Sunday, December 23, 2012

Crowd gathers at Griffith Observatory to mark non-apocalypse

In the end, chances of a Maya apocalypse Friday night were infinitesimal ? in fact nonexistent, according to a group of NASA experts.

But that didn't stop some Angelenos from cashing in on the notion of "no tomorrow." Across the city, businesses offered bomb shelters, T-shirts, "Mayan sweepstakes" and bucket list raffles. Nightclubs threw apocalypse-themed DJ parties. Even T.G.I. Friday's got into the spirit with a "Last Friday" celebration at the Hollywood & Highland Center.

Griffith Observatory took an aggressive stance against the doomsayers, holding a special gathering with educational talks and lectures debunking the apocalypse and extending its hours to one minute past midnight.

"We decided, well, we'll stay open and get everyone past the 13th baktun," Director Ed Krupp said, referring to the Maya calendar period that was supposed to end.

Hundreds lined up to peer through telescopes that magnified the night sky by up to a thousand times and trade rumors of planetary alignments and apocalypse parties.

Rick Matlock, 40, of San Pedro said the prophecy rumors never troubled him. He came to the observatory to help his son, a Cub Scout, earn an astronomy badge.

"I woke up this morning and checked Facebook, and guess what? Everyone was still alive," Matlock said.

Quashing the Maya apocalypse rumor has taken nearly a decade, said Griffith astronomical observer Anthony Cook. The rumors began in 2002, when conspiracy theorists decided that the observatory's closing was an attempt to hide the passage of Nbiru, supposedly a stealth planet, which according to one theory was supposed to crash into Earth on Dec. 21.

"Of course, we were just under renovation," Cook said.

Krupp said media attention on "this Mayan calendar business" began to create public anxiety. He fielded calls from nervous parents and teachers, while observatory guides reported that Maya apocalypse questions dominated the conversations on tours.

Michael Kirkpatrick was also worried, but for a different reason. If a secret planet collided with and destroyed the Earth, he would be out $1,000.

The 61-year-old retiree had struck a bet with his sister, whom he called a "crystal gazer." He plans to collect when he heads over to her house for Christmas.

"I know she's going to [skip out] on it, though," Kirkpatrick said.

With 10 minutes to midnight, about 300 people gathered at the steps out front. Excitement rippled through the crowd and some tried to start the wave. Couples held each other close, as children rubbed sleep from their eyes.

With 10 seconds to go, the crowd took up the countdown and thrust smartphones into the air:

"5, 4, 3, 2, 1..."

Then, it all ended with a bang ? or rather a man striking a large bronze-colored gong, followed by cheers.

The crowd dispersed quickly. One man shouted, "Los Angeles, ladies and gentlemen!"

In the distance, the lights of the city shimmered, dreamlike.

frank.shyong@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/QsNkmImxQCc/la-me-1223-mayan-end-20121223,0,1630213.story

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New Jersey Close to Online Gambling (Again) - Law Across the Wire ...

Well now everything dies baby that?s a fact
But maybe everything that dies someday comes back
Put your makeup on fix your hair up pretty
And meet me tonight [online?] in Atlantic City

- Bruce Springsteen, ?Atlantic City?

An online gambling bill that has died twice before has come back. ?On Thursday, December 20th, New Jersey?s State Senate passed an?online gambling bill?? by a vote of 32-4, nearly identical to its vote on a 2011 bill that was vetoed by New Jersey?s Governor Chris Christie. ?Another version of the bill died in May 2012, without a full Senate vote. ?The new bill had passed the assembly two days before, on December 18th.

The bill, amending the NJ Casino Control Act, would permit??Atlantic City casinos to host websites offering poker and casino games ? and any game permitted at the casinos themselves. ? Governor Christie now has 45 days ?to either sign it, veto it or do nothing and allow it to become law when the 45 days lapses.

Christie had vetoed the original bill in March 2011, citing ?legal and constitutional concerns.? ? Back then, Christie was particularly opposed to that bill?s provision of subsidies to horse racing purses. ?He also cited concerns that the bill might violate New Jersey?s Constitution, which only permits casino gambling in Atlantic City: ?he labeled a ?legal fiction? the bill?s presumption that all internet bets would be deemed to originate in Atlantic City.

The bill now sitting on Governor Christie?s desk has resolved both of those issues. ?A provision permitting $30 million in racing subsides was removed from the bill in December. ?At the same time, the legislature secured expert opinions that so long as the servers processing the bets were located in Atlantic City, New Jersey?s constitution wasn?t violated. ?(There is analogous precedent in the Interstate Horseracing Act ? which allows states to decide whether bettors can bet from home phones and computers. ? Under the IHA, state legislatures were permitted to adopt a similar ?legal fiction? that bets, known as Advanced Deposit Wagers, occur at tracks and OTBs even though bettors are at home.)

There is thus reason to believe that Christie may be more favorable to the bill this time. ?In addition, in December 2011, the U.S. Department of Justice announced its opinion that the U.S. Wire Act did?not?prohibit states from licensing intrastate online casinos ? thus opening the door to state licensing and multi-state compacts.

If passed, the bill would permit licensed Atlantic City casinos to create online operations, provided that all ?equipment used . . . to conduct Internet gaming? is on their own ?premises.? ?Other significant elements of the bill:

  • The New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement will create standards for software and equipment used in Internet gaming, including ??mechanical, electrical or program reliability, security against tampering, the comprehensibility of wagering, and noise and light levels.?
  • Casinos would be required to ?verify? that a player is ?physically present? in New Jersey at every log-in: ?this could create challenges for geo-location software, which is often accurate only to several miles (at best). ?Philadelphia, for instance, is just across a river from New Jersey, and some of the state?s larger cities are jogging distance from New York. ?(Mobile gaming by contrast, which can use GPS tracking, can be far more accurate.)
  • The bill does not require age verification. ?While it prohibits casinos from permitting bettors under 21, it creates a defense where a bettor has claimed to be 21 and the casino accepted that in good faith. ?It is unclear whether the Division of Gaming Enforcement would require age verification software, as is commonly required, for instance, under European regimes and the Delaware online gaming statute signed this summer.

Source: http://blog.zwillgen.com/2012/12/21/new-jersey-close-to-online-gambling-again/

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Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Stocks gain on budget deal optimism

Stocks climbed Tuesday?on renewed hope for a budget deal that will stop the US from going over the fiscal cliff.?Stocks slumped after the presidential election on concern that a divided government would struggle to reach an agreement.

By Steve Rothwell,?AP Business Writer / December 18, 2012

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Tuesday. As stocks rise on hints of a budget deal, some investors say stocks are pricing in too much optimism.

Brendan McDermid/Reuters

Enlarge

Stocks climbed on Wall Street Tuesday, pushing the Standard and Poor's 500 to its highest level in two months, on optimism that lawmakers are closing in on a budget deal that will stop the U.S. from going over the "fiscal cliff" at the beginning of next year.

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The Dow Jones industrial average rose 115.57 points to 13,350.96, its biggest one-day gain in almost a month. The Standard & Poor's 500 rose 16.43 points to 1,446.79, its highest close since Oct. 18. The Nasdaq composite rose 43.93 points to 3,054.53.

House Speaker John Boehner told reporters he remains hopeful that a fiscal cliff compromise can be reached, but says President Barack Obama has yet to offer a balanced deficit-cutting plan. Boehner said Obama's latest offer for $1.3 trillion in tax increases over the next decade with $850 billion in spending cuts is not enough. The White House says that President Obama has moved halfway to meet Boehner on a budget deal.

"People are cheering the prospect for some compromise in Washington right now," said Joe Costigan, director of equity research at Bryn Mawr Trust Co. "At the moment there is some pretty good news and the market is reacting favorably to it, but the deal isn't done yet."?

?I know each of them by heart.? | All Our Words

As our gift to you this holiday season, we?d like to share one of our provider?s thoughts about what makes family child care special for caregivers, children, and families alike.? Many thanks to Josie Queen for beautifully articulating her experience as a family child care provider and mother.

?I was working a corporate job when I became pregnant with my daughter and knew I would need a good daycare so I could return to work after her birth. I looked at daycares both close to my job and close to home, weighing the benefits of each. I looked mostly at daycare centers and, like many other parents in the same situation, was shocked to find out that I would be paying about a third of my salary to place my daughter in a center. The ones I really liked and trusted were even more expensive and I just couldn?t bring myself to settle for the ones that were a chaotic free-for-all when I went to visit.

Josie reading edited

I called a few family child care programs, but none had spaces for infants and I called as a last resort, mistakenly thinking that a center would have so much more to offer. ?So, desperate and close to giving birth I started thinking about opening a family child care for myself. It seemed the perfect solution. I had fifteen years of nanny experience with all ages of children and an associate?s degree in early childhood education. I would be able to stay with my daughter while, at the same time, providing the second salary that we just can?t live without. So I applied for my license with a huge amount of help from Nilda Aponte and All Our Kin and started advertising. It took a whole year to actually get any families to enroll, but at last, on September 6, 2011, I opened my doors to my first two toddlers.

So what does it mean to be a family child care provider? I have been lucky enough to meet quite a few other providers in the last year and what I can tell from those encounters is that we offer a safe, fun, loving and warm environment to the children and families we care for. The ratio of children to adults is a small one; we?re allowed six children up to five years of age and three children of school age before and after school. Only two of those children can be under two years of age. So we are able to get to know the children quickly. We discover their likes and dislikes, we understand their tears and what will bring a smile to their faces, we encourage them and cheer for them and we let them know it?s safe for them to try new things and to broaden their curiosity. All this in a home environment. The children I care for, at least the older ones, have become fast friends. Play is an important learning experience and the children enrolled in my program and my daughter are constantly learning: how to share, how to be good friends, to be empathetic, and that the world does actually extend beyond themselves and their own interests. Now that I also have two infants in my home, the older children are learning what it takes to care for a baby. I see it in their pretend play with the dolls and the stuffed animals.

A family child care offers a more personal opportunity and allows me to share more one on one time with each child. I know each of them by heart. ?Heart? is a good word for what it feels like to have children come to my home each day. I think each and every family child care provider falls in love with the children in their care. It becomes more than just a ?job.?

Josie playing editedOf course, there are a few practical benefits to attending a family child care program: we don?t usually close on snowy days (or after hurricanes if we still have power), we can be flexible with drop-off and pick-up times, and our schedules don?t have to be rigid. ?We can take breaks through the day to sit and read a book or ten together, or to sing songs and dance to the music the children love, or we can decide to make play dough, or bake, or go and weed and water our vegetable garden or if the children are just enjoying playing together, then we can just spend the day playing. The children still get the learning experiences that they would get in a more structured setting such as a center; they play with blocks and manipulatives learning math and logical skills and they start to recognize numbers and letters and eventually words through our reading, songs and craft projects. ?But they also get the benefit of being at ?home? all day. They eat family style meals together, get to know the other parents and develop important relationships with each other, and we spend hours outside, running, jumping, climbing, playing. ?And I try to foster the children?s imaginations constantly. I get a real kick out of watching them ?go to? the supermarket and library. Or take their dollies and animals for a ride in the elevator or airplane.

I guess what I?m trying to say is that, if I had known what a family child care looks like and offers to families and their children, I would not have hesitated to place my daughter in that kind of setting. A family child care is, literally, a home away from home.?
??? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?? ? Josie Queen
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?? Lil Cupcakes Daycare

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Source: http://allourkin.wordpress.com/2012/12/19/i-know-each-of-them-by-heart/

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Halo 4 Crimson DLC Banning Error Is Now Fixed, Microsoft Says

Microsoft has posted an official statement concerning an error with the latest Crimson Map Pack DLC for Halo 4, saying that only 200 players were banned as a result of the glitch.

Halo 4 received a brand new DLC pack last week, in the form of the Crimson add-on, which included new maps and a fresh multiplayer mode.

Sadly, the release of the add-on wasn't without issues, as those who should have gotten it for free weren't able to download it until a day later than expected.

Over the weekend, other Halo 4 players found that they were banned from accessing certain parts of the game.

Now, Microsoft has confirmed, via Kotaku, that the banning error has been remedied and that only a few people actually had their accounts affected by the glitch.

Those players were reinstated by Microsoft and the company says the error shouldn't affect anyone else in the future.

Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/Halo-4-Crimson-DLC-Banning-Error-Is-Now-Fixed-Microsoft-Says-315535.shtml

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Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Google Music gains scan and match feature in the US

Google Music gains scan and match feature in the US

It wasn't very long ago that Google Music landed in Europe -- to the delight of local music lovers, we're sure. On its trip across the pond, the service gained a unique new feature called scan and match, wherein Google scans your local music library and makes the songs it matches instantly available in the cloud -- no upload required. Until now the feature, which is similar to iTunes Match, was only available in Europe, but it's coming to the US starting today. From now on, any US Google Play users who upload their music collection will benefit from this new feature. Over time, the company will also upgrade users with existing cloud libraries. It's a free service and it's automatic -- you're unlikely to notice that it's even happening. The upside is that entire collections will be uploaded faster. We're not aware of any downsides yet -- matched songs will be available for streaming at 320Kbps like regular Google Play purchases, while re-downloaded music will be available at or close to the bitrate of the original file.

Update: Google confirmed that any VBR files matched by the service will be re-downloaded as CBR files with a bitrate that's slightly higher than the average bitrate of the original song. This is obviously a drawback if you're currently relying on the service to backup your music collection.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/VosNU5uD-lQ/

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Scientist at Work Blog: For the Social Wrasse, News, Good and Bad

Luiz Rocha, the curator of ichthyology at the California Academy of Sciences, writes from Belize, where he conducts research on one of the world?s most endangered fish, social wrasse.

December 15, 2012

After hours on airplanes and in airports ? with a last leg by boat ? I finally arrived at Carrie Bow Key. It was late afternoon and there was no time to dive. But what I found on the Pelican Keys early the next morning was not encouraging. Invasive lionfish lurked around the islands. And after catching a few of them, I went for a walk in the mangroves and found trash strewn along the shore.

I had come to Belize to assess the potential threats to a small, but important, member of the reef ecosystem. And by Day 2, I had found two major threats to the social wrasse.

Now for the good news: The lionfish population is not large. And I saw many social wrasses, although they were only juveniles and females. Their schools were, as expected, high in the water column feeding on plankton, dutifully capturing nutrients from the water and transferring them to the reef.

The few lionfish that our team observed seemed to prefer a high-relief habitat with big rocks and overhangs. Those types of habitats are hard to find here.

We captured two lionfish and both of their stomachs were empty, but they were well-nourished. We may have just been unlucky, catching them between meals. Of course, we will keep capturing more lionfish during the next few days.

Many islands in the Caribbean are doing a good job in keeping the lionfish population in check. They are quite tasty once you get past the poisonous spines and good marketing has made them popular in restaurants. There are now lionfish tournaments and in some places even tourists are encouraged to spear them. But none of this will be enough to eradicate the species. Lionfish have very broad habitat requirements and some have been spotted from submersibles as deep as 1,000 feet. Even if divers control them at shallow depths there will always be more deeper down.

Recognizing that humans can?t possibly catch all of these new invaders, some dive shops are resorting to a slightly more controversial tact. In Mexico, Barbados and a few other places in the Caribbean, people are ?training? groupers, sharks, morays and other large reef fish to eat lionfish.

While at first this practice seems to be the logical thing to do, there is no evidence that these larger fish are actively trying to catch live lionfish. Rather, they are learning that divers in the water mean ?free handouts,? and becoming very aggressive when divers don?t give them their lionfish snack.

Whether it?s effective to try to sic fish on fish is unclear, but the strategy remains a heavily debated topic in the scientific literature. And regardless of our efforts to control this spiny exotic, it?s clear that the lionfish is here to stay. And it?s up to us to figure out what they are doing to their new home because maybe then we can devise better ways to mitigate their impact on the reef and the social wrasse.

Source: http://scientistatwork.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/17/for-the-social-wrasse-news-good-and-bad/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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