Saturday, December 31, 2011

Atari's Latest Legal Actions ?Appear to be Putting the Squeeze on ...

Summary A project update for iOS game Vector Tanks 3 on crowd-sourcing platform Kickstarter revealed that Atari has started threatening legal action against indie game developers whose creations resemble the company?s ancient arcade titles.

Description In light of threatened legal action, Black Powder Media has pulled Vector Tanks and Vector Tanks Extreme from the app store because ?It doesn?t seem to matter that the game bears only a vague resemblance to Atari?s Battlezone.?

Source: http://www.crowdsourcing.org/document/ataris-latest-legal-actions-appear-to-be-putting-the-squeeze-on-hundreds-of-apps/9793

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Friday, December 30, 2011

A simple Italian celery soup

Leftover celery teams up with chicken, carrots, tomato paste, and rice to become Minestra del Sedano, a satisfying meal in a bowl.

One of the things that bugs me about cooking is buying a fresh ingredient for a recipe, using only a little and later finding the withering remains in the fridge. It happens a lot with fresh herbs, I?m ashamed to admit. But for some reason, the thing that galls me the most is throwing out the wilted carcass of a stalk of celery from which I?ve only used a rib or two.

Skip to next paragraph Terry Boyd

Terry Boyd is the author of Blue Kitchen, a Chicago-based food blog for home cooks. His simple, eclectic cooking focuses on fresh ingredients, big flavors and a cheerful willingness to borrow ideas and techniques from all over the world. A frequent contributor to the Chicago Sun-Times, he writes weekly food pieces for cable station USA Network's Character Approved Blog. His recipes have also appeared on the Bon App?tit and Saveur websites.

Recent posts

So recently, after using a couple of ribs of celery from a fresh stalk for a pot of chili, I was determined to use up the rest of it. My first thought was celery soup. Doing a quick online search, I mostly found various pur?ed versions. I?m sure they?re lovely, but I was in the mood for soup with chunks of stuff in it.

Then I came across a recipe for minestra del sedano, Italian celery soup, posted by my friend Lydia at Soup Chick. It called for about twice the celery I had on hand and fewer other ingredients (no chicken or carrots, for instance). I?m guessing with my tinkering, I?ve actually veered a good distance from true Italian celery soup. But I used up all the celery I had on hand, and we ate well that night. Again, not a holidayworthy meal, but a good one. Happy holidays, everyone. Eat well.

Italian Celery Soup
?Serves 3 to 4

2 tablespoons olive oil
?3 slices of bacon, cut crosswise into matchsticks
?1 medium onion, chopped
?1 large carrot, diced
?1 stalk celery, cut into 1/2-inch pieces (5 to 6 cups)
?2 tablespoons tomato paste
?2 cups reduced sodium chicken broth
?2 cups water (plus more, if needed)
?2 bay leaves
?1 piece of rind from a Parmesan cheese wedge (optional)
?3 boneless skinless chicken thighs, chopped (about 1-1/2 cups)
?1/2 cup uncooked white rice
?salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
?freshly grated Parmesan cheese

Heat oil in a lidded Dutch oven over a medium flame. Add bacon, onion and carrot and toss to combine and coat with oil. Cook until onion begins to soften, stirring occasionally, about 5 minutes. Stir in tomato paste and celery and cook for about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Meanwhile, heat broth and water together in a separate pan. (This is a trick I picked up from Lydia?you don?t have to wait for cold or room temperature broth to heat up when added to the soup pot if you do this.) Gradually add hot broth mixture to soup pot and add Parmesan rind and bay leaves. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer soup, covered, for 20 minutes.

Add chicken and rice and simmer, covered, for about 15 minutes. Adjust seasonings with salt and pepper. Be generous with the pepper, another tip from Lydia.

Ladle into individual bowls and top with grated Parmesan. Serve with a crusty bread.

Related post: Cherry Orange Loaf Cake

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of food bloggers. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by The Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own and they are responsible for the content of their blogs and their recipes. All readers are free to make ingredient substitutions to satisfy their dietary preferences, including not using wine (or substituting cooking wine) when a recipe calls for it. To contact us about a blogger, click here.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/h5kt8yBX0YQ/A-simple-Italian-celery-soup

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Smiling thieves: Family hopes to get stolen computer back after photo pops up on Facebook

CHICAGO -- Theresa Unkrur's daughter was on her iPhone checking her Facebook page when she spotted a new photo posted from her MacBook.

Her stolen MacBook.

The computer was taken in a break-in last week, and days later the new photo showed up on Facebook showing two guys sitting on a couch and smiling into the laptop's camera.

Unkrur, an attorney, says she doesn't know the guys in the picture and understands there could be an innocent explanation for why they were sitting in front of the stolen computer when the camera snapped and - thanks to an app - automatically posted the photo to Facebook.

A thief or thieves broke into the Unkrurs' Chicago home last Wednesday, four days before Christmas, and took computers, an iPhone and a Playstation 3. The family filed a report with police, then contacted authorities again after the photo popped up Monday evening.

The family figures that if police can identify the young men in the picture, that could help them track down who took the electronics. A Chicago police spokesman declined to comment on the photo, and police were not releasing the picture, as of Tuesday evening.

Meanwhile, members of Unkrur's family, including daughter Liz, 22, and son Alex, 21, were showing the photo on Facebook and asking visitors whether they recognized the two. They even showed the photo in the neighborhood, but so far have gotten only vague leads.

Unkrur said the break-in occurred after her son briefly left the home to visit a neighbor. When she arrived home, all the doors and a lower window were open, she said.

Missing were an iPhone, two MacBooks, a PlayStation 3, video games and a controller. The thieves apparently loaded it all into three pieces of luggage that also are missing. Unkrur said she was told by police that they got some "good fingerprints" from a wall-mounted television the thieves tried to take.

Crime experts say Unkrur's case is an extreme example of how technology can potentially aid in solving crimes.

According to James Alan Fox, a criminologist at Northeastern University in Boston, criminals aren't always savvy when it comes to technology, and tend to underestimate how they can be detected electronically.

Fox cited conventional ways that technology is fighting crime, including surveillance cameras, car alarms and home security systems. He had never heard of a case quite like the Unkrurs'.

Yet a reminiscent case occurred just last August in the Chicago area.

A laptop was stolen from a home in suburban Riverside, and when it was recovered a few days later at an electronics store, a photographic self-portrait of the suspected burglar was found on it. Police went public with the photo, quickly identified a suspect, and ultimately arrested him.

Theresa Unkrur said the break-in has left her family feeling exposed and violated. "It's a terrible feeling just knowing someone was in here ... that they could have hurt the dogs," Unkrur said. "It's very unsettling."

"I'm afraid," she added. "I just don't know what their (burglars') states of mind are ... if they are on to the fact that we are on to them."

Source: http://www.bnd.com/2011/12/27/1994313/family-hopes-photo-posted-on-facebook.html

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Venezuela to remove breast implants for free

EDITORS NOTE NUDITY - FILE - In this Jan. 22, 2007 file photo, a plastic surgeon performs breast implant surgery in Caracas, Venezuela. Venezuela is offering free surgeries for women to remove faulty French-made breast implants, the country's top health official said on Tuesday Dec. 27, 2011. France's health system has recommended that women with the PIP implants get them replaced, and has agreed to pay for surgeries. In Brazil and Argentina, however, health officials just recommend checkups. (AP Photo/Leslie Mazoch, File)

EDITORS NOTE NUDITY - FILE - In this Jan. 22, 2007 file photo, a plastic surgeon performs breast implant surgery in Caracas, Venezuela. Venezuela is offering free surgeries for women to remove faulty French-made breast implants, the country's top health official said on Tuesday Dec. 27, 2011. France's health system has recommended that women with the PIP implants get them replaced, and has agreed to pay for surgeries. In Brazil and Argentina, however, health officials just recommend checkups. (AP Photo/Leslie Mazoch, File)

(AP) ? Venezuela is offering free surgeries for women to remove faulty French-made breast implants, the country's top health official said.

Health Minister Eugenia Sader said women with implants made by the now-defunct French company Poly Implant Prothese may go to hospitals that carry out plastic surgery to have the implants removed, the state-run Venezuelan News Agency reported.

Sader said Tuesday that the free procedure will simply be to remove the implants and will not include replacing them.

"Those patients are running a risk," Sader said. However, she said, women need not seek emergency care and instead may visit hospitals at their convenience.

France's health system has recommended that women with the PIP implants get them replaced, and has agreed to pay for surgeries. In Brazil and Argentina, however, health officials just recommend checkups.

The president of Brazil's Plastic Surgeons Association, Jose Horacio Aboudib, said "I'd remove them from any patient that wants to, but I don't see the need for everyone to go into surgery."

"In France, the government pays for the surgery. Here it is not considered a public health risk, and so the patient would have to pay for it," Aboudib said, noting that his association will create a breast implant registry in January, so that doctors can register information on surgeries and the implant material used in a database aimed at improving patient safety and care.

On Tuesday, a group of 50 women in Argentina threatened to sue their plastic surgeons if they don't get free replacements of the faulty French breast implants.

The group is led by attorney Virginia Luna, who herself has the "PIP" silicone gel packs implanted in her breasts. She said five of her clients have obtained out-of-court agreements to provide free replacements, and if the rest don't get them as well, her group will sue.

Argentine clinics say they'll replace leaky implants, but the symptoms aren't always detectable, and Luna says any woman with the faulty implants can suffer psychological damage.

It's unclear how many women have the PIP implants in Venezuela, where breast enlargement surgery is popular and doctors say the French implants used to be widely used.

An estimated 35,000 to 40,000 women in the country have breast enlargement surgery each year, said Dr. Marisol Graterol, president of the Venezuelan Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has criticized the widespread popularity of breast surgery, saying women shouldn't be sold on an image that big bosoms are attractive.

The plastic surgery society recommended last week that women with PIP breast implants see a doctor to have them checked. Graterol said doctors should decide depending on each patient's situation whether or not the implants need to be removed.

Sales of PIP implants were halted in Venezuela in April 2010, Graterol said.

Plastic surgeon Dr. Henry Saud said he removed ruptured PIP implants from more than 10 patients during the past year.

In some cases, his patients hadn't noticed anything wrong and the leaking implants were detected during imaging exams, Saud said. In other cases, "they felt discomfort and had swelling."

"It used to be one of the most-used brands," Saud said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-28-LT-Venezuela-Breast-Implants/id-60d408b6a171425caee5e4a6e1587ce3

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

One or Three Private Golf Lessons with PGA Pro Robb Nunn from Golf Equation Swing Academy in Lake Forest (Up to 54% Off)

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Source: groupon.com --- Monday, December 26, 2011
Golf parallels life in that the only way to escape rough patches is through aggressively swinging a club at something. Power through obstacles with today's Groupon for private Golf lessons with PGA teaching pro Robb Nunn from Golf Equation Swing Academy at the Lake Forest Golf and Practice Center . Choose between the following options: For $49, you get one private lesson (a $100 value). For $89, you get three private lessons (a $195 value). Golf teaching pro, and PGA member since 1998, Robb Nunn has conducted more than 30,000 Golf lessons teaching Golf fundamentals to students of all skill levels. Golf is a sport of physical precision and aerial dynamics, won and lost upon the pendulum of your swing. Robb helps improve players? striking accuracy and Golf swing stability during easy-to-understand 45-minute Golf Equation lessons. After the first lesson, pupils often slash scores and fine tune strokes, but opting for a three-lesson package affords deeper understanding for the game via more precise backswings and fluid follow throughs. Groupon Says The Groupon Guide to: Map-Legend Symbols Which map shows where you can safely leave a baby? Read more... ...

Source: http://groupon.com/orange-county/deals/golf-equation-swing-academy

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sportspickle: POLL: How excited are you about the start of the NBA season? -- http://t.co/pX87CGxI

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Football: Berbatov puts United joint top

December 26, 2011 -- Updated 1826 GMT (0226 HKT)

Dimitar Berbatov scores the second of his hat-trick as Manchester United thrashed Wigan 5-0.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Dimitar Berbatov scores a hat-trick as Manchester United thrash Wigan 5-0
  • The result lifts United level with rivals Manchester City at the top of Premier League
  • City lead on goal difference despite a 0-0 draw at West Bromwich Albion
  • Chelsea and Liverpool are both held at home by teams in bottom half of table

(CNN) -- Bulgarian striker Dimitar Berbatov scored a hat-trick as Manchester United thrashed 10-man Wigan Athletic 5-0 at Old Trafford to draw level with rivals Manchester City at the top of the English Premier League.

City went into the traditional Boxing Day fixtures two points clear of champions United, but Roberto Mancini's side were held to a 0-0 draw at West Bromwich Albion.

That meant United's result puts the two sides level at the top on 45 points, with City keeping hold of their lead on goal difference.

Footballers are TV stars, and should act like it ...

United had thrashed Fulham 5-0 in midweek and they always looked set for another big victory once Park Ji-Sung had converted Patrice Evra's eight-minute cross.

And Wigan's task was made even harder when Conor Sammon was sent off for catching Michael Carrick with a stray arm.

United took full advantage when Berbatov netted just before half-time and the same player added United's third goal from Antonio Valencia's 58th-minute pass.

Valencia himself made it 4-0 in the 75th minute and Berbatov completed his treble from the penalty spot after Antonin Alcaraz had tripped Park in the area.

Tottenham, who play Norwich on Tuesday, are 10 points behind the Manchester clubs in third place -- although they have two games in hand -- while Chelsea are a further point behind in fourth after being held to a 1-1 home draw by London neighbors Fulham.

Juan Mata put Chelsea ahead before half-time but the visitors leveled 11 minutes after the interval when Clint Dempsey tapped home Bryan Ruiz's pass.

Arsenal will play Wolverhampton on Tuesday, and they can move up to third place with a victory, while Liverpool are sixth, a massive 14 points off the top, after a disappointing 1-1 home draw with bottom club Blackburn.

The struggling visitors, without an away win all season, took the lead on the stroke of half time when Charlie Adam deflected a Morten Gamst Pedersen's corner into his own net.

But Liverpool equalized soon after the break through a Maxi Rodriguez header. However, Liverpool have now drawn six of their nine home matches, a run that is threatening their hopes of making the Champions League places.

They are just a point ahead of seventh-placed Newcastle, who returned to winning ways with a 2-0 win at second-bottom Bolton, who have now lost eight of their nine home matches this season.

Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/edition_sport/~3/Zxft_qLgjbw/index.html

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Britain's Prince Philip leaves hospital

Britain's Prince Philip smiles and waves as he leaves Papworth, a specialist heart hospital, in Cambridge, England, Tuesday Dec. 27, 2011. Prince Philip left hospital Tuesday, after undergoing treatment for a blocked coronary artery. (AP Photo/Chris Radburn, PA) UNITED KINGDOM OUT

Britain's Prince Philip smiles and waves as he leaves Papworth, a specialist heart hospital, in Cambridge, England, Tuesday Dec. 27, 2011. Prince Philip left hospital Tuesday, after undergoing treatment for a blocked coronary artery. (AP Photo/Chris Radburn, PA) UNITED KINGDOM OUT

Britain's Prince Philip leaves Papworth, a specialist heart hospital, in Cambridge, England, Tuesday Dec. 27, 2011. Prince Philip left hospital Tuesday, after undergoing treatment for a blocked coronary artery. (AP Photo/Chris Radburn, PA) UNITED KINGDOM OUT

LONDON (AP) ? Britain's Prince Philip returned to the royal family's country estate Tuesday, after a spell in the hospital undergoing treatment for a blocked coronary artery.

Philip, Queen Elizabeth II's 90-year-old husband, spent four nights in the hospital recovering from a successful coronary stent procedure. He was taken to Papworth, a specialist heart hospital in Cambridge, on Friday after complaining of chest pains.

It was the most serious health scare suffered by Philip, who is known to be active and robust. He has continued to appear at many engagements, most recently taking a 10-day tour of Australia with the queen.

For the first time in years he was forced to miss the royal family's traditional Christmas festivities, which include attending a morning church service, viewing the queen's annual Christmas broadcast together, and a shooting party on Boxing Day.

Philip did not speak to reporters as he was driven away from the hospital in a Range Rover Tuesday morning, though he smiled and waved to those gathered to film his departure.

"He is very much looking forward to rejoining his family," a Buckingham Palace statement said, adding that he also thanked the hospital staff for their care.

Philip will now return to Sandringham, the queen's huge private estate in rural Norfolk where the royal family retreats for the holiday season every year.

It is not yet clear if Philip's heart problem will cause a reduction in his plans to travel with the queen next year to celebrate her Diamond Jubilee. He is scheduled to make a series of trips to England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland to help her mark her 60th year on the throne.

Now that Philip has been found to have coronary artery blockages, he is likely to be treated with several medications that are routinely prescribed for heart patients. The goal is to prevent future coronary artery blockages and a possible heart attack.

In most cases these medicines would include a daily dosage of aspirin to thin the blood, a statin to lower cholesterol, and possibly a beta-blocker and a separate medicine to control his blood pressure. Philip would also be expected to have his heart function tested every six months or so to check for any changes.

Philip had already announced when he turned 90 that he intended to slow down his extremely active schedule. The Diamond Jubilee plans reflected this desire, with the queen deciding to send her children and grandchildren on grueling overseas trips to Commonwealth countries while she and her husband make less demanding trips throughout the United Kingdom.

____

Associated Press writer Gregory Katz contributed to this report.

Britain's Prince Philip left the hospital Tuesday, after undergoing treatment for a blocked coronary artery.

Philip, Queen Elizabeth II's 90-year-old husband, spent four nights in the hospital recovering from a successful coronary stent procedure. He was taken to Papworth, a specialist heart hospital in Cambridge, on Friday after complaining of chest pains.

It was the most serious health scare suffered by Philip, who is known to be active and robust. He has continued to appear at many engagements, most recently taking a 10-day tour of Australia with the queen.

For the first time in years he was forced to miss the royal family's traditional Christmas festivities, which include attending a morning church service, viewing the queen's annual Christmas broadcast together, and a shooting party on Boxing Day.

Philip did not speak to reporters as he was driven away from the hospital in a Range Rover Tuesday morning, though he smiled and waved to those gathered to film his departure.

He also thanked the hospital staff for their care.

He will return to Sandringham, the queen's private estate in rural Norfolk, to join the queen and other royal family members, Buckingham Palace officials said. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity in line with policy.

It is not yet clear if Philip's heart problem will cause a reduction in his plans to travel with the queen next year to celebrate her Diamond Jubilee. He is scheduled to make a series of trips to England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland to help her mark her 60th year on the throne.

Now that Philip has been found to have coronary artery blockages, he is likely to be treated with several medications that are routinely prescribed for heart patients. The goal is to prevent future coronary artery blockages and a possible heart attack.

In most cases these medicines would include a daily dosage of aspirin to thin the blood, a statin to lower cholesterol, and possibly a beta-blocker and a separate medicine to control his blood pressure. Philip would also be expected to have his heart function tested every six months or so to check for any changes.

Philip had already announced when he turned 90 that he intended to slow down his extremely active schedule. The Diamond Jubilee plans reflected this desire, with the queen deciding to send her children and grandchildren on grueling overseas trips to Commonwealth countries while she and her husband made less-demanding trips throughout the United Kingdom.

____

Associated Press writer Gregory Katz contributed to this report

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-27-EU-Britain-Prince-Philip/id-0af95c314a5346c7a66157bc40373b24

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Monday, December 26, 2011

IBM's Watson Shows up for Work at Cedars-Sinai's Cancer Center

IBM's Watson supercomputer is about to begun work evaluating evidence-based cancer treatment options that can be delivered to the physician in a matter of seconds for assessment.

IBM and WellPoint, which is Blue Cross Blue Shield's largest health plan, are building applications that will essentially turn the Watson computer into an adviser for oncologists at Cedars-Sinai's Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute in Los Angeles, according to Steve Gold, director of worldwide marketing for IBM Watson Solutions.

Cedars-Sinai's historical data on cancer as well as its current clinical records will be ingested into an iteration of IBM's Watson that will reside at WellPoint's headquarters. The computer will act as a medical data repository on multiple types of cancer. WellPoint will then work with Cedars-Sinai physicians to design and develop applications as well as validate their capabilities.

Dr. M. William Audeh, medical director of the cancer institute, will work closely with WellPoint's clinical experts to provide advice on how the Watson may be best used in clinical practice to support increased understanding of the evolving body of knowledge on cancer, including emerging therapies not widely known by physicians.

Watson Solves Problems

IBM announced earlier this year that healthcare would be the first commercial application for the computer, which defeated two human champions on the popular television game show Jeopardy! in February.

WellPoint partnered with IBM this fall to develop Watson-based applications intended to improve patient care through the use of evidence-based medicine, which is designed to standardize patient treatments by identifying proven best practices. A simple example of evidence-based medicine in action is when a provider automatically places someone who has suffered a heart attack on an aspirin regimen upon leaving the hospital. Cedars-Sinai is the first application of the partnership.

"Where Watson really lends itself to solving problems is information rich opportunities and the information is changing constantly and in various forms, structure and unstructured coming from disparate systems," IBM 's Gold said. "Healthcare fits that requirement exceptionally well."

Custom Configuration

The Watson supercomputer that beat past Jeopardy champions was made up of 90 IBM Power 750 Express servers powered by eight-core processors -- four in each machine for a total of 32 processors per machine. The servers were virtualized using a kernel-based virtual machine (KVM) implementation, creating a server cluster with a total processing capacity of 80 teraflops. A teraflop is one trillion operations per second.

The iteration of Watson being used by Cedars-Sinai, which will reside on WellPoint's campus and can be accessed remotely over a WAN, is vastly smaller, according to Gold.

IBM's Watson supercomputer as it was used for the game show Jeopardy!. The iteration of Watson being used by Cedars-Sinai will be much smaller, but it will have the same capability to ingest and analyze data from disparate systems, both structured and unstructured "The Jeopardy! configuration was done with a specific purpose in mind. It was an in-memory application designed to respond to a question in three seconds," Gold said. "It had 2880 cores and 15 terabytes of memory. Most situations won't dictate that level of response time. For a doctor, if the response is in six seconds or 10 seconds ... obviously the implications for the response are more important than the turnaround time."

Working with speech and imaging recognition software provider Nuance Communications, IBM said the supercomputer can assist healthcare professionals in culling through gigabytes or terabytes of patient healthcare information to determine how to best treat specific illnesses.

For example, Watson's analytics technology, used with Nuance's voice and clinical language understanding software, could help a physician consider all related texts, reference materials, prior cases, and latest knowledge in journals and medical literature when treating an illness. The analysis could quickly help physicians determine the best options for diagnosis and treatment.

Watson will likely be good at helping physicians prescribe treatments that will have the best outcome, Gold said. For example, between the first and second prescribed treatments of a cancer patient, 50% of the time the prescribed medication changes for the second treatment based on the patient's reaction to the initial treatment, Gold said. Watson may be able to better prescribe initial treatments based on past patient data and information specific to the patient being treated.

"The goal is to assist physicians in evaluating evidence-based treatment options that can be delivered to the physician in a matter of seconds for assessment," he said.

Lucas Mearian covers storage, disaster recovery and business continuity, financial services infrastructure and health care IT for Computerworld. Follow Lucas on Twitter at @lucasmearian or subscribe to Lucas's RSS feed . His e-mail address is lmearian@computerworld.com.

Read more about health care in Computerworld's Health Care Topic Center.

Computerworld
For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright ? 2011 Computerworld Inc. All rights reserved.

Source: http://feeds.pcworld.com/click.phdo?i=47c769c3f329023fb56dbff6cc30face

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Iraqi artist struggles to start anew in North Texas

With the U.S. military mission in Iraq officially over this month, troops can finally return home to their families. However, right here in north Texas, there is a man who can never return home.

He is an Iraqi artist, living in exile in Dallas. His work is known around the world, his passion in paint so telling, his expression could get him killed.

Yet this rare gem lives in Dallas, unknown to most, struggling to make it in America.

Waleed Arshad's relationship with the U.S. military started in 2003, when he became fed up with graffiti around his neighborhood.

"They write something like bad word, like in the top of Saddam pictures...it's not nice for kids," Arshad said. "I grab my material and I paint something beautiful...like blue sky and sun and bird."

Arshad says he wanted his art to make children forget the vandalism, and feel hopeful and happy instead. As he was painting, he says several U.S. troops surrounded him. They wanted to know why he was painting. After he answered, they offered him a contract: to help design and paint bridges and squares through all of Baghdad.

It was a massive undertaking; the equivalent of painting all the way from Dallas to Fort Worth. However, the job meant work for artists and contractors across Baghdad, including Arshad's father.

"I put like my signature, my idea in Baghdad. I visit each area, I see the area, this place and size, and go back home, do sketch."

From his sketches, workers brought his designs to life all over the city. His stamp on Baghdad lasted for two years, until he had to flee the country.

Working with the U.S. military proved too dangerous. He says a terrorist stopped him one day on the road, and he had to lie about where he was going.

Later, he said the government in Iraq interrogated him for four hours for having beer in his car. They questioned him inside a mosque.

"They asked me a lot of questions. Where are you from? Which denomination? Sunni or Shiite?"

Arshad said he lied because he heard a man being beaten in the next room, and feared he was next.

That is when he decided he had to leave, that his children would be in danger if they stayed in Iraq.

Arshad moved his wife and two children to Syria. He lost the military contract, but says the art continues to this day, and that people are still painting murals throughout Baghdad.

Once in Syria, Arshad held an exhibition, and invited other artists living in exile to show their work. He said he used the platform to speak out against his government, and talk about the violence and religious oppression.

He also said it is the reason he will be killed if he ever returns to his homeland.

His work is contemporary, but each stroke has meaning. "Each touch, I touch my canvas, I feel I have responsibility for that. I have to like, do something truth. It's not just abstract."

His art is filled with traffic lights. "I put traffic light sign because the traffic light is like meaning, like waiting."

He is waiting in exile. Waiting for the war to end. Waiting to go home.

After a year, he wanted to return to Baghdad and see his parents, but they told him "no." While he was gone, terrorists took possession of his home.

"They come to my dad and they tell my dad, we have three days, you have to get out of here."

Some people knew Arshad had worked with the U.S. military painting murals and also soldier's portraits. Because of that relationship, Arshad's father feared for his son's life. He told Arshad not to return.

Two years after moving to Syria, the United Nations helped Arshad move to a new country. He had a choice between the United States, Canada, and Sweden. Arshad said the U.S. had the worst benefits for refugees, but he chose it anyway because he felt bonded with soldiers and Americans.

In 2008, moving to North Texas proved harder than he expected. He did not speak the language, and came with almost nothing.

"When I arrived in Dallas, everything got different, everything got hard. I have no idea... I think, I have to start my life in the beginning."

Perhaps the most heart-wrenching for Arshad after leaving his family is what he gave up ? his artwork. "I have to learn English. And, I have to work," he explained. "I have to take care of my kids now. This is the time for my kids."

Just like his artwork, where Arshad is waiting at the traffic light, in Dallas his life is still about direction.

"I don't know how to use the GPS. What's the GPS? Oh, my God!" he joked. He was so afraid when he arrived, his apartment became his new place of exile. "I make [my apartment] like small country with my family, my kids."

Arshad's first job in Dallas was cleaning at a church. He says the people were generous, and even though he was not a Christian, they willingly donated furniture for his home.

But cleaning did not fulfill him. Neither did driving, which was his second job.

He now works at Walmart. "I have responsibility for my dad and mom. They don't work. I help them for the money," Arshad said.

If Arshad is not painting, to him, he is not truly living. He said it is "like air, like oxygen. If I don't paint 100 percent, I think I will die soon. This is the only way I explain my feeling."

Last year, he flew back to Syria, hoping to meet his parents in Baghdad. With tears in his eyes, he described pleading with them over the phone, begging to hug and kiss them. They still refused.

Even to this day, Arshad has no pictures of his family in his home. He said it would be too painful to be reminded of what he can't have.

He keeps a collection of polished stones in his room, taken from the places he has been. Kissing a rock he took from his homeland, he says, "Sometimes when I miss my country... I keep... the stone. I feel like I kiss Baghdad... Baghdad for me, like everything. Baghdad [is] my childhood. Baghdad is my mom. Baghdad is my dad."

It has now been nearly four years since he moved his family to Dallas. His children are thriving; they love it here. He says most of all, they love the schools and their teachers

He started the paperwork required for his parents to fly over for a visit to the U.S. His mother does not want to leave her homeland, but Arshad's father and brothers may come.

Arshad's English is improving, and his art is gaining interest again.

His paintings are taking on new meaning.

The Iraqi artist says the traffic light will remain in his work, but it will be painted in a new light. "Different colors, and different traffic light," he said. "I think the beautiful traffic light coming soon."

Arshad said he finally has hope again; hope for his future here, and hope that Iraq can grow strong and beautiful.

Most of all, he has hope that one day he will set foot in Baghdad again, and embrace his parents.

"I think, like, we dance together in the street, if I go back."

E-mail amcnew@wfaa.com

Source: http://www.wfaa.com/entertainment/Iraqi-artist-struggles-to-start-anew-in-north-texas-135972988.html

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Google activating 700,000 Android devices daily, nearing 250 million total (Appolicious)

Want to talk about some crazy numbers? Google says that it?s approaching a total of 250 million activated Android devices worldwide. That?s getting close to the entire population of the United States, represented in Android users.

TechCrunch has the story, in which it reported that Google has sized up the number of Android devices it says are being activated daily to 700,000, according to a Twitter update from Android chief Andy Rubin. Back in June, the number of Android devices activated each day was 500,000, nothing to sneeze at itself, although the 700,000 mark is significantly higher. Not only is Android sweeping into expanding smartphone markets all over the world, it?s even increasing the speed of its growth.

Market analyst firm Asymco charted the increase in Android activations over the last three years, and the climb is pretty staggering. Aysmco analyst Horace Dediu estimates that there have been somewhere between 224 million and 253 million activated Android smartphones to date (back in November, Google mentioned there were 200 million activated devices). Compare that to Apple?s iOS, which the Cupertino tech giant announced in October had 250 million activated devices, which includes iPhones, iPod Touches and iPads. It?s not certain how many iPhones Apple sells in a day, but crunching the numbers from the 17 million that were sold in the previous quarter of 2011, TechCrunch estimates the number at around 190,000 per day; that?s short iPhone 4S sales, though, which reportedly sold at about 1.3 million per day during its first three days available. Still, it?s unlikely Apple is matching Google?s pace.

Android is seeing some big growth in Europe and emerging markets in Asia; an analysis from Gartner last month found that Android devices accounted for about 53 percent of all the smartphones sold in the third quarter of 2011. The company also announced recently that its Android Market had hit 10 billion app downloads, showing that all those Android phones floating around the world are converting to app sales, as well. Though Apple and Google are constantly battling for supremacy in one arena or another when it comes to the mobile sphere, at least in the growth category, Android is still leading by a considerable margin.

OnLive jumps aboard the Xperia PLAY

If you?re still looking for last-minute holiday gifts, you might want to consider a Sony Xperia PLAY, because now the smartphone can play PC games.

Sony?s PlayStation-branded smartphone was recently added to the list of devices that supports OnLive?s streaming video games app, which allows users to stream video game releases like Deus Ex: Human Revolution and Batman: Arkham City to some smartphones and tablets. The big upside of the Xperia PLAY is that it has a slide-out gamepad, making it ideal for playing actual video games. Users of other devices have to rely on either touch controls, which aren?t available for all games, or pay $49.99 for a wireless OnLive controller.

Adding OnLive to the Xperia PLAY is a pretty big boon for the device. It seems to have struggled to find a dedicated fanbase, despite being a quality piece of mobile gaming equipment. Using OnLive?s streaming service (which allows you to pay a monthly subscription for unlimited play of several games, rent games for a smaller fee for a series of days, or purchase games outright on the service for unlimited play) basically turns the Xperia PLAY into a mobile PlayStation 3, in a sense. And that pretty much makes it the most powerful handheld gaming device on the market right now.

Just keep in mind, if you do play PC games on your Xperia PLAY, that you?ll need a pretty solid Wi-Fi Internet connection to effectively stream games.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/appolicious_rss/rss_appolicious_tc/http___www_androidapps_com_articles10587_google_activating_700_000_android_devices_daily_nearing_250_million_total/43994188/SIG=13q0b9mkb/*http%3A//www.androidapps.com/tech/articles/10587-google-activating-700-000-android-devices-daily-nearing-250-million-total

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Dr. Peter Breggin: The Psychiatric Drugging of America's Foster Children (Huffington post)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/178075731?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Mother doesn't give up after facing surprise breast cancer diagnosis

Meg Farris / Eyewitness News

NEW ORLEANS -- For a New Orleans woman, one of the happiest times in her life quickly became one of the toughest. But she is only focusing on what she's been given in life, not what's been taken away, by a serious diagnosis.

At 33, Melissa Daigle's life dream was fulfilled. One was the man she met at the University of Louisiana homecoming game after babysitting for his brother's child.

"We met and six months later, we got engaged. And a year later, we got married," she remembers with a big smile.

And then the ultimate: starting the big family she always wanted. But after her second daughter was born, everything changed.

"I would have liked to have four or five kids, but I can't have anymore. Now two, is the, two is what, but I'm blessed to have two of them," said Daigle.

It all started during Melissa's second pregnancy with Libby Kate.

"Five months into it, I noticed a lump and I asked my gynecologist about it, and he said, 'You know, things come. Lumps and bumps happen when you're pregnant,'" Daigle remembers.

But months after the birth, while breast feeding, the lump in her breast was still there. Around the same time, her mother was diagnosed with breast cancer. Soon after that, Melissa got neck pain.

At first, she thought nothing of it since years earlier, she had gone to physical therapy to fix neck pain. But this time was different.

"I was having so much pain in my neck, that I was holding, I was nursing Libby and she tapped me in the face with her foot and thank God my husband was in front of me because I tossed her. It hurt. It was so incredibly painful it felt like nothing I had had before," Daigle recalls.

The doctor took a neck X-ray. By the time she got home, her phone was already ringing.

"She said, 'You need to go to the emergency room right now. Something looks very concerning on your X-ray,'" Daigle said about the conversation she had with her doctor.

After weeks of tests came the diagnosis.

"'You have metastatic breast cancer, which is stage IV (4) and it's probably going to be something that you deal with off and on for the rest of your life,'" she was told.

"It's hard to cure them forever, but we can get a lot of women in to remission. So I'm hoping that's going to happen with her," said Dr. Elly Zakris, the director of Radiation Oncology at Touro.

The breast cancer has spread to several places in Melissa's bones. Radiation treatments helped and that pain is now gone. She is being treated by doctors at Touro in New Orleans and MD Anderson in Houston.

Doctors in Texas have her on medication to suppress her hormones in hopes of controlling both cancers. There's also a bone strengthening drug since her bones are at risk of thinning from the hormone suppression.

Doctors say the flood of hormones during pregnancy don't cause breast cancer, they just caused one that was already there to be found.

"The extra hormones that are in your body during pregnancy may make a cancer that was in your body become more obvious. It is potentially a good thing when it's found during pregnancy," said Dr. Zakris.

There is not a lot of science that shows another pregnancy, with it's increase in hormones, would cause cancer recurrence. And some women decide to have more children.

But that concerns doctors. So Melissa was told she should not get pregnant again.

"If I wouldn't have had her (Libby), that, if I wouldn't have had them close together, I might not have had another baby, you know. So we're thankful for what we have. I would always like more (children) but there's always in the future, you never know, you know, you never know, we could adopt or have a foster child or something," said Daigle.

Doctors say it's hard to do breast exams during pregnancy because of the normal lumpy changes. But the good news is this cancer would be worse if it had spread to her organs.

Melissa and her mother, who is doing fine now, do not have the genetic mutations that increase the risk for breast cancers. It is possible Melissa could go into remission for a long time.

But breast surgery should not be ruled out.

"There is (scientific) literature showing that if you remove the primary cancer with women with breast cancer, your survival's better. That might be in her future," Dr. Zakris recommends.

Melissa says friends and family, and even people she knew in the past, help out at home and support her family. But she wants to be there full time while her children are so dependent.

Because she looks so healthy, she now realizes that you can never look at another person and truly know what burdens they carry in life.

"The biggest thing that I want people to know is, you never know when you look at somebody, what they're going through. There's something in every illness, every bad thing that happens in your life, that good comes out of and that God wants us all to be happy in this life and just to do the best with what we have. This is just part of my journey. It's just part of what I'm supposed to do in my life," said Daigle as she choked up.

Melissa and her mother have a very similar type of breast cancer. It is the most common type of breast cancer that is seen in 70 to 80 percent of women with breast cancer.

Melissa has decided, with the doctor's recommendation, that next month she'll go off of her medication and have her ovaries removed at Touro to lower her cancer risk.

?

Source: http://www.wwltv.com/news/health/Mother-doesnt-give-up-after-facing-surprise-breast-cancer-diagnosis-135712668.html

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Shocker! Tablet ad requests up 700 percent during 2011

Good news: all those new tablets you see reported on these pages aren't being stolen by elves; they're entering the human population at large and -- most Christmassy of all -- they're displaying ads. Google told TechCrunch that its AdMob platform saw eight billion ad requests from tablets during the month of November, compared to one lonely billion back in December 2010. Total AdMob requests amount to roughly three billion per day, however, so tablet advertising is still sugary froth compared to that on smartphones.

Shocker! Tablet ad requests up 700 percent during 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Dec 2011 15:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/JXFQSvPLWTo/

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Major step forward towards drought tolerance in crops

ScienceDaily (Dec. 19, 2011) ? When a plant encounters drought, it does its best to cope with this stress by activating a set of protein molecules called receptors. These receptors, once activated, turn on processes that help the plant survive the stress.

A team of plant cell biologists has discovered how to rewire this cellular machinery to heighten the plants' stress response -- a finding that can be used to engineer crops to give them a better shot at surviving and displaying increased yield under drought conditions.

The discovery, made in the laboratory of Sean Cutler, an associate professor of plant cell biology at the University of California, Riverside, brings drought-tolerant crops a step closer to becoming a reality.

It's the hormones

When plants encounter drought, they naturally produce abscisic acid, a stress hormone that helps them cope with the drought conditions. Specifically, the hormone turns on receptors in the plants, resulting in a suite of beneficial changes that help the plants survive. These changes typically include guard cells closing on leaves to reduce water loss, cessation of plant growth to reduce water consumption and myriad other stress-relieving responses.

The discovery by Cutler and others of abscisic acid receptors, which orchestrate these responses, was heralded by Science magazine as a breakthrough of the year in 2009 due to the importance of the receptor proteins to drought and stress tolerance.

Tweaking the receptor

Working on Arabidopsis, a model plant used widely in plant biology labs, the Cutler-led research team has now succeeded supercharging the plant's stress response pathway by modifying the abscisic acid receptors so that they can be turned on at will and stay on.

"Receptors are the cell's conductors and the abscisic acid receptors orchestrate the specific symphony that elicits stress tolerance," said Cutler, a member of UC Riverside's Institute for Integrative Genome Biology. "We've now figured out how to turn the orchestra on at will."

He explained that each stress hormone receptor is equipped with a lid that operates like a gate. For the receptor to be in the on state, the lid must be closed. Using receptor genes engineered in the laboratory, the group created and tested through more than 740 variants of the stress hormone receptor, hunting for the rare variants that caused the lid to be closed for longer periods of time.

"We found many of these mutations," Cutler said. "But each one on its own gave us only partly what we were looking for. But when we carefully stacked the right ones together, we got the desired effect: the receptor locked in its on state, which, in turn, was able to activate the stress response pathway in plants."

Study results appear in the Dec. 20 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Next, the research team plans to take this basic science from the lab into the field -- a process that could take many years.

The research was supported by the National Science Foundation and Syngenta Biotechnology, Inc.

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Journal Reference:

  1. A. Mosquna, F. C. Peterson, S.-Y. Park, J. Lozano-Juste, B. F. Volkman, S. R. Cutler. Potent and selective activation of abscisic acid receptors in vivo by mutational stabilization of their agonist-bound conformation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1112838108

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/2011/12/111219152520.htm

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Britney Spears engaged to boyfriend (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? Pop star Britney Spears is engaged to her boyfriend Jason Trawick, celebrity media outlets reported on Friday after the singer posted a message on Twitter about receiving "the one gift" for which she has longed.

Television show "Access Hollywood" said host Billy Bush reached Trawick by text message, and the groom-to-be confirmed the news. "Yes, we are engaged," the show quoted Trawick as telling Bush.

Celebrity news magazine Us Weekly also reported the engagement, citing an unnamed source, saying Trawick popped the question at a private dinner Thursday on his 40th birthday, presenting the singer with a three-carat round stone and pave diamond ring. Website TMZ said the pair would be celebrating their engagement Friday night in Las Vegas.

Spears, 30, added fuel to the wedding fire with her own tweet Friday that said "OMG. Last night Jason surprised me with the one gift I've been waiting for. Can't wait to show you! SO SO SO excited!!!!"

Spears' spokesman did not return requests for comment.

The "Toxic" singer has been dating her former agent Trawick since May 2010, after a turbulent few years in her personal and professional life in which she lost custody of her children and was forced to enter rehabilitation after a public meltdown.

She was previously married to dancer Kevin Federline for two years, with whom she has two children. The singer also spontaneously married childhood friend Jason Alexander during a trip to Las Vegas in 2004. That marriage lasted 55 hours before the singer annulled the union.

(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/people_nm/us_britneyspears

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Paul, Bachmann spar over Iran and nuclear threat (AP)

SIOUX CITY, Iowa ? Republican presidential candidates Ron Paul and Michele Bachmann are trading barbs over Iran, with the Texas congressman saying the U.S. has no legitimate claim to block Tehran from developing a nuclear weapon and Bachmann calling his position wildly dangerous.

The two House members clashed during Thursday night's GOP debate while standing next to each other.

Paul says that terrorists want to harm the U.S. because it bombs innocent civilians and invades countries. The libertarian-leaning lawmaker says the worries over a nuclear Iran are merely the pretense for the U.S. to start another war.

Bachmann says that Iran is led by "an avowed madman" and committed to destroying Israel. She says Iran must be stopped.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_el_pr/us_gop_debate_paul_bachmann

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Bill Gates: No, I?m Not Returning To Microsoft

Polio: Eradicating an Old Reality Once and for All: William H. GatesDismissing rumors that he might be making a comeback at Microsoft, founder Bill Gates went down under to rule out the possibility of ever returning to the software behemoth full-time. Instead, he says, he'll be working full-time at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation until the day he dies. Gates stepped down from his full-time role at Microsoft in June 2008.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/OkivB4qbNCc/

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Friday, December 16, 2011

National Grid rate cuts approved (Rochester Democrat and Chronicle)

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"Artist", "Hugo" pile up nominations ahead of Oscars (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? Silent film "The Artist" and animated movie "Hugo" led nominations for Hollywood's Critics' Choice Awards on Tuesday, in a key week that will firm up the field of likely Oscar contenders.

The two movies -- both love letters to the early days of the movie industry -- notched 11 nominations, including for best film and for their directors Michel Hazanavicius ("The Artist") and Martin Scorsese ("Hugo").

Summer sleeper box-office hit "The Help" and action movie "Drive" starring Ryan Gosling followed with eight nominations apiece, while the George Clooney family drama "The Descendants" and director Steven Spielberg's upcoming family movie "War Horse" both garnered seven. All four also landed among the 10 nominees for best film.

Clooney, Brad Pitt ("Moneyball") and Viola Davis ("The Help") were among acting nominees, along with Meryl Streep for her performance as former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in "The Iron Lady", and Michelle Williams' turn as Marilyn Monroe in "My Week with Marilyn."

The nominations were announced by the Broadcast Film Critics Association -- the largest film critics organization in the United States and Canada.

They come as Hollywood's awards season heats up with the Screen Actors Guild announcing its picks on Wednesday for the best movie performances of 2011, and Thursday's Golden Globe nominations.

The early nominations help narrow the field for the actors, directors and writers likely to compete for the Oscars, the film industry's top awards. Oscar nominations are due January 24 and the awards will be presented on February 26.

Other Critics' Choice nominees for best film included Woody Allen's "Midnight in Paris" and Terrence Malick's "The Tree of Life" in the best picture category.

Christopher Plummer, who has proved popular in early film critics awards, got another nod for his supporting actor turn as a gay man who comes out in old age in "Beginners".

Newcomer Jessica Chastain also notched another nomination, this time for her role in "The Help" about black maids and their white employers in the early 1960s.

The Critics' Choice Awards will be handed out at a ceremony in Hollywood on January 12.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111213/en_nm/us_criticschoice

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Redesigned Facebook update hitting Android devices today

Facebook updateFacebook Update

Yesterday we saw that the Facebook application for Android was about to receive an update, and today the update was made official. While the update hasn't hit the market yet it does indeed bring the redesigned interface, moving messages to the top, and your menu to the side. The redesigned Facebook application is supposed to improve on the speed of the application, as well as make it look much prettier. Keep your eyes on the market for the update, and be sure to let us know when you see it!

Source: Facebook



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/Iwl26RtNKTw/story01.htm

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