Friday, June 29, 2012

Scientists measure soot particles in flight

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

"For the first time we can actually see the structure of individual aerosol particles floating in air, their 'native habitat'," said DESY scientist Henry Chapman from the Center for Free-Electron Laser Science (CFEL) in Hamburg. "This will have important implications for various fields from climate modelling to human health." CFEL is a joint venture of Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY, the German Max Planck Society and the University of Hamburg.

Aerosol particles like soot play important roles in a wide range of fields from toxicology to climate science. Despite their importance, their properties are surprisingly difficult to measure: Visible light doesn't provide the necessary resolution, X-ray sources are usually not bright enough to image single particles, and for electron microscopy particles have to be collected onto a substrate, which potentially alters their structure and encourages agglomeration.

Using the world's most powerful X-ray laser LCLS at the U.S. SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in Stanford (California), the team captured images of single soot particles floating through the laser beam. "We now have a richer imaging tool to explore the connections between their toxicity and internal structure," said SLAC's Duane Loh, lead author of the study appearing in this week's scientific journal Nature. Free-electron lasers like LCLS or the European XFEL currently being built in Hamburg consist of particle accelerators that send unbound (free) electrons on a tight slalom course where they emit X-ray light.

The study focused on particles less than 2.5 micrometres in diameter. This is the size range of particles that efficiently transport into the human lungs and constitute the second most important contribution to global warming. Microscopic soot particles were generated with electric sparks from a graphite block and fed with a carrier gas of argon and nitrogen into a device called an aerodynamic lens, that produces a thin beam of air with entrained soot particles. This aerosol beam intercepted the pulsed laser beam. Whenever an X-ray laser pulse hit a soot particle, it produced a characteristic diffraction pattern that was recorded by a detector. From this pattern, the scientists were able to reconstruct the soot particle's structure.

"The structure of soot determines how it scatters light, which is an important part of understanding how the energy of the sun is absorbed by the earth's atmosphere. This is a key factor in models of the earth's climate," explained co-author Andrew Martin from DESY. "There also are many links between airborne particles around two micrometres in size and adverse health effects. Using the free-electron laser we are now able to measure the shape and composition of individual airborne particles. This may lead to a better understanding of how these particles interfere with the function of cells in the lungs."

The team recorded patterns from 174 individual soot particles and measured their compactness, using a property called fractal dimension. "We've seen that the fractal dimension is higher than what was thought," said Chapman. "This means that soot in the air is compact, which has implications for the modelling of climate effects." Also, the structure of the airborne soot seems to be surprisingly variable. "There is quite some variation in the fractal dimension, which implies that a lot of rearrangement is going on in the air," explains Chapman.

A primary long-term goal of the research is to take snapshots of airborne particles as they change their size, shape and chemical make-up in response to their environment, explained Michael Bogan from SLAC, who led the research. "Scientists can now imagine being able to watch the evolution of soot formation in combustion engines from their molecular building blocks, or maybe even view the first steps of ice crystal formation in clouds."

In real-world settings soot is seldom pure. To see the effects of mixing with other aerosols, the researchers added salt spray to the soot particles, resulting in larger particles with soot attached to the tiny salt crystals. Such composite particles might form in coastal cities and are expected to have a much larger climate effect than soot alone. Composite aerosols are more difficult to analyse, but the new technique could clearly discern between soot, salt and mixtures of both. As the aerosol particles are vaporized by the intense X-ray laser pulse, the researchers could use mass spectroscopy to examine the composition of each individual particle imaged.

Even though the aerosol particles are destroyed by the X-ray laser pulse, the pulse is so short that it out-runs this destruction. Therefore the diffraction patterns are of high quality and represent the undamaged object. The novel X-ray technique can find wide application to study all sorts of aerosols and can also be extended to resolve the static and dynamic morphology of general ensembles of disordered particles, the researchers state.

"We are now able to study the structure of soot by measuring individual particles in a large ensemble," explains Martin. "Biological samples, like cells and large proteins, have a similar size to the soot particles we studied and also lack a fixed, reproducible structure. In the future it may be possible to extend these techniques beyond aerosols, to study the structural variations in biological systems."

The research team included contributors from SLAC, DESY, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the Max Planck Institutes, the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Cornell University, the University of Hamburg, Synchrotron Trieste and Uppsala University. LCLS is supported by DOE's Office of Science.

###

Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres: http://www.helmholtz.de/en/index.html

Thanks to Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Thursday, June 28, 2012

Cheap PC Gaming: Borderlands | TheSixthAxis

This week on CPCG I?ll be making a bit of a departure from my usual pricing limit. Borderlands on Steam costs ?19.99 for some reason, but you should probably be looking into getting the Game of the Year edition, which is??19.99. No, I don?t know why.

Normally I would forgo the game as that?s about ?5 above my usual pricing limit, but a combination of just how brilliant this game is and the inevitability of it being on sale in the now dangerously close Steam Summer Sale has pushed me towards covering it regardless.

It also helps that I?ve been playing it all weekend; I?m a sucker for anything with crazy loot and Borderlands contains some of the craziest.

For those who don?t already know, Borderlands is a first person shooter like no other. Based around a loot system that contains (literally) millions of guns, the game is a FPS/RPG fan?s wet dream that enables you ? yes?you ? to shoot rockets out of revolvers should you happen to find such a revolver.

Finding guns consists of them dropping from enemies and discovering them in chests, which fold out when you open them in a way that makes you giggle with glee. That giggle only intensifies into manic laughter once you discover a 4x incendiary shotgun with 56?11 damage and an increased ammo capacity.

As you might find in any other extensive loot system?(read: RPG), weapons and their stats are randomly generated, with some unique weapons that you can find by killing the right (boss) enemy. There are four elemental effects that weapons can roll with; incendiary, corrosive, static or explosive.

Incendiary weapons have a chance to set enemies on fire (enemies on fire take more damage), corrosive weapons can tear through armour incredibly quickly and splash onto other enemies, static weapons are more effective against shields (and can electrocute enemies) and explosive weapons have a chance of exploding on hit, dealing massive damage. The likelihood of these effects occurring is indicated on the weapon?s stats, with a 1x, 2x, 3x or 4x showing the likelihood (the higher the number, the better the chance).

The chances of elemental effects occurring can also be affected by your chosen character. Lilith, the Siren, has skills (which you put skill points into whenever you level up) that can increase the likelihood and effectiveness of elemental effects.

Whilst Lilith is best with elemental weaponry, the other three classes obviously all have different advantages. Moredecai is a hunter, most proficient with revolvers and sniper rifles; Brick is best with explosive weaponry and shotguns as well as skills that make him suited for being up close and tanking damage; whilst Roland is a soldier, skilled with all weapons (though still prefers shotguns and combat rifles).

?Each class also has a special ability; Lilith, for example, can Phasewalk, which has her entering another dimension, rendering her invisible to enemies and enabling her to move much more quickly. Entering and exiting Phasewalk also triggers an explosion, dealing damage to all enemies in the vicinity. Roland, however, can drop a turret that will automatically target enemies and provide you with some cover. Mordecai can send his trusty alien bird Bloodwing to deal high damage to an enemy, and Brick?s special ability is a berserker rage that has him getting his fists out and dealing very high melee damage.

All of this fanciness wouldn?t be of much importance if the shooting mechanics weren?t up to scratch. Thankfully, they are; shooting feels solid and responsive, and although some guns can feel like they lack punch (most?notably?pistols), most feel meaty and substantial.

(read: RPG)This is all backed up by a healthy (and often laugh out loud funny) sense of humour, cel-shaded graphics and a four player cooperative multiplayer that ramps the difficulty up appropriately. You might want to learn where the chests are, however, since all the loot is shared and if you get there too late the guns worth grabbing will all be gone. You can even duel your friends should you so desire, or deathmatch against them in an arena.

Borderlands is honestly some of the most fun I?ve had in first person. Combining tight shooting mechanics with the obsessive loot-gathering of a Diablo-like, I shudder to think of the effect its sequel will have on my social life. Though I still await it impatiently.

As mentioned previously, Borderlands GOTY is ?19.99 on Steam, though you?ll want to wait and see if it?s on sale when Valve unleash the wallet-destroyer over the coming weeks. Should you not be willing to wait, the base version of the game is available in the OnLive Playpack bundle, which is ?7 a month, not to mention that you can trial the game there too. If you?re okay with a physical version of the game, you can get it from Amazon for ?11.57. System requirements are through the Steam link.

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Friday, June 22, 2012

Eating With Kirby: Cafe De Waraku- Fancy Schmancy Cheesecakes ...

I don?t think a lot of people in Richmond know about this place called ?Cafe de Waraku? but this restaurant has been open for quite some time now. They specialize in Japanese inspired pasta dishes and desserts.

This little restaurant is located inside the strip mall that is between Parker Place and Aberdeen, next to Lido Restaurant.

When Meta Knight and I stepped in, we instantly noticed the emptiness of the restaurant. I think we were one of three tables dining but this was during peak dinner time. :(

If you want to find a new restaurant to eat dessert, you should try this place out because they offer many varieties of cheesecake, panna cottas, and other kind of desserts.

They also have... DURIAN CHEESECAKE!! I tried it once before and it was amazing! It was full bodied, delicious and fragrant. Mmm... :D

They also have a wonderful display case to showcase their goodies and to knock down any willpower you have of trying to eat healthier.

The Crab and Fresh Tomato Spaghetti ($9.49) consisted of a creamy rose type of sauce and it was more sweet than savoury which was weird. There were chunks of fresh tomato (as indicated in the title) and acceptable amounts of real crab meat. Fresh or canned, on the other hand, is questionable.

I thought it tasted pretty delicious but it didn?t blow my mind. Also, I can?t help but to compare this pasta dish to the Asian pastas at ?Bistro The Home? (now closed). If I had to choose, it would be Bistro hands down.

Meta Knight ordered the Deluxe Meat Sauce ($8.99) because he just wanted the dish with the most meat. His meat varieties include sausage, bacon, and meatballs.

He didn?t enjoy the meatballs and I thought the sauce tasted too much like it came from a can. Meta Knight also was a little sad from the small portion size as it didn?t fill his man-belly up.

We ordered the Caramel Apple Cheesecake ($7.00) for dessert and luckily, this saved the entire dinner. The cheesecake was quite large and there were copious amounts of apple chunks within the cheesecake. The caramel icing on the top made the entire thing taste EXACTLY like caramel apple! The price is a bit steep for a slice but you know what, I wouldn?t mind just coming here for dessert and drinks from time to time.?

All in all, I wouldn't rule this restaurant out completely because some of their pastas (if you know which ones to get) are pretty good and they clearly know what they are doing for desserts. I say, if you are in the mood for some fancy cheesecake or if you are just a cheesecake lover in general, then give Cafe de Waraku a try.

Service Rating: 3/5

Food Rating: 2.5/5

Price: $$

Overall Rating: 2.5/5

Cafe de Waraku ??? on Urbanspoon

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Monday, May 21, 2012

Confab 2012: Thoughts and Reactions | I'd Rather Be Writing

I recently attended Confab in Minneapolis. I was one of about 5 technical writers among the 650 attendees, which is why I found it surprising to hear Kristina Halverson say,?We can learn a lot from tech comm. Let me repeat that. We can learn a lot from tech comm.

I felt pleased to hear this shout-out to my profession, and then tried to unpack exactly what she meant. Throughout the conference, a number of presenters emphasized the need for structured authoring. This refrain seemed loudest in Karen McGrane?s?talk on Adapting Ourselves to Adaptive Content (a presentation she is also giving at the STC Summit).

I believe they respect tech comm for our expertise in structured authoring, which theoretically gives rise to an ability to publish many different outputs from one source. If you can publish to web, mobile, tablet, flipbook, print, intranet, blog, white paper, social media, brochures, and other content from one source, because you?ve tagged that content in the right way, then you have a strong competitive advantage in the marketplace. Yes, ?structured authoring is definitely the way to go??was the message I kept hearing.

If you want to write your content once and ?spray? it (to use a verb I heard in Karen?s presentation) to a dozen different publishing destinations, then you need to structure your content with the right tags, metadata, and other semantic markup to make it flexible and adaptable to the platform and context it resides on.

Despite all the enthusiasm for structured authoring, I didn?t hear much about the nitty-gritty technical details. In fact, in one presentation, the speaker talked extensively about metadata, and had us map out a taxonomy for a website. The idea was that through metadata, the content management system (CMS) would dynamically pull content into various spaces on the website based on the metadata and content model rules.

I guess sticking with concepts is fine, but I would have appreciated some refreshing realism about the difficulty of doing this. Does a CMS that pulls different objects based on metadata require about 100K and a team of programmers to implement? Or are we talking about something much simpler here?

And to write once, publish everywhere, do we have a dozen or so custom XSLT transforms to manipulate XML-tagged content into different outputs? From what I?ve heard, setting these transforms up requires developer-level expertise, and getting the PDF deliverable is so difficult that the most one can hope for is a plain-looking output that is merely acceptable rather than downright ugly. Or is responsive design the model instead?

Two words I didn?t hear

The Confab conference had many top-notch sessions. I listened to Lou Rosenfeld, Jared Spool, Mailchimp content strategists, and other well-known people. Their sessions were lively and memorable. However, I must confess that I was disappointed not hear the words ?collaborative authoring? or ?blog? during any presentation (except maybe as a brief word on a slide).

Why are these two concepts downplayed? First, I do not think the content strategists who attend Confab have any interest in wikis or collaborative authoring. From what I can tell, most attendees are content strategists in their organization, which usually means they write/edit/review the copy for their organization?s website and other collateral, provide a style guide, and help in myriad other undefined ways. (To be honest, I?m always a little curious to hear what people who call themselves content strategists actually do in their organizations.)

I can understand the absence of discussion around wikis, because wikis are more the domain of tech comm. Wikis are more suited for technical publishing, when you regularly interact with subject matter experts, work with constantly changing information, follow an agile methodology, and draw knowledge from product users. Wikis are not typically for marketers.

But why no discussions about blogging? In fact, no sessions scheduled for the STC Summit address blogging either. What happened to blogging? Is it simply aggregated into a larger umbrella of social media? Is blogging now just considered another form of content? Or has the unthinkable happened ? has blogging become ? pass??

It wasn?t too long ago that it seemed blogs were discussed more directly, and as a powerful, new form of content, rather than simply another form of social media. Where else can you publish thought-provoking, idea-soaked content with a personal voice and transparent tone? Few forms of content do more to build relationships, increase visibility, and spur interaction than a well-written blog. After all, not to call attention to myself, but MindTouch did name me #1 most influential in tech comm this year?? not for my content strategy, or for any books I?ve written (which I haven?t), or for a preponderance of tweets, or for speaking engagements, or webinars, but rather for my blog.

And yet, ironically, having a blog nowadays doesn?t have nearly the impact it used to. Now pretty much everyone has a blog, even though they may not post to it more than quarterly. And the quality of the posts? If it?s a blog, it seems you?re allowed to drop the quality several notches. You don?t even need to proofread or spell check your content, really. It?s just a blog. Synonymous with blah.

In one session,?Erin Kissane?presented a session on ?Ideas Worth Stealing.? She looked at innovations in writing and reading. Near the end, she mentioned a new site she has developed called Contents. Contents is an online magazine focused on content strategy.

From what I can tell, the style follows a similar approach as A List Apart. The site runs on WordPress, has a weekly publishing schedule, favors longer articles, probably includes an editorial workflow, has a list of regular contributors/editors, and is packaged in a responsive theme (making it mobile/tablet friendly).

Now, in looking at Contents, how is it really different from a group blog? One point Kissane made during her presentation is that lines and boundaries of content are blurring. What does it even mean for a book to be a book, now that you have mobile versions, online web versions, flipbooks, and so forth? What defines content as a book in this digital age? How does a blog post differ from a magazine article? Maybe it?s better just to refer to it all as ?content.?

I like Kissane?s style, and I definitely welcome the new Contents magazine. I just don?t want us, in all this talk and praise of content, to forget about blogs.

Vivid = Verbal + Visual Interdependence

Let?s switch gears a bit. Another major focus during Confab was the emphasis on adding visuals to content. Dan Roam gave one of the most energizing keynotes I?ve listened to for a while. It was one of those keynotes where something clicked inside of me.

I used to be more gung-ho for visual illustration (see my 10 post series on visual imagination). During Dan?s presentation, I kept thinking back to my post on VITA (Video ? Illustration ? Text ? Action) as my answer to the evolution of how one should do help content.

Somehow, in the busy-ness of life, I?d forgotten about the importance of visual content. Dan Roam reminded me of what I?d forgotten. Thank you, Dan. I was also pleasantly surprised to find a complimentary copy of Dan Roam?s latest book, Blah Blah Blah: What To Do When Words Don?t Work in my free Brain Traffic tote bag. (The conference staff really knows how to put together a nice conference.)

Dan?s main premise is that you must combine the verbal (words) with the visual (pictures) to make your ideas vivid (hence the acronym).

I also attended a session on comics by Kevin Cheng. Comics are just sequentially told visuals, usually in story form. Kevin continued some of the points Dan made, but applied them in different ways.

If I were to combine more visuals with my writing, the appeal of my content would triple. The tragedy of tech comm is that we?ve focused too much on authoring efficiency over the past decade, rather than trying to solve the problem of why so many users find help useless. If help were more visual (and I?m not just talking about inserting more screenshots), both with the illustration of concepts and with videos, I think users would welcome help material, arms wide open.

By the way, I think some of Roam?s ideas about connecting text with visuals ties back to Robert Horn?s Visual Language: Global Communication for the 21st Century. More on that later (when I finish reading?Blah Blah Blah).

On the Ride Home

On the ride home, I thought I was done with Confab, but the flight attendant saw my Brain Traffic?tote bag and, somewhat stunned, asked, ?What?s that about ??Brain Traffic???I thought a minute, and then said, ?It?s a writer?s conference.? (Who wants to explain content strategy to a flight attendant?)

Well, it turns out the guy sitting next to me was a Confab conference attendee, returning to Colorado. We chatted for about an hour. He had a lot of great insights and feedback about the conference. One of his criticisms was a lack of dissent during the conference. Few people disagree about anything, he noted. And you know what? He?s right. I?m starting to get sick of tweets and blog posts that do nothing more than agree, praise, repeat a quote, and bemoan how others in their organization don?t get it.

What exactly would you disagree with, I asked? He mentioned Ann Rockley?s talk on governance. In the web publishing world of his clients, implementing a governance board that meets regularly to review content guidelines would be something his clients would downright laugh at. They have a need to publish immediately and regularly, without any kind of structure that introduces more bureaucracy into the system. Many of these companies aren?t big enough to merit a ?governance board.?

He also pointed out that the idea of writing once and publishing everywhere was a flawed idea. You can?t publish the same content that was intended for a blog post in a white paper, a tweet, and a brochure, he explained. Different forms require a different emphasis, style, and approach. To think that you can create content that can live everywhere and anywhere because you?ve tagged it intelligently is nonsense. It doesn?t fit the world I live in.

We then got to talking about some of his projects. He is in fact a bonafide content strategist, and has begun his own company doing content strategy. He quit his regular job to do this, and has had good success so far, since the competition is scarce in his area.

With one of his clients, he explained that they publish regular blog articles to attract new readers. Readers are pulled in by the blog articles, and they are then presented with contextual links for the services the client sells. He said it has been a very successful strategy for the client. He didn?t think blogs were pass?, and he was a little surprised that blogs didn?t receive more attention at the conference (though he hadn?t considered this until I pointed out their absence).

Concluding thoughts

Overall, Confab is an excellent conference. Other attendees compared it to conferences put on by A List Apart. I walked away with a lot of insights and ideas, and I have been very open in this post. In the coming weeks, I?ll try to post some notes from sessions I attended.

If this conference weren?t back to back with the STC Summit, I would recommend that more technical writers attend it. If you?re interested in learning more about content strategy, I recommend that you attend the Content Strategy Workshop that dovetails with Lavacon in the fall.

Sponsors

Tags: blogs, Brain Traffic, cms, confab, conferences, content strategy, Content Strategy Workshops, dan roam, Erin Kissane, karen mcgrane, kristina halverson, lavacon, metadata, minnesota, Robert Horn, visual language, Wikis

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Friday, March 23, 2012

Even Xperia Is Interesting in Wes Anderson's Hands [Video]

It seems that everything Wes Anderson touches turns out sweet adorableness (or saccharine crap, depending on your tolerance). That is certainly true for this Sony Xperia ad, directed by master of twee himself. His new creation follows the release of some Hyundai commercials earlier this month. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/-cVdyDhM7Bg/even-xperia-is-interesting-in-wes-andersons-hands

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Thursday, March 22, 2012

Top 5 NOLA Coffee Date Spots | invadeNOLA

Yes, I might belong in an episode of Portlandia due to my love of coffee shops but hear me out. As an alternative to ?grabbing a drink?, a coffee date can allow for a belligerent-free meet up and quality time to discover your mutual love for people watching or blackout poetry. In selecting these New Orleans cafes, I considered not just the quality of coffee or expresso but also: crowdness, noise-level, interior environment, variety of drink and food options, price and location. Here are the top five cuppas:

1. Il Posto Cafe, 4607 Dryades St, Uptown
This artisanal cafe has a minimal, rustic interior,?reminiscent of an Italian country-home, that serves phenomenally fresh food and drinks.? Because it?s off the beaten path, snagging a table engulfed in warm sunlight usually isn?t a challenge. This Uptown spot is enchanting, easygoing, and ideal for drinking coffee with a new love interest.
www.ilpostocafe-nola.com

2. Cafe du Monde, 800 Decatur St, French Quarter
Usually overlooked as a touristy spot, sipping cafe au laits at Cafe du Monde is a great date option. Perfect for people watching, it has the buzz of a diverse crowd and rhythmic clinking of cups and dishes. And although the pigeon?s commotion might blow the beignet white powder dust up in a cloud, it?s totally romantic.
http://www.cafedumonde.com/

3. Cafe NOMA, #1 Collins Diboll Circle, City Park, Mid-City
This cafe is snuggled inside the New Orleans Museum of Art and it?s interior is punctuated with fine art and bright flowers. Providing a poetic view, it?s wall to ceiling length windows gaze out to City Park. And if the coffee runs out but the date is still going strong, Cafe NOMA has a variety of small dishes and sandwiches that could help feed any continued date appetite.
http://www.cafenoma.com/

4. Fair Grinds, 3133 Ponce De Leon St, Mid-City
Tucked right off of Esplanade, this community favorite would serve well for a casual date. You can feel good about indulging on a vegan cupcake and expresso because the shop has heart felt?intentions (all it?s beans are from fair trading). I?d suggest soaking up your drinks on the patio area to fully experience Fair Grind?s laid-back vibe.

5. Satsuma Cafe, 3218 Dauphine St, Marigny/Bywater
This brick-walled, art-filled Marigny hotspot makes a great first impression. It is literally fresh and peachy or should I say ?satsumy? since it?s name originates from the local citrus fruit. I?m appreciative of it?s creative menu; It offers a variety of light, delicious food but not forgetting the essential coffee options. Satsuma allows for no-pressure conversation and provides pleasant distractions.
http://satsumacafe.com

+ A special thanks to all my lovely friends who accompanied me through a week of caffeine overload and provided lovely insight and company.

Amanda LaPlaca is a creative designer from Brooklyn, NYC. She is an avid calendar filler (volunteering, events, etc) and loves being on the go but relaxes each day in her Uptown backyard garden after a long bike ride. www.amlaplaca.blogspot.com + www.amandalaplaca.com

Related posts:

Source: http://invadenola.com/2012/03/top-5-nola-coffee-date-spots/

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Fessler Home Improvement & Construction - Roofing Murfreesboro

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Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Better organic electronics: Researchers show the way forward for improving organic and molecular electronic devices

ScienceDaily (Mar. 20, 2012) ? Future prospects for superior new organic electronic devices are brighter now thanks to a new study by researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab). Working at the Lab's Molecular Foundry, a DOE nanoscience center, the team has provided the first experimental determination of the pathways by which electrical charge is transported from molecule-to-molecule in an organic thin film. Their results also show how such organic films can be chemically modified to improve conductance.

"We have shown that when the molecules in organic thin films are aligned in particular directions, there is much better conductance," says Miquel Salmeron, a leading authority on nanoscale surface imaging who directs Berkeley Lab's Materials Sciences Division and who led this study. "Chemists already know how to fabricate organic thin films in a way that can achieve such an alignment, which means they should be able to use the information provided by our methodology to determine the molecular alignment and its role on charge transport across and along the molecules. This will help improve the performances of future organic electronic devices."

Salmeron and Shaul Aloni, also of the Materials Sciences Division, are the corresponding authors of a paper in the journal NanoLetters that describes this work. The paper is titled "Electron Microscopy Reveals Structure and Morphology of One Molecule Thin Organic Films." Other co-authors were Virginia Altoe, Florent Martin and Allard Katan.

Organic electronics, also known as plastic or polymer electronics, are devices that utilize carbon-based molecules as conductors rather than metals or semiconductors. They are prized for their low costs, light weight and rubbery flexibility. Organic electronics are also expected to play a big role in molecular computing, but to date their use has been hampered by low electrical conductance in comparison to metals and semiconductors.

"Chemists and engineers have been using their intuition and trial-and-error testing to make progress in the field but at some point you hit a wall unless you understand what is going on at the molecular level, for example, how electrons or holes flow through or across molecules, how the charge transport depends on the structure of the organic layers and the orientation of the molecules, and how the charge transport responds to mechanical forces and chemical inputs," Salmeron says. "With our experimental results, we have shown that we can now provide answers for these questions."

In this study, Salmeron and his colleagues used electron diffraction patterns to map the crystal structures of molecular films made from monolayers of short versions of commonly used polymers containing long chains of thiophene units. They focused specifically on pentathiophene butyric acid (5TBA) and two of its derivatives (D5TBA and DH5TBA) that were induced to self-assemble on various electron-transparent substrates. Pentathiophenes -- molecules containing a ring of four carbon and one sulfur atoms -- are members of a well-studied and promising family of organic semiconductors.

Obtaining structural crystallographic maps of monolayer organic films using electron beams posed a major challenge, as Aloni explains.

"These organic molecules are extremely sensitive to high energy electrons," he says. "When you shoot a beam of high energy electrons through the film it immediately affects the molecules. Within few seconds we no longer see the signature intermolecular alignment of the diffraction pattern. Despite this, when applied correctly, electron microscopy becomes essential tool that can provide unique information on organic samples."

Salmeron, Aloni and their colleagues overcame the challenge through the combination of a unique strategy they developed and a transmission electron microscope (TEM) at the Molecular Foundry's Imaging and Manipulation of Nanostructures Facility. Electron diffraction patterns were collected as a parallel electron beam was scanned over the film, then analyzed by computer to generate structural crystallographic maps.

"These maps contain uncompromised information of the size, symmetry and orientation of the unit cell, the orientation and structure of the domains, the degree of crystallinity, and any variations on the micrometer scale," says first author Altoe. "Such data are crucial to understanding the structure and electrical transport properties of the organic films, and allow us to track small changes driven by chemical modifications of the support films."

In their paper, the authors acknowledge that to gain structural information they had to sacrifice some resolution.

"The achievable resolution of the structural map is a compromise between sample radiation hardness, detector sensitivity and noise, and data acquisition rate," Salmeron says. "To keep the dose of high energy electrons at a level the monolayer film could support and still be able to collect valuable information about its structure, we had to spread the beam to a 90 nanometer diameter. However a fast and direct control of the beam position combined with the use of fast and ultrasensitive detectors should allow for the use of smaller beams with a higher electron flux, resulting in a better than 10 nanometer resolution."

While the combination of organic molecular films and substrates in this study conduct electrical current via electron holes (positively-charged energy spaces), Salmeron and his colleagues say their structural mapping can also be applied to materials whose conductance is electron-based.

"We expect our methodology to have widespread applications in materials research," Salmeron says.

Aloni and Altoe say this methodology is now available at the Imaging and Manipulation of Nanostructures Facility for users of the Molecular Foundry.

This research was supported by the DOE Office of Science.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by DOE/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Virginia Altoe, Florent Martin, Allard Katan, Miquel Salmeron, Shaul Aloni. Electron Microscopy Reveals Structure and Morphology of One Molecule Thin Organic Films. Nano Letters, 2012; 12 (3): 1295 DOI: 10.1021/nl203776n

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/03/120320115627.htm

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Tuesday, March 20, 2012

A romantic comedy of environmental folly

Sara Reardon, reporter

1st-pic-rexfeatures_1667577h.jpg(Image: CBS/Everett/Rex Features)

If you were an environmental research scientist, what would you do if you were handed an unlimited budget out of the blue? Using it to destroy an entire ecosystem, introduce an invasive species into a hostile environment and create a recreation park for one man would probably not top your list. But that?s the premise of the new romantic comedy Salmon Fishing in the Yemen which provides food for thought behind the shimmering romance.

Fred Jones (Ewan McGregor) is a fish scientist working for the UK government who receives a strange email from investment banker Harriet Chetwode-Talbot (Emily Blunt). A Yemeni sheikh (Amr Waked) wants to commission Jones to install a river in the Yemen desert and introduce Scottish salmon into it - so the sheikh can fly fish in his backyard.

Jones immediately turns him down, saying simply that the desert is too hot and, oh, it has no water. But he?s too late: the prime minister?s overzealous press secretary (Kristin Scott Thomas), hungry for a Middle East story with a positive spin, spots the proposal and turns it into a flagship project for British science. With his job in jeopardy and with his marriage on its last legs, Jones takes a leap of faith and commits to the project and the pretty investment banker.

Despite the magnitude of the undertaking, there?s little science to be seen here. At the start, Jones gives Chetwode-Talbot a sarcastic markerboard lecture of the project?s many hurdles: engineering the dam to trap water from freshwater aquifers uncovered while drilling, oxygenating the water to the right temperature for North Atlantic salmon, transporting 10,000 salmon across three time zones in giant holding tanks, and convincing the farm-bred creatures to swim up river and spawn - all of which, he assures her, will result in a river full of belly-up fish.

The next we see, though, the two are walking along the side of a canyon in Yemen, hair blowing in the desert wind as they gape at the massive scale of the project magicked into existence behind them. Of course, it would tax the audience of a movie billed as a rom-com to tolerate an hour-long lecture on aquaculture. The satirical 2010 book by Paul Torday, on which the movie is based, leaves more room to expose the details. But when Jones, with his $50 million budget, hires the engineering team who built the notorious Three Gorges Dam in China to set up shop in the Yemen, one wonders how they pulled it off - or managed to get so far in spite of the same controversies.

2nd-pic-rexfeatures_1667577c.jpg(Image: CBS/Everett/Rex Features)

Even with the romantic focus, the movie delves into some real issues about the short-sightedness of environmental projects forced on communities, however beautiful and peaceful those projects may initially seem. Jones? boss at Defra, tasked with collecting 10,000 native salmon from Scotland?s rivers, suddenly finds his picture splashed across the cover of every fishing enthusiast magazine in the U.K., denouncing him as ?the salmon snatcher.?

The idea goes down no better in Yemen. It?s hardly a spoiler to say that the idea of putting a river in the desert doesn?t thrill the sheikh?s neighbours, who object to his hubris. After tragedy strikes, Jones has a brilliant thought: ?Next time, we?ll engage the local community, make it their project and not just ours!? he exclaims, eyes shining with long-overdue enlightenment.

Though the metaphors are a bit laboured at times, it?s a sweet, lightly funny movie overall, and it?s always nice to see a scientist in a non-evil role. A very human scientist too: money, love, and the sheikh?s seductive talk of faith are enough to convince Jones to put aside his better scientific judgement and take on a project that, even the sheikh later laments was intended ?to glorify God, but now I fear it was to glorify man.? It certainly doesn?t glorify the poor salmon.

Salmon Fishing in the Yemen is currently showing in cinemas throughout the US. It opens in the UK on 20 April.

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Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/1d95103c/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Cblogs0Cculturelab0C20A120C0A30Ca0Eromantic0Ecomedy0Eof0Eenvironmental0Efolly0Bhtml0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

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Spotlight On Ad Buyers (TIME)

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Monday, March 19, 2012

Robert L. Cook Blog ? Have More Fun Online by Gaming

Gaming By Left Hand! free games online is one of those things where the total influence it has primarily rests on other considerations. So it is not uncommon to find yourself doing a lot of research and decision making. Many people have created more problems for themselves because they did not gather all the relevant facts. That is exactly why we advise you take a look at all of your options as it relates to getting the most for your efforts. You want to know what you are working with, so the following are some areas within this subject you should use the time to consider.

Online gaming represents fun for most people, plus they?re a nice way to socialize with others. Tens of millions play them, so if they were not a source of fun they would not bother with it. As with all other things, you?ll find some people better at games than others. When a person is getting involved with online gaming, that?s when it?s most true. The good news is that figuring out the lay of the land doesn?t have to be difficult. A positive attitude plus anything you need such as a left-handed mouse, as an example. What we want to do now is discuss a few proven tips and tricks for more victorious online gaming.

It is worthwhile for left-handed players to purchase left-handed mouses to make it easier to maneuver. Ambidextrous keyboards are also available. Ambidextrous keyboards come in two parts, which enables you to use them in the most convenient way. If you are really serious about getting the right gadgets, you can find a special keyboard for gamers, even one made for left handed players if you look hard enough. These keyboards cost more than most, so they are made for players who are willing to pay for this extra edge.

Just try not to be like the Terminator when you?re gaming. Good game play requires you to be at least a little bit humble. If you can do something a lot better than someone else, be cool about it and don?t bust their stones. Don?t get angry or anything like that when you lose a game. Be straight and even about it, tell them you enjoyed the game, congratulations, and thank them. Work to get better by identifying why you lost, and then try to improve. In time people will grow to like you there, and it?ll be a good thing.

Beyond all else, you should not forget to have fun with it. Games are meant to provide you with entertainment. Although they are not meant to replace real life. If you find that you are taking the game too seriously or that you are getting too wrapped up in it, step away from the left handed mouses and keyboard and do something else for a while. Get a divorce from your computer for a while or switch to a different game. If you aren?t having fun then the people you are playing with won?t have fun. That can be quite powerful if you take what is known about free arcade games and put it to use. We all know how much people like to complain about things, and that is one thing that really hardly ever gets anything done.

Dare to be different in the sense that you will get up and move on this ? go forward, be bold and willing to do something. Make a plan that you will take action, and then work from that plan every day until you see the results you want.

Half the battle with anything is making decisions and following through with them. After saying all of that, it is time to move forward. You can blow off steam, meet new friends and practice your gaming skills with this type of game. The reason we can find so many online games right now is because they are meant to bring enjoyment to the user, if this weren?t happening you can bet there would not be so many. Great game players understand all of the different things that becoming good involves. Having the right equipment (like left handed mouses) is only a little bit of it. These tips have been provided in hope that you will learn a few things. Now get out there and have some fun!

In mere seconds you can discover a few possibly shocking pieces of information concerning free online games that we think you will love. It is incredibly simple to overlook the most valuable information because it is spread out all over the web. It is so simple to find information that is missing in important finer points, we will say, but we do have the full story.

Source: http://www.miauce.org/have-more-fun-online-by-gaming/

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Sunday, March 18, 2012

Super busy SXSW wraps up with poignant moment

Norah Jones performs her entire new album during the SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas on Saturday, March 17, 2012.(AP Photo/Jack Plunkett)

Norah Jones performs her entire new album during the SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas on Saturday, March 17, 2012.(AP Photo/Jack Plunkett)

Norah Jones performs her entire new album during the SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas on Saturday, March 17, 2012.(AP Photo/Jack Plunkett)

(AP) ? Stars of all stripes and celebrity hit town to close out South By Southwest, but it was a marching band that stole the show Saturday.

Members of the Austin High band watched their star turn in the premiere of filmmaker Emmett Malloy's "Big Easy Express," then joined documentary subjects Mumford & Sons, Edward Sharpe and The Magnetic Zeroes and Old Crow Medicine Show in an outdoor concert at the University of Texas as the music conference fell into an exhausted heap on its final night.

Across town, Timbaland held a listening party at Perez Hilton's annual to-do. Norah Jones played her new album for an appreciative group of fans. Matthew McConaughey joined The Cult during a free concert. Punk rock icon Bob Mould played "Copper Blue" in its entirety, bringing out the graybeards. And Peter Buck and Mike Mills of R.E.M. joined The Posies and Blitzen Trapper in one final tribute to Big Star frontman Alex Chilton, who passed away two years ago as he was due to participate in SXSW.

Rumors of celebrity appearances swirled up and down Sixth Street, but few of them materialized as St. Patrick's Day revelers clogged downtown Austin in a frenzy of partying that didn't end till 2 a.m. last call.

Superstars such as Bruce Springsteen, Jay-Z, Eminem and others made this the busiest SXSW ever, overflowing with celebrity, secret performances and high-dollar endorsements that made sure the festival looked nothing like the humble event that started 25 years ago with just 200 bands spread over 12 clubs. With so much going on and plenty of places to get hammered on green beer, even the usually most exclusive events were easy to get into.

It took a bumpin' tuba line and a bunch of enthusiastic high school kids to shake off the glitzy veneer that had many longtime festival participants grumbling about the good old days and inject a little innocent joy back into the conference.

With the UT Tower lit up in the background, the band took the stage, then laid down a rolling groove before joining Mumford & Sons on "The Cave," recreating a powerful moment from "Big Easy Express" in front of thousands of fans on the lawn at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library.

"That's real music, ladies and gentlemen," Marcus Mumford told the crowd after the song. "That's real music from real people."

Afterwards fans surrounded marching band members on the street and chanted: "One more song! One more song!"

The love of making music and the community brought by close collaboration were the dominant themes of "Big Easy Express," which made its world premiere earlier in the day at the Paramount Theatre, then was replayed for the crowd before the night's concert.

Malloy follows the three bands as they made a train trip from California to New Orleans via Austin. They covered 2,500 miles in a week and a half, playing music almost every step of the way and enlisting Austin High to join the fun in one of the film's most delightful moments.

"Very few people have seen this film," said Malloy, whose previous credits include The White Stripes 2009 documentary "Under Great White Northern Lights." ''But the ones who have, everyone says they're very jealous that they weren't on (the train). They want to quit their day job and go be a freak. And I think the fact that this film evokes that kind of like, 'I want to get in touch with my wild side' is great. It's more emotional than I would've ever thought, and the fact that I was able to work with everything those guys were doing those days and create a little bit of an emotional journey, that put this film in a very special place."

The film is full of poignant moments as the bands bond in close quarters, jamming on each other's songs, writing new ones and taking old standards and making them new.

"We got on the train and you guys were just setting the tone, really playing music nonstop," said Alex Ebert, nodding to Mumford and OCMS member Gill Landry during a red carpet interview before the premiere. "It was a really powerful experience and one we jumped into probably willingly and happily. But I mean in that sense that's what we took away the most ? the preparedness, willingness and effort to constantly play music."

Over at Hilton's party, producer Timbaland took the stage after a long absence from the spotlight.

"I know you been missing me for a while," he said.

Timbaland bragged on his own group of favorite collaborators, saying that collaborator Dev was now a member of his "Superfriends" before launching into his latest single, "Break Ya Back," from his forthcoming album "Shock Value III." He also rapped and beat-boxed over abbreviated versions of some of his best-known songs.

"I don't know if I can get off the stage," he said. "I've got too many hits."

___

Online:

http://www.sxsw.com

___

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Chris Talbott at www.twitter.com/Chris_Talbott.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-03-18-SXSW-Wrap%20Up/id-5b73232736b9475bbd6c4834a7b79629

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Jockey Corey Nakatani, One of the Best Riders in North America

Corey Nakatani has long been a fixture among the very best jockeys riding in the United States today. He has won many of the biggest races that are run in the United States, and has even been chosen by many European trainers to ride their top fillies, mares and colts when the biggest event of the year, the Breeders' Cup World Championships, comes along every year at the end of October or early in November.
Nakatani is not a jockey that favors one type of surface over another. Indeed, a look at his surefire Hall-of-Fame record shows conclusively that he has run many prestigious, Grade I events featuring lucrative purses sometimes in the millions of dollars, and he has won those races on natural dirt in the slop or on a fast track, on dry grass or wet grass, and on every type of synthetic, whether it be Polytrack or ProRide.
At the the age of 28 years old, Nakatani graduated in Castaic, California from jockey training school. In 1988, he won his very first race aboard a horse by the name of Blue King. One notable thing about Corey's first win was the fact that it was, after a photo finish, determined to be a dead heat, making Nakatani the only jockey riding in the United States today who won his first race in an actual dead heat. He first gained national prominence in 1991 when, on the Friday before Kentucky Derby day at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky, he won the Kentucky Oaks in impressive fashion aboard a fine filly named Lite Light. He then won the Oaks again in 1996 atop Pike Place Dancer. Nakatani's reputation as a major stakes jockey was secure at that point, but it was in the 1996 Breeders' Cup that he really made himself a household name in the racing world.
He won two of the most prestigious Breeders' Cup races in the Breeders' Cup Distaff (now known as the Ladies' Classic) atop Jewel Princess and then won the Breeders' Cup Sprint on a colt named Lit de Justice. Since 1996, Nakatani has totally dominated the Breeders' Cup, and although he has yet to win the Breeders' Cup Classic, he has won a grand total of 4 times in the Breeders' Cup Sprint alone, and 7 total Breeders' Cup races.
2006 was a banner year for Nakatani, as on Memorial Day of that year he won his 3000th race at Hollywood Park. The one thing that Nakatani is still searching for is a Triple Crown victory, especially a Kentucky Derby victory. With the success that he has already had in racing, you can bet that Corey Nakatani will get plenty of chances at the Triple Crown races, whether it be the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes, or the Belmont Stakes.

Source: http://www.artipot.com/articles/1182626/jockey-corey-nakatani-one-of-the-best-riders-in-north-america.htm

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Saturday, March 17, 2012

The Hunger Games Movie Mockingjay Prop Rep Pin | Shopping ...

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From the Hunger Games, the most anticipated movie of 2012. The mocking Jay pin replica as worn by Katniss in the Games. Measuring about 1.5 in diameter.

  • From Lionsgate Film
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  • The highly anticipated movie!
  • Great gift for the Holiday
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Source: http://www.dexcomtoday.com/the-hunger-games-movie-mockingjay-prop-rep-pin-reviews/

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Fairly Legal S02E01 720p HDTV x264-IMMERSE ? Releaselog ...

Here?s the season premiere of USA?s ?Fairly Legal?.

Kate returns to work and mediates a case between a corporation and former employee whose granddaughter claims he was exposed to harmful chemicals.

Links: Homepage ? TV.com

Fairly.Legal.S02E01.HDTV.XviD-2HD
XviD | MP3 VBR | 350 MB
NTi ? NETLOAD | UPLOADED | FiLEFACTORY

Fairly.Legal.S02E01.HDTV.x264-ASAP
x264 | AAC VBR | 378 MB
NTi ? NETLOAD | UPLOADED | FiLEFACTORY

Fairly.Legal.S02E01.720p.HDTV.x264-IMMERSE
x264 | AC3 CBR | 1.31 GB
NTi | NETLOAD | UPLOADED | FiLEFACTORY

Source: http://www.rlslog.net/fairly-legal-s02e01-720p-hdtv-x264-immerse/

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Friday, March 16, 2012

Heroes or villains? Latvian SS march angers Russians

RIGA (Reuters) - Veterans from a Latvian World War Two SS division and their nationalist backers marched through Riga on Friday, angering the country's large, Russian-speaking minority and drawing a rebuke from its former imperial master Moscow.

The marchers say their fight was for Latvian freedom against the Soviet Red Army after mass deportations under dictator Josef Stalin. Critics say it is wrong to honor men who fought on the same side as Nazi Germany.

About a hundred counter-demonstrators, mostly Russian-speakers who say Latvia discriminates against them, watched in silence as several hundred grey-haired veterans and young nationalist supporters walked past them through the city centre.

Some of the Russian-speaking protesters wore the striped uniforms of prisoners of Nazi concentration camps. They also held placards with photos of people murdered in the Holocaust.

"This resurrection of nationalism like in the 1930s has been going on for the last 20 years and we don't like it," said Grigory Drozdov, 69, a Russian-speaking pensioner.

Russia's foreign ministry called the SS veterans "Hitler's henchmen" and said the "odious" march was an attempt to re-write history and whitewash Nazi atrocities.

"We believe that the Latvian authorities' indulgence of the former legionnaires and the attempts to rewrite history should be met with an appropriate reaction from the international community," the ministry said in a statement.

Russia, proud of its World War Two role and seeing the Soviet Union as having liberated Latvia and the other Balts from the Nazis, has reacted angrily to such events in the past.

The Latvian government had distanced itself from the commemoration, an annual event which also angers Jewish leaders. Police had warned it could cause trouble but it passed off peacefully.

"We have come here to honor our dead, it is very important to do that," said marcher Janis Johanson, 82, who said he was forced to join one of the Latvian SS divisions at the age of 18 and fought in 1944-1945.

"If you did not join up you were shot as a deserter. That was it. That was what happened in a time of war," he said. Many Latvians also fought in the Red Army, showing how the small country squeezed between two powerful neighbors.

Young men and women holding the national flag on long poles flanked the marchers, who then laid flowers at the Freedom Monument, a key symbol of Latvian independence.

Latvia's Jewish Community organization issued a statement opposing the march. Ephraim Zuroff, a Nazi hunter at the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, said men who massacred Latvian Jews later joined the SS units, as well as those forcibly conscripted.

"This is a horrible message here. You are talking about people who wanted the Third Reich to win, some of whom are mass murderers," he told Reuters.

ETHNIC DIVIDE

The Baltic state was left with a large Russian minority after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Though Latvia last month overwhelmingly rejected making Russian a second language, the holding of the vote was seen as a sign of discontent by the Russian-speakers in the face of what some see as discrimination by the ethnic Latvian ruling elite.

Many Russian-speakers also still feel resentment they had to apply for citizenship of Latvia after the Soviet collapse and that there are still 300,000 people who have no citizenship, which means no right to vote or take certain jobs.

Some Latvians see the Russian-speakers as illegal occupiers who came during 50 years of Soviet rule.

But the march is also controversial amongst Latvians and a poll of 750 people on Friday showed 49 percent were against it.

Prime Minister Valdis Dombrovskis told all his coalition ministers to stay away, including two nationalists from the All For Latvia-For Fatherland and Freedom group.

The Foreign Ministry also said in a statement this week that Latvia condemned the Holocaust and totalitarianism.

All For Latvia-For Fatherland and Freedom, the smallest of three ruling parties, are the main backers of the march. Several of its 14 members of parliament took part.

(Reporting by Patrick Lannin; Editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/heroes-villains-latvian-ss-march-angers-russians-194936218.html

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North Korea says it will launch long-range rocket

FILE - In this April 5, 2009 image made from KRT video, a rocket is lifted off from its launch pad in Musudan-ri, North Korea. North Korea announced Friday, March 16, 2012, it plans to launch a long-range rocket mounted with a satellite next month, a surprise move that comes weeks after it agreed to nuclear concessions including a moratorium on long-range missile tests. The launch plan comes as North Korea prepares to celebrate the April 15 centenary of the birth of its founder, Kim Il Sung. (AP Photo/KRT TV, File) NORTH KOREA OUT, TV OUT

FILE - In this April 5, 2009 image made from KRT video, a rocket is lifted off from its launch pad in Musudan-ri, North Korea. North Korea announced Friday, March 16, 2012, it plans to launch a long-range rocket mounted with a satellite next month, a surprise move that comes weeks after it agreed to nuclear concessions including a moratorium on long-range missile tests. The launch plan comes as North Korea prepares to celebrate the April 15 centenary of the birth of its founder, Kim Il Sung. (AP Photo/KRT TV, File) NORTH KOREA OUT, TV OUT

FILE - In this April 5, 2009 image made from KRT video, a rocket is lifted off from its launch pad in Musudan-ri, North Korea. North Korea announced Friday, March 16, 2012, it plans to launch a long-range rocket mounted with a satellite next month, a surprise move that comes weeks after it agreed to nuclear concessions including a moratorium on long-range missile tests. The launch plan comes as North Korea prepares to celebrate the April 15 centenary of the birth of its founder, Kim Il Sung. (AP Photo/KRT TV, File) NORTH KOREA OUT, TV OUT

(AP) ? North Korea announced plans Friday to launch a long-range rocket mounted with a satellite next month, a provocative move just weeks after it agreed to nuclear concessions including a moratorium on long-range missile tests.

North Korea argues that such launches are part of a peaceful space program that is exempt from any disarmament agreements, but the U.S., South Korea and other critics condemn them as disguised tests of the North's military missile technology in violation of a U.N. ban.

The launch is to take place exactly three years after similar launch in April 2009 drew widespread censure.

Liftoff will take place between April 12 and 16 from a launch pad in North Phyongan province, a spokesman for the Korean Committee for Space Technology said in a statement carried by state media. The North said the launch would be a test of satellite technology.

The plan comes as North Korea prepares to celebrate the April 15 centenary of the birth of its founder, Kim Il Sung. Kim's grandson, Kim Jong Un, has led the nation of 24 million since his father, Kim Jong Il, died in December.

North Korea agreed last month to suspend uranium enrichment, place a moratorium on nuclear and long-range missile tests, and to allow back U.N. weapons inspectors in exchange for much-needed food aid. Uranium enrichment is one way to make atomic bombs. In the past North Korea has also weaponized plutonium for nuclear devices.

North Korea called the April 2009 launch a bid to send a communications satellite into space, but it was widely viewed in the West as a violation of U.N. Security Council resolutions prohibiting North Korea from engaging in nuclear and ballistic missile activity.

Shortly after the 2009 launch, Pyongyang declared that it would abandon six-nation negotiations on offering the North aid and concessions in exchange for nuclear disarmament. And weeks later, North Korea tested a nuclear device, the second in three years ? earning the regime tightened U.N. sanctions.

North Korea is proud of its nuclear and missile programs, which it claims are necessary to protect itself against the United States, which stations more than 28,000 troops in South Korea and has thousands more troops as well as nuclear-powered warships in Asia-Pacific region.

North Korea and the United States fought on opposite sides of the three-year Korean War, which ended in a truce in 1953. They have never signed a peace treaty.

North Korea is believed to have enough weaponized plutonium for four to eight "primitive" atomic bombs, according to scientist Siegfried Hecker of the Center for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford University.

Pyongyang also announced in 2009 that it would begin enriching uranium, and revealed the facility to Hecker and North Korea expert Robert Carlin during a November 2010 visit to the Yongbyon nuclear complex.

The North Korean space committee spokesman said a Kwangmyongsong-3 satellite designed to orbit the earth will be mounted on an Unha-3 rocket from the Sohae station in Cholsan County. He called it a "working" satellite that was an improvement over two previous "experimental" satellites.

The spokesman said North Korea would abide by international regulations governing the launch of satellites for "peaceful" scientific purposes and that an orbit was chosen to avoid showering debris on neighboring nations.

North Korea provided similar notice in 2009, but launched the rocket despite warnings from world leaders that it would set the nation on a path of isolation.

In 2009, North Korea said an experimental communications satellite mounted on a three-stage Unha-2 rocket was sent into space playing "Song of Gen. Kim Il Sung" and "Song of Gen. Kim Jong Il."

The U.S. North American Aerospace Defense Command and South Korea's Defense Ministry said no satellite made it into orbit.

In Seoul, the Unification Ministry said it had no comment Friday. South Korea is due to host the Nuclear Security Summit in Seoul in two weeks, and North Korea's nuclear program was expected to be discussed on the sidelines of the gathering of world leaders.

___

Associated Press writer Jean H. Lee contributed to this report from Seoul, South Korea.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-03-16-AS-NKorea-Rocket-Launch/id-8113c56ecff04de9859887bc7b77d421

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