Monday, February 25, 2013

ASUS' MWC press event happens tomorrow at 7AM ET, get your liveblog here!

ASUS' MWC press event happens tomorrow at 7AM ET, get your liveblog here!

Regardless of how you feel about ASUS, we think we can all agree on this: the company knows how to put on a good show. The outfit's made it pretty obvious it's about to announce a new PadFone here at Mobile World Congress, thanks to teasers involving a Spanish-speaking statue and a spaceship landing atop La Sagrada Familia. Plus, chairman Jonney Shih has a little trouble controlling the volume of his voice, especially if you get him on the subject of ubiquitous cloud computing. So the keynote tomorrow should be fun -- and yeah, we're excited about that new PadFone, too. Follow our liveblog tomorrow at 7AM ET and all will be revealed.

February 25, 2013 7:00 AM EST

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/24/asus-is-holding-its-mwc-2013-press-event-tomorrow-at-7am-et/

Cecil Hotel Cressida Bonas Kenny Clutch Edward Gorey Argo american idol bonnaroo

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Benefits and Risks of Redefining a Positive CT Result for Lung Cancer

Using a threshold of 7 or 8 mm to define a positive lung cancer result in a baseline round of computed tomography (CT) could decrease false positive screening results. However, prospective research is needed to determine whether increasing the threshold may delay diagnosis of cancer in some patients.

In CT screening for lung cancer, the positive result of the initial low-dose CT indicates whether further diagnostic work-up is needed before the first scheduled repeated screening. A definition that is too inclusive may cause excessive diagnostic work-up and unnecessary treatment, while a definition that is too restrictive may delay diagnosis.

In the past decade, the frequency of identifying a noncalcified nodule (NCN) of any size on the initial baseline CT scan has almost tripled. This is mostly due to technological advances in CT scanners and the use of large computer monitors to display the CT images. Changing the size threshold for a positive screening could help reduce the harms associated with unnecessary, invasive work-up of false positive screening tests.

Researchers reviewed medical records for a cohort of 21,136 patients who had a baseline CT performed between 2006 and 2010 to assess how using a more restrictive threshold in the baseline round of screening would affect the number of positive results and delayed diagnoses. Of the participants undergoing baseline screenings, 57 percent had at least one NCN discovered.

By using the current definition of 5 mm, 16 percent (3,396 of the 21,136 patients) had a positive result. Of those, 8 were diagnosed with lung cancer within 12 months of baseline enrollment. Increasing the threshold to 6, 7, 8, and 9 mm would have lowered the frequency to 10, 7, 5, and 4 percent respectively, thus decreasing further work-up by 36, 56, 68, and 75 percent respectively.

The authors of an accompanying editorial in Annals of Internal Medicine express concern that nodule size may not be the best indicator of cancer risk. Other variables, such as presence of emphysema or nodule spiculation could predict which nodules are likely to be cancerous.

The editorialists call for development of a comprehensive computer-based risk calculator that integrates nodule and demographic information.

Source: http://www.sciencecodex.com/benefits_and_risks_of_redefining_a_positive_ct_result_for_lung_cancer-107411

actuary elon musk fox mole manson bubba watson recent earthquakes fbi most wanted list

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

VIDEO: Facebook's Sheryl Sandberg: Career Advice for Women ...

Watch Facebook?s COO Sheryl Sandberg sit down with Jesse Draper, host of ?The Valley Girl Show? to talk about career advice for women, Facebook?s impact and advice for her younger self.

Thanks for checking us out. Please take a look at the rest of our videos and articles.

To stay in the loop, bookmark our homepage.

Social Share Toolbar

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

About Shonda Kellams

I am a freelance writer, entrepreneur, and work at home mom.

For small business hosting and Internet marketing go to?Designer Hosting,?where we do everything we can to help you create and market a successful website.

oDesk Certified Online Article and Blog Writer

Tags: arianna huffington, business, Career, connected, entrepreneurship, facebook, google, sheryl sandberg, social media, social network, women

Source: http://snapoint.org/2013/02/video-facebooks-sheryl-sandberg-career-advice-for-women/

new orleans saints ireland bracket vangogh yield crossbow airhead

Facebook PHP SDK - basic example not working

Im still in the process of creating a Facebook app, I decided to not use the SDK originally because I couldnt get it to work, however, I just ran into many problems which I couldnt get around so figured id try and find out why the SDK wont work.

Now, when I use the code posted on the Facebook page which simply returns the users name (this was extremely simple to do without the SDK).

Part of the code is the following:

// No user, print a link for the user to login $login_url = $facebook->getLoginUrl(); echo 'Please <a href="' . $login_url . '">login.</a>'; 

Which is all that is shown when I try and load the app, it says "Please login" and when I click it, it loads for a few seconds and says "Please login" once again.

I was just wondering if anyone knew what the issue is?The code is exactly the same as that copied from: http://developers.facebook.com/docs/reference/php/facebook-api/ Replacing the relevant information such as app_id, etc.

I dont know if this is relevant but for some reason the server wont let me use file_get_contents, only curl.

Source: http://facebook.stackoverflow.com/questions/14971559/facebook-php-sdk-basic-example-not-working

zipper armenian genocide asteroid mining memorial day ivan rodriguez planetary resources mothers day gift ideas

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Maingear fits 3-way GTX Titan graphics into (un-priced) gaming PC

Maingear launches gaming desktops with NVIDIA's latest speed king the GTX Titan

If you're a high-end gaming PC manufacturer, why not just time your desktop launches for when the latest pixel-blasting GPUs come out? That's exactly how Maingear rolls, so it's just announced three new machines based on NVIDIA's freshly launched GeForce GTX Titan. The new flagship graphics card borrows its name (and some of its tech) from the Kepler-based Titan supercomputer and packs 2,688 CUDA cores and 7.1 billion transistors, along with 6GB of GDDR5 RAM and a 384-bit interface. That lends it 4,500 Gigaflops of horsepower, displacing the company's GTX 690 model at the top while letting modders overclock and overvolt the cards with "higher limits than ever," according to NVIDIA.

Maingear will ship three units armed with the Titan: the SHIFT, which will be available in dual or three-way GTX Titan configurations, the F131 with one or two cards and the single-card only Potenza. All feature a 90 degree rotated motherboard design to vent hot air out the top for better cooling, along with with AMD or Intel processors up to the Core i7-3960X six-core model, SATA 6G, USB 3.0 and up to 64GB of RAM. You'll also get 4K max resolution on four simultaneous displays, thanks to two dual-link DVI, HDMI and Display Port 1.2 connectors. There's no word yet on pricing, but for a three-way SLI SHIFT PC? Think big.

Filed under:

Comments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/Su5M3wjwA1I/

Dell Levis Fireman Ed Allegiant Air Melissa Rycroft mega millions Cyber Monday Deals 2012

Sony Announces PS Vita News Tonight!

Posted 11 hours ago By Vince - Vincent Deshaies

We?ve been getting a lot of news lately... first from the big Nintendo Direct conference, and now Sony has an event coming this Wedesday. Well... it actually turns out we don?t need to wait that long to hear from Sony, because they will be streaming some PS Vita news tonight. Sony Computer Entertainment Japan president, Hiroshi Kawana, will be the one presenting it. It will air tonight at 2 AM CT (around midnight PT and 3 AM ET) right here, though it will obviously be in Japanese. How will this correspond with the news on the 20th?

?

?


Source: http://www.gamefocus.ca/news/19217.html

Indianapolis explosion jay cutler applebees jeff gordon veterans day mike brown bcs rankings

Hunt for distant planets intensifies

Feb. 18, 2013 ? When astronomers discovered planet GJ 1214b circling a star more than 47 light-years from Earth in 2009, their data presented two possibilities. Either it was a mini-Neptune shrouded in a thick atmosphere of hydrogen and helium, or it was a water world nearly three times the size of Earth.

Along came Jacob Bean, now an assistant professor in astronomy & astrophysics at the University of Chicago, who used a new method called multi-object spectroscopy to analyze the planet?s atmosphere from large, ground-based telescopes. Aided by technology, Bean and his colleagues are surmounting the challenge of inferring the atmospheric composition of planets that were invisible to humans just a few years ago.

?We?re trying to distinguish whether it?s like the gas giants we know about, or something fundamentally different from what we?ve seen in our solar system ? an atmosphere predominantly composed of water,? Bean said.

The search for exoplanets - planets beyond our own solar system - has taken off over the last decade, and is now a growing component of UChicago?s research agenda in astronomy. One estimate published in January calculated that our Milky Way galaxy alone contains at least 17 billion Earth-sized planets, with a vast potential for life-sustaining worlds. Pursuing the exoplanet search via complementary methods are Bean and Daniel Fabrycky, another assistant professor in astronomy & astrophysics.

Bean has received a 60-orbit allocation on the Hubble Space Telescope to continue his observations on GJ 1214b, a sign of the work?s importance. Previous HST studies of planetary atmospheres encompassed 10 to 20 orbits. Bean will use a technique called transmission spectroscopy to measure the chemical composition of the planet?s atmosphere with unprecedented precision.

A big prize

A definitive assessment of the planet?s atmosphere could lead to a larger prize: learning how to detect potential signs of alien life on a cosmically distant Earth twin. The atmospheric signature of life on an exoplanet presumably would contain some mixture of oxygen and various other gases.

Planetary scientists are conducting theoretical studies to narrow the range of possibilities.

?It?s interesting to note that all the instruments astronomers have used to study exoplanet atmospheres so far were never designed for that,? Bean said. ?We?re using them in very unusual ways. We do what we can with what we have.?

But now Bean aims to build a system that is perfectly suited and well optimized to study exoplanet atmospheres, including that of GJ 1214b.

?The current data suggest an atmosphere predominately composed of water, but it?s not a definitive result yet,? Bean said. ?There could be even more exotic scenarios possible that we?re not able to rule out.?

If GJ 1214b is a water world, ?It would be very different than anything in our own solar system,? said Harvard University astronomy Professor David Charbonneau, whose team discovered the planet.

Deep questions

The search taps into some of modern science?s deepest questions: Are humans alone in the cosmos, and is our life-sustaining world unique? One of the earliest writers to speculate about exoplanets was the Italian philosopher and scientist Giordano Bruno, who was burned at the stake in 1600 for espousing beliefs that the Catholic Church deemed heretical.

In one prescient passage, Bruno wrote, ?In space there are countless constellations, suns and planets; we see only the suns because they give light; the planets remain invisible, for they are small and dark. There are also numberless earths circling around their suns, no worse and no less than this globe of ours.?

Discoveries of new exoplanets have flowed like oil from a gushing wellhead in recent years. The number has topped 850 and continues to climb.

Starting in the 1990s, exoplanet hunters initially were only able to find giant, Jupiter-like gas planets because they were bigger and thus easier to find. ?They were closer to their stars than Jupiter is from the sun, so we nicknamed them ?hot Jupiters,?? Charbonneau said.

But in recent years, scientists began pursuing a new, more interesting goal: find planets that are more Earthlike. One major push along that front was the $600-million Kepler mission, launched in 2009. This mission, encompassing a 100-member science team, is conducting a survey of planets orbiting other sun-like stars.

?Kepler is on the cusp of finding small planets in the habitable zone around both sun-like and small stars,? Fabrycky said. ?This is the goal of the mission, and it?s almost there.?

A Kepler research veteran, Fabrycky began his UChicago faculty appointment last October. Fabrycky precisely measures the timing of transits, the mini eclipses that planets cause as they pass in front of their stars. Timing inconsistencies in the transits often result from the gravitational influence of other planets.

So far Kepler has 105 confirmed planet discoveries to its credit, and has identified 2,740 planet candidates. As a postdoctoral scientist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, two years ago, Fabrycky was a member of a team that discovered six planets orbiting a single star called Kepler-11. ?Kepler-11 is hanging on ? for the moment ? as the one with the most number of planet signals? among exoplanetary systems, Fabrycky said.

Bean and his colleagues have made the best observations of planetary atmospheres so far using the Hubble Telescope, the Spitzer Space Telescope, and, in Chile, the Very Large Telescope array and the twin Magellan Telescopes. But the planned Giant Magellan Telescope, of which UChicago is a founding partner, and the forthcoming James Webb Space Telescope should eclipse the capabilities of today?s observatories when they go into service late this decade.

The new telescopes will be able to do the same sort of exoplanetary atmospheric studies underway now, ?but actually do it for the smaller planets that might even be habitable,? Charbonneau said.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Chicago. The original article was written by Steve Koppes.

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


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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/space_time/astronomy/~3/B_kh2gVokzo/130218132351.htm

brandon jacobs brian dawkins emma roberts north korea news north korea news giuliana and bill giuliana and bill