Sunday, June 23, 2013

An iPad You're Actually Supposed to Cover in Crumbs

An iPad You're Actually Supposed to Cover in Crumbs

If you're discrete enough, this iPad cutting board will convince your friends and dinner guests that you're absolutely flush with cash. Because instead of slicing cheeses, vegetables, and fruits on a traditional cutting board, you can afford to use an iPad for the task.

In reality, this $30 glass cutting board is just styled to look like an iPad, complete with a screen full of faux icons, an accompanying cheese knife, and even a case. Sure, it's mostly just a sight gag, but one that's actually far more useful in the kitchen than an obscene apron. [HomeWetBar via 7Gadgets]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/an-ipad-youre-actually-supposed-to-cover-in-crumbs-533120006

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Saturday, June 22, 2013

Syrian regime, rebels step up offensives

In this Thursday, June 20, 2013 photo, special operations forces from Iraq, Jordan and the U.S. conduct an exercise as part of Eager Lion multinational military maneuvers at the King Abdullah Special Operations Training Center (KASOTC) in Amman, Jordan. The first Jordanian public official to speak publicly of the numbers of U.S. troops in the kingdom, Abdullah Ensour told reporters Saturday, June 22, 2013 that 200 of the personnel were experts training for how to handle a chemical attack. He said the remaining 700 are manning a Patriot missile defence system and F-16 fighter jets which Washington deployed this month in case the Syrian war worsens.(AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

In this Thursday, June 20, 2013 photo, special operations forces from Iraq, Jordan and the U.S. conduct an exercise as part of Eager Lion multinational military maneuvers at the King Abdullah Special Operations Training Center (KASOTC) in Amman, Jordan. The first Jordanian public official to speak publicly of the numbers of U.S. troops in the kingdom, Abdullah Ensour told reporters Saturday, June 22, 2013 that 200 of the personnel were experts training for how to handle a chemical attack. He said the remaining 700 are manning a Patriot missile defence system and F-16 fighter jets which Washington deployed this month in case the Syrian war worsens.(AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

(AP) ? Syrian government forces stepped up their attack against rebel strongholds north of the capital, Damascus on Saturday, while opposition fighters declared their own offensive in the country's largest city Aleppo.

The fighting in Damascus came as the Syrian government announced salary increases for state employees and members of the military, days after the Syrian currency dipped to a record low of 210 pounds to the dollar compared with 47 when the crisis began more than two years ago. The raise also covered pensions.

Both sides intensified operations as an 11-nation group that includes the U.S., dubbed the Friends of Syria, began meeting in Qatari capital of Doha to discuss how to coordinate military aid and other forms of assistance to the rebels seeking to oust Syrian President Bashar Assad.

The donors agreed on Saturday to do more to help the embattled rebels trying to overthrow Assad, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said. While he offered no specifics, Kerry said the assistance would help change the balance on the battlefield. Kerry also denounced Assad for inviting Iranian and Hezbollah fighters to fight alongside his troops, saying the Syrian president risked turning the civil war into a regional sectarian conflict.

Activists, meanwhile, reported heavy shelling of many districts north of Damascus, apparently an attempt to cut links between rebel-held districts that have served as launching pads for operations against the capital. Three children, including two from the same family, have been killed in shelling of the outlying district of Qaboun since Friday, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which relies on an extensive network of activists in Syria.

The Lebanese TV station Al-Mayadeen, which had a reporter embedded with Syrian government forces in the offensive, quoted a military official as saying that the operation aims to cut rebel supply lines, separate one group from another and secure the northern entrances to the capital. The regime's forces have struggled for months to regain control of these suburbs.

The Observatory said the neighborhood was being attacked from several different sides, while the shelling has caused structural damage and started fires. Activists from Qaboun posted on Facebook that government forces had deployed new tanks to reinforce its positions outside the neighborhood, and the bombardment had brought buildings down.

The Observatory said rebels targeted a police academy in the nearby Barzeh area Saturday, pushing back against a government attempt to storm the neighborhood. One rebel was killed in overnight fighting, it said.

State news agency SANA said troops "inflicted heavy losses" among rebels in several suburbs of Damascus.

The uprising against Assad began in March 2011 as peaceful protests but morphed into a civil war as rebels took up arms against a government crackdown. The Syrian regime has gained momentum in recent weeks with the help of Iran and its proxy group Hezbollah. The opposition is hoping the Obama administration's decision to begin supplying them with arms will help swing the tide in their favor.

Rebels say they have already received new weapons from allied countries? but not the U.S. ? that they claim will help them to shift the balance of power on the ground. Experts and activists said the new weapons include anti-tank missiles and small quantities of anti-aircraft missiles.

It was not clear if any of the new weapons have made it to the Damascus area. A spokesman for one of the main groups fighting outside of Damascus, the al-Islam brigade, said his group had none of the new weapons. The spokesman, who declined to be named for fear of government reprisals, spoke to The Associated Press on Skype.

He said government forces were shelling Barzeh from Qasioun mountain overlooking Damascus. Syria's main Western-backed opposition group said Thursday that 40,000 civilians in the two northern districts of Damascus are suffering from shortages of food and medical supplies.

Rebels and government also clashed in and around the northern city of Aleppo, where government forces launched an offensive earlier this month. Activists reported clashes in southern and western neighborhoods.

The Observatory also said rebels pounded a military academy in the area, causing a fire in the compound. No casualties were immediately reported. In Rashideen, rebel forces have pushed government forces out from parts of the neighborhood, according to the local Aleppo Media Center network and posts on Facebook.

A statement by a coalition of rebel groups, posted on the Center's page, declared that the fighters are launching a new operation to seize control of the western half of Aleppo.

Also Saturday, Syrian forces fired a dozen shells that landed in a northern Lebanese border town, causing a panic among residents, the Lebanese news agency reported.

SANA said government troops were targeting a group of infiltrators across the border. It gave no further details.

Rockets from Syria fall regularly into towns and villages near the border.

In Damascus, a presidential decree said that the raise for the public sector could reach up to 40 percent depending on the salary of the civil servant. Pensions could rise by up to 25 percent, according to the decree.

It said those who make 10,000 pounds ($54) a month will get a 40 percent raise, while those who make double that amount will get a 20 percent boost. People making 40,000 pounds a month will get a 5 percent raise, it said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-22-ML-Syria/id-88b37a01c2a2466aa1e1dc3a4a0a2381

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Why closely related species do not eat the same things

June 21, 2013 ? Closely related species consume the same resources less often than more remotely related species. In fact, it is the competition for resources, and not their kinship, which determines the food sources of the species of a community. Under the effect of this competition, closely related species have specialized on different food resources. This is the conclusion of a study carried out by researchers from CNRS, the Mus?um National d'Histoire Naturelle and Exeter University (United Kingdom). These results were obtained by studying trophic interactions between species at an extraordinary level of detail in an English meadow.

Published on 20 June 2013 in the journal Current Biology, the work provides important insights into the evolution of ecological communities at a time when certain are being disrupted by climate change and the arrival of invasive species.

In ecology, the present paradigm considers that kinship relations between species determine the identity of the partners with which the species interact: the more closely related the species, the more chance they have of interacting with the same partners. Thus, according to this view, two closely related species should share the same predators and the same preys. Recent work carried out by a team of researchers from CNRS, the Mus?um National d'Histoire Naturelle and Exeter University shows that this is not necessarily the case. For the first time, the scientists have shown that although kinship between species effectively determines what feeds on species, it is competition for resources and not degree of kinship that determines what species feed on.

To arrive at this conclusion, they made a series of observations over a ten-year period in a meadow in the south east of England. These observations, carried out at an extraordinary level of detail, made it possible to establish the interactions between one hundred or so species situated on four trophic levels: plants (23 species), aphids that feed on these plants (25 species), wasps that lay their eggs in the bodies of the aphids (22 species), and other wasps that lay their eggs in the larvae of the preceding wasps inside aphids (26 species).

The researchers have shown that two closely related species of aphid, for example, are generally the prey of the same species of wasp. It is thus the kinship of species that determines the identity of their predators. On the other hand, these two closely related species of aphid do not necessarily feed on the same plants. Going up the food chain, the scientists observed that there was little chance that the most closely related wasps feed on the same species of aphid. This is explained by the fact that under the pressure of competition for food sources, closely related species diversify what they feed on, which has the effect of reducing competition. It was possible to reach this conclusion thanks to the level of detail of the observations made, enabling dynamics to be revealed at a very local scale.

At a time when global warming is creating an imbalance in communities and when numerous species are invading ecosystems to which they were previously alien, these conclusions need to be taken into account if it is wished to predict the new interactions that will result from such changes. In fact, these results show that the resources consumed by a species joining a community cannot be predicted by its kinship relations with those species already present.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/yZyIR8b4HWQ/130621104336.htm

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Obama nominating Comey as FBI director Friday

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama on Friday plans to nominate President George W. Bush's former No. 2 at the Justice Department, Jim Comey, to lead the FBI as the agency grapples with privacy debates over a host of recently exposed investigative tactics.

If confirmed by the Senate, Comey would serve a 10-year tenure and replace Robert Mueller, who has held the job since the week before the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. Mueller is set to resign on Sept. 4 after overseeing the bureau's transformation into one the country's chief weapons against terrorism.

The White House said in a statement that Obama would announce his choice of Comey on Friday afternoon.

Comey was a federal prosecutor who severed for several years as the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York before coming to Washington after the Sept. 11 attacks as deputy attorney general. In recent years he's been an executive at defense company Lockheed Martin, general counsel to a hedge fund, board member at HSBC Holdings and lecturer on national security law at Columbia Law School.

The White House may hope that Comey's Republican background and strong credentials will help him through Senate confirmation at a time when some of Obama's nominees have been facing tough battles. Republicans have said they see no major obstacles to his confirmation, although he is certain to face tough questions about his hedge fund work, his ties to Wall Street as well as how he would handle current, high-profile FBI investigations.

The FBI is responsible for both intelligence and law enforcement with more than 36,000 employees. It has faced questions in recent weeks over media leak probes involving The Associated Press and Fox News; the Boston Marathon bombings; the attack at Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans; and two vast government surveillance programs into phone records and online communications.

The leaker of those National Security Agency programs, former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, also is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation. And just this week Mueller revealed the FBI uses drones for surveillance of stationary subjects and said the privacy implications of such operations are worthy of debate.

Comey played a central role in holding up Bush's warrantless wiretapping program, one of the administration's great controversies and an episode that focused attention on the administration's controversial tactics in the war on terror.

In dramatic testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee in 2007, Comey said he thought the no-warrant wiretapping program was so questionable that he refused for a time to reauthorize it, leading to a standoff with White House officials at the hospital bedside of an ailing Attorney General John Ashcroft.

Comey said he refused to recertify the program because Ashcroft had reservations about its legality.

Senior government officials had expressed concerns about whether the NSA, which administered the warrantless eavesdropping program, had the proper oversight in place. Other concerns included whether any president possessed the legal and constitutional authority to authorize the program as it was carried out at the time.

Comey was deputy attorney general in 2005 when he unsuccessfully tried to limit tough interrogation tactics against suspected terrorists. He told then-Attorney General Alberto Gonzales that some of the practices were wrong and would damage the department's reputation.

Some Democrats denounced those methods as torture, particularly the use of waterboarding, which produces the sensation of drowning.

As U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, Comey headed one of the nation's most prominent prosecutorial offices and one at the front lines in the fight against terrorism, corporate malfeasance, organized crime and the war on drugs.

As an assistant U.S. attorney in Virginia, Comey handled the investigation of the 1996 bombing of the Khobar Towers housing complex near Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, which killed 19 U.S. military personnel.

He led the Justice Department's corporate fraud task force and spurred the creation of violent crime impact teams in 20 cities, focusing on crimes committed with guns.

After leaving government in 2005, Comey was senior vice president and general counsel at Lockheed Martin. In 2010, he went to the Westport, Conn.-based hedge fund Bridgewater Associates, before leaving in February.

The White House also said Comey has developed improvements in the military justice system's performance regarding crimes committed in Iraq and Afghanistan as a member of the Defense Legal Policy Board, which provides independent advice to the defense secretary.

Comey also has taught at the University of Richmond Law School and worked for law firm McGuireWoods LLP, also in Richmond. He has a bachelor's degree from the College of William & Mary, a law degree from the University of Chicago Law School and clerked for former District Court Judge John M. Walker, Jr. in the Southern District of New York.

___

Follow Nedra Pickler on Twitter at https://twitter.com/nedrapickler

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-nominating-comey-fbi-director-friday-202300449.html

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Friday, June 21, 2013

Cameron And Tyler Winklevoss Tell Us Why They're So Bullish On Bitcoin [TCTV]

Screen shot 2013-06-20 at 3.21.55 PMCameron and Tyler Winklevoss first emerged as household names in the tech world because of their contentious relationship with that major social networking company and its famous founder. But these days, their focus has shifted onto a new area of the tech industry that's very different (though no less controversial): Bitcoin.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/j5RstTUkkfM/

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Two-dimensional atomically-flat transistors show promise for next generation green electronics

June 21, 2013 ? Researchers at UC Santa Barbara, in collaboration with University of Notre Dame, have recently demonstrated the highest reported drive current on a transistor made of a monolayer of tungsten diselenide (WSe2), a 2-dimensional atomic crystal categorized as a transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD). The discovery is also the first demonstration of an "n-type" WSe2 field-effect-transistor (FET), showing the tremendous potential of this material for future low-power and high-performance integrated circuits.

Monolayer WSe2 is similar to graphene in that it has a hexagonal atomic structure and derives from its layered bulk form in which adjacent layers are held together by relatively weak Van der Waals forces. However, WSe2 has a key advantage over graphene.

"In addition to its atomically smooth surfaces, it has a considerable band gap of 1.6 eV," explained Kaustav Banerjee, professor of electrical and computer engineering and Director of the Nanoelectronics Research Lab at UCSB. Banerjee's research team also includes UCSB researchers Wei Liu, Jiahao Kang, Deblina Sarkar, Yasin Khatami and Professor Debdeep Jena of Notre Dame. Their study was published in the May 2013 issue of Nano Letters.

"There is growing worldwide interest in these 2D crystals due to the many possibilities they hold for the next generation of integrated electronics, optoelectronics and sensors," commented Professor Pulickel Ajayan, the Anderson Professor of Engineering at Rice University and an authority on nanomaterials. "This result is very impressive and an outcome of the detailed understanding of the physical nature of the contacts to these 2D crystals that the Santa Barbara group has developed."

"Understanding the nature of the metal-TMD interfaces was key to our successful transistor design and demonstration," explained Banerjee. Banerjee's group pioneered a methodology using ab-initio Density Functional Theory (DFT) that established the key criteria needed to evaluate such interfaces leading to the best possible contacts to the monolayer TMDs.

The DFT technique was pioneered by UCSB professor emeritus of physics Dr. Walter Kohn, for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1998. "At a recent meeting with Professor Kohn, we discussed how this relatively new class of semiconductors is benefitting from one of his landmark contributions," said Banerjee.

Wei Liu, a post-doctoral researcher in Banerjee's group and co-author of the study, explained, "Guided by the contact evaluation methodology we have developed, our transistors achieved ON currents as high as 210 uA/um, which are the highest reported value of drive current on any monolayer TMD based FET to date." They were also able to achieve mobility of 142 cm2/V.s, which is the highest reported value for any back-gated monolayer TMD FET.

"DFT simulations provide critical insights to the various factors that effectively determine the quality of the interfaces to these 2D materials, which is necessary for achieving low contact resistances." added Jiahao Kang, a PhD student in Banerjee's group and co-author of the study.?

Their research was supported by the National Science Foundation, the California NanoSystems Institute at UC Santa Barbara, and the Materials Research Laboratory at UCSB: an NSF MRSEC.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/aOcqO6ILwgw/130621095713.htm

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Joe Manchin's NRA Ad Rebuttal - Business Insider

Joe Manchin NRA ad

MSNBC

U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), a lifetime NRA member, fired back at the association on Thursday in an ad debuted on MSNBC's "Morning Joe."

The ad served as a response to the NRA's attack ad on Manchin it debuted last week, blasting him for co-authoring a failed amendment that would have expanded background checks?on gun purchases.?

The ad in response from Manchin, who isn't up for re-election until 2018, puts him in a rural setting and reassures West Virginia residents that "you know me."

"I'm a lifetime NRA member, but I don't walk in lockstep with the NRA's Washington leadership, this administration, or any other special interest group," Manchin says in the ad. "West Virginia ? you know me. I haven't changed. And you know I've always fought for our gun rights."

Politico reported earlier this week, citing a Manchin aide, that the senator plans to at least match the NRA's ad buy in West Virginia.

The ad comes amid signs of a renewed push from both the Senate and White House on reviving Manchin's legislation. Earlier this week, Vice President Joe Biden warned members of Congress that they "will pay a price" for not backing a reform of certain gun laws.

Here's Manchin's ad:?

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

?

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/joe-manchin-nra-ad-rebuttal-background-check-bill-gun-control-2013-6

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Advice For My Trip To Mobile, Alabama - Business Insider

bellingrath gardens mobile

via Wikipedia

Bellingrath Gardens outside Mobile is one of the places I've been told I can't miss

I haven't even arrived in Mobile, Ala., yet, but I've already had a taste of "Southern hospitality."

For a girl from New Jersey, it's been a nice change!

I'll be the guest of mayoral candidate Sandy Stimpson, who invited me after I?wrote a post calling Mobile the third most miserable city in America, based on Gallup data.

Since I wrote about my upcoming trip to Mobile earlier this week,?I've received close to 300 emails welcoming me to the Gulf Coast and offering advice about the city.

I still don't know whether I'll find that Mobile isn't so miserable, after all. I've been warned it's pretty hot and humid this time of year.

But I'm looking forward to finding out. I'm still reading through all the advice I received from Mobilians, but here are some insights?? good and bad??from email and comments?on Business Insider:

The Food:

  • "The absolute best crab claws are at a little hole in the wall called The Lighthouse. It is located in Bayou La Batre and has no view. The crab claws make up for it. People will want you to dine on the Causeway (and yes they have great food too) but the best is a bit out of the way."

  • "For a cheeseburger rated best in Alabama by USA Today, go to Callaghan's. It's a great neighborhood bar that was also rated as one of the best bars in America by Esquire magazine. It's the local hangout, also called the unofficial 'town hall.' Great live music most nights too."

  • "Yes, everything will be fried so put your diet on hold while you're there. It's worth it and you can work it off later. ALWAYS order fried pickles whenever they're available. Trust me, you won't regret it."

  • "Mobile?is home to some of the?best?seafood?on the GC (Gulf Coast). The Beach House and The Original Oyster House are two of my favorites for?seafood."

The Sights:

  • "While you are visiting Mobile please check out the 5 Rivers Delta park on the causeway and go kayaking in the delta. This and the many rivers in Alabama make river kayaking very pleasant."

  • "If you haven?t been aboard a battleship, don?t miss touring the USS Alabama.?The school children of Alabama raised the money, by collecting coins, to help bring the USS Alabama to Mobile."

  • "Take a stroll or guided tour on foot through Bellingrath Gardens and home. It is truly breathtaking. Skip the boat ride here, though, it's long and not as informative as others."

  • "Mardi Gras in Mobile is smaller and a lot easier and safer than New Orleans' Mardi Gras. Mobile is where you want to bring your family for Mardi Gras... Of course everyone in Mobile loves to tell you that Mobile is the birthplace of Mardi Gras in the states, not New Orleans. You are a smart person if you never bring that fact up while living in New Orleans."

The Weather:

  • "It's a little unfortunate you'll be visiting during the summer ??I'm sure you've been warned about Gulf?Coast?summers ??but try not to let the heat and humidity hamper?your enjoyment of the city! Just wear a lot of sunscreen, drink a lot of fluids (of the alcoholic variety?particularly) and be in reach of some powerful AC."

  • "There really isn't much to do in Mobile if you aren't an outdoors person and then not in the summer! Too hot and buggy!"

  • "We are one of the rainiest cities in the world ??consistently in top 3 in the USA."

?The Rest:

  • "The best way to sum up Mobile is a family-friendly New Orleans. The history is similar, the architecture is similar, and the racial issues are similar. Mobile is still a very segregated city and that is where a large part of the problems there come from. The people can be a little backwards. However, there are a wide-range of people in Mobile. The food is fantastic and the art scene seems to be exploding. All in all, it is not a bad place to live, or it wasn?t when I left around 2007, but the economy is a little weak. That appears to be turning around. I would not call Mobile miserable so much as I would call it under-utilized. It could be much better."

  • "People here hate it when I tell the cold hard truth about Mobile. For many natives, it's a very special place because it's their home. They do not want to face the reality of extremely poor quality from education to medicine to career opportunities to diet to lack of healthy, organic food to lifestyle choices. Oh, and then there's violent crime. The business community devotes a lot of effort to constructing smokescreens and attempting to create illusions as a world view rather than making systemic changes."

  • "You've got to talk to folks down here about football: Pro ??Saints; College ??usually Alabama or Auburn; and high school ??too many to mention." ?

  • "People who come here to visit agree, Mobile has some of the most wonderful people you'll ever meet. Even the Walmart near my house received the "friendliest Walmart in America award." I wasn't surprised, and I'm not even a Walmart fan."

  • "If you're not a God-fearing, Church-going conformist who's drunk the kool-aid of the Southern Bible Belt, or a party-hard Greek Life college student who enjoys trolling Dauphin Street?on Friday?and?Saturday?nights week after week, there's not a lot to do around here as a local."

  • "I love this town, but like most have had my moments of misery. That misery is usually related to the summer humidity, the traffic on big weekends, and the fact that you just can't 'hide' ... Literally. It's rare to go in a place and not know anyone there."

  • "I've lived in Mobile for most of my life and when I moved away I was absolutely blown away by how backwards Mobile is on race-relations compared to the rest of the world."

  • "I am 85, I've lived in India, France, England, Egypt and in California, Colorado and Alabama. I've lived in cities including London, San Francisco, New Delhi, Denver, Birmingham (UK), Bristol (UK), Nice (France), Colorado Springs and Port Said (Egypt). I married a lovely French girl, I speak two languages. My experience allows me true comment on Mobile city: Mobile is beautiful, has live oaks and idiotic traffic, too many very rich and poor, good seafood and mudbugs, Vietnamese restaurants, a few villains but also some of the nicest people I've ever met. I love it. So did my Colette, who died here."

Disclosure: A couple of months ago,?I?included Mobile, Alabama on a list of the "most miserable cities in America,"?based on Gallup data. Sandy Stimpson, a mayoral candidate in Mobile (#3 on the list) objected to my characterization, and offered to fly me down and show me how great the city really is. After a little prodding, I agreed to a visit.?Stimpson is paying my travel expenses and arranging my travel in the city. I'm not planning to cover the mayoral race, but look forward to forming my own opinions about Mobile.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/advice-for-my-trip-to-mobile-alabama-2013-6

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Are Ugly People Treated Badly at Work?

A new Michigan State University study has uncovered an ugly truth about the American workplace: looks do matter.

Researchers found that employees who are considered unattractive are more likely to be belittled and bullied in the workplace. While plenty of research has found that attractive students tend to be more popular in school, the study is the first to link the level of attractiveness to cruelty in the office.

"Although we like to think we're professional and mature in the workplace, it can be just like high school in many ways," said Brent Scott, one of the study's lead investigators.

[Want a Promotion? Change Your Name]

As part of the study, researchers surveyed 114 workers at a health care facility in the southeastern United States about how often their co-workers engaged in cruel behavior toward them, which included saying hurtful things, acting rudely and making fun of them. Additionally, researchers had people who didn't know the survey participants judge their attractiveness from digital photos.

They found that unattractive workers were treated much more harshly than attractive employees even when other key factors were taken into account, including age, gender and how long they had worked at the health care facility.

The researchers also collected information on how agreeable or friendly the workers were, based on questionnaires completed by their spouses, partners or good friends. The results show that disagreeable workers, like unattractive employees, were treated more harshly than their co-workers.

"Our findings revealed that both personality and appearance matter," Scott said.

Based on the study, managers should have a better idea of which employees are potential targets in order to prevent such behavior from occurring, or to be able to provide counseling and social support if prevention attempts fail, Scott said.

The study's results were recently published in the research journal Human Performance.

Follow Chad Brooks on Twitter @cbrooks76 or BusinessNewsDaily @BNDarticles. We're also on Facebook & Google+. This story originally published on BusinessNewsDaily.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ugly-people-treated-badly-153951569.html

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Now There Are 3 Republican Senators Who Support Gay Marriage (Atlantic Politics Channel)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/313858120?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Downey Jr. signs on for 2 more 'Avengers' films

NEW YORK (AP) ? Robert Downey Jr. has signed up for two more "Avengers" films.

Marvel announced Thursday that the actor will reprise his role as Iron Man/Tony Stark for "The Avengers 2" and "The Avengers 3." Downey Jr. has played the character in a trilogy of "Iron Man" movies, as well as the first superhero ensemble "Avengers" film, which made $2.7 billion worldwide.

Joss Whedon is to return as director of the next "Avengers" film. He is writing the screenplay now. Production is to begin in March, with a theatrical release in May 2015.

The 48-year-old actor had previously suggested "Iron Man 3" might be his last spin in a stand-alone "Iron Man" film. Marvel's announcement made no mention of an "Iron Man 4" release.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/downey-jr-signs-2-more-avengers-films-182547639.html

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'Wild Blue Yonder' features sky pirates, adventure

Jet packs, sky pirates and mountaintop taverns.

Such are the elements of "Wild Blue Yonder," a five-issue comic book miniseries that centers on Cola, a skilled female teen upstart pilot whose adventures form a tale set in a world where humanity lives among the clouds in floating airships away from the broken, poisoned earth.

The first issue of the series from Mike Raicht, Zach Howard and Austin Harrison of Noble Transmission was released by IDW Publishing on Wednesday, seven years after Raicht wrote it in one sitting.

"I have always loved post-apocalyptic stuff, and I had this idea about guys with jet packs fighting each other with crowbars and axes and not being able to live on the earth," he said of the story, which came to life after a marathon writing session in a single sitting in a laundromat. "Pirates in the sky mixed with families and overcoming insurmountable odds."

While the story itself has been tweaked since the initial draft, Harrison said it still has the same spirit, noting that during story development, the three felt they were part of an "alchemy, a collaborative process where we essentially create a story that we all believe in."

Readers were hooked from the start, helping fund the trio's plans through the fundraising site Kickstarter which, in turn, drew IDW's attention. From there it was a matter of the trio working together to refine and focus on the five-issue story, blending Raicht's words and Harrison's scripts with Howard's art.

Howard, who's drawn for Marvel, Image, DC and Dark Horse, among others, calls the series a labor of love, adding that Harrison had approached him years ago about doing a book together and that all three were able to make the time to pursue the story they wanted to create.

"World-inventing is what Mike and I often do best. Technology, solar power fuel ? it's about bringing a reader and viewer into our world," he said of "Wild Blue Yonder," which is set on an earth where catastrophe has rendered the surface untenable for life and putting humanity in the skies where the struggle to survive ? and thrive ? is decidedly uncertain.

"It makes us feel like our hard work pays off," Raicht said of the story and the positive critical response to the issue. "You feel built into the world immediately."

___

Moore reported from Philadelphia. Follow him at http://www.twitter.com/mattmooreap

___

Online:

http://www.nobletransmission.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wild-blue-yonder-features-sky-pirates-adventure-163446152.html

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

Dreams on demand: Virtual reality finally delivers

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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Residents anxious to return to Colo. fire zone

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) ? Residents are anxious to return to the scene of Colorado's most destructive wildfire but authorities say it's still not safe.

Fire crews were putting out hot spots Sunday to prevent flare ups in heavily wooded Black Forest, where nearly 500 houses have been destroyed.

However, El Paso County Sheriff Terry Maketa said roads and power lines still need to be repaired. The death of two people trying to flee is still being investigated and he's in no hurry to let people back near what is considered a crime scene for now.

The 22-square-mile fire is 65 percent contained.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/residents-anxious-return-colo-fire-zone-193509558.html

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Khloe Kardashian Reveals The Secret To Keeping 'Keeping Up' Fresh

The reality starlet opens up to MTV News about Kourtney's dreams for a 'weird lifestyle' and how her family never gets boring.
By Jocelyn Vena

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1709087/khloe-kardashian-keeping-up-with-the-kardashians-fresh.jhtml

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Monday, June 17, 2013

For Belfast, keeping peace means a city of walls

BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) ? When President Obama comes to Belfast, he's expected to praise a country at peace and call for walls that separate Irish Catholics and British Protestants to come tumbling down.

Barely a 10-minute walk from where the U.S. leader is speaking Monday, those walls have kept growing in size and number throughout two decades of slow-blooming peace. Residents today on both sides of so-called "peace lines" ? barricades of brick, steel and barbed wire that divide neighborhoods, roads and even one Belfast playground ? insist the physical divisions must stay to keep violence at bay.

Belfast's first peace lines took shape in the opening salvos of Northern Ireland's conflict in 1969, when impoverished parts of the city suffered an explosion of sectarian mayhem and most Catholics living in chiefly Protestant areas were forced to flee. The British Army, deployed as peacekeepers, erected the first makeshift barricades and naively predicted the barriers would be taken down in months.

Instead, the soldiers' role supporting the mostly Protestant police soon inspired the rise of a ruthless new outlawed group, the Provisional Irish Republican Army, committed to forcing Northern Ireland out of the United Kingdom and into the Republic of Ireland.

For all the unlikely triumphs of Northern Ireland diplomacy since the U.S.-brokered 1998 Good Friday peace deal ? a Catholic-Protestant government, troop withdrawals, police reform, and disarmament of the IRA and outlawed Protestant groups responsible for most of the 3,700 death toll ? tearing down Belfast's nearly 100 "peace lines" still seems too dangerous a step to take.

"I'd love to see that wall taken down and I could say hi to my neighbors, but it isn't going to happen. There'd be cold-blooded murder and I'd have to move out," said Donna Turley, 48, smoking a cigarette at her patio table in the Short Strand, the sole Irish Catholic enclave in otherwise Protestant east Belfast.

Right behind Turley's backyard refuge towers a 50-foot (15-meter) wall. It starts as brick, transitions into fences of corrugated iron, and is topped by more steel mesh fence. Each layer marks the history of communal riots like the growth rings of a tree. Higher still, two batteries of rotating police surveillance cameras monitor Turley and her Catholic neighbors, as well as the Protestant strangers living, audibly but invisibly, on the far side.

"It's terrible looking. But I wouldn't feel safe if it wasn't there. I couldn't imagine that wall being torn down. Nobody here can," said Tammy Currie, 21, who is Turley's nearest Protestant neighbor, standing in her own small cement patio backed by the wall. Her 3-year-old son jumps on a trampoline that a few months ago had to be cleared of shattered beer bottles thrown from the other side.

Both families rent state-subsidized homes provided by the Northern Ireland Housing Executive, which is responsible for making their homes as safe as possible from the risk of further rioting. That means both have triple-layered Perspex windows that are foggy-looking and unbreakable, and metal-tiled roofs that can't be set on fire.

It was a lesson hard learned. The Protestants of Cluan Place and the Catholics of Clandeboye Drive used to be able to look, from upper floors, into each other's back yards until 2002, when militants on both sides sought to drive each other out with homemade grenades, Molotov cocktails and even acid-filled bottles. An IRA gunman shot five Protestants, none fatally, while standing atop what was then only a brick wall. Most homes in the area were burned, abandoned and rebuilt, and British Army engineers doubled the height of the wall in 2003. Nobody's been shot there since, even though both sides continue to host illegal paramilitary groups billing themselves as community defenders.

This stretch of wall connects with other security lines that date back to the early days of the modern Northern Ireland conflict in 1970, when IRA men in Short Strand shot to death three Protestants allegedly involved in attacking the district's lone Catholic church. To make it less of an eyesore, Belfast City Council has funded imaginative art works all along that stretch, but it still leaves Short Strand looking a bit like Fort Apache.

Last month, the Catholic and Protestant leaders of Northern Ireland's unity government announced a bold but detail-free plan to dismantle all peace lines by 2023. British Prime Minister David Cameron formally backed the goal Friday. Obama is expected to do the same Monday.

The politician working closest to the Cluan-Clandeboye wall, Michael Copeland, says both G-8 leaders are out of touch.

"Removing the walls would be a catastrophic decision," said Copeland, a former British soldier and a Protestant member of the Northern Ireland Assembly, who keeps his office just around the corner from Cluan Place.

"The biggest walls to be addressed are in the minds of the people. And what people in here remember is being shot at, being bombed, having their street burned," Copeland said while sitting on a Cluan Place bench outside one resident's home. He knows everyone living in all 23 homes on the Protestant side and, in fact, helped get many of them get their housing assignment.

"The walls will come down when the people who live in the shadow of these walls, and look to those walls for a sense of security, can feel secure without them. Memories will have to fade. It will take another generation at least," he said.

The two sides mark their cultural divide in ways petty and profound. Each morning, two sets of children depart in different directions, wearing different uniforms, as Catholics head for their own church-run schools, the Protestants for state-run ones. At night, the two sides usually order fast-food deliveries from their own areas, fearful that someone from "the other side" might spit in their food. They use separate taxi companies and favor different newspapers.

Short Strand's community association has erected house numbers bearing each family's name in Gaelic, the little-used native tongue of Ireland that is loathed by most Protestants.

Reflecting their anxiety that the faster-growing Catholic community wants to push them out, the Protestants of Cluan Place have painted the gable end of one house with a mural featuring a massive Union Jack and a list of attacks on their street since 2002. "Still loyalist, always British, no surrender," it says.

The house opposite Currie's, belonging to an aunt, has a dog strutting about sporting a Union Jack collar, and Ulster loyalist music blaring loudly enough from a stereo to carry to Catholic ears beyond the wall.

Across the divide, 56-year-old Maggie McDowell cocks an ear at the sectarian tune. "Och, him again," she said, identifying her Protestant neighbor not by a name or face she's never known, but by his musical taste. Unlike most living on both sides of this wall, she was here for the 2002 rioting ? and credits the wall's extension with ensuring no repeat.

She and her husband, James, keep a collection of the most interesting objects that have crashed into their house or back garden, including one smooth stone used as a doorstop. He points out holes in their home's brick wall marking strikes from past violence. Golf balls, a favored weapon for both sides, she collects by the bucket to give every so often to her golf-enthusiast brother.

When asked if she'd like the wall to come down, Maggie McDowell said, "It's a terrible thing to say, but I wish they could make it higher."

___

Online:

Maps and data of Belfast peace lines, http://bit.ly/11odl3w

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/belfast-keeping-peace-means-city-walls-005438147.html

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Saturday, June 15, 2013

PPC: Where Every Click Counts | hfug.net

Behind the two-dimensional world of the Internet, there?s a grueling battle among websites. Billions of webpages vie for position day in and day out to reach the top of search engine rankings. But why is it so important to see your website?s name as the first link on Google? It?s because Internet users visit the first entry they see 53% of the time while the second placer only settles for 15%.

Every website is born with a goal in mind. Some websites want to share knowledge while others aim to sell. Whichever your purpose is online, you need to dominate the search engines to establish your credibility. Of all known strategies to boost your web traffic, pay-per-click (PPC) offers some of the most promising results. Clear Sky SEO, a trusted name in search engine marketing, shares four reasons PPC is a worthy investment entering the online business.

Efficient Keyword Tester

PPC is a low-risk method to test if you have the right keywords. Like a regular website, PPC ads appear on top of search results based on the keywords entered by Internet users. This can save you money, as you won?t pay a dime if no one clicks your ads. No clicks, however, could mean that the keyword is not appropriate for your intended audience.

Speedy Traffic Generator

PPC can give a quick boost to your traffic. This could give your website a lift if it?s falling short in the rankings. PPC ads are as effective as websites. They provide a direct link to your website to give you a good chance of increasing your traffic.

Strategic Ads Placement

Companies providing SEM services have the ability to post your ads strategically. You can schedule it to appear in specific places for your target demographics. Placing your PPC ads during the best sales periods can increase your web traffic dramatically.

Guaranteed Investment

Because you only have to pay for every successful web visits, PPC allows you to maximize your investments. Every dollar you spend can translate into web traffic.

PPC helps you make your financial investment counts. Visit www.clearskyseo.com for more information on SEO marketing.

Monroe Rocheleau

Monroe holds a degree in Marketing and PR. His work covers everything from marketing and advertising to PR and retail operations. He reads marketing journals tirelessly and does freelance graphic design for small business entrepreneurs.

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Source: http://hfug.net/digi-market/ppc-where-every-click-counts/

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Failed Cuba-to-Florida swimmer won't try again

The Australian who gave up her quest to swim from Cuba to Florida because of painful jellyfish stings said Thursday that she will not make another attempt.

Chloe McCardel told The Associated Press that she had picked June because the jellyfish danger was supposed to be low. But about 11 hours and 14 miles into her expected 60-hour, 110-mile journey, she found herself in a swarm.

"I had one coming out of my mouth. I was pulling it, this tentacle out of my mouth, but I don't remember this moment. My kayaker told me that I was doing this, 'cause I have no recollection. I'm not coming back. That's it," she said.

The 28-year-old from Melbourne became the latest endurance athlete undone by the strong currents and fierce jellyfish of the Florida Straits on Wednesday night, abandoning her attempt to become the first person to swim across nonstop without a shark cage. The jellyfish caught her by surprise.

"I got smashed with them coming from every direction," she said. "I would not have gone to all this trouble if I had known they would be out in such numbers in June."

She was pulled out of the water and taken by one of her support vessels to Key West, where she was resting at a hotel Thursday. She said the trip back to land was excruciating.

"It was two and a half hours of the worst pain, continuously, every second, of my whole entire life. It's like fireballs in every fiber," she said.

It was the fifth failure involving three women who have tried to make the marathon swim the past three summers. Jellyfish stings and strong currents have been the main impediments.

Diana Nyad tweeted her commiseration. The endurance athlete has failed three times trying to make the same crossing and says she'd like to take another shot this summer.

"It's a tough night for Chloe McCardel, a superior swimmer and an exemplary spirit," Nyad wrote.

Endurance swimmer Penny Palfrey has also tried and failed to make the swim.

Australian Susie Maroney successfully made the crossing in 1997, but she did it with the benefit of a shark cage.

McCardel had twice made a double crossing of the English Channel, but the most time she had spent in the water continuously was 25 hours.

She attempted her Cuba to Florida swim under English Channel Marathon rules, which meant she could not touch her support boat or hold on to anything. She also wasn't allowed to wear a full-body wetsuit, which would have helped protect against jellyfish.

McCardel and her team spent nine and a half months planning the trip and studying others' attempts.

The repeated failures raise the question of whether the Cuba-to-Florida swim without a cage is even doable as a 2.5 day swim is stretching the physical limits of even elite endurance athletes. According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the longest open water swim without flippers was 139.8 miles (225 km) by Croatian Veljko Rogosic, who swam between two Italian cities on the Adriatic Sea from Aug. 29 to 31, 2006.

Dr. Clifton Page, a sports medicine specialist at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, said he thinks the Cuba-to-Florida swim can be done, although there are several physical obstacles to overcome. He has advised Nyad on her swims.

One obstacle is hypothermia. While the water is more than 80 degrees in late spring and summer, it is still well below the body's normal temperature of 98 degrees and causes it to slowly drop. There is also malnutrition. No matter how often the swimmer stops to eat, she will never ingest enough calories to make up for those expended swimming, he said. After a while, that causes the muscles to start breaking down. Then there is dehydration, he said. Even though swimmers don't feel it, they sweat just like any other athlete, while the saltwater acts like a wick, drawing even more water out of the body. Finally, there is sleep deprivation - exercising that hard for days without sleep can result in hallucinations.

"The variable is the jellyfish," Page said. He said their bites are very painful and potentially fatal if not treated. "Chloe would have gotten a lot further into her swim if she hadn't been bit."

Adding to the swimmer's strain are the Florida Strait's currents. Villy Kourafalou, a University of Miami oceanography professor, said that the swim from Cuba to the Keys "is very challenging as the currents are not only very strong but also extremely variable."

But, she said, modern computer models that utilize information from satellites, buoys and ships allow the swimmer's support team to better predict the currents and help the members decide the best time to start the swim, the best route to take and then make adjustments along the way.

Spencer reported from Miami.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/06/13/3449203/cuba-to-florida-swimmer-was-surprised.html

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Thursday, June 13, 2013

Activists: Syrian rebel attack kills 60 Shiites

BEIRUT (AP) ? Syrian rebels have attacked a village in the country's east, killing dozens of Shiites, mostly pro-government fighters, activists said Wednesday. A Syrian government official denounced the attack, saying it was a "massacre" of civilians.

The killings, which took place Tuesday in the eastern Deir el-Zour province, highlight the sectarian nature of Syria's conflict that has killed more than 80,000 people, according to the U.N.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 60 people were killed in the village of Hatla in the oil-rich province that borders Iraq.

Thousands of rebels took part in the attack and at least 10 of them were killed in the fighting, said the Observatory.

In Damascus, a government official said the rebels "carried out a massacre against villagers in which older people and children were killed." The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

The fighting in Deir el-Zour came a week after Syrian troops, backed by Lebanon's militant Shiite Hezbollah group, captured the strategic town of Qusair near the Lebanese border after nearly three weeks of fierce battles that killed dozens of troops, rebels and Hezbollah members.

Hezbollah's involvement in the Qusair battle underlined the group's commitment in support of President Bashar Assad's regime and edged the civil war in Syria closer to a regional sectarian conflict pitting the Middle East's Iranian-backed Shiite axis against Sunnis.

Most of the armed rebels in Syria are from the country's Sunni majority, while Assad has retained core support among the minorities, including his own Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, along with Christians and Shiites.

An activist based in Deir el-Zour said the rebel attack was in retaliation for an attack Monday by Shiites from Hatla that killed four rebels. Thaer al-Deiry, who identified himself only by his nickname for fear of government retaliation, said via Skype that rebels gathered and launched a counter attack Tuesday.

He said some 150 Shiites from the village fled across the Euphrates River to the government-held village of Jafra.

"The situation in the village is quiet and the Free Syrian Army is in full control," al-Deiry said, referring to the rebels. He added that the village has been under opposition control for more than a year but some of its Shiite residents recently started collecting arms apparently to fight along government troops.

Also Wednesday, the Observatory reported heavy clashes in the central city of Homs, mostly in the neighborhood of Wadi Sayeh. The fighting appeared to be an attempt by government forces to separate two main rebel-held areas in the city, Khaldiyeh and the center of Homs.

Building on its victory in Qusair, the Syrian military has shifted its attention to try to clear rebel-held areas in Homs, a linchpin area linking Damascus with regime strongholds on the Mediterranean coast, and the northern city of Aleppo.

___

Associated Press writer Albert Aji contributed to this report from Damascus, Syria.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/activists-syrian-rebel-attack-kills-60-shiites-070344315.html

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Teacher shows horror film 'Saw' to 6th graders

Movies

3 hours ago

Cary Elwes in "Saw."

Lionsgate

Cary Elwes in "Saw."

As the school year comes to a close, many teachers are giving students a break from all of those final exams with the occasional class video, or movie. But the R-rated film "Saw" might not be the best idea -- particularly for a teacher of 6th graders.

Still, that's what happened in in a suburb just outside Paris on Monday, according to Europe 1 (as translated by Gawker) when math teacher Jean-Baptiste Cl?ment reportedly told his 11-year-old students, "This will be your first horror film."

"Saw" is indeed a 2004 horror film from director James Wan that spawned six sequels, and is considered to be of a new, lower-budget, independent horror film genre often called "torture porn." It focuses on a sadistic killer who directs his victims to to play "games" in which they are forced to kill one another.

One student's father told The Local that his child came home "visibly in some discomfort."

Cl?ment was disciplined Tuesday and given a one-day suspension, a representative for the Federation of Students' Parents Councils said, adding that there may be legal measures to pursue in the incident.

But, as the Local noted, this wasn't the first time in recent memory that a French teacher got in trouble for creative teaching styles -- in May a teacher used a swastika to teach geometry, and another one was investigated in February for asking her students to write their own suicide notes. And The Hollywood Reporter noted that a 6th-grade Georgia teacher was recently investigated for showing R-rated films like "The Campaign" and "Ted" to his students.

Maybe this is just a little too much vive la diff?rence.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/teacher-screens-saw-6th-grade-class-gets-suspended-6C10292195

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To build high performance, remember the power of 'Thank you ...

by Christine Riordan

In every workplace and on every team, all people have the innate desire to feel appreciated and valued by others. Leaders of teams?and team members themselves?should work to encourage a culture of appreciation.

High-performing teams have well-defined goals, systems of accountability, clear roles and responsibilities and open communication. Just as important, teams that foster cohesion with a sense of gratitude among team members perform better on a number of dimensions.

Research demonstrates that when employees feel valued, they have high job satisfaction, are willing to work longer hours, engage more productively with co-workers and supervisors, are motivated to do their best and work toward achieving the company?s goals.

The power of gratitude

Google, which sits atop many best-places-to-work lists, fosters feelings of employee value through an open culture that promotes employee input, recognizes performance and encourages personal growth. In a recent interview, CEO Larry Page stated, ?My job as a leader is to make sure everybody in the company has great opportunities, and that they feel they?re having a meaningful impact and are contributing to the good of society.?

Consider the consequences of not fostering a culture of gratitude: A 2012 American Psychological Association (APA) study of more than 1,700 employees found that more than half of all employees intended to search for new jobs because they felt underappreciated and undervalued.

Organizational leaders?including HR?can foster high performance by finding opportunities to say ?Thank you!? and giving specific praise to employees in genuine, honest and heartfelt ways. These three specific leadership behaviors can enhance a culture of gratitude:

1. Help others develop

The APA study indicated that 70% of employees feel valued at work when they have opportunities for growth and development. While promotion opportunities within companies may sometimes be limited, you can still invest in team members? professional development through training, assignment to new and interesting projects, participation on task forces and exposure to new and interesting different areas through cross-training.

Employees frequently have skills that extend beyond the jobs they do. Additionally, skills typically grow over time. Leveraging these broad skill sets can lead to greater engagement and satisfaction.

2. Involve employees

Team members feel valued when they have an opportunity to take part in decision-making, problem-solving, and to use their skills to benefit the organization.

A 2012 study by the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) showed the importance of employees? opportunities to use skills and abilities, with 63% of respondents listing the ability to use their skills as the top driver of job satisfaction.

3. Support camaraderie and collegiality

Camaraderie leads to greater job satisfaction and commitment to the organization and doing a job well.

Leaders should foster collegiality, help to eliminate dysfunctional team behaviors and create bonding opportunities that don?t involve work projects. Google famously provides games and toys simply to facilitate entertaining interactions among colleagues. The positive feelings carry over when the colleagues work on projects together.

The 2012 SHRM study found employees? relationships with their co-workers was the second-highest factor related to their connection and commitment to the organization. Team leaders may also consider using social contracts?explicit agreements on how team members interact?to help shape positive behaviors within their teams.

Taking the time and effort to create a culture that values and appreciates the diversity and similarity within a team can reap great rewards in terms of performance and satisfaction of the entire team.

__________________________________________________________________________

Christine Riordan is dean of the Daniels College of Business at the University of Denver. Contact her at (303) 871-4324.

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Glowing Plants: Crowdsourced Genetic Engineering Project Ignites Controversy

Biohackers who promised to distribute genetically modified bioluminescent plants without regulatory testing defend their work


glowing-plant

GLOWING PLANT: A Kickstarter project to create a glowing plant has raised lots of money--and questions. Image: Courtesy of Glowing Plants

  • Why do testicles hang the way they do? Is there an adaptive function to the female orgasm? What does it feel like to want to kill yourself? Does ?free will?...

    Read More??

In April three biohackers from a California Do-It-Yourself biology lab, BioCurious, posted a Kickstarter campaign to crowdsource their plan to bioengineer a glowing plant. They asked for $65,000. But by the close of their campaign at midnight on Thursday, June 6, they had raised a remarkable $484,013. (Meanwhile, BioCurious itself is in financial trouble.) It was the first time anyone had kick-started a genetic engineering project. The group had hit upon a new method for funding biotech, one that?s faster, cheaper and requires less expertise than traditional grants or venture capital. Crowdsourcing does require public buy in, however, and this case raises a thorny hitch?ethically, environmentally and perhaps legally.

In exchange for the donations Antony Evans, Kyle Taylor and Omri Amirav-Drory promised to distribute the genetically modified seeds to supporters. More than 6,000 backers across the U.S. will be rewarded with seeds that were not vetted by any regulatory body for human safety, environmental risk or any other safeguard that bio-based companies such as Monsanto must meet. The plant campaign has reignited the controversy over genetically modified organisms. The ETC Group, a technology watchdog, and Friends of the Earth have publicly petitioned the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Kickstarter and the team to kill the project. They even started a countercampaign called Kickstopper. At heart is the question: What can a team of DIYers do when they get their hands on biotechnology, and who can stop them?

Scientific American caught up with Evans and Taylor. An edited transcript of the interview follows.

Glowing plants have captured the imagination of your backers. Why?
Evans: It?s just such a simple idea. Ninety-nine percent of the people on the planet think that it?s science fiction. In fact, it has already been done to a degree. That combination of simplicity, science fiction and feasibility in one project doesn?t come along very often. The central goal behind this is to inspire people and educate them about this technology. That was the overarching vision for why to do this.

Taylor: For my senior project in high school I actually tried putting a green fluorescence gene (pGLOW) into an African violet. I?m embarrassed to say that I tried it?it was never going to work. I think we have an opportunity here to show a new model for how science and research can be conducted. For better or worse, I guess I drank the Kool-Aid. Academia has its playground that it plays in, industry has its playground that it plays in, and I think that leaves a gap for the DIYbio community to come in and do the sorts of projects that aren?t on the radar of either.

You?ve raised almost $500,000. How did it feel watching the dollars roll in on Kickstarter?
Taylor: At first it was exciting, and then I started having a freak-out. Where have we overpromised? What could we deliver? The science is still going to be challenging, and we?re not going to be replacing 60-watt lightbulbs with a plant anytime soon.

On the other hand, ETC asked Kickstarter to take your fund-raising campaign off the site. You?ve been criticized on two aspects: You have scientists who say this isn?t going to work. Then you have organizations that are saying that giving out genetically modified seeds poses an ecological disaster.
Evans: All the environmentalists are expressing concerns about light pollution and insects and things like that. That?s if we succeed. There?s no way we are going to affect any kind of light pollution. The glow from this project is, as we say, [nothing more than] glow-in-the-dark paint. We?ve really chosen something that is about as safe as you get?to quote George Church. We consulted with scientific advisors, but I think what?s become clear is that we should broaden that group to include ecologists.

Source: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=glowing-plants-controversy-questions-and-answers

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