Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Trust bids to secure white cliffs

The National Trust is launching a ?1.2m appeal to purchase and safeguard part of the white cliffs of Dover.

The trust says purchasing the mile-long stretch to the east of Dover will allow it to prevent building, ensure a public right of way and conserve nature.

The cliffs mark the UK's closest point to France; troops defended here against the Romans' arrival, and many Dunkirk evacuees landed on the local beaches.

The chalkland supports wildlife including insects, birds and plants.

The Adonis blue butterfly has a particular liking for chalk.

"Immortalised in song and literature, the white cliffs of Dover have become one of the great symbols of our nation," said Fiona Reynolds, the trust's director-general.

"We now have a once in a lifetime opportunity to secure their future for everyone to enjoy."

The surface of the cliffs, which can be seen from France on a clear day, is kept white by constant erosion.

They were voted the UK's third best "natural wonder" in a 2005 Radio Times poll, behind the Dan yr Ogof caves and Cheddar Gorge, but ahead of such landmarks as the Giant's Causeway and Loch Lomond.

Purchasing this stretch of coast would fill in the gap between two segments already owned by the National Trust, creating a five-mile (8km) contiguous reserve with guaranteed rambling rights and nature protection.

Birds such as kittiwakes and fulmars nest on the cliff face, while peregrine falcons wheel above.

Continue reading the main story

Matthew Arnold: 'Dover Beach'

"Listen! you hear the grating roar

Of pebbles which the waves draw back, and fling,

At their return, up the high strand,

Begin, and cease, and then again begin,

With tremulous cadence slow, and bring

The eternal note of sadness in."

Extract, 1867

The trust uses Exmoor ponies to graze the chalky topside, enabling plants such as oxtongue broomrape to thrive.

Managers are keen to extend these measures to the new stretch, which currently belongs to a local landowner.

"We own pockets of land either side; but it's a gap in the middle, and from a wildlife point of view you have a gap where you go into farmland and there's not much we can do for wildlife or for people," said Brian Whittaker, acting property manager for the white cliffs.

"The ponies are the best lawnmowers you can get - it's a natural way to look after the grassland, and creates a great deal of attraction for visitors," he told BBC News.

The cliffs are receding at an average rate of 1cm (0.4in) per year, but occasionally large chunks crash into the sea.

The white cliffs of Dover gained nationwide fame through Dame Vera Lynn's eponymous wartime ballad, while Matthew Arnold's 1867 poem Dover Beach focussed on the pounding of the seas rather than the impacts of war.

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The 33,000-Pound Pizzeria on a Truck [Where The Magic Happens]

The humble food truck has evolved from a greasy spoon on wheels into a purveyor of sushi, dumplings and over-the-top desserts. The truck's limits were pushed a step further by Jon Darsky—pro baseball scout turned pizza chef—with Del Popolo, a mobile, wood-burning brick pizza oven serving pies on the streets of San Francisco. More »


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Economist's View: Stiglitz: America is No Longer a Land of Opportunity

The inequality problem won't solve itself:

America is no longer a land of opportunity, by By Joseph Stiglitz, Commentary, FT: US inequality is at its highest point for nearly a century. ... One might feel better about inequality if there were a grain of truth in trickle-down economics. But the median income of Americans today is lower than it was a decade and a half ago... Meanwhile, those at the top have never had it so good. ...
Markets are shaped by the rules of the game. Our political system has written rules that benefit the rich at the expense of others. ... There is good news in this: by reducing rent-seeking ... and the distortions that give rise to so much of America?s inequality we can achieve a fairer society and a better-performing economy. ...
America used to be thought of as the land of opportunity. Today, a child?s life chances are more dependent on the income of his or her parents than in Europe, or any other of the advanced industrial countries for which there are data. ...
We can once again become a land of opportunity but it will not happen on its own... The country will have to make a choice: if it continues as it has in recent decades, the lack of opportunity will mean a more divided society, marked by lower growth and higher social, political and economic instability. Or it can recognize that the economy has lost its balance. The gilded age led to the progressive era, the excesses of the Roaring Twenties led to the Depression, which in turn led to the New Deal. Each time, the country saw the extremes to which it was going and pulled back. The question is, will it do so once again?

Posted by Mark Thoma on Monday, June 25, 2012 at 02:47 PM in Economics, Income Distribution, Politics?| Permalink? Comments?(39)

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The Sound-Word Index Helps You Express Yourself Online [Internet]

Communicating in plain text can be really tough; it just doesn't allow the subtlety, nuance and level of emotion that humans need to understand conversations properly. If you struggle with it, the Sound-Word Index might be able to help you out. More »


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Business Continuity: How Safe is Your Data? | Expedient

Just how important is a reliable and continually tested business continuity plan?to the success of your business. Well consider this:

  • ? 93% of companies that experience a major data loss go out of business within five years1
  • ? Medium sized businesses (101-1000) experience an average of 140 hours of ?downtime every year ? with an average loss in revenue of 867,000 dollars
  • ? 43% of businesses that experience a disaster but have no business continuity plan in place never recover

Right now you are probably saying to yourself, ?My company is safe. We invested in a disaster recovery plan?a few years back. And on top of that, we are located in a region where disasters seldom strike.?

Unfortunately, this is a mistake that far too many companies make. A pre-existing business continuity plan or low occurrence of ?natural? disasters has them believing that they are immune to data loss.

But the facts don?t match up with the statistics:

  • ? Only 14% of businesses update their business continuity plan regularly ? And an out of date plan is about as good as no plan at all.
  • ? More than 50% of system failures are due to localized power outages or IT failures ? Not a large scale natural disaster

The business continuity experts at Expedient are here to ensure that your data is truly SAFE.

Our business continuity plan options include:

  • ? Private Virtual Colocation
  • ? Virtual Machine Replication
  • ? De-Duplicated Disk Based Backup
  • ? Traditional Tape Based Back Up
  • ? Offsite cloning
  • ? DYODR ? Design Your Own Disaster Recovery

?

Through our business continuity plan servicesand disaster recovery plan testing, it is just as if your data is being safely secured within the reinforced walls of the Expedient Safe ? meaning you are protected, no matter how big or how small the disaster.

?

1-??? U.S Bureau of Labor

This entry was posted in Disaster Recovery by Expedient. Bookmark the permalink.

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Monday, June 25, 2012

Growing Colorado fire forces 11,000 from homes

DENVER (Reuters) - A fast-growing wildfire in Colorado forced 11,000 people from their homes at least briefly on Sunday and threatened popular summer camping grounds beneath Pikes Peak, whose vistas helped inspire the patriotic tune "America the Beautiful."

Live summit video from the 14,115-foot (4,302-metre) peak showed plumes of dark smoke billowing in the air, and a cog railway that ferries tourists up the side of the famous mountain was shut down because of the wildfires.

The blaze in the Pike National Forest, known as the Waldo Canyon Fire, has consumed about 2,500 acres since Saturday and triggered evacuation orders for 11,000 people from Colorado Springs and nearby towns, fire officials said.

"This is a very, very volatile situation," said emergency worker Rob Deyerberg at the fire joint information center.

The blaze was just one of 20 uncontrolled fires raging in U.S. states on Sunday, mostly in the West, stoked by wind and triple digit temperatures in some areas. A fresh blaze in neighboring Utah forced an estimated 1,500 people from their homes in that state, officials said.

Of those evacuated in Colorado, about 6,200 people were cleared from Manitou Springs, which is often used as a base for travel to Pikes Peak, fire department spokesman Dave Hunting said. That evacuation order was later lifted on Sunday evening as winds calmed and stopped driving flames in that direction, while others remained in place.

Authorities also ordered residents to leave Green Mountain Falls, Chipita Park and Cascade, according to the fire incident command. No buildings had been lost to the fire as of Sunday evening, but the flames could threaten houses if the wind shifted, Deyerberg said.

El Paso County spokesman Dave Rose said the fire was burning two miles from the base of Pikes Peak, billed as the most visited mountain in North America. Flames were also visible in a heavily wooded neighborhood of upscale homes just south of the Garden of the Gods, a park in Colorado Springs that is popular with rock climbers.

The Waldo Canyon blaze came as firefighting resources were stretched by the monster High Park blaze west of Fort Collins, which officials now estimate has destroyed 248 homes since it was ignited two weeks ago. Another Colorado fire charred 21 homes on Saturday.

The High Park Fire - the second-largest on record in the state and its most destructive - has so far consumed 83,205 acres in steep canyons. Sparked by lightning, it is blamed for the death of a 62-year-old grandmother in her mountain cabin.

"This fire continues to be persistent and find new areas that it can burn," incident commander Bill Hahnenberg said.

FRESH UTAH EVACUATIONS

In Utah, a fire that erupted Saturday evening destroyed 30 structures and pushed residents from their homes in the rural communities of Fountain Green and Indianola on Sunday, and forced a 15-mile (24-km) closure of state highway 89.

Fueled by gusty winds, the Wood Hollow fire has ballooned rapidly to 30,000 acres since it started in the foothills near Fountain Green, about 100 miles south of Salt Lake City, Interagency Fire Center spokesman Don Carpenter said.

An exact cause of the fire was under investigation, although Carpenter said it was caused by somebody. Evacuations were ordered in three small towns and some rural subdivisions.

Sanpete County Sheriff's Deputy Eric Zeeman said around 1,500 people had been evacuated, adding that it was hard to give an exact number because the fire had spread rapidly and the area included permanent residences and part-time dwellings. Officials earlier estimated 2,500 people had been evacuated.

The fire has burned up over a mountain ridge through grass, sage, pinion juniper and alpine firs, and by midday was burning down north-facing slopes into a small valley, Carpenter said. At least one structure was destroyed.

"Everything is so dry and the temperatures are so high, it doesn't take much to have it go," he said, adding that about 64 firefighters were fighting the fire, with additional crews on the way. A PV-2 air tanker was providing air support.

Further north, crews were still battling the Dump fire, 35 miles south of Salt Lake City. It was 40 percent contained on Sunday, U.S. Forest Service fire information officer Kim Osborn said.

The 6,023-acre (2,437-ha) fire was started Thursday by target shooters and had earlier forced the evacuation of nearly 600 homes. Evacuation orders there were lifted on Saturday after keeping residents away about 30 hours.

On Sunday, Osborn said the fire was burning on a ridge a good distance from any structures, but fire managers were closely watching for shifting afternoon winds.

(Additional reporting by Jennifer Dobner in Salt Lake City and David Bailey in Minneapolis; Writing by Cynthia Johnston; Editing by Eric Walsh and Paul Simao)

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Vintage Photos of a Geisha's World in Kyoto, Japan in 1946

Nice entry. I'm interested in geishaculture.

"a geisha in traditional dress w. an umbrella on a street" This woman/girl isn't geisha/geiko. She is maiko,a geisha training. The geisha don't use these haircut (called momoware) and her hair acessories are more simple.

ReplyDelete

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Opinsy Launches Beta To Create The ?Opinion Graph?

2946945985_588f104631Ankur Shah was a co-founder of the Techlightenment company which was acquired by Experian, the credit reporting service. But he's now onto new and interesting things. That project now launches as Opinsy, a new platform which, broadly speaking, enables people to build communities and followings around their opinions, beliefs and ideas. Opinsy breaks cover as an invite only beta today. The launch is ironically timed and 'on trend' - we saw the launch of Menshn only last week, and Amen is the hot mobile app around strong opinions right now.

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Wednesday, June 20, 2012

US military looking to create a 'universal remote' for drone fleets

US Military looking to create a 'universal remote' for drone fleets

When you've got as many different drone models as the US military, it can be hard to manage things. That's why a group inside the Pentagon is looking to help cut down on unmanned aerial fragmentation, attempting to develop a way to manage all of the different models with a universal drone controller. It's something the military has tried and failed to accomplish in the past, but this time it's taking a more smartphone-esque approach to the matter, according to Wired. The key would be to create an underlying software architecture that allows pilots to control fleets of unmanned vehicles. On top of that would be specific applications that are "down-loaded to suit individual user taste and productivity," a Pentagon official told the site. The approach would make it possible to control different models with differing functionality as a connected fleet.

US military looking to create a 'universal remote' for drone fleets originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jun 2012 21:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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92% Safety Not Guaranteed

All Critics (75) | Top Critics (27) | Fresh (69) | Rotten (6)

Neatly, the script embarks on one journey while dangling the possibility of another: the prospect of taking a sudden leap from comic reality into the realm of pure imagination.

"Safety Not Guaranteed" is most vibrant and vital at its edges, in the way that the characters interact with each other while waiting for something to happen.

It's brisk and assured and never begs the audience's indulgence. No time is wasted. The movie is, at every moment, either funny or pushing the story forward, or both.

The film is modest but skillful and heartfelt, spiced just so by Plaza and company.

Safety Not Guaranteed casts an enchanting spell from its opening scene.

Expectedly funny but unexpectedly touching, too.

Hope is a powerful thing and Safety Not Guaranteed delivers in its tale of longing, deliverance and connection during the here and now.

An intriguing yet erratic effort...

Less of a philosophical argument and more of a character piece driven deep into the heart by Duplass and Plaza.

Have you ever wondered what mumblecore sci-fi would look like? Wonder no more.

Rather than trying to beat Hollywood at its own game of high-tech gadgets and weaponry, director Colin Trevorrow and writer Derek Connolly achieve a sly mix of the insane and the mundane.

A character-driven piece about regret and true partnership - our basic, primal need for someone to take the journey with us even if safety is not guaranteed.

Aubrey Plaza is the best thing about this iffy mock-sci-fi doohickey.

As a hipster rom-com about people trying to shake off their pasts to make present-day connections, it's pretty satisfying.

A strange, light-hearted bit of quasi-sci-fi, with no small amount of heart.

The material is played mostly for laughs and succeeds in that regard. The undercurrent of lament in Safety Not Guaranteed, though, is what holds the film together.

If safety isn't guaranteed by the film's title, a viewer's satisfaction with this genial, warm-hearted movie pretty much can be.

One central recasting and brutal editorial session away from being a lovely little short film, where its mystery and sentiment is more easily controlled and considered.

With its well-constructed screenplay, sharp dialogue and unapologetic sincerity, this first feature from former SNL interns Colin Trevorrow and Derek Connolly is its own act of nostalgia...

More Critic Reviews

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London Games to be first social media Olympics

FILE This Monday April 16, 2012 file photo provided by LOCOG shows an aerial view of the Olympic Park showing the London 2012 Olympic Stadium, foreground and the Aquatics Center, white building at left. London will be the social media Olympics. For all the history and tradition associated with London, a very modern-day phenomemon will play a prominent role at the upcoming Summer Games. Tweet this: These will be the first Olympics told in 140 characters or less. The London Games will be the most tweeted, micro-blogged, liked and tagged in history, with fans offered a never before seen insider's view of what many are calling the social media Olympics, or the "socialympics." (AP Photo/Anthony Charlton/LOCOG)

FILE This Monday April 16, 2012 file photo provided by LOCOG shows an aerial view of the Olympic Park showing the London 2012 Olympic Stadium, foreground and the Aquatics Center, white building at left. London will be the social media Olympics. For all the history and tradition associated with London, a very modern-day phenomemon will play a prominent role at the upcoming Summer Games. Tweet this: These will be the first Olympics told in 140 characters or less. The London Games will be the most tweeted, micro-blogged, liked and tagged in history, with fans offered a never before seen insider's view of what many are calling the social media Olympics, or the "socialympics." (AP Photo/Anthony Charlton/LOCOG)

LONDON (AP) ? Tweet this: The London Games will be the first Olympics told in 140 characters or less.

The London Games will be the most tweeted, liked and tagged in history, with fans offered a never before seen insider's view of what many are calling the social media Olympics, or the "socialympics."

Hash tags, (at) signs and "like" symbols will be as prevalent as national flags, Olympic pins and medal ceremonies. Some athletes may spend more time on Twitter and Facebook than the playing field.

Mobile phones have become smarter, laptops lighter and tablet devices a must-have for technology lovers ? meaning social-savvy fans, whether watching on television or inside the Olympic stadium itself, will be almost constantly online.

Organizers expect more tweets, Facebook posts, videos and photos to be shared from London than any other sports event in history. The 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver offered just a small glimpse of what's to come.

"Vancouver was just the first snowflake," said Alex Hout, the International Olympic Committee's head of social media. "This is going to be a big snowball."

Twitter is already braced for a surge of traffic. Launched in 2006, it has become a key outlet for sports fans to trade messages during live events.

Users sent 13,684 tweets per second during a Champions League soccer match between Barcelona and Chelsea in April, a record volume of tweets for a sporting event ? busier even than the 2012 Super Bowl. Chances are good that will be one of the records broken in London.

"It could be the 100-meter final or something unexpected," said Lewis Wiltshire, Twitter U.K.'s head of sport.

At the last Summer Olympics in Beijing in 2008, Twitter had about 6 million users and Facebook 100 million. Today, the figure is 140 million for Twitter and 900 million for Facebook.

"In Sydney (2000) there was hardly any fast Internet, in Athens (2004) there were hardly any smartphones, in Beijing hardly anyone had social networks," said Jackie-Brock Doyle, communications director of London organizing committee LOCOG. "That's all changed. Here, everyone has all that and will be consuming the games in a different way."

Later this month, at trials in Calgary for Canada's Olympic track and field team, athletes will even wear Twitter handles on their bibs ? encouraging fans to send messages of support as they race.

Sponsors have also taken their Olympic campaigns online. Coca-Cola, Cadbury, Visa and BP are among those using Facebook to reach younger consumers. Samsung is even offering to paint the faces of Internet users with their national flag ? virtually, of course.

"They key difference from four years ago is that now almost everyone has a smartphone, which means everyone can participate in real time," said Adam Vincenzini, an expert at Paratus Communications, a London-based PR and social media marketing agency. "You used to have to be sitting at your desk to access various social media platforms. Now you can have your phone or tablet on your lap while you watch, whether that's at the pub or the stadium."

The IOC, with 760,000 Twitter followers and 2.8 million on Facebook, will host live chats from inside the Olympic village with athletes, allowing the public to pose questions using social media accounts. It has already created an online portal, called the Athletes' Hub, which will collate posts from their Facebook and Twitter accounts.

Under IOC rules, athletes and accredited personnel are free to post, blog and tweet "provided that it is not for commercial and/or advertising purposes" and does not ambush official Olympic sponsors and broadcasters. Social media posts should be written in a "first-person, diary-type format."

What about spectators using their phones and iPads to take photos and video?

"There is no problem with photo sharing," Hout said. "We encourage it. But monetizing is not allowed."

"People are allowed to film. They're allowed to do that on their phones," he said. "The thing that we ask is that content is not uploaded to public sites."

The reason is to protect the exclusivity of the broadcasters who shell out big money for the rights. NBC, for example, paid more than $1 billion for the U.S. rights to the London Games.

"We encourage the use of social media. We encourage athletes to engage and to connect," Hout said. "There are some rules to follow, there's no question about it. But we don't police the fans, we don't police the athletes. We don't do that. What we do is we engage."

Facebook launched an Olympic page on Monday that groups teams, sports, athletes, broadcasters and in one place. The site has pages dedicated to specific Olympic sports and links to Facebook sites for 60 national teams and 200 athletes, including Michael Phelps, LeBron James and David Beckham.

LOCOG also plans to announce new Olympic tie-ups with Twitter and Google.

But London Olympic organizers have drawn up strict rules for their employees and the 70,000 Olympic volunteers. They have been told not to share their location, any images of scenes in areas that are off limits to the public, or details about athletes, celebrities or dignitaries who they find themselves in contact with.

"We are not stopping people from using social sites," Brock-Doyle said. "We say there are lots of things about your job ? procedures, places you'll be and do ? that remain confidential. There are elements of your job you can't share with wider groups of people."

Athletes, too, will need to navigate the social media world carefully.

Australian swimmers Nick D'Arcy and Kenrick Monk have already been punished after posting photos of themselves on Facebook in which they cradled pump-action shotguns and a pistol in a U.S. gun shop.

The Australian Olympic Committee ordered them to remove the photos immediately. The swimmers have been banned from using social media for a month starting July 15 and will be sent home the day the Olympic swimming program finishes.

The British Olympic Association has offered advice to its own athletes, suggesting that "a few smiley faces and LOL's (online speak for laugh out loud) will make you seem more approachable and encourage more people to talk and ask you questions." What not to do: "Don't get into disputes with your audience."

British swimmer Rebecca Adlington, a two-time Olympic gold medalist and a leading medal contender in London, has spoken out about abuse she has received about her physical appearance from some users on social media sites. She has already blocked the worst offenders from being able to contact her, but insists she won't stop using Twitter, where she trades dozens of messages a day with more than 50,000 followers.

"I'm insecure about the way I look and people's comments do hurt me," Adlington said in a message posted on Twitter.

While some athletes prefer to tune out from social media to concentrate on their competition, others embrace the opportunity to interact with their fans.

"Letting people know what I'm eating, how I'm sleeping, what the venues are like ? people want to know what we're going through," U.S. gymnast Jonathan Horton said. "They want to know what it's like going through the experience and what we're up to."

All in 140 characters.

___

Follow Stephen Wilson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/stevewilsonap

Follow David Stringer on Twitter at http://twitter.com/david_stringer

___

AP Sports Writer Nancy Armour in Chicago contributed.

Associated Press

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NEC LifeTouch L unveiled: Android 4.0 tablet keeps it thin and light (video)

NEC Lifetouch L unveiled keeps Android 40 thin and light

Still looking for that perfect 10-inch Android tablet? Well here's another one slab aiming for your wallet. NEC's latest attempt is the LifeTouch L and lands in 16GB and 32GB sizes, with a business option (with unchanged hardware) on the sidelines. The consumer-facing models are set to arrive on July 5th, with a dual-core 1.5GHz processor running the Android 4.0-based show and despite a 10-inch (1280 x 800) display, it all weighs in at a gentle 540 grams (19 ounces). The tablet also slims down to just -- and we mean just -- under 8mm, or 7.99mm (0.31 inches) to be precise, putting it below even the svelte Toshiba Excite 10. If the substantially heavier 45,000 yen ($570) price tag doesn't make you balk, there's a brief product tour after the break.

Continue reading NEC LifeTouch L unveiled: Android 4.0 tablet keeps it thin and light (video)

NEC LifeTouch L unveiled: Android 4.0 tablet keeps it thin and light (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jun 2012 16:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Monday, June 18, 2012

Video: Addressing the immigration debate

The most dangerous cities in America

This week, the FBI announced that violent crime dropped 4 percent in 2011, compared to a 5.5 percent drop in 2010. Nationally, the murder rate fell 1.9 percent from 2010, and robbery, forcible rape and assault fell 4 percent each.

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Tomlinson to call it quits after 11 NFL seasons

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Monday, June 11, 2012

I'll Have Another retired before Triple Crown try

I'll Have Another walks in the barn after a morning workout at Belmont Park, Friday, June 8, 2012 in Elmont, N.Y. The Triple Crown hopeful runs Saturday in the Belmont Stakes. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

I'll Have Another walks in the barn after a morning workout at Belmont Park, Friday, June 8, 2012 in Elmont, N.Y. The Triple Crown hopeful runs Saturday in the Belmont Stakes. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

I'll Have Another is tended to after a bath at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y., on Thursday, June 7, 2012. The winner of the Kentucky Derby and Preakness will attempt to win the Belmont Stakes horse race and Triple Crown on Saturday. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

(AP) ? Things began unraveling for Triple Crown hopeful I'll Have Another a day after the colt's thrilling win in the Preakness three weeks ago.

A series of minor setbacks for the horse and his handlers culminated with the biggest shocker of all: I'll Have Another's sudden retirement on the eve of the Belmont Stakes with an injury to his left front tendon.

Friday's news dealt further blows to a racing industry already battered by declining interest and yet another near-miss in the Triple Crown. The colt became the 12th horse whose Triple try was derailed since Affirmed swept the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont in 1978, and it occurred without I'll Have Another ever reaching the starting gate.

"I've been hoping and praying he would stay injury-free, and it didn't happen," his trainer Doug O'Neill said.

I'll Have Another won the Derby on May 5 and the Preakness two weeks later ? both with stirring stretch drives ? to set up the highly anticipated Belmont Stakes and a Triple try. Only 11 horses have won the Triple Crown and the wait for another now stretches to 35 years ? the longest drought ever.

Now Saturday's race is largely irrelevant to casual viewers who would have watched in the hopes of seeing history in the making. Dullahan, who ran third in the Derby, was installed as the new 9-5 favorite after I'll Have Another was scratched.

The day's highlight is likely to be when I'll Have Another is led to the paddock and then walked to the winner's circle before the Belmont is run at 6:40 p.m. EDT. O'Neill will then remove his saddle in a wistful farewell.

"We felt that this would be a fitting ceremonial retirement for an incredible racehorse," O'Neill said. "There are many fans who traveled from near and far to see I'll Have Another today, and we wanted to give them a chance to help us send him off to retirement."

The colt won't lead the Belmont horses to the starting gate with jockey Mario Gutierrez aboard as previously planned.

"He'll be my hero forever," Gutierrez said. "What I'll Have Another did for me is so amazing. He brought happiness to my life."

But the colt and his camp had endured setbacks during the three weeks since the Preakness.

On his van ride to New York, the trip was delayed several hours because of traffic on the New Jersey Turnpike. A few days later, O'Neill was suspended 45 days and fined $15,000 by the California Horse Racing Board for a medication violation involving one of his horses in a 2010 race. His suspension is to begin next month.

Then, track stewards said that for the Belmont, I'll Have Another would have to go without the nasal strip he wore in races this year, and exercise rider Jonny Garcia had visa problems and had to be replaced for several days.

The scariest thing was a near collision with a loose horse on the track last week, prompting racing officials to establish a special window of time for Belmont Stakes horses to be on the track.

Then the New York State Racing and Wagering Board ordered all the Belmont Stakes horses into a detention barn three days before the race. It was a security measure to ensure the race was run fairly, the board said, but the move angered some trainers, who were annoyed about relocating their horses to a new environment so soon before a major race.

"Some people have asked did the detention barn have anything to do with this. Absolutely not. Just a freakish thing," O'Neill said about his colt's injury.

O'Neill has been under intense scrutiny throughout the Triple Crown series because of his history of medication violations.

But he was never accused of doing anything illegal to I'll Have Another, and the colt, along with the other 11 Belmont Stakes entries, all came back negative in testing done Wednesday by the state board.

O'Neill said I'll Have Another was being retired because he developed swelling in his left front tendon that was the beginning of tendinitis.

"This is extremely tough for all of us. It's far from tragic but it's extremely disappointing," he said.

O'Neill's brother, Dennis, said it was hard to tell anything was wrong just by looking at the horse.

"He looks great. He's sound. He went great this morning. He looks super (but) you just can't take a chance," he said. "He's too valuable of a horse and we love him to death like all of them. You wouldn't run a horse if you think something might happen."

Doug O'Neill said he first noticed something might be wrong with the colt Thursday, hours after his usual morning gallop.

"We prayed he kind of hit himself and that it was a little bit of skin irritation," he said as I'll Have Another grazed in the grass behind him.

O'Neill had called an audible Friday and taken his horse out to gallop at 5:30 a.m., three hours earlier than he had been working out in the days leading up to the race. He wanted to avoid the congestion created by all the Belmont horses going to the track at the same time.

"I thought he looked great on the track," he said, "and then cooling out, you could tell that swelling was back, and at that point I didn't feel very good."

A veterinarian confirmed the diagnosis and suggested that O'Neill give the colt three to six months off before resuming training. But O'Neill said he and his brother, along with Reddam and his wife, were unanimous in deciding to retire the colt who had won four consecutive Grade 1 races, starting with the Santa Anita Derby in April.

"I really thought he was going to run off tomorrow and really show something," Reddam said. "So we were all a bit shocked, but we have to do what's best for the horse."

Associated Press

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Sunday, June 10, 2012

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Father's Day: How to choose second TV for dad

21 hrs.

What do you get the dad who has everything? ?More tools, a tablet computer, cologne? No, get him a second, smaller TV. While many dads already have a big-screen, flat-panel TV that's?42 inches and up, it's usually in the family room. Get him is own for his workroom, basement or wherever he wants to place it.?

The most popular selling TV size is still 32?inches, and that means there are some great deals to be had. ?The HD Guru explains the features need to know to help you choose the right HDTV and picks the best all-around models, best deal and the cheapest model you can get and still not feel ashamed.

With over?10 million 32-inch HDTVs forecast to be sold this year (Source: Quixel Research) there are dozens of models from many vendors with a number of advanced features available. Before our picks, here the most important criteria you should consider.

Resolution
32-inch HDTVs are available in 720p or 1080p, the latter with twice as many pixels for a sharper image. The 1080p models are more expensive. Does dad need it? Assuming pop still has near normal vision, the decision will depend on how far his chair will be from the TV. Our HD Viewing Chart (link) shows dad will need to be no further than 50?inches from the screen to see all the resolution with a 1080p 32-incher. He can be up to 75 inches from the screen to see all the detail on a 720p model. So if dad will be viewing six feet or further from his new TV, a 720p model will provide all the resolution needed.

Viewing Angle
?If you think dad wants to be alone when watching his new TV, viewing angle doesn?t matter. All 32-inchers look good when viewed straight-on. However, if he sits at an off-angle or others will be viewing, too, you?re best off with a wide-viewing angle TV. The medium-viewing angle sets listed have a somewhat narrower viewing cone that can still accommodate three to four viewers.

Inputs
Most 32-inch TVs have two HDMI inputs, good for a cable or satellite box and a Blu-ray player. Most "smart" models have an Ethernet connection and Wi-Fi. Some models also include USB connections too, used to view photos, home videos and other content.

Check out our How to Pick the Right HDTV article for more information when choosing larger screen sizes.

Best Deal
We pick the 720p Panasonic TC-L32C5 LCD TV?at $299.99. Features include 2 HDMI inputs, 1 USB input and a PC input and medium-viewing angle.

For 1080p, go with the LG 32CS560 LCD TV at $349.?Features include 2 HDMI inputs, one 1 USB input, room light sensor, and built-in self calibration tools for easy set up.

Bargain Model
For shoppers seeking the least expensive 32-incher you can find, there are a number of no-name brand models for around $230 to?$250. We pick the Haier L32D1120?at $249.99 from Amazon direct with free shipping. Haier is a Chinese company that makes a wide range of products. This 32-Inch set?comes with a one-year parts and labor warranty. Buying any no-name brand can be risky; learn more here and here.

Taking a nod from Hallmark, pick this one, when you want to get him the very cheapest.

Luxury Models
The LG 32LM6200?is a full-featured 1080p LED LCD. It includes wide-angle viewing, 3-D with 6 pair of?glasses, Smart TV with streaming video apps and built-in Wi-Fi, four HDMI inputs, 3 USB inputs, two-player gaming, 1.4-inch depth and more. For those that want the top 32-inch available today and can afford to give it to pop, the 32LM6200 will set you back $619.

The Samsung UN32ES6500 is the most expensive 32-inch consumer HDTV available that we're recommending. Besides 1080p resolution, it offers a medium viewing angle, 2.5-inch deep cabinet, active 3-D with two pairs of glasses included, LED backlight, 120 Hz refresh and scanning, Internet ready (for movie services) plus a Web browser, Skype video-compatible (with camera sold separately) and three HDMI inputs. The UN32ES6500 sells for $899.99 and is available from Crutchfield.

Pick any of these HDTVs and dad will always be able to watch his TV programs whenever he wants.

Have a question for the HD Guru??Send an?email

More from HD Guru:

Copyright ?2012 HD Guru Inc. All rights reserved. HDGURU is a registered trademark.

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Saturday, June 9, 2012

Baseball: Zach Mantel gives Lake Central a boost with his glove, arm and brain

Story Image

Indians catcher Zach Mantel tags home plate forcing Bulldogs Jake Lindeman out off of a base hit by Bulldogs Brett Bayer in the top of the 5th inning at Lake Central High School on Thursday April 12, 2012. | Jim Karczewski~for Sun-Times Media

storyidforme: 31760701
tmspicid: 10417097
fileheaderid: 4793266

Northern
semistates

At Kokomo
(Highland Park)

Class 3A: Western (23-9) vs. Bellmont (24-8), noon Saturday

Class 4A: Lake Central (30-1) vs. Zionsville (28-5), to follow

At South Bend Clay
(Coveleski Stadium)

Class 1A: Fort Wayne Blackhawk (22-6-1) vs. Lafayette Central Catholic (29-4), noon Saturday

Class 2A: Hebron (20-8) vs. Northfield (27-5), to follow

Updated: June 8, 2012 2:09AM

In the days leading up to Memorial Day, Lake Central catcher Zach Mantel drank a lot of water.

A lot of water.

?I just kept drinking gallon after gallon a day,??Mantel said with a laugh. ?I?actually gained eight pounds.?

Why? Because he knew he?d spend up to 14 innings behind the plate that Monday ? squatting with all that heavy equipment on, hauling in 90-mph fastballs, diving in the dirt to block balls, trying to pick off runners at all three bases, and generally running the game for the Indians defense in the sectional semifinal and championship game.

Takes a lot out of you. Literally.

?I?don?t know how he does it sometimes,? said Lake Central ace Jimmy McNamara. ?I?d sign up for a different position.?

Catchers are a special breed. It takes a certain mix of cunning, conditioning, courage and, yes, craziness to take on a role that?s always so demanding, yet often so unnoticed.

A great catcher is hard to find. And as far as Lake Central coach Jeff Sandor is concerned, he?s got the best one around ? one big reason why the top-ranked Indians (30-1) are regional champions, and facing Zionsville (28-5) in the Class 4A northern semistate at Kokomo?s Highland Park on?Saturday afternoon.

?He?s the most important kid on the field for us,??Sandor said. ?It?s his job to communicate what we?re doing from a first-and-third standpoint. It?s his job to monitor the runners and look for signals from the fielders. It?s his job to communicate anything we say to the rest of the kids. And it?s his job to handle a lefty whose ball moves all over the place (McNamara)?and a righty who?s got it up in the low 90s (Taylor Lehnert)?for seven innings. The kid?s unbelievable.?

Mantel?s got a cannon, too. He?s thrown out nearly 75 percent of would-be base-stealers over the last two years ??an astounding number at the high school level ? and has three pickoffs at first base this season.

He even calls his own pitches when McNamara is on the mound. The two have been batterymates since they were 13 years old ??they live two houses apart ? and Sandor trusts the two of them to make the right pitch every time. And even though McNamara?s a headstrong kind of guy, you?ll rarely see him shake off Mantel.

?We definitely have a nice connection,? McNamara said. ?It just gets in such a rhythm where I?know what he?s going to call before he throws the number down.?

That?s because Mantel knows what?McNamara wants to see.

?I?ve been working with him so long that I?know him probably better than he knows himself,??Mantel said. ?We know what works, we know how to get people out.?

So while Sandor and his staff call the pitches whenever anyone else is pitching, they just get out of the way when it?s McNamara and Mantel. They simply give Mantel and McNamara a scouting report on the opposition, and let them do their own thing out there.

Given McNamara?s 9-1 record and 0.75 ERA against some of the best teams in the region and the state, it seems to be working.

?Jim?s his own breed,? Sandor said. ?I?don?t think any of us are as smart as him, or can think like him, at least. Zach?s ability to receive him, and understand baseball and understand hitters, it?s amazing.?

Sandor?s trust in his backstop goes beyond choosing between fastballs and curves. In the few hours between games at the LaPorte Regional last Saturday, Sandor briefly mentioned to Mantel that Penn likes to try a delayed double steal when it has runners at first and third. He said if that happens, Mantel should stand up, look back the runner at third, walk toward second and fire a strike to second.

?We didn?t practice it at all,??Sandor said.

Didn?t need to. Sure enough, in the top of the third, Penn had runners at first and third with one out. The guy on first broke, Mantel stood up, stared back the runner at third, fired a strike to second, got back to the plate, took the throw from second and nailed the runner at home.

It helps that Mantel?s got a 4.0 GPA and is headed to Purdue. It wasn?t an easy decision to pick academics over baseball ? despite his modest hitting numbers (.273, three home runs, 18 RBI), he had college baseball options ??but Mantel said he was raised to always put academics first.

?He?s going to go be an engineer and make a lot more money than I?ever did,? Sandor said.

In the meantime, he?s got at least one more ??two, he hopes ??games left behind the plate for Lake?Central. And should the Indians win, whoever starts, McNamara or Lehnert, likely will get most of the credit.

That?s just the life of a catcher. You sacrifice your body, you sacrifice your ego ? but if you?re good at your job, you?re the team?s backbone, whether anyone realizes it or not.

?Me and Tay didn?t even realize it until (Sandor)?talked to us a few days ago,? McNamara admitted. ?I think he?s one of the best defensive catchers in the state. The way he calls pitches, frames pitches, blocks balls, the way he leads the team ? you sometimes take it all for granted. I think I?m just spoiled.?

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Motorola Droid RAZR HD's backside possibly leaked: we hope you like Kevlar

Motorola Droid RAZR HD's backside possibly leaked we hope you like Kevlar

We may have seen it from the front, but Motorola's rumored upcoming Droid RAZR HD now looks to have had its back subjected to the whims of Mr. Blurrycam. The overriding theme? Kevlar. Lots of Kevlar. So much so that it runs right up to the edge, making even the original Droid RAZR seem a tad restrained. A side profile shot hints that it might not be as waif-thin as that first model, which Droid Life takes as a sign (however indefinite) that Motorola could reuse the 3,300mAh mega-battery from the Droid RAZR MAXX. Sadly, the snoop providing the photos hasn't solidified rumors of a Snapdragon S4 processor, a 720p display or a 13-megapixel camera, although they're components that are increasingly par for the course in mid-2012 and later. Unverified murmurs have Verizon only shipping the Droid RAZR HD in the summer; that will give us plenty of time to figure out whether or not it can stop a bullet.

Motorola Droid RAZR HD's backside possibly leaked: we hope you like Kevlar originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Jun 2012 15:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Deliciously Awkward Baby Shower Cakes

Written by Raven Snook for iVillage.

You will not believe what showed up on the cake table at these showers. Headless pregnant torsos, graphic birth scenes and newborns that look like the spawn of Satan? these cakes, compiled by Cake Wrecks, may have been labors of love, but we question why they were ever born, errr, baked.

  • Here Comes Baby!

    We thought baby was coming from our hoo-ha not our belly button?

  • Unlucky

    From the chopped off arms to the floating green hands covering the boobs (those are hands, right?). All we can say is, WTF?!

  • Maternity Wear Gone Wrong

    Who knew they made pregnancy cardigans specifically designed to show your bare belly, instead of covering it? We especially love how baby's fluids match!

  • One Big Baby

    This was mama-to-be's biggest fear materialized: a giant, 15-pound baby.

  • Newborn Reality

    This baker's real passion is modern art.

  • Baby Announcement

    Tom and Sue were excited their only daughter was expecting, but started to doubt her husband's ability to spell.

  • Belly Gone Wrong

    The whole baby doll lingerie look went totally out of style as soon as we couldn't see our toes anymore.

  • Peek-a-Boo, I C you!

    We hope this mom-to-be scheduled a <a href="http://www.cakewrecks.com/home/2009/3/20/first-impressions.html" target="_hplink">Caesarean</a>.

  • Backseat Birther

    That's one pushy (and R-rated) <a href="http://www.cakewrecks.com/home/2009/3/20/first-impressions.html" target="_hplink">cake</a>.

  • I'm Comin' Out

    At least we know the kid will look like mom: He doesn't seem to have a <a href="http://www.cakewrecks.com/home/2010/9/6/the-magical-story-of-labor-day.html" target="_hplink">head</a>, either.

  • Continued on iVillage

    <a href="http://www.ivillage.com/deliciously-awkward-baby-shower-cakes/6-b-368385" target="_hplink">For more awkward baby shower cakes, click over to iVillage.</a>

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