Sunday 3 March 2013

Egyptian Muslims clash with police amid religious tensions ...

?CAIRO, March 1, 2013 (AFP)

Egyptian police fired tear gas on Friday to disperse Muslim protesters outside a church in southern Egypt after claims that a women who converted to Christianity was hiding in the church, a security source.

The police acted after the protesters pelted them with stones in the town of Kom Umbo, the source said.

The official Al-Ahram newspaper reported on its website that police also refused to allow Christian worshippers to leave the church, in order to avoid clashes between them and the protesters.

The Muslims had also protested outside the church on Thursday night.

Sectarian tensions are high in Egypt, which is home to the region?s largest Christian minority, with violence occasionally flaring between Muslims and the Coptic Christians.

Copts, who make up between six and 10 percent of the country?s 83 million people, have complained of an increase in sectarian attacks since an uprising overthrew president Hosni Mubarak in early 2011.

Source: http://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2013/03/80574/egyptian-muslims-clash-with-police-amid-religious-tensions/

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Thursday 28 February 2013

US research to be put online for free

YOU paid for it, so you should be able to see it. On Sunday the US government said that all federally funded research results must be available for free online. The UK made a similar decision last year.

Most research papers are behind paywalls. Now all federal agencies that spend $100 million annually on research and development will have to make their results freely available by a specified time after initial publication. The US government suggests 12 months as a suitable delay. According to John Holdren, director of the US Office of Science and Technology Policy, this will improve access to information while still allowing publishers to charge for early access.

The movement towards open access has been accelerating. Last July the UK government announced that all publicly funded research will be available for free starting in 2014. Furthermore, 13,000 researchers are boycotting the academic publisher Elsevier ? owned by the same company as New Scientist ? in protest at its high prices.

This article appeared in print under the headline "Science free for all"

If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.

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Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/2904b5b0/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Carticle0Cmg217290A630B90A0A0Eus0Eresearch0Eto0Ebe0Eput0Eonline0Efor0Efree0Bhtml0Dcmpid0FRSS0QNSNS0Q20A120EGLOBAL0Qonline0Enews/story01.htm

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Sunday 24 February 2013

Backup Installed Apps on Android to Dropbox or Google Drive

One f the best features of having an Android phone is that you can install custom ROMs on your phone which brings in additional functions and features. But each time you install a new ROM, you will have to install your apps from start which is a real painful task. Recently we have covered about Carbon Backup app which allows you to take a backup of your apps and sync it across multiple devices with support for cloud storage.

Easy App Toolbox is yet another free tool for Android which allows you to take a backup of your apps. But unlike Carbon backup app, this one provides cloud storage integration in the free edition as well.

Easy app toolbox?Easy app toolbox1

Once you install the app and run it, you can select the backup option. You can back it up to SD card, Google Drive, Dropbox or even PC. Then you can select the apps to backup and finish the process. To Restore you can do the same option from the main menu. Another useful feature of Easy App toolbox is that you can share the apk of any installed app to your friends.

Easy App Toolbox features:

  • Send your installed apps (APK files) to your friends
  • Backup and Restore your apps to/from Dropbox
  • Backup and Restore your apps to/from Google Drive
  • Backup and Restore your apps to/from Box.net
  • Backup and restore your apps to/from SD card
  • Backup your apps to your PC
  • View many detailed information about your installed apps (permissions, activities, services, files and folders, etc?)
  • Easy uninstaller ? gives you batch uninstalls

Download Easy App Toolbox

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/LifeRocks20/~3/P8pqLJjV0HE/

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Wednesday 20 February 2013

Montana Lawmakers Eye Oil/Gas Impacts

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Source: http://shaledaily.com/news/montana-lawmakers-eye-oilgas-impacts-sd20130220d.shtml

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Judge weighing whether Pistorius gets freedom or rough lock up

Stephane De Sakutin / AFP - Getty Images

South African Olympic sprinter Oscar Pistorius appears at the Magistrate Court in Pretoria on Feb. 19. His bail hearing continues Wednesday.

By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

A South African judge will hear more arguments Wednesday before deciding whether Olympic sprinter Oscar Pistorius should be denied bail and sent to a prison where other inmates have complained about ghastly conditions.

A day after prosecutors and the defense presented clashing accounts of how and why Pistorius fatally shot girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp on Valentine's Day, the two sides will spar over where he should spend the months before a trial.

South African legal experts say that after hearing from witnesses, the magistrate will be asked to evaluate the strength of the prosecution's case and consider whether the double-amputee is a flight risk, a danger to anyone, or likely to intimidate witnesses or destroy evidence.

"Personally, my view is he should get bail because he's got a fixed permanent residence, has no previous convictions, and owns assets in the jurisdiction of the court. He's disabled and easily recognizable," said Steve Tuson, a law professor at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg.

But bail could be a tough sell since the judge provisionally entered a charge of premeditated murder after Tuesday's hearing ? where Pistorius claimed he fired into his bathroom in a panic over a possible prowler, while prosecutors alleged he calmly put on his artificial legs before he stalked Steenkamp to the bathroom to kill her.

Unless the magistrate, Desmond Nair, downgrades the charge after Wednesday's hearing, or the defense convinces him there are extraordinary reasons Pistorius should remain free, the trail-blazing runner is headed to lockup.

Since his arrest, Pistorius, 26, has been held at a local police station, but that's unusual and it's expected he would be transferred to Pretoria's central prison to await further proceedings, experts said.

"It's not too pleasant," Marius du Toit, a South African defense lawyer who has also been a prosecutor and magistrate, said of the central prison.

"I've represented people from overseas who were incarcerated in our prisons. One lost 20 kilos because the food and conditions are so bad. He said, 'I've been in prisons all over Europe and I've never seen anything like this.'"

Two weeks before Pistorius' arrest, six inmates from the Pretoria prison petitioned the High Court to improve conditions, painting a grim picture of daily life behind its walls.

Their complaints included up to three inmates in single-person cells, dirty mattresses with no bedding, sweltering heat and poor ventilation, no time outside, rampant drug dealing and violent threats from fellow prisoners,?according to the Pretoria News.

The court has not ruled on the application, which the government planned to oppose, the newspaper said.

Du Toit said that Pistorius' high profile and disability could be grounds for some kind of accommodation if he is sent to prison, but added that officials will be loathe to give him special treatment because the decision to hold him at the police station before the bail hearing was questioned.

If he does wind up behind bars, he could be there for months before a trial and verdict -- which is delivered by a judge since jury trial were done away with in 1969.

Prosecutors and the defense team will be given time to marshal evidence before a trial date is set in stone, Tuson said.

Before the constitutional changes that accompanied the end of the apartheid era in South Africa, prosecutors could keep most of their case under wraps until trial. Now, they have to share all their evidence, Tuson said.

While U.S. trials are often delayed by endless haggling over what evidence is admissible at trial, in South Africa those decisions are made by the judge during the trial.

Tuson said the timeline from charge to verdict normally depends on the complexity of the case, the number of witnesses and how crowded the court docket is. Because the country's judicial system is so clogged, run-of-the-mill cases can face "horrible delays," he said.

Pistorius, however, could be fast-tracked due to the high-profile nature of the case. Tuson predicted the whole thing will be over in six months.

"Because of the media coverage, the state will push for this cases to be held as quickly as possible," du Toit said.

A South African court officially charged superstar runner Oscar Pistorius with killing his unarmed girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp, alleging he shot her three times through a locked bathroom door. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

?

Related:

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/19/17018585-judge-weighing-whether-pistorius-gets-freedom-or-months-in-rough-prison?lite

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Google Goes Street Smart,Takes The Retail Store Plunge

Till now Google Inc was known as the best search engine, soon it expanded its services into the e-commerce sector by help merchants sell online.

But just don't be surprised if you see "Google-Stores" and we actually mean the brick-n-mortar kinds, in U.S cities by the end of 2013.

Taking a leaf out of its competitors books - Apple and Microsoft, Google too will sell its merchandise through retail stores as per an "extremely reliable source" report by 9to5Google. The first stores are expected to open in its European base, Dublin while American cities will have to wait till the holiday season.

Despite stories doing rounds, Google Inc's media wing has not definitely affirmed this report. The spokesperson issued a statement that "No final decision has been taken".

Currently Google sells most of its merchandise and services online with a handful of pop-up stores in collaboration with tech firms like Best Buy in U.S and Dixon's in the U.K.

However, this move is a clear indicator that for one it wants to compete effectively with its industry rivals. Secondly, it is a move to expand its business avenues outside its "Chrome Zones".

Even though both Apple and Microsoft are also effective "Soft Powers", but it is clearly Google that rules the roost when it comes to the Web. On the flip side, Google competitors are a notch higher when it comes to retail operations.

While Apple has roughly 400 stores, with 30 more in the tow by the year end, Microsoft too has 51 permanent and semi-permanent operational stores.

Seth Weintraub, 9to5Google's reporter suggests that "The mission of the stores is to get new Google Nexus, Chrome, and especially upcoming products into the hands of prospective customers. Google feels right now that many potential customers need to get hands-on experience with its products before they are willing to purchase. Google competitors Apple and Microsoft both have retail outlets where customers can try before they buy".

Google's road ahead is surely not totally difficult because it has a market reputation that customers identify with. With the introduction of its Project Glass, the retail outlets with the prospective product available for trial, will only add to consumer experience. The customers can are after all investing anywhere between $500 to $1,000 of their money into Google's technology.

This street-smart business strategy is yet another feather in Google achievements. But hopefully it will certainly not lead us away from its primary identity.

You can read the complete first report here.

Share with us your thoughts and opinions about Google's retailing ventures. Would you love to see such stores in your neighbourhood or do you still prefer the online version of Google marketing?

Stay tuned for more Google stories with E-junkie.

Source: http://www.e-junkie.info/2013/02/google-goes-street-smarttakes-retail.html

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Health Canada OKs Lallemand Probiotic Claims

MONTREAL?Lallemand Health Solutions (LHS) announced five of its probiotic formulations have been granted health claims in the areas of digestive health, natural defenses and stress by Health Canada?s Natural Health Products Directorate (NHPD).

The new health claims are based on strong scientific and clinical data supporting each benefit and condition of use. This culminates many years of work and research in partnership with leading universities and hospitals.

The new health claims apply toward the following products: ProbioKid, which helps reinforce the body's natural defenses in children; Probio'Stick, which helps reduce stress-related gastrointestinal complications like nausea; Protecflor, which helps reduce the risk of traveler's diarrhea; Lacidofil, which helps reduce the risk of antibiotic associated diarrhea (AAD) and restores intestinal flora; and Lalflor, which helps reduce the risk of AAD.

The products already had been recognized by Canadian health authorities for their probiotic benefits with claims, such as ?probiotic to benefit health and/or confer a health benefit," or ?probiotic that contributes to a natural healthy gut flora."

Earlier this month, Lallemand, Inc. inaugurated its new Lallemand Health Solutions (LHS) division that consolidates the internationally recognized probiotic manufacturers Institut Rosell and Harmonium International. Lallemand Health Solutions is dedicated in bringing to its customers the highest-quality probiotic solutions produced within current GMP and ISO 9001 environments.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/FPDArticles/~3/4YJvx51K-zA/health-canada-oks-lallemand-probiotic-claims.aspx

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