Wednesday, February 20, 2013

PS Vita Price Reduced in Japan


Staring on February 28, 2013, both the Wi-Fi and 3G models of Sony's PS Vita handheld will carry the retail price of 19,980 yen ($215). The price has been lowered from 24,980 yen ($269), according to a press release sent over by Sony today.

"Now one thing clear for us that in terms of profitability, we have to do a better job in promoting the PlayStation Vita mobile product," Sony EVP and CFO Masaru Kato said. "How do we do that? Well, gaming business software is the name of the game. So as a fundamental measure, we are putting all - a lot of resources, not just first party, but also asking third parties to put out more attractive software."

Kato added: "The other thing, well, marketing, pricing of the product, et cetera, I cannot talk about pricing of this platform, but those are the things that we are looking into to improve our profitability in the mobile handheld gaming business."

That's very nice, Sony. Very nice, indeed. Now then, how about you spill the beans on the PS4 (btw, they're holding a press conference in NYC next week, so hopefully more will be revealed about the new PS console after that).

Source: http://www.actiontrip.com//news/ps-vita-price-reduced-in-japan/021813_5

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Toddler Trapped in Washing Machine: Rescued!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/02/toddler-trapped-in-washing-machine-rescued/

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Monday, February 18, 2013

MintLife Blog | Personal Finance News & Advice | Mint.com ...

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Last month, Mint was kind enough to post a call for credit questions on their Facebook page, here. And as usual, Minters didn?t disappoint, leaving me with enough great credit-related questions to last me until the summer.

I?m going to try and tackle two per week and here is the first installment:

Question #1: How old do your accounts have to be in order to have enough of a credit history?

There is a great deal of confusion when it comes to the topic of the age of your credit accounts. One has to do with the issue of the age of your credit report and the age of your credit accounts, and their influence on your credit scores. I?ll try my best to clear up the confusion across the board.

Credit file age:?The two common ?age? measurements in your FICO credit score are the age of your credit report and the average age of the accounts on your credit report.

The date opened of the oldest account on your credit report (open, closed, active, or inactive) will set the age of your credit report.

The average age of your accounts is determined by taking the average age of ALL accounts on your credit report whether they?re open, closed, active or inactive.

A common myth is that closed accounts do not count in the age metrics. That?s not true. Not only do they count toward age metrics, but they continue to age even after they?ve been closed.

How long before an account ?counts? in your score:?Another common myth is that accounts have to be on your credit file for a certain amount of time before they?ll be considered by scoring systems.

That?s not true.?The moment an account hits your credit reports it is fair game and is considered in your scores.

The only exception is if you only have one account on your credit reports and it is less than 6 months old. In that case, your credit file will not qualify for a score because you?ve got to have at least 6 months of history in order for your credit file to be scoreable.

But, as long as the file is scoreable, EVERY account is considered.

How old does my file have to be to have a great score: The answer to this question is, ?not very old at all.?

This is out of your control. If you?re young and don?t have a long history of managing credit, then your age metrics (above) aren?t going to be perfect. But that?s ok because the age metrics only count for 15% of the points in your score.

As time passes, your file will get older organically and you?ll gain more points in the age category. You can have a very impressive score even with only a few years under your belt.

Question #2: Do medical bills hurt your credit score?

It is rare that your doctor?s office will report your on-time payments to the credit reporting agencies, as do most lenders. But, it does happen. And, as long as your doctor?s office is reporting that you?re making on-time payments then that?s definitely not hurting your credit scores.

Having said that, most of the time. when a medical bill shows up on a credit report, it?s being reported by a collection agency because you haven?t paid the bill or your insurance company hasn?t paid the bill. When a medical collection hits your credit reports it definitely can hurt your credit scores.

The degree of the negative hit is going to depend on the rest of your history. If you?ve got a perfectly clean credit report and all of a sudden a medical collection is added, then that?s going to have a very large downward impact.

If, however, you?ve already got negative items on your credit reports, then adding yet another to the mix isn?t going to have the same kind of negative impact because your scores are already being driven down by the presence of the other negative items.

Negative items do not have independent value, which means having 10 negative items isn?t necessarily worse than having 9, or 8, or 7. I often tell people that you can?t blame collection #16 for your poor credit scores and ignore collections #1-15.

John Ulzheimer?is the President of Consumer Education at?SmartCredit.com, the credit blogger for?Mint.com, and a contributor for the?National Foundation for Credit Counseling.? He is an expert on credit reporting, credit scoring and identity theft. Formerly of FICO, Equifax and Credit.com, John is the only recognized credit expert who actually comes from the credit industry. The opinions expressed in his articles are his and not of Mint.com or Intuit.?Follow John on Twitter.

Source: http://www.mint.com/blog/credit/mint-com-facebook-fan-qa-your-credit-questions-answered-part-1-0213/

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Vallejo mayor pushing for more officers, neighborhood watch programs

After months of burglaries and break-ins, a neighborhood effort is succeeding.

"We haven't had any (home break-ins) in 30 days," Tina Encarnacion announced Saturday afternoon during the Carriage Oaks neighborhood watch group meeting.

Encarnacion, the group leader, said eight burglaries also have been prevented by members of the group since Jan. 22.

"It's making a big difference," a member said. "I also get to know more of my neighbors."

The group of about 135 people has been diligently patrolling the North Vallejo neighborhood after getting tired of being victims of a rash of burglaries.

At a special meeting Saturday attended by about 50 people, Vallejo Mayor Osby Davis was invited to answer questions from the neighborhood residents, who had suggestions to improve safety themselves.

Inviting the Solano County District Attorney to a meeting to explain the juvenile court system was one suggestion, since a few of the suspects arrested in the burglaries have been under 18.

"They are just getting slaps on their hands, and being released back out," a concerned resident said.

When asked what Davis' plan on getting more officers into the department, he said that his goal is to add 10 more officers into the upcoming city budget, and another 10 into the following budget.

"A bigger police presence in the community will deter crimes, but it alone won't automatically make our community safe," Davis said. "We'll still need neighborhood watch

groups."

Davis said he realizes that there are budget concerns when hiring police officers.

"That's subject to negotiation," he said. "While I respect the police and what they do, I'm one to say that the city can only pay what (it) can afford."

Davis estimated the 10 new officers would cost about $2 million.

The department is now budgeted for 98 officers, including five that are financed through Measure B, a 1 percent sales tax that Vallejo voters passed in 2011.

With recent attrition, the force has 87 sworn officers, and at least six of them are expected to retire by May.

Davis said he's encouraged to see the turnout of Saturday's meeting.

"They are really concerned and active," he said. "They've become the eyes and ears for the police department."

Two Vallejo police officers also attended the meeting.

The group had previously met with Vallejo police Chief Joe Kreins to voice their concerns. Members of Citizens on Patrol have since been patrolling the neighborhood, in addition to the regular police patrol.

Contact staff writer Irma Widjojo at (707)553-6835 or iwidjojo@timesheraldonline.com. Follow her on Twitter @IrmaVTH.

Source: http://www.timesheraldonline.com/ci_22609384/vallejo-mayor-pushing-more-officers-neighborhood-watch-programs?source=rss_viewed

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Seawater desalination plant might be just a drop in the bucket

CARLSBAD, Calif. ? Dreamers have long looked to the Pacific Ocean as the ultimate answer to California's water needs: an inexhaustible, drought-proof reservoir in the state's backyard. In the last decade, proposals for about 20 desalting plants have been discussed up and down the coast.

But even with construction about to begin on the nation's largest seawater desalination facility, 35 miles north of San Diego, experts say it is doubtful that dream will ever be fully realized.

"While this Poseidon adventure may work out, I don't look for a lot of that," said Henry Vaux Jr., a UC Berkeley professor emeritus of resource economics who contributed to a 2008 National Research Council report on desalination.

The reasons boil down to money and energy. It takes a lot of both to turn ocean water into drinking water, driving the average price of desalinated supplies well above most other sources.

The purified water produced by the Poseidon Resources plant will cost the San Diego County Water Authority more than twice what it now pays the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California for supplies from Northern California and the Colorado River. Over the authority's 30-year contract with Poseidon, San Diego County ratepayers will pay between $3 billion and $4 billion for the desalted water, which is expected to provide no more than a tenth of their overall supply.

Seawater desalination is not new to California. There are number of small coastal plants, used mostly for research or industrial purposes, and a few, such as one on Catalina Island, that provide municipal supplies.

For reasons unique to the region, San Diego County will be the first to stick a big straw into the Pacific. It is at the end of the line for imported water, doesn't have much local groundwater and is perennially battling with Metropolitan, Southern California's wholesaler of imported supplies.

"I do believe it is worth it," said Tom Wornham, board chairman of the county water authority. "I would rather be apologizing to people in 10 years for the rate than the fact they would have no water."

Up the coast, other places have taken a pass on the Pacific. Los Angeles and Long Beach recently shelved seawater desalting plans after concluding that other water sources, such as conservation or recycling, are cheaper and easier to pursue.

Poseidon, a small, privately held company based in Stamford, Conn., started talking about developing a desalination plant in Carlsbad in late 1998. The road to construction has been so long and twisting that Global Water Intelligence, which covers the international water industry, last year listed the project among the "Top 10 Desalination Disasters" of all time.

It took years for the company to get the necessary state and local permits. Environmentalists filed multiple legal challenges, the last of which was only recently resolved in Poseidon's favor. A deal with a number of local water agencies in San Diego County fell apart.

In the end, the Poseidon supplies ? up to 56,000 acre-feet a year ? will sell for roughly $2,000 an acre-foot, more than double the company's 2004 estimate. (One acre-foot is enough to supply two average homes for a year.) The price will rise with inflation; if energy costs go up, so will the price of water.

On the other side of the Pacific, Australia offers a sobering lesson in the perils of diving too deeply into desalination.

When years of withering drought emptied the country's reservoirs, Australia commissioned six big coastal desalting plants, including some of the world's largest. Then the rains returned. Just as some of the operations were coming on line, they were no longer needed.

Four of the six plants are being idled because cheaper water is available. Australian politicians are bemoaning the desalination binge, complaining that it saddled ratepayers with "hyper-expensive" white elephants they have to pay for regardless of whether the plants are used.

"That's certainly the risk ? that we build them when they're not necessary or we build them, frankly, too soon," said Heather Cooley of the Pacific Institute, an Oakland think tank.

Santa Barbara had a similar experience in the early 1990s, when it built a desalination plant during a severe statewide drought that ended before the facility was finished. The $34-million plant, with a tenth of the capacity of the Carlsbad facility, was never used beyond the testing phase, though it could still be brought into service in an emergency.

The $954-million Carlsbad project is being financed with $781 million in tax-exempt construction bonds sold by Poseidon and the water authority. The balance is coming from investors who anticipate a return of about 13%. IDE Americas Inc., the subsidiary of an Israeli firm that runs some of the world's largest coastal desalination facilities in the Middle East, has been hired to design and operate the plant, slated for completion in 2016.

The fresh water will be produced through reverse osmosis, an energy-intensive process that separates salts and contaminants from seawater by forcing it through sand filters and tightly coiled, synthetic membranes peppered with billions of tiny holes a fraction of the width of a human hair. The water will then be pumped inland for distribution ? the opposite direction that drinking supplies are usually moved ? requiring construction of a 10-mile underground pipeline that the water authority will own and operate.

Poseidon chose the Carlsbad location, next to the Encina Power Station, so it could draw from the power plant's cooling water discharge ? thus avoiding the environmental harm of operating its own ocean intake.

But new federal and state environmental regulations are pushing coastal power plants to phase out the use of huge volumes of ocean water for cooling, thwarting that strategy. Poseidon expects the Encina station to be replaced within the decade with a new generating facility employing a different cooling system.

That will mean the desalter will have to pump directly from the ocean, sucking 300 million gallons a day. Of that, 100 million gallons will go through the reverse osmosis process, with half converted to fresh water and half to a concentrated brine. The brine, twice as salty as the sea, will be diluted in a mixing pool with the other 200 million gallons of intake and discharged to the ocean.

Destruction of marine life is a major environmental concern of ocean desalination. Raw seawater is full of tiny organisms, including plankton that form a critical part of the food chain and the young stages of fish and invertebrates. When the water they live in is pumped into a plant, they die.

The Coastal Commission is requiring Poseidon to restore 55 acres of marine wetlands in south San Diego Bay to compensate for the plant's projected effects. The State Water Resources Control Board is also developing new seawater desalination regulations that could force Poseidon to change its intake and discharge systems.

"They took a big risk in building this before the rules are finalized," said Joe Geever of the Surfrider Foundation, which tenaciously fought the Carlsbad proposal in court and argues that water agencies should turn to the ocean only as a last resort ? after more environmentally benign sources such as recycling and storm-water capture have been aggressively pursued.

Poseidon, which is trying to line up customers for a similar-size desal plant proposed in Huntington Beach, says it is peddling more than water. "What we're selling is ... a reliability premium that's locally controlled, drought-proof," said Carlos Riva, the company's chief executive.

But even Poseidon doesn't predict that the Pacific will become California's dominant water supply. The state has too many other sources.

"We have quite a bit of water to move around," said Peter MacLaggan, the Poseidon executive who is overseeing the Carlsbad project. "I don't think it's ever going to be a majority of supply or anywhere close to that."

bettina.boxall@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/GG-9qXEM-u8/la-me-carlsbad-desalination-20130218,0,3034309.story

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Speedy great white sharks tracked along Florida coast

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Source: http://www.floridatoday.com/article/20130218/NEWS01/302180009/1006/rss01/Speedy-great-white-sharks-tracked-along-Florida-coast-

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Ancient teeth bacteria record disease evolution

Feb. 17, 2013 ? DNA preserved in calcified bacteria on the teeth of ancient human skeletons has shed light on the health consequences of the evolving diet and behaviour from the Stone Age to the modern day.

The ancient genetic record reveals the negative changes in oral bacteria brought about by the dietary shifts as humans became farmers, and later with the introduction of food manufacturing in the Industrial Revolution.

An international team, led by the University of Adelaide's Centre for Ancient DNA (ACAD) where the research was performed, has published the results in Nature Genetics Febraury 17. Other team members include the Department of Archaeology at the University of Aberdeen and the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Cambridge (UK).

"This is the first record of how our evolution over the last 7500 years has impacted the bacteria we carry with us, and the important health consequences," says study leader Professor Alan Cooper, ACAD Director.

"Oral bacteria in modern man are markedly less diverse than historic populations and this is thought to contribute to chronic oral and other disease in post-industrial lifestyles."

The researchers extracted DNA from tartar (calcified dental plaque) from 34 prehistoric northern European human skeletons, and traced changes in the nature of oral bacteria from the last hunter-gatherers, through the first farmers to the Bronze Age and Medieval times.

"Dental plaque represents the only easily accessible source of preserved human bacteria," says lead author Dr Christina Adler, who conducted the research while a PhD student at the University of Adelaide, now at the University of Sydney.

"Genetic analysis of plaque can create a powerful new record of dietary impacts, health changes and oral pathogen genomic evolution, deep into the past."

Professor Cooper says: "The composition of oral bacteria changed markedly with the introduction of farming, and again around 150 years ago. With the introduction of processed sugar and flour in the Industrial Revolution, we can see a dramatically decreased diversity in our oral bacteria, allowing domination by caries-causing strains. The modern mouth basically exists in a permanent disease state."

Professor Cooper has been working on the project with archaeologist and co-Leader Professor Keith Dobney, now at the University of Aberdeen, for the past 17 years. Professor Dobney says: "I had shown tartar deposits commonly found on ancient teeth were dense masses of solid calcified bacteria and food, but couldn't identify the species of bacteria. Ancient DNA was the obvious answer."

However, the team was not able to sufficiently control background levels of bacterial contamination until 2007 when ACAD's ultra-clean laboratories and strict decontamination and authentication protocols became available. The research team is now expanding its studies through time, and around the world, including other species such as Neandertals.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Adelaide.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Christina J Adler, Keith Dobney, Laura S Weyrich, John Kaidonis, Alan W Walker, Wolfgang Haak, Corey J A Bradshaw, Grant Townsend, Arkadiusz So?tysiak, Kurt W Alt, Julian Parkhill, Alan Cooper. Sequencing ancient calcified dental plaque shows changes in oral microbiota with dietary shifts of the Neolithic and Industrial revolutions. Nature Genetics, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/ng.2536

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/1rPkY6W3lso/130217134140.htm

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