Saturday, December 31, 2011

6. BEING GEORGE WASHINGTON

A version of this list appears in the January 8, 2012 issue of The New York Times Book Review. Rankings reflect sales for the week ending December 24, 2011.

An asterisk (*) indicates that a book's sales are barely distinguishable from those of the book above it. A dagger (?) indicates that some retailers report receiving bulk orders.

Rankings reflect sales reported by vendors offering a wide range of general interest titles. The sales venues for print books include independent book retailers; national, regional and local chains; online and multimedia entertainment retailers; supermarkets, university, gift and discount department stores; and newsstands. E-book rankings reflect sales from leading online vendors of e-books in a variety of popular e-reader formats.

E-book sales are tracked for fiction and general nonfiction titles. E-book sales for advice & how-to books, children's books and graphic books will be tracked at a future date. Titles are included regardless of whether they are published in both print and electronic formats or just one format. E-books available exclusively from a single vendor will be tracked at a future date.

The universe of print book dealers is well established, and sales of print titles are statistically weighted to represent all outlets nationwide. The universe of e-book publishers and vendors is rapidly emerging, and until the industry is settled sales of e-books will not be weighted.

Among the categories not actively tracked at this time are: perennial sellers, required classroom reading, textbooks, reference and test preparation guides, journals, workbooks, calorie counters, shopping guides, comics, crossword puzzles and self-published books.

The appearance of a ranked title reflects the fact that sales data from reporting vendors has been provided to The Times and has satisfied commonly accepted industry standards of universal identification (such as ISBN13 and EISBN13 codes). Publishers and vendors of all ranked titles conformed in timely fashion to The New York Times Best Seller Lists requirement to allow for independent corroboration of sales for that week.

Publisher credits for e-books are listed under the corporate publishing name instead of by publisher's division.

Sales of both print books and e-books are reported confidentially to The New York Times. The Best Seller Lists are prepared by the News Surveys and Election Analysis Department of The New York Times. Royalty Share, a firm that provides accounting services to publishers, is assisting The Times in its corroboration of e-book sales.

An asterisk (*) indicates that a book's sales are barely distinguishable from those of the book above it. A dagger (?) indicates that some retailers report receiving bulk orders.

Click here for an explanation of the difference between trade and mass-market paperbacks.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=07662aa013cc8a77c62b0739cb4d8d8f

junior dos santos evelyn lauder devin hester devin hester shayne lamas cain velasquez dos santos

Friday, December 30, 2011

Chris Treadway: Community college student to help update historic resource list

Area community college students are getting a chance to see and learn firsthand about local historical sites while helping document them.

The Contra Costa County Historic Landmarks Advisory Committee, with the guidance of the Contra Costa County Historical Society, is updating its Historic Resource List for cities and areas around the county.

Interns will help by visiting and photographing the sites, updating ownership and condition details and researching other information needed to document historic homes and sites in the county.

Organizers are encouraging students at Contra Costa Community College District campuses to apply for the internships, particularly if they have an interest in state and local history.

Interns will be supervised by staff from the county society under the guidance of academic instructors.

Interns must provide their own transportation and the spots are unpaid, but there is the possibility they could receive academic credit through their college.

Areas to be updated in West County include Crockett, El Cerrito, El Sobrante, Hercules, Pinole and San Pablo. The area defined as North County includes Port Costa, Rodeo and Richmond.

Student interns are also needed for the east, central, south and mid county areas.

The experience would not only be educational but look good on a resume as well.

A list of historic resource sites in each of those areas is online at http://bit.ly/vjlGCK.

Details on the Historic Landmarks Advisory Committee can be found at www.contracosta.ca.gov/index.aspx?NID=539.

Interested students in West County can contact Webb Johnson at webbjohnson@comcast.net. The East County contact is Carol Jensen at historian@byronhotsprings.com, and the contact for all other areas is Mellissa Jacobsen at mjacobson@dvc.edu.

WEST COUNTY NOTES: The after-school program at the George Miller Center in Richmond reached its goal of collecting more than 172 warm coats this year to donate to the Bay Area Rescue Mission. The program has been holding a collection during the holidays for the past four years that has brought in more than 1,000 coats for the mission.

  • Jeff Rubin, the man behind that uniquely Pinole creation known as National Punctuation Day, has announced the winners of this year's paragraph contest. The contest, held in conjunction with National Punctuation Day on Sept. 24, brought in 220 entries from adults around the world, along with hundreds of entries from students at 38 schools. Rubin, aka "Punctuation Man," scrutinized the entries, and the winners can be found online at www.nationalpunctuationday.com.
  • The annual golf tournament held in November by the San Pablo Lytton Casino to benefit the Brookside Community Health Center raised more than $100,000, making it "our most successful tournament to date," said Margie Mejia, chairwoman of the Lytton Band of Pomo Indians.

    Despite rainy weather, more than 140 golfers participated in the tournament at Hiddenbrooke Golf Course in Vallejo and the dinner and award ceremony that followed.

  • Martino Gonzalez, the well-established restaurateur who specializes in Italian cuisine at La Strada in San Pablo and Napa, has a new venture.

    Restaurante La Revolucion, described as a "Latin-fusion bar and grill with California flair," opened earlier this month at the former Ground Round restaurant at 1900 Klose Way in Richmond.

    Gonzalez, known professionally as simply Martino, has been known for his community involvement during his 15 years at La Strada.

    He and his partners at the new restaurant, located near the Hilltop Cinemas, will hold a three-day grand opening on Jan. 6, 7 and 8.

  • Matthew Maclear of El Cerrito was appointed assistant general counsel for enforcement at the California Environmental Protection Agency this week by Gov. Jerry Brown.

    Maclear, 39, had been the statewide environmental circuit prosecutor for the California District Attorneys Association since 2006.

    He is a graduate of the McGeorge School of Law at the University of the Pacific.

    Contact Chris Treadway at 510-262-2784 or ctreadway@bayareanewsgroup.com. Follow him at Twitter.com/christreadway. Stay up-to-date on West Contra Costa news at IBABuzz.com/westcounty.

  • Source: http://www.contracostatimes.com/news/ci_19642196?source=rss

    steven tyler michael lohan fiddler on the roof rally squirrel rally squirrel scumbag steve scumbag steve

    Samsung Working on Quad-Core Galaxy Smartphone

    By: Vincent Chang |

    ?If Samsung adheres to its new tradition of announcing a new version of its flagship Galaxy smartphone at the Mobile World Congress in February, it is expected that the company will show off the new Galaxy S III handset.

    According to a Korean news report, the new handset is indeed under development, and should go on sale in the second quarter of 2012.

    The report by ETNews suggests the new smartphone will come with a quad-core CPU, support Android 4.0 operating system and may come with a higher resolution display screen.

    Samsung is also reported to be working on phones that support 3D displays and can record 3D video.

    On the web: ETNews via SammyHub

    ?

    Tags: [samsung]? [galaxy s]? [mobile world congress]? [android]?

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/cellular-news/LmiX/~3/0cQqim8kFuo/52406.php

    discovery channel jersey shore season 5 lea michele michael buble michael buble teddy roosevelt rita hayworth

    Santorum: Obama plays politcs with S.C. voter ID law (Washington Bureau)

    Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/180800186?client_source=feed&format=rss

    nor easter nor easter st.louis cardinals st.louis cardinals drag me to hell alot alot

    Thursday, December 29, 2011

    U.S. adds surveillance drone on Mexico border (Reuters)

    SIERRA VISTA, Ariz, Dec 27 ? U.S. authorities took possession of an additional high-tech surveillance drone on Tuesday to overfly the rugged Arizona borderlands to look for drug smugglers and illegal immigrants crossing from Mexico.

    The Predator-B drone is based at the National Air Security Operations Center in Sierra Vista, a few miles north of the Mexico border in southeast Arizona, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency said.

    The addition brings CBP's fleet of surveillance drones along the nearly 2,000-mile southwest border with Mexico to six. Four are based at the Arizona center, and two more overfly the border from Corpus Christi, Texas.

    "The missions from these two centers will allow CBP to deploy its unmanned aircraft from the eastern tip of California across the common Mexican land borders of Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas," CBP said in a statement.

    The unmanned aircraft are equipped with tools including powerful day and night vision cameras which enable operators to spot incursions by drug traffickers and illegal immigrants slipping over the border from Mexico.

    The surveillance operations under the program have led to the seizure of around 46,600 pounds of illicit drugs and 7,500 arrests along the southwest border.

    This past year, arrests of illegal immigrants crossing north over the southwest border dropped to 327,577, their lowest level since 1972 when President Richard Nixon was in the White House.

    Factors in the stark decline have included tightened border and workplace enforcement, a slowed U.S. economy providing fewer jobs to undocumented workers, and increased drug cartel-related violence in Mexico making the journey north more hazardous, according to analysts.

    The arrival of the Predator-B marks the second of two unmanned aircraft earmarked in supplemental budget provisions identified in August 2010.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mexico/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111227/us_nm/us_usa_mexico_drone

    bill of rights toys r us toys r us shame shame denver weather donovan mcnabb

    Police say neighbor confessed in death of Indiana girl (Reuters)

    (Reuters) ? The Indiana man accused of killing a nine-year-old neighbor he was watching told investigators he beat the girl with a brick, dismembered and dumped most of her body but kept her head, hands and feet in his freezer over the Christmas weekend, according to an affidavit filed on Tuesday.

    It said that authorities arrested 39-year-old Mike Plumadore, who was watching Aliahna Lemmon and her two sisters when she went missing near Ft. Wayne last week, on Monday after he confessed to killing the little girl, cutting her up with a hacksaw and disposing of most of her body in a nearby dumpster.

    Plumadore told police where they could find the child's remains, according to the affidavit filed in state court, and police technicians sent to his trailer in the mobile home park where victim's family lived found "what they believed to be human body parts, including a head," in his freezer.

    The girl, who was allegedly killed on Thursday and reported missing on Friday, had been staying with Plumadore, a family friend, for about a week.

    He will be formally charged with murder on Tuesday.

    (Reporting by Susan Guyett; Editing by James B. Kelleher and Jerry Norton)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111227/us_nm/us_crime_indiana_babysitter

    julian beever appeasement ian stewart ian stewart odom colt mccoy vt

    Wednesday, December 28, 2011

    LIPPER: Equine vs equity investing | Funds Hub

    Is betting on horses very different from picking stocks? Can understanding a gambler?s approach and mentality give a better understanding of fund managers?

    In searching for answers to these questions, I spoke to Paul Moulton, a professional gambler who originally worked in the fund management industry. He then set up a fund research company (Fitzrovia International, which he eventually sold to Reuters), although his working life began with an attempt to become a professional chess player.

    Most of the fraternity of professional gamblers who make a living from horse racing are what Moulton describes as ?traders? or ?chisellers?.

    This group do not really look at horses at all, but look at market movements, hedging back their bets, and aiming to make tiny but regular profits with much less risk. They remain tucked away in their homes in front of an array of computer screens.

    Moulton sees himself as part of a second, smaller group of professional punters, those he refers to as ?judges?, some of whom look at horses in the paddock to assess their physical condition and thus their chances, while others are more reliant on assessing form based on previous races.

    Some of them may even be conscious of the FSA?s warnings on funds? past performance, which is deemed to be no guide to future returns. Although past performance does tend to shorten a horse?s starting price.

    As part of this approach, Moulton has gathered vast amounts of data on all aspects of racing (jockeys, trainers, pedigrees, speed figures and so on) in a database that covers all horses in all races in the UK and Ireland since January 2005.

    Although his background in fund research lends itself to such an approach, Moulton admits that, while his original idea was to ?out-stat? everyone else, this approach has turned out to be much more limited for determining which outsiders to back.

    He did try to do all of this from home, but in the end he was better able to deal with losses when trackside. The journey home enables Moulton to carry out a post-mortem of his performance, win or lose, and to clear his mind before returning to the family.

    So he now spends more time looking at the horses in the paddock too, even though being at a course means that it is a little more ?archaic? when trying to work out ?what the market is doing?.?But even this has a beneficial side-effect: it is far easier to bet on too many horses in too many races when sitting at home and betting over the internet, he says, while, for practical reasons, this is far less the case when at a course.

    TOO MUCH INFORMATION

    Moulton acknowledges the above findings from Russo and Shoemaker. From his own experience of building a horse racing database, he is all too aware of the desire to add in a new piece of information after virtually every race.

    In the early days this process of amassing more and more data on which to base decisions was ?comforting? he says, but he has found that ?it doesn?t help results.? The more detailed any extra analysis that he runs, the smaller the sample size becomes (for more recent races) and the less meaningful the findings are.

    ?Once filtered to that degree, apparent patterns are really just statistical tricks.?

    At its heart, Moulton?s approach to placing bets is to look for value in the market. He creates a ?tissue? for each race, assessing the price at which he would be prepared to back a horse and then compares this to the odds offered by a bookmaker.

    Moulton tries to divorce himself from picking winners. ??Anybody can pick winners,? he says. ?There?s no point in picking winners if you?re backing them at the wrong prices, because sooner or later you?ll come a cropper.?

    It?s for this reason that he?s always reluctant to answer the question from the occasional punter ?who is going to win the 2.30 at Haydock??

    ?In all likelihood I?ll back several horses in the race if I think they?re good value and still expect to lose, which most [amateur] punters can?t quite get their heads around.?

    Yet after all this work over the past five years of professional gambling, it might come as a surprise that 93 percent of the time Moulton?s chosen horses lose.

    Luca Cumani, one of British racing?s leading trainers (and who trains some horses that Moulton owns), on hearing this said, ?if I got 93 percent of my decisions wrong, I would not be able to call myself a professional anything.? ? Moulton?s response to this is that it doesn?t matter as long as the average odds of his selections are greater than a 7 percent chance (or 13-1) because, in the end, ?it?s all about profit?.

    In the same way, if typically one backed horses at 33-1 (i.e. a 3 percent chance of winning), then one could get away with losing 96 percent of the time and still make a profit. This contrasts with picking 2-1 shots (a 33 percent chance), where one has to be right more than 35 percent of the time.

    In Moulton?s view, each gambler has to decide where on this ?risk spectrum? he believes he can succeed, much of which comes down to temperament. Most professional gamblers are focused on those horses with shorter odds, while Moulton chooses horses with longer odds but has to deal with losing more frequently.

    He admits that there are very few punters at his end of the spectrum. But this does not come as a surprise, indeed he seems to relish the apparent loneliness. As he says, ?it does do funny things to your brain when you lose 93 percent of your bets!?

    Whatever happens, he can draw more than a little comfort from the fact that all his work is tax free (since the 9 percent betting commission was abolished a decade ago) and has gone to great lengths to check that HMRC will not come knocking at his door . It is as though all of his investments are held in a huge ISA wrapper.

    To hit the golden 7 percent, he spends over 80 hours a week at work. His unwavering logic is that to spend that amount of time he needs a decent return, and to do this he needs to place a decent stake. ?So Moulton fairly routinely turns over ?100,000 a day at the big festivals and consequently turns over several million pounds a year.

    ?I don?t think there?s a serious professional gambler who has made 10 percent of turnover? he says, so his daily stakes of a few hundred pounds back in 2006 were simply not high enough to earn the sort of living he wants to sustain.

    Even to make ?25,000 a year, on 5 percent of turnover one would need to turn over ?500,000 a year or ?2,000 a day. ?As a result, Moulton concludes that ?betting on horses is only 50 percent of a professional gambler?s skill, the rest is in temperament and stake management, both if betting too much and too little.?

    DEALING WITH LOSING

    The biggest challenge for Moulton remains how to deal with losing runs when a 7 percent success rate looks further and further away.

    For Moulton it is in the nature of things that he will hit bad spells as winners don?t come neatly spaced between losses. His approach requires consistency but a run of losers has often tempted him to start tinkering with that approach in order to try and end the losing streak ? a fatal error.

    This has clear echoes of the pressure on fund managers to deliver short-term returns despite managing money for the long-term. Perhaps Professor John Kay, who is leading an independent review into long-term investing in UK equity markets, has considered talking to professional gamblers.

    Moulton has learned this the hard way. Each year he has gone through a ?horrible, horrible losing run? and each year he has tried to train himself to deal with it better. ?Indeed early on he admits to losing all confidence in his abilities. ?He puts such losing runs down to being in his chosen end of the risk spectrum and he admits it would be ?far better for my mental health? if he could find a proven method of making money from backing 4-1 shots.

    Despite this, after five full years of betting, with 7,000 to 9,000 bets each year, Moulton has experienced two years that were essentially flat (before expenses) and three ?pretty spectacular? years.

    The occasional anonymous mention in the pages of the ?Racing Post? stands as testament to some huge wins. In July 2008 one columnist wrote in disbelief at meeting Moulton and finding that he had won ?200,000 and ?250,000 within a few weeks of each other. And in September this year he made nearly ?600,000 over two pool bets.

    INSIDER?

    More generally, when considering the similarities with investing in the stock market, Moulton points out that the vast majority of the time, the competitive environment in which companies operate changes relatively slowly, enabling analysis to be carried out over a reasonable length of time and in depth.

    He contrasts this with the competitive environment for a horse race that can change in moments ? and often does, such as the previous race highlighting a bias relating to positions in the draw. And of course a horse race is over within a matter of minutes. Moulton has not had to develop the equivalent of a ?buy and hold? investment strategy.

    While he may have found an asset class uncorrelated to stocks, bonds or even gold, indeed even the euro zone crisis does not figure very prominently in the minds of punters, if oil rich Middle Eastern owners such as Godolphin (the Maktoum family?s private horseracing stable) decided to leave British racing, this would surely send an earthquake through the sport.

    Meanwhile, Moulton?s own moderate success as an owner ? despite friendships across a range of trainers and jockeys ? gives the lie to the idea that apparent ?inside information? is the key to success. ?? ?Indeed much trackside information is available to all, with those in the paddock able to tweet their views to punters within moments. Moulton himself is an avid tweeter ?? @moulton66. So ?market chatter? is increasingly open ? and you don?t get much more transparent than when a horse is sweating!

    As for dealing with bookmakers, his response makes clear the implicit trust in those relationships: ?If I had to choose one group of people with whom to do business the rest of my life, it would be bookies.?

    THE BITTER END

    Moulton would not be drawn on whether his family was the equivalent of dealing with investors in a mutual fund, although he has avoided running a syndicate because this would end up with him being answerable to shareholders. Instead he asserts that he is better at being a professional gambler than anything else he could turn into a career and so it offers the best chance for him to support his family comfortably.

    What might be seen as a risky career is bolstered by steadfast confidence. ?Even if I lost 50 percent of my capital, I would ? I would, I would, I would ? turn it around.?

    So in 2010 when he sold his beloved E-Type Jaguar to raise some cash, he did not adopt a more cautious approach and proceeded to lose the money made from the sale in 45 minutes on the racecourse.

    So how far would he really go? ?I would go all the way.?

    Conviction, dedication, self-awareness and a consistent investment process. Surely attributes all investors long for in a fund manager; although you would allow them some nerves if the trackside approach to capital preservation turned up in their fund factsheet.

    (Editing by Joel Dimmock) ?((joel.dimmock@thomsonreuters.com; Twitter: @reutersJoelD; +44 20 7542 3505;))

    Source: http://blogs.reuters.com/fundshub/2011/12/28/lipper-equine-vs-equity-investing/

    yule log ham recipes adrian peterson darlene love free kindle books roasted potatoes turkey recipes

    Quick Hits: Back to Business - Winging It In Motown

    Photo

    Hockeytown, No Limits

    Merry Chrismtas from The Production Line " The Production Line - TP:60
    In case you missed it, a nice holiday greeting drawn up by Stevie over at TPL. Great work as always.

    Red Wings' Jimmy Howard eager for first Christmas as father, enjoying standout season in net | MLive.com
    The guy deserves some R&R on Xmas after the way he's played so far this season.

    Red Wings can always count on their St. Nicklas (Lidstrom) to deliver | Detroit Free Press | freep.com
    All his teammates want for Christmas is more Nicklas Lidstrom.

    The Octopi Garden: A Winged Wheel Christmas
    Some Red Wings' holiday greetings.

    World Juniors Team Slovakia Preview: Puck Magician Jurco Key To Success | The Hockey Writers
    Big expectations for one of the Wings' top prospects.

    Around the NHL

    Merry Christmas: Leafs extend Wilson | ProHockeyTalk
    Brian Burke plays Santa Claus.

    Hoped-for snow nowhere in sight for Philly's Winter Classic | Detroit Free Press | freep.com
    No snow in Philly? Fine with me as long as there is no rain.

    My Little Pony: Hockey is Magic (yes, yes I did) - On the Forecheck
    The Preds as My Little Pony characters? ...okay then.

    We hope everyone had a great xmas. If anyone was wondering, due to Christmas falling on a Sunday, we didn't record an episode of WIIM Radio last night. We will be releasing a special episode this Thursday. We will be joined by the enemy this week. Brad Lee from St. Louis Game Time will be our guest. We'll be talking smack after the Wings drop the Blues on Tuesday and we'll look ahead to the game against the Blues on New Years Eve. If you have any questions for us to ask Brad, leave them in the comments or send them along to WingingItMailBag@gmail.com.

    Let's Go Red Wings.

    Source: http://www.wingingitinmotown.com/2011/12/26/2661447/quick-hits-back-to-business

    patriots steelers ravens bengals new england patriots nfl nfl

    Lawyer Morvillo, Martha Stewart defender, dies (Reuters)

    (Reuters) ? Lawyer Robert Morvillo, who led the courtroom battle of media celebrity Martha Stewart and other high-profile white-collar criminal defendants, has died at the age of 73, according to a notice on his firm's website on Sunday.

    Morvillo was regarded as one of New York's savviest criminal-defense attorneys, a master of establishing a kind of just us-folks rapport with jurors.

    The website statement did not specify the cause of death.

    Stewart may have been his best-known client. In 2004, despite Morvillo's efforts, she was convicted of lying to investigators about a sale of ImClone Systems shares and served five months in a West Virginia federal prison. ImClone is a wholly owned subsidiary of Eli Lilly and Co.

    Other prominent clients included John Zaccaro, husband of the late politician Geraldine Ferraro, who in 1984 became the first woman to run on a major party national ticket for vice president. Zaccaro, a real estate developer, was acquitted of felony bribery charges in 1987 with Morvillo defending him.

    Morvillo was an editor of White Collar Crime: Business and Regulatory Offenses and a co-author of the "White-Collar Crime" in the New York Law Journal. He was a founding partner in 1973 of a predecessor to the firm Morvillo, Abramowitz, Grand, Iason, Anello & Bohrer, P.C., where he was principal partner until his death.

    (Reporting By Jim Wolf in Washington)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111225/us_nm/us_usa_morvillo

    nfl mock draft 2012 adam lambert incendiary floyd mayweather kate upton winter solstice r. kelly

    Tuesday, December 27, 2011

    Samsung Galaxy S and Tab, No Ice Cream Sandwich for You!

    By SiliconIndia, Monday, 26 December 2011, 05:38 Hrs

    ') .css({ 'float' : 'left', 'width' : slideWidth }); $('#slideInner').css('width', slideWidth * numberOfSlides); $('#slideshow') .prepend('

    '); manageControls(currentPosition); $('.control') .bind('click', function(){ currentPosition = ($(this).attr('id')=='rightControl') ? currentPosition+1 : currentPosition-1; manageControls(currentPosition); $('#slideInner').animate({ 'marginLeft' : slideWidth*(-currentPosition) }); }); function manageControls(position) { if(position==0) { $('#leftControl').hide() document.getElementById("p2").style.display = "block"; document.getElementById("p3").style.display = "block"; $('#rightControl').show() } else if(position==numberOfSlides-2 ) { $('#leftControl').show() document.getElementById("p3").style.display = "block"; $('#rightControl').show() } else if(position==numberOfSlides-1 ) { $('#leftControl').show() document.getElementById("p2").style.display = "block"; $('#rightControl').hide() } } });


    Bangalore: The latest version of Google?s Mobile Operating System - Ice Cream Sandwich or Android 4.0- will not be available for Galaxy S and the 7-inch Galaxy Tab. In late November Samsung promised an up-gradation of OS for both Galaxy S and Tab, which now seems to be broken. The reason behind this omission of up-gradation is due to the additional software features in these devices like TouchWiz, widgets, video calling and carrier software pack-ins. TouchWiz is given the major blame due to which these devices doest have enough RAM or ROM to contain all Samsung-designed accoutrements without affecting the quality of use.


    The confusing fact is that Galaxy S is very much similar to the recently launched Galaxy Nexus which runs on Android 4.0. Samsung explains that ?Nexus runs solely on Android without the addition of Samsung?s TouchWiz UI. Hence, the Galaxy S would probably not be able to cope with the implementation of ICS (Ice Cream Sandwich), along with TouchWiz?. As there is no problem with Galaxy S?s?1-GHz Cortex A8 processor or RAM, which are perfectly capable to run the Android 4.0, its Samsung?s UI that obstructs Galaxy S from having the ICS update.? This point out the fact that if TouchWiz is removed from Galaxy S, the device might be capable of running the vanilla version of Ice Cream Sandwich without much trouble even though the experience will not that perfect.?


    There is going to be a vex in the minds of Samsung Smartphone and Tablet users due the barring of Ice Cream Sandwich for Galaxy S and Tab. Users are expecting a third party developer to come up with some new techniques to make these devices portable with the new OS. Other players like Motorola and HTC will be coming up with their ICS updates for their Smartphone and Tablets in another three to six months.


    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/si-techproduct/~3/E5h_JB4o2E4/Samsung_Galaxy_S_and_Tab_No_Ice_Cream_Sandwich_for_You-nid-101518.html

    joe walsh zsa zsa gabor heavy d dead heavy d dead alaska weather alaska weather election results

    Kendall and Kylie Jenner Get Two Lab Puppies for Christmas! (omg!)

    Kendall and Kylie Jenner Get Two Lab Puppies for Christmas!

    The Kardashian household size just increased by two bodies and eight legs.

    Mom and dad Kris and Bruce Jenner made it a Christmas-to-remember by giving their teen daughters Kendall and Kylie Jenner two chocolate lab puppies.

    PHOTOS: The Kardashians' sexy beach vacation

    "OMG OMG OMG!!!! Best Xmas present ever!!!!!!! 2 beautiful puppies!!!!! Ahhhh thanks mom and dad!!!!" Kendall, 16, tweeted on Saturday with a pic.

    "One of my babies!" sister Kylie, 14, added with another pic.

    PHOTO: See the Kardashian Christmas card

    And although the matching pups are now part of the famous household, their names surprisingly don't begin with a 'K."

    "Kendall & Kylie got 2 chocolate lab puppies for Christmas...A boy & a girl! Check out little Louis & Vuitton sleeping shhh," big sis Kim Kardashian tweeted Monday.

    PHOTOS: Kim Kardashian's terrible year

    Tell Us: What do you think of the puppies' names?

    Get more Us! Follow us on Twitter, Friend us on Facebook, Subscribe to Us Weekly

    Kendall and Kylie Jenner Get Two Lab Puppies for Christmas!

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_kendall_kylie_jenner_two_lab_puppies_christmas195650319/44007776/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/kendall-kylie-jenner-two-lab-puppies-christmas-195650319.html

    michael jackson trial carlos the jackal namibia namibia hell on wheels hell on wheels new york city marathon

    Monday, December 26, 2011

    One Of These Things Is Not Like The Other

    www.collegehumor.com:

    Standing out isn't always a good thing.

    Read the whole story: www.collegehumor.com

    '; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/26/one-of-these-things-is-no_n_1169923.html

    nba season iron bowl iron bowl bo jackson bo jackson ibogaine michigan football

    Science and Censorship: A Duel Lasting Centuries

    [unable to retrieve full-text content]When a federal panel asked two journals last week to withhold details on bird flu experiments, it was only the latest example of an ages-old conflict often rooted in issues of war and advanced weaponry.

    Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=0cc346a9bc42680a84384f521875ead1

    safe and sound botticelli x factor winner footlocker julia gillard julia gillard pecan pie

    Tear gas fired at protesters in China seaside town (AP)

    BEIJING ? Riot police in a southern Chinese coastal town fired tear gas Friday at protesters, including elderly men and women, on the fourth day of unrest over a planned power plant expansion, according to protesters' accounts and TV footage.

    Police and protesters in the town of Haimen squared off near a highway entrance that has become the focal point for protests this week, with residents demanding that authorities release an unknown number of demonstrators.

    The town's elders knelt on the road facing a barricade set up by riot police with helmets and shields several hundred yards (meters) away while others lit large incense sticks and planted them into a plastic foam makeshift altar, a protester said by phone.

    "They were begging the police to release those people that they've detained and praying that the riot police can see things more clearly," the 20-year-old saleswoman surnamed Yao told The Associated Press by phone.

    Haimen's protesters are demanding a halt to the planned expansion of a coal-fired power plant which they say has contributed to what they say is a rise in cancer cases and heavy pollution in the seas, a serious problem for a town where many make their living from fishing.

    The protests started Tuesday when thousands of people besieged a Haimen government office and blocked a highway. When riot police used tear gas in an attempt to disperse them, demonstrators hurled rocks, water bottles and bricks in return. Clashes broke out, injuring an unknown number of protesters and police, residents say.

    In response to the protests, the local government said Tuesday that it would temporarily suspend the power plant project, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

    But protesters say they have not heard directly from authorities on the matter and say several protesters in their teens or early 20s had been detained.

    Many of the protesters waved red plastic bags meant to signify red scarves worn by children as part of their school uniforms, photos from the scene showed.

    They held up banners saying "Release the people," "Defend our home" and "Oppose construction of power plant."

    It was not immediately clear how many people have been taken into police custody, but Xinhua said Thursday that five people had been detained by Wednesday for vandalism during the protests.

    Earlier in the day, police fired tear gas at the protesters, said another protester, a man surnamed Lin.

    "When they saw that more and more people had come to protest, they fired the tear gas to try to chase us away. At the same time, a big gust of wind blew toward us, so we all had to run," Lin said. "My tears ran continuously. Our eyes are all red."

    This is the third time police have used tear gas to disperse protesters in Haimen this week.

    "We have no weapons at all. All we are doing is standing here and protesting," Lin added.

    Hong Kong's Cable TV showed footage of tear gas clouds being blown toward protesters, scattering the crowd of hundreds of people. Riot police with helmets and shields had formed a blockade at the entrance to the highway.

    After three decades of laxly regulated industrialization, China is seeing a surge in protests over such environmental worries.

    In September, hundreds of villagers in an eastern Chinese city near Shanghai demonstrated against pollution they blamed on a solar panel factory. In August, 12,000 residents in the northeastern port city of Dalian protested against a chemical plant after waves from a tropical storm broke a dike guarding the plant and raised fears that flood waters could release toxic chemicals.

    ___

    Follow Gillian Wong on Twitter at http://twitter.com/gillianwong

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111223/ap_on_re_as/as_china_unrest

    osu football osu football christopher walken ok state ok state kurt budke regis philbin

    Sunday, December 25, 2011

    Repurpose an Ikea Laptop Surface into a Music Stand [Ikea Hacks]

    If you already own a camera tripod and need a music stand you can save a lot of money by adapting a $2.49 Ikea Brada laptop surface to fit the tripod.

    Repurpose an Ikea Laptop Surface into a Music StandTo make the laptop stand fit the tripod you'll need to purchase a metal nut that can fit the bolt on your tripod. Attach this nut to the stand, and now your tripod can also serve as a music stand and a portable laptop stand. With a pivoting camera tripod it should be much more adjustable than the average music stand.

    Ikja, Ik Hack...Pakjes... | Grow For It via IKEA Hackers

    Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/a5Wv8zi44os/repurose-an-ikea-laptop-surface-into-a-music-stand

    when does daylight savings start earthquake in texas earthquake in texas official time news 9 tuscaloosa tuscaloosa

    Arlington Cemetery to issue report on grave checks (Providence Journal)

    Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/177823689?client_source=feed&format=rss

    walmart black friday sales walmart black friday sales michelle obama booed at nascar polio cutler natalie wood christina aguilera

    Saturday, December 24, 2011

    Avatron?s Air Dictate App Makes Siri Take Notes On Your Mac

    airdictatePerhaps best known for the Air Display iOS app, Avatron is at it again with new app called iOS dictation app called (what else?) Air Dictate. But of course, Avatron wouldn't just cook up a straightforward dictation app -- there's a twist. Instead of just taking your voice input and transcribing it into a file on your iDevice, it actually syncs with your Mac and dumps the interpreted output into your text field of choice. As long as both devices are on the same wireless network, the connection yields quick and (mostly accurate) transcriptions.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/URNIK4hWtH4/

    nl mvp verlander verlander justin verlander pepper spraying cop pepper spraying cop somaya reece

    Friday, December 23, 2011

    US rep apologizes to first lady on 'big butt' quip (AP)

    MILWAUKEE ? Wisconsin Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner has apologized to first lady Michelle Obama for reportedly saying she has a "big butt."

    Sensenbrenner's press secretary says the Republican sent the first lady a personal note and released a statement Thursday saying he regrets his "inappropriate comment."

    Sensenbrenner's office would not release the note.

    The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel ( http://bit.ly/s1kBwP) reports Sensenbrenner referred to Michelle Obama's "big butt" while talking to church members at a Christmas bazaar at St. Aidan's Episcopal Church in Hartford earlier this month.

    Church member Ann Marsh-Meigs told the newspaper that she heard Sensenbrenner's remarks. She said the 16-term congressman was speaking about the first lady's efforts to combat childhood obesity, and added, "And look at her big butt."

    Michelle Obama's press office didn't immediately return a request for comment Thursday.

    ___

    Information from: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, http://www.jsonline.com

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_re_us/us_sensenbrenner_first_lady_apology

    trinidad trinidad jeff bezos slither slither craigslist killer chattanooga

    Don't Expect Any Classic Cameos in the Star Trek Sequel

    star-trek-enterprise-ship-slice-01

    Director J.J. Abrams is gearing up for a mid-January start date for the sequel to his highly successful Star Trek pic, and details on the project are starting to trickle down. While one of the neater aspects of the 2009 flick was Leonard Nimoy reprising his role as Spock with the help of a very convenient time-travel aspect, we now have word that no cast members from the original Star Trek series will be popping up in the sequel (sorry William Shatner). Sources tell Showbiz 411 that Abrams has no plans to include any original cast members in the sequel.

    While it?s not exactly mind-blowing information, I think it?s wise to stick with Abrams? rebooted cast. Nimoy?s inclusion in Star Trek was a nice way to bridge the gap between the other films and Abrams? take, but there?s no need to dwell on the past in future installments; we?re happy to follow the new cast in original, separate stories. Following Benicio Del Toro?s departure from the flick, Edgar Ramirez is now the frontrunner to take on the villain role. The untitled Star Trek sequel opens in 3D on May 17th, 2013.

    Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1924180/news/1924180/

    mark buehrle rick perry ad rick perry ad richard cordray dragnet dragnet immaculate conception

    Monday, December 19, 2011

    HBT: Bonds to be sentenced for obstruction of justice

    Barry Bonds finds out the penalty for minor hemming and hawing today, as he will be sentenced in U.S. Federal court for his April conviction.

    Most likely: probation in the form of house arrest. I?m assuming his house is pretty nice, though. ?But that?s what other athletes in the BALCO case have gotten for single-count convictions. The feds want him to do hard time, but it just ain?t gonna happen.

    But no matter what happens, this should serve as a lesson to all of you: don?t ramble for a minute before answering a question. Ever.

    Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/12/16/barry-bonds-to-be-sentenced-today/related/

    noreaster steve miller band boston weather kara dioguardi thomas kinkade the shining stanford

    Sunday, December 18, 2011

    (Founder Stories) Charity: Water?s Harrison Ends His Hard Partying Ways To Solve ?The Water Crisis?

    Founder Stories Charity Water 1.mp4Scott Harrison is the founder of Charity: Water an organization he founded after waking up to the realization he was living a "dark, kind of decadent selfish existence" as a nightclub promoter whose life revolved around getting "people wasted for a living." He tells Dixon at the age of 30 "I wanted to change the whole world and thought I could end the water crisis in my lifetime and I could also reinvent charity."

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/cFzPyDlFntc/

    ali fedotowsky krill oil krill oil black friday 2011 rhodium uppity uppity

    Saturday, December 17, 2011

    Imprisoned activist's daughter detained in Bahrain (AP)

    Bahrain ? A daughter of a prominent Bahraini activist was detained early Friday during an anti-government demonstration in the Gulf kingdom that has been roiled by months of protests and crackdowns, a rights group said.

    Nabeel Rajab, the president of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, says Zainab al-Khawaja was detained during a rally outside the capital Manama. She is a daughter of Bahrain's most prominent political activist, Abdulhadi al-Khawaja, who was imprisoned for life along with seven other opposition leaders in June. A special security tribunal, set up under emergency rule, convicted them of anti-state crimes.

    The rally, which began on Thursday near the town of Diraz and other Shiite villages west of the capital, was marked with clashes as Bahraini security forces used tear gas and stun grenades to disperse hundreds of opposition supporters attempting to protest alongside a highway leading to Manama.

    Zainab's arrest came just hours after the U.S. State Department's top human rights envoy visiting the Gulf island nation expressed concern about Bahrain's use of tear gas and other tough tactics against the majority Shiite protesters. They have been campaigning for greater rights from the Sunni monarchy since February.

    The government said authorities were looking into the circumstances of Zainab al-Khawaja's arrest.

    Along with her father, al-Khawaja's three other male relatives have been convicted in court and imprisoned during Bahrain's uprising, including her uncle, her brother-in-law and her husband, the father of her 2-year-old daughter. The 28-year-old activist has campaigned relentlessly for their release and went on a hunger strike for 10 days earlier this year to protest their detention.

    More than 35 people have died in clashes and protest-related violence since February, inspired by other Arab Spring revolts. Bahrain's protests are the largest and most sustained to have hit the Arab monarchies and sheikdoms that line the Persian Gulf.

    Last month, an international panel that investigated Bahrain's unrest detailed abuses and excessive force in Bahrain's crackdown on protest. Its 500-page report that was released Nov. 23 also criticized the special security court that has sentenced dozes of opposition supporters, activists and doctors and nurses who treated injured protesters to prison sentences.

    Three protesters were also sentenced to death after they were convicted in two separate trials of killing police officers.

    The report by the Bahrain Independent Commission of inquiry recommended authorities review convictions and sentences handed down by the special court.

    On Thursday, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Michael Posner, head of the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor called on both the government and protesters to refrain from violence. As host to the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet, Bahrain is strategically important to the United States.

    Posner told reporters in the capital Manama that Washington remains concerned about the government's "excessive use of force, including tear gas, in response to ongoing street protests."

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_bahrain

    velasquez vs dos santos velasquez vs dos santos manny pacquiao vs. juan manuel marquez manny pacquiao vs. juan manuel marquez cain velasquez vs dos santos cain velasquez vs dos santos oregon stanford

    Friday, December 16, 2011

    Michael Kors designs a successful IPO

    Richard Drew / AP

    Fashion designer Michael Kors, center, applauds as the IPO of Michael Kors Holdings begins trading on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Thursday.

    By Sarah Skidmore, The Associated Press

    Michael?Kors understands what fashion-conscious shoppers desire. Apparently, he knows what investors want, too.

    The designer's company, Michael Kors Holdings Ltd., raised $944 million after selling 47.2 million shares in its initial public stock offering Wednesday night, valuing the company at $3.8 billion. It had planned to sell about 42 million shares for between $17 and $19. But like demand for some of Kors' designs, investors clamored for more and that helped push the price to $20 per share.

    The shares spiked as much as 25 percent in trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

    The success of the Michael Kors IPO is a testament to the resilience of the well-heeled set which has continued spending through tough economic times, and the company's strategy of producing a diverse array of items, so that it's not overly focused on individual product categories in case one of them falls out of fashion. More broadly, the IPO defies what has been an otherwise weak year for companies looking to raise money through new offerings of stock. For Kors personally, it means a payday of more than $100 million.

    "The IPO market has not shown grandiose returns, but this was on everyone's buy list," said Scott Sweet, a senior managing partner at IPOBoutique.com.

    Kors, an American designer who became a household name in recent years as a judge on fashion design competition show "Project Runway," has been one of the top names in fashion for years, dressing countless celebrities and even First Lady Michelle Obama. His designs, for men and women, are more practical luxury than haute couture. The focus is traditional American style with just a hint of high-fashion glitz.

    The company, based in Hong Kong, makes high-end handbags, shoes and clothing that it sells at its own shops and through other retailers. A Michael Kors crocodile handbag can run more than $2,000 and a halter dress more than $7,000, but the bulk of its business is centered on more affordable luxuries for wealthy shoppers such as $300 sunglasses and $600 purses.

    While most consumers are feeling the drag of the economy, wealthy shoppers in the U.S. and abroad are spending more freely. That has helped companies such as jewelry seller Tiffany & Co., handbag maker Coach Inc. and luxury retailer Nordstrom Inc. recover from the recession faster than the rest of the industry. In 2011, U.S. retail sales of luxury items is up more than 5 percent from a mid-recession low in September of 2009, according to an estimate by MasterCard SpendingPulse.

    Michael Kors has been one of the beneficiaries of that spending. The company's net income soared 85 percent to $56.9 million in the 2011 fiscal year and its revenue increased 58 percent to $803.3 million in 2011. Revenue from its stores open at least a year, considered a key indicator of a retailer's performance, jumped 31 percent during the first two months of its third quarter, which ended Nov. 26.

    The company's strong performance is helping to fuel rapid expansion. The company added 30 stores in its 2010 fiscal year and plans to open 40 more in fiscal 2011. It currently operates 184 stores in North America and 37 internationally. Its growth potential makes it stand out in a less-than-stellar year for the IPO market. In 2011, the total number of IPOs filed rose nearly 5 percent from 2010, but the number that actually made it to market fell 20 percent, according to Renaissance Capital, as many companies either withdrew or postponed their offerings because of the skittish financial markets. Adding to the malaise, total proceeds raised through IPOs have fallen 11 percent.

    "You have to separate the overall market environment from a company like Michael Kors that is in a very strong growth period," said Linda Killian, principal at Renaissance Capital, an IPO-focused investment firm. "Investors want to own a company like this, irrespective of what is going on in the market."

    Prada and Salvatore Ferragamo, two other luxury brands, went public this year with limited success. Prada had a lackluster debut in June on the Hong Kong exchange and its shares have fallen 8 percent since. Ferragamo's stock jumped on its first day in trading in Milan, but it has climbed only 9 percent from its closing price on its first day.

    Analysts say Michael Kors could fare better because it is a younger company, has a more recognized name and it targets a broader swath of shoppers. It has gone public in its growth phase, while Prada and Ferragamo made their debut much later in their development.

    But there is some risk. Some analysts worry the potential growth of the luxury market is overblown and that wealthier shoppers could retreat if more economic tumult hits.

    "Luxury has been strong," said Morningstar retail analyst Paul Swinand. "But I worry that we are at the peak."

    Michael Kors stock trades under the ticker symbol KORS. Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs were the lead underwriters on the offering.

    Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/15/9471800-michael-kors-designs-a-successful-ipo-stock-spikes

    psat psat brenda song mountain west mountain west rickross rickross

    World Golf Hall of Fame to induct Dan Jenkins in 2012

    Jenkins is also in the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Hall of Fame.

    Dec. 14, 2011

    FORT WORTH, Texas -- The World Golf Hall of Fame & Museum will enshrine award-winning journalist Dan Jenkins as part of its Class of 2012. The 82-year-old writer was selected through the Lifetime Achievement Category.

    Jenkins will be inducted along with Phil Mickelson and Hollis Stacy into the Hall of Fame at its Induction Ceremony on May 7, 2012 at World Golf Village in St. Augustine, Fla. The Ceremony is held on the Monday of THE PLAYERS Championship week.

    PGA TOUR Commissioner Tim Finchem and World Golf Hall of Fame Chief Operating Officer Jack Peter made the announcement by teleconference, with Jenkins joining from his long-time home in Fort Worth, Texas.

    "Dan has been a vital part of the game for more than 60 years," Finchem said. "His unique brand of storytelling in newspapers, books, Sports Illustrated and Golf Digest helped introduce golf to millions of fans. His contributions to sports journalism, especially golf, make him worthy of this honor."

    Jenkins is regarded as one of America's greatest sportswriters. His chronicles of Texas golf in the 1950s, specifically of Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson, are legendary. When Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer were starring in the 1960s and 70s, Jenkins was at Sports Illustrated, reporting on their exploits with award-winning stories. Jenkins, the author of several best-selling sports books, still maintains a regular column for Golf Digest.

    Jenkins won the 1995 PGA Lifetime Achievement in Journalism Award from the PGA of America and was inducted into the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Hall of Fame in 1996. He won his first award in the Golf Writers Association of America's annual writing contest in 1957 while working for the Fort Worth Press newspaper. In 2011, he earned his ninth career award. It was the first time he was honored in the Internet category.

    "I can only say as a native of Fort Worth, Texas, that I'm extremely proud to keep following Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson somewhere," Jenkins said. "Not with my golf game, but with my typewriter."

    The Hall of Fame will round out the Class of 2012 with a final announcement on Thursday, Dec. 15.

    "Dan is a legend," Peter said. "He has been telling some of golf's greatest stories for generations and we are honored to be able to tell his story at the World Golf Hall of Fame. He is a fantastic addition to the Class of 2012."

    Source: http://www.pgatour.com/2011/r/12/14/dan-jenkins/index.html

    gold rush gold rush chili recipe chili recipe grimm jello shots tashard choice

    Wednesday, December 7, 2011

    Brinkley vows to promptly repay $531k back taxes (omg!)

    FILE - In this Oct. 5, 2011 file photo, Model Christie Brinkley attends the premiere of "Ides of March" at the Ziegfeld Theatre in New York. Brinkley vows she'll immediately repay the $531,000 she owes in back taxes. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini, File)

    NEW YORK (AP) ? Christie Brinkley vows she'll immediately repay the $531,000 she owes in back taxes.

    New York's Daily News recently reported the Internal Revenue Service has filed a tax lien against the supermodel.

    Brinkley says in a statement the lien was a "result of an error" and pledges it will be paid in full by Wednesday.

    Brinkley says she regrets not paying more attention to her accounting. She says she's been focused on her parents, who are dealing with "serious health issues."

    The 57-year-old Brinkley was married to Billy Joel and appeared in his "Uptown Girl" video. She made her Broadway debut this year playing Roxie Hart in the musical "Chicago."

    She says she considers herself "lucky to have been employed" since she was 17 years old.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_brinkley_vows_promptly_repay531k_back_taxes_000328991/43814612/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/brinkley-vows-promptly-repay-531k-back-taxes-000328991.html

    boise state football jack and jill uss carl vinson holly marie combs unc basketball college basketball gunsmoke

    Tuesday, December 6, 2011

    Insight: Stem cell therapy poised to come in from the cold

    Mon Dec 5, 2011 8:09am EST

    (Reuters) - A rogue surgeon injects stem cells from a fetus into a sick man's brain. The cells morph and form body parts. When the man dies, the pathologist finds cartilage, skin and bone clumped in his brain.

    The scene is not from a horror movie; it happened to Max Truex, a former Olympic runner who suffered from Parkinson's disease. The case sent a chill through the scientific community when it came to light 15 years ago and typifies some of the hurdles researchers have faced while trying to bring stem cell therapies to the market.

    Now, it appears, their efforts are closer than ever to paying off.

    Dozens of adult stem cell treatments are moving through clinical trials and showing early success, raising hopes that some could reach the market within five years.

    "It will only take a few successes to really change the field," said Gil Van Bokkelen, chief executive of Athersys Inc and chairman of the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine. "As you see things getting closer and closer to that tipping point, you're going to see a frenzy of activity take place."

    Many of the trials focus on heart disease and inflammatory conditions, some of the biggest markets in medicine. The cells used are derived from adult tissue such as fat, or bone marrow, thereby circumventing the ethical concerns raised by the use of cells derived from embryos.

    Data for the most part remains early, but as more results emerge, pharmaceutical companies are beginning to take note.

    "A lot of big companies are looking to place bets on some Phase II products once that data has been confirmed," said Paul Schmitt, managing partner at venture capital firm Novitas Capital. "Even now they're attending all the medical meetings and talking to all the stem cell companies."

    Venture funds like Novitas are taking different approaches to playing the emerging field. Novitas invested $4 million in Amorcyte Inc, a company recently acquired by NeoStem Inc that is developing a treatment for heart disease. It is sticking to that investment for now.

    By contrast, Aspire Capital Partners LLC is investing more broadly in the hope that one success will offset the inevitable failures.

    "My philosophy in the stem cell space is that it's very difficult at this point to pick the winners and losers," said Steven Martin, managing member at Aspire. "We believe that over time there will be some very significant clinical progress, and valuations will improve, but we're still a long way from an approved therapy."

    In the meantime, he said, "we are willing to be patient because we think the upside is tremendous."

    GROWING INTEREST

    Aastrom Biosciences Inc recently presented promising results from a mid-stage trial of its treatment for patients with critical limb ischemia, a disease in which blood flow to the extremities is restricted, at the American Heart Association's annual meeting. A mid-stage trial from Australia's Mesoblast Ltd showed its stem cell product reduced the rate of heart attacks and the need for artery clearing procedures by 78 percent.

    "We're actually developing products now," said Timothy Mayleben, chief executive of Aastrom, which is using cells derived from a patient's own bone marrow to develop treatments for cardiovascular disease. "For the first time you are starting to see data being presented at major medical meetings."

    Mesoblast has attracted more interest from investors than most. In late 2010, Cephalon Inc took a 20 percent stake in the company, which now has a market value of $2 billion -- far greater than any other pure play company in the space. Cephalon was bought this year by Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd..

    "Mesoblast gets this out-sized valuation by being a standard bearer in a risky field that everyone feels has a lot of promise," said Raghuram Selvaraju, an analyst at Morgan Joseph TriArtisan.

    Shire Plc said in May it planned to establish a new regenerative medicine business, and kick-started it with the $750 million purchase of Advanced BioHealing Inc, which makes a skin substitute for treating diabetic foot ulcers.

    Pfizer Inc, Johnson & Johnson and Roche Holding AG are members of the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine, a nonprofit group that promotes awareness of the field. Pfizer has a regenerative medicine unit and a partnership with Athersys. But their projects are small.

    "Big pharma companies will be more interested in investing once they see data in hundreds of patients," said Schmitt.

    Once that happens, there will be a land rush, he said, just as there was with monoclonal antibodies, genetically engineered molecules such as Roche's breast cancer drug Herceptin and Abbott Laboratories' rheumatoid arthritis drug Humira.

    "Monoclonal antibodies were a missionary effort for many years, all through the eighties and nineties," Schmitt said. "They were called silver bullets, and eventually those bullets turned to gold."

    According to GBI Research, the market for monoclonal antibodies was worth $15.6 billion in 2010 and is expected to reach $31.7 billion by 2017.

    Stem cell therapy, which once promised to deliver cures for everything from Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's to spinal cord injury, has followed a similar path of enthusiasm followed by disappointment.

    "There was a lot of hype around the industry early on and the industry failed to live up to that hype," said Aastrom's Mayleben.

    Now stem cell therapy is gaining credibility again as real clinical data begins to emerge.

    "From an investor standpoint, the time lines are long, but the opportunity to transform medicine and science is unlike anything else out there," said Aspire's Martin.

    MASTER CELLS

    The promise of stem cells, which have been used for 40 years in bone marrow transplants, lies in their ability to repair tissue, reduce inflammation, regulate the immune system, and respond to calls for help from multiple places inside the body. Stem cells are the body's master cells - blank slates that renew themselves and mature into specific cell types in the heart, muscle and other organs.

    Embryonic stem cells are uniquely capable of differentiating into every type of mature cell in the body, and were long viewed as the most promising for regenerating tissue.

    But harvesting stem cells from embryos requires the destruction of the embryo itself, a process opposed by conservative Christian groups. Moreover, their endless capacity to divide can lead to the formation of teratomas, or stem cell cancers.

    Recently, Geron Corp, the world's leading embryonic stem cell company, said it could no longer fund its stem cell work and would focus on developing cancer drugs. It closed its trial for spinal cord injury.

    Unlike embryonic stem cells, adult stem cells have a more limited capacity to differentiate, but appear able to reduce inflammation and promote blood vessel formation. Furthermore, they can respond to damage in the body in a flexible and dynamic way, offering advantages over traditional drugs.

    "They seem to be preprogrammed to act some way in tissue repair, not to form an organ or a tissue," said Douglas Losordo, head of stem cell research at Baxter International Inc, which is developing cell therapies for heart disease. "The cells that we use are very effective at stimulating the formation of new blood vessels, but if I wanted to make a brain cell out of those cells they would not be very good at it."

    These are the type of stem cell treatments, delivered by infusion, injection or catheter, that are being developed today.

    Some companies, such as Celgene Corp, Pluristem Therapeutics Inc, Athersys and Mesoblast are developing so-called allogeneic products designed to be sold with the ease and scale of a traditional pharmaceutical. Cells are taken from a single donor, expanded, frozen and shipped for use in thousands of people.

    "We wanted to create a product that everyone could receive and not have to match every donor to every recipient," said Robert Hariri, chief executive of Celgene's Cellular Therapeutics unit.

    Aastrom, Baxter, NeoStem and Cytori Therapeutics Inc use cells taken from a patient's own body in what is known as an autologous transfer. This personalized approach eliminates the risk that the cells will be rejected.

    "There are going to be dividing lines in the industry between autologous and allogeneic and there are some indications where one will be better than the other," said Jason Kolbert, head of business development at NeoStem.

    "It may be that immediately following a heart attack you would want to use an allogeneic therapy to limit the damage in those first few hours, and then follow up after day five with an autologous product like ours."

    Different types of stem cell are being used for different diseases. Cytori is developing a heart disease product derived from fat cells, for example, while Celgene is using placental cells for Crohn's disease and rheumatoid arthritis therapies.

    Fetal cells are also being explored. Neuralstem Inc, for example, is developing treatments for neurological disorders from an aborted fetus and is in the early stages of testing a treatment for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, known also as Lou Gehrig's disease.

    "I think Neuralstem is one to watch," said Aspire's Martin.

    CHALLENGES AHEAD

    As cell therapies move further through clinical trials, companies will need more money, and funding is scarce. Aastrom's shares have fallen 37 percent since reaching a year high of $3.47 in June as investors brace for another dilutive capital-raising effort.

    Companies with credible partners will likely have an advantage. Athersys has a partnership with Pfizer; Cytori has a partnership with General Electric Co; Pluristem has a partnership with United Therapeutics Corp. Celgene, which makes cancer drug Revlimid, has resources of its own.

    Yet even if companies remain afloat long enough to bring a product through late-stage clinical trials, it is unclear what regulators like the Food and Drug Administration will require in order to approve them.

    Some believe the regulatory hurdles for treatments derived from a patient's own cells will be lower than those where the cells come from donors, since there is less risk of cell rejection. However, no clear pathway has yet been established.

    "We need a clear, consistent and rigorous regulatory framework," said Athersys's Van Bokkelen "The FDA is actually willing to provide lots of guidance and assistance to sponsors, if you just ask them."

    (Reporting by Toni Clarke in Boston and Deena Beasley in Los Angeles; Editing by Michele Gershberg, Edward Tobin and Tim Dobbyn)

    Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/b3EEDVX8DSQ/us-insight-stem-cell-therapy-idUSTRE7B30FH20111205

    the island the island mcdonalds beating dreamcatcher georgia tech big east expansion big east expansion