Saturday, February 16, 2013

Video: 'A Gathering Storm', Part 1

Dateline NBC

'Dateline NBC,' the signature broadcast for NBC News in primetime, premiered in 1992. Since then, it has been pioneering a new approach to primetime news programming. The multi-night franchise, supplemented by frequent specials, allows NBC to consistently and comprehensively present the highest-quality reporting, investigative features, breaking news coverage and newsmaker profiles.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/3032600/vp/50828606#50828606

day 26 new hunger games trailer sasquatch david choe national wear red day gunner kiel gunner kiel

Friday, February 15, 2013

Berlin's beloved polar bear Knut returns on show

BERLIN (Reuters) - Knut, the hand-reared polar bear who captured Germans' hearts before his early death in 2011, returned to his adoring Berlin public on Friday as a life-sized model bearing the animal's real fur.

Knut will stand for a month in the entrance foyer of the city's natural history museum, which has modified its entrance for the anticipated rush of visitors, a museum spokeswoman said.

The museum is keen to stress that Knut has not been stuffed. Rather, a replica of the bear was made, based on Knut's skeleton, in one of his favourite poses, and this was covered with the creature's pelt, in a procedure known as dermoplasty.

The model has expressive eyes and a damp nose, museum director Johannes Vogel said.

"I think people will accept Knut, because this is a very dignified model.. People who knew Knut very well while he was alive recognise their Knut here again."

Knut was the star attraction of Berlin zoo during his four-year life. His mother rejected him as a new-born leaving the fluffy white cub to be reared by a zookeeper. Thousands of visitors queued for hours to watch him frolic in his enclosure, and he inspired a dizzying array of merchandise.

Other German zoos have tried in vain to create celebrity animals. None have ever come close to matching Knut's fame.

The bear died suddenly of an epileptic fit in March 2011.

(Reporting by Reuters television; writing by Alexandra Hudson, editing by Paul Casciato)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/berlins-beloved-polar-bear-knut-returns-show-154315132.html

George Bush After Christmas Sales 2012 Charles Durning Webster Ny Mcdonalds Restaurants Open on Christmas Day jessica simpson

Hockey East teams see their NCAA tournament hopes take a hit

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Sony announces Xperia ZL coming to Bell, Rogers, Mobilicity, MTS, WIND, and Videotron in April

xperia_z_zl16_1020_large_verge_medium_landscape

Sony announced their flagship Xperia Z and Xperia ZL smartphones back at CES in January, and confirmed that the international Xperia ZL variant would be released in Canada. Today they?ve confirmed that the Xperia ZL will launch in Canada ?beginning in April?, and will be offered by a number of carriers around the country, including Bell, Rogers, Mobilicity, WIND Mobile, MTS, and Videotron.

Under the hood, the Xperia ZL is packing a 1.5 GHz quad-core Snapdragon S4 processor, 2GB of RAM, and a 13 megapixel camera. It features a now ?standard? 5-inch 1080p display, and Sony is touting that the phone provides the ?highest screen to phone size ratio available today?, meaning they?ve packed the large display into a relatively small form factor. The Xperia ZL will be available in black at launch, and will run Android 4.1 Jelly Bean out of the box.

No word on pricing yet, though carriers will likely make their own announcements in the weeks before launch.

Image Credit: The Verge

Source: http://thecellularguru.com/2013/02/14/sony-announces-xperia-zl-coming-to-bell-rogers-mobilicity-mts-wind-and-videotron-in-april/

hbo luck unc asheville stephen jackson nba trade deadline ncaa tournament marchmadness mike d antoni

Energies, Vol. 6, Pages 973-987: Evaluating the Economic Performance of High-Technology Industry and Energy Efficiency: A Case Study of Science Parks in Taiwan

Energies 2013, 6(2), 973-987; doi:10.3390/en6020973 (doi registration under processing)

Article

1 Department of International Business Administration, Chinese Culture University (SCE), No. 231, Sec. 2, Jian-guo S. R., Da-an Dist., 106 Taipei City, Taiwan 2 Science and Technology Policy Research and Information Center, National Applied Research Laboratories, Taiwan

* Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.

Received: 23 December 2012; in revised form: 20 January 2013 / Accepted: 31 January 2013 / Published: 13 February 2013

Abstract: High-technology industries provide opportunities for economic growth, but also raise concerns because of their energy-demanding nature. This paper provides an integrated evaluation of both economic benefits and energy efficiency of high-technology industries based on the real data from one of the globally recognized high-technology industrial clusters, the national science parks in Taiwan. A nation-wide industrial Input-Output Analysis is conducted to demonstrate the positive effects of science parks on national economic developments and industrial upgrades. The concept of energy intensity and an energy-efficient economy index are applied to an integrated assessment of the relationship between economic growth and energy consumption. The proposed case study suggests that economic and energy efficiency objectives can be simultaneously achieved by the development of high-technology industries, while three energy policy implications are considered. First, a nation-wide macro viewpoint is needed and high-technology industries should be considered as parts of the national/regional economies by governmental agencies. Second, a proper industrial clustering mechanism and the shared environmental facilities supported by the government, such as planned land and road usage, electricity and water supply, telecommunications system, sewerage system and wastewater treatments, can improve energy efficiency of high-technology industries. Third, the governmental policies on the taxing and management system in science parks would also direct energy-efficient economy of high-technology industries.

Keywords: economic evaluation; energy efficiency; energy intensity; science park; high-technology industry

Article Statistics

Click here to load and display the download statistics.
Notes: Multiple requests from the same IP address are counted as one view.

Cite This Article

MDPI and ACS Style

Yan, M.-R.; Chien, K.-M. Evaluating the Economic Performance of High-Technology Industry and Energy Efficiency: A Case Study of Science Parks in Taiwan. Energies 2013, 6, 973-987.

AMA Style

Yan M-R, Chien K-M. Evaluating the Economic Performance of High-Technology Industry and Energy Efficiency: A Case Study of Science Parks in Taiwan. Energies. 2013; 6(2):973-987.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Yan, Min-Ren; Chien, Kuo-Ming. 2013. "Evaluating the Economic Performance of High-Technology Industry and Energy Efficiency: A Case Study of Science Parks in Taiwan." Energies 6, no. 2: 973-987.

Source: http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/6/2/973

madonna super bowl halftime kelly clarkson super bowl giants super bowl 2012 half time show halftime show 2012 kelly clarkson super bowl 2012 ok go

Chinese Acupuncture Relaxing m

Source: Detroit Metro Times

Chinese Acupuncture Relaxing massage Located on Newburgh & Warren in Westland. Four hand massage Now Available Call 313-623-6185 for an appointment.

Source: http://metrotimes.kaango.com/ad-chinese-acupuncture-relaxing-m/21707658

columbine breaking news Google News Newton virginia tech shooting Bbc News China

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

SwiftKey Flow beta updated with fresh round of bug fixes

Android Central

The SwiftKey Flow beta test continues with another release for phones and tablets today. Version 4.0.0.99 includes a new round of bug fixes, including behavior fixes for the Google Chrome Beta, various crash fixes and a new Turkish layout. Here's the full changelog for your perusal --

  • Fixed crash on changing keyboards
  • Fixed force close on clicking update language
  • Fixed other crashes
  • Resolved majority of non-English punctuation problems
  • New look installer to match SwiftKey Flow colors and include an introduction to SwiftKey Flow
  • Added Turkish layout
  • Chrome Beta should now behave like Chrome
  • Snap and tap (correction of words) now compatible with Vietnamese
  • Memory usage of settings app reduced
  • Improved handling of non-zero length selection in Chrome and Samsung mail client
  • Fixed jumping cursor in ExDialler and Samsung calculator
  • Microphone key disabled in fields that don’t support voice input
  • Fix for keyboard disappearing when phone build installed on tablet sized devices
  • Disabled predictions in Kingsoft Office and UC browser to make SK usable in them
  • Double space for period turned off by default to prevent accidental period insertion when flowing
  • Replaced ‘learnt’ with ‘learned’ in personalization page (US English)
  • Turned off slide down from candidate bar to close keyboard when flow is on (to be consistent with the description in the Settings menu)

There's still a handful of known issues in the current beta build, so you might want to take a look over them at the source link before installing for the first time. That's also where you'll find download links for both phone and tablet versions of the keyboard.

SwiftKey Flow remains the keyboard of choice for many of us here at AC, despite its beta status. Hopefully we'll see it graduate to Google Play soon.

Source: SwiftKey



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/iQPlmr9d4aw/story01.htm

shades of grey pittsburgh penguins record store day jennie garth space needle nashville predators king arthur

What Obama can do on climate change (CNN)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/284321602?client_source=feed&format=rss

columbus day columbus day Stacy Dash Amber Tamblyn Lilit Avagyan Nashville TV Show VP debate

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Faulk Replaces Brees as Host of Celeb Golf Tourney

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Source: www.nytimes.com --- Monday, February 11, 2013
Pro football Hall of Famer Marshall Faulk has been picked to replace Drew Brees as host of a celebrity Golf tournament. ...

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2013/02/11/sports/golf/ap-glf-faulk-golf-tournament.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

optimal Samantha Steele Espn goog Sylvia Kristel st louis cardinals Steelers Schedule tory burch

Family Handyman Magazine & House Beautiful Subscription $4.99 -

Discount Magazines deals 2/13/13

Today only, subscribe to Family Handyman Magazine for only $4.99 per year (75% off)! You can order up to 4 years at this price! Just enter coupon code FORTHEMOMMAS

Family Handyman Magazine is for people who take an active interest in home improvement, yard and garden care, maintenance and repair, and remodeling. Family Handyman also features information on woodworking, auto maintenance, energy efficiency, and decorating.

This offer expires at Tuesday 02/12/13 11:59 PM EST EST

Today only, subscribe to House Beautiful Magazine for only $4.99 per year (66% off)! You can order up to 3 years at this price! Just enter coupon code FORTHEMOMMAS

House Beautiful is written for affluent readers with a sense of style. It introduces possibilities in the context of individuality, diversity and simplicity with an emphasis on comfort rooms that are lived in. Editorial encompasses interior design, remodeling, architecture, travel, entertaining, gardening and more.

This offer expires at Wednesday 02/13/13 09:59 AM EST EST

Share Me:

This post may contain affiliate links. Read my disclosure policy here.

Source: http://forthemommas.com/hot-deals/family-handyman-magazine-subscription-4-99

Karrueche Tran dodd frank Lark Voorhies Jennifer Livingston Orlando Cruz MLB Playoff Schedule arizona cardinals

Something from Nothing? A Vacuum Can Yield Flashes of Light

"Virtual particles" can become real photons--under the right conditions


Casimir effect, casimir plates, vacuum, Image: Wikimedia Commons/Emok, MissMJ

A vacuum might seem like empty space, but scientists have discovered a new way to seemingly get something from that nothingness, such as light. And the finding could ultimately help scientists build incredibly powerful quantum computers or shed light on the earliest moments in the universe's history.

Quantum physics explains that there are limits to how precisely one can know the properties of the most basic units of matter?for instance, one can never absolutely know a particle's position and momentum at the same time. One bizarre consequence of this uncertainty is that a vacuum is never completely empty, but instead buzzes with so-called ?virtual particles? that constantly wink into and out of existence.

These virtual particles often appear in pairs that near-instantaneously cancel themselves out. Still, before they vanish, they can have very real effects on their surroundings. For instance, photons?packets of light?can pop in and out of a vacuum. When two mirrors are placed facing each other in a vacuum, more virtual photons can exist around the outside of the mirrors than between them, generating a seemingly mysterious force that pushes the mirrors together.

This phenomenon, predicted in 1948 by the Dutch physicist Hendrick Casimir and known as the Casimir effect, was first seen with mirrors held still?. Researchers also predicted a dynamical Casimir effect that can result when mirrors are moved, or objects otherwise undergo change. Now quantum physicist Pasi L?hteenm?ki at Aalto University in Finland and his colleagues reveal that by varying the speed at which light can travel, they can make light appear from nothing.

The speed of light in a vacuum is constant, according to Einstein's theory of relativity, but its speed passing through any given material depends on a property of that substance known as its index of refraction. By varying a material's index of refraction, researchers can influence the speed at which both real and virtual photons travel within it. L?hteenm?ki says one can think of this system as being much like a mirror, and if its thickness changes fast enough, virtual photons reflecting off it can receive enough energy from the bounce to turn into real photons. "Imagine you stay in a very dark room and suddenly the index of refraction of light [of the room] changes," L?hteenm?ki says. "The room will start to glow."

The researchers began with an array of 250 superconducting quantum-interference devices, or SQUIDs?circuits that are extraordinarily sensitive to magnetic fields. They inserted the array inside a refrigerator. By carefully exerting magnetic fields on this array, they could vary the speed at which microwave photons traveled through it by a few percent. The researchers then cooled this array to 50 thousandths of a degree Celsius above absolute zero. Because this environment is supercold, it should not emit any radiation, essentially behaving as a vacuum. "We were simply studying these circuits for the purpose of developing an amplifier, which we did," says researcher Sorin Paraoanu, a theoretical physicist at Aalto University. "But then we asked ourselves?what if there is no signal to amplify? What happens if the vacuum is the signal?"

The researchers detected photons that matched predictions from the dynamical Casimir effect. For instance, such photons should display the strange property of quantum entanglement?that is, by measuring the details of one, scientists could in principle know exactly what its counterpart is like, no matter where it is in the universe, a phenomenon Einstein referred to as "spooky action at a distance." The scientists detailed their findings online February 11 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=6aa317651f815de3df9ca67f64150f42

London 2012 rhythmic gymnastics Meteor Shower August 2012 jessie j jessie j David Boudia David Rakoff Bourne Legacy

"Pueblos Unidos" decapita a dos y manda aviso a Los Zetas en C?rdenas, Tabasco

"Pueblos Unidos" decapita a dos y manda aviso a Los Zetas en C?rdenas, Tabasco ~ Narcoviolencia-Notinfomex.INFO skip to main | skip to sidebar

"Pueblos Unidos" decapita a dos y manda aviso a Los Zetas en C?rdenas, Tabasco

click here
Dos cuerpos decapitados fueron encontrados la ma?ana de este domingo en la colonia Pueblo Nuevo de esta cabecera municipal y m?s tarde en otra parte de la ciudad fueron halladas las dos cabezas junto con una cartulina cuyo mensaje iba dirigido al grupo delictivo "Los Zetas".

Los primeros informes se?alan que las dos personas decapitadas fueron descubiertas sobre la calle Rep?blica de Argentina, entre Carrillo Puerto y Francisco Trujillo. Uno de los cuerpos portaba pantal?n de mezclilla y estaba desnudo del torso, entre tanto el otro vest?a playera roja y pantal?n de mezclilla.

Al lugar arribaron las fuerzas federales y la polic?a ministerial acordonando el ?rea cuando en esos momentos fueron alertados que en la calle Carlos A. Madrazo de la colonia El Palmar fueron encontradas las cabezas de los ejecutados con un mensaje que dec?a textualmente:

?

"esto les ba a pasar a todos los que secuestren y maten por paga y violen asi como a los que apollen a los zetas y los policias que "TAMBIEN" se prestan para delinquir que nosotros ya tenemos "UBICADOS" ATTE Pueblos Unidos PUC" (SIC)".

Al arribar al lugar, las fuerzas de seguridad observaron que las dos cabezas estaban juntas,

Las autoridades ministeriales tras realizar su trabajo de rigor levantaron los cuerpos y las cabezas y todas las evidencias halladas, y los llevaron al Servicio M?dico Forense, donde los cad?veres est?n en calidad de desconocidos.

?

';var pageArea=document.getElementsByName("pageArea");var blogPager=document.getElementById("blog-pager");if(postNum0){html=''}if(blogPager){blogPager.innerHTML=html}}function showpageCount2(json){var thisUrl=home_page_url;var htmlMap=new Array();var isLablePage=thisUrl.indexOf("/search/label/")!=-1;var thisLable=isLablePage?thisUrl.substr(thisUrl.indexOf("/search/label/")+14,thisUrl.length):"";thisLable=thisLable.indexOf("?")!=-1?thisLable.substr(0,thisLable.indexOf("?")):thisLable;var thisNum=1;var postNum=1;var itemCount=0;var fFlag=0;var eFlag=0;var html='';var upPageHtml='';var downPageHtml='';var labelHtml='';var thisUrl=home_page_url;for(var i=0,post;post=json.feed.entry[i];i++){var timestamp1=post.published.$t.substring(0,19)+post.published.$t.substring(23,29);timestamp=encodeURIComponent(timestamp1);var title=post.title.$t;if(title!=''){if(itemCount==0||(itemCount%pageCount==(pageCount-1))){if(thisUrl.indexOf(timestamp)!=-1){thisNum=postNum}if(title!='')postNum++;htmlMap[htmlMap.length]='/search/label/'+thisLable+'?updated-max='+timestamp+'&max-results='+pageCount}}itemCount++}for(var p=0;p=(thisNum-displayPageNum-1)&&p'}else{upPageHtml=''+upPageWord+''}fFlag++}if(p==(thisNum-1)){html+=''+thisNum+''}else{if(p==0){html=labelHtml+'1'}else{html+=''+(p+1)+''}}if(eFlag==0&&p==thisNum){downPageHtml=' '+downPageWord+'';eFlag++}}}if(thisNum>1){if(!isLablePage){html=''+upPageHtml+' '+html+' '}else{html=''+upPageHtml+' '+html+' '}}html='

Pages ('+(postNum-1)+')'+html;if(thisNum';var pageArea=document.getElementsByName("pageArea");var blogPager=document.getElementById("blog-pager");if(postNum0){html=''}if(blogPager){blogPager.innerHTML=html}}var home_page_url=location.href;var thisUrl=home_page_url;if(thisUrl.indexOf("/search/label/")!=-1){if(thisUrl.indexOf("?updated-max")!=-1){var lblname1=thisUrl.substring(thisUrl.indexOf("/search/label/")+14,thisUrl.indexOf("?updated-max"))}else{var lblname1=thisUrl.substring(thisUrl.indexOf("/search/label/")+14,thisUrl.indexOf("?&max"))}}var home_page="/";if(thisUrl.indexOf("?q=")==-1){if(thisUrl.indexOf("/search/label/")==-1){document.write('

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Notinfomex/~3/XGWyTf5_9iU/pueblos-unidos-decapita-dos-y-manda.html

presidents day band of brothers presidents george washington russell westbrook horsetail falls ice t

Lack of Energy is an Enemy to Antibiotic-Resistant Microbes

Rice University researchers ?cured? a strain of bacteria of its ability to resist an antibiotic in an experiment that has implications for a long-standing public health crisis.
?
Rice environmental engineer Pedro Alvarez and his team managed to remove the ability of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa microorganism to resist the antibiotic medication tetracycline by limiting its access to food and oxygen.
?
Over 120 generations, the starving bacteria chose to conserve valuable energy rather than use it to pass on the plasmid ? a small and often transmissible DNA element ? that allows it to resist tetracycline.
?
The researchers? results, reported this month in the American Chemical Society journal Environmental Science and Technology, are the latest in a long effort to understand the environmental aspects of antibiotic resistance, which threatens decades of progress in fighting disease.
?
?The propagation of antibiotic resistance has been perceived as a medical or microbiology-related problem,? Alvarez says. ?And it truly is a serious problem. But what many people miss is that it is also an environmental pollution problem. A lot of the antibiotic-resistant bacteria originate in animal agriculture, where there is overuse, misuse and abuse of antibiotics.?
?
Alvarez contended that confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs) are potential sources of environmental contamination by antibiotics and the associated antibiotic-resistant genes that find their way into the ground, water and ultimately the food supply.
?
?We started with the hypothesis that microbes don?t like to carry excess baggage,? he says. ?That means they will drop genes they?re not using because there is a metabolic burden, a high energy cost, to keeping them.?
?
The Rice researchers tested their theory on two strains of bacteria, P. aeruginosa, which is found in soil, and E. coli, which carries resistant genes directly from animals through their feces into the environment.
?
By slowly starving them of nutrients and/or oxygen through successive generations, they found that in the absence of tetracycline, both microbes dumped the resistance plasmid, though not entirely in the case of E. coli. But P. aeruginosa completely shed the genetic element responsible for resistance, which made it susceptible once again to antibiotics. When a high level of tetracycline was present, both microbes retained a level of resistance.
?
One long-recognized problem with antibiotics is that they tend to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. If any antibiotic-resistant bacteria are part of a biological mix, whether in a person, an animal or in the environment, the weak microbes will die and the resistant will survive and propagate; this process is known by biologists as ?selective pressure.?
?
So there is incentive to eliminate the resistance plasmid from bacteria in the environment as close to the source as possible. The experiments point to possible remediation strategies, Alvarez said. ?There are practical implications to what we did,? he said. ?If we can put an anaerobic barrier at the point where a lagoon drains into the environment, we will essentially exert selective pressure for the loss of antibiotic-resistant genes and mitigate the propagation of these factors.?
?
An anaerobic barrier may be as cheap and simple as mulch in the drainage channel, he says. ?If you have a CAFO draining through a channel, then put an anaerobic barrier in that channel. A mulch barrier will do.? He said a mulch barrier only a meter thick could contact slow-moving groundwater for more than a month. ?That may not kill the bacteria, but it?s enough to have bacteria notice a deficiency in their ability to obtain energy from the environment and feel the stress to dump resistant genes.?
?
Alvarez has been chipping away at the problem since moving to Rice from the University of Iowa in 2004, even without American funding for research. His study of the Haihe River in China, funded by the Chinese government and published last year, found tetracycline resistance genes are common in the environment there as well. ?We tested water and river sediment and couldn?t find a sample that didn?t have them,? he says.
?
?Our philosophy in environmental engineering is that an ounce of prevention is worth more than a pound of remediation,? Alvarez says. ?Prevention here is, basically, don?t let these genes proliferate. Don?t let them amplify in the environment. Stop them before they?re released. And one easy way is to put up an anaerobic barrier.?
?
Co-authors of the paper are Rice alumni Michal Rysz, now an environmental engineer at GSI Environmental Inc., Houston; William Mansfield, a scientist at the EPA in Dallas; and John Fortner, an assistant professor at Washington University, St. Louis. Alvarez is the George R. Brown Professor and chair of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Rice.

Source: Rice University

Source: http://www.infectioncontroltoday.com/news/2013/02/lack-of-energy-is-an-enemy-to-antibioticresistant-microbes.aspx

crystal cathedral st. patrick s day brandon lloyd brandon lloyd celtic thunder fabrice muamba collapse prometheus trailer

Taylor Swift Leads A White-Hot Circus At The Grammys

Swift opens Sunday's show with Record of the Year nominee 'We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together.'
By Jocelyn Vena


Taylor Swift performs at the 55th annual Grammy Awards
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1701700/taylor-swift-grammys-2013-opening.jhtml

dark knight trailer delmon young dallas mavericks washington capitals amare stoudemire tallest building in the world the pitch

No date for Valentine's Day? New apps may help

TORONTO (Reuters) - Singles who believe in love at first sight can turn to new apps that will match them with potential dates in time for Valentine's Day, but only if each person has expressed an interest.

With the new dating apps, users simply flip through photos of people in nearby locations and express their interest in dating someone. If there's a mutual attraction, the app connects them for a conversation. If not, their feelings remain anonymous.

"It limits the conversations to people you've actually expressed an interest in. So each of those conversations starts at a very deep level," said Sean Rad, co-founder and CEO of Los Angeles-based company Tinder, which developed the app of the same name.

Makers of the Tinder app, which is available worldwide for iPhone, said it has matched more than 10 million couples since it was launched in September.

The app pulls in member photos of people from Facebook, and then it's as simple as anonymously indicating interest in that person. If both people like each other, messages can be sent between the two users.

Rad said most users are between 18 and 30 years old.

Let's Date, which was released across the United States last week for the iPhone, is a similar app. But rather than simply focusing on the photo, the app provides the person's interests from Facebook for a broader view of the potential date.

"Our goal was to create an app that replicated the real world experience of going to a party or bar full of potentially eligible people," said Sean Suhl, founder of Let's Date.

"You're put into a crowd of people and if someone catches your eye and they catch your eye, then a conversation is struck up and then someone might ask the other person out on a date," he added.

The app resulted from a frustration with other dating apps, according to Suhl, who described them as "artificial and laborious".

"We're just presenting you the daters and you're just saying yes or no," he added.

Both apps require a login with Facebook, so people must use their real identity. Let's Date also stipulates that users must have been active on Facebook for a year, and have at least 50 friends before signing up.

Although the apps can set people up quickly, it still could take a while to find the right person.

"People are literally getting dates the same night, but you might want to give yourself enough time to find the right Valentine," Rad said.

Both companies plan to release Android apps.

(Editing by Patricia Reaney; and Peter Galloway)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/no-date-valentines-day-apps-may-help-161008287--finance.html

arizona republican debate arizona debate enquirer national inquirer knicks vs heat ash wednesday kate walsh

Monday, February 11, 2013

Hathaway eyes more musicals after 'Les Miserables'

BERLIN (AP) ? Anne Hathaway says she'd like to do more musicals after the Oscar-nominated "Les Miserables" ? but don't expect her to launch into a singing career.

Director Tom Hooper on Saturday presented his movie, an adaptation of a Broadway musical based on Victor Hugo's novel, at the Berlin film festival.

Hathaway's role as an outcast mother reduced to prostitution has won her an Oscar nomination for best supporting actress.

She told reporters she hopes to do more musicals and would like more to be made ? "I'm a big fan of them, so that would make me very happy both as an actress and as an audience member."

But Hathaway says the experience hasn't made her more comfortable singing in public. She says: "I have no plans for recording an album."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hathaway-eyes-more-musicals-les-miserables-193138951.html

world war z Ed Koch Groundhog Day 2013 groundhog day What Time Is The Superbowl Caleb Moore House of Cards

DJ Paul to Justin Bieber: Stay Off the Sizzurp!

Source:

roses flower delivery e cards kate upton sports illustrated outback chaka khan taylor swift safe and sound