in any other neural region when volunteers were doing math.

The work by Lyons and Beilock suggests that, for those with math anxiety, a painful sense of dread may begin long before a person sits down to take a math test. Previous research has shown that highly math anxious individuals tend to avoid math-related situations and even math-related career paths. The current work suggests that such avoidance stems in part from painful anxiety.

The current work is also consistent with other research from Beilock and Lyons, in which they showed that the mere anticipation of doing mathematics changes functioning in the brains of people with high levels of math anxiety. Beilock's work, supported by the National Science Foundation and the Department of Education, has also shown that mathematics anxiety can begin as early as first grade, and that female elementary school teachers often transmit their math anxiety to their female students.

This latest study points to the value of seeing math anxiety not just as a proxy for poor math ability, but as an indication there can be a real, negative psychological reaction to the prospect of doing math. This reaction needs to be addressed like any other phobia, the researchers said. Rather than simply piling on math homework for students who are anxious about math, students need active help to become more comfortable with the subject, Beilock said. Beilock's work has shown, for instance, that writing about math anxieties before a test can reduce one's worries and lead to better performance.

###

Beilock is the author of the best-selling book about stress and performance, "Choke: What The Secrets Of The Brain Reveal About Getting It Right When You Have To".


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


When people worry about math, the brain feels the pain [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 31-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: William Harms
w-harms@uchicago.edu
773-702-8356
University of Chicago

When people worry about math, the brain feels the pain

Mathematics anxiety can prompt a response in the brain similar to when a person experiences physical pain, according to new research at the University of Chicago.

Using brain scans, scholars determined that the brain areas active when highly math-anxious people prepare to do math overlap with the same brain areas that register the threat of bodily harmand in some cases, physical pain.

"For someone who has math anxiety, the anticipation of doing math prompts a similar brain reaction as when they experience painsay, burning one's hand on a hot stove," said Sian Beilock, professor of psychology at the University of Chicago and a leading expert on math anxiety.

Surprisingly, the researchers found it was the anticipation of having to do math, and not actually doing math itself, that looked like pain in the brain.

"The brain activation does not happen during math performance, suggesting that it is not the math itself that hurts; rather the anticipation of math is painful," added Ian Lyons, a 2012 PhD graduate in psychology from UChicago and a postdoctoral scholar at Western University in Ontario, Canada.

The two report their findings in a paper, "When Math Hurts: Math Anxiety Predicts Pain Network Activation in Anticipation of Doing Math," in the current issue of PlOS One.

For the study, the scholars worked with 14 adults who were shown to have math anxiety based on their responses to a series of questions about math.

The questions gauged one's anxiety when receiving a math textbook, walking to math class or realizing math requirements for graduation. Additional tests showed that these individuals were not overly anxious in general; instead, their heightened sense of anxiety was specific to math-related situations.

The study volunteers were tested in an fMRI machine, which allowed researchers to examine brain activity as they did math. Volunteers were given mathematics equations to verify for example, the validity of the following equation: (12 x 4) 19 = 29. While in the fMRI scanner, subjects were also shown short word puzzles. For these puzzles, people saw a series of letters (for example: yrestym) and had to determine if reversing the order of the letters produced a correctly spelled English word.

The fMRI scans showed that the anticipation of math caused a response in the brain similar to physical pain. The higher a person's anxiety about math, the more anticipating math activated the posterior insulaa fold of tissue located deep inside the brain just above the ear that is associated with registering direct threats to the body as well as the experience of pain.

Interestingly, math anxiety levels were not associated with brain activity in the insula or in any other neural region when volunteers were doing math.

The work by Lyons and Beilock suggests that, for those with math anxiety, a painful sense of dread may begin long before a person sits down to take a math test. Previous research has shown that highly math anxious individuals tend to avoid math-related situations and even math-related career paths. The current work suggests that such avoidance stems in part from painful anxiety.

The current work is also consistent with other research from Beilock and Lyons, in which they showed that the mere anticipation of doing mathematics changes functioning in the brains of people with high levels of math anxiety. Beilock's work, supported by the National Science Foundation and the Department of Education, has also shown that mathematics anxiety can begin as early as first grade, and that female elementary school teachers often transmit their math anxiety to their female students.

This latest study points to the value of seeing math anxiety not just as a proxy for poor math ability, but as an indication there can be a real, negative psychological reaction to the prospect of doing math. This reaction needs to be addressed like any other phobia, the researchers said. Rather than simply piling on math homework for students who are anxious about math, students need active help to become more comfortable with the subject, Beilock said. Beilock's work has shown, for instance, that writing about math anxieties before a test can reduce one's worries and lead to better performance.

###

Beilock is the author of the best-selling book about stress and performance, "Choke: What The Secrets Of The Brain Reveal About Getting It Right When You Have To".


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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/uoc-wpw103012.php

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Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Living Healthy Day 33: Soup catastrophe | Living Healthy | The Sun ...

Justin Mitchell's lunch on Tuesday consisted of Thai rice noodles, apple cinnamon rice cakes and water sweetened with lemon.

JUSTIN MITCHELL ? SUN HERALD

Cheat day

I look forward to Mondays for two reasons: to relax and enjoy the day and to be able to eat whatever I want for the day. Oh, and The Voice comes on. Well, maybe three reasons.

I had Chinese buffet with my mom and grandmother for lunch on Monday. It was pretty delicious, and I only allowed myself one plate of food and one plate of dessert. Typically, I could eat for days at a buffet. Peanut butter chicken was an option on the buffet line. I tried it and fell in love. I may try make healthy peanut butter chicken for dinner Tuesday evening. It would be a high-protein meal that would give me energy and help me keep on tracking at the gym.

I also had a biscuit from Popeye's chicken and a two slices of pizza.

Cheat day is always good, but my body pays for it the next morning. I wake up groggy, and my stomach almost always hurts. It's as if my body is getting used to eating healthy, and the bad foods on cheat day seem to send my body into shock. I need my cheat day for motivation, but I don't think that cheat day necessarily needs me.

No soup for you

I typically don't work on Tuesdays, but I decided to work this Tuesday so I could take off a day this weekend to attend a dear friend's wedding. As today was a busy news day, Tuesday kept me on the edge of my seat, and I left my lunch at home. However, reporter Christina Steube had me in her mind when she came to work because she brought me a Thai noodle soup bowl to try for lunch. Christina is also dieting, and she loves the 250-calorie bowls.

When it was time for lunch, I made the first mistake of opening the seasoning packet for the noodle bowl backwards. Thus, the powdered flavorings went askew in the bowl and on the table in the break room. Next, I added the liquid component of seasoning. To my dismay, I also dripped that all over the table. I finally added water and microwaved. By the time I got the bowl completely finished, I was starving.

As I went to sit down, the bowl became scalding hot, and I dropped it on the table. Water went everywhere.

Clearly, this soup bowl was testing me today.

However, the end product was light, flavorful and delicious.

I'm unsure as to how many of these noodle bows I will have, as they have an extremely high sodium level. However, I will be prepared next time for a soup catastrophe.

Source: http://www.sunherald.com/2012/10/30/4274525/living-healthy-day-33-soup-catastrophe.html

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Two Connecticut M-F Properties Reel in $96M in Financing ...

October 30, 2012

By Barbra Murray, Contributing Editor

LCOR has secured $96 million in financing for Greenwich Place and Greenwich Oaks two apartment communities offering an aggregate 396 units in Greenwich, Conn. The real estate company relied on commercial real estate and capital markets services firm HFF to orchestrate the two-loan deal.

Jon Mikula, a senior managing director, and Jim Cadranell, managing director, spearheaded the HFF team. The firm arranged the fixed-rate financing for the Fairfield County properties through Allianz Real Estate of America, securing a $55 million and a $41 million loan collateralized by Greenwich Place and Greenwich Oaks, respectively. Allianz did not exactly have to go out on a limb in terms of risk; the previously unencumbered assets are Class A properties in a Class A suburban New York City locale.

Sited on 30 acres at 311 Putnam Green, Greenwich Place made its debut in 1969, but the 266-unit apartment complex is keeping up with the times, having most recently undergone a renovation in 2010. The 130-unit Greenwich Oaks, located on approximately 29 acres just two miles away at 219 Weaver St., is no relic of the past, either; the 41-year-old property was last upgraded in 2011.

In addition to recent makeovers, the apartment communities boast a location in a high-demand area, and there?s nothing like the prospect of steady, long-term cash flow to attract lenders.

?The [Connecticut] rental market remains robust as an alternative for would-be buyers,? Paul E. Breunich, president and CEO of William Pitt Sotheby?s International Realty, writes in a third quarter report. ?We expect rental prices to remain high and inventory levels low while we emerge from this period of housing weakness.?

According to numbers from commercial real estate analysis provider REIS Inc., the average annual apartment rent growth in Fairfield County is expected to be 4.6 percent through 2016, outpacing the northeast region and the nation, which are expected to experience rent growth of 4.4 and 4.1 percent, respectively.

Source: http://www.cpexecutive.com/regions/mid-atlantic/two-connecticut-m-f-properties-reel-in-96m-in-financing/

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No Scaredy Cats or Dogs This Halloween: Safety Tips for Pet Parents

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Source: http://theriver1079.com/no-scaredy-cats-or-dogs-this-halloween-safety-tips-for-pet-parents/

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Livestream for Producers Android app update brings live video broadcasts over wireless data connections

DNP Livestream for Producers Android app update brings live video broadcasts over wireless data connections

Android users of generation "Hey Look at Me!" can now add another tool to their arsenal of lifestyle sharing. The Livestream for Producers Android application received an update on Monday that introduces "single touch" sign up and logins through Facebook, a new app icon and some unnamed bug fixes. However, the most noteworthy addition here is the ability to run live ad-free videos over 3G and 4G data connections. Requiring Android 2.2 or higher, this free media streaming app might be an ideal companion for folks looking to incriminate co-workers at this year's Halloween costume party -- all in good fun of course. Just be sure to remember who signs your paycheck before you decide to take a broadcast live.

Continue reading Livestream for Producers Android app update brings live video broadcasts over wireless data connections

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/30/livestream-for-producers-android-app-live-video-support/

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