Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/kate-middleton-on-impending-birth-i-cant-believe-it/
xbox live Psy Cat Zingano DMX spartacus spartacus Jonathan Winters
Yum, sugar pills! We talk about them all the time in science, where they have a much more formal and less appetizing name ? placebos.
A placebo is simply something used in research to act as a treatment equivalent, so as to not bias either the research subjects or the researchers themselves in how they perceive and react to the experimental treatment. In research on drugs, this often means giving one group of patients pills that look just like the medicine being studied, but lacking any active ingredient.
In recent years, new research has emerged looking solely at the studies that were used to gain FDA approval of antidepressant medications (some of which were never published). When taken together, the studies found that antidepressant medications may not be as effective as previously thought (but what any patient who?s ever tried them could?ve told us decades ago). This recent research found effect sizes of just 0.31.
Which got some researchers to wonder? If antidepressant drug treatment effect sizes might be lower than we had thought, could the same be true for psychotherapy effect sizes too?
Could, in fact, a sugar pill offer as much change in one?s depression as months or years of intensive psychotherapy?
A research study?s effect sizes tell us how different the treatment group is from the control group ? the folks taking placebos. A larger effect size means the treatment really worked, a small effect size tells us the treatment isn?t that much different from a sham treatment.
The studies re-examing the data on antidepressants demonstrated new effect sizes that were smaller than we thought they would be. We thought antidepressants had an effect size of anywhere from 0.60 to 0.40. Now we find out their effect size might be as little as 0.31 ? a significant difference.
This means that antidepressants ? as a class of drugs ? simply aren?t as effective as most of us once thought.
?C?mon Doc? Surely psychotherapy ? which seeks to make real changes to a person?s thoughts and belief processes ? couldn?t fare any worse when compared to a sugar pill, could it??
Answering this question is tricky, because there are so few studies that have been conducted comparing psychotherapy treatment with a pill placebo control group. That?s because a pill isn?t really equivalent to psychotherapy as a treatment method. It?s like comparing apples to oranges, so in psychotherapy research, the control group is most often what?s called a ?wait list? control group.
But you can look at studies that examined an antidepressant medication, a pill placebo, and a psychotherapy treatment group. And there just so happens to be a few such studies out there.
Cuijpers et al. (2013) combed the psychological and psychiatric research literature and found ten studies that compared psychotherapies with pill placebo. In total, 1,240 patients were included in these studies. They pooled the data and ran their statistical meta-analyses on the resulting data.
Here?s what they found:
At the end of clinical trials, the effect size for psychotherapy compared to pill placebo was g = 0.25.
If we translate that into practical terms of Number Needed to Treat (NNT), 7.14 psychotherapy patients had to be treated in order to get assured of getting one who did better than getting a pill placebo.
Patients in the psychotherapy conditions scored 2.66 points lower on the Hamilton depression rating scale than those assigned to pill placebo. These differences are well within the range of the differences found between antidepressants and pill placebo in the FDA registered trials.
Essentially, when compared to pill placebo, psychotherapy did as well or, if you?d like, as poorly as an antidepressant. So, inferring that psychotherapy is the preferred treatment based simply on the basis of the small differences between antidepressants and pill placebos is not warranted.
In other words, when we look at what limited data we have ? and 10 studies of just over 1,000 patients over the course of 20 years isn?t a lot ? psychotherapy doesn?t really come out ahead of antidepressant medications.
In fact, according to this one study, it?s actually worse than antidepressants (0.25 versus 0.31), and really not much better than a person taking a sugar pill for treatment (because these effect sizes are so small, they suggest there?s not a significant difference between the placebo and treatment groups).
James Coyne suggests, ?both sides should recognize that neither psychotherapy nor meidcation [sic] have the efficacy that we would like to obtain from them in treating depression.? No new antidepressant medication breakthroughs are on the horizon, he notes, nor have any new psychotherapies taken hold in the past twenty or thirty years.
Which leaves us with the knowledge that while the treatments we have may not be as effective as we would like them to be, they remain the best tools we have to combat depression. What research can?t capture or comment upon is the amount of trial-and-error effort that goes into finding the right, effective treatment for each individual. A process that ? while frustrating ? usually results in the person suffering from depression to find some relief and hope.
?
For a very lengthy, in-depth discussion of these issues, see: Is psychotherapy for depression any better than a sugar pill?
Reference
P. Cuijpers, E. H. Turner, D. C. Mohr, S. G. Hofmann, G. Andersson, M. Berking and J. Coyne. Comparison of psychotherapies for adult depression to pill placebo control groups: a meta-analysis. Psychological Medicine, available on CJO2013. doi:10.1017/S0033291713000457.
Footnotes:?
Dr. John Grohol is the founder & CEO of Psych Central. He is an author, researcher and expert in mental health online, and has been writing about online behavior, mental health and psychology issues -- as well as the intersection of technology and human behavior -- since 1992. Dr. Grohol sits on the editorial board of the journal Cyberpsychology, Behavior and Social Networking and is a founding board member and treasurer of the Society for Participatory Medicine.Like this author?
Catch up on other posts by John M. Grohol, Psy.D. (or subscribe to their feed).
????Last reviewed: By John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on 26 Jun 2013
????Published on PsychCentral.com. All rights reserved.
APA Reference
Grohol, J. (2013). What If a Sugar Pill Was Just as Effective As Psychotherapy?. Psych Central. Retrieved on June 26, 2013, from http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2013/06/26/what-if-a-sugar-pill-was-just-as-effective-as-psychotherapy/
?
Ledecky Nadia Comaneci Rebecca Soni Snoop Lion London 2012 Table Tennis
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/X-2S22eG6dQ/
luke bryan michele bachmann disneyland Now You See Me chrissy teigen Andre 3000 Keyshawn Johnson
Showing further commitment to social technologies (following their plans to use Twitter's mirror), Wimbledon has just announced the launch of?its first ever iPad app. This year, you will be able to interact with the tournament in a whole new way, including 360? photo and video view, as well as the option to use pinch and zoom to home in on the action.
It's also made it easy to follow your favourite players, using colour-coded drop pins on a real-time map view of the courts and match alerts so you can easily follow live games.The app has been produced in collaboration with IBM, as part of the ongoing partnership between the two.
The Wimbledon app is a lot more than just offering users an alternative place to follow the tournament and seems to have been designed with a second screen experience in mind. The content available within the app serves the viewer who already has one eye on the TV screen, and wants to get more information on upcoming games or additional stats when they're watching.
The app gives you everything you need when simply watching the matches live is no longer enough and this complements the live viewing experience.
comments powered bySource: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SimplyZesty/~3/e0N7kCZujUE/Wimbledon-launch-first-iPad-app
seabiscuit dingo nba all star weekend malin akerman jeff carter chomp national enquirer
By Christian Lowe and Jana Mlcochova PRAGUE (Reuters) - It was a moment of high drama: the Czech prime minister stood up in parliament to try to salvage a political career torpedoed by the arrest of an aide, and Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg, sitting next to him, had dozed off. Schwarzenberg's habit of napping has, instead of being a liability, made him popular among Czechs fed up with their political class and its endemic corruption, and desperate for someone who breaks the mould. ...
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/santander-says-does-not-bad-debt-provisions-100655795.html
dallas fort worth dfw 1930 census nike new nfl uniforms nfl uniforms andrew bailey the village
After all, the ugly creature?can live for up to thirty years (other rodents live about a tenth of that) and they are unusually resistant to cancer.
This resistance could be due to a molecule in the mole rats' connective tissues, according to a study published in the journal Nature on June 19.
Magic molecule?
This key molecule is called hyaluronan. It exists in long chains around cells holding them together in tissues. The hyaluronan chains found in mole rats are many times larger than the kinds found in shorter-lived mammals, like mice and humans.
The researchers think the long chains stop healthy cells from becoming cancer cells.
When Andrei Seluanov, of the University of Rochester, tried growing naked mole rat cells in the lab, they kept turning into a gooey, slow-moving syrup ? not normal.
The substance was so thick it was clogging the drains in his lab, he told Nature News.
Strange cells
Seluanov wildly guessed that this clumping might have something to do with the mole rats' weirdness. He saw that when injected into mice the cells didn't grow tumors, but they did when they were stopped from making hyaluronan.
That was pretty strong proof.
These findings could lead to treatments for humans in the future, Seluanov told Nature News, though it will probably be a few years still.
Naked mole rats probably didn't evolve long chain hyaluronan to fight cancer, but to help squeeze through the tiny underground tunnels that these animals burrow through. Up to 80 bald and almost-blind individuals huddle into their insect-like colonies (dominated by one breeding queen) in low-oxygen conditions.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/naked-mole-rat-cancer-prevention-trick-2013-6
Game of Thrones Season 4 Battlefield 4 erin brockovich gametrailers Apple.com Tony Awards e3
By Peter Henderson
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The fight over legalizing gay marriage in the most populous U.S. state may go back to the ballot box in 2014 with California voters asked once again to settle the matter even after the Supreme Court's expected ruling this month on the issue.
Experts believe the top court is unlikely to proclaim a national right to same-sex marriage in its decisions. The court is set to rule on a challenge to California's ban on same-sex marriage and on a provision of federal law denying certain benefits for married same-sex couples.
At issue is California's 2008 prohibition on same-sex marriage, known as Proposition 8. Lower federal courts struck down the ban, and a high court majority appears likely to rule in a way that would affect only Californians.
A vast array of legal issues, from the procedural question of who can legally defend a ballot proposition to more consequential questions of states' rights, leaves room for continuing uncertainty over the fate of Proposition 8. That has prompted each side to prepare a Plan B.
California could help to shape the national agenda again.
California voters in 2008 ended a summer of court-approved gay marriage by adopting Proposition 8. The proposal, backed by 52 percent of voters, changed the state constitution to define marriage as between a man and a woman.
That enraged and energized the national gay rights movement while offering social conservatives proof that their message resonated even in a state known for its liberal leanings.
For gay marriage supporters, buoyed by laws permitting gay marriage in now 12 of the 50 states and the District of Columbia, a California ballot initiative would be a chance to recover from their biggest loss.
For gay marriage opponents, it would be a chance to regain momentum.
"It's the biggest state in the union. It is a state that has twice voted for traditional marriage, and if we were able to prevail here, I think it would be an incredible feat, and would certainly cut the legs out from the inevitability argument," said Frank Schubert, who led the 2008 campaign to pass the ban.
2014 ELECTION GOAL
Social liberals, who are among the biggest supporters of same-sex marriage, generally turn out to vote most in presidential elections, which would suggest the best time to challenge Prop 8 would be November 2016.
But state gay rights groups don't want to wait, and they universally predict that if the need arose, they would fight at the ballot box in November 2014 when Americans hold midterm Congressional elections and California elects a governor.
"I've been talking to a lot of people in the donor community and outside the donor community," said John O'Connor, the new head of Equality California, the group which led opposition to Prop 8. "There is a sense of readiness," he said. Groups are ready to launch a coalition, he added.
The 2008 pro-gay-marriage campaign was generally seen as lacking a clear message, ignoring minority groups and bedeviled by complacency that gay marriage support was assured.
"The lessons of Prop 8 have been learned. The lessons of victories have been internalized," said Kate Kendell, executive director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights.
An Equality California poll this month found 55 percent of likely voters favored gay marriage. However, that is no guarantee; a Field Poll from September 2008 showed 55 percent of likely voters would oppose the Prop 8 ban. Less than two months later it passed.
Schubert is concerned about same-sex marriage supporters' recent fundraising success. "We can't go through another year like we did last year where we get outspent four to one," he said.
The 2008 ballot fight was one of the most expensive in state history, costing more than $80 million, with both sides raising more than $40 million in 2008.
Both sides aim to reach out to faith groups and minority groups, which are especially important in diverse California, and to do so early on. In fact, California groups have been doing grassroots support-building since 2008, in particular aiming to get gays and lesbians to discuss marriage with straight friends and family.
Gay marriage supporters signal they will seek to avoid a long million-dollar signature-gathering campaign to get an initiative on the ballot. Instead they hope Democrats will use their supermajority in the state legislature to put a constitutional amendment on the ballot.
(Reporting by Peter Henderson; Editing by Howard Goller and Cynthia Osterman)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/court-rules-california-gay-marriage-fight-may-051114972.html
neil patrick harris Austin Mahone E3 2013 Titanfall Killer Instinct New Xbox 360 cnet
Contact: Mathieu Filion
m.filion.rivest@umontreal.ca
514-343-7704
University of Montreal
This news release is available in French.
Child care is linked to fewer emotional problems and symptoms of social withdrawal among children exposed to maternal depression, according to a new study of nearly 2000 children conducted by researchers in Montreal, Canada, at the Sainte-Justine University Hospital Research Center, Universit du Qubec Montral (UQAM), and University of Montreal.
"We found that children exposed to maternal depression during the preschool years were nearly two times more likely to develop emotional problems and separation anxiety symptoms. However, regular child care attendance of at least 8 hours per week was linked to a more positive outcome for these children, such as reduced chances of developing emotional problems and symptoms of social withdrawal" reported Dr. Catherine Herba, a researcher at Sainte-Justine University Hospital Research Center who is the lead author of the study, as well as an assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at UQAM, and affiliated with the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Montreal.
Entering child care at a younger age (i.e. before 17 months of age) or later in the preschool period was associated with similarly beneficial effects. Most importantly, it was not the intensity of exposure that was linked to lower levels of emotional problems, but rather the type of child care arrangement that proved most crucial, the key being regulated group-based child care either in a family environment or a daycare center. Child care arrangements with family members or babysitters, usually individual care within the child's home, were not associated with reduced risk of developing emotional problems in these children. "Further work needs to be done for us to understand the exact mechanisms responsible for this effect", Dr. Herba added. "However results clearly point toward the benefits of regulated group-based child care for children exposed to symptoms of maternal depression during their preschool years. This could be due to the more structured setting; care provided by trained professionals; the child being out of their home; or exposure to other children of a similar age."
Dr. Sylvana Ct, a co-author of the study, also noted that "it is important that we support young families, particularly those at risk, by providing access to quality child care services". Dr. Ct is also a researcher at Sainte-Justine University Hospital Research Center and associate professor in the Department of Social and Preventive Medicine at the University of Montreal.
###
About the study
The study "Maternal Depressive Symptoms and Children's Emotional Problems Can Early Child Care Help Children of Depressed Mothers?" was published in the prestigious journal JAMA Psychiatry on June 19, 2013. Findings were based on the Quebec longitudinal study of child development. The study was supported by the Qubec Government's Ministre de la Sant et des Services sociaux, the Fonds de recherche du Qubec - Sant, the Fonds de recherche du Qubec - Socit et culture, Canada's Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Sainte-Justine University Hospital Research Center, and the University of Montreal. Researchers from the Universit du Qubec Montral, the Universit de Montreal, Universit Laval, and University College Dublin contributed to this study. Data was collected and managed by the Institut de la statistique du Qubec.
?
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.
Contact: Mathieu Filion
m.filion.rivest@umontreal.ca
514-343-7704
University of Montreal
This news release is available in French.
Child care is linked to fewer emotional problems and symptoms of social withdrawal among children exposed to maternal depression, according to a new study of nearly 2000 children conducted by researchers in Montreal, Canada, at the Sainte-Justine University Hospital Research Center, Universit du Qubec Montral (UQAM), and University of Montreal.
"We found that children exposed to maternal depression during the preschool years were nearly two times more likely to develop emotional problems and separation anxiety symptoms. However, regular child care attendance of at least 8 hours per week was linked to a more positive outcome for these children, such as reduced chances of developing emotional problems and symptoms of social withdrawal" reported Dr. Catherine Herba, a researcher at Sainte-Justine University Hospital Research Center who is the lead author of the study, as well as an assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at UQAM, and affiliated with the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Montreal.
Entering child care at a younger age (i.e. before 17 months of age) or later in the preschool period was associated with similarly beneficial effects. Most importantly, it was not the intensity of exposure that was linked to lower levels of emotional problems, but rather the type of child care arrangement that proved most crucial, the key being regulated group-based child care either in a family environment or a daycare center. Child care arrangements with family members or babysitters, usually individual care within the child's home, were not associated with reduced risk of developing emotional problems in these children. "Further work needs to be done for us to understand the exact mechanisms responsible for this effect", Dr. Herba added. "However results clearly point toward the benefits of regulated group-based child care for children exposed to symptoms of maternal depression during their preschool years. This could be due to the more structured setting; care provided by trained professionals; the child being out of their home; or exposure to other children of a similar age."
Dr. Sylvana Ct, a co-author of the study, also noted that "it is important that we support young families, particularly those at risk, by providing access to quality child care services". Dr. Ct is also a researcher at Sainte-Justine University Hospital Research Center and associate professor in the Department of Social and Preventive Medicine at the University of Montreal.
###
About the study
The study "Maternal Depressive Symptoms and Children's Emotional Problems Can Early Child Care Help Children of Depressed Mothers?" was published in the prestigious journal JAMA Psychiatry on June 19, 2013. Findings were based on the Quebec longitudinal study of child development. The study was supported by the Qubec Government's Ministre de la Sant et des Services sociaux, the Fonds de recherche du Qubec - Sant, the Fonds de recherche du Qubec - Socit et culture, Canada's Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Sainte-Justine University Hospital Research Center, and the University of Montreal. Researchers from the Universit du Qubec Montral, the Universit de Montreal, Universit Laval, and University College Dublin contributed to this study. Data was collected and managed by the Institut de la statistique du Qubec.
?
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/2013-06/uom-gcc061913.php
pulitzer prize winners nfl 2012 schedule gmail down tim lincecum ryan oneal file taxes online tupac shakur
(Fixes day and date in headline, first par)
Reuters sports schedule at 0600 GMT on Tuesday
- - - -
SOCCER
World Cup qualifiers
Australia v Iraq (0930)
Australia one win away from fourth World Cup
SYDNEY - The Socceroos need just to beat an Iraq side already out of the running for Brazil and weakened by the retirement of two key players to secure a place at a fourth World Cup finals and a third in succession. (SOCCER-WORLD/AUSTRALIA (PIX), expect by 1115 GMT/7:15 AM ET, by Nick Mulvenney, 500 words)
- -
European Under-21 championship finals, Israel
Italy v Spain, Jerusalem (1800)
Holders Spain face Italy in a European Under-21 final for the third time in a repeat of their title showdown at the Euro 2012 senior tournament. (SOCCER-UNDER21/FINAL (PIX), expect by 2000 GMT/4 PM ET, by Ori Lewis, 500 words)
- -
Confederations Cup
We will bring you all the latest news from the Confederations Cup as Brazil prepare to face Mexico at the Maracana and Italy play Japan in Recife in Group A on Wednesday.
- - - -
NHL
Stanley Cup Final
Bruins shutout Blackhawks in Game Three
BOSTON - Boston netminder Tuukka Rask was in brilliant form as the Bruins shutout the Chicago Blackhawks 2-0 in Game Three of the Stanley Cup Final. (NHL-STANLEY/ (PIX), moved, by Steve Keating, 500 words)
- - - -
NBA
Title on line as Finals return to Miami
The defending champion Miami Heat and challengers San Antonio Spurs return to Miami knowing their NBA Finals series could end with Tuesday's Game Six. (NBA-FINALS/ (PIX), expect by 2100 GMT/5 PM ET, 400 words)
- - - -
RUGBY
British and Irish Lions tour of Australia
ACT Brumbies v Lions, Canberra (0940)
Lions bid to tame Brumbies, stay unbeaten on tour
CANBERRA - The British and Irish Lions, with a hastily assembled backline led by 36-year-old former Wales winger Shane Williams, will hope for a rousing victory over twice Super Rugby champions ACT Brumbies to remain unbeaten on tour ahead of Saturday's first Australia test. (RUGBY-LIONS/ (PIX), expect by 1130 GMT/7:30 AM ET, by Ian Ransom, 600 words)
- - - -
BASEBALL
Scherzer stays perfect with 10th win of season
Max Scherzer maintained his perfect start to the season by securing a 10th straight victory in pitching the Detroit Tigers to a 5-1 triumph against the Baltimore Orioles. (BASEBALL-ROUNDUP/, moved, 300 words)
- - - -
GOLF
Iconic Merion stands test of time in hosting U.S. Open
ARDMORE, Pennsylvania - Like a vintage bottle of wine brought out of the cellar after gathering dust for 32 years, Merion Golf Club's iconic East Course made a welcome return as host of the U.S. Open - and did so in classic style. (GOLF-OPEN/ (PIX), moved, by Mark Lamport-Stokes and Larry Fine, 800 words)
- - - -
CRICKET
ICC Champions Trophy
We will have all the latest news ahead of the Champions Trophy semi-finals starting with hosts England against South Africa at The Oval on Wednesday.
- - - -
HORSE RACING
Royal Ascot (to 22)
ASCOT, England - Kentucky Derby and Dubai World Cup winner Animal Kingdom bids to follow in Frankel's hallowed hoof-prints in the Queen Anne Stakes with the American raider providing the star billing on the opening day of Royal Ascot. (HORSERACING/ASCOT), expect by 1430 GMT/10:30 AM ET, by Justin Palmer, 400 words)
- - - -
TENNIS
Wimbledon holds no fear for Radwanska anymore
Wimbledon can hold no fear for Agnieszka Radwanska this year, after the Pole survived all the way to the final last July. (TENNIS-WIMBLEDON/RADWANSKA (INTERVIEW, TV), moved, by Clare Fallon, 600 words)
- - - -
ATP/WTA: Den Bosch Open, Netherlands (to 23)
Eastbourne International, England (to 23)
Copy on merit (Duty editor: Peter Rutherford)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/reuters-sports-schedule-0001-gmt-monday-june-17-000100236.html
ludwig mies van der rohe jamie lynn sigler mega millions jackpot black panther party frank martin pink slime eagle cam
By the numbers, the MyCharge Freedom 2000 ($79.99 direct) should provide more than double the battery life to a connected iPhone 5. But, as we've found with some of its competitors, double the capacity doesn't equal double the battery life. Still, the Freedom 2000 provides enough charge to comfortably get you through a day of moderate to heavy use, and its unique design makes it possible to use headphones or Lightning-enabled accessories without having to remove the case. It's a good battery case, but it's not the best?that distinction remains with our Editors' Choice Mophie Juice Pack Helium, which adds more battery life in a sleeker and more attractive package.
Design and Features
The Freedom 2000 looks more like Unu's Ecopak?power solution, which was more of an external battery slapped onto a case than a traditional battery case. It's a single-piece design, measuring 5.1 by 2.5 by .6 inches (HWD) and weighing 2.88 ounces, with rubber sides that flex to let you easily slip an iPhone 5 into place. It's easily the shortest battery case for the iPhone 5, which is an important distinction since I found that cases like the Helium push the limit for shallower pockets. Inside is impact absorbing foam, while the back is covered in a glossy plastic material with inlaid concentric circles?reminiscent of the texture on Asus Zenbook laptop lids. The whole case looks too boxy, and I personally prefer the gently tapered, soft-touch back of the Juice Pack line. There are cutouts for the camera, Volume buttons, and silent switch, while a rubber button along the top lets you easily press the Power button. ??
Unlike other battery cases, the Freedom 2000 leaves the bottom edge of the iPhone 5 open?meaning you won't have to fiddle with a 3.5mm headphone extender like with every other case we've tested. Instead, MyCharge built a flexible and stowable Lightning cable that you plug into your iPhone when you need some extra juice. When not in use, simply slide the cable back into its slot where it stays hidden from view.
To the left of the Lightning cable is a flap that covers a micro USB port for charging the battery back. You can charge just the Freedom 2000, or connect the Lightning cable and charge the phone and battery case using the micro USB power source. The micro USB port is a bit recessed in the Freedom 2000, so while it works fine with the bundled cable, I found that even slightly bulkier cables didn't quite fit?negating some of the benefits of using the more ubiquitous micro USB standard. Around back is a Power button, which you press and hold to activate the flow of juice or press once to check battery status. It'll glow or blink green or orange depending on charge, but it's not quite as useful or easy to decipher as the status LEDs on the Mophie Juice Packs or the PowerSkin case.
Performance and Conclusions
Though it packs a sizeable 2000mAh battery, compared with the 1500mAh battery found in the Mophie Juice Pack Helium, the MyCharge Freedom 2000 fell short of expectations. In my tests, making a continuous call with LTE enabled with Wi-Fi and Bluetooth switched off, the Freedom 2000 added 5 hours, 35 minutes of talk time to my completely drained AT&T iPhone 5. The Helium, meanwhile, added 6 hours, 20 minutes on the same test. It did, however, best the PowerSkin's 4 hours, 28 minutes.
The MyCharge Freedom 2000 offers power when you need it, and open access to all ports when you don?t. It's also a good deal shorter than other options, but I can't help feeling like it's a glorified external battery grafted onto a normal iPhone 5 case?like the Unu Ecopak but with a built-in Lightning cable. On top of that, despite its high capacity battery, it wasn't able to best the Mophie Juice Pack Helium in our battery rundown tests. If you value having easy access to your ports, the Freedom 2000 is a good choice, but if you're looking for the best battery case, our Editors' Choice remains the Helium.
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/-2qhM_79sPg/0,2817,2420476,00.asp
tony robbins bon iver abraham lincoln vampire hunter their eyes were watching god lara logan manu ginobili sports illustrated swimsuit 2012
At a UK briefing for Nokia's incoming Lumia 925, the company revealed that it's continuing to deepen its relationship with Microsoft. Nokia UK's Ray Haddow said that it was "working even closer" with Redmond and that we can expect to see the fruits of this pairing "in the next few weeks." While we're not sure what that will entail just yet (and we're already expecting to see some beta software functionality land on our review model), we're hoping to see some new features from the team-up. Better still, we've just received our very own Lumia 925 to test, so expect a review very soon.
Update: As the meeting progresses, we've heard another small tidbit out of Nokia related to this collaboration. It appears that reps have been emphasizing the marketing aspects of this pairup, suggesting the two companies will work together in advertising and increasing Nokia's visibility. We'll update this post with more info if we get more clarification on exactly what we can expect.
Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Microsoft, Nokia
salton sea arizona immigration law aubrey huff the killers julianne hough brandy michael pineda
By Paul Taylor
PARIS (Reuters) - If the Troika that handles bailouts of distressed euro zone countries were a soccer team, it would probably be looking for a new manager after achieving a track record of one win, one loss and one draw.
The uneasy trio of European Commission, International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank was assembled in haste in March 2010 after Greece's public debt and deficit exploded and it was about to lose access to market funding.
Last week's IMF "mea culpa" report about the failures of the Greek program blew the lid off the fiction that the three institutions saw eye-to-eye on the rescue packages they designed and are enforcing in Greece, Ireland, Portugal and now Cyprus.
Behind closed doors, they clashed over whether Greece should restructure its debt, forcing investors to take losses, and whether Ireland should make bondholders in its shattered banks share the cost of a financial rescue.
They still differ over whether European governments should write off some loans to Athens to make its debt sustainable in the long term, an idea that is politically explosive before a German general election in September.
The public airing of such differences raises the question of whether the Troika has reached the end of the road. All sides are feeling sore but divorce seems unlikely.
The IMF says it lowered its standards to support a flawed program for Greece; the European Commission says it "fundamentally disagrees" with the IMF's view that Greek debt should have been written off sooner; and the ECB says the IMF is applying misleading hindsight.
The Europeans contend that in the acute market panic of 2010, before the euro zone had begun to built a financial firewall, letting Greece default or making it restructure its debt could have caused massive contagion to other countries and perhaps swept away the single European currency.
"It would have been Europe's Lehman moment," EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn told Reuters, referring to the 2008 collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers that sparked a global financial crisis.
"I don't recall the IMF's managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn proposing early debt restructuring, but I do recall that Christine Lagarde was opposed to it."
Lagarde was French finance minister at the time and replaced Strauss-Kahn as IMF head in 2011.
NUMBERS MASSAGED?
The most damaging suspicion raised by the IMF study of the Greek program is that the Troika made over-optimistic growth forecasts and massaged the debt numbers because euro zone political leaders exerted undue influence on the process.
Wrapped in the forensic jargon of financial analysis, the IMF experts say European leaders made Greece's economic crisis worse by delaying an inevitable debt write-off, buying time for their own banks to cut their losses at taxpayers' expense.
"The Troika is a unique set-up which has institutionalized political influence in IMF decision-taking," said Ousmene Mandeng, a former IMF official. "Decisions were perceived to be taken in Berlin and Brussels rather than by the IMF board.
"The IMF should never again be a junior partner in this way," Mandeng said, arguing that the Fund should either pull out of the Troika now or take sole control of the rescue programs.
ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet initially opposed bringing the global lender into the euro zone, arguing that Europe should be able to sort out its own problems. He also rejected debt restructuring or making bank bondholders share losses, saying it would ruin the euro area's standing in financial markets.
EU paymaster Germany and its north European allies insisted on IMF involvement because they feared the Commission would be too soft on indebted member states and too willing to commit taxpayers' money.
While the IMF never felt in command, EU officials felt it held a de facto veto on the bailout programs.
But the IMF is not the only body to harbor misgivings.
Some ECB stakeholders, notably in Germany, are worried about potential conflicts of interest if the central bank stays in the Troika while it is backstopping euro zone government debt at the same time with its OMT bond-buying program and is soon to take charge of supervising banks that lend to troubled sovereigns.
ECB executive board member Joerg Asmussen told the European Parliament that once the current crisis is over, the Troika should be replaced by the euro zone rescue fund and the European Commission. But not now.
ROSY FORECASTS
Many independent economic experts argued from the outset that Greece would never be able to repay its debt mountain and questioned the Troika's rosy forecasts for the Greek economy.
The initial Greek program projected that gross domestic product would contract by just 3.5 percent between 2009 and 2013. In fact, it crashed by 22 percent.
Troika officials repeatedly increased the amount Greece was supposed to raise by privatizing state assets, even as its economy crumbled and investors fled.
Growth forecasts for Portugal, where the outcome of a EU/IMF adjustment program remains uncertain, were also over-optimistic, though not by the same order of magnitude.
The biggest errors occurred in predicting unemployment - a key measure of economic damage in bailed out countries.
In Greece, the Troika originally foresaw a peak jobless level of 14.8 percent this year. The real figure is 27 percent.
Even in Ireland, the one "success" which returned to growth and expects to get back to market funding this year, the Troika underestimated job losses and the related social damage.
Now non-European IMF members in Latin America and Asia, who endured harsh lending terms in the 1980s and 1990s, are loath to pour more money into one of the world's richest regions.
"Operationally and financially, the IMF has become much more involved in Europe than its global shareholders deem sustainable," said Jean Pisani-Ferry, outgoing director of the Bruegel economic think-tank in Brussels.
An IMF source, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is still involved with the bailout programs, said the real problem with the Troika was that no one was in charge.
"It's more like a soccer team with no manager and no clear definition of who plays where on the field," he said.
(Additional reporting by Axel Bugge in Lisbon; Writing by Paul Taylor; editing by Ron Askew)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-euro-bailout-troika-nears-end-road-patchy-060052752.html
2013 Calendar chris christie sofia vergara American Horror Story Patti Page anonymous texas chainsaw massacre
George Zimmerman, accused in the Trayvon Martin shooting, in Seminole Circuit Court during his pretrial hearing??
Lawyers on both sides of the George Zimmerman trial today will begin what is expected to be a weekslong process of selecting a 12-member jury in the incendiary case in Sanford, Florida.
Zimmerman's attorneys declined to ask for a change of venue in the case, suggesting they are confident they can find impartial jurors in the area despite the wall-to-wall media coverage that 17-year-old Trayvon Martin's killing attracted last year. Zimmerman, out on a $1 million bond and in hiding for much of the past year, is charged with second-degree murder for killing the unarmed teen in a confrontation in his gated community, where Zimmerman acted as a volunteer watchman.
Prosecutors argue that Zimmerman racially profiled, followed and then shot Martin. Zimmerman's lawyers counter that their client was attacked by Martin and that he acted in self-defense.
Defense lawyer Jose Baez, who represented Casey Anthony in her high-profile trial in Orlando in 2011, said jury selection in this trial will be especially complicated because of the case's racial overtones. (Zimmerman is Hispanic; Martin was black.)
Generally, defense lawyers would be more likely than prosecutors to want to select minorities for a jury, since, on average, African-American and Hispanic people express more skepticism of law enforcement than white people, according to Baez. But in this case, Zimmerman's defense lawyers will want to pack the jury with white "gun-toting Republicans," who would be amenable to their argument that their client shot and killed the unarmed Martin in self-defense. These jurors might also be more convinced by the argument that local police made the right decision not to arrest or charge Zimmerman in the shooting initially.
"It's a very unique case in that respect, where the general rules that a lot of lawyers use are just going be absolutely flipped upside down," Baez said. "Because it is such a racially charged case, I think that the clear line is going to be drawn here between African-American jurors and Caucasian and Hispanic jurors."
But the defense team will have to be very careful in its quest to find conservative jurors more amenable to the self-defense argument. Circuit Judge Debra Nelson, who is presiding over the televised trial in the Seminole County Courthouse, will most likely be vigilant to make sure neither side is excluding jurors based on their race, which is illegal under a 1985 Supreme Court decision.
"I think this judge is fully aware of the racial tensions involved and is going to be on high alert," Baez said. If the defense team moves to dismiss an African-American juror during the peremptory strike phase of jury selection, for example, the judge could challenge it to provide a reason for the move. If the team can't come up with a good reason (for example, that the juror attended a rally in support of Trayvon Martin), the judge will assume the attorneys wanted to dismiss the juror for racial reasons and override their preference.
Nelson has ruled that the pool of 500 potential jurors will be kept anonymous during the selection process. It's possible she could order them sequestered during the trial, which is what happened to the jurors in the Anthony case. Nelson rejected the defense's request to sequester them during jury selection.
The pool will shrink rapidly as jurors can make the case that sitting on a jury for weeks would be a hardship. After that process winnows down the lot, the attorneys will go through and disqualify anyone with a personal connection to the case. Both sides will be on the lookout for jurors who have stated their support for either Zimmerman or Martin on social media sites, or been involved in activism around the case. The attorneys may also have potential jurors fill out questionnaires gauging their beliefs about gun control, law enforcement, race and other issues.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/jury-selection-begins-george-zimmerman-trial-121304344.html
London 2012 hurdles Taylor Kinney Beach Volleyball Olympics 2012 Jessica Ennis Aliya Mustafina Kirk Urso London 2012 Javelin
No matter what we call it, we all pursue success.? We all have desires and strive to achieve them.? Our desires may be different from anyone else?s, and we may not consider achieving them to be ?success.?? We look around and see people whose success we envy.? What is Jake doing with his supply of ho...
In this third installment of the ?Why People Resist Networking? Video Series, I discuss another popular theme surrounding why people tend to resist networking ? impatience.? If new networkers don?t see immediate payoff from their efforts, they become impatient, inevitably resulting in failure early on in the...
Peter Drucker once said, ?The most important thing in communication is to hear what isn?t being said.? ?This is so true and extremely important because the quality of our relationships depends on the quality of our communications; and when it comes to sales for your business and growing your business t...
In this second installment of the ?Why People Resist Networking? Video Series, I discuss another commonly held idea behind why people most likely resist networking?they claim they are much too busy to network. The bottom line is that though people may feel they ?don?t have the time? or...
Over the past few weeks, I?ve posted blogs on how embracing quality, adding members, and seeking engagement are all things that will help networkers and entire networking groups achieve success.? Today, I?d like to talk about an additional tactic for obtaining stellar networking results?sharing stories...
? In this first video in the ?Why People Resist Networking Series,? I list four ideas about why people most likely resist networking and then delve more deeply into detail about the very first idea?Lack of Confidence. I offer insight into three different reasons why people lack confidence when it c...
Engagement involves a promise and an action.? In order to achieve success in your group of networking relationships, you and your relationships must promise to support one another and then take the actions necessary to fulfill that promise. There are many ways that you can become engaged.? Have you taken the time to re...
In this fourth installment of the Networking Faux Pas Series, I talk about the faux pas which I see happen most out of the faux pas topics I?ve discussed thus far.? It also happens to be the faux pas which frustrates me the most (Seriously?it drives me crazy!)?it?s when you give a networking part...
Years ago I learned that there is a dramatic correlation between the size of a quality networking group and the number of referrals which are generated by that group. ?The fact is, the addition of new members brings an increase in the likelihood that any given networking group will be successful. Groups under 20 people ...
Last Thursday I posted a blog in which I explain why confusing networking with direct selling is one of the worst faux pas you can make while networking as it completely undermines any chance you have of being a successful networker.? The fact remains that if your idea of networking is walking around, shaking hands, and...
In order for a networking group to be successful and thus ensure optimum networking results for each of its members, the first thing the group needs to do is ensure they are embracing quality. Embracing quality means being very selective about who you bring into the group.? The only people you should be inviting into th...
In this third installment of the Networking Faux Pas Series, I discuss the danger of confusing networking with direct selling?it is often this specific point of confusion which really causes networking to go all wrong. If your idea of networking is walking around, shaking hands, and closing deals, you owe it to you...
When one of your business contacts passes you a new referral, does that mean the prospect is ready to hear a presentation on your product or service?? Repeat after me . . . NO.? Assume nothing. When an associate passes you a referral, say thanks, then start digging for more information.? Exactly what does the prospect...
In?this second?installment of the Networking Faux Pas Series, I talk about Premature Solicitation (a term you certainly don?t want to attempt to say three times fast as it very well may get you into a little bit of trouble . . .)?a classic example of how NOT to network. I share a personal story of an occurr...
Source: http://businessnetworking.com/
Obama 2016 Who Is Winning The Election 2012 Election Coverage 2012 Linda McMahon Voting Results 2012 pbs ron paul
Pool photo by Joe Burbank/Getty Images
Would you want to be on the jury that will decide whether to convict George Zimmerman in the Florida killing of Trayvon Martin? I would?except that the practical realities of serving on this jury would probably ruin anyone?s summer.
Jury selection may take as long as two weeks. That?s a sign of how racially charged and generally fraught this case remains more than a year after Martin?s death. Judge Debra Nelson has already ruled that the jurors are supposed to remain anonymous?the media won?t be able to show their faces, and they?ll be referred to by number instead of name. She has not yet said whether she?ll sequester the jury once its members have been selected, but odds are she probably will.
She shouldn?t?or at least I hope Nelson decides against sequestration. It?s a huge burden to impose on those citizens selected to serve?weeks of living a sealed existence in a hotel, away from your family, friends, and daily routines. I?d do just about anything to avoid serving on a sequestered jury, as I?m sure most people would. That?s why legal experts worry that sequestration skews the composition of the jury by limiting who is willing to serve. It could make retirees more likely to serve than working people or parents with young children, for example.
And I?m skeptical that it?s worth the cost. As I pointed out a year ago, after the story broke of Martin?s death in a gated community in Sanford, Fla., there has been so much publicity that it?s hard to imagine the point of shielding jurors from more at this point. Plus, to be an impartial juror shouldn?t mean being an uninformed one. As the Supreme Court said in 2010 in an appeal brought by Jeffrey Skilling, Enron?s former CEO, ?juror impartiality does not require ignorance,? and jurors ?need not enter the box with empty heads in order to determine the facts impartially.? Justice Kennedy went further two decades ago, when he wrote, ?Empirical research suggests that in the few instances when jurors have been exposed to extensive and prejudicial publicity, they are able to disregard it and base their verdict upon the evidence presented in court.? This is heartening when you think about it: Research shows that jurors can obey the instruction to set aside their preconceived notions about a case and stick to weighing the evidence presented at trial. Nelson should let the Zimmerman jurors sleep at home.
What about the racial composition of the jury? From the beginning, the debate over this shooting has been drenched in debate about racism because of some of the elements it involves: a teenage black victim, who was unarmed and wearing a hoodie when he was killed while out on a walk; a shooter who has a white father and a Peruvian mother and may have uttered a racial slur in his 911 call about the shooting; local law enforcement officials who initially decided not to press charges (a bad call that was later rectified when the governor appointed a special prosecutor). Of course, lawyers can?t object to potential jurors on the basis of race. That?s the rule from the Supreme Court set in 1986. But that doesn?t mean it doesn?t still happen, as this 2010 report from the Equal Justice Initiative describes. Jury selection based on race has just become more subtle. In the Zimmerman case, it should be obvious that the jury should include African-Americans and be multiracial. Nelson will surely be watching out to make sure jurors aren?t struck because of color. We will see, though, how this plays out.
Ta-Nehisi Coates has long pointed out that the core of the Zimmerman-Martin case is the botched police investigation and the screwy nature of Florida?s Stand Your Ground law. It was Stand Your Ground that confused the police into thinking that ?law enforcement was PROHIBITED from? arresting Zimmerman because he said he was acting in self-defense. The Florida law, passed in 2005, gives people who think they are being threatened the right to use force?they can protect themselves without first trying to retreat, the usual legal obligation outside of one?s own home. Stand Your Ground entitles defendants such as Zimmerman to a hearing, before trial, in which a judge decides whether to dismiss the case or let the jury hear it. The relatively low standard the judge uses?did the defendant show he feared for his life by a preponderance of the evidence?is good for the defense. And most of those who have invoked Stand Your Ground have gone free, especially (dismayingly) when the victim is black, according to this analysis by the Tampa Bay Times. But Zimmerman has decided not to have a Stand Your Ground hearing. His lawyers say he can convince the jury of self-defense, straight up.
That?s got to be the key question at trial?the same question this case has raised all along. Since Zimmerman has admitted to shooting Martin, all that remains is why, and whether to believe his answer or the prosecution?s. The tantalizing piece of evidence here is the 911 call about the shooting, which includes a voice screaming for help. Is it Zimmerman?s, as his lawyers claim, or Martin, as his family has said? Voice recognition experts testified on Saturday that they can?t say for sure: Because the voice on the tape is screaming, it?s in a high registry that?s too hard to match. Nelson hasn?t ruled yet on whether to allow the jury to hear this testimony. Since it won?t settle the identity of the screamer, it may not matter much. Then again, trials often surprise us. You don?t need to be on the jury to know that.
oregon ducks oregon ducks rob gronkowski Coughing eddie murphy Stephanie Bongiovi stanford football
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pandora-promise-start-environmental-movement-nuclear-power-120500896.html
Xbox 720 HTC One NICOLAUS COPERNICUS Las Vegas shooting Jerry Buss Chris Bosh wife josh duhamel