Sunday, June 30, 2013

BSkyB wins trademark case against Microsoft over SkyDrive name

BSkyB wins European trademark case against Microsoft over SkyDrive name

While many can tell the difference between Sky TV services and Microsoft's SkyDrive cloud storage, that's not necessarily true for everyone. A British court certainly thinks there's room for confusion: it has ruled that SkyDrive infringes BSkyB's trademarks on the Sky name in both the UK and the European Union. The presiding judge didn't believe that Microsoft's use of the "sky" prefix was absolutely necessary, and she showed evidence that at least some of the general public didn't understand which company made what. Microsoft says it plans to appeal the verdict, although there's no guarantee that it will have to relabel SkyDrive if the appeal falls through. Some past trademark lawsuits have led to fines instead of name changes, and we suspect Microsoft would rather pay out than lose brand recognition across a whole continent.

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EXCLUSIVE: HPD parking shortage concerns officers, police union chief

HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) -

East Honolulu police officers who were warned they could be disciplined for not coming to work on time staged a sickout Monday night, in an incident that highlights the Honolulu Police Department's parking shortage.

Half the patrol officers on third watch, from 2:30 to 11 p.m. covering Manoa to Makapuu called in sick Monday night, in part because of the discipline warning and because a captain asked supervisors to start checking officers' odometers in their vehicles to make sure there were going on patrol.???

There's not enough room for all of the police vehicles inside HPD's garage at its Beretania Street headquarters, particularly at shift change around 2:30 p.m. every afternoon.?

"There is a huge problem, because it's not just officers.? We have civilian employees as well.? So parking is very very difficult," said Tenari Maafala, president of the State of Hawaii Organization of Police Officers, the union that represents about 1,900 Honolulu police officers.???

The police garage is already full of cars of personnel from a half dozen divisions parking there during the day. Then at 2:30 in the afternoon, the problem is compounded when patrol officers from three districts come to work, while some of the officers from the previous shift are returning to headquarters.????

"Even within the station itself, you got officers double parking. So officers are being disciplined for that as well, parking out of stall within the structure of which they are allowed to park," Maafala said.?

Until a few years ago, the area behind the main police station on the King Street side, was a parking lot where police employees regularly parked.? But now it's the Alapai Transit Center, with buses, benches and shelters for bus riders that is no longer available for HPD parking.?

"We have hundreds of sworn and civilian employees at the main station and we understand that during certain times parking can be a problem," said HPD Media Liaison Teresa Bell in a written statement.?

To help ease the parking crunch, she said police dispatchers park in a new city parking structure right next to HPD headquarters and most other HPD civilian employees pay to park at Neal Blaisdell Center.? She could not estimate the number of HPD employees who already park at those off-site facilities because she said the HPD employees with those numbers were in a training session Friday afternoon.?

Recently East Honolulu patrol officers were reminded to come to work on time or face discipline by Captain Calvin Tong, who oversees the patrol district that includes Manoa, Hawaii Kai, ?But Maafala said that's not fair.?

"You can't blame the officers.? When they're pulling up, there's nowhere to park.? And you're not going to just double park a car out on the street, especially, when those lanes are not authorized to be used by police vehicles," Maafala said.?

"We are encouraging our officers to take into account the current parking situation and leave ample time when reporting for duty to ensure that they get to work on time," said Bell, the HPD spokeswoman.?

"We are currently looking at other alternative parking options for police officers who are unable to find parking during normal business hours at the main station," Bell added.??

So far, no officers have been either disciplined or counseled for being late to work because of the parking problems, according to HPD spokeswoman Michelle Yu.?

HPD said public safety was not jeopardized during the sickout Monday night that affected East Honolulu, from Manoa to Makapuu.? The department held over officers from the previous shift, brought in others from their days off and temporarily assigned desk-bound officers to the field that night to assure all beats were staffed, HPD said.

Copyright 2013 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/story/22719918/exclusive-hpd-parking-shortage-concerns-officers-police-union-chief

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Scientists view 'protein origami' to help understand, prevent certain diseases

June 28, 2013 ? Scientists using sophisticated imaging techniques have observed a molecular protein folding process that may help medical researchers understand and treat diseases such as Alzheimer's, Lou Gehrig's and cancer.

The study, reported this month in the journal Cell, verifies a process that scientists knew existed but with a mechanism they had never been able to observe, according to Dr. Hays Rye, Texas A&M AgriLife Research biochemist.

"This is a step in the direction of understanding how to modulate systems to prevent diseases like Alzheimer's. We needed to understand the cell's folding machines and how they interact with each other in a complicated network," said Rye, who also is associate professor of biochemistry and biophysics at Texas A&M.

Rye explained that individual amino acids get linked together like beads on a string as a protein is made in the cell.

"But that linear sequence of amino acids is not functional," he explained. "It's like an origami structure that has to fold up into a three-dimensional shape to do what it has to do."

Rye said researchers have been trying to understand this process for more than 50 years, but in a living cell the process is complicated by the presence of many proteins in a concentrated environment.

"The constraints on getting that protein to fold up into a good 'origami' structure are a lot more demanding," he said. "So, there are special protein machines, known as molecular chaperones, in the cell that help proteins fold."

But how the molecular chaperones help protein fold when it isn't folding well by itself has been the nagging question for researchers.

"Molecular chaperones are like little machines, because they have levers and gears and power sources. They go through turning over cycles and just sort of buzz along inside a cell, driving a protein folding reaction every few seconds," Rye said.

The many chemical reactions that are essential to life rely on the exact three-dimensional shape of folded proteins, he said. In the cell, enzymes, for example, are specialized proteins that help speed biological processes along by binding molecules and bringing them together in just the right way.

"They are bound together like a three-dimensional jigsaw puzzle," Rye explained. "And the proteins -- those little beads on the string that are designed to fold up like origami -- are folded to position all these beads in three-dimensional space to perfectly wrap around those molecules and do those chemical reactions.

"If that doesn't happen -- if the protein doesn't get folded up right -- the chemical reaction can't be done. And if it's essential, the cell dies because it can't convert food into power needed to build the other structures in the cell that are needed. Chemical reactions are the structural underpinning of how cells are put together, and all of that depends on the proteins being folded in the right way."

When a protein doesn't fold or folds incorrectly it turns into an "aggregate," which Rye described as "white goo that looks kind of like a mayonnaise, like crud in the test tube.

"You're dead; the cell dies," he said.

Over the past 20 years, he said, researchers have linked that aggregation process "pretty convincingly" to the development of diseases -- Alzheimer's disease, Lou Gehrig's disease, Huntington's disease, to name a few. There's evidence that diabetes and cancer also are linked to protein folding disorders.

"One of the main roles for the molecular chaperones is preventing those protein misfolding events that lead to aggregation and not letting a cell get poisoned by badly folded or aggregated proteins," he said.

Rye's team focused on a key molecular chaperone -- the HSP60.

"They're called HSP for 'heat shock protein' because when the cell is stressed with heat, the proteins get unstable and start to fall apart and unfold," Rye said. "The cell is built to respond by making more of the chaperones to try and fix the problem.

"This particular chaperone takes unfolded protein and goes through a chemical reaction to bind the unfolded protein and literally puts it inside a little 'box,'" Rye said.

He added that the mystery had long been how the folding worked because, while researchers could see evidence of that happening, no one had ever seen precisely how it happened.

Rye and the team zeroed in on a chemically modified mutant that in other experiments had seemed to stall at an important step in the process that the "machine" goes through to start the folding action. This clued the researchers that this stalling might make it easier to watch.

They then used cryo-electron microscopy to capture hundreds of thousands of images of the process at very high resolutions which allowed them to reconstruct from two-dimensional flat images a three-dimensional model. A highly sophisticated computer algorithm aligns the images and classifies them in subcategories.

"If you have enough of them you can actually reconstruct and view a structure as a three-dimensional model," Rye said.

What the team saw was this: The HSP60 chaperone is designed to recognize proteins that are not folded from the ones that are. It binds them and then has a separate co-chaperone that puts a "lid" on top of the box to keep the folding intermediate in the box. They could see the box move, and parts of the molecule moved to peel the chaperone box away from the bound protein -- or "gift" in the box. But the bound protein was kept inside the package where it could then initiate a folding reaction. They saw tiny tentacles, "like a little octopus in the bottom of the box rising up and grabbing hold of the substrate protein and helping hold it inside the cavity."

"The first thing we saw was a large amount of an unfolded protein inside of this cavity," he said. "Even though we knew from lots and lots of other studies that it had to go in there, nobody had ever seen it like this before. We can also see the non-native protein interacting with parts of the box that no one had ever seen before. It was exciting to see all of this for the first time. I think we got a glimpse of a protein in the process of folding, which we actually can compare to other structures."

"By understanding the mechanism of these machines, the hope is that one of the things we can learn to do is turn them up or turn them off when we need to, like for a patient who has one of the protein folding diseases," he said.

Rye collaborated on the research with Dong-Hua Chen and Wah Chiu at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Damian Madan and Zohn Lin at Princeton University, Jeremy Weaver at Texas A&M and Gunnar Schr?der at the Institute of Complex Systems in Germany.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/PfjFPU7j0xE/130628120759.htm

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Immigration overhaul: Senate passes historic bill

WASHINGTON (AP) -- With a solemnity reserved for momentous occasions, the Senate passed historic legislation Thursday offering the priceless hope of citizenship to millions of immigrants living illegally in America's shadows. The bill also promises a military-style effort to secure the long-porous border with Mexico.

The bipartisan vote was 68-32 on a measure that sits atop President Barack Obama's second-term domestic agenda. Even so, the bill's prospects are highly uncertain in the Republican-controlled House, where conservatives generally oppose citizenship for immigrants living in the country unlawfully.

Spectators in galleries that overlook the Senate floor watched expectantly as senators voted one by one from their desks. Some onlookers erupted in chants of "Yes, we can" after Vice President Joe Biden announced the bill's passage.

After three weeks of debate, there was no doubt about the outcome. Fourteen Republicans joined all 52 Democrats and two independents to support the bill.

In a written statement, Obama coupled praise for the Senate's action with a plea for resolve by supporters as the House works on the issue. "Now is the time when opponents will try their hardest to pull this bipartisan effort apart so they can stop commonsense reform from becoming a reality. We cannot let that happen," said the president, who was traveling in Africa.

After the bill passed, he called Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., a leading author of the bill, to offer congratulations.

In the final hours of debate, members of the so-called Gang of 8, the group that drafted the measure, frequently spoke in personal terms while extolling the bill's virtues, rebutting its critics ? and appealing to the House members who turn comes next.

"Do the right thing for America and for your party," said Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., who said his mother emigrated to the United States from Cuba. "Find common ground. Lean away from the extremes. Opt for reason and govern with us."

Arizona Republican Sen. Jeff Flake said those seeking legal status after living in the United States illegally must "pass a background check, make good on any tax liability and pay a fee and a fine." There are other requirements before citizenship can be obtained, he noted.

He, too, spoke from personal experience, recalling time he spent as a youth working alongside family members and "undocumented migrant labor, largely from Mexico, who worked harder than we did under conditions much more difficult than we endured."

Since then, he said, "I have harbored a feeling of admiration and respect for those who have come to risk life and limb and sacrifice so much to provide a better life for themselves and their families."

The bill's opponents were unrelenting, if outnumbered.

"We will admit dramatically more people than we ever have in our country's history at a time when unemployment is high and the Congressional Budget Office has told us that average wages will go down for 12 years, that gross national product per capita will decline for 25-plus years, that unemployment will go up," said Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala.

"The amnesty will occur, but the enforcement is not going to occur, and the policies for future immigration are not serving the national interest."

In the Senate, at least, the developments marked an end to years of gridlock on immigration. The shift began taking shape quickly after the 2012 presidential election, when numerous Republican leaders concluded the party must show a more welcoming face to Hispanic voters who had given Obama more than 70 percent of their support.

Even so, division among Republicans was evident as potential 2016 presidential contenders split. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida was one of the Gang of 8, while Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky and Ted Cruz of Texas were opposed to the bill.

The legislation's chief provisions includes numerous steps to prevent future illegal immigration ? some added in a late compromise that swelled Republican support for the bill ? and to check on the legal status of job applicants already living in the United States. At the same time, it offers a 13-year path to citizenship to as many as 11 million immigrants now living in the country unlawfully.

Under the deal brokered last week by Republican Sens. John Hoeven of North Dakota and Bob Corker of Tennessee and the Gang of 8, the measure requires 20,000 new Border Patrol agents, the completion of 700 miles of fencing and deployment of an array of high-tech devices along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Those living in the country illegally could gain legal status while the border security plan was being implemented, but would not be granted permanent resident green cards or citizenship.

A plan requiring businesses to check on the legal status of prospective employees would be phased in over four years.

Other provisions would expand the number of visas available for highly skilled workers relied upon by the technology industry. A separate program would be established for lower-skilled workers, and farm workers would be admitted under a temporary program. In addition, the system of legal immigration that has been in effect for decades would be changed, making family ties less of a factor and elevating the importance of education, job skills and relative youth.

With the details of the Senate bill well-known, House Speaker John Boehner said at a news conference the separate legislation the House considers will have majority support among Republicans. He also said he hopes the bill will be bipartisan, and he encouraged a group of four Democrats and three Republicans trying to forge a compromise to continue their efforts.

He offered no details on how a House bill could be both bipartisan and supported by more than half of his own rank and file, given that most of the bills that have moved through the House Judiciary Committee recently did so on party line votes over the protests of Democrats. None envisions legal status for immigrants now in the country illegally.

Boehner declined to say if there were circumstances under which he could support a pathway to citizenship, but he made clear that securing the border was a priority.

"People have to have confidence that the border is secure before anything else is really going to work. Otherwise, we repeat the mistakes of 1986," he said, referring to the last time Congress overhauled the immigration system.

Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California, the House Democratic leader, also said he favors a bipartisan approach. At the same time, she noted that Democratic principles for immigration include "secure our borders, protect our workers, unite families, a path to legalization and now citizenship for those" without legal status.

While the outcome of the Senate vote was not in doubt, supporters scrambled to maximize the vote and fell short of 70, a level they had talked of reaching. Schumer spoke with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie on Wednesday night as he lobbied ? successfully ? for the vote of the state's Republican Sen. Jeff Chiesa, whom the governor appointed to his seat.

___

Associated Press writer Donna Cassata contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/immigration-overhaul-senate-passes-historic-204756712.html

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Video: Market Master's Top Investment Plays

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Beneath NYC's ground zero, a museum takes shape

NEW YORK (AP) ? Gray dust blankets everything in the subterranean halls of the unfinished National September 11 Memorial & Museum. But while the powder may look ominously like the ash that covered lower Manhattan after the terrorist attacks, this time it is a product of rebirth, not destruction.

After a yearlong construction shutdown because of a funding dispute, and additional months of cleanup following a shocking flood caused by Superstorm Sandy, work has been racing ahead again at the museum, which sits in a cavernous space below the World Trade Center memorial plaza that opened in 2011.

About 130 workers are at the site each day and there is much left to be done, but officials with the museum said the project is on track to open to the public in the spring of 2014.

Some of the museum's most emotion-inspiring artifacts already are anchored in place.

Tears rolled down Anthoula Katsimatides' cheeks Thursday as she toured halls holding a mangled fire truck, strangely beautiful tangles of rebar and the pieces of intersecting steel known as the Ground Zero Cross.

"It makes me sad," said Katsimatides, whose brother John died at the trade center. But it's also inspiring, said Katsimatides, who sits on the museum's board. "Seeing it come to fruition is pretty intense."

Work on the museum was halted for nearly a year, starting in the fall of 2011, because of a money fight between the memorial foundation and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which owns the trade center site.

In retrospect, that slowdown was a blessing. Shortly after the two sides worked out their differences, Superstorm Sandy sent the Hudson River thundering through lower Manhattan and filled the museum cavern with 7? feet of water.

The flood destroyed interior walls and electrical circuits, but the construction delay meant that hundreds of artifacts and exhibits that might have been in the museum still hadn't been fabricated or were sitting safely in storage. There was minor flash rusting to one of the fire trucks that had already been lowered into the space, but the damage was repaired by conservators and isn't noticeable today, said National September 11 Memorial & Museum President Joseph Daniels.

Today there is no sign that there was ever a flood. Daniels said there has been "almost indescribable" progress on construction since the storm.

Structural work appears mostly complete on the glass pavilion and wide staircase and ramp visitors will use to descend into the museum, past two towering "tridents" that once helped form the distinctive base of the twin towers. Once silvery, the columns were stripped bare by the fires on 9/11 and are now the color of rusted, raw steel.

From a mezzanine, patrons will be able to peer into a deep, nave-like hallway nicknamed the South Canyon. The hall's high western wall will eventually be covered with a multitude of notes and letters of support that people around the world sent to New York after the attacks.

"They continue to send things. It's amazing," Katsimatides said. "That outpouring of support is one of the things that got the 9/11 families through."

Further down the ramp, visitors come to a platform overlooking an even more massive cavern bordered by the slurry wall, a 70-foot-tall, steel-studded concrete slab originally built to keep the Hudson River from flooding the trade center construction site.

In the hall's center stands the last steel column removed from ground zero during the cleanup operation. Recovery workers covered the pillar with their signatures before it was carried away, and visitors will get a chance to leave their own mark on another big piece of steel near the museum's exit ? though their autographs will be captured by a computerized touch screen and projected on the slurry wall, rather than left in ink on metal.

Throughout the museum, curators have hung pieces of steel that were bent and twisted into striking shapes, including one sheet of metal that now appears to ripple like a flag and a huge girder bent by the impact of the aircraft hitting the towers.

Many of them look like sculptures.

"In a strange way, they are like pieces of art," Katsimatides said. But Daniels added that they weren't chosen for their beauty, but to explain what happened at the site on 9/11.

A few design elements of the museum are still under discussion.

When visitors descend to the very bottom of the museum ? where, in some places, they will be able to view the very bedrock that the towers once rested upon ? they will enter a hall with a large wall bearing an inscription from Virgil. "No day shall erase you from the memory of time."

Behind that wall will sit a special mausoleum, off limits to the general public, containing the unidentified remains of hundreds of 9/11 victims. Most of the interior walls of the museum have the look of bare concrete, as a constant reminder of the site's location within the old trade center foundation. But Daniels said the museum's designers are talking about possibly cladding this wall in a different material, or a different color, to separate it from the rest.

"It's a special place. Do we need something to distinguish it?" he said.

The bulk of the work remaining to be completed will revolve around installing the museum's exhibits, which will include many artifacts, including a wall made up of portraits of all 2,983 victims and a room where visitors will be able to call up video presentations that tell a story about each of them.

"The idea is to learn about the lives that they lived, not just the deaths that they died," Daniels said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/beneath-nycs-ground-zero-museum-takes-shape-072748254.html

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Friday, June 28, 2013

The Argle-Bargle Gabfest

Become a fan of the Political Gabfest on Facebook. We post to the Facebook page throughout the week, so keep the conversation going by joining us there. Or follow us @SlateGabfest!

To listen to the discussion, use the player below:

Chicago Live Show: Wednesday, July 10, 7 p.m., at the Thorne Auditorium on the Chicago campus of Northwestern University. Tickets and additional information. Now with special guest Peter Sagal, host of NPR?s ?Wait Wait ? Don?t Tell Me!?

On this week?s Slate Political Gabfest, Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz discuss the Supreme Court?s historic rulings on same-sex marriage and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. They also discuss why an epic filibuster in the Texas senate riveted the country?s attention.

Here are some of the links and references mentioned during this week's show:

?Topic ideas for next week? You can tweet suggestions, links, and questions to @SlateGabfest. The email address for the Political Gabfest is gabfest@slate.com. (Email may be quoted by name unless the writer stipulates otherwise.)

Podcast production by Mike Vuolo. Links compiled by Jeff Friedrich.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/podcasts/gabfest/2013/06/gay_marriage_voting_rights_act_wendy_davis_filibuster_on_the_gabfest.html

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Not Just for Textbooks Anymore, Literati Helps Students Find ...

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Educators and students who have enjoyed the instructional and learning tools incorporated in Credo?s Literati School now have new feature to utilize, embedded at no additional cost to Literati subscribers. Literati School, which is already in use in over six hundred schools and institutions, will now help students find scholarship opportunities to pay for college at a time when costs have reached an all-time high. Called the FundingFinder Express, this feature will not only increase the value of Literati School for its subscribers, but will help students and their families locate sources of tuition revenue.

According to a release from Credo, ?Drawing on Reference Service Press?s award-winning database, FundingFinder Express offers students the opportunity to customize their search for college aid, receive email alerts when new scholarships that match their profile become available and get deadline date reminders, so they don?t miss out on scholarships that are closing soon.?

?We were excited to establish our partnership with Reference Service Press earlier this year and are thrilled to have implemented this new service,? said Carol Helton, Executive Vice President of Customer Solutions and Marketing, in a statement. ?Reference Service Press? reputation for providing the highest quality financial aid directories, ebooks and searchable databases preceded them and we are seeing great results from this first implementation of the financial aid tool in Literati School.?

While Reference Service Press has had a long and accomplished history of helping specific demographics uncover scholarship sources, groups that include women, minorities, student athletes, persons with disabilities, individuals with ties to the military, and those interested in specific majors, the FundingFinder Express is open to all users of Credo?s Literati School.

Mercy Pilkington (1155 Posts)

Mercy Pilkington is a young-adult author and a teacher in a correctional facility. She does not have a single textbook in her classroom. With the top-of-the-line technology at her disposal and the low reading ability of many of her students, there?s no need for standard paper texts. Instead she relies on e-readers, iPads, desktop PCs, Polycom video conferencing equipment for virtual field trips, live streaming for science demonstrations, and text-to-speech read-aloud software to teach English and science. Within the next ten years, public school classrooms across the country are going to look a lot more like Mercy?s classroom because the educational possibilities with these kinds of technologies are limitless. Have a question? Send an email to mercypilkington@yahoo.com


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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Feds sue ex-NJ governor Corzine over MF Global failure

mf-global

1 hour ago

Former MF Global CEO Jon Corzine testifies before a House Financial Services Committee Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee hearing on the collap...

JONATHAN ERNST / Reuters

Former MF Global CEO Jon Corzine testifies before a House Financial Services Committee Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee hearing on the collapse of MF Global, at the U.S. Capitol in Washington in this December 15, 2011 file photo.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is suing former MF Global CEO Jon Corzine for failure to supervise at the defunct firm.

In a statement, the regulator said it seeks to ban the former governor of New Jersey from working in the futures industry for his alleged role in the firm's bankruptcy 18 months ago.

The suit also targets the former treasurer of the company, Edith O'Brien, and alleges that MF Global misused funds prior to its collapse. The CFTC is asking for a $100 million penalty against the company.

MF Global collapsed in October 2011 under the weight of aggressive bets on sovereign debt, thin capital and questionable disclosures to investors. Customers were left reeling after it was revealed that more than $1 billion of their money could not be found.

Corzine is charged with violating his legal obligations to diligently supervise. O'Brien is charged with aiding and abetting the firm's misuse of customer funds.

Reuters contributed to this report.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663286/s/2de407d7/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Cfeds0Esue0Eex0Enj0Egovernor0Ecorzine0Eover0Emf0Eglobal0Efailure0E6C10A472546/story01.htm

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Obesity May Boost Migraine Odds - Health News and Views - Health ...

By Marijke Vroomen Durning
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, June 26 (HealthDay News) ? Obese people may be at higher risk for episodic migraine headaches, a new study suggests.

Migraines involve intense pulsing or throbbing pain in one area of the head, according to the American Academy of Neurology. Symptoms can include nausea, vomiting and sensitivity to light and sound. Migraines affect more than 10 percent of the population.

Episodic migraines ? the more common type of migraine ? occur 14 days or fewer per month, while chronic migraines occur at least 15 days per month. Low-frequency episodic migraines occur the least often.

In the new study of nearly 3,700 adults, those with a high body-mass index ? a measure of body fat determined using height and weight ? had much higher odds of having episodic migraines than did those with a lower body-mass index (BMI). This was particularly true among women, whites and people under 50 years old. As the BMI moved from normal weight to overweight to obese, so did the rate of headaches.

The cross-sectional study doesn?t prove that obesity causes episodic migraines. The study does, however, demonstrate that people who are obese have an increased risk of having more of them, even low-frequency ones, said lead author Dr. B. Lee Peterlin, an associate professor of neurology and the director of headache research at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, in Baltimore.

The study is to be presented this week at the International Headache Congress, in Boston. The data and conclusions should be viewed as preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

Dr. Gretchen Tietjen, a professor of neurology and director of the headache treatment and research program at the University of Toledo, in Ohio, said she found the study interesting because previous studies had looked for connections between obesity and chronic migraines.

?That the researchers were able to show an association between obesity and episodic migraine lends more credence to some of the earlier studies that found similar things,? she said.

She pointed out, however, that it still isn?t known which came first ? the obesity or the migraine. There are many possible scenarios, Tietjen said. ?Maybe the person had the migraines first and then started taking medications like amitriptyline or valproic acid,? she said. ?Those medications are associated with weight gain.?

The possible connection between obesity and migraines is under debate. One theory involves inflammatory substances from fat tissue (adipose) that are released into the system, Tietjen said.

Premenopausal women have more total adipose tissue in general than men, and women have more superficial and less deep adipose tissue, Peterlin said. But after menopause, adipose tissue is more similar between the two sexes.

Adipose tissue secretes different inflammatory proteins based on how much tissue there is and where it is located. Since younger women and obese people have more adipose tissue, this could, at least in part, explain why they get more headaches.

On the other hand, Peterlin also suggested that a possible connection may be related to the brain. ?Previous imaging data in migraine patients have shown activation of the hypothalamus, a part of the brain that controls the drive to feed,? she said. Alternatively, it could be that people who have migraines may be more inclined to behaviors associated with weight gain, such as being less active.

Would losing weight mean that migraines will decrease in frequency? Although weight loss is generally encouraged for people who are obese, that won?t necessarily result in migraine relief, both Peterlin and Tietjen cautioned.

At least two small studies have evaluated migraines on people who were obese and underwent bariatric surgery to lose weight, Peterlin said. Although these studies did find that some patients experienced fewer headaches, the studies were small and more research needs to be done to see if this is consistent.

It?s possible that the lifestyle changes needed for weight loss cut the migraine frequency, rather than the weight loss itself, the experts said. People who eliminate processed foods, high-calorie foods and alcohol ? all of which can be migraine triggers ? could end up experiencing fewer headaches.

Unfortunately, the opposite could also be true if dieters introduce new foods that are migraine triggers. Some people may develop migraines when they consume certain sugar substitutes, for example. There also is limited data suggesting that people with severe obesity who exercise may have fewer migraines, Peterlin said.

?Our data and previous research serve as a call to researchers in the headache field to identify safe and appropriate treatment options for obese [people with] episodic migraines of all classifications and not just those who qualify for [weight-loss] surgery,? she said.

Peterlin also suggested that physicians, in addition to providing lifestyle education to their obese patients with episodic migraines, take into account the weight-gain or weight-loss effect that migraine medications may have on their patients.

More information

Find out more about migraines at the American Academy of Neurology.

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/06/26/obesity-may-boost-migraine-odds/

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Get cool tips and tricks about all technology you live with: How To ...


By following a few simple guidelines, you can maintain your computer, help increase its speed, and help keep it running smoothly. This article discusses how to use the tools available in Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, and Windows XP Service Pack 3 to help make your computer faster, maintain your computer efficiently, and help safeguard your privacy when you're online.
Note: Some of the tools mentioned in this article require you to be logged on as an administrator. If you aren't logged on as an administrator, you can only change settings that apply to your user account.

1. Remove spyware, and help protect your computer from viruses
Spyware collects personal information without asking for permission. From the websites you visit to user names and passwords, spyware can put you and your confidential information at risk. In addition to compromising your privacy, spyware can hamper your computer's performance. Fortunately, there are a couple of easy ways to combat spyware.

Download Microsoft Security Essentials for free to help guard your system from viruses, spyware, adware, and other malicious software (also known as malware). Microsoft Security Essentials acts as a spyware removal tool and includes automatic updates to help keep your system protected from emerging threats.

The Microsoft Windows Malicious Software Removal Tool, also free, checks computers running Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2008, and Windows Server 2003 for infections by specific, prevalent malicious software, including Folstart, Phorpiex, Weelsof, Blaster, Sasser, and Mydoom. It helps remove any detected infection or malware.

2. Free up disk space
The Disk Cleanup tool helps you to free up space on your hard disk to improve the performance of your computer. The tool identifies files that you can safely delete and lets you choose to delete some, all, or none of the identified files.

Use Disk Cleanup to:

Remove temporary Internet files.
Delete downloaded program files, such as Microsoft ActiveX controls and Java applets.
Empty the Recycle Bin.
Remove Windows temporary files, such as error reports.
Delete optional Windows components that you don't use.
Delete installed programs that you no longer use.
Remove unused restore points and shadow copies from System Restore.
Delete system files (Windows 8).
Tip: Typically, temporary Internet files take the most amount of space because the browser caches each page you visit for faster access later.

To use Disk Cleanup:

Windows 8 users

Windows 7 users

Windows Vista users

Windows XP users

3. Speed up access to data
Disk fragmentation slows the overall performance of your system. When files are fragmented, the computer must search the hard disk as a file is opened (to piece it back together). The response time can be significantly longer.

Optimize Drives (Windows 8) and Disk Defragmenter (sometimes shortened to Defrag by users) are Windows utilities that consolidate fragmented files and folders on your computer's hard disk so that each occupies a single space on the disk. With your files stored neatly end to end, without fragmentation, reading and writing to the disk speeds up.

When to run Optimize Drives or Disk Defragmenter
In addition to running these utilities at regular intervals (weekly is optimal), there are other times you should run it, too, such as when:

You add a large number of files.
Your free disk space totals 15 percent or less.
You install new programs or a new version of the Windows operating system.
To use Optimize Drives:

Open Optimize Drives by swiping in from the right edge of the screen, tapping Search (or if you're using a mouse, pointing to the upper-right corner of the screen, moving the mouse pointer down, and then clicking Search), entering Defragment in the search box, tapping or clicking Settings, and then tapping or clicking Defragment and optimize your drives.
Under Status, tap or click the drive you want to optimize. (The Media type column tells you what type of drive you're optimizing.)
To determine if the drive needs to be optimized, tap or click Analyze. You might be asked for an admin password or to confirm your choice.
After Windows is finished analyzing the drive, check the Current status column to see whether you need to optimize the drive. If the drive is more than 10% fragmented, you should optimize the drive now.
Tap or click Optimize. You might be asked for an admin password or to confirm your choice.
Optimizing a drive might take anywhere from several minutes to a few hours to finish, depending on the size of the drive and degree of optimization needed. You can still use your PC during the optimization process.
Notes

If the drive is being used by another program, or is formatted using a file system other than NTFS, FAT, or FAT32, it can't be optimized.
Network drives can't be optimized.
If a drive isn't appearing in Optimize Drives, it might be because it contains an error. Try to repair the drive first, then return to Optimize Drives to try again.
How to make a computer faster: 6 ways to speed up your PC
By following a few simple guidelines, you can maintain your computer, help increase its speed, and help keep it running smoothly. This article discusses how to use the tools available in Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, and Windows XP Service Pack 3 to help make your computer faster, maintain your computer efficiently, and help safeguard your privacy when you're online.
Note: Some of the tools mentioned in this article require you to be logged on as an administrator. If you aren't logged on as an administrator, you can only change settings that apply to your user account.

1. Remove spyware, and help protect your computer from viruses
Spyware collects personal information without asking for permission. From the websites you visit to user names and passwords, spyware can put you and your confidential information at risk. In addition to compromising your privacy, spyware can hamper your computer's performance. Fortunately, there are a couple of easy ways to combat spyware.

Download Microsoft Security Essentials for free to help guard your system from viruses, spyware, adware, and other malicious software (also known as malware). Microsoft Security Essentials acts as a spyware removal tool and includes automatic updates to help keep your system protected from emerging threats.

The Microsoft Windows Malicious Software Removal Tool, also free, checks computers running Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2008, and Windows Server 2003 for infections by specific, prevalent malicious software, including Folstart, Phorpiex, Weelsof, Blaster, Sasser, and Mydoom. It helps remove any detected infection or malware.

2. Free up disk space
The Disk Cleanup tool helps you to free up space on your hard disk to improve the performance of your computer. The tool identifies files that you can safely delete and lets you choose to delete some, all, or none of the identified files.

Use Disk Cleanup to:

Remove temporary Internet files.
Delete downloaded program files, such as Microsoft ActiveX controls and Java applets.
Empty the Recycle Bin.
Remove Windows temporary files, such as error reports.
Delete optional Windows components that you don't use.
Delete installed programs that you no longer use.
Remove unused restore points and shadow copies from System Restore.
Delete system files (Windows 8).
Tip: Typically, temporary Internet files take the most amount of space because the browser caches each page you visit for faster access later.

To use Disk Cleanup:

Windows 8 users

Windows 7 users

Windows Vista users

Windows XP users

3. Speed up access to data
Disk fragmentation slows the overall performance of your system. When files are fragmented, the computer must search the hard disk as a file is opened (to piece it back together). The response time can be significantly longer.

Optimize Drives (Windows 8) and Disk Defragmenter (sometimes shortened to Defrag by users) are Windows utilities that consolidate fragmented files and folders on your computer's hard disk so that each occupies a single space on the disk. With your files stored neatly end to end, without fragmentation, reading and writing to the disk speeds up.

When to run Optimize Drives or Disk Defragmenter
In addition to running these utilities at regular intervals (weekly is optimal), there are other times you should run it, too, such as when:

You add a large number of files.
Your free disk space totals 15 percent or less.
You install new programs or a new version of the Windows operating system.
To use Optimize Drives:

Open Optimize Drives by swiping in from the right edge of the screen, tapping Search (or if you're using a mouse, pointing to the upper-right corner of the screen, moving the mouse pointer down, and then clicking Search), entering Defragment in the search box, tapping or clicking Settings, and then tapping or clicking Defragment and optimize your drives.
Under Status, tap or click the drive you want to optimize. (The Media type column tells you what type of drive you're optimizing.)
To determine if the drive needs to be optimized, tap or click Analyze. You might be asked for an admin password or to confirm your choice.
After Windows is finished analyzing the drive, check the Current status column to see whether you need to optimize the drive. If the drive is more than 10% fragmented, you should optimize the drive now.
Tap or click Optimize. You might be asked for an admin password or to confirm your choice.
Optimizing a drive might take anywhere from several minutes to a few hours to finish, depending on the size of the drive and degree of optimization needed. You can still use your PC during the optimization process.
Notes

If the drive is being used by another program, or is formatted using a file system other than NTFS, FAT, or FAT32, it can't be optimized.
Network drives can't be optimized.
If a drive isn't appearing in Optimize Drives, it might be because it contains an error. Try to repair the drive first, then return to Optimize Drives to try again.
Additional information and instruction to optimize your hard drive for Windows 8 is available.

To use Disk Defragmenter:

Windows 7 users
Click Start, click All Programs, click Accessories, click System Tools, and then click Disk Defragmenter.

In the Disk Defragmenter dialog box, click the drives that you want to defragment, and then click the Analyze disk button. After the disk is analyzed, a dialog box appears, letting you know whether you should defragment the analyzed drives.

Tip: You should analyze a volume before defragmenting it to get an estimate of how long the defragmentation process will take.
To defragment the selected drive or drives, click the Defragment disk button. In the Current status area, under the Progress column, you can monitor the process as it happens. After the defragmentation is complete, Disk Defragmenter displays the results.
To display detailed information about the defragmented disk or partition, click View Report.
To close the View Report dialog box, click Close.
You can also schedule the Disk Defragmenter to run automatically. (Your computer might even be set up this way by default.) Under Schedule, it reads Scheduled defragmentation is turned on and then displays the time of day and frequency of defragmentation. If you want to turn off automatic defragmentation or to change the time or frequency, click Configure schedule (or Turn on Schedule, if it is not currently configured to run automatically). Change the settings, and then click OK.
To close the Disk Defragmenter utility, on the title bar of the window, click the Close button.
Windows Vista users

Windows XP users

Running Optimize Drives, Disk Cleanup, and Disk Defragmenter on a regular basis is a proven way to help keep your computer running quickly and efficiently. If you'd like to learn how to schedule these tools and others to run automatically, please read Speed up your PC: Automate your computer maintenance schedule. Windows 8 users should read Improve performance by optimizing your hard drive.

4. Detect and repair disk errors
In addition to running Optimize Drives, Disk Cleanup, and Disk Defragmenter to optimize the performance of your computer, you can check the integrity of the files stored on your hard disk by running the Error Checking utility.

As you use your hard drive, it can develop bad sectors. Bad sectors slow down hard disk performance and sometimes make data writing (such as file saving) difficult or even impossible. The Error Checking utility scans the hard drive for bad sectors and scans for file system errors to see whether certain files or folders are misplaced.

If you use your computer daily, you should run this utility once a week to help prevent data loss.

Run the Error Checking utility:

5. Learn about ReadyBoost
If you're using Windows 8, Windows 7, or Windows Vista, you can use ReadyBoost to speed up your system. A new concept in adding memory to a system, it allows you to use non-volatile flash memory?like a USB flash drive or a memory card?to improve performance without having to add additional memory. With Windows 8, if you have a storage device that will work with ReadyBoost, you?ll see an option to use ReadyBoost when you plug the device in to your PC.

6. Upgrade to Windows 8
If you try all the previous remedies and your computer still isn't as fast as you would like it to be, you may want to consider updating to Windows 8

Source: Microsoft

Source: http://hackedhead.blogspot.com/2013/06/how-to-improve-yor-compter-performance.html

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

We're all familiar with the, uh, pitfalls of Apple's iOS Maps app. But Peder Norrby, the founder of a Stockholm-based tech company called Trapcode, has managed to capture some of the most bizarre 3D mapping glitches in high definition?turning them into lovely, surreal vignettes.

Norrby's project is called Mapglitch, and it's exactly what it sounds like: a series of high-def screen grabs from instances where the map has incorrectly laid 2D aerial imagery onto the 3D map. We got in touch with Norrby to find out what spurred the project, and apparently, it grew out of a Maps-surfing habit. "Ironically, I recently focused on the Mapglitch project because just sitting with iOS Maps looking around relaxes me," he said over email. "And now it got all this attention!"

Norrby is updating his Flickr page with new glitches as he finds them, so keep an eye on that for future images. And for now, enjoy the following finds?from Houses Throwing Up Trees in Barcelona to Hungry Plane Wants to Eat Terminal at JFK?below. [Flickr]

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

Source: http://gizmodo.com/ios-maps-atrocities-nah-these-are-works-of-art-585375062

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Digg Reader Is Now Open

Screen Shot 2013-06-25 at 5.20.34 PMExactly one week before Google Reader shuts down entirely, Digg has opened up access to the Digg Reader beta. To celebrate this momentous occasion, we sat down with General Manager Jake Levine and President Andrew McLaughlin to discuss the details of the product, as well as the long-term roadmap. Digg now has two main products, which reach entirely different content consumers. Digg is a passive-consumption experience ? you head over to Digg.com and check out 50-80 of the biggest stories of the day with no work required on your part. With Digg Reader, the company is going after power consumers who don’t mind putting in a little effort to build their feeds. But Digg and Digg Reader are only pieces of a larger puzzle, McLaughlin explained to me. Eventually, the data sourced from Digg Reader will allow for a consumption experience with all the personalization and customization of a reader, but without all the work. But before the middle ground can be found, the team is focused on perfecting the Digg Reader experience, and that involves speed. According to Levine, speed and reliability ? “the invisible things that you don’t see” ? were the biggest challenges in developing the product. After all, Google had a massive, powerful infrastructure to power their Reader, and Digg wants users who are transitioning to have a similarly snappy experience. But they don’t want to just be as good as Google. They want to be better. For now, that means tweaking and iterating the Popular Sort, which scores the last thousand or so items across a number of factors to determine what is the most popular content at that given time. Eventually, that will extend into what’s popular within your social circles, or over a given period of time, or in a particular location. However, Digg Reader is missing one thing that Google Reader has: Search. According to McLaughlin and Levine, it’s still undecided whether or not Search (which will be added to the service eventually) will be part of the premium product or the free version. “Search isn’t something that the majority of people use, but those who use it find it to be very important,” said Levine. “We haven’t decided if we’ll make it part of the premium product, but it’s entirely possible since it’s one of the more expensive features we’ll be adding. We’re toying with the idea of having pricing line

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

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Flowers, vegetables could affect Snowden's fate

QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- With Edward Snowden stuck in Moscow and Washington pushing hard for his return, many Ecuadoreans began realizing Tuesday that this small country's deep economic ties with the U.S. could make it the one with the most to lose in the high-stakes international showdown over the National Security Agency leaker.

While President Rafael Correa's leftist government was virtually silent on Snowden's request for asylum, Ecuadorean analysts said his fate, or at least his safe harbor in Ecuador, could depend as much on frozen vegetables and flowers as on questions over freedom of expression and international counterterrorism.

Unlike with China, Russia or Cuba, countries where the U.S. has relatively few tools to force Snowden's handover, the Obama administration could swiftly hit Ecuador in the pocketbook by denying reduced tariffs on cut flowers, artichokes and broccoli. Those represent hundreds of millions of dollars in annual exports for this country where nearly half of foreign trade depends on the U.S.

A denial wouldn't mean financial devastation for Ecuador, which has been growing healthily in recent years thanks in large part to its oil resources. Growing ties with China also could give the Ecuadorean government a sense of diminished vulnerability. But analysts and political figures said the prospect of any economic damage could nonetheless alter the political calculus for Correa, a pragmatic leftist who's long delighted in tweaking the United States but hasn't yet suffered any major consequences.

"Much of our foreign trade is at stake," said flower grower Benito Jaramillo, president of the country's largest association of flower farmers, who shipped more than $300 million in flowers, mostly roses, to the U.S. last year. "They've been inserting themselves in a problem that isn't Ecuador's, so we're in a dilemma that we shouldn't be in."

For years, Ecuador's oil, vegetables and roses have kept flowing northward even as Correa has expelled U.S. diplomats and an American military base, publicly hectored the U.S. ambassador and harbored WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange at Ecuador's embassy in London.

Correa's strongest backers have delighted in his attacks on Washington. And even his detractors have tolerated his foreign policy as the indulgence of a man who has maintained general economic and political stability, funneling billions of U.S. dollars, which are also Ecuador's currency, to social spending and infrastructure projects.

The president's office and other government agencies declined comment on Snowden, referring questions to Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino, who said only that he doesn't know where Snowden is or what travel documents he might be using.

Analysts and politicians said any potential loss to Ecuador could make hosting Snowden a tougher decision than previous ones for Correa, a member of Latin America's leftist bloc who's maintained cordial relations with countries like Cuba and Venezuela without marching in lockstep with them.

"The president's ideology toward the United States is one thing. It's another thing to be president of a country whose dependence on the U.S. is unavoidable, irreplaceable and extremely valuable, because we sell the U.S. a lot more than we could ever could to any other country," said former vice president Blasco Penaherrera, member of the center-left Liberal Party.

Many Ecuadoreans see the NSA surveillance revealed by Snowden's leaks as part of a longstanding and broad pattern of excessive U.S. interference abroad, including in Latin America. So, some people said, asylum for Snowden would be humane and wise despite any economic consequences.

"On a commercial basis, the U.S. and Ecuador are guided by pragmatism, independent of economic agendas. Businessmen set priorities based on cost-benefit and because of that I don't think there are going to be major consequences, because the commercial line is separate from the geopolitical one," said Pablo Davalos, an economics professor and analyst at the Catholic University in Quito.

But on the streets of the capital, people appeared to be increasingly feeling that their country should keep out of the affair.

"We shouldn't give him asylum," said Fredy Prado, a retired shoe company manager. "Every country needs to take care of itself, its own security."

The U.S. administration is supposed to decide by Monday whether to grant Ecuador export privileges under the Generalized System of Preferences, a system meant to spur development and growth in poorer countries. The deadline was deadline set long before the Snowden affair but conveniently timed for the U.S.

More broadly, a larger trade pact allowing reduced tariffs on more than $5 billion in annual exports to the U.S. is up for congressional renewal before July 21. While approval of the Andean Trade Preference Act has long been seen as doubtful in Washington, Ecuador has been lobbying strongly for its renewal in recent months.

"I hope the government doesn't decide to give Snowden asylum, because obviously this isn't in Ecuador's interests," said Roberto Aspiazu, chairman of a coalition of Ecuador's largest industries. "Hopefully the issue will be looked at from the perspective of Ecuador's interests, and I don't think it's in our country's interest to unnecessarily confront the U.S."

___

Michael Weissenstein on Twitter: www.twitter.com/mweissenstein

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/flowers-vegetables-could-affect-snowdens-010200174.html

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

High Peaks Pure Earth ? ?I Have to Speak Out? By Go Sherab Gyatso

High Peaks Pure Earth has translated a blogpost focusing on a recent new regulation enforced in Kirti Monastery in Ngaba, Amdo, Tibet, that requires any writings and publications to be pre-approved by the ?Education Department? of the monastery before distribution.

The original blogpost at the Sangdhor website is currently offline, as is the whole site:?http://sangdhor.com/blog_c.asp?id=11738&a=jiayang?The long blogpost is made up of several parts and contains an introduction with background information before publishing the piece by Kirti monk Go Sherab Gyatso.

Go Sherab Gyatso eloquently and logically outlines his objections to the new regulation in the piece titled ?I Have to Speak Out? which was written on June 4, 2013. High Peaks Pure Earth readers may remember Go Sherab Gyatso from a blogpost written by Jamyang Kyi in 2008 after she had heard that he had been detained.?Go Sherab Gyatso authored the book ?We Need To Wake Up?, published in 2007 by Gansu Nationalities Press but, as he mentions in his piece, he has been very careful about his writings ever since 2008.

High Peaks Pure Earth is very grateful to Bhuchung D. Sonam of TibetWrites.Org for translating this post into English.

2013 06 20 Go Sherab Gyatso 2

Photo of the ?Resolution? (Tib: Drochoe Yigey)

?

Resolution

From now on, if any monk covertly puts up letters criticising each other, there will be a thorough search for the author. If found out, he will be permanently expelled from this monastery irrespective of what position he may hold, and if the writer is not found then keeping law of karma as the witness, the issue will be brought to the attention of the protector deity of this monastery in accordance with traditional custom. No newspaper or magazine can be published or distributed in the monastery without prior permission from the Board of Directors of the Education Department. If anyone does so without permission, then the printed materials will be confiscated and severe punishment will be given to offenders.

A Short Clarification

On May 21, 2013, the authorities of Ngaba Kirti Monastery, including the Board of Directors of the Education Department, issued a ?Resolution? which stated that no literature can be distributed in the monastery without prior permission from the Board of directors of the monastery?s education department, and that anyone found doing so would be severely punished.

On June 4, Go Sherab Gyatso, a monk in the monastery, wrote an essay titled ?I Have to Speak Out?, in which he stated that the resolution not only hammers down on monks? freedom of expression but also brings more harm than benefits. The essay criticised the board members saying that such excessive regulations would be counterproductive to the monastery?s spiritual development.

On June 5, the members of the Education Department of the Kirti Monastery came to the meeting of the monks and threatened them by saying that: ?Since Go Sherab criticised us yesterday, we will stop all our works from today onwards.? According to the local custom and tradition of this region, if leaders of a monastery resign from their work, then it takes a huge amount of money to request them to re-take or resume their responsibilities.

On June 9, Go Sherab wrote an article titled ?Desperate Parting Prostration? in which he wrote his detailed thoughts on his inability to bear the pressure from the possible resignation of the board members, lack of any channels to air his grievances and lack of any financial resources to pay to bring back the members should they resign. He also wrote that until and unless the board members declare him innocent, he would remain outside the monastery.

?I Have to Speak Out?
By Go Sherab Gyatso

A few months have passed since changes in the rules and regulations in our monastery have come to effect. According to the ?New Charter? some of the futile communal ritual performance were done away with and schedule and place of other such performances were also changed. As debating is an importance part of our monastery?s dialectical study, some positive changes were made in this regard. A change is also about to be made in terms of memorisation of texts and its superficial showpiece test.

Furthermore, the monastery?s authorities have finally accepted the repeated requests from students to increase both the quantity and quality of the teachers. Instead of pretending that this is a big monastery with great image, the authorities are working to bring qualified teachers from other places. In this sense, there have been positive and practical changes that would benefit the monastic education. These are worth praising.

It is difficult to say how these changes will impact other aspects of the monastery?s activities. Looking from the students? point of view, these changes need to be continued since they consider them as having positive impacts. For the leaders and for those who execute these reforms it goes without saying that they have taken great troubles and faced numerous obstacles. They are to be thanked for their efforts.

However, among the wave of these changes, there are a few decisions that leave one sad and disappointed. As Chandrakirti said: ?auspicious and inauspicious always come together? on May 21 this year, the monastery?s authorities, led by the board of directors of the Education Department, issued a Resolution. It said that ?no newspaper or magazine can be distributed in the monastery without prior permission from the Board of Directors of the Education Department. If anyone does so without permission, then the printed materials will be confiscated and severe punishment will be given to the offenders.?

Why? Why? Why would they want to punish someone simply because he would not seek their permission to distribute his writing irrespective of whether it contained something that is beneficial to society or fabricated lies. On what religious logic and indisputable evidence was this rule based on? From what school of thought did this come from? On which of Buddha?s principle does this lean upon?

However one thinks over this or examines it, this harsh rule is seen as a heinous fabrication of a few individuals and has neither religious principles nor civic values. This has neither benefits on the monastery?s spiritual development nor improvement in monks? conducts. In fact, it is clear that this will destroy the monastery?s education atmosphere and its space for creative output. For anyone who is not blind to the law of karma, one has no choice but to consider this unbearable rule as something that has little value and will cause great harm.

Hence, for someone like me, who may not be a good monk but someone who considers writing as an important part of my life, this forced rule gives me more pain and suffering than others. Sacrificing my future and ready to face any consequences, I am forced to say a few things to the monastery?s authorities who made this rule. You can consider this as asserting my right to write or to maintain the learning atmosphere of this monastery or for the sake of future of young monks in this institute.

One
Last year, in another resolution ? weren?t the monks of this monastery warned that they would be expelled if they spoke or wrote anything beyond the stated rules? In this sense they were already barred from speaking out or writing. Thus, this time, when you announced another rule, couldn?t you leave some space [within the rule] for the monks of this monastery to enjoy freedom and space to write?

Considering every creative output as suspicious enemies, those who want to publish newspapers and books first must submit their materials to the authorities. Anyone who fails to do so, they said, would face severe consequences. Isn?t this a loud deceit that crosses every social norm? If a monk from our monastery authors an excellent book that would do Tibetans proud?and benefit the entire human beings, would the author still face severe punishment because he did not seek your permission for publishing his book? Think deeply. Aren?t your authoritative hands stretching too long? Aren?t you becoming too dictatorial?

Isn?t this rule ? that requires every book and magazine to have your prior permission before their publication ? a tool to have power over what is to be published and what not to be published? If all publication materials go through your hands, what guarantees are there that you would not say that this is OK to be distributed, this is not OK to be distributed and that this should be revised and these parts to be deleted?

In this way, one day when you will have the absolute power over every written material in our monastery, what guarantee do we have that you would not say that there are ?mistakes? in the Prajnaparamita scriptures, or that the commentary on Madhyamaka is not in accordance with ?your accepted premise?, or that a new social commentary is ?erroneous?, or that a new style of poetry is wrong or an outlook on culture is ?not in tune? with old way of thinking?

Finally, wouldn?t you order editing things out that do not go well with official line or even not in sync with your own views? No one can guarantee that you would not engage in these acts. This unlimited power will have no borders where one can say for sure what can be done and what cannot be done.

Generally speaking, each word in an essay represents images coming from authors? innermost thoughts and hence compositions are a family made up of each writer?s wisdom. Essays are music played with authors? thoughts set on melodies. Therefore, characteristics of writing bear writers? conduct, values, aesthetics and other distinctive qualities. If our monks are to engage in writing today, they have to bury their inherent thoughts and write something that will please the members of the Education Department. They may call it new writing, but they are nothing more than a pile of rotten words without the authors? deep wisdom and rich experience.

Then again, they may say that there is a long tradition of showing essays to teachers and to seek feedback and critique from friends. Since the difference between voluntarily showing your writing to someone and authorities forcing you to show your writing is clear, it would be pointless for me to run through them.

Over two thousand years ago, the famous Buddhist master Nagarjuna authored numerous commentaries, including Prajnamula or the Fundamental Treatise on the Middle Way called Prajna, which was the first of Nagarjuna?s six main works. By stating the principle of interdependence of all things and that nothing exists on its own, Nagarjuna put out a bright new philosophy for humanity. Since there were only two schools of thoughts namely the Vaibhashikas and Sautrantikas at that time, Nagarjuna?s thoughts went beyond the accepted views of his monastic orders. The fact that the institute did not have a committee to limit what could be published and what could not was Nagarjuna?s greatest happiness. But if such a committee existed and if they said, ?Your writing do not confirm with many of Buddha?s teachings and they are also not in tune with our views, so you cannot publish them? and if they confiscated his writing, what would have happened?

Likewise, the great work on logic by Dharmakirti Pramanavartika or Commentary on the Compendium of Valid Cognition was a critique of his teacher?s views. What would have happened if someone else had the power to decide whether this could be published or not?

Since the time of the Buddha, there has always been a space to analyse the nature of things based on one?s mental capacity and to test and critique truth about objects and phenomena. In the future too this space for debate must continue. Like the great scholars of the past who have handed down this tradition from one generation to the next, we must strive to continue and further improve upon this great tradition. It is simply wrong for a few people to have the power to decide whether someone?s writing can and cannot be published.

Let?s say that someone seeks your permission to publish something on centuries of Tibet?s history under Sakya, Phadru, Rinpung and Ganden Phodrang saying that this rule was harmful for both spiritual and secular traditions. Then wouldn?t you say that this is against Tibet?s unique tradition and hence cannot be published?

Thus, if writings undergo your ?can? and ?cannot? process then there is a real possibility that published materials will likely to be a heap of murky eulogies devoid of aesthetic value, essence and truth.

In this way if your authoritative hands stretch too long, then at your whim and fancy, you will most likely search our quarters and run through our bookshelves to sort out what books can be read and what must be confiscated or banned. If all our daily works end up inseparable from your commands, then what will happen to ?us?? Where will be our private lives go?

Yes. We are monks. We clearly know the limits of our belief and in this regard we are no less than you. As a part of this institution, we know what rules to abide and what are our responsibilities. More importantly, we clearly know that amidst all these rules there is a space for individual freedom. The truth is that while doing public service, it is customary for you to have same powers. But if you take this power to mean that you can control our every action, then it is like a kid dreaming to trap a rainbow in his hands.

If you continue like this into the future, then there will come a time when you will invariably become ?murderers of words? and ?thought police? hammering down on our wisdom and creativity. If you reach such a state, you will most likely say in anger: ?How is this? It?s impossible that we did this. We only wanted to ban bad writing.? I want to state that any power that people cannot criticise is dictatorial. Such powers are like alcohol making everyone drunk for they cannot differentiate between good and bad.

Worse still is the fact that your power to limit distribution of newspapers in the monastery restricts others from checking on your powers. There has to be some powers to get public work done. But unlimited power and the inability to receive any criticism can lead to blurring of what can be done and what cannot be done.

Two
I want to ask you this: if from now onwards you want to check whether any writing in our monastery can or cannot be published, then it goes without saying that you also have to look into the past published materials to see separate ?good? from ?bad?. What are the criteria of a good writing and on what basis would you consider writing as bad? What else do you have other than ban or permit something to be published based on your personal likes and dislikes?

Frankly speaking, in your quest to check on others and to cleanse things, it seems that you have forgotten yourself. In fear of your threatening and thundering declaration, I have made a few mistakes in my writing here. What freedom do I have not to get scared when you are preparing to take the throne atop which you will decide what to publish and what not to publish?

It is a common knowledge that our monastery?s official correspondences are full of errors. This has become a norm form some time now. Since you [the board of directors of the education department] are supposed to be the best of the best, shouldn?t you worry a little over this matter?

Scholars and members of Kirti Monastery?s Education Department, if one says that your official correspondences are terribly bad, you would laugh and say, ?Consider him our enemy!? with great vanity. Didn?t the five mistakes in two lines give a new name to your grand-sounding department? Others remarked that when they see the standard of the official correspondence then others also must like that. This clearly indicates that your power to oversee what can or cannot be published in the monastery is nothing but a forced decree.

Three
If you pass a resolution stating that anyone going to town must seek your permission and that failure to do so would face severe consequences, then senior monks are likely to raise a strong voice against it. Likewise if you put up a notice stating that anyone who wants to engage in business must seek prior permission from you and that failure to do so would be punished severely, then those with money and power will scold you again and again.

Unlike the above two cases, no senior monks or powerful people would raise their voice against the resolution that says no one should distribute any writing without your permission. Particularly, the majority of the monks ? who would never have to pick up a pen to write ? which is about 95% of monks have no feeling or thoughts against this rule. Stone-faced and unthinking, they would say ?It is right. This is necessary.?

Right. Writing is the interest of a few monks in this monastery. It has become a life-partner of a few humble monks. There are those who engage in deeds that cross spiritual ethics and traditional values, but apart from occasional verbal warnings these people are left alone. However, a few who seriously engage in studies and persevere in writing are cut and operated by knife without mercy.

There has been a long tradition of dialectical study in our monastery. But the study on basic language and its structure has been poor. However, due to hard work and vision of teachers such as Drungchen Lodoe Choe, there has been a great improvement in this field and many monks became literate. Due to some unavoidable obstacles, this good development had stopped. Since then the young monks who could not read and write have increased year after year.
For the last few years, irrespective of the environment in the monastery, they have taken individual initiatives to learn the language, including going abroad to do so. Today there are numerous budding youth who are continuously learning and perfecting the Tibetan language.

Realising the importance of having literary platforms, many of them are trying to bring out magazines and newspapers to be distributed amongst their peers. For them such platforms are environments in which they can build up their dreams. Writing has become a stage to showcase their creative talents.

Thus, I am scared that this newly-issued regulation may become an agent that can crush the small field on which young monks? dreams grow. The desire of the monks to express things and their wish to accomplish things must be considered as progress and hope for a good result. It is your responsibility to nurture these new shoots and not consider them as something dangerous. What can be more fearful, shameful and irresponsible than to look at them as something that is to be destroyed and maimed?

It is entirely possible that their writing contain various disorderly things such as unsuitable terms and out of place meanings. But the development of human mind and creativity must take place with such tortuous path. It is impossible to have someone who has perfect wisdom and knowledge right from the beginning.

Generally speaking, there is a view among the younger generation in monasteries today that are source of a little worry. For me personally, I am someone who is genuinely concerned about this. The issue concerning the younger generation to have an outlook towards life that is based on wisdom and value must be debated and then imparted and practiced. This can never be achieved by controlling their writing and cleansing the contents of newspapers. Imposition of forced rules and regulations always produce negative results. If you do not agree with me on this, we will watch it gradually unfold in the future.

This chaotic decade has become a turning point in the history of Tibetan Buddhism. Sadly, the monastic authorities all over Tibet have no inkling in how to face such change. There is a strong desire to hold onto their own images and lack courage to supplement knowledge from other sources. They have neither the desire learn new things nor any wisdom to identify good from bad. Their self-importance and selfishness are increasing and getting worse each year.
If you earnestly believe and hope that this monastery produces good writing, you must set aside your desire to check on everything and ban anything that fails to go through you. More importantly, you must learn and work hard to identity each monk?s talents and abilities to nurture them with Buddhist philosophy and other fields of learning. This has to be done not with fear and intimidation but with joy, freedom and individual initiative. Don?t you think that in this way they can produce good writing?

One way of looking at this new rule is that, perhaps, it has come about because you are scared of being criticised on your works. But why is there a need to be fearful about it? Even if someone writes baseless accusations, it only shows his shallowness. You can just laugh and forget about it. And if someone writes positive criticism then to accept them and to look at it with open mind which is how it is done by those in power in big nations or small institutions around the world.

Look far and wide. Any nation and organisation that fears criticism and opposes, arrest, use violence to silence opposition and even kill those who express dissents have become thorns in people?s eyes. This is despite their economic, military and other powers.

Hence, if you really have sincere motivation and good intention towards our monastery, it is useless to just utter ?Ah! This is being spoken about. This is written about!? instead you need to find ways to develop and improve monks way of thinking. This is most fundamental. If you investigate on how to inculcate development of truth within each mind based on Buddha?s Three Baskets ? comprising the Sutras, the Vinaya, and the Abhidharma ? and create environment in the monastery to maintain clean vows and learn things with freedom and democracy, then these are bound to become pillars of future victories.

On the contrary, if you let go of these important methods and instead try to find other ways to control with ulterior motives, then you will end up nowhere. You will be the laughing stock of the world but your actions will be tantamount to inviting defeat and loss.

Since the beginning of this year i.e. in about four months time, over sixty monks from our monastery have disrobed. Don?t you think that we should earnestly think and internally analyse these issues?

Four
This is the first piece of writing that I am doing since I came back from Lhasa in 2008. This is not because I have nothing to write over things taking place in our monastery but because I have been overtly careful not to write due to your overwhelming might and power.

However, the long hands of this so-called Education Department have stretched everywhere making it difficult for us to live. Tears have fallen from my eyes and the unbearable pain in my heart has burst out without control.

There is heaviness in my heart because one of the members of this Education Department is my most respected spiritual teacher. Personally, my respect for him is unshakable. But I have to write this article for the greater common good.

The red wind from outside is so strong and its orders so strict that we have barely space to breathe in and breathe out. On top of this if one witnesses act such as this, the sadness is overwhelming.

Finally, the readers must check for themselves if there is any truth in my writing. If this stern order stating that ?no newspaper and magazine can be published without our permission? is a measure to prevent anyone from committing any mistakes then it is a matter of happiness. But if it ends up being a tool to crackdown on and punish any dissenting voice by branding them vulgar, ignorant and blasphemy then it is an order by force.

Unlike anonymous letters that create rumours, I have written this piece with integrity and openness. I have and will always take responsibility for my writing.

Written on June 4, 2013 in my quarters at Ngaba Kirti Monastery

Source: http://highpeakspureearth.com/2013/i-have-to-speak-out-by-go-sherab-gyatso/

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