Tuesday 30 July 2013

De la Torre to stay on as Mexico coach

The president of Mexico's soccer federation said Jose Manuel de la Torre would stay on as the national team's coach, though he made clear the manager is expected to lead the squad to a berth in the 2014 World Cup.

"We have the commitment and obligation to be in Brazil 2014. I have to trust the coaching staff through the end of the qualifying," Justino Compean said.

"We must give him a second chance because he deserves it. We're talking about someone who is a professional and our best option," he added.

Compean termed a "true failure" Mexico's elimination from this summer's Confederations Cup in Brazil in the round-robin stage and its defeat in the semifinals of the just-concluded Concacaf Gold Cup by Panama.

Although Mexico currently sits in third place in regional qualifying for next year's World Cup - behind the United States and Costa Rica - and will qualify directly for soccer's premier competition if it stays in that spot, Compean said "there's no valid excuse" for the national team's results.

Mexico still has four World Cup qualifying games left and will host a match on Sept. 6 against Honduras, which trails El Tri by just one point. EFE

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/latino_foxnews_com/home/feed/~3/PGbQlbiooG8/

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Saturday 13 July 2013

Marloes Coenen and Cristiane ?Cyborg?s? road to Invicta bout went through Strikeforce

Saturday, two women who once held Strikeforce belts will fight at Invicta FC 6. Marloes Coenen, the one-time bantamweight champion, will fight Cristiane Cyborg, the only person to hold the featherweight championship.

This is a rematch of their fight from January of 2010. Cyborg won with a TKO of Coenen in the third round. After Coenen lost this fight, she went on to win the bantamweight championship from Sarah Kaufman. She defended it against Liz Carmouche before losing her belt to Miesha Tate.

Cyborg fought two more times in Strikeforce. She beat Jan Finney, but then her win over Hiroko Yamanaka was overturned after she tested positive for a banned substance.

Before Saturday's Invicta bout, they defeated the same person in their last fight. Coenen submitted Fiona Muxlow with a submission at 3:29 in the first round at a DREAM event. Cyborg made her Invicta debut against Muxlow in April. Cyborg won with a TKO at 3:46, also in the first round.

Who will win the rematch? Speak up on Facebook or Twitter.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/marloes-coenen-cristiane-cyborg-road-invicta-bout-went-154042899.html

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Modems and Routers: Little Black Boxes, Big Energy Hogs

Today, you can walk into a store and get a nice, big, flat-screen TV that uses one-third the energy of older models, and has better features. You can get a powerful 14-inch laptop that uses a lot less energy than a machine built a few years ago, with longer battery life and an even brighter display. But your high-speed modem and router?those little blinking boxes that you use to stream video, get email, zap a document to your wireless printer?could be eating up as much energy as your TV, and twice as much as your laptop.

What a waste.

At NRDC, we?ve worked with industry and government to help make home electronics more energy efficient, saving money for consumers and reducing carbon pollution from power plants. While we?ve made progress on cutting energy waste from televisions, computers, gaming systems and power supplies, until now, no one had looked at the energy use of devices like modems and routers.?

It?s a good thing we did. There are 145 million of these small network devices in U.S. households. These seemingly insignificant little boxes are always on?and they consume more than $1 billion and 3 dirty coal power plants' worth of electricity each year, according to a new analysis released by NRDC. Cumulatively, they use as much energy as every household in Silicon Valley. At home, modems and routers can eat more energy than a new, energy-efficient 32-inch TV.

Comparison of Energy Use of Network Equipment.png

There?s no need for these devices to guzzle power all day and night. Some manufacturers are already using power-scaling technology in modems and routers, which allows them to use less power when they're just sitting around waiting to receive or send data, without sacrificing speed or convenience. Next year, these efficient modems and routers will bear the blue Energy Star label. You can find them on store shelves, or ask your internet service provider to swap out your old device for an Energy Star model as part of your subscription package.

When you do so, you?ll save money on your electric bill, and help reduce pollution from power plants. On a large scale, replacing old modems and routers with models that are among the 25 percent most efficient in their category would save consumers $330 million on electric bills every year.

All this, from a small tweak to a little black box. That?s what?s so great about energy efficiency?like those unassuming modems and routers, it?s so humble, yet such a powerful tool.? Energy efficiency puts money back in our pockets, and it?s the cheapest, cleanest, fastest way to reduce global warming pollution.

Authored by:

Peter Lehner

I am the Executive Director of NRDC. The position is my second at NRDC. Beginning in 1994, I led the Clean Water Program for five years, before leaving in 1999 to serve as the head of the Environmental Protection Bureau for the Attorney General of the State of New York.

See complete profile

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/theenergycollective_allposts/~3/h1gs9z4F65E/high-speed-modems-and-routers-little-black-boxes-big-energy-hogs

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Sandy Hook victims fund dispute gets public airing

Peter Foley / EPA

The U.S. flag flew at half-staff June 14, the six-month anniversary of the Sandy Hook massacre. Money from a victims' fund has still not been disbursed.

By Tracy Connor and Tracy Jarrett, NBC News

The drawn-out process of distributing millions of dollars collected in the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre has agonized and infuriated many, the victims? families and other Newtown, Conn., community members vented at a town hall meeting held Thursday to discuss how the funds would be doled out.

Rob Accramondo, the founder of the My Sandy Hook Family Fund, said those gathered for the meeting Thursday wished the fund had been dealt with ?in a much more transparent way.?

He added, ?The ability to ask questions to the decision-makers would have been nice.?

Brian Snyder / Reuters file

Ken Feinberg, seen here at a town hall meeting about the Boston Marathon victims fund he ran, is a consultant for the Newtown, Conn., committee divvying up money for Sandy Hook massacre families.

And David Lewis, whose grandson Jesse was killed in the attack, stressed that the money needed to go to where the donors thought it would, "because if it doesn't go to right place this time, people may not give next time," he said.

"This process is re-victimizing the victims," said Caryn Kaufmann, a victims advocate, to applause from other community members at the meeting at Edmond Town Hall in Newtown.

It?s been nearly seven months since 20-year-old Adam Lanza stalked through a Newtown elementary school, killing 20 first-graders and six staff members in a shooting spree that shocked the nation.

Although millions in donations poured into the fund, none of the $7.7 million dedicated to go to families of the victims has been disbursed yet due to a battle with the Sandy Hook Community Foundation over the amount the families will get, how much goes to the community, and the process being used.

At Thursday night?s public meeting, which lasted only about 30 minutes, a committee distributed a plan it developed with the advice of Ken Feinberg, the lawyer who oversaw victims funds from 9/11, the Virginia Tech massacre and the Boston Marathon bombing.

But those in attendance wanted to know why there was not a more transparent system in place earlier to help determine how the money would be divvied up. They also wanted to know what happens to the funding raised in the future, and why this was their first shot at getting a public say.

Proposed plan gives lion's share to deceased victims' families
The newly introduced plan calls for 95 percent of the $7.7 million to go to the families of deceased victims, with the remaining 5 percent reserved for two people who were injured during the shooting and the families whose children witnessed the attack.

Jessica Hill / AP

Residents of Newtown wait to speak at a public forum on the distribution of Newtown donations at Edmond Town Hall in Newtown, Conn., Thursday, July 11, 2013.

The 26 families of the deceased will each receive $281,000 under the plan. The two injured may receive a total of $150,000, while those whose children witnessed the shooting may receive $20,000 each.

The proposal states that 12 families are eligible to claim their children witnessed the shooting.

A final protocol will be adopted July 15, with Aug. 2 being the deadline for claims submissions.

The proposal calls for final payments to be made around Aug. 16.

Thursday?s town hall was ?an opportunity for whoever wants to speak out,? said the committee chairman, retired federal Judge Alan Nevas. ?There may be curiosity in terms of the process. Some people may want specifics in terms of numbers. And there has been controversy in terms of the 70-30 allocation.?

The fund, which was initially run by United Way of Western Connecticut, collected $11.4 million and has decided that 70 percent will go to the victims while 30 percent will be set aside for undefined community needs.

But when a woman asked about the split during the town hall, Nevas said the town hall was only meant to address the $7.7 million amount.

Family members have complained the decision-making process was not transparent and pleaded for an independent figure to oversee the fund. At a meeting in June, two mothers ran from the room crying, according to the Hartford Courant.

Feinberg ? who managed to start funneling $60 million in funds to Boston Marathon victims in just 60 days after the bombing ? is serving only as a consultant to the Newtown committee.

?I have no binding authority,? he said.

Having handled so many cases, he noted that there is always frustration involved on the part of the victims.

"Is the money adequate? No, it's not adequate. It's never adequate," he told NBC Connecticut.

The three-person committee was to meet privately after the hearing and again on Friday, and Nevas said he expects a final decision early next week. Feinberg said he hopes families will start receiving funds by Aug. 15.

Nevas said he did not want to comment on why the process has been so protracted.

?I know why it?s taken so long,? he said. ?I don?t want to ruffle any feathers.?

/

A nation mourns after the second deadliest school shooting in U.S. history left 20 children and six staff members dead at Sandy Hook Elementary.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2e8c0534/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C110C194176890Esandy0Ehook0Evictims0Efund0Edispute0Egets0Epublic0Eairing0Dlite/story01.htm

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Friday 12 July 2013

The Union - O2 Academy Newcastle - 5th Nov 13

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Source: http://www.ticketline.co.uk/tickets/13284999/the-union/o2-academy-newcastle/2013-11-05

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Path partners with Nokia to bring app to Lumia 1020, 'all Windows Phones'

Path partners with Nokia to bring app to Lumia 1020

After months of anticipation, Path is finally bringing its social network to the Windows Phone, and it?s starting with the Nokia Lumia 1020. The app, which is still in the works and hasn?t been assigned a launch date, will take advantage of the company?s new imaging SDK and its plethora of photo filters. Although the main focus of Path?s announcement was centered on the new Lumia, it also mentioned that the app will indeed come to ?all Windows Phones.? No word on if the launch will occur across the board at the same time (nor if this includes Windows Phone 7.5 or only affects WP8 users) or if it will be featured only on the 1020 at first, but we?ll update you as soon as we know. In the meantime, there?s a press release for you to digest below the break.

Filed under: Wireless, Mobile, Microsoft, Nokia

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Source: http://worldstechblog.com/?p=5157

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Wednesday 10 July 2013

Thanks to clouds, some 60 billion planets are habitable in Milky Way

New research that factors in the influence of cloud cover on alien climate has extended the habitable zone around red dwarf stars to include twice as many planets.

By Elizabeth Barber,?Contributor / July 2, 2013

This photo taken in June 2013 shows the Milky Way galaxy over Gem Island, on the east coast of Malaysia.

Vincent Thian/AP

Enlarge

?Life would be dull if we had to look up at a cloudless monotony all day,? writes Gavin Pretor-Pinney in the Cloudspotter?s Guide.

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That, and life would be more difficult to find.

New research that factors in cloud cover and its influence on alien climate has extended the habitable zone around red dwarf stars to include double the number of planets in that life-supporting region. That means that some 60 billion habitable planets could be orbiting red dwarf stars in the Milky Way galaxy alone.

Scientists had previously believed that each red dwarf had just one Earth-sized planet in its habitable zone ? the sweet spot just far enough from the sun that the planet?s water doesn?t turn to vapor in the overwhelming heat, and just close enough that water doesn?t freeze without the reassuring warmth of the sun?s glow.

But now that habitable zone, once thought to be fairly small around the eponymously named red dwarfs ? the stars are small and faint, relative to our sun ? has been expanded. That?s because the formula for calculating the habitable zone of far-flung planets had not previously included how cloud cover might mitigate the star?s influence planets.?

"Clouds cause warming, and they cause cooling on Earth," said Dorian Abbot, an assistant professor in geophysical sciences at the University of Chicago. "They reflect sunlight to cool things off, and they absorb infrared radiation from the surface to make a greenhouse effect. That's part of what keeps the planet warm enough to sustain life."

Building 3D computer models that simulate how clouds behave on alien planets, researchers at the University of Chicago and Northwestern University found that where there is surface water there are also water clouds. On planets close to their sun, those clouds exert a significant cooling effect, which allows those planets to retain their water, despite their closeness to the dwarf star?s heat. That means that the habitable zone has been extended inward, closer to the star, than had been imagined to be possible.

The researchers plan to test their findings, published in Astrophysical Journal Letters, with the James Webb Telescope, which will go into orbit into 2018, taking the temperature of those alien planets during their days and nights to measure cloud cover.

But the big question is, when an alien looks up at that planet?s clouds, what strange shapes, what foreign animals or objects or ideas, does he or she see?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/scFWb6mO8BM/Thanks-to-clouds-some-60-billion-planets-are-habitable-in-Milky-Way

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