Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Buffett's firm buys Prudential real estate network | Maryland Daily ...


OMAHA, Neb. ? Warren Buffett?s company said Tuesday that it is buying the Prudential and Real Living real estate franchise and launching a new brokerage brand for those agents.

Berkshire Hathaway Inc.?s real estate unit is acquiring the network from Brookfield Asset Management. Berkshire?s HomeServices of America and Brookfield will launch Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices next year and begin switching agents to the new firm.

Buffett said he?s happy to lend Berkshire?s name and financial strength to the new company, which will be based in Irvine, Calif., and be led by a team of executives from Prudential Real Estate.

?I am confident that these partners will deliver value to the residential real estate industry, and I am pleased to have Berkshire Hathaway be a part of the new brand,? Buffett said in a statement.

Financial terms of the deal weren?t disclosed, but Berkshire?s HomeServices of America will be the majority owner. HomeServices already owns local brokerages with 16,000 real estate agents in 21 states.

HomeServices, which is part of Berkshire?s MidAmerican Energy unit, played the lead role in the deal with Buffett offering final approval on the use of the Berkshire Hathaway name, MidAmerican spokeswoman Ann Thelen said.

HomeServices Chairman and CEO Ron Peltier said the deal gives the company a national franchise network with more than 53,000 agents to complement its local brokerages. Peltier said in an interview that he wanted to acquire a national franchise because building one would be too costly and take several years.

The Prudential and Real Living brands will be eliminated over the next couple of years.

?The strategy going forward is to migrate the franchises over to one super brand: Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices,? Peltier said. That will help the company build one main brand online under the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices banner.

Peltier said the independent local brokers that HomeServices already owns won?t be forced to switch affiliation to the new franchise network, but they will begin noting they are owned by Berkshire Hathaway. For example CBS Home Real Estate in Omaha will keep its name, but add that it?s a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate.

Peltier said that will help ensure that both the independent brokers it owns and Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices locations will show up in Internet searches.

Berkshire owns roughly 80 subsidiaries, including railroad, clothing, furniture and jewelry firms, but its insurance and utility businesses typically account for more than half of the company?s net income. The Omaha, Neb., company also has major investments in such companies as Coca-Cola Co., IBM and Wells Fargo & Co.

Brookfield, based in Toronto, manages more than $150 billion worth of utility, infrastructure and real estate assets.

Source: http://thedailyrecord.com/2012/10/30/buffetts-firm-buys-prudential-real-estate-network/

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My Short Halloween Fiction Story ? that multi-tasker. rar.

?But I?m scared.? said the little boy who?s afraid of the dark.

?We?ll be right next to your room, sweetie. Good night.? His mother smiled, gave him a kiss on the forehead turning off the lights before she left the room.

Jimmy just moved into the new house with his parents. It was his first night. The house was small but big enough to accommodate two adults and a 6-year-old boy.? His parents loved the house but not Jimmy. He could never understand why his parents wanted to move.

?Jimmy, you have to understand that daddy and I love this place. But we have to move to another better place.?

?But why mummy? Now I can never play with Dilly and Nick. I like Mr. Frank he?s the best teacher in the world! I don?t want another person to teach me Science!? Jimmy pouted his mouth. His eyes were wet.

She let out a deep sigh. She kneeled down next to Jimmy, running her hands through his hair. ?I?m sorry, my dear. It?s something that you will only understand when you grow older.? Then she kissed his head. ?We can always come visit them.?

Jimmy?s face was already wet. His tears continue to trickle down as his mother hugged him tight. He could not accept the fact that he might never see his friends ever again. Mr. Frank told him that his new place is 6 hours drive from here. There was absolutely no way he could drive or take a bus because he doesn?t know how to.

The yellow blue moon light shined through the high windows in the room. He laid down on his bed looking through one of the windows. The moon was the roundest he has ever seen and also the brightest blue moon he can ever imagined. His eyes got used to the darkness in his room.

He could not sleep. He was not even sleepy. His room was dusty and drafty. He could even hear creaks sometimes if he paid enough attention. He wondered if monsters would come through his door. The thought of that shuddered him. He flicked open the lamp beside his bed. He rummaged through his stash of books in the paper box. He picked out his all time favorite book, jumped onto his bed and hid underneath his blanket. He flipped open the first page and read it aloud but soft enough so his parents could not hear him.

As he reached the third page his eyelids became heavier and his voice became softer. Slowly he rested his head on his open book. He fell asleep.

Creak!

He jerked from his sleep.

Creak!

This time he knew his door room was open. He was still underneath his blanket and he was silent. He tried his best not to move a limb. He could hear footsteps coming into the room. And it?s not just footsteps. It was as if someone was dragging something heavy across the floor. His heart started to beat really fast. The footsteps were getting closer now. Underneath his blanket, he could see shadows moving. He hope the thing would just leave him alone.

The footsteps stopped. The noises stopped.

He could only hear his own breath and his heart beating fast.

He heard the footsteps and dragging noise again but going distant this time.

Creak!

He jerked a little and heard the door closed. He was still underneath his blanket. He did not dare to move even a bit. His lamp was still flickering and his heart was still beating fast. That lasted for the longest time and Jimmy fell asleep.

Jimmy opened his eyes and realised that it was already morning. The sun was shining brightly through the window and birds were chirping outside. It took him a minute to realise that he was at his new house and figured out what happened the night before.

His room was completely normal. It still smelled dusty.

He heard a knock on his door and his mother peeped in.

?Ah you?re up. Good morning sweetie. Go get washed up.? She said with a smile before closing the door.

He headed over to the bathroom. He slowly walked down the flight of stairs. Each step he took gave out a loud creak.

?Good morning mum. Good morning dad.? He said as he stepped into the kitchen.

His mother was at the stove cooking and his father was behind the newspaper. His mother turned her head around and asked him if he would like pancakes or waffles. He replied waffles.

He took a sit next to his father.

?Did you sleep well last night?? His father asked, still behind the papers.

He nodded, hesitantly.

?You?ll get used to it, boy.? He said.

Jimmy could not resist so he asked, ?Do you believe in monsters??

His father choked on his coffee and his mother laughed.

?Monsters don?t exist! Don?t worry, son. You?ll be fine.? His father said giving out a small laugh.

?You must had a bad nightmare, sweetie.? His mother said.

His father closed and folded the papers. ?I have to go. See you later.? He bent down and kissed Jimmy and his mother before leaving.

Jimmy heard the car engine started, then left. His mother placed a plate of waffles in front of Jimmy and he took a small bite. His mother sat opposite him, looking at Jimmy. ?Where do you want to go today?? She asked.

School only starts the next day for Jimmy so he was free for the day. He shook his head and replied, ?Nowhere.? Still chewing his waffle.

?Are you sure??? She asked.

He nodded silently, taking another bite.

?I?m sorry Jimmy but I hope you?ll love this town soon enough.? And then she walked away towards the kitchen sink and started cleaning the utensils.

Jimmy took the last bite and passed his plate to his mother.

He walked over to his backyard and there were witted plants all over. Even the tree looked creepy. It was a gloomy day and the weather was a bit chilly. He hanged around in the backyard until lunchtime.

After lunch, he explored the front porch this time and saw his neighbour, an old woman carrying a bucket of water. He ran over and asked her, ?Do you need my help? I can help you carry that.?

The woman smiled and replied, ?That?s so sweet of you darling but I think this is too heavy for you.? Then she poured the bucket of water into the drain. ?You?re new here aren?t you? Saw a big truck in front of your house a few days ago moving in stuffs into the house.?

He nodded and told the woman, ?I don?t like moving here. I don?t like this place.?

The woman laughed while carrying her empty bucket and headed to the main door. ?I?ve baked some cookies. Come in, young boy.?

He hesitated but went in anyway realising that an old lady can do nothing to him.

The house smelled of incense. The type of smell that Jimmy would smell every time he goes to church with his parents. The floor creaked every time he took a step. The woman guided him to the kitchen. She took out the freshly baked chocolate cookies from her oven and placed them on the table.

Jimmy took one and munched on it. It had different taste to the ones that his mother usually bakes. It tasted richer. He loves chocolate so he munched on more. The woman made tea and sat opposite him.

?You love them don?t you?? She said.

Jimmy grabbed another cookie and nodded. He asked the woman, ?You stay here alone??

The lady nodded, ?All my life.?

He then let out a yawn.

?Didn?t sleep well last night did you?? She asked, smiling at the boy.

Jimmy put down his cookie and asked the lady, ?Do you believe in monsters??

The lady looked at him intensely. She did not smile and said, ?There are other creatures and living things that live amongst us. Only a certain of us can see them. They only come out in the dark and especially during full moon. They come and hunt us humans at night.?

Jimmy was quiet. He was waiting for the woman to finish her story.

She continued, ?They don?t eat us nor kill us.? Jimmy let out a deep breath. ?But, if they find us, they will break our arms and then the legs, alive. I don?t know what they will do with them but our body they will let it decay, slowly, making sure you can feel the maggots eating your flesh, alive. And when only your bones are left, then only they will let you die.?

Jimmy looked at the woman after she was done. He found his voice and asked, ?H-h-have you seen them before??

The woman answered, ?Yes, once. When I was little. But I was lucky. I got away.?

Jimmy asked her how.

?I was hiding inside my blanket when the thing came into my room. I could hear the footsteps coming nearer to my bed. Then the thing stopped and left my room. I was safe.?

Jimmy asked why. His heart was beating fast.

?They don?t attack those who believed in them.?

Jimmy was speechless, couldn?t make up the words he wanted to ask inside his head.

?The next day when I woke up I told my family what happened the night before and no one believed in me. Everyone thought I had a bad dream. The next thing I know, my whole family disappeared the next day. Nobody knew where they went. The police searched up and down the town and no trace could be found.?

Jimmy choked. He was not feeling well so he asked if he could leave.

?Of course my dear. Come back anytime.? The woman said happily. And before he left, she whispered, ?They are everywhere.?

He went back to his house trying to forget what the woman told him. He had very little dinner because the story made him really sick.

During bedtime he asked his mother and father if he could sleep with them.

?Monsters don?t exist. Don?t be silly!? His mother kissed his forehead and left his room.

Jimmy quickly flicked open his bedside lamp. He was awake for the longest time and then he fell asleep. He had a really great sleep.

The warm sunlight woke him up from his sleep the next morning. He washed up and climbed downstairs. There was no one to be found. He ran upstairs to his parents? bedroom. There was no one to be found as well. He walked towards his parent?s window and looked down.

In his backyard, he could see the old lady standing there looking up at him. Her lips curved showing her yellow teeth. It was the most scariest and creepiest grin he had ever seen in his life. And outside the room, he could hear the staircase creaked, as if someone or something was climbing up the stairs, leaving a loud echo in the empty house.

Happy halloween everyone!!

Source: http://krisss86.wordpress.com/2012/10/31/my-halloween-story/

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Communications Networks and NASA's Curiosity Mars Rover ...

The author of this article, Brian Palmer, discusses how NASA has set up the communications network and information system for the Curiosty Rover, so that information may be adequately sent to, and received from the Rover in a timely manner. As a high-profile NASA mission, the project?s engineers have designed the information network with fail-safes in mind, by creating multiple relay components to transmit information between the Rover and mission control back on Earth.

To explain the layout of this network, one can split the separate components of the network (or the nodes), into four different groups. The first is NASA mission control, or simply NASA. From this node, there are different lines of communication (directed edges), leading to the different parts of the Deep Space Network, which include three major hubs in the Mojave Desert, Spain, and another in Australia). There are probably directed edges between all three, but for convenience?s sake, let us consider directed edges going from both Spain and Australia to the Mojave node (after all, it would make sense that the central space telecommunications hub be out in the desert, where there is less likely to be interference). Next, all three of the Deep Space Network nodes would have directed edges leading to Curiosity itself. Finally, directed edges would lead from Curiosity to a pair of orbiters circling around Mars, named Odyssey and Reconnaissance (these in turn, would have directed edges pointing back to NASA?s node). By observing the path of these directed edges, one can see that these nodes and their respective pathways form a strongly connected network ? that is, any information at any one node in the network can move to any another node in the network via a series of pathways.

For a mission such as the Curiosity Rover, a strongly connected network is crucial for being able to relay information both TO and FROM the Rover. To relay information to the Rover, there are three separate hubs, so that if there is any problem at one or two of the nodes, there is always a third one. Also, having more than one hub allows information to be split up and dispersed along separate edges (if there are traffic limitations applied to specific edges, maximizing the dispersion along different routes, as we did with the traffic example earlier this semester, would be ideal).? This also applies to relaying information back to the main NASA node ? Curiosity can parse and send the data along both of the orbiter?s paths. Finally, one could imagine a situation where information is being sent in a constant steady, or equilibrium state, amongst these nodes, along all available edges. According to the previous explanation, and by using equilibrium dispersion by assigning value ?a? to NASA?s node, and setting the summation of all values equal to zero:

a+(a/3)+(a/3)+(2a/3)+a+(a/2)+(a/2)=1; (13a)/3=1; a=3/13

The equilibrium numerical values in this case indicate the amount of information at/passing through the hub during equilibrium. Relay hubs ?Spain,? and ?Australia,? have equal values of 1/13, while the central relay hub in the Mojave has a value of 2/13, and the orbiter nodes (Odyssey and Reconnaissance), have values of 3/26. Interestingly enough, both NASA ground command and Curiosity have the same equilibrium values ? this would seem to make sense, as all the information passed from the ground to ends up at the satellite, and in response to the received commands, the satellite sends a proportional amount of information back to the ground to be received.

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/mars-rover-gets-instructions-daily-from-nasa-via-a-network-of-antennae/2012/10/29/60e6e040-1c65-11e2-ad90-ba5920e56eb3_story.html

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Source: http://blogs.cornell.edu/info2040/2012/10/29/communications-networks-and-nasas-curiosity-mars-rover/

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Dana White is a really good tipper

UFC president Dana White is known as many things: entrepreneur, visionary, hothead, Pinkberry fan. According to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, he also deserves the title great tipper.

White and the UFC have apparently cut ties with the Palms, the Las Vegas Casino that has hosted several of the UFC's smaller events. White's credit line was reportedly cut, and the biggest loser from the fallout is the staff. White was known to give exorbitant tips to dealers and waitstaff.

"He changed people's lives," said one of the sources ... During one two-month hot streak, White tipped dealers more than $100,000, sources confirmed. "Anytime he came in, we knew it was a big payday," a Palms employee said.

The Palms and UFC fans are also losers in this because their venues were fun places to watch fights. They have intimate venues that are nothing like the arenas the UFC uses for some of their bigger pay-per-views and Fox shows.

It was perfect for "The Ultimate Fighter" finale and Ultimate Fight Night events. Fans could get closer to the action. Diego Sanchez's memorable win over Clay Guida sticks out as one of the fights that was perfect for the Palms. Every punch, every blood drop that flew, every kick was clear to every fan in the venue.

More news from the Yahoo! Sports Minute:

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Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/dana-white-really-good-tipper-171323566--mma.html

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Space view of menacing hurricane's size

A series of satellite photos of Hurricane Sandy have captured eye-popping views of the frightening storm from space, showing the tempest in relation to the entire planet Earth, as well as its appearance at night.

The new satellite views of Hurricane Sandy were snapped Sunday by the GOES-13 weather satellite and the powerful Suomi NPP Earth-watching satellite. Both satellites are used by NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to monitor Earth's weather.

It was NOAA's GOES-13 satellite that captured the stunning view of Hurricane Sandy as it appeared on the entire disk of Earth.

The image shows a complete view of North America, Central America and South America, with Sandy appearing as an unmistakable spiral of clouds battering the U.S. East Coast. Bands of clouds stretch from just north of Florida all the up toward Maine, with a wispy tendril of clouds also reaching eastward across the Atlantic Ocean. [ Photos: 'Frankenstorm' Hurricane Sandy from Space ]

The nighttime view of Hurricane Sandy by Suomi NPP offers a more intimate view of the Category 1 hurricane.

The image was taken at 2:42 a.m. EDT by a special "day-night band" instrument on Suomi NPP that can detect a wide range of light wavelengths, which allows the satellite to observe dim targets like auroras, city lights and reflected moonlight, explained Michael Carlowicz of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., in an image description.

The night view of Hurricane Sandy shows the storm just east of Florida and Georgia, and bright city lights in both states can be seen in the image. The hurricane, itself, is revealed by moonlight reflecting off its cloud tops. The view was created by Jesse Allen and Robert Simmon at the NASA Earth Observatory, which regularly releases amazing views of Earth from satellites in orbit.

The Suomi NPP (the name is short for Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership) is a joint project by NASA, NOAA and the U.S. Department of Defense.

GOES-13 and Suomi NPP are just two of the many weather satellites currently tracking Hurricane Sandy. NOAA has also been using GOES-15, while NASA's Terra satellite and Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission satellite have also been following the storm.

As of early Monday Hurricane Sandy was a Category 1 storm with wind speeds of up to 85 mph (140 kph) as it approached the U.S. East Coast. The storm was expected to make landfall in Delaware and New Jersey on Monday night and cause substantial flooding and power outages, according to the National Hurricane Center.

You can follow Space.com Managing Editor Tariq Malik on Twitter@tariqjmalik and Space.com on Twitter? @Spacedotcom. We're also on? Facebook ? and?? Google+.

? 2012 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49597682/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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Paranormal Tours In Alton Illinois Part 2

Paranormal Tours In Alton Illinois Part 2

Mineral Springs Mall is one of the oldest and most historic buildings in Alton, Illinois. It was started as Mineral Springs Hotel by two German immigrants August and Herman Luer in 1909. Mineral Springs Hotel was completed on August 1, 1914. It was built with luxurious terrazzo floors, decorated cornices, marble staircases and artistic glass throughout the hotel. It was an immediate success and was even more popular after the mineral pool was opened in the basement.

The hotel was a popular meeting place for politicians, traveling salesmen, civic leaders and socialites. The pool attracted water polo clubs, people for swimming lessons and the claimed healing powers of the mineral water. The water was claimed to have healing powers for the sick and the noted Dr. Furlong of this period in time gave mineral baths and claimed they would heal colds, headaches and sore muscles. It has been reported that Mineral Springs Hotel attracted up to 30,000 visitors in one season.

With this many visitors in the early 1900?s it is surprising that there are not more paranormal activities in the Mineral Springs Mall. There are six known ghosts I have talked about in previous discussion; Pearl, Maria, Gus, Cassandra, William and one that does not have a name. The nameless ghost is known to be wearing a three piece suit or a tuxedo. He has been observed in the mineral pool where Cassandra has been known to be.

There was an art store using the adjoining room to the pool in the basement and one evening a worker heard noise in the pool area, when she went to investigate there was a figure of a man in a suit in the mineral pool. After this siting the store was moved immediately.

There have been others known to have been attracted to the mall, as the energy from visitors on the tours has caused wayfarers to come into the hotel. Most are just passing through and are just drawn by the extra activity and energy in the mall and do not stay. There have also been many orbs spotted on tours and Wayne, the main tour guide, usually has them swarm him when he enters the mineral pool, although I did not observe this on our tour. Some of the resident ghosts have also been known to follow tour visitors when they leave the mall. The guides had noted they then get a call and have to explain to the visitor how to make them return to the mall.

The Mineral Springs Mall is a very interesting place. I did not feel uncomfortable in this building and actually felt more at ease. Maybe because I knew I was in the presence of lost souls looking for help.

Who knows how many more spiritual residents the Mineral Springs Hotel will attract in the next hundred years?

Source: http://www.streetarticles.com/adventure-travel/paranormal-tours-in-alton-illinois-part-2

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Pats rout Rams in London

By MATTIAS KAREN

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 5:32 p.m. ET Oct. 28, 2012

LONDON (AP) - The Patriots showed that old England is their domain as well.

After the Patriots gave up an early 50-yard scoring play, Tom Brady responded by leading five straight touchdown drives Sunday and New England (5-3) ran over the St. Louis Rams 45-7 in the NFL's annual regular-season game at Wembley Stadium.

"I hope they enjoyed the game today, all the fans," Brady said, "I know it got out of hand there, but that's how the Patriots like it. So it was a fun game for us."

Yes, for one night at least, the Pats - Expats on this occasion- were back to blowing away opponents. According to Brady, though, there's still plenty of room for improvement.

"We've got a long way to go. ... We certainly haven't played our best football yet," he said. "Coach says the season doesn't start until after Thanksgiving, and it isn't even Halloween yet."

This offense is looking quite scary, though.

New England had at least 350 yards of total offense for the 17th straight game, breaking an NFL record set by the Rams in 1999-2000, back when Kurt Warner was leading "The Greatest Show on Turf."

This was arguably the greatest show put on by a team in London since the NFL started staging regular-season games here in 2007 - or at least the most dominating. New England gave the British crowd a first-hand look at the league's top-ranked offense.

Brady led four straight touchdown drives for a commanding 28-7 lead by halftime, and then hit Brandon Lloyd for a 9-yard score to start the third quarter.

Brady passed for 304 yards with four touchdowns and tight end Rob Gronkowski caught eight passes for 146 yards and two scores. Lloyd also had two touchdown catches, while Stevan Ridley ran for 127 yards and a score as the Patriots put themselves atop the AFC East heading into their off week.

The Rams (3-5), who also will be off, are last in the NFC West after losing two in a row.

The Rams struck first when Sam Bradford hit Chris Givens with a 50-yard touchdown pass on the opening drive of the game - exactly the kind of statement the team hoped to make to ruffle the favored Patriots.

But St. Louis, which arrived in London on Tuesday, three days before the Patriots, to get better adjusted to the time difference, was the team that looked jetlagged the rest of the way.

"You can't ask for a better start to the game. First time we touched the ball we go down and score," Bradford said. "It just all fell apart from there."

After the Rams took the lead, Brady led a 78-yard drive to tie the score with a 19-yard pass to Lloyd. On their next drive, coach Bill Belichick opted to go for it on fourth down at the 1-yard line, and Shane Vereen broke into the end zone.

It was the only fourth down the Rams forced until the middle of the third quarter, when the Patriots had to settle for a 26-yard field goal to make it 38-7.

In between, Brady hit Gronkowski on a 7-yard touchdown pass and Ridley had another 1-yard run into the end zone 10 seconds before halftime.

Gronkowski celebrated both his touchdowns with theatrical spikes to fire up the crowd, doing a high-stepping strut before the first one to mimic a local tourist attraction. That led to questions about what the move was called, a Changing of the Gronk, a FrankenGronk, or what?

"That was a `Palace Guard,"' the tight end joked.

Even Brady was a bit perplexed.

"I don't know what the hell he was doing on that first one," Brady said. "I was trying to get out of the way. He needs some work on that."

St. Louis only had one other scoring opportunity in the first half, but botched the snap on a 52-yard field goal attempt.

Givens' touchdown gave him a reception of at least 50 yards for the fifth straight game, a rookie record, but he left temporarily with a toe injury and only managed two more catches after returning. Running back Steven Jackson was also largely shut down, finishing with 23 yards on seven carries. Bradford was 23 of 31 for 205 yards and added an interception in the fourth quarter before being replaced by backup Kellen Clemens near the end.

"It's embarrassing the way we played tonight," Bradford said. "Just embarrassing."

New England became the first team to win two games in London, having beaten Tampa Bay here in 2009. As expected, the Patriots also had the majority of crowd support from the 84,004 fans at Wembley, despite the Rams being the designated home team.

That, however, didn't stop backup quarterback Ryan Mallett from getting booed when taking a knee to run out the clock - one of the few aspects of the American version of football the British crowd didn't seem to appreciate.

Belichick had no complaints about the atmosphere, though.

"The stadium was great," he said. "Playing on grass is always good. ... It's good to see the jerseys muddy, grass stains. Guys picking up dirt out of their facemasks, stuff like that. We don't see a lot of that back in the States."

NOTES: The Rams had originally agreed to return to London in 2013 and 2014 but pulled out of the deal. ... The NFL will stage two regular-season games in London in 2013 for the first time. ... The Patriots didn't punt until 2:36 left in the third quarter. ... Rams wide receiver Danny Amendola missed his third straight game with a right shoulder injury. ... Flamboyant London Mayor Boris Johnson addressed the crowd before the game, saying he was proud to welcome "this glorious descendant of rugby union football" to Wembley.

---

Online: http://pro32.ap.org/poll and http://twitter.com/AP-NFL

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Giants top Cowboys by a fingertip

The New York Giants escaped with a 29-24 victory over the Cowboys in Dallas by the grace of a reversal of a Dallas touchdown when replay showed the Cowboys' Dez Bryant had come down with a pass in the end zone with his fingers out of bounds.

Watch live online: Saints vs. Broncos

Watch NBC's presentation of New Orleans-Denver in an HD player with DVR style controls, alternate angles, stats, highlights and more. Chat with others during the game.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/49589648/ns/sports-nfl/

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Sandy unlikely to damage US economy, analysts say

Sand bags protect the front of the New York Stock Exchange, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012. Hurricane Sandy continued on its path Monday, forcing the shutdown of mass transit, schools and financial markets, sending coastal residents fleeing, and threatening a dangerous mix of high winds and soaking rain. There had been plans to allow electronic trading to go forward on the New York Stock Exchange but with a storm surge expected to cover parts of lower Manhattan in water, officials decided late Sunday that it was too risky to ask any personnel to staff the exchanges. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Sand bags protect the front of the New York Stock Exchange, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012. Hurricane Sandy continued on its path Monday, forcing the shutdown of mass transit, schools and financial markets, sending coastal residents fleeing, and threatening a dangerous mix of high winds and soaking rain. There had been plans to allow electronic trading to go forward on the New York Stock Exchange but with a storm surge expected to cover parts of lower Manhattan in water, officials decided late Sunday that it was too risky to ask any personnel to staff the exchanges. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Travelers on Delta Airlines look at a departure screen Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Detroit. Dozens of departing flights have been canceled at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport as a looming superstorm locks down flights to the East Coast. Hurricane Sandy continued on its path Monday, as the storm forced the shutdown of mass transit, schools and financial markets, sending coastal residents fleeing, and threatening a dangerous mix of high winds and soaking rain.? (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

(AP) ? Airlines canceled thousands of flights and stranded travelers. Insurers braced for damages of up to $5 billion. Retailers expected shrunken sales.

Hurricane Sandy is causing disruptions for companies, travelers and consumers. But for the overall economy, damage from the storm will likely be limited. And any economic growth lost to the storm in the short run will likely be restored once reconstruction begins, analysts say.

Preliminary estimates are that damage will range between $10 billion and $20 billion. That could top last year's Hurricane Irene, which cost $15.8 billion.

If so, Hurricane Sandy would be among the 10 most costly hurricanes in U.S. history. But it would still be far below the worst ? Hurricane Katrina, which cost $108 billion and caused 1,200 deaths in 2005.

"Assuming the storm simply disrupts things for a few days and it doesn't do significant damage to infrastructure, then I don't think it will have a significant national impact," Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, said Monday.

The economic impact could be more severe if the storm damages a port or a major manufacturing facility such as an oil refinery, Zandi noted.

Here's how the storm has begun to affect key areas of the economy:

? AIR TRAVEL:

Flights in the Northeast are all but stopped for at least two days. Airlines canceled more than 10,000 flights for Monday and Tuesday from Washington to Boston. The disruptions spread across the nation and overseas, stranding passengers from Hong Kong to Europe.

Airline cancellations have already surpassed those from Hurricane Irene last year and are on par with those from the snowstorm that pounded the East Coast early last year. The Airports Council International, a trade group, said that even if the storm damage turns out to be minor, it could be a week before operations are back to normal at major East Coast airports.

Eric Danielson was trying to fly Monday from San Francisco to Norfolk, Va., to start a new job.

"It was supposed to be only a two-hour layover here in Atlanta, Ga., and now it's beginning to be a 28-hour layover until tomorrow, Danielson said.

Wall Street analysts expect carriers like JetBlue, United and Delta to suffer a short-term hit to earnings as they spend money to shuffle crews and planes away from and then back to the East Coast.

? RETAILERS:

The nation's big stores are expected to lose billions, and the losses could extend into the crucial holiday shopping season. Sales at department stores, clothing chains, jewelers and other sellers of non-essential goods are expected to suffer the most.

The industry is entering the holiday season, when many retailers collect up to 40 percent of annual revenue. Retailers, excluding restaurants, could lose at least $25 billion in sales this week, estimates Burt Flickinger III of retail consultancy Strategic Resource Group.

Even home improvement chains and grocers that will benefit from shoppers stocking up on emergency supplies before the hurricane and cleaning and repair items afterward could lose sales in the long run if overstretched consumers feel they must scale back.

"If you're spending $400 on a generator, that could hurt discretionary purchases," said Brian Sozzi, chief equities analyst at NBG Productions.

Flickinger now estimates that holiday sales in November and December will rise 2.1 percent over last year instead of the 3.2 percent he had originally predicted.

A better idea of how Hurricane Sandy is affecting the retail business will come Thursday, when some major retailers like Target Corp. and Macy's will report sales figures for October.

The storm is affecting small retailers as well as large ones.

At Angelo's Civita Farnese, a restaurant in Providence, R.I., the lunchtime crowd didn't surface as usual Monday. By 12:30 p.m., barely 10 customers were inside, and owner Bob Antignano had no hope of seeing the 200 to 250 he usually serves for lunch.

"It's a wasted day and it looks like tomorrow probably will be as well," Antignano said.

The loss of two days' revenue will wipe out his profit for the month. He would face losses if the restaurant lost power. He would have to close, and the food in his walk-in refrigerator and freezers could spoil.

? INSURANCE

The cost to insurers is expected to rival the insured damage from Hurricane Irene last year. Damage from Irene cost insurers roughly $5 billion, according to Sterne, Agee & Leach Research. Because the storm is hitting a highly populous region, with "one of the highest concentrations of wealth in the world," the damages are likely to run into the billions, say analysts at Morgan Stanley.

Hurricanes, like other disasters, can cause big losses but also big spikes in economic activity, once homes and buildings are rebuilt or repaired. And Americans may spend more before the storm when they stock up on extra food, water and batteries. Spending can also rise afterward as households restock.

The economy expanded at an annual rate of 2 percent in the July-September quarter. Zandi said he isn't changing his forecast for similar growth in the current October-December quarter of 1.9 percent.

Economic activity in October and November might slow if factory output declines and some workers are laid off temporarily and seek unemployment benefits. But the economy could strengthen in December as companies rebound.

CoreLogic, a private data provider, estimates that there are 284,000 homes worth about $88 billion in the hurricane's path.

? AUTOS

The effect on auto sales may be minimal, some analysts say. Many people who planned to buy cars in the last few days of the month, when deals tend to peak, bought cars over the weekend instead, said Jesse Toprak, an analyst with car buying site TrueCar.com.

As a result, TrueCar isn't changing its forecast for October U.S. auto sales. Toprak predicts that more than 1.1 million vehicles will be sold in October, up 11.5 percent from the same month last year.

Forecasting firm LMC Automotive predicts that 1 percent to 3 percent of new-car sales, around 20,000 vehicles, will be lost because of the storm. But LMC analyst Jeff Schuster predicts that those sales will simply shift to November. So the storm might have little or no overall effect on sales.

Toprak also notes that dealers could gain sales once the storm is over if people need to replace damaged vehicles.

? POWER

Energy outages and disruptions in major East Coast cities "may take a toll on (power) demand unlike anything we have seen before," Phil Flynn, a senior market analyst for Price Futures Group, wrote in a report.

Some of the biggest oil refineries in the Northeast were closed, and others were running at reduced capacity. As businesses closed and drivers staying home, demand for gasoline was expected to fall.

___

AP Business Writers Matthew Craft, Anne D'Innocenzio, Samantha Bomkamp and Joyce M Rosenberg in New York, Joshua Freed in Minneapolis and Tom Krisher and Dee-Ann Durbin in Detroit contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-10-29-Superstorm%20Sandy-Economic%20Impact/id-5f841ba4cc284fa892987906857b0b90

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

Thoroughbred - Gunny Highway - Large - Adult - Male - Horse ...

Thoroughbred - Gunny Highway - Large - Adult - Male - Horse

***COURTESY POST*** Gunny Highway (Whatasaint out of Just Like Dancer) is a 6 year old chesnut Thoroughbred gelding. He earned $20,170 during his racing career and last raced Oct. 25, 2011.

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Massive storm wreaks havoc on presidential race

CELINA, Ohio (AP) ? Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney and President Barack Obama frantically sought to close the deal with voters with precious few days left in an incredibly close race as this year's October surprise ? an unprecedented storm menacing the East Coast ? wreaked havoc on their best-laid plans.

Ever mindful of his narrow path to the requisite 270 electoral votes, Romney looked to expand his map, weighing an intensified effort in traditionally left-leaning Minnesota. Obama sought to defend historically Democratic turf as the race tightened heading into the final week.

Wary of being seen as putting their political pursuits ahead of public safety, the two White House hopefuls reshuffled their campaign plans as the storm approached. Both candidates were loath to forfeit face time with voters in battleground states like Virginia that are likely to be afflicted when Hurricane Sandy, a winter storm and a cold front collide to form a freak hybrid storm.

"The storm will throw havoc into the race," said Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va.

Obama, preparing to depart for Florida Sunday, a day early to beat the storm, got an update from disaster relief officials before speaking by phone to affected governors and mayors.

"Anything they need, we will be there," Obama said. "And we are going to cut through red tape. We are not going to get bogged down with a lot of rules. We want to make sure that we are anticipating and leaning forward."

An opportunity for Obama to demonstrate steady leadership in the face of crisis was offset by the risk that the federal government, as in past emergencies, could be faulted for an ineffective response, with the president left to take the fall.

Obama canceled campaign stops Monday in Virginia and Tuesday in Colorado to monitor the storm but planned to go forward with other events Monday in Florida and Ohio, with former President Bill Clinton at his side. He planned to return to Ohio on Wednesday with stops in Cincinnati and Akron, followed by a Thursday swing through Springfield, Ohio; Boulder, Colo.; and Las Vegas.

Romney nixed three stops in up-for-grabs Virginia on Sunday, opting instead to campaign with running mate Paul Ryan in Ohio before heading Monday to Wisconsin, where Romney has chipped away at Obama's lead.

"Let's today when we get home put in our prayers the people who are in the East Coast in the wake of this big storm that's coming," Ryan said in Celina, Ohio.

Vice President Joe Biden canceled a Monday event in New Hampshire, and Romney's wife, Ann Romney, called off her Monday events. Campaign staffers planned to collect supplies for Virginia storm victims, and a Republican Party spokesman said Romney's campaign bus would be used for "relief efforts throughout the East Coast."

Also vexing to Obama and Romney was the prospect that bad weather could hinder early voting and get-out-the-vote efforts.

"Obviously, we want unfettered access to the polls, because we think the more people that come out, the better we're going to do," said David Axelrod, a top adviser to Obama's campaign. "To the extent that it makes it harder, that's a source of concern."

In Virginia, one of the most competitive states in the race, election officials eased absentee voting requirements for those affected by the storm.

"The state board of elections is already planning for extended hours in advance for absentee voting, and it's now a priority, moved up to the same level as hospitals and police stations to have power restored," said Gov. Bob McDonnell, a top Romney ally.

Getting voters to the polls ? whether early or on Election Day ? is one of the few elements of the race still in the candidates' control. Although Romney and Obama are in a close contest for the popular vote, the president continues to have the upper hand in the most contested states.

Reince Priebus, the GOP chairman, pointed to recent gains for Romney that have lifted him to a virtual tie in most national polls. "The challenger always wins in a tie race," he said.

With time running out, both campaigns appeared to be fine-tuning their map of the states where they're campaigning the hardest.

A senior Republican official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to disclose private deliberations, said Sunday that the Romney team was seriously discussing sending Romney, Ryan or both to Minnesota during the final week. The state hasn't gone Republican in the presidential race since 1972, but recent polling shows a tighter race there than most anticipated.

In a flashback to the 2008 race, Obama's campaign announced that Biden will campaign Thursday in Pennsylvania, reprising a visit to his hometown of Scranton that he made during the final week four years ago. Pennsylvania, too, has been Democratic territory in recent years, but Romney has continued to contest the state with an advertising assist from the Republican Party.

Axelrod, Priebus and McDonnell spoke on CNN's "State of the Union." Warner spoke on "Fox News Sunday."

___

Lederman reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Philip Elliott in Ohio, Brian Bakst in Minnesota and Jim Kuhnhenn and Julie Pace in Washington contributed to this report.

___

Online:

Federal emergency storm information: http://www.ready.gov

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/east-coast-storm-wreaks-havoc-presidential-race-184702531--election.html

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Hundreds say goodbye at funeral for slain NJ girl

Mourners hug during an interment service at the Cedar Green Cemetery in Clayton, N.J., on Saturday Oct, 27, 2012, for Autumn Pasquale, a 12-year-old police said was killed by two teenage brothers in their small New Jersey town. Police said the brothers killed the girl and put her body in a recycling bin. (AP Photo/Joseph Kaczmarek)

Mourners hug during an interment service at the Cedar Green Cemetery in Clayton, N.J., on Saturday Oct, 27, 2012, for Autumn Pasquale, a 12-year-old police said was killed by two teenage brothers in their small New Jersey town. Police said the brothers killed the girl and put her body in a recycling bin. (AP Photo/Joseph Kaczmarek)

Mourners hold hands during an interment service at the Cedar Green Cemetery in Clayton, N.J., on Saturday Oct, 27, 2012, for Autumn Pasquale, a 12-year-old police said was killed by two teenage brothers in their small New Jersey town. Police said the brothers killed the girl and put her body in a recycling bin. (AP Photo/Joseph Kaczmarek)

People attend a public viewing for Autumn Pasquale at Our Lady of Lourdes Church, in Glassboro, N.J. on Saturday Oct. 27, 2012. Two teenage brothers were charged Tuesday with murdering Pasquale, 12, who had been missing since the weekend, prompting a search until her body was found in a recycling bin.. (AP Photo/Joseph Kaczmarek)

Mourners hug during an interment service at the Cedar Green Cemetery in Clayton, N.J., on Saturday Oct, 27, 2012, for Autumn Pasquale, a 12-year-old police said was killed by two teenage brothers in their small New Jersey town. Police said the brothers killed the girl and put her body in a recycling bin. (AP Photo/Joseph Kaczmarek)

People hug after attending a public viewing for Autumn Pasquale at Our Lady of Lourdes Church, in Glassboro, N.J. on Saturday Oct. 27, 2012. Two teenage brothers were charged Tuesday with murdering Pasquale, 12, who had been missing since the weekend, prompting a frantic search until her body was found in a recycling bin.. (AP Photo/Joseph Kaczmarek)

(AP) ? Hundreds of mourners who packed a church Saturday to say goodbye to a 12-year-old who police say was killed by two teenage brothers were urged to do good works in her memory and dwell not so much on why she died so young but how she lived.

People lined up from morning until afternoon for Autumn Pasquale's wake at Our Lady of Lourdes Church. Some wore buttons bearing the girl's photo and T-shirts reading: "Autumn Pasquale forever in our hearts."

They filed by photo collages of Autumn riding a roller coaster, posing with Piglet, smiling with friends and family and playing soccer. "Our Angel" was written across one.

Autumn was found dead in a recycling bin last week. The two brothers have been arrested in her slaying.

Monsignor Michael Mannion eulogized the girl at a funeral Mass that followed the wake.

Autumn was a girl who was wise beyond her years, who listened to other people and cared about others, he said. She wanted to learn sign language so she could communicate with a man she knew who could sign but not speak, he added.

"So often when someone dies, especially at this age, we're haunted by the question why did she die?" Mannion said. "We struggle with it. We're hurt by it. We're broken by it. But I hope in the midst of that grieving, we can ask ourselves why did she live?"

Mannion said mourners need to embrace "spirituality without boundaries," where "we pray from the walls of this church to the prison walls as well. It's tough." He urged them to do good works as a way to remember Autumn's fiery, generous spirit. Talk to a classmate sitting alone at a lunch table, he said, or organize a charity bike ride in her memory.

"Let her life change yours. Let her spirit and let her soul, which connected so easily to other souls, become something we all remember," he said.

Police said Autumn, who disappeared while riding her beloved BMX bike last Sunday, was lured to a house by a 15-year-old who told her he wanted to trade bike parts. Police said he and his 17-year-old brother killed the girl and put her body in the bin near their home. The brothers and Autumn lived in Clayton, a town of about 8,000 about 25 miles south of Philadelphia.

The brothers were ordered detained after a juvenile hearing Friday. While authorities have not revealed their names because they are juveniles, neighbors and others in Clayton have identified them as 17-year-old Dante Robinson and 15-year-old Justin Robinson.

On Saturday, dozens of flower arrangements stood on the church's altar. Two were shaped like a soccer ball; one was a pink and white ice cream cone and another was a bicycle made from white flowers. Autumn's parents and family hugged mourners next to the girl's silver casket. A spray of purple and white flowers lay across it, along with three framed photos of her.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-27-Missing%20NJ%20Girl-Funeral/id-567d91bb5cea48b0a2b6ea10d323b6d1

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Saturday, October 27, 2012

Study Linking Aspartame, Cancer Causes Controversy

A study linking the artificial sweetener aspartame ? which is found in lots of diet sodas ? to a possible cancer risk in people was set to make a splash earlier this week. But shortly before the paper was published, in a very unusual move, the scientific leaders at the hospital released a statement saying the findings were too weak to promote.

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

It's MORNING EDITION, from NPR News. I'm Steve Inskeep.

RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:

And I'm Renee Montagne.

A scientific study was set to make a splash this week. It linked the artificial sweetener aspartame - found in lots of diet sodas - to a possible risk of cancer. But shortly before the paper was published, in a very unusual move, the teaching hospital behind the study released a statement saying the findings were too weak to promote to the public in a press release. NPR's Allison Aubrey reports.

ALLISON AUBREY, BYLINE: It was a press release titled "The Truth Isn't Sweet When It Comes To Artificial Sweeteners" that set the tone for how the media team at Brigham and Women's Hospital hyped the findings of a new study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. The release described how researchers had documented an increased risk of certain blood cancers in men who consumed more than one diet soda a day.

WALTER WILLETT: I think this grab's people's attention, because the question around aspartame is very hotly debated.

AUBREY: That's Walter Willett of the Harvard School of Public Health. He's a co-author of the paper. But he says the press release failed to fully characterize the findings and came across as frightening.

WILLETT: This is the kind of thing that probably should never have had a press release in the first place.

AUBREY: So why weren't the findings ready for primetime? Well, we'll get to that. But Willett says, by way of background, the reason he decided to look into this issue in the first place is because several years back, a big lab study of rats found an increased risk of blood cancers linked to aspartame. This made them curious. He and his colleagues realized they had the opportunity to look at this in people.

Lead author Eva Schernhammer of Brigham and Women's Hospital explains her colleagues had started asking thousands of people about their diet soda consumption way back in the 1980s, just after the FDA had approved the use of aspartame.

EVA SCHERNHAMMER: So we would ask them: How many servings of diet soda did you consume on average in the last years?

AUBREY: And they kept asking this question periodically for 22 years as part of a wider health and diet survey. So Schernhammer and her colleagues analyzed this data, and they found there did seem to be some associations between aspartame and cancer.

SCHERNHAMMER: This was a surprise to us, because we really had not expected an association between aspartame and any of the cancers that we had studied.

AUBREY: Specifically, they found an increased risk of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in men, but not in woman, which was puzzling. And they also saw an increased risk of leukemia that teetered on the edge of clinical significance. Even the authors acknowledge in the paper that it's entirely possible that these associations they found were due to chance. These weaknesses were a red flag to the independent experts we asked to review the paper earlier in the week.

DONALD BERRY: I'm not convinced that this paper shows a relationship between blood-related cancers and drinking diet soda.

AUBREY: That's Donald Berry. He's a professor of biostatistics at MD Anderson Cancer Center. He told us it's likely that the findings are due just to chance. The only other big study of people found no link between aspartame and cancer. And Amy Subar of the National Cancer Institute says what puzzled her about the new findings is that men in the study who drank regular, sugar-sweetened soda also seemed to have an increased risk of cancer. So perhaps something other than aspartame is at play here.

AMY SUBAR: There might be some other ingredient in soda that might be leading to this that's common to both diet and non-diet sodas, could be other lifestyle things associated with all soda drinking. And that's interesting, except you'd think you'd find it in women, also. And that's what's puzzling.

AUBREY: These are all interesting questions. And Marji McCullough of the American Cancer Society says they are worth further investigation.

MARJI MCCULLOUGH: I think you can bet that there will be other studies looking at this question.

AUBREY: But until there are more studies, there's no clear message to send to consumers. This is why study author Walter Willett agrees that the findings should never have been promoted to news organizations in the first place. Science, he says, is messy.

MCCULLOUGH: It's often a back-and-forth process.

AUBREY: And, he says, for now, the data linking aspartame to possible cancer risks are still in the gray area.

Allison Aubrey, NPR News.

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR's programming is the audio.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2012/10/26/163688001/aspartame-cancer-study-causes-controversy?ft=1&f=1007

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Increasing Demand for Oil and Gas & Depleting Oil and Gas Reserves Drives the Global Oilfield Chemicals Market, According to New Report by Global Industry Analysts, Inc.

GIA announces the release of a comprehensive global report on the Oilfield Chemicals markets. The global market for Oilfield Chemicals is forecast to reach US$31 billion by the year 2018. Incessant demand for oil and gas, depleting oil and gas reserves, increasing oil costs, production activities in technically challenging environment, and a need to extract products efficiently are expected to drive growth in the Oilfield Chemicals market.

San Jose, California (PRWEB) October 26, 2012

Follow us on LinkedIn ? Oilfield chemicals, utilized for oil and gas applications, such as drilling, completion and stimulation of wells, are posting significant growth, with demand expected to progress steadily in future. Growth in this sector is attributable to the declining oil and gas reserves, leading to an upsurge in exploration, development, and drilling activities in offshore, deepwater, as well as in developing regions. Traditionally, North America and Europe have been the major oilfield chemicals markets. However, the regions are witnessing a relatively slow growth at present, with growth emanating from the developing economies across the globe. The rapidly spreading industrialization and population growth in these regions are responsible for the demand shift.

While drilling fluids corner the biggest portion of the market in terms of sales, demand for chemicals used for enhanced oil recovery and well stimulation is racing upward. Increasing oil costs, production activities in technically challenging environment and a requirement to extract products efficiently constitute the primary demand driving factors for the oilfield chemicals market. The non-traditional crude oil, for instance, the heavy crudes extracted from the oil sands of Alberta and the Orinco Belt in Venezuela is witnessing increased demand. Furthermore, the availability of lighter sweet crude oil is low, and chemicals, such as emulsion breakers and corrosion inhibitors, are needed in large quantities for production.

Despite recovering from the 2008-2009 global economic crisis, the ?Arab Spring? upsurge that began in the Middle East and North Africa in late 2010, created political unrest in the region and disturbance in the related markets. Oilfield activity took the brunt impacting the oil and gas production and supply. With a halt in oil supply from Libya and other prominent exporters, oil and gas prices rocketed skyward, consequently boosting drilling and well completion operations in other parts of the globe. Additionally, the Gulf of Mexico fallout in the same year advocated oil production from wells already existing, creating more demand for chemicals.

The United States is at the forefront in the global oilfield chemicals market, as stated by the new market research report on Oilfield Chemicals. Declining oil reserves and maturing oilfields, depletion of existing oil and natural gas wells as well as the US Government?s decision in limiting the nation?s dependence on oil imports drives the oilfield chemicals market. Advancements in Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) techniques and their usage, well simulation techniques and shale gas operations are likely to create demand for raw materials, chemical formulations, and the chemicals required for hydraulic fracturing. The Asia-Pacific is expected to exhibit the fastest growth at a CAGR of 9.5% over the analysis period. Regionally, China is expected to lead, driven by the efforts to address native energy requirements by increasing the production of oil and gas from the old oil wells.

New fields of shale gas in the Asia-Pacific region are likely to push growth in markets for cementing, stimulation, and drilling chemicals, while mitigating the demand for production chemicals. Meanwhile, the demand for oilfield chemicals in the Middle East is not as intense, owing to the hassle free extraction in the area. The market witnessed investments in the oilfield of Iraq and the Middle East region, where the development of the novel and extraction techniques is underway. Technical challenges enveloping new oilfields in Iraq are bound to require relatively more quantities of costly oilfield chemicals, thereby increasing both volume and value growth of the same in the country. In Central Asia, republic countries such as Kazakhstan are exhibiting growth.

In terms of product segments, Drilling Fluids and Stimulation Chemicals are the largest product segments. The demand for drilling fluids is attributed to the climbing rig counts as well as drilling activity. However, growth is expected to mainly emanate from Stimulation Chemicals, on account of the increasing demand from the US, Mexico, China, Canada, Russia, and several other nations. Oil production from shale also has a positive influence on the demand for oilfield chemicals.

Major players profiled in the report include Akzo Nobel NV, Albemarle Corp., Baker Hughes, Champion Technologies Inc., Elementis Plc., Enerchem International Inc., Halliburton, Nalco Company, Newpark Resources Inc., Schlumberger Limited, M-I SWACO, and Weatherford Engineered Chemistry, among others.

The research report titled ?Oilfield Chemicals: A Global Strategic Business Report? announced by Global Industry Analysts Inc., provides a comprehensive review of the oilfield chemicals market, current market trends, major growth drivers, the challenges faced, an overview of the petroleum and natural gas industry, recent product introductions, strategic corporate developments, and profiles of major and niche global and regional market players. The report analyzes market data and analytics in terms of value for geographic regions including the US, Canada, Europe (UK, Norway, Kazakhstan, Russia and Rest of Europe), Asia-Pacific (Including Japan), Middle East & Africa, and Latin America. Key product segments analyzed include Drilling Fluids, Cementing Chemicals, Production Chemicals, EOR Chemicals, Stimulation Chemicals, and Completion & Workover Fluids. The report also provides historic analysis for the period 2004-2009 for additional perspective.

For more details about this comprehensive market research report, please visit ?


http://www.strategyr.com/Oil_Field_Oilfield_Chemicals_Market_Report.asp

About Global Industry Analysts, Inc.


Global Industry Analysts, Inc., (GIA) is a leading publisher of off-the-shelf market research. Founded in 1987, the company currently employs over 800 people worldwide. Annually, GIA publishes more than 1300 full-scale research reports and analyzes 40,000+ market and technology trends while monitoring more than 126,000 Companies worldwide. Serving over 9500 clients in 27 countries, GIA is recognized today, as one of the world's largest and reputed market research firms.

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Telephone: 408-528-9966


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Email: press(at)StrategyR(dot)com


Web Site: http://www.StrategyR.com/

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/increasing-demand-oil-gas-depleting-oil-gas-reserves-130625019.html

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LG E960 support manuals confirm Nexus 4 name, 8GB and 16GB configurations

LG E960 support manuals confirm Nexus 4 name, 8GB and 16GB configurations

The information leaks ahead Google's Android event next week continue to flow, with the latest thanks to support manuals on LG's Australian and UK websites. While we're already familiar with the phone's hardware thanks to a detailed Belarusian review, the manuals confirm it is going to be called the Nexus 4, and that along with the 8GB version we've seen there will definitely be a 16GB edition available. As you can see above, it also includes an induction coil for wireless charging and excludes any microSD slots for additional storage. This all comes after two separate Nexus 10 leaks earlier today, as well as a report by Wired of a lost Nexus 4 recovered in a San Francisco bar (sound familiar?) last month. Hit the source link below to check out the LG E960 PDF for yourself (you may need to select the "show all" radio button), although there's only a few diagrams and support info waiting within.

[Thanks, Tim aka Zurginator]

Continue reading LG E960 support manuals confirm Nexus 4 name, 8GB and 16GB configurations

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Scientists use molecular layers to study nanoscale heat transfer

ScienceDaily (Oct. 26, 2012) ? Scientific research has provided us with a fundamental understanding of how light (via photons) and electricity (via electrons) move within and between materials at the micrometer or nanometer levels, making possible a wide variety of miniature devices such as transistors, optical sensors and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS). However, man's knowledge of micro- and nanoscale heat flow is rudimentary at best. Now, a research team at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) has developed a novel system for examining and measuring nanoscale thermal conductance at the interface between two materials. With further refinement, the scientists believe their advance may one day provide data for applications such as harvesting electricity from waste heat, better cooling of microelectronic devices and "heat-seeking" targeting of disease cells by hyperthermal (above normal body temperature) therapeutics.

The team's findings will be presented by Mark Losego, formerly a post-doctoral fellow at UIUC and now a research assistant professor in chemical and biomolecular engineering at North Carolina State University, during the AVS 59th International Symposium and Exhibition, held Oct. 28-Nov. 2, 2012, in Tampa, Fla.

At the nanoscale, thermal properties are the result of vibrations between neighboring atoms. Bonds between atoms carry these vibrations similar to an oscillating spring. The UIUC team developed a technique for studying the effects of these bonds on heat transport across an interface between two different materials. "We wanted a system where we could observe, analyze and quantify thermal flow across an interface with atomic-level precision," Losego says.

The system starts with a substrate base of quartz crystal, upon which the researchers place molecular chains that are 12 carbon atoms long. At the base of each chain is a chemical "cap" that covalently bonds to quartz. The attraction of these caps to the substrate spontaneously aligns all of the carbon chains into an ordered array of molecules known as a self-assembled monolayer (SAM). At the opposite end of each carbon chain is a different kind of cap, either a thiol (sulfur and hydrogen) group that bonds strongly to metals or a methyl group (carbon and hydrogen) that bonds weakly.

"We then make use of a viscoelastic silicone stamp to 'transfer print' gold layers onto the SAM surface," Losego explains. "This process is similar to transferring a decal onto a T-shirt where the gold film is the 'decal' attached to the silicone stamp 'backing'. When we slowly peel away the silicone, we leave the gold layer on top of the SAM."

It is at the interface between the gold film and the SAM, Losego says, where nanoscale heat flow is characterized. "Changing the chemical groups that are in contact with the gold layer allows us to see how different bonds affect heat transfer," he adds.

Combined with an ultrafast laser technique capable of monitoring temperature decay (or heat loss) with picosecond (trillionth of a second) resolution, the UIUC researchers are able to use their experimental system to evaluate heat flow at the atomic scale. "We heat the gold layer attached to the monolayer and can monitor temperature decay with time," Losego explains. "Concurrently, we observe oscillations in the gold film that indicate the strength of the bonds at the gold-SAM junction. Using these measurements we are able to independently verify that strong bonds [fast-decaying oscillations] have rapid heat transfer while weak bonds [slowly decaying oscillations] have slower heat transfer."

The researchers plan to refine their nanoscale thermal measurement system and develop theoretical calculations to better interpret the data it produces.

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Credit report errors often a nightmare to fix

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Trying to straighten out errors in an individual's credit report can cause consumers to tear their hair out in frustration.

By Kelly Dilworth, creditcards.com

A federal law is supposed to guarantee that credit report errors get fixed. So why do some people wind up spending months?or even years trying to remove legitimate errors that are ruining their credit?

Take the case of Rahul Sharma of College Station, Texas. With the Fair Credit Reporting Act in place, it should not have taken Sharma six years and a meeting with a lawyer to get errors ranging from bad Social Security numbers to accounts that weren't his erased from his credit report. But despite the decades-old consumer protection law, which guarantees consumers the right to get legitimate errors off their reports, Sharma fell through the cracks of the credit reporting system.

Representatives across the credit reporting and banking industries say that cases like Rahul Sharma's are rare. "Like anything, (the credit reporting dispute process) is not a perfect system," said Nessa Feddis, vice president and general counsel at the American Bankers Association. "Sometimes mistakes happen."

However, consumer advocates and attorneys experienced with handling Fair Credit Reporting Act cases say that Sharma's hellish experience of dealing with errors serious enough to deny him credit for more than half a decade is a perfect example of the problems they have been complaining about for years. The automated credit reporting dispute system used by the three major credit bureaus ? Experian, Equifax and TransUnion ? is broken, they say, and is causing too many consumers such as Sharma to miss out on the opportunity to apply for affordable credit, get a job in certain industries or avoid rate hikes on everything from apartment rentals to new cell phones.

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"The dispute process has absolutely no value whatsoever for consumers," said Leonard Bennett, a consumer lawyer in Newport News, Va., who has repeatedly testified before Congress about the credit report dispute system.

After a consumer has carefully gathered evidence proving the information isn't theirs and written a detailed dispute explaining the mistake, the credit bureau will usually discard the packet of evidence, say consumer advocates. Instead, the dispute will get compressed into a two- to three-digit computer code and a 100-character summary, and it will be sent electronically to another automated system, where it may be reviewed solely by another computer, according to court documents and interviews with people familiar with the process.

If the automated system fails to catch and correct a mistake, consumers can dispute again. However, if they complain too many times, the credit bureaus can legally dismiss the complaints as frivolous and ignore them, trapping consumers in a nightmare of bad credit they didn't earn. Consumers' only way out? Sue.

Bureaus required to investigate disputes
By law, any time a consumer says there is something wrong on his or her reports, the credit bureaus are required to conduct "a reasonable investigation" into the disputed information and remove anything they can't verify as accurate. However, the reality is that "the credit bureaus actually spend very little time ? only a few minutes, at best ? investigating a consumer's dispute," said DeVonna Joy, an attorney with the Consumer Justice Law Center in Big Bend, Wis.

Consumer lawyers say the short amount of time credit bureaus spend investigating consumers' disputes is proof that the bureaus are skirting the law.

Credit bureaus say the issue is more complicated. They maintain that their systems are in compliance with the?Fair Credit Reporting Act?and they do the best they can with the resources they have.

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"We take our obligations very seriously and complete investigations and disputes as required," said Rod Griffin, director of education at the credit reporting agency Experian. Lenders wouldn't trust them if they didn't, he added. "Businesses rely on the accuracy of the credit history to make sound decisions, and if the credit reports were rife with inaccuracy, any usefulness or credibility would be undermined and we would provide no useful service," said Griffin.

Watchdog agency steps in
Until recently, the question of whether credit bureaus are investigating consumers' disputes as thoroughly as the law requires has largely been left up to juries to decide on a case-by-case-basis.

Before the federal consumer watchdog agency, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, gained regulatory authority on Sept. 30 of this year, the credit reporting industry was regulated solely by the Federal Trade Commission. The FTC?occasionally issued enforcement actions against companies that it said violated the Fair Credit Reporting Act. However, the FTC's resources were extremely limited, said Chi Chi Wu, a staff attorney for the National Consumer Law Center in Boston.?

As a result, many of the credit bureaus' dispute practices remained an industry secret, apart from snippets that were revealed in court cases and through congressional testimony, and the bureaus largely escaped serious regulatory scrutiny.

That's about to change, however. Examiners at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will soon begin scheduling office visits to determine how closely the credit reporting agencies are following the Fair Credit Reporting Act.

By doing so, consumer advocates hope that the bureau will finally begin answering the highly controversial questions that have split consumer advocates and industry leaders for years. For example: When it comes to credit report disputes, what exactly is a "reasonable investigation" under the law? And are credit bureaus ? and the entities that that provide them with the information that make up their reports ? expending enough financial resources to keep a reasonable majority of consumers from going through unnecessary turmoil trying to get errors removed from their reports???

A mostly automated system
When the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau begins scheduling on-site visits to the credit reporting agencies, consumer advocates say one of the first stops on their route should be the agencies' processing centers where the disputes initially get reviewed.

Most of those trips will require a passport. All three credit bureaus have outsourced at least part of their dispute programs to contractors abroad, said consumer lawyer Leonard Bennett.

Foreign employees of those contractor quickly scan consumers' disputes for relevant information and compare them with preset computer codes that describe typical consumer disputes. For example, a code might say "not his/hers" or "claims paid the original creditor before collection status or paid before charge-off." Or a dispute code may be even more general, such as "consumer states inaccurate information," with a note to the creditor to "provide and confirm complete ID and account information."

Once the worker has determined what code best fits the dispute, he or she will type the code into a brief online form called an Automated Dispute Verification Form, along with a 100-character summary (around 20 words) of the dispute, and send that form electronically to the original furnisher of the information.?

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That, said Bennett, is the full extent of the credit bureau's investigation process. "Once the data, your 10-page letter and all your exhibits and documents or affidavit, has been reduced to the two- or three-digit code, the credit bureaus' involvement is over," said Bennett.?

The employees don't conduct any other type of investigation, he said. Instead, their "single job is to read the letter as quickly as possible [and] determine which of a limited number of two- or three-digit codes best describes that consumer dispute."

Norm Magnuson, vice president of the consumer reporting agency trade group, the Consumer Data Industry Association, described a similar process. "Almost all disputes now are handled electronically," Magnuson confirmed. "There's a process where it comes to one of the CRAs and they input what the complaint is about."

Disputes are processed electronically, he said, in order to accommodate as many disputes as possible within the 30-day time frame that credit bureaus are allowed, by law, to investigate a dispute. "The genesis of this is that years and years ago, one of the criticisms was that it took too long to respond to complaints," said Magnuson.

"Almost all of the disputes that come in, they're fairly standard," he added. However, he admitted, some consumers with more complicated disputes do fall through the system's cracks. ?

"We try to devise a system that can accommodate people and get back to them in a timely manner, and I think that's what the system does," said Magnuson. "At least in 97 percent of the cases."?

If consumers' cases are more complicated, they can also try calling a customer service representative by phone, said Experian's Griffin, where they will get more personal attention. "Our representatives spend as much time as necessary to resolve an issue when they are on the phone with someone," he said.

Disputing by phone doesn't necessarily mean consumers will get a full airing of their disputes once they are translated onto paper, said the Consumer Justice Law Center's DeVonna Joy. "In litigation, I get their records and [the dispute] is reduced to one or two sentences, and you know they talked more than that," she said.?

?Once the credit bureaus' employees are finished translating a dispute into an Automated Dispute Verification Form, they send that form to the original supplier of the information through an electronic portal called e-Oscar. Usually, any supporting evidence that the consumer submitted with the dispute gets left at the bureau's processing center, say consumer lawyers.

"Initially, we don't necessarily transmit all of the documentation that comes to us in every case," said Griffin. "But we'll send it to the lender if necessary."

At that point, the credit bureau's investigation is done. "The credit reporting company's role is to accurately report what lenders are telling us is in their records," said Griffin. "We don't have direct access to a business's records," he said, so the bureaus must rely on the furnisher to investigate their records and ensure that they are accurate.

Consumer advocates say that's not an excuse. "If they don't have access to the files, they should ask for them," said the National Consumer Law Center's Chi Chi Wu. "The credit reporting agencies like to say they're just a library. They're just a database. But that's not true," she said. "The consumer reporting agencies are supposed to have an independent role," said Wu. "They're not supposed to be parroting the furnisher, which is what they're doing now." ?

The duty to actively and substantially investigate a dispute ? and examine any relevant evidence ? is in the case law, she said. ?

What's a 'reasonable investigation'?
For example, Newport News-based lawyer Leonard Bennett pointed to a 1997 3rd Circuit Court case, Cushman v. TransUnion, that he said sets the standard for a "reasonable investigation" under the law. "It's the most-often cited from coast to coast," said Bennett.

In that case, the judge ruled that the credit reporting agency TransUnion violated the Fair Credit Reporting Act by failing to compare evidence, such as mismatched handwriting samples, and independently verify the misinformation that the original furnishers, American Express and Chase, were reporting. ??

The 1997 case, in which Pennsylvania resident Jennifer Cushman's credit reports were littered with accounts opened by an identity thief, is a good example of how consumers' legitimate errors get repeatedly verified, said the attorneys.

Furnishers, such as banks or debt collectors, are also required by the act to conduct a "reasonable investigation" of a consumer's dispute. However, their investigation processes vary and many rely on automated systems as well.

For example, said Paul Hartwick, a spokesman for JPMorgan Chase, in an email, "We may receive credit bureau disputes from either individual consumers or from the credit bureaus. We have automated processes for handling both types of disputes."

Hartwick said that the bank's automated systems are set up to catch more complicated errors, such as when a clerical error at Chase caused the bank to misreport a consumer's information.

However, consumer lawyers say that multiple court cases have demonstrated that many furnishers' investigation systems are inadequate. "All they're doing is checking to see if what's in their computer system is the same information that's in the ACDVs (Automated Consumer Dispute Verification Form)," said Leonard Bennett. So, "what happens is, unless the creditor itself made the correction to its computer system, the dispute process is hopeless," said Bennett.

Nessa Feddis of the American Bankers' Association disagreed with that description. "I don't know how they know that unless they've been inside the bank," said Feddis.? "It can't just be, 'This is what it's in our files and that's what matched,'" she said. "They have to do something more than that."

However, Chi Chi Wu said that evidence shows not all furnishers are double-checking their own information. "In the case law, it's been documented of furnishers where all they do is check their own database," she says.

"In my mind, and I think in the minds of other people, (a reasonable investigation) means actually having a human being look into a matter," said Wu. "None of that happens with an automated system."

Cary Flitter, a consumer lawyer and law professor in Philadelphia, said that credit bureaus and information furnishers' decision to automate the dispute process, rather than staff it with trained investigators, comes down to dollars and cents.

"It's a business decision about the level of accuracy that they want competing with the business cost of fully or properly administering disputes," Flitter said. "At the end of the day, that's where it falls."

"If they get it wrong, they get it wrong," added Flitter. "The great majority of them don't do anything about it."

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