Sunday, September 30, 2012

Animal capers as pets are blessed | Toowoomba News | Local News ...

DOGS can seem pretty unholy after digging holes in the yard, but animal owners were able to put a bit of holy back after this morning?s Animal Sunday service.

Rev Penny Jones at Pet blessing at St Lukes Church.

Bev Lacey

DOGS can seem pretty unholy after going through the rubbish and digging a few holes in the backyard, but thankfully animal owners were able to put a bit of holy back into their pets after this morning's Animal Sunday service at St Luke's Anglican Church.

Dogs howling at hymns and grumbling at prayers for cats provided for a light hearted church service as Reverends Penny Jones and Val Grayson presided over what is easily the most fun Sunday on the church's annual calendar.

Pet owners brought along their furry friends to enjoy an outdoor church service aimed at thanking the little critters that often make our most dependable and loyal friends.

There were prayers for cats, dogs, ducks and even elephants said, as well as a moment to reflect on furry friends passed on.

"It's so important to recognise our interdependence with the animal world because we have one creator and we belong together in the web of life," Rev Jones said.

"They give us such marvellous gifts such as unconditional love and loyalty and deserve to be recognised."

Source: http://www.thechronicle.com.au/story/2012/09/30/animal-capers-pets-are-blessed/

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99% Finding Nemo 3D

All Critics (222) | Top Critics (45) | Fresh (232) | Rotten (2) | DVD (48)

A genuinely funny and touching film that, in less than a decade, has established itself as a timeless classic.

It makes even more compelling what is still my all-time favorite Pixar film.

Think of this re-release as an encore, a handy touchstone for you and your kids. "Finding Nemo" was and remains the gold standard against which all other modern animated films are measured, a classic from the day it premiered.

In this seamless blending of technical brilliance and storytelling verve, the Pixar team has made something as marvelously soulful and innately, fluidly American as jazz.

Nemo, with its ravishing underwater fantasia, manages to trump the design glamour of earlier Pixar films.

Gill is Platoon's Sgt. Elias if he'd survived Sgt. Barnes' treachery and returned to civilian life weary and hard-bitten from his experiences. And also a fish.

Finding Nemo 3D is a quality post-conversion experience that successfully enhances the 2003 film's original standout visuals.

The 3D gives the images a little more depth but they already had heft and weight. The 3D is a money-making gimmick, nothing more.

A great blend of storytelling and technology.

It's downright curmudgeonly to remain focused on the negatives when the rest of the picture is saturated with invention and wit.

It's bright, it's beautiful and it hasn't aged a day. So why, then, do we need to see it in 3-D?

A rare example of a movie that not only survives its 3-D conversion but benefits from it

It was as funny as I remember and brilliant because it is subtle. It just knocks it out of the park. I love everything about this movie, one of my favorite Pixar movies of all time, 5/5 Schmoes. The new sound/3D adds to the greatness that is Nemo.

If you're fishing for fun in an ocean of movie mediocrity, grab the kids or the grandkids, fork out a few extra bucks and see this one in three-dimensions.

It's a great movie, so much fun, an acheivement that should be enjoyed by children of all ages and worth seeing it in 3D.

Sea-worthy w/enhanced visual lure and rich, humorous characters set in a double narrative; this 3D revisit allows us to fall overboard all over again.

If ever there was a film that wasn't broke, this is it. So naturally they converted it into 3D for a special re-release this weekend. (Stupid irony.)

I believe my sensitivity to certain creative choices of the picture has dulled some, while age has opened my eyes to its complex relationships and tireless sense of exploration.

When the blunt head of Bruce the shark slams into the screen like a hammer, everyone -- adults included -- gasps

At its best, the added dimension is merely harmless, making the movie blurry enough that you need special glasses to make it sharp again.

More Critic Reviews

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/finding_nemo_3d/

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Weighing The Week Ahead: The Debate About Jobs

Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. (More...)

Sometimes the political and economic streams converge to determine the agenda.

Prepare for a non-stop debate about jobs.

This week the major data all relate to employment. We also have the first of the Presidential debates, Wednesday night at 9:00 PM EDT. Moderator Jim Lehrer, whom I met when he got an honorary degree in my professor days, has released the topics for the debate and also devised an interesting format. There will be plenty of opportunity for discussion and following up. Neither candidate can expect to give a prepared answer and stick to the script while dodging the main points -- especially with Lehrer in charge!

The debate will start with a discussion of economic policy. Employment will be at the forefront. Both campaigns are engaged in driving down expectations. Two examples: "Obama is a great orator." "Romney has so much recent experience and won most of the primary debates."

It is a tricky game. You have to praise your opponent so much that any outcome seems good for your side. You must do so in a way that belittles debating skills as not relevant to the actual job. Check out The Hill's report for details.

I'll offer some of my own expectations in the conclusion, but first let us do our regular review of last week's news.

Background on "Weighing the Week Ahead"

There are many good sources for a list of upcoming events. One source I especially like is the weekly post from the WSJ's Market Beat blog.

In contrast, I highlight a smaller group of events. My theme is an expert guess about what we will be watching on TV and reading in the mainstream media. It is a focus on what I think is important for my trading and client portfolios.

This is unlike my other articles at "A Dash" where I develop a focused, logical argument with supporting data on a single theme. Here I am simply sharing my conclusions. Sometimes these are topics that I have already written about, and others are on my agenda. I am putting the news in context.

Readers often disagree with my conclusions. Do not be bashful. Join in and comment about what we should expect in the days ahead. This weekly piece emphasizes my opinions about what is really important and how to put the news in context. I have had great success with my approach, but feel free to disagree. That is what makes a market!

Last Week's Data

Each week I break down events into good and bad. Often there is "ugly" and on rare occasion something really good. My working definition of "good" has two components:

  1. The news is market-friendly. Our personal policy preferences are not relevant for this test. And especially -- no politics.
  2. It is better than expectations.

The Good

There were a few bright spots last week.

  • Greece has a coalition proposal for a new austerity package (see The New Athenian). This is a good step. Next we must see whether it will pass muster with "the troika" in charge of bailout funding.
  • Housing prices are stronger -- now on all indexes as reported by Bonddad. Calculated Risk looks at prices measured in several ways, with plenty of great charts. Here is the simple version, just using nominal prices (click to enlarge images):

NominalHousePricesJuly2012

  • M2 growth has resumed. This is the foundation for economic improvement through expansionary Fed policy, so it deserves attention. Bonddad reports the y-o-y growth of 7.1% as well as positive readings from their valuable regular coverage of high frequency data.
  • Spain made progress. This complex story was misinterpreted by many, especially because of the video coverage of demonstrations. The market wants Spain to agree to a bailout, get lower interest rates, and achieve some certainty. This is a difficult political step, so it is not happening as quickly as pundits would prefer.
  • Initial jobless claims moved lower. The 359K report is back to July levels and much better than the more worrisome 380K range of recent weeks. The reported data does not include the survey period for this week's payroll report.
  • Consumer confidence spiked higher. The Conference Board measure bounced to 70.3, much higher than expectations. This is encouraging as a coincident indicator of employment as well as possible future consumption. Here is Doug Short's chart, showing that levels are still below normal expectations:

Conference-Board-consumer-confidence-index

The Bad

There was plenty of bad news last week.

  • New Home sales were soft, down 1.9% month-over-month, but up 24% year-over year. See John Lounsbury and Steven Hansen's discussion.
  • Earnings forecasts moved lower. Reacting to second-quarter reports and outlook, analysts have reduced forecasts. Brian Gilmartin tracks this carefully, showing the actual changes by sector as well as some thoughtful commentary. One-year forward earnings have not moved that much. Bespoke wonders whether the bar is now low enough for Q3. Here is their typically helpful chart:

Spxeps921

  • Durable goods orders declined by 13.6%. Even excluding the transportation segment with the high volatility airline orders, the decline was 1.6%, much worse than expected. See Steven Hansen's discussion and helpful charts. Here is one example:

Fredgraph

  • Chicago PMI broke below 50. The 49.7 reading indicates marginal contraction in manufacturing for the Chicago region. Normally this report gets less attention, but it moved the market on a Friday morning. Many view this as an indicator of the national ISM report which will be released on Monday.
  • Business investment is weak reflecting lower confidence. Scott Grannis discusses and provides this chart:

Capital Goods Orders

The Ugly

Iran's progress toward nuclear weapons. Just as importantly, Israeli perceptions of Iran's progress. See Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu's UN General Assembly Speech.

The Indicator Snapshot

It is important to keep the current news in perspective. My weekly snapshot includes the most important summary indicators:

The SLFSI reports with a one-week lag. This means that the reported values do not include last week's market action. The SLFSI has moved a lot lower, and is now out of the trigger range of my pre-determined risk alarm. This is an excellent tool for managing risk objectively, and it has suggested the need for more caution. Before implementing this indicator our team did extensive research, discovering a "warning range" that deserves respect. We identified a reading of 1.1 or higher as a place to consider reducing positions.

The SLFSI is not a market-timing tool, since it does not attempt to predict how people will interpret events. It uses data, mostly from credit markets, to reach an objective risk assessment. The biggest profits come from going all-in when risk is high on this indicator, but so do the biggest losses.

The C-Score is a weekly interpretation of the best recession indicator I found, Bob Dieli's "aggregate spread."

Bob and I recently did some videos explaining the recession history. I am working on a post that will show how to use this method. As I have written for many months, there is no imminent recession concern. I recently showed the significance of by explaining the relationship to the business cycle.

The ECRI recession call is now over a year old. Many have forgotten that at the time of the original prediction, the ECRI claimed that the recession was already underway by September of 2011. See New Deal Democrat's carefully documented discussion, including the original video, at the Bonddad Blog.

Readers might also want to review my new Recession Resource Page, which explains many of the concepts people get wrong.

The single best resource for the ECRI call and the ongoing debate is Doug Short. This week's article describes the complete history, the critics, and how it has played out. We are now seeing modest declines in two of the major indicators. Here is the key chart:

Big-Four-Indicators-Since-2009-Trough

The Doug Short updates are mandatory weekly reads for those who are still worried about a new recession.

Indicator snapshot 092912

[We did not get our regular data for the RecessionAlert forecast, but hope to update this next week.]

Our "Felix" model is the basis for our "official" vote in the weekly Ticker Sense Blogger Sentiment Poll. We have a long public record for these positions. This week we continued as bullish after a brief stint at "neutral." These are one-month forecasts for the poll, but Felix has a three-week horizon. The ratings have moved a little higher, and the confidence has improved from last week. It has been a close call over the last few weeks.

The Week Ahead

There are not so many items on this week's calendar, but it is a crucial week. As noted above, my grading of the reports relates to what I see as important.

The "A List" includes the following:

  • The Employment Situation Report (F). Right or wrong, this will be viewed as the official indicator of where the US economy stands.
  • Initial claims (Th) which continue to provide the most up-to-date read on jobs and the economy.
  • The ISM manufacturing report (M) is expected to be weak, but remains a wild card. This has implications for Friday's employment report.

The "B List" includes several reports:

  • ADP jobs estimate (W) may actually be as good as the official report, but does not enjoy the same status.
  • The ISM services index (W) does not have the long history of the manufacturing index, but now represents a more important part of the economy.
  • The FOMC minutes (W) may seem like old news, but provide some color.

The Presidential debate will be big news, but challenging to interpret. Pundits will speculate both on who won and also the implications for the economy.

There is a lot to cover this week, but I'll try to do something on debate night.

Trading Time Frame

Felix has moved back into a neutral posture after a few weeks as marginally bullish. It has been a close call for several weeks. In practice, the official forecast has mattered little to our trading positions. Felix became more aggressive in a timely fashion, near the start of the summer rally. Since we only require three buyable sectors, the trading accounts look for the "bull market somewhere" even when the overall picture is neutral. The ratings have moved lower this week, and I would not be surprised to see a reduction in trading positions this week.

Investor Time Frame

Last week I reported on research showing that many long-term investors have simply lost touch with reality. I see confirmation in data showing that investors have abandoned stocks.

Even the PBS Newshour program, exceptionally aimed at balance and information on topics like this, winds up with a pairing of two people celebrated by those of the bearish persuasion -- Harvard's Econ and Public Policy Prof Kenneth Rogoff and PIMCO's Mohamed El-Erian. Neither seemed especially bearish in this interview, perhaps because of the setting.

Rogoff, whose recent book as frequently cited as proof positive that the end is near for the US economy, responded as follows:

I do think next year might look a little better. But I don't think we're going to be having fast growth for a very long time. The uncertainty around the world, in Europe, in the United States, in China is one thing.

The huge debt legacy from the financial crisis is another and the growing government debt.

That said, I mean, I wouldn't underestimate the upside, with the U.S. being such a creative economy. For example, energy prices have fallen a lot. And there are some other things you can point to on the upside.

But, so far, businesses have been very reluctant to invest heavily, very reluctant to hire heavily.

El-Erian had the following comment:

I tell the politicians, please remove the fiscal cliff, because if the fiscal cliff occurs, and we get 4 percent of GDP disorderly cuts in spending and then across-the-board increase in taxes, the U.S. will go into recession.

So, the first thing is, do no harm.

Second is, if we can get over that, I see an economy gradually picking up momentum. It's not going to be great. We're going to -- we're going to create jobs, not enough to really lower the unemployment issue. And, hopefully, we're going to start dealing with these longer-term issues.

So, like Ken, the thing I find most frustrating, Judy, is this is not a complicated issue. We can handle this. We can unleash the innovation, the entrepreneurship, the cash that is on the sideline. But it requires a political will and political coordination.

I watched the show and decided to do a one-person focus interview -- not a poll - with one of the smartest people I know. He is a regular Newshour viewer and had just watched the interview. He understood the background and biases of the participants. He has personally beaten the markets and the pundits by choosing and maintaining some high-quality investments and discounting the headline worries.

Since he is a Poli Sci PhD he is not scared witless (TM euphemism OldProf) by news from Europe. He is accustomed to progress through incremental processes. While I am delighted that my friend is doing so well, I suspect that most investors do not share his savvy.

The Risk/Reward Question. How much risk should you take? The right answer is different for everyone, but too many people choose "zero." These investors do not follow the Buffett advice of buying when others are fearful. Then, when the market rallies, they are afraid that they are "too late." I wrote a recent article, Stock Prices and the Fundamentals: Don't be Fooled, showing how to avoid this trap. The answer is not going "all in" since most of us have to pay more attention to short-term risk than does Mr. Buffett!

If you have been following our regular advice, you have done the following:

  1. Replaced your bond mutual funds with individual bonds (bond funds are very risky!);
  2. Sold some calls against your modest dividend stocks to enhance yield to the 10% range; and
  3. Added some octane with a reasonable allocation of good stocks.

There is nothing more satisfying than getting yield and call premiums, even if stocks move sideways.

If you have not done so, it is certainly not too late. We have collected some of our recent recommendations in a new investor resource page -- a starting point for the long-term investor. (Comments and suggestions welcome!)

Final Thoughts on Employment

Current economic data reflect the weakness in business investment. While consumer confidence is higher, business confidence is still lacking. I am specifically referring to established businesses considering expansion --- and I do not mean all of them. At the margin, there are some businesses that simply find it easier to be conservative, waiting until after the election to commit to expansion or new hiring. This is the key source of the recent soft patch in manufacturing.

Companies have no incentive to make positive earnings forecasts and may well choose to delay expansion. It is the price we pay for a political process that creates long periods of uncertainty with brief windows of opportunity for fixing problems.

The jobs picture is actually a little better than we thought. This week the BLS announced the preliminary benchmark revisions for payroll employment. Net job creation was actually about 350K better than previously reported and private job creation was 400K better for the twelve months ending in March, 2012.

Here are the key takeaways:

  • Those disparaging the BLS estimate as adding phantom jobs have once again been proved wrong. The basic process has been very accurate over the years, with an average error of only 0.3%. You should be hearing a correction from some commentators, but do not hold your breath!
  • Revising data is a fact of life. Consumers demand timely reports, which use partial data and estimates. When complete data become available, the BLS reports it, as we would expect. The smart-Alec know-nothings who have never had the responsibility of developing data use this as an occasion for criticism. When you read someone making a sarcastic comment about the BLS suddenly "finding" another 350K jobs, you have discovered a biased and misleading source of commentary.

For a balanced explanation see the WSJ. For further discussion and examples of the revision process, see Bob Dieli's new blog, "No Spin Forecast".

I am not expecting major job gains, especially given the other indicators and the manufacturing weakness. I will discuss this further in my regular monthly employment preview.

Enjoy Wednesday's debate, which will definitely not be using any replacement referees!

Source: http://seekingalpha.com/article/895921-weighing-the-week-ahead-the-debate-about-jobs?source=feed

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Satellite launch stirs passions in Venezuela

Venezuela will launch its second satellite on Friday in a move President Hugo Chavez says highlights the achievements of his self-styled revolution ahead of an election, but which his rival says underscores his neglect of problems closer to home.

It is a close race with just nine days to go before the vote in South America's biggest oil exporter. Both sides are planning huge rallies next week to close their campaigns, as well as making last-ditch efforts to win over undecided voters.

Opposition candidate Henrique Capriles says Chavez is focused on spreading his socialist project around the world - and has done little to address the daily problems of Venezuelans such as crime.

The "Miranda Satellite," which will be launched from China, is a prime example of what he calls Chavez's grandiose plans. For the government, it is a symbol of sovereign pride.

"It is a reaffirmation of our path towards independence, in all areas of knowledge," Science Minister Jorge Arreaza said on Twitter. "The rancid bourgeois (opposition) dismiss it and humiliate the workers ... who designed and built it. How sad!"

Like the "Simon Bolivar Satellite" launched from China in 2008, officials say the new spacecraft will help the government monitor the environment, improve urban planning and even crack down on illegal mining and drug cultivation.

Both satellites were named after 19th-century independence heroes. Live footage of Friday's late-night launch is due to be beamed from China to big screens in Caracas' museum district, where officials were gearing up for a street party.

In the run-up to previous elections, Chavez has often unveiled many projects in an effort to impress voters. This time, his campaigning has been much less intense, partly because he has suffered two bouts of cancer since June 2011.

'Chavez is tired'
Chavez, 58, is warning his "bourgeois" foe will scrap his social welfare programs, while Capriles wants to tap discontent over crime, unemployment and inefficient public services.

In a jab at the baseball-loving president, the opposition candidate held a rally on Thursday at the home stadium of Chavez's favorite team, Los Navegantes del Magallanes.

"The president is like a pitcher whose arm is tired. ...? We need a new one," Capriles told the cheering crowd in Carabobo state.

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The latest surveys by Venezuelan pollsters have been sharply divergent. Most of the best-known polls show Chavez ahead, but Capriles' numbers have been creeping up. Polls are notoriously controversial in Venezuela and public opinion shifts quickly.

Investors expect Capriles to end a five-year nationalization drive if he wins, and reduce state intervention in the economy.

Chavez has vowed to strengthen his oil-financed socialism if he gets another six years in office. That is likely to mean fresh confrontation with the private sector, and more support for the president's leftist allies around the region.

Capriles says he believes Chavez is willing to step down if he loses on Oct. 7. But some radical members of the opposition fear the president could do anything to stay in power, from rigging the vote to sending armed supporters into the street.

During previous elections there have been plenty of accusations of small-scale fraud at remote polling stations ? but no evidence of widespread, centralized rigging.

Venezuela's widely traded debt has risen as Capriles' poll numbers have inched up. Its popular Global 2027 bond has climbed by more than 3.5 percent in the last week alone.

Wall Street would like a more business-friendly leader in Venezuela, although Chavez's government has never given any sign of defaulting on the country's debts.

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012. Check for restrictions at: http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49218690/ns/world_news-asia_pacific/

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Jim Webb on 'Givers' and 'Takers' (Atlantic Politics Channel)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/251867156?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Saturday, September 29, 2012

Vegetarian Awareness Month: What's Your Favorite Meatless Dish ...

Q: What do hip hop artist Usher and President Bill Clinton have in common?

A: They've both converted to veganism to embrace the health benefits of eating a plant-based diet.

If you're interested in eating less meat?or no meat at all?October is your month! Monday is World Vegetarian Day, the official start of Vegetarian Awareness Month.

And if you're already vegetarian or vegan?spread the love! Share your best recipes for meat-free meals and snacks, and we'll feature them on Meatless Mondays throughout the month.

Swapping beef for beans just once a week might not only be good for you, it might be good for the Earth, too. A recently released Oxfam America report says families that make this small change at the dinner table can help conserve the world's water resources and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Eating less beef decreases livestock production, according to Oxfam. And when fewer livestock are farmed, less water is used and less cow toots are released into the environment. Methane produced by livestock is responsible for 18 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions.

The report, The Food Transformation (available in the media box attached to this article), says that if urban households in America, the United Kingdom, Spain and Brazil offered a vegetarian option once a week, they could each save the equivalent of 17 bathtubs full of water and together reduce methane equal to taking 3.7 million cars off the road.

A healthier you could mean a healthier world.

Email your favorite recipes for meatless meals and snacks to michelle.mowad@patch.com. Include a pretty picture, too, if you like and where you live! We'll offer vegetarian dishes to try each week on Meatless Monday.

Source: http://lajolla.patch.com/articles/vegetarian-awareness-month-whats-your-favorite-meatless-monday-dish-recipe

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Bo verdict allows China to focus on succession

BEIJING (AP) ? With disgraced politician Bo Xilai expelled from the party, his career effectively ended with a slew of criminal charges that are certain to result in convictions, China's ruling communists can finally focus on the crucial task of ensuring a smooth transition to a new generation of leaders.

On Friday, the party's decision-making Politburo finally took long-awaited action on the scandal that had loomed over Chinese politics for more than half a year, leveling criminal charges against Bo that range from corruption to sexual affairs to abetting the cover-up of a murder by his wife. At the same time, the 25-member Politburo also made the long overdue announcement of the opening of the party congress, now scheduled for Nov. 8, when President Hu Jintao will step down as party boss and Vice President Xi Jinping will succeed him.

The twin pronouncements are connected: Getting Bo out of the way was seen as crucial to healing rifts in the party and allowing Xi and a new leadership to come to power without the overhang of a messy scandal.

"Having settled this contentious issue, the party leadership is in a position to start the party congress with a facade of unity and also harmony," said Willy Lam, a political analyst at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Friday's announcement also came on the eve of National Day, which commemorates Mao Zedong's Oct. 1, 1949, declaration of victory in the country's civil war and the dawn of the People's Republic of China. Despite China's explosive economic growth and breakneck modernization since then, the events surrounding Bo's fall from grace show Mao's party remains very much the opaque and powerful force in Chinese political life.

"Again, this is politics overriding legal and judicial principles," Lam said, noting that the decision came from the Politburo convening behind closed doors instead of judges in an open court.

"The elite politics are still done" in secrecy, Lam said.

One of China's most ambitious and best-known politicians, Bo was brought down after a trusted aide disclosed that Bo's wife had murdered a British businessman. Bo was dismissed as party chief of the vibrant inland megacity of Chongqing; his wife, Gu Kailai, was given a suspended death sentence after confessing to the murder; and the aide, Chongqing police chief Wang Lijun, received a 15-year prison term for initially covering up the murder and other misdeeds.

The charges against Bo, however, go much further, spanning more than a decade and including allegations that he took bribes, abused his power and had improper relationships with several women. Given the party's control of the courts, the indictment ensures the flamboyant 63-year-old's political career is finished.

The criminal proceedings against Bo are likely to start soon, with steps being taken to remove him from the National People's Congress, China's top legislature. Delegates to that body have immunity from arrest and prosecution.

As the son of a founding father of communist China, Bo grew up with a broad web of contacts within the party, government and military. Unlike most of the other members of the stiff and remote senior leadership, the telegenic Bo also was popular with the public, using a crackdown on organized crime in Chongqing to court publicity.

That also made him a polarizing figure among the party elite. In recent months, as speculation swirled about Bo's fate and the debate among top leaders dragged on, it is likely that his allies argued for the administrative equivalent of a slap on the wrist, while the top leadership represented by Hu, Vice President Xi and Premier Wen Jiabao saw Bo as a threat that needed to be eliminated.

The decision to level such a harsh punishment is a sign that the top leaders won out, once again, said Jeremy Paltiel, an expert on Chinese politics at Canada's Carleton University.

"My guess is that Hu and Wen wanted to crush Bo, not just smother him," Paltiel said. "They got their wish, even at the cost of a month's delay in the congress."

The state-run Global Times said in an editorial Saturday that it is in the people's fundamental interest for the party congress to convene smoothly and that the decisions about Bo provide certainty.

"It is conducive to the current situation and also to the accumulation of political certainty," the editorial read.

Bo is the first Politburo member to be purged and handed over to prosecutors since Hu ousted Shanghai party secretary Chen Liangyu in 2006 for corruption. Bo's case, however, was more politically divisive and delicate than Chen's, or any other recent case in which senior officials have been charged with corruption.

Ultimately, the decision on Bo was part of the overall horse-trading relating to the succession, said Steve Tsang, director of the China Policy Institute at the University of Nottingham in Britain.

"It probably means that as a result they negotiated something else that is better for the leadership succession," Tsang said.

Bo's removal is seen as strengthening Xi's position, leaving him the undisputed leader of the party's "princelings," as the offspring of high-ranking communist elders are known, and eliminating a challenger who had threatened party unity. He may face some opposition from Bo's supporters among party hard-liners, but Friday's announcement shows his influence was waning fast.

Friday's closed-door Politburo meeting also likely finalized other arrangements for the congress, including the much contested lineup for the new leadership as well as for a commission that oversees the party's control of the military. Those decisions will be presented to the 204-member Central Committee ? a cross-section of the nation's political elite ? on Nov. 1 before being discussed a week later at the congress, which is a largely ceremonial event, approving decisions made earlier by the party's inner circle.

In trying to use the Bo case to rally the rank-and-file, the Politburo said Friday that bringing down such a high-level leader was proof of the party's determination to tackle the corruption that has damaged public confidence.

"Investigations must be thorough, firm and make no appeasement, no matter who is involved and how powerful they are, so no corrupt member will escape the punishment of party discipline and the nation's law," it said.

___

Associated Press writer Didi Tang contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bo-verdict-allows-china-focus-succession-072606219.html

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Wall-Ye robot does grunt work at vineyards

1 day

Winemaking is the latest industry to be hit by robot?fever: French inventors have created a robot that rolls among the grapevines, checking and perhaps pruning as it goes.

A wine grower in France complained three years ago to?Christophe Millot that they were always short on staff. Millot designed the Wall-Ye robot, which is indeed named after Pixar's trash-collecting WALL-E, and the pair have been working together on it ever since.

Wall-Ye moves around on treads and is equipped with a number of cameras for navigation and inspection of vines.?It navigates by GPS, but also recognizes each plant individually and can carry out?special instructions or follow up on previous work.

There are plans to make it able to prune vines and eventually pick grapes, but for now it is limited to less complicated tasks. But checking for bugs, disease, temperature variations and soil problems are important parts of running a vineyard ? and they can be tedious.

Another winemaker, Claire Gazeau-Montrasi, explains in the AFP video above?that she would welcome a robot that took care of the most boring jobs. Like a Roomba or similar household robot, it can do its job slowly but surely, working around its owner's schedule.

At ?25,000, or around $32,000, Wall-Ye isn't cheap, though there are larger and more expensive systems that are capable of more. Automation of agriculture hasn't made it to vineyards quite yet because of the delicate nature of the task, but that may soon change, with?robots like Wall-Ye leading the charge.

Devin Coldewey is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. His personal website is coldewey.cc.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/wall-ye-robot-does-grunt-work-vineyards-6150501

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Living Pretty: Easy Peazy Crockpot meal

?Good Morning!? Anthony just left for his first golf lessons (more on that later) and my in-laws and I are having a lazy morning before we hit the stores later.? I wanted to share a super easy meal that we love.

Sometimes I get annoyed with crockpot recipes because there is a lot of prep involved in making the meal.? Not this recipe!

Ingredients:

  • beef chuck roast
  • yams
  • 16 oz. jar of slasa
  • 1 C chicken stock or water (Not pictured)?

?I actually forgot to put the chicken broth in this time, and it turned out fine.? I think I cook it for four hours on High, checking on it periodically.? I usually cook it on the weekend and have it for leftovers during the week.

*I do not like anything that has a hint of spicy in it!? If you are like me, don't be afraid of putting the salsa on it and trying it.? It actually turns out like a sweet flavor.

Let me know if you try it! Perfect meal to start the fall season:)

Source: http://angelabrabon.blogspot.com/2012/09/easy-peazy-crockpot-meal.html

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Wall St Week Ahead: Stock bulls eye Spain, Bernanke and jobs

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street will open October with a busy week, highlighted by low expectations for global manufacturing data and the U.S. jobs report, but that could set the stage for positive surprises that help lift the market.

The S&P 500 finished its third positive quarter in the last four on Friday, despite suffering its largest weekly percentage decline since June. For the past three months, the S&P 500 gained 5.9 percent - its best third quarter since 2010. In contrast, the index was down 1.3 percent for the week.

The benchmark S&P 500 earlier this month reached its highest level since late 2007. Yet uncertainty remains over whether stocks can hold their gains against the headwinds of a struggling economy. That explains, in part, the retreat over the last several days.

The S&P 500 hit a high of 1,474.51 in mid-September before pulling back by a bit more than 2 percent. A run at 1,500 seems possible, but the flurry of economic and world events ahead probably will prevent a major advance in the coming week.

Bulls are betting this week's Spanish budget proposals will be a preamble to a bailout request by Mariano Rajoy's government. The move would be seen as a first step to get the finances of the euro zone's fourth-largest economy in order and would clear some of the market uncertainty regarding the euro zone crisis.

Monetary policy is also on the list of market catalysts next week. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is scheduled to speak on Monday and the minutes of the latest FOMC meeting are set for release later in the week. The week's agenda includes meetings of the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan.

"I think we could see a rebound next week if we get some of the stars aligning and have Spain ask for a bailout, the ECB announcing favorable terms for that bailout, and if we see the Bank of Japan announce further monetary intervention," said Brian Jacobsen, chief portfolio strategist at Wells Fargo Funds Management in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin.

"If Spain and the ECB don't deliver, we could set ourselves up for a further lateral move in the markets. A negative would be if Rajoy flat-out denies that they need a bailout."

The ECB and BOJ are set to meet on Thursday, with the Bank of Japan's meeting extending until Friday.

FACTORIES, JOBS AND THE DEBATES

Chinese factory and business conditions data will kick off a numbers-heavy calendar for markets. Manufacturing PMI, due on Monday, is expected to show a second straight month of contraction.

A snapshot of U.S. manufacturing activity will be provided on Monday when the Institute for Supply Management releases its September index. The September ISM reading is expected to show another month of contraction, but at a slightly slower pace than in August. On Wednesday, the ISM will release its U.S. services-sector Purchasing Managers' Index, which could show a slight deceleration in the pace of growth in the non-manufacturing sector.

"We have Chinese economic data over the weekend, and we'll see how markets react on Monday," said Wasif Latif, vice president of equity investments at San Antonio, Texas-based USAA Investment Management.

"It seems like the market is bracing for bad numbers, meaning if they're not as bad, it could be market-positive," Latif said.

Non-farm payrolls for September, due on Friday, are seen up 115,000, while the U.S. unemployment rate is seen ticking up 0.1 percent from August to 8.2 percent in September.

The jobs data will come on the heels of the first of three U.S. presidential debates, scheduled for Wednesday night. Recent poll numbers point to a strengthening lead by President Barack Obama, but a weak payrolls reading could give some hope to Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

"If Romney doesn't turn the ship with a very strong (debate)performance, the president is going to win," said Jack de Gan, chief investment officer at Harbor Advisory Corp in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.

He said the trend in the polls has taken away some of the market uncertainty regarding the presidential election. He added that an ECB- or Spain-related headline out of Europe on Thursday could overcome almost anything that would happen Wednesday night during the debate.

"I think the market is coming to terms with the fact the president is ahead, and unless something significant changes, (he) will prevail."

(Wall St Week Ahead runs every Friday. Questions or comments on this column can be emailed to: rodrigo.campos(at)thomsonreuters.com)

(Editing by Jan Paschal)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wall-st-week-ahead-stock-bulls-eye-spain-034223623--finance.html

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Wild Advertising Claims - Web Hosting Talk

Professional Idiot

?

Join Date: Apr 2003

Location: London, UK

Posts: 2,537


Is it just me that gets a little bugged by providers who make ads which are either clearly untrue, or simply something they could never prove? I'm not talking about the usual stuff like 24/7 support, but for example ..

On WHT right now there's two different VPS offers that both say something like 'the best VPS your money can buy' - well they can't both be true?

There's also a banner ad which says 'Best uptime in the industry' - Really? you've monitored every other provider on the planet and can show the stats?

I don't know what regulation there is in the US for advertising, in the UK we have the ASA and here's a little reminder that you can't just say what you want when you write that next advert.

http://www.asa.org.uk/Rulings/Adjudi...DJ_173899.aspx

Thoughts? As a provider, do you ever challenge other company ads through bodies such as the ASA?




WHT Addict

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Join Date: Feb 2011

Posts: 139

hey man that's how the world is like nowadays, not just the hosting industry
all the hosting providers want to make their products stand out so they have to come up with some kind of catch phrase


Community Guide

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Join Date: Apr 2002

Location: Kansas City, MO

Posts: 1,951

Words like "best" are subjective. When I say I'm the best lover in the world that is my opinion and although most women would probably agree with that statement there are going to be some hard core lesbians out there that don't.

When a VPS provider says they're the best they probably think they are and there might be others that agree.

Best uptime? Maybe they've had 100% uptime on every server (all 1 of them) for the last 5 seconds.

It's all about the basis of their claims and the opinion words they use.


Junior Guru Wannabe

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Join Date: Nov 2011

Posts: 67

Quote:

Words like "best" are subjective. When I say I'm the best lover in the world that is my opinion and although most women would probably agree with that statement there are going to be some hard core lesbians out there that don't.

When a VPS provider says they're the best they probably think they are and there might be others that agree.

Best uptime? Maybe they've had 100% uptime on every server (all 1 of them) for the last 5 seconds.

It's all about the basis of their claims and the opinion words they use.

Got a good chuckle out of your post. Its just how advertising works. Do you expect them to put
"Average host with OK prices",
no, no one is going to do that.
__________________
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LiteSpeed Enthusiast

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Join Date: Nov 2009

Location: United Kingdom

Posts: 6,821

As much as the "smaller guys" do it within this industry I can assure many of the "top dogs" do it just as bad...

Just browse several of the "biggies" in this industry and you'll see what I mean.

Regards,


__________________
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? Server Setups - Migrations - Security/Hardening - cPanel DNS Cluster Setups.
? High Quality Support With 30 Minute Guaranteed Response Times! -

Premium Member

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Join Date: Aug 2010

Location: Kuala Lumpur, Malasiya

Posts: 589

This is the way people advertise their businesses now. I'd have to agree with cd/home, even the industry leaders don't care much about the terms they use. Some of them can be misleading at times, and false advertising later results in a bunch of angry customers who didn't get what they expected. Problem with the hosting industry is that everyother day a kid is opening a webhosting website, and there is no way they can be stopped or regulated.


__________________
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Junior Guru Wannabe

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Join Date: Jul 2012

Location: Singapore

Posts: 72

This is how business/world works, unethical, backstabbing, lying.
The world is now immoral.

Apple announced that iPhone 5 was the first phone to have 4G support.
That was obviously a lie, there were many smartphones with 4G support before iPhone 5 came out.


Junior Guru Wannabe

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Join Date: Jun 2012

Posts: 63

This is Just a Marketing Thought to attract Customers. Just Use your Mind & Commonsense, This Will Lead you to your way.


Wouldn't want a custom title

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Join Date: Aug 2001

Posts: 1,202

Quote:

When I say I'm the best lover in the world that is my opinion and although most women would probably agree with that statement there are going to be some hard core lesbians out there that don't.

Quote:

Best uptime? Maybe they've had 100% uptime on every server (all 1 of them) for the last 5 seconds

Nice summary overall


Web Host Reviewer

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Join Date: Feb 2006

Location: Kepler-22b

Posts: 7,700

Quote:

'the best VPS your money can buy'
'Best uptime in the industry'

This is all hyperbole. There's nothing overtly "wild" about those claims.
Everybody thinks they're best.

Would you use a company that says they're mediocre, but good enough?

Quote:

iPhone 5 was the first phone to have 4G support..

This is an example of a false claim.
... assuming GIANT_CRAB is accurate with his claim of it being a false claim. I didn't verify.

Professional Idiot

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Join Date: Apr 2003

Location: London, UK

Posts: 2,537


Web Hosting Master

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Join Date: Oct 2010

Posts: 1,395

It's subjective.

What company enjoys success while advertising they are the worst?

Well, Rudy's BBQ in Texas does claim to be the worst BBQ in Texas and they're pretty good.


__________________

Web Host Reviewer

?

Join Date: Feb 2006

Location: Kepler-22b

Posts: 7,700

Quote:

Well, Rudy's BBQ in Texas does claim to be the worst BBQ in Texas and they're pretty good.
Not to veer too far OT, but... Rudy's isn't all that good. I'd rather have Spring Creek. If you're near Austin or San Antonio, go to The Salt Lick in Buda/Driftwood (little nowhere town south of Austin on I-35). Just print a map before you go. Much better BBQ, veggies, and everything else. BYOB, too, if you need a brew. Warning: Cash only.

And now I'm hungry.

.
.


WHT Addict

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Join Date: Aug 2008

Location: England, UK

Posts: 170

Quote:

Best uptime? Maybe they've had 100% uptime on every server (all 1 of them) for the last 5 seconds.

It appears that a complainant can request proof of a host uptime claims to be substantiated too:
http://www.asa.org.uk/Rulings/Non-co...OSTUK-Ltd.aspx

I wonder how they would find for unlimited claims? (withdraws to bunker )


WHT Addict

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Join Date: Apr 2007

Posts: 156

Nice one! Still have the chuckle on my face... In marketing it is often the case one uses subjective assumptions for psychological reasons - when you see words like "best", "top", "quality",and all the "-est"'s out there, the prospect is presumed to want to try the vendor out. And as someone above said, would you seriously consider a company if they said something along the lines of being average or just mainstream?

I agree, it may be best to try and leave the meaningless superlatives out of your marketing campaigns, yet, as cheap as it is, it does work on the "lesser" minds, I guess... In this respect, I quite like the rules in Google AdWords, where you're not to provide misleading information, or else your ad comes a cropper.

This reminds me the situation when you go to, say, Petticoat Lane Market on Saturday and every seller is shoving their goods in your face with the "best" argument!







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Source: http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1195816

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RolePlayGateway?

I'm checking the interest on dark fantasy. Angels, demons, vampires, werewolves, necromancers, gifted humans, and such.

I have a majorly long backstory that I wouldn't want to bore you with at the present time, but for the sake of conveying information, here's a basic outline:

-'Angels' are more like deities because their soul purpose is to travel between galaxies creating life on planets that can sustain it.
-When the angels created humans, they were different from their other prior creations because they didn't respect the land and the other humans.
-The angels leave, thinking that this problem would sort itself out (because angels can't destroy their own creations), but then return after several centuries to try again. Too bad for them, the humans are still alive and have deconstructed their planet to reconstruct it how they see fit. They're also fighting wars among each other.
-The second time around, they've brought a younger angel with them who can't understand why her angel brethren would just leave behind the humans in their misery. There must be something we can do...
-The other angels don't hear the young one, and in turn, the angel 'loses her innocence' and her heart is corrupt with dark energy, so she crashes into earth after her wings splinter away and turn the color of charcoal, losing her ability to travel through space and becoming the first Fallen Angel that this universe has seen.

-Upon testing her ability to create life, the fallen angel creates a shadow demon by the name of Umbrok.
-Shadow demons are tall, dark (bluish-tinted) skinned, red-eyed, sharp-teethed creatures who can take the form of a shadow/smoke.
-After conversing together, they decide that Velyssa, the fallen angel is right for believing the way humans act is wrong and that they need a sole ruler over them to keep them in check.
-Umbrok begins to recruit humans who are close to death (at first, only humans who have been nearly murdered by their own kind, but it doesn't take long to branch out to the sick, etc.).
-Umbrok brings said humans back to the angel who corrupts their souls and turns them into vampires: immortal, blood-thirsty, darkness-thriving creatures.
-Vampires can blend in with humans except for their pale skin and fangs. If they have fed recently, and can resist their urge to kill, then they won't have a problem being around humans for a while. Isolation and not drinking human blood makes them weak, and their weakness makes them intolerant of the sun. The sun and fire will return them to their normal 'human weaknesses', making them destroy-able. Set a vampire on fire, and it won't survive for long.
-Yes, I said vampires can blend in with humans, however, the corrupt soul within them makes them 'controllable' by the fallen angel, not to the extent where said vampires will do her bidding, but they will lose all of their inhibitions when the fallen so chooses, causing them to have no problem killing even their closest friends or relatives.

-After this first 'controlling' happens (I'll continue on referring to it as the 'blood oath'), it sends out a beacon of dark energy into the galaxies (due to a miscalculation on power needed to control these vampires by Velyssa) alerting the angels of the evil afoot.
-The angels return to see vampires beginning to pick off the human race bit by bit without any means to fight back, so they believe that it is their duty to give them power against these creatures.
-The angels seek out those who are pure of heart and grant them an ability that would help them defend themselves.

-Umbrok reports the angels and their happenings to Velyssa who further commands Umbrok to bring her those who seek power, but the angels hadn't given it to them.
-When Velyssa receives these humans, she removes the 'death-force' within their soul (corrupting it and making them controllable via the blood oath), leaving behind only their life-force making them further ageless and able to control the dead. These corrupted humans are known as necromancers and they typically lose their minds with power and infatuation for the dead.
-Let it be noted that a 'death-force' taken from a human doesn't simply disappear. Velyssa renders it into a demon of death.
-When the blood oath takes them over, the necromancers use their powers and they and the reanimated dead go on a mindless killing spree.

-Death demons are tall, like shadow demons, but their skin is completely white. Their hair is transparent, like fishing wire. Their eyes have lone, ghostly pupils within them. They look as if their made of simply skin and bones (no muscle). Wherever they go, they can absorb the life from around them, turning it into their strength/muscle. They can only teleport in their weakest form.

-Before the angels hear about the necromancers and death demons, they plan to take their leave. They can't remain on one planet forever.
-However, they mean to give future humans a chance to protect themselves, so they visit certain elders in certain regions and grant them the power to give abilities to other humans.
-Once the angels leave, humans begin swarming the elders and they have to check each visitor for purity of heart before they can grant them any power.
-Another setback would be that the elders have only a basic idea of how to use these abilities, and upon first attempts, it is perceived that a human might not have received any power, however, on the night of the first following full moon, these humans who were the rare anomaly to not receive power transformed into wicked creatures who killed and pillaged everything in sight until morning.

---

Well, that introduces the basis of the story line. Except that there is another, (I believe) final type of demon referred to as 'The Wicked'. They look just like humans, though some are known to have horns or wings, and they also have strange eye color (purple, red, dark green, etc.). They have no special abilities beyond being extraordinarily charming and persuasive. They look harmless enough, but their job is to take advantage of a human's sinful nature and send them to the brink of their destruction, so a shadow demon or death demon can recruit them to the fallen angel. They can pose as the perfect best friend or lover and make you develop habits and addictions that can break a person down.

Anyway, that's my story. I'm sorry it's so long. If you have any questions, I'd love to answer them.

Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/RolePlayGateway

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