Thursday, March 14, 2013

Payday 2 Looks to Improve on an Already Great Formula - KBMOD ...

News

PAYDAY-2

Published on March 12th, 2013 | by Dan

Payday: The Heist is definitely a KBMOD favorite. I did a whole series with Alex and Nick on my YouTube channel last year. The game combines Left4Dead style game play with crazy Hollywood movie style heists. What?s not to love? There is even an extensive leveling system and some extreme difficulty too. ?The game really doesn?t have many faults, but Overkill Studios is going to try to top it.

Payday 2 was announced last year but now we have some details on what improvements and changes are coming to the game. PCGamer got a good amount of time with the game and has revealed some juicy details. Overkill has upped the stakes of the leveling system from more than just Call of Duty style perks to actual diverse talent paths. There are four ways to build your character and each one fulfills some individual roles in the heists. ?The classes include an Enforcer who does the damage for your crew, the Ghost, who can more easily remove cameras and destroy alarms, Technicians can crack safes, use gadgets and repair equipment faster and Masterminds can turn cops to your side and negotiate with ease. This will allow you to better plan heists and not rely on just piling up bodies, which is what the first game devolved into most of the time.

There will also be more dynamic missions with evolving mid-mission choice. You may have a branching side story to follow if you choose. You can even purchase maps or safe codes before the mission with previous stash money that will help with the current heist. There is even talk of being able to case the joint before the heist. Definitely check out the full list of changes in the PCGamer article linked above.

Overall, this all sounds like the right way to do the sequel to a first great effort. They didn?t make an radical changes and if anything have refined the formula of Payday: The Heist. This game is a definite purchase for me and if the first game was any indication, it should be a $20-$30 title so it won?t strain your wallet either. No release date pinpointed, but it will come out this year so keep your eyes on this one.

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image courtesy Starbreeze Studios

Tags: Overkill Studios, Payday 2, Payday: The Heist


About the Author

Dan I put the OO in Swagoo. One of the founders of KBMOD. I stream 3 times a week on the Twitch channel and try to write many articles here on the site. I enjoy long walks on the beach and games about children being chased through their basement by their homocidal mother.



Source: http://www.kbmod.com/2013/03/12/payday-2-looks-to-improve-on-an-already-great-formula/

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Kickoff for Mac and iPhone lets you manage work chats and group to-do lists

Manage work chats and group to-do lists with Kickoff for Mac and iPhone

Kickoff for Mac and iPhone aims to streamline getting things done and communicating with workgroups. That means sharing task lists, splitting up who is doing what, and chatting about it in real time. Whether you run a small to medium-sized business or have colleagues in remote geographical locations, Kickoff has something to offer.

Kickoff is currently available for both iPhone and Mac. While both apps are paid, signing up for the service itself is free. You'll be asked to do that when you launch either app for the first time. After you're signed in, you can start joining teams or creating your own.

The iPhone and Mac versions both allow you to create tasks and chat with other team members in real time. The real value of an app like Kickoff is the ability to create tasks and to-do lists natively. Where apps like Campfire, Glassboard, and HipChat offer a real-time chatroom, Kickoff takes it one step further. It integrates a to-do list.

To-do lists via email and text aren't necessary anymore with Kickoff. Simply add a to-do for the group to see or that only you can see. Other members of the team can then comment on it individually or discuss it in the main team chat window. Kickoff gives you the ability to assign tasks to specific people as well so you can keep track of who is currently doing what. This allows you to see what is going on in a quick glance. You can also comment on tasks which will nest underneath them.

Most people who use workgroups know that conversation can sometimes become less work and more general chat. Kickoff allows users to private message each other directly as well as nest comments on tasks. This means the main chat window stays focused and becomes less diluted with general chat which can easily happen with work groups and teams that only allow a main chat area and nothing else. That means colleagues don't miss important information that may be lost in general chatter.

When it comes to storing data, Kickoff uses Amazon S3 servers equipeed with TSL/SSL. This means every message sent is encrypted and safe. There is also native support for social services such as Twitter, YouTube, Vimeo, Dribble, CloudApp, and more built right in.

The good

  • Push notifications are super fast on iPhone
  • Full integration with Notification Center in OS X
  • Drag and drop file sharing in OS X
  • Support for keyboard gestures and shortcuts on OS X
  • Dictation support in OS X
  • No monthly subscription fee, after you purchase the app you have complete access to all of Kickoff's features

The bad

  • You can currently only upload photos in the iPhone version of Kickoff
  • No iPad support

The bottom line

Creating a productive work environment online where you can collaborate with others isn't an easy task. The tools you use will always dictate how productive your employees are and unfortunately there haven't been a lot of great choices for small to medium sized businesses that don't want to spend the money on a custom solution. Where one excelled, the other was lacking and vice versa. Kickoff for Mac and iPhone may very well bridge that gap.

Everything from the user interface to how you share and collaborate on data blows the competition away. The only feature Kickoff is currently lacking that we'd like to see in a future update is the ability to upload files other than photos on the iPhone. If you spend most of your time on a Mac, you'll be able to share files but it'd be nice to see the same extended to iPhone whether that's through Dropbox integration or some other way.

Kickoff is by far the best chat and task management app for workgroups that is currently available in either App Store. We can only cross our fingers that they'll also bring this to iPad eventually.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/8_hMTaJpYyg/story01.htm

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Monday, March 11, 2013

This Week in Small Business: The Next Big Battle - NYTimes.com

Dashboard

A weekly roundup of small-business developments.

What?s affecting me, my clients and other small-business owners this week.

The Budget: SkyNotFall

The sequestration takes effect, and according to Keith Hennessy, the impact is: ?skynotfall.? Stephen Colbert offers a creative solution, and things are so bad that one ex-con is accused of sneaking back into jail. Some economists believe the sequestration doesn?t cut spending at all, but $92 million is whacked from the Small Business Administration?s budget, and Kelly Phillips Erb says some small businesses are already taking a hit. A small-business round table discusses the debt. These are four things to know about the next big budget battle, and do you also know who is one of the most influential people in the formation of the White House economics team?

Small Business Statistics: The Bright Side

The latest employment numbers bring ?great news.? Despite the Dow Jones industrial average?s record close, small businesses are still struggling and although the recovery is lifting profits, many analysts conclude it?s still not adding jobs. A survey shows steady job gains in February and Intuit?s small-business employment index edged up. Moderate growth continued in the Philadelphia region. But small-business hiring was down in Pennsylvania and small-business closings increased in Missouri. Lending to small companies weakened in January, and Destiny Bennett explains the real reason small-business owners are not getting loans. A survey finds more baby boomer owners are selling their businesses. On the bright side: now is a great time to be in the tax business!

The Economy: Surpassing Saudi Arabia

The United States was the world?s largest petroleum producer in November, surpassing Saudi Arabia for the first time in 10 years ? but an oil price analyst is doubtful about the potential of American oil production. Lance Roberts believes an asset bubble is indeed growing. Ezra Klein offers a few reasons to be optimistic. Economic activity in the nonmanufacturing sector increased for the 38th consecutive month, and activity in the manufacturing sector increased for the third consecutive month. Home prices nationwide increased on a year-over-year basis by 9.7 percent. Lumber prices approached an eight-year high. And these 100 facts about the economy will blow your mind.

Management: Don?t Quit the Day Job (Yet)

Forbes publishes its annual list of billionaires. GoDaddy?s founder warns against quitting your day job too soon. Mikey Rox lists 25 ways to raise your creativity, including: skim through a magazine. In this video, a blogger says Groupon and its former chief executive, Andrew Mason, should be ashamed. Marc Andreessen and B. Horowitz take a crack at annotating Mr. Mason?s goodbye memo. Jeff Cornwall tells a story of how he knew it was time to fire a customer. Patricia Lotich lists her top 10 small-business resources. These are five potentially disastrous financial mistakes every entrepreneur should know about. An online grocery store uses its customer-purchase histories to predict when items will run out. A receivables management firm offers an ?A to Z of receivables management.?

Your People: The Cool Kids

Yahoo reins in telecommuters, and Best Buy copies it. A study reveals that more than 600,000 commuters travel more than 90 minutes to work every day. A new national survey finds more than a third of American workers experience chronic work stress, with low salaries, lack of opportunity for advancement and heavy workloads topping the list of contributing factors. Kirsten Chiala takes a look at how companies and employees are benefiting from ?telework.? Richard Juman suggests three ways to inspire a healthy corporate culture. Chucky terrorizes drive-thru employees. A company offers an alternative to the student loan by connecting prospective employees with potential backers who are willing to invest in their career goals. Data crunchers are now the cool kids on campus and these are the top 50 apps employees sneak into work. This is one of the craziest buzzer beaters you?ll ever see.

Start-Up: Blowing It

After selling her start-up for $70 million at age 25, the founder blows through her fortune and heads to prison. These are the steps to follow to set up a home-based small business, and these are the funniest home Wi-Fi names. A new contest challenges you to explain what your start-up does and why anyone should care in six seconds. A crowdfunding site is started to drive the ?new American dream.? But a start-up guru doubts that crowdfunding will happen.

Around the Country: A Start-Up Video Store?

These are the 10 American companies with the best reputations. And here are 13 stores you will never shop at again (but this passionate owner of a video-rental store in Pennsylvania doesn?t care). A ?Grey?s Anatomy? star tries to turn around a failing coffee business in Seattle. Texas leads the country in business relocations and expansions. The 2013 Startup Law Summit is scheduled this week in Chicago (a city that needs a ?start-up growth anchor? according to Microsoft?s C.E.O.). San Francisco?s Bay Bridge lights up. Social entrepreneurship programs at Yale and Stanford Universities are scheduled for high school students this summer. Here are four underrated tech hubs to watch, and here are the 10 cities with the highest tax rates.

Around the World: Singapore Is No. 1

Singapore ranks as the top Tier 1 economy since 1980. German car sales plunge as Europe?s auto crisis deepens, and some believe the fourth euro crisis cycle of panic has officially begun. But private business activity in the euro zone in February was not as bad as feared. Some believe that Spain still has a long way to fall. Since 2008, Somali pirates operating in the Gulf of Aden have cost the shipping industry $900 million to $3.3 billion per year. A plague of locusts descends upon Egypt. Swiss voters approve limits on executive pay. This is why Auntie Anne?s Pretzels failed in China. Tim Fernholz claims that America is terrible at globalization. iYogi makes a big small-business bet in India.

Social Media: Pronto!

Facebook redesigns its news feed. Twitter kills TweetDeck. Mark Veverka warns that if your company or business does not have a social media strategy, it better get one pronto! A coming webinar features a social media expert who will explain how to use Facebook and LinkedIn for lead generation. Nick Bilton writes that it ?seems as if Facebook is not only promoting my links on news feeds when I pay for them, but also possibly suppressing the ones I do not pay for.? Hospitals with the most Facebook likes have lower death rates. Jeff Bullas explains how to use Pinterest?s group boards to get more exposure for your business. These are the basics of social media marketing for business-to-business companies. Here are nine amusing travel hacks, and the Raiders? Desmond Bryant is the target of a hilarious meme. An awkward British guy invites Mila Kunis out drinking.

SXSW: Ten Austin Start-Ups

Here are the 10 Austin start-ups you need to meet at South By Southwest this week. Pizza Hut plans to hold 140-second job interviews there. You can get a free ride in the SXSW TechCab by confessing your sins. An Austin entrepreneur shares his SXSW tips. Andrea Swensson explains why she?s not going this year.

Marketing: Too Watery?

Kelley Robertson says this is how not to use a referral. Derrick Daye shares seven ways to generate ideas from customers. Allison Carter warns you not to start content marketing if you are not willing to wait at least six months before seeing results. Online survey tools may be the most effective way to engage existing customers. Chris Robinson explains how business owners can increase site traffic through video. Here?s the only way to market with SnapChat. Wal-Mart introduces a program supporting businesses owned by women worldwide. This is how Budweiser responded to accusations that its beer was too watery.

Cool Ideas: Forgive Us

A company offers digitized magazine subscriptions for waiting rooms. A new type of silicone exhibits both viscous and elastic properties. A flexible battery stretches 300 percent. This video explains how 3-D printing will change the world, but this infographic shows how long the 3-D printing revolution will take. Apple is said to be planning an iWatch and a fingerprint-sensing iPhone, and it now seems that the latest fashion is wearable computers. An entrepreneur auctions off his name to the highest bidder. To predict trends before they happen, G.B. Oliver recommends keeping an eye on pop culture. A company regrets printing Bible quotations on toilet paper.

Technology: Google Glass for Guys

Evernote is hacked. Jon Xavier lists seven Apple products whose reality didn?t live up to the hype. Adriana Gardella wants to know how you handle laid-back technology vendors. These are four apps for getting rid of paperwork. A new case helps you get a better Wi-Fi signal on your iPhone. A programming error costs Microsoft 561 million euros. A survey shows that small businesses have heavy exposure to data breaches. A new backup tool will help manage your overstuffed Gmail account. And here?s how guys will be using Google Glass in the future.

Tweet of the Week

?@alexia ? ?You going to SXSW(i)?? ? Everyone even vaguely related to tech, right now.

The Week?s Best

Bob Phibbs wants to know if you are too weak to become stronger: ?It isn?t so much what you decide to reach out for, but it is that moment of decision. Going from the weakness of I?m overwhelmed, I don?t need anyone else, it won?t work, etc. to one of strength ? this will allow me to work smarter, focus my attention, make my business competitive. That?s why I pay for my Web designers to carry out my vision. That?s why I paid for a one-day coaching with one of the smartest marketers around. That?s why I do a lot of things. And I know a lot of you do too.?

This Week?s Question: Why aren?t you going to SXSW this year?

Gene Marks owns the Marks Group, a Bala Cynwyd, Pa., consulting firm that helps clients with customer relationship management. You can follow him on Twitter.

Source: http://boss.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/11/this-week-in-small-business-the-next-big-battle/

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Positive Attitude for Self-Improvement and Success | Healthy ...

Webmaster | March 10, 2013 | no comments



Positive Attitude for Self-Improvement and SuccessThis?article covers a topic that has recently moved to center stage?at least it seems that way.

If you?ve been thinking you need to know more about it, here?s your opportunity.

Everything that happens to us happens in purpose.

And sometimes, one thing leads to another.

Instead of locking yourself up in your cage of fears and crying over past heartaches, embarrassment and failures treat them as your teachers and they will become your tools in both self-improvement and success.

I remember watching Patch Adams ? it?s my favorite movie, actually. Its one great film that will help you improves yourself. Hunter ?patch? Adams is a medical student who failed to make it through the board exams. After months of suffering in melancholy, depression and suicidal attempts ? he decided to seek for medical attention and voluntarily admitted himself in a psychiatric ward.

His months of stay in the hospital led him to meeting different kinds of people. Sick people in that matter. He met a catatonic, a mentally retarded, a schizophrenic and so on. Patch found ways of treating his own ailment and finally realized he has to get back on track.

He woke up one morning realizing that after all the failure and pains he has gone through, he still want to become a doctor. He carries with himself a positive attitude that brought him self-improvement and success. He didn?t only improved himself, but also the life of the people around him and the quality of life.

Did he succeed? Needless to say, he became the best?doctor his country has ever known.

So, when does self-improvement become synonymous with success? Where do we start? Take these tips, friends?

*Stop thinking and feeling as if you?re a failure, because you?re not. How can others accept you if YOU can?t accept YOU?

*When you see hunks and models on TV, think more on self-improvement, not self pitying. Self acceptance is not just about having nice slender legs, or great abs. Concentrate on inner beauty.

*When people feel so down and low about themselves, help them move up. Don?t go down with them. They?ll pull you down further and both of you will end up feeling inferior.

*The world is a large room for lessons, not mistakes. Don?t feel stupid and doomed forever just because you failed on a science quiz. There?s always a next time. Make rooms for self-improvement.

*Take things one at a time. You don?t expect black sheep?s to be goody-two-shoes in just a snap of a finger. Self-improvement is a one day at a time process.

*Self-improvement results to inner stability, personality development and?SUCCESS. It comes from self-confidence, self-appreciation and self-esteem.

* Set meaningful and achievable goals. Self-improvement doesn?t turn you to be the exact replica of Cameron Diaz or Ralph Fiennes. It hopes and aims to result to an improved and better YOU.

*Little things can mean BIG to other people. Sometimes, we don?t realize that the little things that we do like a pat on the back, saying ?hi? or ?hello?, greeting someone ?good day? or telling Mr. Smith something like ?hey, I love your tie!? are simple things that mean so much to other people.

When we?re being appreciative about beautiful things around us and other people, we also become beautiful to them.

*When you?re willing to accept change and go through the process of self-improvement, it doesn?t mean that everyone else is. The world is a place where people of different values and attitude hang out. Sometimes, even if you think you and your best friend always like to do the same thing together at the same time, she would most likely decline an invitation for self-improvement.

We should always remember that there?s no such thing as ?over night success?. It?s always a wonderful feeling to hold on to the things that you already have now, realizing that those are just one of the things you once wished for. A very nice quote says that ?When the student is ready, the teacher will appear.?

We are all here to learn our lessons. Our parents, school teachers, friends, colleagues, officemates, neighbors? they are our teachers. When we open our doors for self-improvement, we increase our chances to head to the road of success.

Those who only know one or two facts about Positive attitude can be confused by misleading information.

The best way to help those who are misled is to gently correct them with the truths you?re learning here.

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Article by Zack Lim

About the Author : Zack Lim is the owner of http://self-improvement.atspace.com providing information on positive attitude. To get Free ?7 Days to Positive Thinking? course, go to http://self-improvement.atspace.com.

www.healthylifestyleplus.com

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Category: Healthy Spirit

Source: http://www.healthylifestyleplus.com/spirit/positive-attitude-for-self-improvement-and-success/

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M@h*(pOet)?ica ? Mathematics and Love

#StorySaturday is a Guest Blog weekend experiment in which we invite people to write about science in a different, unusual format ? fiction, science fiction, lablit, personal story, fable, fairy tale, poetry, or comic strip. We hope you like it.

I know, I shouldda had math and love as my subject last month.? But I?ve been reading essays lately against having Valentine?s Day in the cold, cold month of February.? I don?t like it there, either?because I don?t like it competing with the only important holiday in that month (or the year, for that matter!), Groundhog Day, the day I was born.? In any case, this entry will feature poems from Strange Attractors, an anthology edited by Sarah Glaz and JoAnne Growney, containing 151 poems (by my count) that are mathematical or about mathematics, and concerned with love.? Not necessarily romantic love and courtship, although many are.? ?Among the funniest ones of these (and included are more than a few very funny ones about those topics) is a limerick by Bob Kurosaka concerning a young maiden named ?Lizt? who ?turned both her lips/ Into Mobius strips . . .?? His poem ends with ?kissed,? happily exemplifying the anthology?s principal theme.? (With the important bonus of two ?ips?-rhymes sharing a 5-rhyme poem with 3 ?ist?-rhymes!)

Two other poems about kissing in the anthology with an equally entertaining silliness are otherwise notable for having been written not by poets but by those who did consequential work in mathematics.? One was Frederick Soddy (1877?1956), a radiochemist who won a Nobel Prize (the first Nobelist, I believe, to have also achieved a place in this blog!)? He, with Ernest Rutherford, Wikipedia informs us, explained that radioactivity is due to the transmutation of elements.? The other, an English lawyer, Thorold Gosset (1869?1962), was noted for discovering and classifying the semiregular polytopes in dimensions four and higher. (Sorry, I don?t know what polytopes are, either.? I?m tempted to say it?s a four-side, 6-dimensional hectosphlidge to spur some expert or other to correct me in a comment; this blog is not getting comments, the only thing about it that bothers me.? Well, except its tendency to go off on tangents like this.? But ?tangent? is an irreproachably mathematical word, so I shouldn?t be bothered.

Dang, I can?t think of a transition to get us back to where we were. . . .? How about, ?meanwhile, back at the ranch??*? Meanwhile, back at the ranch, the note provided by the editors of Strange Attractors about the two poems tells you pretty much all you need to know about them.? Soddy?s poem, ?The Kiss Precise,? ?is about his rediscovery, of ?the Descartes Circle Theorem, which involves the radii of four mutually tangent circles? (shown below) and ends announcing his extension of it to cover spheres.? Gosset wrote his poem, ?The Kiss Precise (Generalized) after reading Soddy?s to describe ?the more general case for tangency, or ?kissing,? of n + 2 hyperspheres in n dimensions.?

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A rather more serious take on love is Kaz Maslanka?s

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John Vieira?s, ?The Lake Swan, the Tom,? comes nowhere near the mathematical part of the brain ?Sacrifice and Bliss? puts us in, but does graze what might be called the ?visio-conceptual? part of the brain (if it exists) due to the poet?s use of geometry to paint his picture.

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The visioconceptual part of the brain, I postulate, is where one deals with the abstract basic visual attributes of reality, such as circles, rectangles, straight lines, the curve and vector in John?s poem?and visual symmetry? which I believe we see as certainly as we see colors.

John?s poem, I might add, also puts a reader in what I call the ?socioceptual? part of his brain.? It is in this zone, which has to do with one?s awareness of, and interaction with, others (as Howard Gardner hypothesizes although he may have a slightly different name for it), that the reader (it is to be hoped) will identify with the swans.? Meanwhile, the poem should involve most readers with and the purely sensual part of their brains?where he sees and feels the scene depicted.?? I mention all this simply to remind everyone that a central function of poetry is to put us in more parts of our brains than prose does.

In the following cartoon by Randall Munroe?which I do consider a poem, as well?romantic love is again dominant, but the focus is on its difficulty?at least for someone mathematically inclined, and the poem puts us much more into the mathematical part of the brain than anywhere else:

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Love is actually far from prominent in this one, the social part of the brain being involved only as an excuse to put readers into the mathematical and visio-conceptual parts of their brains?mainly the latter, I would say, where you have to play around with geometry to figure it out. ?I have to boast that I solved it.? I also have to confess that it clobbered me at first.? I worked a good two hours on it after first reading it, then gave up!? I rarely do that.? Anyway, the interesting thing is that I was tired enough that day to go early to bed.? I went quickly to sleep but awoke a couple of hours (not unusual for old me)?and I awoke thinking about the problem, the solution I quickly sketched.? Hint: it involves triangles, and the trick is to get a few trees each into a line of five.? Big hint: 3, 5, 3, 5, 3.

At this point I want to present a poem about another kind of love, the love that friendship is, most especially to showcase perhaps the only bona fide mathematician who became a world-class poet, Lewis Carroll:

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Sigh . . .? But enough of the tenderest kinds of affection for now to turn from the love and friendship of people to the love of other things, like mathematics itself, as expressed in Rita Dove?s, ?Geometry,? which wonderfully describes the poet?s elation at having proven a theorem: at once, her ?house expands,? becoming transparent until she?s outside it where ?the windows have hinged into butterflies . . . going to some point true and unproven.?? Putting her in the almost entirely asensual beauty of the visioconceptual part of her brain where Euclid doth reign supreme.

JoAnne Growney?s**** ?San Antonio, January, 1993,? expresses a love of mathematics, too?not by using a house as a metaphor, though, but hot peppers (which I guess she likes more than I do):

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With somewhat more than a trace less decorum than ?San Antonio, January, 1993,? in their expression of?well, not quite love of mathematics, but a deep admiration, however rude, of what Mandelbrot did mathematically?are Jonathan Coulton?s song lyrics, ?Mandelbrot Set?:

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Then there?s my own contribution to the anthology, ?Mathemaku 10?:

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It expresses what the multiplication of poetry by love (and everything else the heart-symbol represents) can do.*****? This poem is here, incidentally, not only because it?s by ME, and I?m notorious for self-aggrandizement, but because of what does to the anthology?s index:

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While gabbing about my poem, I have to tell you that it is my sole poem to have appeared in a college textbook, so you mustn?t think such poems have been ignored by the academy?100% ignored, at any rate.? The textbook was the sixth edition of reading reacting writing, edited by Kirsner & Mandell (Thomson, Boston 2007), a book I understand sells in the hundreds of thousands.? I was promised a copy of it in payment for my poem, but never got it?in spite of twice requesting it from the publishers.? Yes, the lot of the poet is a difficult one.

Sarah Glaz?s contribution, ?Calculus,? expresses a love not of mathematics so much as the history of the discipline:

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Not in the Glaz/Growney anthology nor even a poem but expressing a different kind of love for mathematic is the following painting of Sue Simon?s, ?More Math?:

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?The painting was done for a math show in Boston, but it was actually shown at the California Women?s Museum this winter,? she went on to say.? ?I thought the equation was beautiful looking (ask a painter about math!) and I set it in a sort of unsettled field of floating shapes and color because it has some relation to Heisenberg?s uncertainty principle.?

Ergo: an expression of love for the visual appearance of mathematical equations!

The equation in Sue?s painting expresses the Cauchy?Schwarz inequality.? ?When I went to the Wikipedia to find out about it, I learned ?that for all vectors x and y of an inner product space it is true that

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where <.,.> is the
inner product. ?

This sent me to the Wikipedia entry on ?inner product?:

Geometric interpretation of the angle between two vectors defined using an inner product

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?In linear algebra, an inner product space is a vector space with an additional structure called an inner product. This additional structure associates each pair of vectors in the space with a scalar quantity known as the inner product of the vectors. Inner products allow the rigorous introduction of intuitive geometrical notions such as the length of a vector or the angle between two vectors. They also provide the means of defining orthogonality between vectors (zero inner product). Inner product spaces generalize Euclidean spaces (in which the inner product is the dot product, also known as the scalar product) to vector spaces of any (possibly infinite) dimension, and are studied in functional analysis.

?An inner product naturally induces an associated norm, thus an inner product space is also a normed vector space. A complete space with an inner product is called a Hilbert space. An incomplete space with an inner product is called a pre-Hilbert space, since its completion with respect to the norm, induced by the inner product, becomes a Hilbert space. Inner product spaces over the field of complex numbers are sometimes referred to as unitary spaces.?

Needless to say, I ended my attempt at self-education as out of it as my poems leave some people.? And, with that I fold my tent once more.? Have a good spring, everyone!

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Note: the poems quoted in full here are all from Strange Attractors, edited by Sarah Glaz and JoAnne Growney and published by A.K.Peters, Ltd., Wellesley, Massachusetts (2008). Permission to reproduce the poems in this entry was obtained from? their authors, all of whom hold full rights to their use.

* The goofiest thing about this goofiness is that I?m not being paid by the word?I don?t have to do it!

** No criticism, this?the two poems call for horrideous doggerel.

*** This and the other parts of the brain have been fairly firmly established by neurophysiologists, it seems to me, although they have different names for them; but it would probably be wise to consider them as metaphors for the brain as a collection of sundry different departments?according to my cracker barrel philosophy, which is nonetheless the result of a good deal of RESPONSIBLE REFLECTION!

**** JoAnne, I must note, has a highly informative and entertaining blog about the intersection of mathematics and poetry at http://poetrywithmathematics.blogspot.com.? While I?m at it, I should point you to Kaz Maslanka?s blog about the same intersection at http://mathematicalpoetry.blogspot.com.

***** Capture all that italicizes existence: in other words, existence ain?t nuttin? without poetry multiplied by love (of another, or others, or poetry, ad infinitum), cardiovascular health, courage, etc.

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Previously in this series:

M@h*(pOet)?ica
M@h*(pOet)?ica: Summerthings
M@h*(pOet)?ica?Louis Zukofsky?s Integral
M@h*(pOet)?ica?Scott Helmes
M@h*(pOet)?ica?of Pi and the Circle, Part 1
M@h*(pOet)?ica ? Happy Holidays!
M@h*(pOet)?ica?Circles, Part 3
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Saturday, March 9, 2013

Obama presses on with GOP charm offensive

House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. arrives at the West Wing of the White House in Washington, Thursday, March 7, 2013. President Barack Obama is having a private lunch with Ryan and the committee's ranking Democrat Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. arrives at the West Wing of the White House in Washington, Thursday, March 7, 2013. President Barack Obama is having a private lunch with Ryan and the committee's ranking Democrat Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., ranking Democrat on the House Budget Committee, right, arrives at the West Wing of the White House in Washington, Thursday, March 7, 2013. President Barack Obama is having a private lunch with Van Hollen and committee chairman Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., gives a thumbs up as he emerges from a private dinner with President Barack Obama and Republican senators at the Jefferson Hotel in Washington, Wednesday, March 6, 2013. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., left, Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Ok., center left, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisc., center right, and Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., depart the Jefferson Hotel after a dinner meeting hosted by President Barack Obama for a few Republican Senators in Washington, Wednesday, March 6, 2013. Obama's efforts are aimed at jumpstarting budget talks and rallying support for his proposals on immigration and gun control. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)

Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, leaves the chamber after Republicans passed legislation through the House to ease the impact of $85 billion in short-term cuts and prevent a government shutdown later this month, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, March 6, 2013. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

(AP) ? Punctuated with the sounds of ringing phones and clinking china, President Barack Obama's new legislative diplomacy has Republicans wondering what took so long.

Obama pressed ahead Thursday with his bipartisan political outreach, eliciting a cautious welcome in a capital that has been riven by gridlock and partisanship over how to lower deficits and stabilize the nation's debt.

Obama had the Republican House Budget Committee chairman, Paul Ryan, and the committee's top Democrat, Chris Van Hollen, to lunch at the White House, a day after he dined with a dozen Republican senators in what the White House said was an effort to find common ground with rank-and-file lawmakers.

Few were willing to guarantee that the engagement would yield results. Previous presidents have tried to develop relationships with members of Congress with varying degrees of success, though some of the biggest pieces of legislation, such as the 1964 Civil Rights Act and a Social Security deal in 1983 required cross-party efforts by Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Ronald Reagan.

"We're not naive about the challenges that we still face; they exist," White House spokesman Jay Carney said. "And there are differences."

Obama has negotiated directly in the past with House Speaker John Boehner in hopes of finding a large deficit reduction deal, but those efforts have faltered as the president pursued deals with tax increases that Republicans oppose. Most recently, neither side worked hard to avoid $85 billion in automatic spending cuts and instead devolved into partisan finger-pointing over which side was more to blame.

Boehner said Obama's new approach represented a 180-degree turn. "He is going to, after being in office now over four years, he is actually going to sit down and talk to members," Boehner said. "I think it is a sign, a hopeful sign, and I'm hopeful that something will come out of it. But if the president continues to insist on tax hikes, I don't think we're going to get very far."

Carney argued that Obama's new talks with congressional Republicans did not signal a shift as much as an attempt to seize an opportunity after automatic spending cuts kicked in last Saturday but months before another fiscal deadline looms. But in briefing reporters Thursday, Carney noticeably dialed back his criticism of Republicans and emphasized the "common ground" that existed between the parties.

"The fact is, this should have been happening all along," said Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., one of the dozen Republicans who joined Obama for dinner Wednesday night at a hotel a few blocks from the White House.

Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., a veteran of Washington politics who got an ice-breaking call from Obama this week, said he appreciated his talk with Obama but said that type of engagement should have occurred much sooner.

"He's the first president in my experience, and I've known or worked with eight, who's had almost no personal relationships here in the Senate, on either side as far as I can tell," Alexander said.ms

Obama may be attempting his charm blitz later than most presidents do. Some presidents have found common ground with opponents sooner, others have not. Former Republican Senate leader Trent Lott, speaking at the 2009 ceremony unveiling his majority leader's portrait in the Senate, said he and President Bill Clinton maintained a friendly relationship even though they quarreled bitterly in public.

"Even if I did or said something stupid ? or vice versa, excuse me, Mr. President ? the main thing about it is that quite often we'd call one or the other and we'd laugh about it," Lott said as Clinton smiled and nodded at his side.

Senate Historian Donald Ritchie said that Reagan, during his first year in office, called every member of Congress. "His congressional liaison found that that worked against him in the long run because members of Congress expected the president to call them on every issue," Ritchie said.

Indeed, Ritchie said, no matter what the relationship is between a president and Congress, lawmakers inevitably complain that presidential outreach is not enough and presidents regularly argue that members of Congress demand too much.

Obama's outreach comes as Senate Democrats appeared to move toward easing passage for a spending measure to pay for day-to-day federal operations through September. Appropriations Chairwoman Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., said there's a "delicate balance" between supporting Obama administration priorities and going too far as to "sink the bill."

Mikulski said the Senate would give agencies including the Agriculture, Homeland Security and Justice departments their detailed, line-by-line budgets as part of legislation advancing next week to head off a government shutdown at the end of March. Other agencies would run on autopilot essentially at last year's funding levels. The automatic cuts ? 5 percent to domestic agencies and 7.8 percent to the Pentagon ? would apply whether or not an agency received its detailed budget.

The House passed its version of the legislation Wednesday.

Obama plans to address Republicans and Democrats in the House and Senate separately next week, the next step in his approach to spell out his agenda to lawmakers.

White House aides say the effort to reach out to rank-and-file members is designed to let the president explain his policies without the filter of party leaders, with whom he has dealt with in the past.

Along with Corker, the lawmakers in attendance at Wednesday's dinner were Sens. John McCain of Arizona, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire, Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, John Hoeven of North Dakota, Dan Coats of Indiana, Richard Burr of North Carolina and Mike Johanns of Nebraska.

___

Associated Press writer Andrew Taylor contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-07-Budget%20Battle/id-604da829fbf74bb4af1b46f986277600

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Boeing 787 battery fire was difficult to control

FILE - In this Jan. 24, 2013 file photo, Joseph Kolly, director National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Office of Research and Engineering, holds an fire-damaged battery casing from the Japan Airlines Boeing 787 Dreamliner that caught fire at Logan International Airport in Boston, at the NTSB laboratory in Washington. An investigation of a battery fire aboard a Boeing 787 shows mechanics and firefighters made repeated, unsuccessful attempts to put out the blaze through smoke so thick they couldn?t see the battery. The documents released Thursday by the National Transportation Safety Board paint a more dangerous picture of the Jan. 7 fire than previously portrayed. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 24, 2013 file photo, Joseph Kolly, director National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Office of Research and Engineering, holds an fire-damaged battery casing from the Japan Airlines Boeing 787 Dreamliner that caught fire at Logan International Airport in Boston, at the NTSB laboratory in Washington. An investigation of a battery fire aboard a Boeing 787 shows mechanics and firefighters made repeated, unsuccessful attempts to put out the blaze through smoke so thick they couldn?t see the battery. The documents released Thursday by the National Transportation Safety Board paint a more dangerous picture of the Jan. 7 fire than previously portrayed. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

(AP) ? Firefighters and mechanics tried repeatedly to put out a battery fire aboard a Boeing 787 Dreamliner through smoke so thick they couldn't see the battery, according to documents released Thursday that portray the incident as more serious than previously described.

The Jan. 7 fire at Boston's Logan International Airport is under investigation by the National Transportation Safety board, which released laboratory analyses, interviews and other data it has gathered so far. It still hasn't been able to pinpoint the cause.

Federal Aviation Administration officials are expected to make a decision in the next few days on whether to approve a plan by Boeing to revamp the 787's lithium ion batteries to prevent or contain future fires. Once the plan is approved, Boeing hopes to swiftly test the reconfigured batteries and get the planes back in the air.

Dreamliners worldwide have been grounded since a second battery incident led to an emergency landing in Japan nine days after the Boston fire. The incidents have raised questions about the safety of using lithium ion batteries, which are more susceptible to igniting if they short-circuit or overheat than other types of batteries. The episodes also have called into question the FAA's process for certifying the safety of new aircraft designs.

The Boston fire occurred aboard a Japan Airlines plane that had just landed after an overseas flight and was parked. A cleaning crew discovered smoke near a kitchen in the rear of the plane six minutes after the last of the 184 passengers walked off the plane, and one minute after the pilots left.

A mechanic investigating the source of the smoke in an electronics bay found intense smoke and three-inch flames in two places on the housing covering the battery. Attempts to put out the flames with a dry chemical fire extinguisher were unsuccessful.

The first firefighter to enter the plane reported seeing "a white glow about the size of a softball" through the smoke using his hand-held heat-imaging camera. He applied another type of fire extinguishing agent, which somewhat reduced the glow. An airport security camera video showed white smoke billowing from the underside of the plane.

Another firefighter entering the electronics bay reported "no visibility" because of the smoke and directed another burst from a fire extinguisher at a hot spot, but the battery seemed to rekindle. A fire captain applied the extinguisher again for about five minutes, reducing the fire. But the battery was still emitting heavy smoke and hissing loudly. Liquid was flowing down its side. Lithium ion batteries contain a flammable electrolyte.

Firefighters finally decided to remove the battery from the plane, but its "quick-disconnect knob" was melted, hampering the process. Investigators later found little balls of melted and cooled stainless steel, apparently from the cases of the battery's eight cells. That type of steel melts at 2,700 degrees Fahrenheit, one document noted. The bottom of the battery box was bent from where firefighters pried it out.

In all, it took an hour and forty minutes to quell the fire.

The report said several kinds of battery failures can cause the battery to smoke. Those include short circuits, recharging a battery that has been allowed to discharge too far and charging at cold temperatures. But unless something outside the battery ignites it, only overcharging it will cause it to burn, according to a report by NTSB engineer Mike Hauf, citing a Boeing safety assessment.

That raises the question of whether there were different causes for the fire in Boston and the Jan. 16 incident aboard an All Nippon Airways plane, where the battery smoldered but flames were not reported.

ANA confirmed this week that it replaced three circuit boards located in 787 electronics bays after pilots received an error message during flights in March, April and June of last year. One of those circuit boards had a "slight discoloration," said ANA spokeswoman Nao Gunji. Nothing wrong was found with the other two, but they were replaced as a precaution, she said.

The 787 is Boeing's newest and most technologically advanced plane. It is the world's first airliner made mostly from lightweight composite materials. It also relies on electronic systems rather than hydraulic or mechanical systems to a greater degree than any other airliner. And it is the first airliner to make extensive use of lithium ion batteries, which are lighter, recharge faster and can hold more energy than other types of batteries.

Boeing has billed the plane to its customers as 20 percent more fuel efficient than other midsized airliners. That's a big selling point, since fuel is the biggest expense for most airlines.

Airlines have been forced to tear up their schedules while the planes are out of service. United Airlines recently cut its six 787s from its flying plans at least until June and postponed its new Denver-to-Tokyo flights. United is the only U.S. carrier with 787s in its fleet.

LOT Polish Airlines has said the grounding of its two 787s is costing it $50,000 per day. The airline has said it will ask Boeing for compensation. Norwegian Air Shuttle, which was due to receive 787s this year, said it will lease two Airbus A340s along with flight crews for its planned New York-to-Bangkok flights if it doesn't get its 787s on time. The airline is allowing customers on 787 flights to change their flight date or get a refund, but "very few have taken advantage of this offer," spokesman Laase Sandaker-Nielsen said Thursday.

Boeing is still building 787s, but deliveries are halted. It has not said how much the battery problems will cost.

UBS analyst David Strauss estimated Boeing will burn some $6 billion in cash on the 787 this year ? and that's even if it delivers more than 60 of them. Every missed 787 delivery adds as much as $120 million to the plane's cash burn this year, he estimated in a note on Tuesday.

___

Freed reported from Minneapolis.

___

Follow Joan Lowy at http://www.twitter.com/AP_Joan_Lowy

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-07-Boeing%20787/id-da940ae0540f48a880303fd19d1586f3

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Democrats face challenging Senate landscape

(AP) ? After a surprising string of victories last fall, Democrats now face a challenging terrain as they look to hold onto their Senate majority in 2014 and prevent Republicans from gaining full control of Congress during President Barack Obama's final two years. His party must defend a hefty 21 seats, including seven in largely rural states that the president lost last fall.

The task of maintaining control of the Senate has grown more daunting in recent weeks, with four Senate Democrats announcing plans to retire. Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan disclosed his decision on Thursday, following Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin and West Virginia Sen. Jay Rockefeller. New Jersey Sen. Frank Lautenberg has also said he will retire, but Democrats will be heavily favored to hold the seat. A fifth Democratic retirement could come soon from South Dakota Sen. Tim Johnson, who has not yet announced his intentions.

Democrats control 55 seats in the Senate, after November elections in which they did better than expected and gained two seats to pad their majority. That means Republicans would need to pick up six seats next year to take control for the first time since 2006.

Twenty months before the mid-term elections, Republicans are laying the groundwork to try to capitalize on the defense-playing Democrats, working to recruit strong candidates in Arkansas, Alaska, Louisiana, North Carolina, South Dakota and West Virginia ? all states carried by Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney last year. They're also buoyed by history, which shows the party controlling the White House typically loses seats during the midterm of a second-term president.

"The map looks pretty good" for the GOP, said Greg Strimple, an Idaho-based Republican pollster for Senate and gubernatorial candidates. "If I had a deck of cards to play, I'd rather play the Republican deck than the Democratic deck."

Indeed, Republicans have only 14 of their seats up for re-election and only one ? Sen. Susan Collins of Maine ? is in a state Obama carried last year. Just two GOP senators have said they will retire ? Mike Johanns of Nebraska and Saxby Chambliss of Georgia ? and they represent states that favor Republicans.

Democrats say 2014 could be a repeat of the past two election years, when their well-funded candidates benefited from the missteps of tea party Republicans who were nominated in bruising primaries over more mainstream GOP candidates.

Mindful of those scars, Republicans are watching to see if such polarizing primaries materialize in states like Georgia, Michigan, Iowa and South Dakota. The outcome of those primaries could determine whether the GOP will try to take advantage of Democratic retirements.

Jim Manley, a former aide to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., doesn't deny that the spate of Democratic retirements make it that much tougher to keep control in 2014. "The math is very much against Democrats," he said. Even so, he adds, "The real question, however, is whether Republicans are going to keep on nominating extremists or they're going to finally figure out that they've got to go mainstream."

At this early stage, both sides are focusing mostly on recruiting candidates ? and watching for signs of how the opposition is positioning.

An early skirmish has emerged in Kentucky, where Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell faces re-election next year and is working to prevent both Republican and Democratic challenges. Among the Democrats talking about running: actress Ashley Judd, who grew up in Kentucky but lives in Tennessee.

Some of the states that could turn into Senate battlegrounds next year include:

MICHIGAN: Republicans see a pickup opportunity with Levin's departure even though the party last won a Senate race in 1994. Several Republicans may seek the nomination, including members of the state's veteran congressional delegation, including Reps. Mike Rogers, Dave Camp and Justin Amash, a favorite of libertarians. Democrats could turn to Rep. Gary Peters, who represents suburban Detroit, or Mark Schauer, a former congressman from a rural district south of Lansing.

IOWA: Harkin's decision not to seek a sixth term has created the state's first open Senate race since 1974. Rep. Bruce Braley, who has tried to position himself in the mold of the liberal Harkin, is the only Democrat to declare his candidacy. Among Republicans, Rep. Tom Latham declined to run while Rep. Steve King, a conservative, has expressed interest but has also been counseled by GOP Gov. Terry Branstad to wait. Lesser-known GOP prospects Lt. Gov. Kim Reynolds, a Branstad prot?g? who is also popular with the state's evangelical right, and state Agriculture Secretary Bill Northey, popular with the state's agribusiness community, are exploring candidacies.

SOUTH DAKOTA: Republicans view South Dakota as a key potential pick-up, especially if Johnson retires. Johnson has made huge strides in recovering from a debilitating 2006 brain hemorrhage, but the state has trended sharply Republican in the past six years. Former two-term Gov. Mike Rounds began campaigning for the GOP Senate nomination shortly after the 2012 election, but it's not clear if Rounds, vulnerable to attack from spending hawks on his right, will face a primary challenge. If Johnson retires, former Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin and Johnson's son, Brendan Johnson, the state's U.S. attorney, are potential prospects.

LOUISIANA: Democrat Mary Landrieu is again a prime target for Republicans as she seeks a fourth term. Republicans have yet to identify a challenger and Landrieu, the daughter of one of the state's most durable political families, has $2.5 million in her campaign account. Two Republican congressmen, Charles Boustany and Steve Scalise, have taken their names out of consideration while two House colleagues, physicians John Fleming and Bill Cassidy, are mulling bids, along with Lt. Gov. Jay Dardenne, a favorite of moderates. Tea party conservatives are pushing former Rep. Jeff Landry.

Republicans view West Virginia Rep. Shelley Moore Capito as a strong candidate to capture the seat of retiring Rockefeller. In North Carolina, Democrats are defending Sen. Kay Hagan in a state narrowly lost by Obama. And Alaska could be pivotal, with Sen. Mark Begich, a Democrat, potentially facing a challenge from Republican Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell.

__

Beaumont reported from Des Moines, Iowa. Associated Press writer Bill Barrow in Atlanta contributed to this report.

___

Follow Ken Thomas on Twitter: http://twitter.com/AP_Ken_Thomas and Thomas Beaumont http://twitter.com/TomBeaumont.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-08-Senate-2014/id-08ae9b9b22e34594a84d02a44e8b7503

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Chris Brown Goes Off Again, Tells Crowd: F*%K DRAKE!

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Prison land trust | The Salt Lake Tribune

Prison land trust

First Published Mar 07 2013 01:01 am ? Last Updated Mar 07 2013 01:01 am

If the bill to move the state prison from Draper passes, then design it to benefit education for years to come.

Transfer the current prison land to the Utah School and Institutional Trust Lands Administration to be held in a trust. Long-term lease arrangements of prime real estate will benefit schools far more than any one-time sale of the land.

L. Richard Raybould

Salt Lake City


Copyright 2013 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Guest post: Turkish businesswomen need more access to finance ...

By Mike Davey of the EBRD

Turkey has been looking for ways to modernise and grow for decades, but this is particularly true today. And now it is noticing its biggest under-utilised resource: women.

Many images of Turkey include women in headscarves. It is probably the Turks? least favourite image: many Turks are concerned that it does not properly reflect the fact that Turkey is a modern country. Some will remind you of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk?s words: ?Humankind is made up of men and women; if one half of a whole is chained to earth, how can the other half soar??

Legally and officially, women have full equality. And they are capable of great achievements. In ?modern?, metropolitan Turkey one meets highly-successful women from prominent business families, playing key roles in their family companies. Guler Sabanci is head of the multi-billion dollar business, Sabanci Holding. The president of the Turkish Industry and Business Association?s Board of Directors is Umit Boyner. Many daughters and nieces from business-owning families go and get their MBAs and return to work for the family company.

But both anecdotally and statistically speaking, Turkey does not score well in terms of gender inclusion. Attitudes and traditions dictate that a son, rather than a daughter, starts or inherits a business. Access to finance for women entrepreneurs and their small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) is insufficient.

The current AKP government has a gender agenda; one of its aims is to increase female participation in the labour market by providing more opportunities in smaller municipalities. But the private sector, particularly banks, needs to do more to help women entrepreneurs.

SMEs feed most Turkish families, accounting for three-quarters of all employment. Statistics show that about 40 per cent of Turkish SMEs are owned or co-owned by women (curiously far fewer have women in top management ? only 12 per cent). Women are strongly represented in the textiles, chemicals, retail and service industries. Yet only 15 or so per cent of female-owned micro, small and medium-sized enterprises get their financing thorough banks.

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has been operating in Turkey since 2009, and we see the need to address these issues. It was in Turkey that we launched the EBRD?s first credit line aimed specifically at women entrepreneurs (?60m through the local Garanti Bank, which was also the first private bank in Turkey to launch a women entrepreneurs? support package). This credit line is aimed at women outside the three biggest cities of Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir (where access to finance is relatively stronger).

We are working on the second credit line for ?20 million with another local private bank, Yapi Kredi. We have also started to include a gender element in projects we finance directly; one of them, the privatisation of IDO ferries in Istanbul, came with the undertaking by the new owners, TAV, to raise the number of female employees ? which they have done. They are also planning a scheme for female interns from maritime schools, and we hope some of them will soon become ferry captains.

We wish not only to improve access to credit but also promote the issue of opportunities for women. If it becomes fashionable in Turkey, it will benefit the economy as a whole. At our Annual Meeting in Istanbul in May this year, we will hold a high-level debate on promoting the role of Turkish women in business.

Meanwhile one client in the western city of Bursa, who obtained a loan through the EBRD?s credit line with Garanti Bank, has just received another order. Handan Ilkoz?s small construction company, Izodem Construction Isolation, is sub-contracted to do some building work at the new football stadium where the city hopes to invite international teams in a few years? time.

She used the loan of 50,000 Turkish lira (about ?21,000) to pay salaries to her 30 employees, when her clients were late with payments. She says that for a woman such as herself, a seasoned small business owner in the male-dominated world of construction, the loan was helpful because it was affordable. But for young women who are just taking their first entrepreneurial steps, she adds, access to such finance means the difference between succeeding or failing.

Mike Davey is director for Turkey at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development

Related reading
Education reforms divide Turkey FT
Leading from the front FT
Women at the Top, FT Special

Source: http://blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/2013/03/07/guest-post-turkish-businesswomen-need-more-access-to-finance/

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Apple marketing chief jabs Android security on Twitter

Cnet Thursday 7th March, 2013

Android is getting worse, in part because of the platform's brisk growth and a new variant of malware that spread using SMS. "Android malware has been strengthening its position in the mobile threat scene," the report's executive summary said. "In the fourth quarter alone, 96 new families and variants of Android threats were discovered, which almost doubles the number recorded in the previous quarter." Apple's iOS, Blackberry and Windows Mobile were also targets for malware threats, but were typically a part of broader, multi-platform attacks, the report said. iOS has not been immune to s...

Read more

Source: http://www.argentinastar.com/index.php/sid/213059853/scat/d805653303cbbba8

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ineedtofindmywaybacktothestart: Mayday Parade by Manz Piencak...

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