রবিবার, ২১ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Landscaper allegedly steals baseball cards from customer's home

A landscaper faces charges after police said he stole money and baseball cards from a customer's house.

Police said Ryan Souza, of Dover, was working for a Rollinsford Family when he went into their house and took $500 in cash and $1,500 worth of cards.

Authorities said the family let Souza into the house after he asked to use the bathroom.?

View these breaking news photos submitted on other stories from our u local community. When YOU see breaking news happen, email your photos to ulocal@wcvb.com -- or post them (and your videos) on ulocal.wcvb.com.

Source: http://www.wcvb.com/news/local/landscaper-allegedly-steals-baseball-cards-from-customers-home/-/9848876/21058906/-/cawkjaz/-/index.html?absolute=true

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শনিবার, ২০ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Mobile Miscellany: week of July 15th, 2013

Mobile Miscellany week of July 15th, 2013

If you didn't get enough mobile news during the week, not to worry, because we've opened the firehose for the truly hardcore. This week, Samsung added two new colors to its GS4 LTE-A lineup, Motorola teased its manufacturing facility for the upcoming Moto X and @evleaks spilled the beans on a new smartphone for Verizon. These stories and more await after the break. So buy the ticket and take the ride as we explore all that's happening in the mobile world for this week of July 15th, 2013.

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

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শুক্রবার, ১৯ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Japan approves clinical trials on stem cells harvested from patient's own body

Last updated at 3:43 pm

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This Week in Time Capsules: Badges, Caskets and Betting on the Ponies

This Week in Time Capsules: Badges, Caskets and Betting on the Ponies

This week, a race track in New York put a time capsule on tour, a town in Michigan used a casket for their time capsule, and Boy Scout badges will spend the next 300 years underground.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/MCo9YvgK3QQ/this-week-in-time-capsules-badges-caskets-and-betting-830911641

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Reports: Detroit files for bankruptcy

1 hour ago

In this July 12, 2013, photo an Outsource to Detroit banner from Galaxe.Solutions is seen on a Detroit building.

Carlos Osorio / AP

In this July 12, 2013, an Outsource to Detroit banner from Galaxe.Solutions is seen on a Detroit building.

Detroit, saddled with more than $18 billion in debt, became the biggest U.S. city in history to file for bankruptcy on Thursday.

Once a symbol of America's industrial might and more recently an example of urban decay, crime and hopelessness, the home to the nation's automobile industry took the extraordinary step after months of negotiations with creditors failed.

?The fiscal realities confronting Detroit have been ignored for too long. I?m making this tough decision so the people of Detroit will have the basic services they deserve and so we can start to put Detroit on a solid financial footing that will allow it to grow and prosper in the future,? Gov. Rick Snyder said in a statement. ?This is a difficult step, but the only viable option to address a problem that has been six decades in the making.?

Snyder authorized the city's emergency manager to file for federal bankruptcy, as required by state law, saying it was the only option to restore the city and provide residents with necessary public services.

Kevin Orr, a bankruptcy expert, was hired by the state in March to lead Detroit out of a fiscal free-fall and made the filing in federal bankruptcy court.

Orr was unable to convince a host of creditors -- including pensions, Teamsters, employee associations and banks -- to take pennies on the dollar to help facilitate the city's massive financial restructuring.

He laid out his plans in June meetings with debt holders, in which his team warned there was a 50-50 chance of a bankruptcy filing.

A number of factors ? most notably steep population and tax base falls ? have been blamed on Detroit's tumble toward insolvency.

Detroit lost a quarter-million residents between 2000 and 2010. A population that in the 1950s reached 1.8 million is now struggling to stay above 700,000. Much of the middle-class and scores of businesses also have fled Detroit, taking their tax dollars with them.

In a letter that accompanied the federal filing, Snyder listed the city's ailments: The city's unemployment rate has tripled since 2000; its homicide rate is at its highest in nearly 40 years; residents wait an average of 58 minutes for the police to respond to their calls (the national average is 11 minutes).

The governor's statement on Thursday said that 38 cents of every city dollar goes toward debt repayment, legacy costs and other obligations. That was expected to reach 65 cents per dollar by 2017.

When Orr initially made his pitch to creditors, some were asked to take about 10 cents on the dollar of what the city owed them. Underfunded pension claims would have received less than the 10 cents on the dollar under that plan.

A team of financial experts put together by Orr said that proposal was Detroit's one shot to permanently fix its fiscal problems.

On Wednesday, as the bankruptcy filing was imminent, Detroit's two pension funds filed a lawsuit against the governor and Orr, the Free Press, Detroit's hometown paper, reported. Detroit city employees filed suits earlier this month as well -- for fear their pensions would be slashed if the city filed for bankruptcy.

Earlier Thursday, the Free Press said the filing would set off a 30- to 90-day period "that will determine whether the city is eligible for Chapter 9 protection and define how many claimants might compete for the limited settlement resources that Detroit has to offer."

If the bankruptcy filing is approved, city assets could be liquidated to satisfy demands for payment.

In the letter to the court, Snyder wrote: "I know many will see this as a low point in the City's history. If so, I think it will also be the foundation of the City's future -- a statement I cannot make in confidence absent giving the City a chance for a fresh start, without burdens of debt it cannot hope to fully pay."

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed reporting.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663286/s/2edb6da7/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Creports0Edetroit0Efiles0Ebankruptcy0E6C10A678946/story01.htm

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বুধবার, ১৭ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Scientists use sound waves to levitate, manipulate matter

A team of scientists in Zurich, Switzerland, have developed a method of acoustic levitation that allows them to float objects next to each other and bring them into contact.

By Eoin O'Carroll,?Staff / July 16, 2013

A droplet of water reacts with sodium metal as both are held aloft by the pressure of acoustic waves in a laboratory in Switzerland.

YouTube screen shot

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A team of researchers in Switzerland have developed a way of levitating and transporting small objects using nothing but sound.

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'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // --> Held aloft by sound waves, a water droplet and a piece of sodium metal waltz to Johann Strauss's 'Blue Danube.'

Using ultrasonic waves ? that is, sound waves whose frequency is too high for humans to hear ? scientists at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich?have made water droplets, instant coffee crystals, styrofoam flakes, and a toothpick, among other objects, hang in midair, move along a plane, and interact with each other. It is the first time that scientists have been able to use sound to simultaneously?levitate several objects next to each other and move them around.

Research published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences describes how objects placed between two horizontal surfaces, the bottom one emitting high-pitched sound waves and the top one reflecting the waves back, can be levitated and manipulated. ?

As anyone with a subwoofer and a teenager knows, sound waves exert pressure. When those waves are bounced between carefully aligned surfaces, they can create what is known as a standing wave, in which the total pressure from the original wave and its reflection cancel each other out. Objects placed at spots along the wave with the lowest amplitude, known as node points, tend to stay put.?

In the past, scientists have been able to acoustically levitate bits of styrofoam and even small insects and fish. But until now, nobody has figured out how to get acoustically levitated objects to do anything other than just hang there, even though moving them has long been known to be theoretically possible.?

"Theoretically there's no difference between theory and practice," says engineer?Daniele Foresti, the study's lead author, in a phone interview. "But in practice there is."

Dr. Foresti and his team developed a sound-emitting platform that uses a checkerboard of piezoelectric crystals, which expand and contract as different voltages are applied to them. The rapid change in shape of the crystals produces ultrasound waves, which are then reflected off a plastic plate above the platform.

By carefully modulating the voltage applied to each crystal, Foresti and his team were able to transport hovering objects over different squares on the checkerboard. They rotated a toothpick. They introduced a droplet of water to a granule of instant coffee. They brought water into contact with sodium metal, producing a tiny explosion. ?

"What struck me the most was the fact that the concept itself is extremely simple.?But to make it work is extremely complicated," says Dr. Foresti. "It took a lot of effort to optimize the design, and also to control the power."

Being able to manipulated matter without touching it promises a wealth of applications, from material sciences to biology. For instance nucleic acids can be introduced into cells ? a process known as DNA transfection ? without fear of contamination.

"You can basically play with cells in a droplet," says Foresti?

While commuting via acoustically levitated skateboards may be far off in the future, Foresti says that he hopes that other researchers will soon find novel uses for his method.

"This is a toy," he says. "I hope that it can be useful for something."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/mgTwg6bU3eI/Scientists-use-sound-waves-to-levitate-manipulate-matter

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TXO hires Markab Capital chief as non-exec director - Oil and gas investor TXO (...

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