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September 30, 2008

Nintendo to launch camera, music-capable DS

Filed under: Computers And Internet — smitha @ 11:10 am

Tokyo, Sept 29: Japanese video game maker Nintendo Co Ltd plans to launch a new model of its DS handheld machine that can take pictures and play music by the end of the year, the Nikkei business daily said on Sunday.

The move would pit the top-selling portable game gear with Apple Inc iPod and camera-embedded cellphones in general.

The price for the new machine, which will also be equipped with advanced wireless communications functions, is expected to be below 20,000 yen ($189) in Japan, compared with 16,800 yen for the current model, the Nikkei said.

The Wii game console and DS have been Nintendo’s twin growth engines, helping its share price to grow more than three-fold over the past three years.

The DS far outsells Sony Corp’s rival machine, PlayStation Portable (PSP), globally.

But in Japan, the PSP’s unit sales exceeded the DS’s in five consecutive months through July, according to game magazine publisher Enterbrain, in a potential sign of slowing momentum for the current DS model.

NASA delays repair mission to Hubble telescope

Filed under: Science And Mathematics — smitha @ 5:32 am

NASA said Monday it is delaying its mission to the Hubble Space Telescope until next year because of a serious breakdown of the observatory in orbit.

Space shuttle Atlantis had been scheduled to blast off in just two weeks, but an unexpected problem with the Hubble appeared on Saturday night when the telescope stopped sending science data.

That potentially means a new repair issue for the astronauts to confront — one that they haven’t trained for and never anticipated.

The abrupt, mysterious failure of the command and data-handling system for Hubble’s science instruments means that the telescope is unable to capture and beam down the data needed to produce its stunning deep space images.

Early Monday afternoon, NASA announced that the Oct. 14 launch had been postponed until at least early next year, possibly February. Each month’s delay will cost the Hubble program about $10 million.

It could have been far worse, said NASA’s science chief, Ed Weiler.

“Think about if this failure had occurred two weeks after the servicing mission, we had just put two brand new instruments in and thought we extended the lifetime for five, 10 years and this thing failed after the last shuttle mission to Hubble,” Weiler told reporters Monday evening.

“So in some sense, if this had to happen, it couldn’t have happened at a better time.”

Hubble manager Preston Burch said the first step is to try to fix the telescope by switching to a backup channel for the science instruments’ command and data-handling system, and allowing observations to resume. That should take a week or two. Even if the effort succeeds as engineers suspect it will, Burch and other officials still want to send up a replacement part for the bad component.

That’s because there would be no other options if that one last working channel malfunctioned.

“Our plan right now is to take the delay and put up the new hardware … so that we can keep Hubble going for as long as possible,” Weiler said. “If we’re going to spend the money and take all the risk involved in a shuttle mission, we want to be sure that we leave Hubble as healthy as we possibly can and potentially lasting for five or 10 more years.”

It will take time to qualify the old replacement part; it was last used for testing in 2001. The equipment won’t be ready before January, which would most likely mean a February launch, Burch said.

The replacement job would be relatively straightforward for the astronauts, who have trained two years to carry out five Hubble repair spacewalks. The work would take less than two hours and could be squeezed into one of the already planned spacewalks.

Work already has begun to switch the telescope to the backup channel. It is a complicated process; the backup channels on the various modules that must be switched over have not been turned on since the late 1980s or early 1990, right before Hubble was launched. Managers also want to assess all the risks.

“This is a major event for Hubble,” Burch said.

NASA officials stressed that the telescope is not in trouble; it’s just that it cannot send science information to ground controllers. That means NASA is unable to receive the dramatic pictures Hubble is known for.

The mission by Atlantis and a seven-person crew — whenever it is — will be the fifth and final servicing mission to Hubble.

Weiler said the latest problem is nothing compared with the flawed mirror that left the telescope with blurred vision back in 1990. That trouble was overcome by an astronaut repair team in 1993.

“Hubble has a habit of coming back from adversity, and the Hubble team … works miracles,” Weiler said. “I’m not too concerned about this. We’ll find a way to get this fixed. Luckily, we’ve got a spare.”

Now, Endeavour will be the next shuttle up, on a trip to the international space station in mid-November. Endeavour is already at the launch pad; it was supposed to serve as a rescue ship for Atlantis in case of trouble.

Cannabis smokers more prone to depression than stimulant drug takers

Filed under: Health — smitha @ 12:50 am

Cannabis smokers are at an increased risk of suffering from depression, anxiety and psychosis, compared to stimulant drug takers, according to mental health statistics.A new national report has shown that dope smokers display higher rates of several psychological symptoms when visiting their doctor.

Of patients who mentioned cannabis use to their GP, 48 per cent had a psychological problem, including 19 per cent with depression and nine per cent with psychosis. Six per cent had anxiety.

According to the latest bulletin released by the National Cannabis Prevention and Information Centre in Sydney, only 31 per cent of stimulant users reported similar problems, with significantly lower rates of all conditions.

Director, professor Jan Copeland, said that the results confirm the dangers of the drug.

“It was unexpected, given what we hear about amphetamine-related psychotic symptoms, but it goes to show what a terrible impact cannabis is having on users,” the Herald Sun quoted Copeland, as saying.

“The delusions, hallucinations and paranoia can be very distressing and people are feeling it,” Copeland added.

The results, in data collected from 1000 randomly-selected GPs, also revealed that mentioning cannabis use to a doctor was very rare, with the drug named in just 19,000 consultations nationwide each year.

The report found that the users were more likely to be male, young, unemployed or on a low income and indigenous.

“The low numbers are a major concern given the sheer number of users and the effects we know that use is having,” Copeland said.

Studies show most people do not experience major problems with occasional use but heavy use can lead to depression, memory loss, lung damage, low sex drive and even brain shrinkage.

September 29, 2008

Vacationers, residents watch Kyle roll their way

Filed under: Science And Mathematics — smitha @ 11:05 am

The threat of a hurricane drew wave-watchers Sunday to West Quoddy Head, a 151-year-old lighthouse at the nation’s easternmost tip.

About a dozen people watched the water lapping on the rocks and snapped pictures of the candy-striped lighthouse while awaiting Kyle’s arrival.

Vacationing from North Carolina, Jill and Brian Higgins awoke in the morning to find themselves in the path of a type of storm more often associated with their home state than with Maine.

“We heard, hurricane in Maine? And it’s going to hit between Maine and Canada? Then that’s where we are,” said Jill Higgins. The couple had spent the night in nearby Machias.

___

LUBEC, Maine (AP) — Gerry Green, a lifelong Lubec resident, didn’t see what all the fuss was about.

“We’ve had lots of bad storms, and this one seems to be blown out of proportion,” said Green, 83, who visited the lighthouse Sunday with her granddaughter and her husband and their two great-grandchildren.

“Our houses are built to withstand this stuff — the wind, the lashing rain, the ice,” she said. “We’re Down Easters. We know how to handle things. We know how to take care of each other.”

___

LUBEC, Maine (AP) — Jon and Meagan Tinker spent the first day of their honeymoon watching videos, and the rain, in a cabin as Kyle bore down on them Sunday.

Outside, a tent that had protected more than 100 guests still stood.

“We hear it’s good luck,” Meagan Tinker said of the rain.

“I don’t know about hurricanes,” her husband joked.

Lata celebrates her 79th birthday

Filed under: Entertainment And Music — smitha @ 5:31 am

India’s most revered singer melody queen Lata Mangeshkar who has mesmerised music lovers with her celestial voice for over six decades celebrated her 79th birthday with family members in her Pune home today. Didi as she is fondly called by family, fans and admirers is rarely in Mumbai on her birthday. She stays put in her Kolhapur or Pune residence. She was last heard in Vikram Bhatt’s “1920″ where she shared playback credits with Pandit Jasraj and Asha Bhosale.

On her 75th birthday, Lata was in Mumbai as her nephew Adinath had organised a concert where other singers sang her classic songs. The function was attended by Sharad Pawar, L K Advani among others.

Lata’s brother Pandit Hridaynath Mangeshkar organised a musical concert ‘Didi ani mi’ (Didi and I) at the Bal Gandharva Rang Mandir in Pune in her honour. The legendary singer was introduced to intricacies of classical music by her father master Dinanath Mangeshkar.

After his demise, the entire responsibility of looking after the family fell on her young shoulders and at the age of 13 she was compelled to don the greasepaint and act. She did a few Marathi films like ‘Pahili Mangalagaur’, ‘Majhe Bal’, ‘Gaja Bhau’ and even few Hindi movies like ‘Badi Maa’, ‘Jeevan Yatra’ and ‘Samudra Mandir’.

Though her playback career started in 1942, she was leaving her first tentative footprints on a music scene dominated by the legendary Shamshad Begum and Noorjehan. It was in 1948 that her career graph took giant leaps with films like Mahal, Baiju bawra, Nagin, Madhumati among others.

Scientists find free-living protozoa in meat-cutting plants

Filed under: Science And Mathematics — smitha @ 3:40 am

In a first of its kind survey on free-living protozoa in meat-cutting plants, scientists have shown high diversity rates of various species including those that could harbour food-borne pathogens.Protozoa are unicellular microorganisms that feed on bacteria. Sometimes the bacteria survive and replicate within the protozoa.

While bacterial presence in meat-processing environments has been previously examined, scientists have not conducted a single study of protozoan communities in these environments and their role in food contamination.

For the study, researchers used a series of methods to screen for protozoa in five meat-cutting plants and found communities of amoebae, ciliates, and flagellates to be present in all.

They detected Protozoa in floor drains, standing water on the floor, soiled bars of cutting tables, plastic pallets and out-of-use hot water knife sanitizers. Also, protozoa were identified on surfaces, which come into direct contact with meat, such as conveyor belts, surfaces of cutting tables, and needles of meat tenderizers.

Later, the cultures were refrigerated for a week, after which protozoa were still detected in half of the samples. Through microscopic observations researchers identified up to 61 morphospecies.

“This survey showed that there is high protozoan species richness in meat-cutting plants and that the species included species related to known hosts of food-borne pathogens,” The Wired News quoted the researchers, as saying.

The findings of the study were reported in the latest issue of the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology.

September 28, 2008

Apollo to set up 200 diabetes clinics in India

Filed under: Business And Finance — smitha @ 1:10 am

Private sector health care major Apollo Hospitals Saturday announced it will set up 200 clinics across the country to provide a comprehensive diabetes management.The company launched on pilot basis two diabetes management clinics here, and plans to set up 50 clinics over the next six months and 150 more by December 2009 in various parts of the country.

Named Sugar, these clinics will provide comprehensive diagnosis and evaluation, education, and treatment, including life-style support to the diabetics. ‘This is a major initiative to combat diabetes which has assumed epidemic proportions in the country,’ Apollo Hospitals Group chairman Pratap C. Reddy said.

He told reporters that Rs.400 million were earmarked for setting up the 200 clinics.

Apollo signed a memorandum of understanding for the purpose with MSD Pharmaceuticals Pvt Ltd, the Indian subsidiary of Merck, a research-driven global pharmaceutical company based in the US.

MSD managing director A. Naveen Rao said his company would provide scientific inputs, Merck’s software tool specific for the development of the structured care protocol (SCP) to manage the diabetic patients, training to physicians and paramedics and patient education content.

According to Reddy, India is considered the global capital of diabetes and it is projected that every fifth adult in the country would be a diabetic. There are 32 million diabetics in the country and the number is likely to reach 80 million by 2030.

‘It is projected that India will need to spend a whopping $30 billion by 2030 to manage the disease burden created by diabetes,’ he said.

The Sugar clinics will focus on identification and management of pre-diabetics. ‘A scientific screening programme will identify those who are likely to become diabetics in near future and they will be taken through a life style management programme to prevent or delay onset of diabetes,’ Apollo chief executive K. Hari Prasad said.

The clinics will also offer year-long disease management programme, including controlling blood sugar level and early intervention for complications of diabetes.

September 27, 2008

DJ AM released from burn hospital after jet crash

Filed under: Entertainment And Music — smitha @ 8:21 pm

Celebrity disc jockey DJ AM has been released from a Georgia hospital after suffering severe burns in a fiery plane crash a week ago, a spokeswoman for the musician said Friday. “While he is deeply saddened by the events he is thankful for all of the love and support he has been receiving from fans and friends,” spokeswoman Jenni Weinman said in a statement. DJ AM, whose real name is Adam Goldstein, and former Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker, were rushed to a burn hospital in Augusta, Ga., after their Learjet crashed on takeoff from a Columbia airport.

Doctors have said they expect both men to fully recover. Two pilots and two other passengers who were close friends of the musicians were killed in the crash just before midnight Sept.

19. An officer who was among the first on the scene said the musicians told him they escaped the flaming wreckage by sliding down a wing.

A hospital spokeswoman would not say when Barker was expected to be released. The head of the burn hospital said it can take up to one year to heal from the second- and third-degree burns the men suffered.

But Dr. Fred Mullins said he didn’t expect it to take that long for the musicians to heal.

The Learjet shot off the end of the runway, ripped through a fence and crossed a highway before coming to rest. Officials with the National Transportation Safety Board have not said what caused the crash, but spokesman Peter Knudson said he expects the agency to release a preliminary report next week.

NTSB officials have said a cockpit voice recorder revealed that crew members thought a tire blew and tried to abort the takeoff. Investigators recovered pieces of tire from the runway.

Barker was one of the more colorful members of the multiplatinum-selling punk rock band Blink-182. DJ AM is a popular disc jockey who was also a tabloid favorite for some celebrity romances.

Stocks mixed on bailout clash; tech slides

Filed under: Business And Finance — smitha @ 11:05 am

Financial markets remained on edge Friday after the Bush administration’s proposal for a $700 billion banking bailout ran into opposition from Republican lawmakers. Stocks ended mixed, with big financial companies lifting the Dow Jones industrials more than 120 points, but worries about smaller banks and parts of the technology sector taking much of the market lower.

Demand for safe-haven buying in government debt remained high as investors uneasily watched events in Washington.

Some lawmakers are concerned about the cost of the proposal, and they balked at the plan after congressional leaders said Thursday they had reached an agreement in principle. Shortly after Friday’s opening bell on Wall Street, President Bush said at the White House lawmakers can express doubts but ultimately should “rise to the occasion” and approve a plan to stave off what he sees as an economic calamity.

The rescue is designed to remove billions of dollars of bad mortgages and other now-toxic assets from the books of financial firms in a bid to free up lending. Tight lending conditions make it harder and more expensive for businesses and consumers to borrow money, a headwind for the economy.

Volume was relatively light Friday as many investors chose to just wait.

“I think the markets are on pause trying to figure out where this is going to go. Congress is still there,” said Mark Coffelt, portfolio manager at Empiric Funds in Austin, Texas. “Right now everyone is a little bit shellshocked.”

With no deal in place as trading ended Friday, investors were likely to be uneasy throughout the weekend. And there was no way to predict whether Monday morning would bring calmer markets after weeks of intense volatility, or whether the turbulence would accelerate. Even if a deal is reached over the weekend, its terms likely would determine how the markets start the week.

Credit markets remained strained Friday, though they showed improvement. The yield on the 3-month Treasury bill, considered the safest short-term investment, rose to 0.87 percent from 0.72 percent late Thursday. The lower the yield on a T-bill, the more desperation there is in the market; investors are at times willing to take the slimmest returns to preserve their principal. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, rose to 3.86 percent from 3.84 percent late Thursday.

The Dow rose 121.07, or 1.10 percent, to 11,143.13. Gains by JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank of America Corp. gave support to the 30-stock index. Most of their advance came late in the session as investors placed bets that a deal would emerge from Washington over the weekend. But with so much uncertainty, the big banks are seen as the most secure, and therefore likely to withstand whatever problems lie ahead.

Broader indicators were mixed. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 4.09, or 0.34 percent, to 1,213.27, and the technology-heavy Nasdaq composite index fell 3.23, or 0.15 percent, to 2,183.34.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers by more than 2 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange, where consolidated volume came to 1.19 billion shares compared with 5.73 billion traded Thursday.

For the week, which again saw triple-digit moves in the Dow, the blue chip average lost 2.15 percent, the S&P 500 declined 3.33 percent and the Nasdaq fell 3.38 percent.

Stocks traded unevenly Friday, with technology shares falling sharply after Research In Motion Ltd. warned that its gross margins would contract in the current quarter because of the costs for producing three new BlackBerry models. The stock fell $26.77, or 27 percent, to $70.76.

The market was also uneasy after Washington Mutual Inc. became the largest U.S. bank to fail. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. seized WaMu on Thursday and then sold the thrift’s banking assets to JPMorgan for $1.9 billion. It was the latest financial firm to collapse under the weight of enormous bad bets on the mortgage market.

Although WaMu’s failure was expected, it nonetheless underscored for investors how widespread the problems are in the financial sector.

Coffelt noted, however, that the market appeared to take some comfort from the orderly fall of WaMu. Several analysts praised the move as a wise takeover for JPMorgan. JPMorgan rose $4.78, or 11 percent, to $48.24 and was the biggest decliner among the Dow industrials. WaMu fell $1.53, or 91 percent, to 16 cents.

Meanwhile, Bank of America, which last week snapped up Merrill Lynch, rose $2.33, or 6.8 percent, to $36.70.

Bank of America and JP Morgan are now the first and second largest banks U.S. banks, respectively, perhaps offering investors some reassurance about the safety provided by their large asset bases in a market short on liquidity.

But worries about some other banks, including regionals, persisted after the failure of WaMu. Wachovia Corp. fell $3.70, or 27 percent, to $10, while National City Corp. fell $1.28, or 26 percent, to $3.71.

Light, sweet crude fell $1.13 to settle at $106.89 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Uncertainty over the bailout package left the dollar mixed against other major currencies. Gold prices rose.

Coffelt said the market would take a hit if a bailout doesn’t materialize, though he said the broader fear is that tightness in credit markets would make any decline more severe.

“If it doesn’t go through I think the markets probably get slapped — probably 1,000 points — but then we’ll work our way out of it,” he said, referring to a drop the Dow industrials could see.

Still, concerns about the broader economy persist. The Commerce Department said the spring’s economic rebound was less robust than previously estimated. Gross domestic product, or GDP, increased at a 2.8 percent annual rate in the April-June quarter. That fell short of the 3.3 percent growth estimated a month ago, but was still better than two previous quarters.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies fell 0.95, or 0.13 percent, to 704.79.

Overseas, Japan’s Nikkei stock average fell 0.94 percent. Britain’s FTSE 100 fell 2.09 percent, Germany’s DAX index fell 1.77 percent, and France’s CAC-40 fell 1.50 percent.

Most Medicare Drug Premiums Same or Lower in 2009

Filed under: Health — smitha @ 5:30 am

In 2009, 97 percent of Medicare beneficiaries will have access to a drug plan with premiums that are the same as this year’s or even lower, Medicare officials announced Thursday.

The various Medicare prescription drug plans in the agency’s “Part D” program cover about 90 percent of all Medicare beneficiaries, Kerry Weems, the acting administrator of the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), said during a late morning press teleconference Thursday.

Overall, 25.4 million Americans are currently enrolled in some type of Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage. Open enrollment in the 2009 Part D plans begins Nov. 15 and ends Dec. 31.

There was more good news, according to Weems. “Part D continues to come in under budget and has consistently high satisfaction rates, and with it, millions of Americans are living better lives,” he said, noting that, “Medicare’s Part D prescription drug plan will enter its fourth year when open enrollment begins in November.”

From year to year, Medicare prescription drug providers do change their plans, Weems said, so it’s important that enrollees check up on their plan to see if anything has been altered.

“Some beneficiaries will see significant changes in their plans. These could be changes in premiums or changes in coverage,” Weems said. “We are encouraging all beneficiaries to review how their plans are changing and what other options are available to determine which plan best meets their needs,” he said.

For instance, the monthly premium for the most popular Medicare Part D plan, the AARP Medicare Rx Preferred Plan, will rise 15 percent, from $32 to $37. The next most popular plans are offered by Humana Inc., and the premium for the standard Humana plan will go up 60 percent, from about $25 to $40. The premium for the enhanced Humana plan will go up from about $23 to $38, the Associated Press reported.

Medicare beneficiaries across the United States will be able to access at least one prescription drug plan with premiums of less than $20 a month, except for people living in Alaska, where the one prescription drug plan has a premium of $23 a month, Weems said.

People who qualify for the full Medicare subsidy will have no premiums or deductibles on these plans. The average monthly premium for the basic Medicare drug benefit in 2009 is expected to be about $28, Weems said.

Medicare beneficiaries will also continue to have access to drug plans with a wide range of options, including plans with no deductibles. In addition, plans that cover the gap for generic drugs are available in all states.

All Medicare beneficiaries will have access to Medicare Advantage plans, Weems noted. These plans cover all Medicare services, including prescription drugs. Many of these plans have prescription drug coverage that will enable more than 93 percent of those enrolled in the plan to get their drugs with no premiums and no deductibles, Weems said.

He added that the marketing of prescription drug plans in 2009 is covered by new regulations intended to protect Medicare beneficiaries from “deceptive or high-pressure marketing tactics by insurance companies and their agents.”

Paul Precht, director of Policy and Communications at the Medicare Rights Center, said people should shop around for the best prescription drug plan and not just continue on with the plan they have.

“The first thing consumers should look for is the premium,” Precht said. “But the more important and the more difficult challenge is to figure out if there are changes in the coverage,” he said.

Consumers should also look to see if there are drugs that were covered in 2008 that won’t be covered in 2009, Precht said. “You need to find out if there are drugs that are covered without restriction this year that will now be subject to prior authorization or step therapy [using the most cost-effective drug first],” he said.

People considering switching to Medicare Advantage should first find out if their current doctor and hospital are part of the plan and what the plan covers and doesn’t. In addition, they should also find out which drugs are covered and which are not, Precht said.

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