Monday, October 29, 2012

Miners take "rail-veyors" and robots to automated future

SUDBURY, Ontario (Reuters) - In an office trailer parked outside a mine shaft in northern Ontario, operator Carolyn St-Jean leans back in her chair and monitors a machine loading nickel-rich ore into rail cars deep underground.

Once filled, the automated train will snake through a series of narrow tunnels, emerge from a rocky outcropping, then loop past St-Jean's window and dump its payload for sorting.

Vale SA, the Brazilian company that owns the mine near this nickel-rich Canadian town, has spent nearly $50 million in two years to install and test the "rail-veyor." The company believes the transport system will revolutionize how it builds and extracts new mineral deposits.

The equipment is made locally by Rail-Veyor Technologies Global Inc. It is one of many mining technologies that developers hope will allow future production to be run almost entirely by people safely above ground.

Such advances may prove crucial as easy-to-exploit deposits run dry and miners drill deeper in more remote places to supply China, India and other emerging economies. The technology could make mining cheaper and safer, avoiding the need to dig wide tunnels and hire large numbers of expensive, skilled workers.

"As we go deeper, if we continue to apply existing thinking and existing technologies, it's a death spiral" for company profits, said Alex Henderson, who heads Vale's technology team in Sudbury.

"We need to begin to look at a step-change in mining rather than just incrementally improving our existing processes."

The rail-veyor is one such step-change. At the test site, it has halved the time to build a mine, and Vale expects a 150 percent boost in production rates before year end.

In Australia, Rio Tinto Ltd, one of the world's largest miners and an automation pioneer, is rolling out a fleet of self-driving trucks and trains at its iron ore operations. Vale, BHP Billiton and Chile's Codelco are in hot pursuit.

Gold miner AngloGold Ashanti is eyeing automation in South Africa, where miners spend hours each shift traveling up and down shafts and ounces of gold are left behind in support pillars each year.

Organized labor has made its peace with the automation drive, although there were some concerns that robots would displace humans.

"We're ok with automation, it's part of the changing times and it's a good thing for productivity," said Myles Sullivan of the United Steelworkers Canada, whose workers ended a year-long strike at Vale over bonuses and wages in 2010.

700 STORIES UNDERGROUND

New challenges in mining are driving technological changes. Large, accessible deposits have all but disappeared. Resources of tomorrow are in far-flung corners of the globe or hundreds of meters beneath the surface.

Add a shortage of skilled labor - expected to worsen as the baby-boom generation retires - and mining costs have surged.

While soaring demand means higher metal prices, rising costs are crimping profits. Canada's S&P/TSX Mining share index has fallen more than 38 percent since the beginning of 2011.

Experts say mining companies must change how they operate.

Making that shift is not easy for an industry steeped in tradition, especially when change doesn't come cheap. Rio Tinto is spending more than $500 million on train automation alone.

"This is a very conservative industry that has been very productive over the last 30 years doing it the way they're doing it now," said Douglas Morrison, chief executive of the Centre for Excellence in Mining Innovation (CEMI), an industry-funded research center in Sudbury.

"But is the old way going to work for us into the future? I think probably not, so we need to make some changes."

After decades of production, the nickel mines around Sudbury are getting deeper and deeper. At Vale's Creighton mine, the No. 8 shaft drops nearly 8,000 feet into the ground - equivalent of a 700-story condo tower.

At that depth it is very hot, around 50 degrees Celsius (120 Fahrenheit), so tunnels must be pumped full of cooled air to make temperatures manageable for people and heavy machinery.

"The bigger issue is when we get much deeper we start to generate our own earthquakes - very small earthquakes - these are called 'rock bursts,'" said Morrison.

Smaller tunnels and new ways of digging can hopefully reduce the danger of these rock bursts, which create a safety concern and slow development.

Rio Tinto is working with CEMI on automated tunnel borers, currently used to build subway and sewer tunnels. By cutting through the rock instead of blasting, Rio aims to quadruple its underground advance rates to 20 meters a day.

But while automated tunnel borers will build shafts and tunnels more quickly, massive mining equipment still handicaps the industry, which is where Vale's rail-veyor comes in.

A train hauling 50 tonnes of ore uses a far smaller tunnel than a truck with the same load. By taking the massive trucks and scooptrams - large vehicles with shovels on the front - out of the equation, Vale can build more compact and stable tunnels.

The rail-veyor, built on tracks that zig-zag down to the deposit, actually eliminates the need for expensive shafts and may eventually move people and equipment, along with ore.

Vale's Henderson believes the technology - which the company plans to roll out in five upcoming projects - is a game-changer that will help usher in a new era of mining.

"Just as the scooptram was the key enabler for the mechanized era, is the rail-veyor a key enabler for the next?" he said.

MAN VS MACHINE

What that "next era" will look like is still up for debate. Some innovators believe robots will do most of the labor in mines of the future, as in automobile assembly plants. This would ease likely shortages in skilled labor in many countries.

Over the next decade Canada's mining sector will need more than 100,000 skilled new hires to sustain even modest growth, according to the Mining Industry Human Resources Council.

In Australia, the labor crunch is already so intense that truck drivers can make upwards of $100,000 a year, with turnover rates at some mines still near 40 percent.

"One of the biggest problems that the mining industry faces worldwide is trained personnel. We can't get them," said John Meech, director of CERM3, a mining research center at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.

"One of the ways we are going to have to deal with that is to automate the systems so that the human becomes the supervisor, rather than the direct means of control."

It is a concept already used at remote open-pit mines in Australia, where Rio's new fleet of driverless trucks can be run from a control room hundreds of miles away.

Canada's Nautilus Minerals Inc is using automated rovers to explore the ocean bed for mineral deposits that underwater robots will eventually mine.

In addition to boosting productivity, the advances will enhance safety. As labor leader Sullivan says, "so long as there's underground mining, there will be women and men working underground."

Safety is the focus at a converted schoolyard just outside Sudbury, where a duo of mine rescue robots roll through a makeshift obstacle course. Their thick tires grind over logs and through mud pits.

Designed by Canada's Penguin Automated Systems Inc, the equipment is being tested by Codelco at its Andina copper mine in Chile, doing dangerous jobs like checking stability after blasting and surveying tunnels at risk of flooding.

"Our mining industry is not quite there yet in Canada and it needs to get there to be competitive with the rest of the world," said Penguin Chief Executive Greg Baiden. "It comes back to the culture. Who wants to do it? Who wants to be first?"

(Additional reporting by Bhaswati Mukhopadhyay in Bangalore; Editing by Frank McGurty, Janet Guttsman and David Gregorio)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/miners-rail-veyors-robots-automated-future-110815981--sector.html

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Economy is healing - Chancellor Osborne

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Transform your Disease fighting capability Along with Probiotics ...

It is possible to increase your disease fighting capability by way of applying probiotics like a product to your diet. Probiotics are friendly microorganisms that are consists of residing micro-organisms which are an important section of our diet that help with digestive system difficulties. Your body is within optimal wellness whenever we possess a great harmony on the good and also the awful microorganisms. Our stability can simply get all smudged via having medicines, changing our diet, conditions in our environment and so on, but you can help to keep the body balanced by including our healthful bacterias into your diet plan to enable you to defend against health conditions.

These healthy and balanced bacteria?s can help the body to maintain a well-balanced digestive tract that may get rid of the damaging bacteria?s which could result in toxic compounds in your body. Additionally they improve your current immunity process and help your body to be able to battle pores and skin bacterial infections, fungus and other vehicle defense problems. You could find healthful germs in a number of foods such as yogurts, granola, cereals and also certain juices. You can even buy probiotics from the local local health store in a liquefied, pills or even pill web form. These people have wafers for youngsters which can be simple to consume and taste very good way too.

An expert mixture of Lactobacillus probiotics for the people in antibiotics (many regarding which knowledge negative effects for example thrush/diarrhoea). Consider in the course of and after your own personal antibiotics course, this surfaces the belly with friendly bacteria like acidophilus.

If you are blessed, you get a number of probiotics by natural means from the mom, however, you may well remove your own personal offer while using 1st prescription medicine that you simply take so you may wish to consider a number of products so that you can build these regress to something easier in the technique. There are numerous different types of effective healthy and balanced microorganisms that can help to bolster your own personal disease fighting capability as well as attack a good excess on the poor bacteria?s. Lactobacillus can be a healthy and balanced bacterias that is used intended for managing and also preventing medical problems helping in the urinary :, digestive system as well as penile devices.

Bifid bacteria?s improve your own bloodstream triglycerides plus your sugar levels and is one more effective germs. Saccharomyces boulardii really helps to stop along with handle diarrhea and can help reduce or even cure pimple difficulties and decrease negative effects with certainty treatment options. Streptococcus thermophilus can help with a healthy food digestion associated with dairy as well as the lactase enzyme can assist prevent lactic intolerance. Enterococcus faecium and also Leuconostoc are other Pro-biotics that assist to improve your own personal digestive function and keep your whole body healthful.

Your overall health attention specialist should be able to assist you to choose the right probiotics for your needs and will recommend much more mild and also advantageous bacteria with regard to children if they are already at the mercy of a rounded involving prescribed remedies to have an ear infection or maybe tender tonsils. All these remedies not only remove unhealthy bacterias, nevertheless the very good microorganisms as well through taking the right healthful bacteria?s back to your system it is possible to assistance to the immune system so you don?t get sick and tired once more.

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Source: http://www.healthuse.com/transform-your-disease-fighting-capability-along-with-probiotics.html

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Joey Yap: 70% OFF on Feng Shui and Astrology Tickets

Today's Deal: Tickets to Joey Yap's Feng Shui & Astrology 2013 (Starting at P670) That's up to 70% OFF!

Details

  • Groupon is valid only on December 18, 2012 from 10:00am - 5:00pm
  • FILL OUT THIS FORM UPON RECEIPT OF VOUCHER. PLEASE ENSURE THAT ALL DETAILS ARE CORRECT AS THIS WILL BE THE BASIS FOR SENDING THE E-TICKET FOR THE SEMINAR.
  • Vouchers will not be considered as tickets
  • Will be held at Genting Club, Resorts World Manila, Newport Boulevard, Newport City, Pasay City
  • Registration starts at 8:30am
  • Attendees need to register as Resorts World Manila members to attend the event. Membership registration can be done during the event day at the registration counter.
  • This seminar practices free seating arrangement, based on first come first served basis.
  • Ticket holders must be there on December 18, 2012 not later than 10:00am (door closes when the seminar starts and will open again during breaks)
  • Before the Event
  • All purchases of tickets are final and valid for the designated event only. Tickets purchased may be transferable to another person but no refunds will be entertained.
  • Please be reminded to print your BaZi chart before the seminar day. If you are unable to do so, the organizer can provide a printing service at the seminar venue for a nominal fee.
  • Admission to the "Joey Yap's Feng Shui & Astrology for 2013 Seminar" is strictly upon presentation of the e-ticket only. Each e-ticket is only valid for one attendee. (Please print the e-ticket on A4 size paper only)
  • During the Event
  • Children below the age of 12 years old are not admissible
  • All video and audio recordings are strictly prohibited. Offenders will be asked to leave immediately
  • Dress code is Smart Casual
  • The organizer reserves the right to refuse entry of any person whose conduct is deemed to be disorderly
  • The organizer reserves the right to substitute the speakers, venue and date of event
  • May purchase multiple Groupons
  • Vouchers cannot be used in conjunction with senior citizen card, or any other promotion
  • No cash back or credit for any unused amount

Highlights

  • Conducted by international Feng Shui and BaZi consultant, Joey Yap
  • Learn how to harness positive energy, take advantage of opportunities, avoid obstacles, improve Feng Shui at home, and more
  • Conducted in English
  • Seminar hand-outs provided
  • Meals or drinks will not be served throughout this seminar.

About The Deal

One?s fortune can often be found in good investments, healthy decisions, and generous parents. Today?s Groupon strives towards independence with a ticket to Joey Yap's Feng Shui & Astrology for 2013. Choose among the following options:


  • P670 (P1680 value) for 1 ticket to Joey Yap's Feng Shui & Astrology
  • P1180 (P3360 value) for 2 tickets to Joey Yap's Feng Shui & Astrology
  • P2020 (P6720 value) to 4 tickets to Joey Yap's Feng Shui & Astrology

With guided references, self-improvement junkies join the reputable expert in Chinese Metaphysics, Joey Yap, as he decodes BaZi charts and analyzes the wealth, health, career and relationship outlook for the coming Water Snake Year. Understand strengths and weaknesses, as informed decisions are made while key house sectors are identified. Hidden potential may be unearthed through Feng Shui, allowing elusive opportunities, such as career paths or rare pretzels, to be grabbed with both paws.



Seminar Agenda:
  • 8:30 - 10:00am Registration
  • 10:00 - 11:30am Seminar Session #1
  • 11:30 - 12:00pm Morning Break
  • 12:00 - 1:00pm Seminar Session #2
  • 1:00 - 2:30pm Lunch Break
  • 2:30 - 4:00pm Seminar Session #3
  • 4:00 - 4:30pm Afternoon Break
  • 4:30 - 5:30pm Seminar Session #4
  • 5:30 - 6:00pm Event Ends with Book Signing by Joey Yap

Register

  • Create your account so that you can purchase amazing deals.

Buy it!

  • Snap up the deal of the day by clicking on the ?Buy Now!? button.

Pass it on

  • Tell your friends about Groupon and make the most of your city with collective buying power.

Experience

  • You receive your printable voucher via email. Get going ? Redeem your voucher and discover a new side to your city.

Source: http://everythinginbudget.blogspot.com/2012/10/joey-yap-70-off-on-feng-shui-and.html

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Stem cell therapies for multiple sclerosis, other myelin disorders expected soon

ScienceDaily (Oct. 25, 2012) ? When the era of regenerative medicine dawned more than three decades ago, the potential to replenish populations of cells destroyed by disease was seen by many as the next medical revolution. However, what followed turned out not to be a sprint to the clinic, but rather a long tedious slog carried out in labs across the globe required to master the complexity of stem cells and then pair their capabilities and attributes with specific diseases.

In a review article appearing October 25 in the journal Science, University of Rochester Medical Center scientists Steve Goldman, M.D., Ph.D., Maiken Nedergaard, Ph.D., and Martha Windrem, Ph.D., contend that researchers are now on the threshold of human application of stem cell therapies for a class of neurological diseases known as myelin disorders -- a long list of diseases that include conditions such as multiple sclerosis, white matter stroke, cerebral palsy, certain dementias, and rare but fatal childhood disorders called pediatric leukodystrophies.

"Stem cell biology has progressed in many ways over the last decade, and many potential opportunities for clinical translation have arisen," said Goldman. "In particular, for diseases of the central nervous system, which have proven difficult to treat because of the brain's great cellular complexity, we postulated that the simplest cell types might provide us the best opportunities for cell therapy."

The common factor in myelin disorders is a cell called the oligodendrocyte. These cells arise, or are created, by another cell found in the central nervous system called the glial progenitor cell. Both oligodendrocytes and their "sister cells" -- called astrocytes -- share this same parent and serve critical support functions in the central nervous systems.

Oligodendrocytes produce myelin, a fatty substance that insulates the fibrous connections between nerve cells that are responsible for transmitting signals throughout the body. When myelin-producing cells are lost or damaged in conditions such as multiple sclerosis and spinal cord injury, signals traveling between nerves are weakened or even lost. Astrocytes also play an essential role in the brain. Long overlooked and underappreciated, it is now understood that astrocytes are critical to the health and signaling function of oligodendrocytes as well as neurons.

Glial progenitor cells and their offspring represent a promising target for stem cell therapies, because -- unlike other cells in the central nervous system -- they are relatively homogeneous and more readily manipulated and transplanted. In the case of oligodendrocytes, multiple animal studies have shown that, once transplanted, these cells will disperse and begin to repair or "remyelinate" damaged areas.

"Glial cell dysfunction accounts for a broad spectrum of diseases, some of which -- like the white matter degeneration of aging -- are far more prevalent than we previously realized," said Goldman. "Yet glial progenitor cells are relatively easy to work with, especially since we don't have to worry about re-establishing precise point to point connections as we must with neurons. This gives us hope that we may begin to treat diseases of glia by direct transplantation of competent progenitor cells."

Scientists have reached this point, according to the authors, because of a number of key advances. Better imaging technologies -- namely advanced MRI scanners -- now provide greater insight and clarity into the specific damage caused in the central nervous system by myelin disorders. These technologies also enable scientists to precisely follow the results of their work.

Even more importantly, researchers have overcome numerous obstacles and made significant strides in their ability to manipulate and handle these cells. Goldman's lab in particular has been a pioneer in understanding the precise chemical signals necessary to coax stem cells into making glial progenitor cells, as well as those needed to "instruct" these cells to make oligodendrocytes or astrocytes. His lab has been able to produce these cells from a number of different sources -- including "reprogramming" skin cells, a technology that has the advantage of genetically matching transplanted cells to the donor. They have also developed techniques to sort these cells based on unique identifying markers, a critical step that ensures the purity of the cells used in transplantation, lowering the risk for tumor formation.

Nedergaard's lab has studied the integration of these cells into existing neural networks, and well as in imaging their structure and function in the adult nervous system. Together, the two labs have developed models of both human neural activity and disease based on animals transplanted with glial progenitor cells, which will enable human neural cells to be evaluated in the context of the live adult brain -- as opposed to a test tube. This work has already opened new avenues in both modeling and potentially treating human glial disease.

All of these advances, contend the authors, have accelerated research to the point where human studies for myelin disorders are close at hand. For instance, diseases such as multiple sclerosis, which benefit from a new generation of stabilizing anti-inflammatory drugs, may be an especially appealing target for progenitor-based cell therapies which could repair the now permanent and untreatable damage to the central nervous system that occurs in the disease. Similarly, the authors point to a number of the childhood diseases of white matter that now appear ripe for cell-based treatment.

"We have developed a tremendous amount of information about these cells and how to produce them," said Goldman. "We understand the different cell populations, their genetic profiles, and how they behave in culture and in a variety of animal models. We also have better understanding of the disease target environments than ever before, and have the radiographic technologies to follow how patients do after transplantation. Moving into clinical trials for myelin disorders is really just a question of resources at this point."

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/zPtIv7nR8Kc/121025150401.htm

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

ECB's Draghi faces German lawmakers

BERLIN (AP) ? The European Central Bank's president drew a broadly positive response from German lawmakers Wednesday when he told them that his bond-buying plan won't stoke inflation and will not allow struggling countries to backslide on economic reforms.

In an effort to win over skeptical public opinion in Europe's biggest economy, Mario Draghi met for two hours at Berlin's Reichstag building with more than 100 politicians, including members of the budget, finance and European affairs committees.

He said afterward that the closed-doors exchange was "an important component of confidence-building, trust-building."

The ECB last month announced its plan to buy unlimited amounts of short-term bonds of troubled euro economies ? a program aimed at keeping a lid on the borrowing costs of indebted countries such as Spain and Italy.

Although Chancellor Angela Merkel's government supports the plan, the president of Germany's central bank, Jens Weidmann, argues that they come too close to using the ECB's power to print money to support governments' finances directly, which the bank isn't allowed to do.

And there are worries in Germany that unlimited bond purchases could undermine the ECB's official mission of fighting inflation.

Draghi tackled those concerns in remarks to the gathering released by the ECB, insisting that investors' "unfounded fears about the future of the euro area had to be removed."

"The only way to do so was to establish a fully credible backstop against disaster scenarios," he said.

Draghi highlighted the fact that bond-buying will only be triggered once countries apply for help from European rescue funds ? which impose conditions for granting aid.

And, he insisted, the purchases "will not lead to inflation."

"In our assessment, the greater risk to price stability is currently falling prices in some euro area countries," he said. "In this sense, (bond purchases) are not in contradiction to our mandate: in fact, they are essential for ensuring we can continue to achieve it."

Norbert Barthle, a senior lawmaker with Merkel's Christian Democrats, appeared satisfied. He told reporters that the Italian "struck us as a Prussian southern European."

"His answers were very convincing, and so I think we can send the message to German citizens that the worries about inflation that have been expressed here and there are unfounded," he added.

Parliament speaker Norbert Lammert, also a Christian Democrat, said the meeting "contributed a lot to understanding each other's concerns and intentions somewhat better" and to building confidence.

The ECB head argued that the bond program "will not lead to disguised financing of governments" because bonds will be bought from investors on so-called secondary markets, not from governments.

Draghi repeated his oft-stated mantra that it is up to governments to fix their finances, reform their economies and work together to improve the eurozone's structure ? which is line with official thinking in Germany.

He maintained that bond purchases won't create "excessive risks" for European taxpayers because "such risks would only materialize if a country were to run unsound policies." But that, he added, is "explicitly prohibited" by eurozone rescue fund programs.

No country has yet sought to tap the new ECB program, though Spain faces pressure to given the parlous state of its economy and its elevated borrowing costs.

Germany's Parliament would have to approve any application for money from the eurozone's own rescue funds ? an application that is necessary before the ECB can act to assist a eurozone nation.

Some lawmakers suggested they weren't convinced it made sense for the independent central bank to link its actions to financial policy conditions.

And Carsten Schneider, a budget committee member for the opposition Social Democrats, said concerns about extra risks to taxpayers remained.

But he argued that foot-dragging by Merkel was responsible for "the current situation that the ECB is moving away from its normal mandate of ... fighting inflation and taking on tasks to save the euro that it is not actually created for."

Though rhetoric in Germany on the bond-buying program has sometimes been shrill, the atmosphere Wednesday was calm. "The tone was, as is customary in German politics, civil," said Social Democrat Joachim Poss.

Asked whether he considered his mission of winning over German public opinion accomplished, Draghi laughed and said: "Oh, that would be too ambitious."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ecbs-draghi-faces-german-lawmakers-132012247--finance.html

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J. Kidd started at SG; Thad Young is preseason MVP; A.Davis 17 rebs. #NBA Fantas...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/sheridanhoops/posts/398783786857868

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New WalMart stores put large retailers out of business, mom-and-pop stores less affected

New WalMart stores put large retailers out of business, mom-and-pop stores less affected [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Oct-2012
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Contact: camille gamboa
camille.gamboa@sagepub.com
805-410-7441
SAGE Publications

Focus issue of economic development quarterly reveals economic and social impact of WalMart stores

Los Angeles, CA (October 23, 2012) Ranked as one of America's largest corporations and the largest private employer in the United States, some say that WalMart stores are catalysts for economic growth in U.S. communities, while others claim that they can have damaging effects on local shops. However, a new study finds that it is the larger retailers such as Ames Department Stores, Sears, and Kmart that lose business with the arrival of a new WalMart store, while smaller retailers are not affected to the same extent. This study is published today in a new Focus Issue of Economic Development Quarterly (a SAGE journal) that describes the economic development impact of Wal-Mart stores.

"Wal-Mart predominantly might be replacing stores already characterized by nonlocal management," wrote the authors. "This seems to contradict a widely held belief that Wal-Mart hurts locally owned subsidiary business establishments."

Using Indiana as a case study, researchers Michael Hicks, Stanley Keil, and Lee Spector studied the financial impact of new WalMart stores on establishments nearby. They found that competing stores with 49 or fewer employees were affected very little after a Wal-Mart was opened in the county and competing stores with 50 to 99 employees received a very small negative impact, while stores with 100 to 249 workers closed at a rate of about .5 stores per year, and competing stores with over 250 workers closed at a rate of 1.5 stores per year.

This Focus Issue of Economic Development Quarterly, out today, includes four articles that detail the economic impact of WalMart stores across the nation. These articles include:

"Walmart and Local Economic Development: A Survey," by Alessandro Bonanno and Stephan J. Goetz http://edq.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/08/27/0891242412456738.abstract?rss=1

"The Impact of an Urban WalMart Store on Area Businesses: The Chicago Case," by David Merriman, Joseph Persky, Julie Davis, and Ron Baiman http://edq.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/09/29/0891242412457985.abstract

"Revisiting WalMart's Impact on Iowa Small-Town Retail: 25 Years Later," by Georfeanne M. Artz and Kenneth E. Stone http://edq.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/09/29/0891242412461828.abstract?rss=1

"Mom-and Pops or Big-Box Stores: Some Evidence of WalMart's Impact on Retail Trade," by Michael Hicks, Stanley Keil, and Lee Spector http://edq.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/10/16/0891242412463817.full.pdf+html

"Where an auto plant or a high-tech research park brings a range of economic development benefits to a community, the economic development benefits generated by a new big-box retailer are far less obvious," wrote the issue editors. "While these articles do not focus on policy implications, the research results reported here suggest great caution in subsidizing WalMart retail locations."

###

The article "Mom-and Pops or Big-Box Stores: Some Evidence of WalMart's Impact on Retail Trade," by Michael Hicks, Stanley Keil, and Lee Spector in Economic Development Quarterly, is available free for a limited time at: http://edq.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/10/16/0891242412463817.full.pdf+html

For access to any of the other articles listed above, please email camille.gamboa@sagepub.com

Economic Development Quarterly (EDQ), is the one journal that effectively bridges the gap between academics, policy makers, and practitioners and links the various economic development communities. Although geared to North American economic development and revitalization, international perspectives are welcome and encouraged. Featuring timely, relevant, and practical essays, EDQ presents today's most pivotal issues and details the programs and policies affecting development at every level. http://edq.sagepub.com/

Impact Factor: 1.059

Ranked: 14 out of 36 in Urban Studies,25 out of 47 in Planning & Development and 101 out of 304 in Economics

Source: 2010 Journal Citation Reports (Thomson Reuters, 2011)

SAGE is a leading international publisher of journals, books, and electronic media for academic, educational, and professional markets. Since 1965, SAGE has helped inform and educate a global community of scholars, practitioners, researchers, and students spanning a wide range of subject areas including business, humanities, social sciences, and science, technology, and medicine. An independent company, SAGE has principal offices in Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore and Washington DC. www.sagepublications.com



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New WalMart stores put large retailers out of business, mom-and-pop stores less affected [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 23-Oct-2012
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Contact: camille gamboa
camille.gamboa@sagepub.com
805-410-7441
SAGE Publications

Focus issue of economic development quarterly reveals economic and social impact of WalMart stores

Los Angeles, CA (October 23, 2012) Ranked as one of America's largest corporations and the largest private employer in the United States, some say that WalMart stores are catalysts for economic growth in U.S. communities, while others claim that they can have damaging effects on local shops. However, a new study finds that it is the larger retailers such as Ames Department Stores, Sears, and Kmart that lose business with the arrival of a new WalMart store, while smaller retailers are not affected to the same extent. This study is published today in a new Focus Issue of Economic Development Quarterly (a SAGE journal) that describes the economic development impact of Wal-Mart stores.

"Wal-Mart predominantly might be replacing stores already characterized by nonlocal management," wrote the authors. "This seems to contradict a widely held belief that Wal-Mart hurts locally owned subsidiary business establishments."

Using Indiana as a case study, researchers Michael Hicks, Stanley Keil, and Lee Spector studied the financial impact of new WalMart stores on establishments nearby. They found that competing stores with 49 or fewer employees were affected very little after a Wal-Mart was opened in the county and competing stores with 50 to 99 employees received a very small negative impact, while stores with 100 to 249 workers closed at a rate of about .5 stores per year, and competing stores with over 250 workers closed at a rate of 1.5 stores per year.

This Focus Issue of Economic Development Quarterly, out today, includes four articles that detail the economic impact of WalMart stores across the nation. These articles include:

"Walmart and Local Economic Development: A Survey," by Alessandro Bonanno and Stephan J. Goetz http://edq.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/08/27/0891242412456738.abstract?rss=1

"The Impact of an Urban WalMart Store on Area Businesses: The Chicago Case," by David Merriman, Joseph Persky, Julie Davis, and Ron Baiman http://edq.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/09/29/0891242412457985.abstract

"Revisiting WalMart's Impact on Iowa Small-Town Retail: 25 Years Later," by Georfeanne M. Artz and Kenneth E. Stone http://edq.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/09/29/0891242412461828.abstract?rss=1

"Mom-and Pops or Big-Box Stores: Some Evidence of WalMart's Impact on Retail Trade," by Michael Hicks, Stanley Keil, and Lee Spector http://edq.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/10/16/0891242412463817.full.pdf+html

"Where an auto plant or a high-tech research park brings a range of economic development benefits to a community, the economic development benefits generated by a new big-box retailer are far less obvious," wrote the issue editors. "While these articles do not focus on policy implications, the research results reported here suggest great caution in subsidizing WalMart retail locations."

###

The article "Mom-and Pops or Big-Box Stores: Some Evidence of WalMart's Impact on Retail Trade," by Michael Hicks, Stanley Keil, and Lee Spector in Economic Development Quarterly, is available free for a limited time at: http://edq.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/10/16/0891242412463817.full.pdf+html

For access to any of the other articles listed above, please email camille.gamboa@sagepub.com

Economic Development Quarterly (EDQ), is the one journal that effectively bridges the gap between academics, policy makers, and practitioners and links the various economic development communities. Although geared to North American economic development and revitalization, international perspectives are welcome and encouraged. Featuring timely, relevant, and practical essays, EDQ presents today's most pivotal issues and details the programs and policies affecting development at every level. http://edq.sagepub.com/

Impact Factor: 1.059

Ranked: 14 out of 36 in Urban Studies,25 out of 47 in Planning & Development and 101 out of 304 in Economics

Source: 2010 Journal Citation Reports (Thomson Reuters, 2011)

SAGE is a leading international publisher of journals, books, and electronic media for academic, educational, and professional markets. Since 1965, SAGE has helped inform and educate a global community of scholars, practitioners, researchers, and students spanning a wide range of subject areas including business, humanities, social sciences, and science, technology, and medicine. An independent company, SAGE has principal offices in Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore and Washington DC. www.sagepublications.com



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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/sp-nws102312.php

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AP Exclusive: France to send drones to Mali region

FILE - In this Oct.18, 2012 file photo, a man carries a sign reading "No to the destructive soldiers of ECOWAS" as Malians opposed to a military intervention to retake Mali's Islamist-controlled north march in the streets of the capital, Bamako, Mali. France is moving surveillance drones to western Africa amid rising concerns that an al-Qaida offshoot and its allies who control northeast Mali represent a major threat to French interests abroad and possibly at home. With six French hostages held by Islamic militants in the region, France is facing a delicate task, but has garnered support from other Western powers including the United States to keep Mali from becoming a new launchpad for global terrorism. (AP Photo/Harouna Traore, File)

FILE - In this Oct.18, 2012 file photo, a man carries a sign reading "No to the destructive soldiers of ECOWAS" as Malians opposed to a military intervention to retake Mali's Islamist-controlled north march in the streets of the capital, Bamako, Mali. France is moving surveillance drones to western Africa amid rising concerns that an al-Qaida offshoot and its allies who control northeast Mali represent a major threat to French interests abroad and possibly at home. With six French hostages held by Islamic militants in the region, France is facing a delicate task, but has garnered support from other Western powers including the United States to keep Mali from becoming a new launchpad for global terrorism. (AP Photo/Harouna Traore, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 31, 2012 file photo, fighters from Islamist group Ansar Dine stand guard in Timbuktu, Mali, as they prepare to publicly lash a member of the Islamic Police found guilty of adultery. France is moving surveillance drones to western Africa amid rising concerns that an al-Qaida offshoot and its allies who control northeast Mali represent a major threat to French interests abroad _ and possibly at home. With six French hostages held by Islamic militants in the region, France is facing a delicate task, but has garnered support from other Western powers including the United States to keep Mali from becoming a new launchpad for global terrorism. (AP Photo, File)

FILE - In this Sunday, Sept. 16, 2012 file photo, fighters from Islamist group Ansar Dine leave after performing a public amputation, severing the hand of a young man found guilty of stealing rice, in Timbuktu, Mali. France is moving surveillance drones to western Africa amid rising concerns that an al-Qaida offshoot and its allies who control northeast Mali represent a major threat to French interests abroad and possibly at home. With six French hostages held by Islamic militants in the region, France is facing a delicate task, but has garnered support from other Western powers including the United States to keep Mali from becoming a new launchpad for global terrorism. (AP Photo, File)

Map shows distribution of French troops across West Africa

(AP) ? France will move surveillance drones to West Africa and is holding secretive talks with U.S. officials in Paris this week as it seeks to steer international military action to help Mali's feeble government win back the northern part of the country from al-Qaida-linked rebels, The Associated Press has learned.

France and the United Nations insist any invasion of Mali's north must be led by African troops. But France, which has six hostages in Mali and has citizens who have joined al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, is playing an increasing role behind the scenes.

Many in the West fear that northeast Mali and the arid Sahel region could become the new Afghanistan, a no-man's-land where extremists can train, impose hardline Islamic law and plot terror attacks abroad. And France, former colonial ruler to countries across the Sahel, is a prime target.

"This is actually a major threat ? to French interests in the region, and to France itself," said Francois Heisbourg, an expert at the Foundation for Strategic Research, a partially state-funded think tank in Paris. "This is like Afghanistan 1996. This is like when Bin Laden found a place that was larger than France in which he could organize training camps, in which he could provide stable preparations for organizing far-flung terror attacks."

France is turning its attention to the Sahel just as it is accelerating its pullout of combat troops from Afghanistan ahead of other NATO allies.

A French defense official said Monday that France plans to move two surveillance drones to western Africa from Afghanistan by year-end, though he did not provide details. France is also reported to have special forces in the region around Mali, and to have contracted out surveillance of Mali to a private company.

Top-level American and French military leaders and diplomats, including U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Johnnie Carson, began two days of talks in Paris on Monday on intelligence-gathering and security in the Sahel region, including Mali, diplomats from both sides told the AP.

The defense official and diplomats spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to talk publicly about the activities.

The Paris meetings follow a U.N. Security Council resolution that gives Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon about a month to help Malian authorities devise a plan to regain control of the north. And on Friday, African leaders met in Bamako, Mali's capital, to prepare a plan for a military intervention in the north, which was seized under the cover of a coup d'etat six months ago.

The United States is partnering with France, which has airpower and hundreds of troops across western Africa ? in Senegal, Ivory Coast, Chad and Gabon, French and U.S. officials said. The United States has no full-time military presence in Africa, but from time to time sends trainers or other advisers on specific missions, according to Africom, the U.S. military command for Africa based in Stuttgart, Germany.

The attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, last month that left four Americans dead, including the U.S. ambassador has fanned an increasing American awareness of the terror threat in the Sahel.

The United States sees France as a key player in Mali, and the French defense official said the U.S. "has conferred to us the role of leader" in the crisis.

Other Western powers are increasingly worried about a lawless Mali.

On Monday, Chancellor Angela Merkel said that Germany would be prepared to take part in a European mission to train and provide logistical support for Malian security forces. European Union members are considering a noncombat training mission to help the interim Malian government.

"Free democratic states cannot accept international terrorism gaining a safe refuge in the north of the country," Merkel told a German military conference near Berlin.

Yet despite the clear French interest in a Mali campaign, French officials don't want to be seen as too aggressive in helping Mali fight AQIM and its allies ? the Movement for Unity and Jihad in West Africa, known as MUJAO, and Ansar Dine, which now controls the famed Malian city of Timbuktu.

French President Francois Hollande, his popularity flailing just five months since he took office, faces a variety of challenges.

First, he wants to free the hostages while quashing the group that holds them. His hardline stance is puzzling to some observers but suggests that larger geopolitical concerns may be holding sway over concern for the hostages.

Secondly, Hollande has just returned from a trip to Senegal and Congo, where he vowed a new, fairer French relationship with Africa. A more robust French military footprint could revive allegations of a long-despised colonialist mindset.

But France is also determined to prevent more kidnappings across Africa, where thousands of French expatriates live under the growing threat of terrorism.

And French authorities have long been concerned that home-grown Islamic militants could get training abroad, then come back to France to sow terror ? a fear borne out by at least two terrorism cases publicly announced this year.

On Friday, a high-level European diplomat told the AP that French authorities know that AQIM has French nationals as members, though the official didn't provide an estimate of how many.

"At this phase, it's not a very high number," the official said. "But if nothing happens on the ground, and AQIM continues to settle in in a durable way and get structure, it's clearly a number that's going to grow."

Whether or when an international intervention in Mali will come remains uncertain.

At a meeting on the Sahel at the United Nations last month, Hollande called for an African-led military intervention in Mali "as quickly as possible." Since then, he has reiterated that France won't provide any ground troops. His government has pledged logistical support, training, and intelligence-gathering to help back up African forces.

French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian has said launching the operation is "a question of weeks," though the diplomatic official said that such a timetable was too hasty, and his comments were taken out of context. The main order of business for the French now, the diplomat said, is building consensus among the partners ? and ensuring that African countries take the leading role.

The idea would be intervention in northern Mali through a series of concentric circles: first by Malian government troops, then the ECOWAS alliance in western Africa, then possibly the broader African Union, and last a Western ? French, EU or American ? in a support role to fill any remaining gaps.

Mali government forces, which are run mostly by junior-level officers who staged the coup, are widely seen as incapable ? or unwilling ? to lead a military operation to recover control of the north.

In August, Mali's interim leaders announced a 31-minister government, including five seen as close to coup leader Capt. Amadou Sanogo, who nominally handed over power but still has not completely relinquished control.

Intelligence Online, which first reported about the French drone deployment, has reported that France has contracted Luxembourg-based CAE Aviation to monitor parts of north Mali and western Niger. A CAE Aviation executive didn't respond to phone messages and an e-mail from the AP seeking comment.

The United States has already expanded its Mali-related intelligence effort with satellite and spy flights over the north to track and map the rebels, U.S. officials have said.

The CIA is believed to use armed drones in places such as Pakistan and Yemen. The top-secret program is especially controversial in Pakistan, where residents view it as an affront to their sovereignty and contend that the drones frequently kill civilians, not just militants. France's military is not believed to have any armed drones.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Mark Toner said he wasn't aware of any French drone deployment over Mali, but said the U.S. was closely working with France and African nations on a plan to address the crisis.

"It's a matter of concern not just for us, not just for France, but for the region," Toner told reporters. "So it's going to take a collaborative approach. And that collaborative approach should be, we think, correctly led by those countries in the region."

___

Rukmini Callimachi in Dakar, Senegal, Geir Moulson in Berlin, and Bradley Klapper in Washington contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-10-22-France-Mali/id-2922478d7bcc44eeabb4dc7f3525e419

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Antibodies to immune cells protect eyes in Pseudomonas infection

ScienceDaily (Oct. 22, 2012) ? Contact lenses, particularly the extended wear variety, render wearers vulnerable to eye infections from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. These infections can cause severe damage, including blindness. Treating the eye with antibodies to the inflammatory immune compound interleukin-17 (IL-17) reduced eye damage and the number of bacteria in a mouse model. The research is published in the October Infection and Immunology.

The onslaught of Pseudomonas infection of the eye is often swift, and is aggravated by the bacterium's resistance to antibiotics. "Pseudomonas is everywhere in the environment, and can be unwittingly introduced into the lens cleaning solution, or directly onto the contact lens, so everyone who uses contact lenses is at risk," says principal investigator Gregory P. Priebe of Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, and Boston Children's Hospital.

Immune cells known as neutrophils are a major cause of the eye damage that ensues from Pseudomonas infection. IL-17 is involved in attracting neutrophils to the infected tissues. They are the vanguard of immune attack, arriving at a site of infection within an hour, trapping, and ingesting pathogens. In their pathogen-killing function, they also release noxious substances, notably elastase, an enzyme that can chew up tissues, and superoxide, which is converted into hypochlorous acid, more commonly known as chlorine bleach. Thus, the ensuing eye damage is not surprising.

Nonetheless, the strategy of blocking these pathogen killing cells risked reducing the immune system's bacteria-killing function, says Priebe. "Surprisingly, just the opposite was seen: blocking IL-17 with antibodies led both to fewer neutrophils in the eye, and to fewer bacteria," says Priebe. Thus, he says, the research may lead to effective treatments.

"We thought that blocking IL-17 infection might worsen eye infections, but found just the opposite,' says Priebe . "Interestingly, this is a common pattern in eye infections. The body's responses that make the damage worse are often the same things needed to limit infections in other tissues, such as the lung."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Society for Microbiology.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. T. S. Zaidi, T. Zaidi, G. B. Pier, G. P. Priebe. Topical Neutralization of Interleukin-17 during Experimental Pseudomonas aeruginosa Corneal Infection Promotes Bacterial Clearance and Reduces Pathology. Infection and Immunity, 2012; 80 (10): 3706 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00249-12

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/eCM5Elrf41c/121022194457.htm

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Third of Women Haven't Made Basic Retirement Plan

LIMRA discovered a disconnect between women?s concern about retirement risk and the steps they?ve taken to prepare, the organization announced Monday. The report found more women were concerned about retirement risk than men, but 32% have done no retirement planning at all.

"We know from earlier studies that working women, on average, have accumulated 40% less than men for retirement, which was confirmed again in this study," Cecilia Shiner, senior analyst for LIMRA retirement research, said in a statement. ?Even though 6 in 10 women are concerned they aren?t saving enough to last throughout their retirement, we see few women taking steps to mitigate for this risk.?

Overall, men are more likely to have taken steps to plan for retirement. Half of men have determined what their income will be in retirement and 43% have determined their expenses. By comparison, 47% of women have determined their income and 39% have determined their expenses.

Over a third of men have estimated how long their assets will last in retirement, compared with 29% of women. This is especially troublesome, as women are likely to have a longer retirement than men.

One explanation for women?s lack of action on retirement planning is that they are simply too busy and haven?t made it a priority, said Alison Salka, vice president and director of retirement research for LIMRA, on Tuesday. ?They?re focused on different things and may be balancing family and work,? she told AdvisorOne.

Alison Salka, LIMRAAn even larger issue, Salka (left) suggested, is women?s lack of knowledge regarding investing. ?We find if people are knowledgeable, they?re more likely to take steps,? Salka said. ?Knowledge is the key to engagement.

Shiner agreed, adding that both men and women underestimate the risk of longevity to their retirement. ?One-third [of respondents] consider it a major concern,? she said on Tuesday.

Among women who have prepared for retirement, about a third say they are actively engaged in their retirement savings. That?s compared with 46% of men. Furthermore, while two-thirds of women said they weren?t sure they could spend their retirement in the manner they?d like to, just 26% were researching investment products that could help them meet their goals.

?Advisors have a huge role to play? in helping women prepare for retirement, Salka said. They should focus on ?understanding women?s needs and educating them in a way that is not intimidating."

Prior research from LIMRA that focuses on life insurance suggests women are more thoughtful when purchasing products and less likely than men to make a decision quickly. Advisors who are used to working with male clients may think they?re not getting the sale, when in reality female clients are just processing the information, according to LIMRA.

LIMRA surveyed over 3,000 adults in May between the ages of 18 and 34. Of those, 1,900 were women.?

Source: http://www.advisorone.com/2012/10/23/third-of-women-havent-made-basic-retirement-plan

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Monday, October 22, 2012

WinZip 17


It seems like WinZip has been around since the dawn of PC computing. And indeed, at 21, it's one of the few popular programs still in use to have attained drinking age. And by popular, I mean it recently passed the billion download mark. But the just-launched version 17 shows that you can teach old dogs new tricks, at least when it comes to software. WinZip 17 ($29.95 direct) plays a useful role in this day of cloud computing, social networks, Windows 8, mobile devices, and even graphics hardware acceleration. The program even has a modern, if not futuristic look, with a simple yet functional Office-style button ribbon.

As you may have guessed, it does a heck of a lot more than just zip and unzip files now. And it supports many more archive file formats, which you may run into when downloading on the Web. In addition to ZIP, it can handle TAR, GZIP, CAB, RAR, 7z, ARJ, LZH, BHZ, and many more. It also offers government-level encryption to protect your files, as well as the cloud and social-network integration mentioned. It can also create self-extracting ZIPs so that you're recipient doesn?t need a utility to extract included files.

Setup/Signup
WinZip, despite its name, is now available for not only Windows XP through 8, but also for Mac OS X, Android, and iOS. The non-Windows versions, however, don't get the full functionality of the Windows version. You can download WinZip 17 as a free 45-day trial version before you buy. The evaluation version displays a banner ad and dialog asking you to purchase whenever you fire up the program. Installation also adds an Outlook plugin, which actually generated errors when I used Outlook to send emails.

Interface
The new WinZip's main window has the look of recent Microsoft Office interfaces, with a ribbon control bar. You can, however, revert to the classic WinZip interface if you prefer. Either choice is far more useable and attractive than 7Zip's. You can even dress WinZip in themes, but there's no Wizard view as there used to be and like that still offered by WinRAR.

WinZip's first ribbon choice is Create, which offers options for encrypting, resizing photos, watermark, and even converting to PDF. A new button is a cloud with a down-pointing arrow, which lets you create zips from your Dropbox, Google Drive, or Microsoft SkyDrive online storage. (Even though there's a Mac version of WinZip, it doesn't support iCloud file storage.) Of course, those choices required a sign-in to the cloud account. The Copy To ribbon set also offers those three cloud services as targets, too. I'd like to see Box (Free, 4 stars) added, since a lot of businesses use it.

Also like Office apps, at the very top of the app's window are small quick-access buttons, in WinZip's case these are for creating a new zip file, opening one, or?most interestingly?a cloud icon, which sends files to WinZip's ZipSend online storage service. More on this in a bit. WinZip also adds right-click choices to your Windows Explorer windows: You can create or add the selected files to an archive, or zip and e-mail the files. The context menus are also fully configurable, so you can just include the WinZip commands you want.

The remaining menu sets are Share, which lets you create a zip download on Facebook, LinkedIn, or Twitter. WinZip's own MyZip cloud storage is also an option here, as is FTP uploading. Backup, which lets you create a compressed Zip of everything in you Documents folder, photos, desktop, email, or favorites. This is a handy tool in a pinch.

Speaking of tools, that's the name of the next activity menu choice. Included are those for creating multi-part zip files, self-extracting ones, UUEncoding (remember those, from Usenet days?), and encrypting with a password. There are also tools for showing the last output messages of test results on the last zip action, a comment adder, and diagnostics. In my tests, the diagnostics and Last Output tools displayed the same dialog.

The final tool is the Performance Scan, which looks for unneeded and temporary files and registry issues, but when you click "Fix" it wants you to by the company's system cleaner software. Stick with CCleaner (Free, 3.5 stars) or SlimWare (Free, 4.5 stars) for this.

Cloud Connections
I was able to easily create zips from files that WinZip downloaded from my cloud accounts, and as with all zip creation in the program, a message box displayed after the operation, telling me how much space had been saved through compression. Likewise I could directly and easily upload a ZIP I'd just created to my cloud account.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/S4UmfVfxlVg/0,2817,2411150,00.asp

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In book, ex exec says?Goldman rips off clients

Greg Smith, the midlevel Goldman Sachs executive who famously left the bank the same day his resignation letter appeared as an explosive New York Times op-ed, told TODAY he quit because of the way the bank ? and other Wall Street firms ? dishonestly took advantage of uninformed clients. He has since written about his 12-year career at the firm in a tell-all book that details why left his London job as a derivatives trader and vice president.

Banks are supposed to make money, but ?capitalism doesn?t need to come with unethical behavior,? Smith told TODAY?s Savannah Guthrie. He said he quit after reaching his limit of seeing Goldman Sachs take overcharging clients.

?When a teacher?s retirement fund in Virginia or Alabama is paying a bank an extra two million dollars, that affects people and I think it?s unacceptable,? he said.

Smith famously called the Goldman Sach?s work environment ?toxic? in his op-ed column published in the spring and says that nothing changed after the financial meltdown.

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?What I write about in the book is that since the crisis, none of these problems have been fixed,? Smith told Guthrie. ?There are less banks, and they?re even bigger, so posing an even greater danger to society.?

In his book, ?Why I Left Goldman Sachs,? Smith also writes about a culture fueled by alcohol. ?Alcohol was a big part of the culture at the firm, as it is on Wall Street in general. Getting smashed with your clients was a regular occurrence.?

Read an excerpt: ?Why I Left Goldman Sachs?

Goldman Sachs said in a statement that Smith writes about a firm ?unrecognizable to us.? It also said it conducted an internal review and ?found no evidence to support his claims,? only suggestions that Smith was frustrated with his career prospects.

The company said that Smith didn?t file any formal complaints internally, while Smith said he spoke to nine senior partners in the year leading up to his departure.

?We discussed ethics and culture. Behind closed doors, a lot of these people agreed with me but no one is willing to say it publicly,? he said. ?The reason why I wrote the op-ed was to almost force change by saying something publicly that a lot of my colleagues agree with and acknowledge, and the idea of being asked to make morally dubious decisions by ripping off a charity or teacher?s retirement fund is something that bothers people so I actually wanted to try to change that.?

One particular charge by Smith was that his colleagues called their clients ?muppets,? a slang term for ?an idiot, a tool, manipulated by someone else.?

But an internal Goldman Sachs review found only one instance of the reference in employee email.

Smith insisted the term was used liberally, but said it?s more important to correct the issue behind it.

?I found the idea of searching for the word ?muppet? to be a bit of a hollow exercise,? he said. ?I would have liked Goldman Sachs to actually address the issue. Are clients being ripped off? I think it?s pretty well known on Wall Street that getting an unsophisticated client to trade a very sophisticated product is a way to make money very quickly.?

? 2012 MSNBC Interactive.? Reprints

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/49501626/ns/today-money/

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White House prepared to meet one-on-one with Iran

FILE - In this Jan. 11, 2012 file photo, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad speaks to a gathering at the University of Havana, in Havana, Cuba, The White House says it is prepared to talk one-on-one with Iran to find a diplomatic settlement to the impasse over Tehran's reported pursuit of nuclear weapons, but there's no agreement now to meet, Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Franklin Reyes, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 11, 2012 file photo, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad speaks to a gathering at the University of Havana, in Havana, Cuba, The White House says it is prepared to talk one-on-one with Iran to find a diplomatic settlement to the impasse over Tehran's reported pursuit of nuclear weapons, but there's no agreement now to meet, Saturday, Oct. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Franklin Reyes, File)

(AP) ? The White House says it is prepared to talk one-on-one with Iran to find a diplomatic settlement to the impasse over Tehran's reported pursuit of nuclear weapons, but there's no agreement now to meet.

National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor said Saturday that President Barack Obama has made clear that he will prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon and will do whatever's necessary to block that from happening. Vietor said Iran must come in line with its obligations, or else faced increased pressure.

"The onus is on the Iranians to do so, otherwise they will continue to face crippling sanctions and increased pressure," Vietor said in a statement. He noted that efforts to get Iran back to the table with the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and Germany ? the so-called "P5+1" ? continue.

Iran has been a recurring issue in the presidential election campaign and Vietor's statement was released shortly after The New York Times reported Saturday that the U.S. and Iran have agreed in principle for the first time to negotiations. The paper said Iran has insisted the talks wait until after the Nov. 6 election.

Vietor, however, denied that any such agreement had been reached.

"It's not true that the United States and Iran have agreed to one-on-one talks or any meeting after the American elections," he said. "We continue to work with the P5+1 on a diplomatic solution and have said from the outset that we that we would be prepared to meet bilaterally."

Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney will meet Monday night in a debate focusing on foreign policy and Iran's nuclear ambitions will likely be a topic. Obama has said he'll prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. He hopes sanctions alongside negotiations can get Iran to halt uranium enrichment. But the strategy, which began during President George W. Bush's administration, hasn't worked yet. Obama holds out the threat of military action as a last resort. Romney has accused Obama of being weak on Iran and says the U.S. needs to present a greater military threat.

Despite unprecedented global penalties, Iran's nuclear program is advancing as it continues to defy international pressure, including four rounds of sanctions from the U.N. Security Council, to prove that its atomic intentions are peaceful.

Those sanctions, coupled with tough measures imposed by the United States and European nations are taking their toll, particularly on Iran's economy. Iranian authorities have in recent weeks been forced to quell protests over the plummeting value of the country's currency. The rial lost nearly 40 percent of its value against the U.S. dollar in a week in early October, but has since slightly rebounded.

U.S. officials say they are hopeful that pressure from the sanctions may be pushing Iran's leaders toward concessions, including direct talks with the United States. But several said on Saturday that they did not believe such discussions would happen any time soon.

If one-on-one talks are to occur, they would likely follow the model that the U.S. has used in six-nation nuclear disarmament talks with North Korea, the officials said.

In those discussions, U.S. negotiators have met separately with their North Korean counterparts but only as part of the larger effort, which also involves China, Japan, South Korea and Russia. Direct U.S.-North Korean talks are preceded and followed by intense consultations with the other members of the group.

However, the direct talks with North Korea have yet to bear fruit and U.S. officials warned that talks with Iran may not yield anything either. If U.S.-Iran talks do occur, they would likely be part of the P5+1 process, which groups the Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States and is overseen by the European Union. The group has met numerous times with Iranian officials but has yet to achieve any significant progress.

In late September, the group instructed EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton to reach out to Iran's top nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, to organize another meeting. No date had been set for the possible resumption of talks.

Iran says its program is for peaceful energy and research purposes but Western nations fear the Islamic republic is determined to develop nuclear weapons and fundamentally reshape the balance of power in the Middle East. That would pose a grave threat to Israel.

Israel has threatened to strike Iran's nuclear facilities if Tehran doesn't stop uranium enrichment a process that can be a pathway to nuclear arms. Israel could decide to strike Iran's nuclear sites on its own, and Israeli leaders say time to act is running out. They have also hinted they would like U.S. support for any such attack.

An Israeli strike on Iran with or without Washington's involvement would likely draw retribution from Tehran including possible attacks on U.S. and Israeli interests overseas or disruptions to the transit of tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, which could send oil prices skyrocketing.

Obama has counseled patience as public as American public support for another Mideast conflict is low with the Iraq war over and the conflict in Afghanistan winding down.

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Associated Press writers Matthew Lee and Andrew Miga contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-10-21-US-Iran/id-d8bc33490e2140cbacf7c214a86e096d

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