Thursday, November 22, 2012

3 Amazing Outfits For The Holiday Season

Fabsugar.com:

A festive cocktail dress is always a safe choice for the holidays.

Read the whole story at Fabsugar.com

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/22/3-amazing-outfits-for-the_n_2176068.html

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Egypt's Morsi grants himself far-reaching powers

CAIRO (AP) ? Egypt's president has issued constitutional amendments granting himself far-reaching powers and ordering the retrial of leaders of Hosni Mubarak's regime for the killing of protesters in last year's uprising.

Mohammed Morsi also decreed immunity for the panel drafting a new constitution from any possible court decisions to dissolve it. He granted the same protection to the upper chamber of parliament. Both bodies are dominated by Morsi's Islamist allies.

The Egyptian leader also decreed that all decisions he has made since taking office in June and until a new constitution is adopted are not subject to appeal in court or by any other authority.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-morsi-grants-himself-far-reaching-powers-162850563.html

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Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Ask Slashdot: Geekiest Way To Cook a Turkey?

First time accepted submitter almostadnsguy writes "There seem to be a lot of ways to cook a turkey the geekiest ones are probably out of the realm of possibility for normal geeks. However, Within the limits of normal society (or outside if you wish) what is the geekiest way to do it? Do you use a special brine, cook it in an inventive way, or raise genetically modified turkeys with extra legs?"

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/ewh5MWXRDVw/story01.htm

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Lotsys develops easy-to-use ?three-click? - Online Gambling News

Press Releases
November 20, 2012
No Comments

logo lotsys20 November 2012 (Suresnes, France) ? Following the success of the Euro Millions app launched last July, Lotsys Gaming Lab is now pleased to present the Loto? game application designed for FDJ, the French Lottery. With nearly one million downloads, the user-friendly app allows players to place a bet in just three clicks. Players may also change the numbers on their grids without clicking at all, simply by shaking their mobile device.

?We have put the user experience at the centre of the app?s development?, explained Renaud Dol, FDJ?s Head of Digital Content. ?This partnership with Lotsys has made FDJ the first lottery with an iPad offer and the lottery with the best mobile game experience, thanks to all our native apps for iPhone, Android, iPad and Webapp.?

Figures clearly illustrate the positive outcome of the partnership towards full convergence: today 15% of FDJ?s digital revenue is from mobiles and tablets. Furthermore, FDJ?s apps are the most downloaded among m-commerce apps on the French AppStore.

Available for mobile phones and tablets, the app offers six different ways to play the Loto? game, and grids can be created offline. Players may also play simple and combined games with the same grid. Favourite grids may be saved and compared with the results of the last draws. Moreover, Loto? app users have access to the last 10 Loto results. Players can also receive alerts on the next jackpot or find the nearest points-of-sale.

?Lotsys has always provided us with cutting-edge solutions?, added Renaud Dol. Now they also excel in mobile ergonomics. During the app development process, Lotsys came up with many excellent ideas in this field ? which are part of the app today. It is so easy and fun to use it! For us it is a strong sign that they are up to date with both lotteries? and players? needs in the mobile internet era.?

?Our main goal as a lottery industry supplier is to create solutions that meet our partners? needs and expectations by combining top-notch technology and security with state-of-the-art ergonomics?, explained Mr Laurent Chesnais, Lotsys General Manager. ?I am pleased and proud to realize that we were once again able to successfully meet FDJ?s expectations.?

As a specialist in both the internet and retail lottery business, Lotsys Gaming Lab handled the game?s entire development process and offers a constantly updated portfolio of games.

Media Contact:
Jodie Thind
Lyceum Media
Jodie@LyceumMedia.com

Note to Editors:
Lotsys, a subsidiary of Fran?aise des Jeux (FDJ), delivers integrated services and solutions to lotteries and sports betting operators. Lotsys boasts 20 years of experience and prestigious references from around the world. The company has already installed nearly 200,000 lottery terminals in partnership with Safran Morpho. For more information please visit http://www.lotsys.com/

If you have any further information related to this story that you would like to share with us privately please click here.

Can't get enough CalvinAyre.com? Follow us on Twitter and Facebook, then you'll never miss out on the latest gaming industry news.

Views and opinions expressed are those of the Author and do not necessarily reflect those of CalvinAyre.com

Source: http://calvinayre.com/2012/11/20/press-releases/lotsys-develops-three-click-app-for-fdjs-loto/

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EU leaders face Greek aid gap in brinkmanship with IMF - Ekathimerini

By James G. Neuger

European finance ministers will try to plug a 15 billion-euro ($19 billion) hole in Greece?s finances and win over the International Monetary Fund in the latest installment of three years of debt-crisis brinkmanship.

Recycling European Central Bank profits on Greek bonds, charging Greece lower interest rates and extending repayment deadlines are among the options under consideration Tuesday for filling the new gap in Greece?s public accounts.

European governments tore open the hole last week, by giving Greece two extra years to cut its budget deficit. The required extra financing provoked a clash with the IMF, since it would add to Greece?s debt load instead of reducing it.

?Greece is in a mess,? James Mirrlees, a Nobel economics laureate, told Bloomberg Television Monday. Europe won?t solve the problem by ?fiddling around with little bits of extra bailout and allowing them to go a bit slower.?

Officials said Tuesday?s meeting, starting at 5 p.m. in Brussels, won?t make a final decision to release the next tranche of aid to Greece, partly because parliaments in Germany, the Netherlands and Finland have yet to weigh in.

The ?troika? representing creditors also has to certify that Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras?s coalition government has delivered economy-boosting steps ranging from improvements to tax collection to the deregulation of closed professions.

Credit Rating

The meeting comes a day after France lost its top credit rating with Moody?s Investors Service, increasing pressure on President Francois Hollande to find ways to bolster growth in Europe?s second-largest economy.

France was cut to Aa1 from Aaa, the rating company said. The Moody?s downgrade follows one by Standard & Poor?s in January.

The euro slid versus most of its 16 major counterparts after the Moody?s action renewed concern the currency bloc?s debt crisis is deepening. The 17-nation euro continued to slide Tuesday, dropping 0.2 percent to $1.2787 as of 9:59 a.m. in Brussels.

Greek 10-year bonds were higher for an eighth day amid expectations that creditors will keep money flowing to the Athens government. The yield on security maturing in February 2023 fell 6 basis points to 17.17 percent.

One option is to deliver about 44 billion euros to Greece in December, by bundling 31.5 billion euros on hold since mid- year with two other tranches due before year-end, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said after the ministers failed to finalize the financing last week.

Paris Meeting

Finance officials from Germany, France, Spain and Italy met Monday in Paris to overcome differences. Spokesmen for the four finance ministries declined to comment on the meeting, which was also attended by European Union Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn.

Last week?s decision to grant Greece two extra years, to 2016, to cut its deficit to 2 percent of gross domestic product without offering debt relief stirred tensions with the IMF, provider of about a third of 148.6 billion euros in loans funneled to Greece since 2010.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, gearing up for a campaign for a third term next year, has ruled out writing off a portion of Greece?s debt. Dutch and Finnish leaders have told their bailout-weary voters the same thing.

?Different Views?

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde, who began the crisis as French finance minister, sparred publicly with the chairman of the euro meeting, Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean- Claude Juncker, over the European inability or refusal to bring down Greece?s debt burden.

?We clearly have different views,? Lagarde said at a joint briefing with Juncker after the Nov. 12 crisis meeting.

The trigger was a decision by the ministers to extend by two years, until 2022, a deadline for paring Greece?s debt to 120 percent of GDP. The debt load is set to peak at 190 percent of GDP in 2014, according to the troika, made up of the IMF, European Central Bank and European Commission.

Lagarde, who cut short a trip to southeast Asia to return to Brussels for Tuesday?s talks, declined to say whether the IMF would budge on the debt target. In an interview in Manila, she said the IMF?s credibility is at stake in pursuit of ?a solid program for Greece that convinces investors today that it will stand tomorrow.?

Financing Gap

Plugging the financing gap through 2014 is easier than demonstrating to the IMF that Greek debt is on a glidepath to ?sustainability,? officials said. Greece?s loan rates have been lowered and repayment schedules lengthened twice before, and no one has publicly contested doing so again.

Finance ministers are also considering how to tap profits made by the ECB and national central banks on Greek bonds, drawing on a February commitment to recycle that money back to Greece. The question of how to treat future ECB profits also has to be addressed.

The central bank is sitting on 208.5 billion euros of bonds of debt-hit governments that it started buying in May 2010 in a controversial program that contributed to the resignation of two Germans from its policy council. While the purchases were halted in March, ECB President Mario Draghi has sketched out a new bond-buying program that would only benefit countries that meet strict conditions.

Asked if unrealized ECB profits on Greek bonds held to maturity could be eventually earmarked for paying off Greek debts, Finnish Finance Minister Jutta Urpilainen said in an interview in Helsinki Monday: ?There are different proposals on the table, of which this is one. We?ll have to see how it looks like as a whole.? [Bloomberg]

Source: http://www.ekathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_wsite1_1_20/11/2012_470781

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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Apes Have Midlife Crises Too

Reported by Dr. Nisha Nathan:

Sure, they may not be able to ditch their wives, buy a shiny red Ferrari, or pick up a 21-year-old at a bar. But apes have midlife crises too ? at least according to a new study.

?The midlife crisis is real,? said Dr. Andrew Oswald, co-author of the study of 500 chimpanzees and orangutans published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. ?Great apes go through it also, so it is inescapable for the average person.?

The term ?midlife crisis? was coined in 1965 by psychologist Elliot Jacques to describe the time when? adults realize their own mortality, recognize that their existence is halfway over, and rush to make significant changes in core aspects of their day-to-day lives. And since the human species evolved from ancestors of modern apes, it would be reasonable to suspect that they have mood swings just as we do.

To see if this was actually the case, researchers asked zookeepers who had close relationships with their apes a series of questions to see whether the animals were happy or sad, if they enjoyed socializing, and how successful they were in achieving their ?personal goals.?

As for what a personal goal might be for an orangutan or chimp, study coauthor Alexander Weiss of the University of Edinburgh said this included such lofty ambitions as climbing a rope, staking out territory, getting prized figs or bananas ? or even hunting down and eating their distant monkey cousins.

Before you knock it, understand that these questions have been used before to assess ape aspiration.

?This questionnaire is a well-established method for assessing positive affect in captive nonhuman primates. There is considerable evidence for this measure?s objective validity,? the study says.

Finally, researchers asked the zookeepers the ultimate question: How happy would you be to switch roles with the apes for a week?

In other words, Weiss said, ?How happy would the rater be to walk a week in the chimp?s shoes ? even though chimps don?t have shoes??

Looking at the zookeepers? answers and the ages of the apes, the authors concluded that great apes have age and well-being highs and lows similar to those of humans ? according to Oswald, a pattern that can best be described as a ?U-shape,? with the high points early and late in life, and the nadir of existence in the middle. This U-shaped curve of human well-being as compared to age, in fact, has been well understood the world over.

As for exactly why this happens to be the case, who knows?

Oswald admits the study has limitations.

?It would be great if we could ask apes to fill out a questionnaire,? he said. ?However this is a human?s assessment of an ape?s well-being and that?s what we are stuck with, being human.?

Despite the apes? silence on the matter, psychological experts who were not involved with the research described the findings as ?fascinating.?

?This is one more example showing that we may be more related to our non-human primates than we think,? said Dr. Nadine Kaslow, vice chair of the department of psychiatry at Emory University in Atlanta. ?It?s quite fascinating that this U-shaped curve is across species.?

For years, researchers have speculated that this U-shape is secondary to social, psychological, or economic explanation. Dr. Redford Williams, director of the Behavioral Medicine Research Center at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C., said this study seems to point at something much more inherent.

?It?s got to be biological,? he said. ?It?s not just that you?re depressed because your earning capacity goes down in mid-life, because I don?t imagine that apes living in the zoo would have to worry about those matters.?

Williams said the study shows there is hope for us humans.

?Don?t worry if you are having a mid-life slump,? he said. ?Don?t feel too guilty; it has to have a genetic basis. It?s not that you screwed up to cause it, because apes are having it too.?

?

Source: http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/health/2012/11/19/apes-have-midlife-crises-too/

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Video: Oil Slides on Ceasefire Talk

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/49906192/

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