Saturday, September 29, 2012

What do Ohio's white working-class voters want?

BRIDGEPORT, Ohio (AP) ? To look at Ohio is to glimpse America in a nutshell ? a state full of places where laborers, truck drivers, cooks, store clerks and business owners form the backbone of small-town life. Places where the deli cashes checks, cars and trucks are "vehicles" and the NFL takes a back seat to high-school football.

It also is a place where presidents are made. No candidate has won without Ohio's 20 electoral votes since John F. Kennedy in 1960. Barack Obama won here in 2008 by about 260,000 votes, 52 percent to 47 percent.

That's why Ohio's white, working-class voters have taken center stage in the election, with Obama and Mitt Romney crisscrossing the state this week as they enter the campaign's homestretch.

These voters may well decide who wins the White House. So what do they want? About two dozen interviews in eastern Ohio revealed some answers:

They are looking for a president who understands what it's like to punch a time clock all month and still come up short on the bills, for a leader who will help the people in work boots as much as those in wingtips. They see money being doled out, from welfare to bank bailouts, and ask why nobody has lent them a hand. They talk of getting rid of everyone in Washington and starting fresh.

Generations of sweaty work and union membership make many deeply skeptical of a Republican multimillionaire CEO like Romney, and polls show he trails among white working-class Ohioans. But there also is widespread frustration with the Democratic president and pessimism about the future.

"If the election was right now, I'd choose 'none of the above,'" says coal miner J.R. Cross, leaving a payday loan store in Bridgeport with money for his oldest son's college bill.

He voted for Obama in 2008 but thinks the president helped Wall Street and the auto industry instead of the working class. He thinks Romney favors the rich and that he bankrupted companies to make investors a profit. His vote will be a last-minute decision ? and he doubts that it will make a difference.

"Whoever gets elected, we're screwed," Cross says.

Nationally, Romney holds a strong edge among white voters with jobs and no college degree: Sixty-three percent favored Romney, compared with 28 percent for Obama, according to an Associated Press/GfK poll conducted Sept 13-17.

But the president does much better in union-heavy Ohio, where Obama's auto bailout has helped keep unemployment a point below the national rate. Fifty-one percent of white voters with no college education preferred the president, compared with 45 percent who backed Romney in a recent University of Cincinnati/Ohio Newspaper Organization poll. The margin of error was plus or minus 6 percentage points.

"I think Obama can bring things back. I really do," said Valinda Liggett, an electrician, as she shopped in a dollar store in Dillonvale. "He's trying. Rome wasn't built in a day. He can only do so much."

Still, conversations with people along the hills and in towns around state Route 7, which hugs the Ohio River on the Ohio-West Virginia line, showed much frustration with the economy.

Shuttered steel mills and the Great Recession have drained businesses and jobs from what once were vibrant towns. Many dislike the Obama administration's stance on the coal industry, which puts food on thousands of tables in this region. Along the two-lane roads that curl through the hills west of Route 7, yard signs reading "Stop the War on Coal ? Fire Obama" are a common sight.

Millie Brown, who tends tables and the grill at a Steubenville truck stop, has some choice words for both candidates. When you make $20,000 a year, she says, every day is a struggle.

"It's hard to make enough to buy gas to drive to work, let alone pay bills," she says, pulling on a generic menthol cigarette. "A gallon of milk is $4.29. That's ridiculous. I never thought I'd see the day when eggs are $2 a dozen."

Like many others interviewed, Brown says the economy would be much better if Obama had used stimulus funds to give large checks ? five, six or even seven figures ? to individual working Americans.

The math doesn't come close to adding up, but this frequent flight of fancy shows how wrong it feels to many of these voters when bailed-out banks pay huge bonuses, or first lady Michelle Obama goes on an expensive trip, or Romney parks some of his millions offshore.

"I'm a white guy with a job. I won't get no help," says Tony Gern, a truck driver from Coshocton.

His girlfriend works two jobs, but they are still barely scraping by. Gern came up short one recent month and tried to get some government assistance but was turned down. "A guy that has no job, 10 kids, he can go to the welfare office and they hand him a check," he says.

Gern says he will watch the debates before deciding how to vote. Right now, he sees Obama as more of a regular guy than Romney.

"If I was digging a ditch, Obama would come down and get a little dirty. He'd probably do it with me," Gern says. "Romney, he wouldn't do it. He's never done that kind of work. He's never had his hands dirty."

But Romney's business career is a plus for Russell Banfield and his wife, Betty. The retired couple ? he was a coal miner; she was a secretary ? are classic Ohio independents who voted for Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Obama.

Now, they are disappointed by the president's decisions on the deficit and the stimulus.

"If I have a problem here on my property, will the USA bail us out?" Russell Banfield says, standing outside his one-story house in Belmont, population 453. "We're on a limited income. We have to make do. Why doesn't Congress? Why doesn't the president?"

"Romney is rich, he made money, he worked, he earned it," Banfield says. "He had a brain to know how to do it, so he has a brain to know what to do now."

An hour down the road, behind the cash register of a small market, Debbie Winland greets customers by name as they buy items like spaghetti sauce, beer, hot pepperoni rolls wrapped in foil and high school football tickets. Movies on VHS tape cost $5.

Winland is troubled by bailouts, the stimulus and people who work their whole lives but end up with nothing. Both candidates seem out of touch: "They're neck and neck, really. Zero to zero," she says.

"Give me someone to vote for."

___

Jesse Washington covers race and ethnicity for The Associated Press. He is reachable at http://twitter.com/jessewashington or jwashington(at)ap.org.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ohios-white-working-class-voters-want-071822131--election.html

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Libratone intros Zipp: the 'first and only' portable AirPlay speaker, expectedly wrapped in wool (video)

Libratone Zipp

If you've been following the surge of AirPlay speakers that started hitting the market in 2011, you've likely feasted your eyes on the spendy wool-clad systems by Libratone. While its larger Live and Lounge units have primarily been purposed for households, its new Zipp speaker is the being touted as the "first and only" portable AirPlay speaker. Make no mistake, unlike B&O Play's portable AirPlay-equipped Beolit 12 ($800), the Zipp's loaded with Libratone's proprietary PlayDirect protocol, meaning it doesn't require a separate wireless network / router for iDevices to connect to it over the air. The Zipp moniker is a play on the swappable wool grill which cozies around its vertically-standing tubular enclosures. Weighing four pounds and measuring in at 10.2 inches high by 4.8 inches in diameter, this "portable" unit is a good bit larger than the Blutooth-equipped Jawbone Big Jambox placed sideways, but it'll certainly fit in a backpack -- hey, it does have a leather carrying strap. Thankfully, that weight is partially due to its internal rechargeable battery, which should last up to eight hours.

As far as the speakers go, you'll find a duo of 1-inch ribbon tweeters facing the sides for the left and right channels, along with a 4-inch up-firing woofer. The rig also features Libratone's signature FullRoom design, which forces a 360-degree dispersion of the sound by way of deflectors in front of the tweeters. Beyond that, it'll naturally work with Libratone's existing iPhone app, allowing you to change the DSP on the fly for optimal output regardless of its placement in a room. The Zipp will hit Apple Stores later this October wrapped with a single red or grey zippered grill for $399, while other retailers will carry the $449 Classic Color and Funky Color editions, which each come with a trio of those wool grills (black, blue and red for the Classic, and black, pink and yellow for the Funky). In the meantime, join us past the break for more details about the unit itself and PlayDirect, our initial impressions and a hands-on video overview.

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Study: Fox and WSJ overwhelmingly wrong about climate change (Americablog)

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Intuitive visual control provides faster robot operation

ScienceDaily (Sep. 25, 2012) ? Using a novel method of integrating video technology and familiar control devices, a research team from Georgia Tech and the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) is developing a technique to simplify remote control of robotic devices.

The researchers' aim is to enhance a human operator's ability to perform precise tasks using a multi-jointed robotic device such as an articulated mechanical arm. The new approach has been shown to be easier and faster than older methods, especially when the robot is controlled by an operator who is watching it in a video monitor.

Known as Uncalibrated Visual Servoing for Intuitive Human Guidance of Robots, the new method uses a special implementation of an existing vision-guided control method called visual servoing (VS). By applying visual-servoing technology in innovative ways, the researchers have constructed a robotic system that responds to human commands more directly and intuitively than older techniques.

"Our approach exploits 3-D video technology to let an operator guide a robotic device in ways that are more natural and time-saving, yet are still very precise," said Ai-Ping Hu, a GTRI senior research engineer who is leading the effort. "This capability could have numerous applications -- especially in situations where directly observing the robot's operation is hazardous or not possible -- including bomb disposal, handling of hazardous materials and search-and-rescue missions."

A paper on this technology was presented at the 2012 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation held in St. Paul, Minn.

For decades articulated robots have been used by industry to perform precision tasks such as welding vehicle seams or assembling electronics, Hu explained. The user develops a software program that enables the device to cycle through the required series of motions, using feedback from sensors built into the robot.

But such programming can be complex and time-consuming. The robot must typically be maneuvered joint by joint through the numerous actions required to complete a task. Moreover, such technology works only in a structured and unchanging environment, such as a factory assembly line, where spatial relationships are constant.

The Human Operator

In recent years, new techniques have enabled human operators to freely guide remote robots through unstructured and unfamiliar environments, to perform such challenging tasks as bomb disposal, Hu said. Operators have controlled the device in one of two ways: by "line of sight" -- direct user observation -- or by means of conventional, two-dimensional camera that is mounted on the robot to send back an image of both the robot and its target.

But humans guiding robots via either method face some of the same complexities that challenge those who program industrial robots, he added. Manipulating a remote robot into place is generally slow and laborious.

That's especially true when the operator must depend on the imprecise images provided by 2-D video feedback. Manipulating separate controls for each of the robot's multiple joint axes, users have only limited visual information to help them and must maneuver to the target by trial and error.

"Essentially, the user is trying to visualize and reconstruct a 3-D scenario from flat 2-D camera images," Hu said. "The process can become particularly confusing when operators are facing in a different direction from the robot and must mentally reorient themselves to try to distinguish right from left. It's somewhat similar to backing up a vehicle with an attached trailer -- you have to turn the steering wheel to the left to get the trailer to move right, which is decidedly non-intuitive."

The Visual Servoing Advantage

To simplify user control, the Georgia Tech team turned to visual servoing (a term synonymous with visual activation). Visual servoing has been studied for years as a way to use video cameras to help robots re-orient themselves within a structured environment such as an assembly line.

Traditional visual servoing is calibrated, meaning that position information generated by a video camera can be transformed into data meaningful to the robot. Using these data, the robot can adjust itself to stay in a correct spatial relationship with target objects.

"Say a conveyor line is accidently moved a few millimeters," Hu said. "A robot with a calibrated visual servoing capability can automatically detect the movement using the video image and a fixed reference point, and then readjust to compensate."

But visual servoing offers additional possibilities. The research team -- which includes Hu, associate professor Harvey Lipkin of the School of Mechanical Engineering, graduate student Matthew Marshall, GTRI research engineer Michael Matthews and GTRI principal research engineer Gary McMurray -- has adapted visual-servoing technology in ways that facilitate human control of remote robots.

The new technique takes advantage of both calibrated and uncalibrated techniques. A calibrated 3-D "time of flight" camera is mounted on the robot -- typically at the end of a robotic arm, in a gripping device called an end-effector. This approach is sometimes called an eye-in-hand system, because of the camera's location in the robot's "hand."

The camera utilizes an active sensor that detects depth data, allowing it to send back 3-D coordinates that pinpoint the end-effector's spatial location. At the same time, the eye-in-hand camera also supplies a standard, uncalibrated 2-D grayscale video image to the operator's monitor.

The result is that the operator, without seeing the robot, now has a robot's-eye view of the target. Watching this image in a monitor, an operator can visually guide the robot using a gamepad, in a manner somewhat reminiscent of a first-person 3-D video game.

In addition, visual-servoing technology now automatically actuates all the joints needed to complete whatever action the user indicates on the gamepad -- rather than the user having to manipulate those joints one by one. In the background, the Georgia Tech system performs the complex computation needed to coordinate the monitor image, the 3-D camera information, the robot's spatial position and the user's gamepad commands.

Testing System Usability

"The guidance process is now very intuitive -- pressing 'left' on the gamepad will actuate all the requisite robot joints to effect a leftward displacement," Hu said. "What's more, the robot could be upside down and the controls will still respond in the same intuitive way -- left is still left and right is still right."

To judge system usability, the Georgia Tech research team recently conducted trials to test whether the visual-servoing approach enabled faster task-completion times. Using a gamepad that controls an articulated-arm robot with six degrees of freedom, subjects performed four tests: they used visual-servoing guidance as well as conventional joint-based guidance, in both line-of-sight and camera-view modes.

In the line-of-sight test, volunteer participants using visual-servoing guidance averaged task-completion times that were 15 percent faster than when they used joint-based guidance. However, in camera-view mode, participants using visual-servoing guidance averaged 227 percent faster results than with the joint-based technique.

Hu noted that the visual-servoing system used in this test scenario was only one of numerous possible applications of the technology. The research team's plans include testing a mobile platform with a VS-guided robotic arm mounted on it. Also underway is a proof-of-concept effort that incorporates visual-servoing control into a low-cost, consumer-level robot.

"Our ultimate goal is to develop a generic, uncalibrated control framework that is able to use image data to guide many different kinds of robots," he said.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Georgia Institute of Technology, Research Communications, via Newswise. The original article was written by Rick Robinson.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/technology/~3/NZLhOEs2-Q4/120925142551.htm

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Slow-moving rocks better odds that life crashed to Earth from space

ScienceDaily (Sep. 24, 2012) ? Microorganisms that crashed to Earth embedded in the fragments of distant planets might have been the sprouts of life on this one, according to new research from Princeton University, the University of Arizona and the Centro de Astrobiolog?a (CAB) in Spain.

The researchers report in the journal Astrobiology that under certain conditions there is a high probability that life came to Earth -- or spread from Earth to other planets -- during the solar system's infancy when Earth and its planetary neighbors orbiting other stars would have been close enough to each other to exchange lots of solid material. The work will be presented at the 2012 European Planetary Science Congress on Sept. 25.

The findings provide the strongest support yet for "lithopanspermia," the idea that basic life forms are distributed throughout the universe via meteorite-like planetary fragments cast forth by disruptions such as volcanic eruptions and collisions with other matter. Eventually, another planetary system's gravity traps these roaming rocks, which can result in a mingling that transfers any living cargo.

Researchers based at Princeton University, the University of Arizona and the Centro de Astrobiolog?a in Spain used a low-velocity process called weak transfer to provide the strongest support yet for "lithopanspermia," the idea that the microorganisms that sprout life came to Earth -- or spread from Earth to other developing planets -- via collisions with meteorite-like planetary fragments. Under weak transfer, a slow-moving planetary fragment meanders into the outer edge of the gravitational pull, or weak stability boundary, of a planetary system. The system has only a loose grip on the fragment, meaning the fragment can escape and be propelled into space, drifting until it is pulled in by another planetary system. (Image by Amaya Moro-Mart?n)

Previous research on this possible phenomenon suggests that the speed with which solid matter hurtles through the cosmos makes the chances of being snagged by another object highly unlikely. But the Princeton, Arizona and CAB researchers reconsidered lithopanspermia under a low-velocity process called weak transfer wherein solid materials meander out of the orbit of one large object and happen into the orbit of another. In this case, the researchers factored in velocities 50 times slower than previous estimates, or about 100 meters per second.

Using the star cluster in which our sun was born as a model, the team conducted simulations showing that at these lower speeds the transfer of solid material from one star's planetary system to another could have been far more likely than previously thought, explained first author Edward Belbruno, a mathematician and visiting research collaborator in Princeton's Department of Astrophysical Sciences who developed the principles of weak transfer.

The researchers suggest that of all the boulders cast off from our solar system and its closest neighbor, five to 12 out of 10,000 could have been captured by the other. Earlier simulations had suggested chances as slim as one in a million.

"Our work says the opposite of most previous work," Belbruno said. "It says that lithopanspermia might have been very likely, and it may be the first paper to demonstrate that. If this mechanism is true, it has implications for life in the universe as a whole. This could have happened anywhere."

Co-authors Amaya Moro-Mart?n, an astronomer at CAB and a Princeton visiting research collaborator in astrophysical sciences, and Renu Malhotra, a professor of planetary sciences at Arizona, noted that low velocities offer very high probabilities for the exchange of solid material via weak transfer, and also found that the timing of such an exchange could be compatible with the actual development of the solar system, as well as with the earliest known emergence of life on Earth. Dmitry Savransky, a Princeton mechanical and aerospace engineering doctoral student, conducted the simulations.

The researchers report that the solar system and its nearest planetary-system neighbor could have swapped rocks at least 100 trillion times well before the sun struck out from its native star cluster. Furthermore, existing rock evidence shows that basic life forms could indeed date from the sun's birth cluster days -- and have been hardy enough to survive an interstellar journey and eventual impact.

"The conclusion from our work," Moro-Mart?n said, "is that the weak transfer mechanism makes lithopanspermia a viable hypothesis because it would have allowed large quantities of solid material to be exchanged between planetary systems, and involves timescales that could potentially allow the survival of microorganisms embedded in large boulders."

All about velocities

The Princeton-Arizona-CAB paper cites two previous studies that present the odds of solid matter from one planetary system being captured by another as being more or less dismal.

The first, a 2003 paper published in Astrobiology by Jay Melosh, a Purdue University earth and atmospheric sciences professor, questioned the probability that meteorites have ever escaped a terrestrial planet in Earth's solar system and wound up on a terrestrial planet in another system. The report concluded that the chances -- about one in 10,000, or 0.01 percent -- are "overwhelmingly unlikely" considering the speed a meteorite would need to travel (about six kilometers per second) and the roominess of space.

Belbruno and his co-authors calculated that under this scenario of high velocities and dispersed planetary systems, the probability of solid material from any planetary system striking another falls to as little as five in 100,000, or 0.005 percent.

Star birth clusters, which are tightly confined groups of stars and planetary systems, were introduced as a possible setting for lithopanspermia in a 2005 Astrobiology paper by David Spergel, Princeton's Charles A. Young Professor of Astronomy on the Class of 1897 Foundation and chair of astrophysical sciences, and University of Michigan physics professor Fred Adams.

Factoring in velocities of two to five kilometers per second, Spergel and Adams found that the chances of an exchange of life-bearing rocks between star systems clustered in groups of 30 to 1,000 could be as unlikely as one in a million to as good as one in 1,000, or 0.0001 to 0.1 percent, respectively. Spergel and Adams, however, limited their study to binary stars -- or planetary systems with two stars -- which might elevate star-to-star solid matter exchanges, Moro-Mart?n said.

Nonetheless, in clusters similar to those considered by Spergel and Adams, weak transfer involves relative velocities of no more than one kilometer per second, which substantially increases the probability of capture by other stars in the cluster. In other words, star clusters provide an ideal setting for weak transfer, Belbruno said.

Chaotic in nature, weak transfer happens when a slow moving object such as a meteorite wanders into the outer edge of the gravitational pull of a larger object with a low relative velocity, such as a star or massive Jupiter-like planet. The smaller object partially orbits the large object, but the larger object has only a loose grip on it. This means the smaller object can escape and be propelled into space, drifting until it is pulled in by another large object.

Belbruno first demonstrated weak transfer with the Japanese lunar probe Hiten in 1991. A mechanical malfunction left the probe with insufficient fuel to enter the moon's orbit the traditional way, which is to approach at a high speed then fire retrorockets to slow down. Instead, Belbruno designed a weak-transfer trajectory that got the probe into orbit around the moon using a minimal amount of fuel.

Adams, co-author of the 2005 paper with Spergel, said that the work by Belbruno and his co-authors succeeds at pulling together the various factors of earlier lithopanspermia models and adding a substantial new element -- chaos. Adams is familiar with the study but had no role in it.

"This paper takes the type of calculations that have been done before and makes an important generalization of previous work," Adams said. "Their work on chaos in this context also carries the subject forward. They make a careful assessment of a process that is dynamically quite complicated and chaotic in nature.

"They are breaking new ground from the viewpoint of dynamical astrophysics," Adams said. "Regarding the problem of lithopanspermia, this type of weak capture and weak escape is interesting because it allows for the ejection speeds to be small, and these slow speeds allow for higher probabilities of rock capture. To say it another way, chaos, in part, enhances the prospects for lithopanspermia."

To the simulator!

Star birth clusters satisfy two requirements for weak transfer, Moro-Mart?n said. First, the sending and receiving planetary systems must contain a massive planet that captures the passing solid matter in the weak-gravity boundary between itself and its parent star. Earth's solar system qualifies, and several other stars in the sun's birth cluster would too.

Second, both planetary systems must have low relative velocities. In the sun's stellar cluster, between 1,000 and 10,000 stars were gravitationally bound to one another for hundreds of millions of years, each with a velocity of no more than a sluggish one kilometer per second, Moro-Mart?n said.

The team simulated 5 million trajectories between single-star planetary systems -- in a cluster with 4,300 stars -- under three conditions: the solid matter's "source" and "target" stars were both the same mass as the sun; the target star was only half the sun's mass; or the source star was half the sun's mass.

The odds of a star capturing solid matter from another planetary system under these three scenarios are 15 (0.15 percent), five (0.05 percent) and 12 (0.12 percent) in 10,000, respectively, the researchers report -- probabilities that exceed those under the conditions proposed by Melosh by a factor of 1 billion.

To estimate the actual amount of solid matter that could have been exchanged between the sun and its nearest star neighbor, the researchers used data and models pertaining to the movement and formation of asteroids, the Kuiper Belt -- the solar system's massive outer ring of asteroids -- and the Oort Cloud, a hypothesized collection of comets, ice and other matter about one light year from Earth's sun widely believed to be a primary source of comets and meteorites.

The researchers used this data to conclude that during a period of 10 million to 90 million years, anywhere between 100 trillion to 30 quadrillion solid matter objects weighing more than 10 kilograms transferred between the sun and its nearest cluster neighbor. Of these, some 200 billion rocks from early Earth could have been whisked away via weak transfer.

For lithopanspermia to happen, however, microorganisms first have to survive the long, radiation-soaked journey through space.

Moro-Mart?n and Malhotra consulted a 2009 paper an international team published in the Astrophysical Journal that determined how long microorganisms could survive in space based on the size of the solid matter hosting them. That group's computer simulations showed that survival times ranged from 12 million years for a boulder up to 3 centimeters (roughly one inch) in diameter, to 500 million years for a solid objects 2.67 meters (nearly nine feet) across.

The researchers estimated that under weak transfer, solid matter that had escaped one planet would need tens of millions of years to finally collide with another one. This falls within the lifespan of the sun's birth cluster, but means that lithopanspermia by weak transfer would have been limited to planetary fragments at least one meter, or about three feet, in size.

Matching the theory with life

As for the actual transfer of life, the researchers suggest that roughly 300 million lithopanspermia events could have occurred between our solar system and the closest planetary system.

But even if microorganisms survived the trip to Earth, the planet had to be ready to receive them. The researchers reference rock-dating evidence suggesting that Earth contained water when the solar system was only 288 million years old and that very early life might have emerged before the solar system was 718 million years old.

The sun's birth cluster -- assumed to be roughly the same age as Earth's solar system -- slowly broke apart when the solar system was approximately 135 million to 535 million years old, Moro-Mart?n said. In addition, the sun could have been ripe for weak transfer up to 700 million years after the solar system formed.

So, if life arose on Earth shortly after surface water was available, there were possibly about 400 million years when life could have journeyed from Earth to another habitable world, and vice versa, the researchers report. If life had an early start in other planetary systems and developed before the sun's birth cluster dispersed, life on Earth may have originated beyond our solar system.

The paper stops short of calculating the likelihood of extrasolar life taking root on a terrestrial planet such as Earth, but the higher probability the researchers determined for solid-matter transfer makes that a more worthwhile pursuit, Moro-Mart?n said.

"Our study stops when the solid matter is trapped by the second planetary system, but for lithopanspermia to be completed it actually needs to land on a terrestrial planet where life could flourish," Moro-Mart?n said. "The study of the probability of landing on a terrestrial planet is work that we now know is worth doing because large quantities of solid material originating from the first planetary system may be trapped by the second planetary system, waiting to land on a terrestrial planet.

"Our study does not prove lithopanspermia actually took place," Moro-Mart?n said, "but it indicates that it is an open possibility."

The paper, "Chaotic Exchange of Solid Material between Planetary Systems: Implications for Lithopanspermia," was published Sept. 12 by Astrobiology, and was supported by grants from NASA, the National Science Foundation and the Ministry of Science and Innovation in Spain.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Princeton University. The original article was written by Morgan Kelly.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Edward Belbruno, Amaya Moro-Mart?n, Renu Malhotra, Dmitry Savransky. Chaotic Exchange of Solid Material Between Planetary Systems: Implications for Lithopanspermia. Astrobiology, 2012; 12 (8): 754 DOI: 10.1089/ast.2012.0825

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/NKu1qNr9RWw/120924144751.htm

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Credit Cards & What You Need to Know | Rise Asset Development

Tuesday, 25 September 2012 1:00 PM (EST)

Join us?Tuesday September 25th?at 1:00 PM for a free Financial Literacy?workshop on??Credit cards & what you need to know?? Attend this informative workshop and learn about the different kinds of cards and how to use them effectively, as well as details on how to reduce interest rates, late charges & minimum monthly payments.? Workshop is?presented by Dan Chometa, Community Outreach Manager for Consolidated Credit.?Consolidated Credit Counseling Services of Canada, Inc. (Consolidated Credit) is a not-for-profit registered charity that helps consumers deal with life-altering credit, debt, and financial issues. Through education, credit counselling and debt management, the agency helps consumers get out of debt faster. Click here for the official poster of the event.

Date: Tuesday, 25 September 2012

Time: 1:00 PM (EST)

Registration Fee: FREE

Event Venue: 489 Queen St. East, Suite 300, Toronto, ON, M5A 1V1

Organized by: Dixon Hall

Presenter: Dan Chometa

You can sign up for this free workshop by vising?http://www.dhesc.ca/events/calendar/?or calling, e-mailing, or in person.

Source: http://riseassetdevelopment.com/events/credit-cards-what-you-need-to-know/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=credit-cards-what-you-need-to-know

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Local church hosts raffles, promotes awareness

Church and technology came to a head Thursday afternoon when the Anchor Community Church hosted a raffle for Cal State Long Beach students, awarding an iPad to one lucky student.

Approximately 500 people entered the drawing, but faith was on the side of nursing graduate student Fara Delaney. Even though Delaney was in class when her name was drawn, it didn?t take her long to make her way to the booth.

?I thought it was a prank when I heard the message on my phone,? Delaney said. ?I really didn?t believe it, and I was just so shocked that I was in tears on my way to get the iPad.?

Delaney said it was the second time she ever won something since winning two tickets to Disneyland more than nine years ago.

?I am ecstatic,? Delaney said. ?I?m so surprised because I never really win anything. I?m so thankful and grateful for winning this because I just can?t afford it right now.?

The goal of the raffle was to raise awareness of the church amongst CSULB students and build a relationship between the campus and community. Pastor Lance Lefler of the Anchor Community Church said the raffle is a great way to interact with people on campus.

?We want to make contact with students to tell them we exist since we?re right across the street,? Lefler said. ?If you walk by a booth, people usually want to make money from you and we?re definitely not looking to do that or gather people?s information. People are shocked that there?s no strings attached.?

Many CSULB students may not be in a financial position to purchase a brand new iPad so some were thrilled about the fact of having an opportunity to win one, including freshman engineering student Richard Menson.

?I think it?s great that they?re giving away an iPad. I know I can definitely use one and I?m sure every other student on campus can too,? said Menson.

?

Source: http://www.daily49er.com/news/local-church-hosts-raffles-promotes-awareness-1.2767870

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Six juvenile offenders escape Washington detention center

by KING 5 News

kgw.com

Posted on September 23, 2012 at 11:39 AM

Updated today at 11:52 AM

Six high risk juvenile offenders at Echo Glen Children's Center were captured early Sunday morning after they assaulted a staff member and escaped the facility.

The incident started around 11:30 Saturday night.? Six boys ? ages 14 and 15 - attacked a female staff member and left her unconscious. The boys took her keys and radio, and locked her in a room.? She laid there unconscious until other boys at the facility found her and reported the incident.

King County Sheriff's Deputies arrived and were assisted by troopers from the Washington State Patrol and officers from the Snoqualmie Police Department.

?A perimeter was quickly established in the wooded area near the facility and the Sheriff's Office Guardian One Helicopter arrived to search the area.

When spotted by Guardian One, the boys split up into three groups of two and ran in different directions.??

Deputies in the helicopter were able to direct the deputies and K-9 units to the boys.

One of the offenders was bitten by a K-9 dog while trying to escape. He was taken to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle for treatment.? The other five boys were arrested and booked at the Youth Services Center for Assault 2, Unlawful Imprisonment and Escape.?

The majority of the boys were in the facility for Assault and Firearms convictions.

Echo Glen Children's Center is a medium and maximum security facility run by the state Department of Social and Health Services. The facility is not fenced, but is bordered by natural wetlands. It provides treatment services for younger male offenders and is the main institution for female juvenile offenders, according to its website.

Source: http://www.kgw.com/news/170896791.html

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Saturday, September 22, 2012

Netgear announces Push2TV WiDi adapter and three new NeoTV units

Netgear

Today, Netgear is unveiling three more Roku-troubling NeoTV boxes and Push2TV, a wireless display adapter letting you harness WiDi or Miracast to push content from smartphones, laptops or tablets to your TV. The trio of NeoTVs are so similar to the last generation that it's a little hard to tell the difference, except that the new flagship NeoTV MAX now comes with the long-desired addition of DLNA and a custom remote that has navigation buttons on one side and a QWERTY keyboard on the other. All four devices are available from today, the Push2Tv costing $60, while the new NeoTVs are priced at $50, $60 and $70, respectively -- and if you'd like to know more, then we've got some more info down below.

Continue reading Netgear announces Push2TV WiDi adapter and three new NeoTV units

Filed under: , ,

Netgear announces Push2TV WiDi adapter and three new NeoTV units originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Sep 2012 08:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/JnbkUNtmGS0/

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How To Get Rich Through Internet Marketing | Eric Chua : Life ...

These days, marketing over the Internet is one of the most important business tactics. Effective online marketing is more important than ever before. This means it is the perfect time to enter into it. The following advice will assist you in your Internet marketing campaign.

If you issue a news release, it might drum up some internet business. Focus on writing informative, relevant and interesting press releases, then distribute them to trusted outlets. This will give you a temporary boost in visibility and an increase in traffic.

Putting out an e-zine or e-mail newsletter can be a very effective marketing tactic. The best results will come from an e-zine that builds readers? trust and interest in you and your business. Bring your personality into your site with pictures of staff and family. Allow readers glimpses into the heart of your company by providing snippets of information about you and your employees. Peak your costumers interest with great articles in the eZine.

TIP! Create an informative website with a glossary of common terms. People searching for those terms will be drawn to your site.

If you get disheartened with internet marketing, do not throw in the towel. Don?t give up too easily, you may be on the precipice of success. Before launching any sort of site, make sure you have thoroughly planned your strategy. This can be time consuming work. Working hard may be difficult, but it will pay off down the road.

Web Design

Take time to learn web design basics. CSS and HTML are a few of the key things to learn to begin designing websites; you can find information about these, and other components of web design, on the Internet. Put in thirty minutes a day at least so you can improve your web page building skills.

TIP! A smart tip for Internet marketing is adjusting your content and delivering it in a way that your customers always feel they are controlling what happens. This feeling is more important than ever, especially given the prevalence of intrusive spam and other unwanted communications.

You can use online tools to determine the efficiency of your marketing approach; one option is to calculate the percentage of site visitors who ultimately end up making a purchase. Most major companies online offer various add-ons and trackers, which allow you to see the comparison of visitors to sales numbers and repeat customers.

Think about using words such as ?simple? and ?easy? to describe your online marketing plans. Your products should seem easy to use, and ordering them should be quick and easy too. Your bottom line will improve, if you do so.

Offering a free course can be a great way of channeling customer interest to your website. This is a powerful strategy that allows to to combine one of your products with the instruction and increase the chances that the visitor to your site will make a purchase. You can also run a contest that allows the participant to win something of added value.

TIP! Having an area on your website for users to post reviews is a great internet marketing tool. Customers who post their experience with your product can result in new sales, and they also increase your Internet presence with more content.

One way to get people to click on your ads is to come up with a discrete image which includes a link to a page that includes a description of the item you wish to sell. The image can use lettering that matches your article?s font and be placed at the article?s end. This will ensure that the ad does not appear to be an advertisement.

Internet Marketing

Now you can see how internet marketing can make a success of your business. There are a number of methods you can employ. There is a plethora of information on jumping into it. When you implement these tips, you?re putting yourself in a better position to create a successful internet marketing strategy

TIP! Keep customers coming back by sending coupons with every purchase. A coupon is a great way to get some repeat business.

Join me on Facebook:
www.facebook.com/maynaseric

Source: http://www.maynaseric.com/how-to-get-rich-through-internet-marketing

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Giants lead Panthers 10-0 after 1st quarter

New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning (10) throws against the Carolina Panthers during the first quarter of an NFL football game in Charlotte, N.C., Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Bob Leverone)

New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning (10) throws against the Carolina Panthers during the first quarter of an NFL football game in Charlotte, N.C., Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Bob Leverone)

New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning (10) throws a pass under pressure from Carolina Panthers defensive tackle Dwan Edwards (92) during the first quarter of an NFL football game in Charlotte, N.C., Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)

New York Giants running back Andre Brown (35) rushes through a tackle from Carolina Panthers linebacker James Anderson (50) during the first quarter of an NFL football game in Charlotte, N.C., Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Mike McCarn)

New York Giants wide receiver Martellus Bennett (85) catches a touchdown pass past Carolina Panthers safety Charles Godfrey (30) during the first quarter of an NFL football game in Charlotte, N.C., Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Mike McCarn)

New York Giants wide receiver Martellus Bennett (85) celebrates after his touchdown catch against the Carolina Panthers during the first quarter of an NFL football game in Charlotte, N.C., Thursday, Sept. 20, 2012. (AP Photo/Bob Leverone)

(AP) ? Eli Manning threw a 14-yard touchdown pass to Martellus Bennett cap New York's game-opening drive and the Giants led the Carolina Panthers 10-0 after the first quarter Thursday night.

Manning directed the Giants to scores on their first two possessions, following his easy scoring throw to Bennett by leading the Giants on a nearly 5-minute drive that ended with Lawrence Tynes' 47-yard field goal. Manning completed 10 of 12 passes for 81 yards in the opening quarter, helping the Giants rack up 158 total yards.

It was a strong start for a team that came in short-handed due to injuries. The Giants were without three starters on offense in receiver Hakeem Nicks, running back Ahmad Bradshaw and right tackle David Diehl. And with the absence of reserve Domenik Hixon, the Giants dressed only four receivers.

It didn't slow Manning, who started the game with a 12-yard strike to wideout Victor Cruz. Andre Brown, starting for Bradshaw, followed with the biggest gainer of the drive when he bounced off a hit from Jon Beason and broke free on the right side for a 31-yard run. Three plays later, Manning found Bennett for an easy throw that put the Giants up at the 11:38 mark of the first quarter.

The touchdown pass capped an eight-play, 80-yard drive that marked the third straight game the Panthers have given up a touchdown on an opponent's first drive.

Then, after the Panthers' first drive stalled across midfield, Brown broke off another long run ? this time 16 yards ? and Manning efficiently moved the Giants downfield to set up Tynes' kick.

Brown finished the quarter with 77 yards on seven carries, including a 19-yarder in the final minute of the quarter.

Carolina managed just 56 yards and three first downs in the period.

The Panthers were missing starting right tackle Byron Bell as well as running back Jonathan Stewart and linebacker Thomas Davis.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-09-20-FBN-Giants-Panthers/id-1b47acd38d674c01848bfb8de80e32e6

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Friday, September 21, 2012

Microsoft says has fixed Internet Explorer flaw

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Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Harris Receives $25 M from Government in Middle East for Falcon ...


  • High-frequency tactical radios to provide long-range military communications.
  • Radios establish crucial communication links for personnel operating in beyond line-of-sight environments such as mountains or urban areas.
  • Contract expands international deployment of Falcon(r) family of tactical radios.

Harris Corporation (NYSE:HRS), an international communications and information technology company, has received a $25 million order from a government in the Middle East for Falcon II? high-frequency tactical radios as part of a military communications modernization program.

Harris will supply this country's armed forces with Falcon II? RF-5800H base stations, vehicular systems and manpack radios to provide beyond line-of-sight terrestrial voice and data communications. The RF-5800H offers advanced features such as Third Generation-Automatic Link Establishment for initiating contact between two HF radios; integrated data link protocols for data sharing such as embedded text messaging and embedded GPS receivers.

"Harris offers the world's most advanced digital HF radio family for delivering highly reliable and secure communications for missions that require beyond-line-of-sight capabilities," said Brendan O'Connell, president, International Business, Harris RF Communications. "HF radio systems are crucial for delivering up-to-the-minute situational awareness and command and control."

Source : Harris Corporation (NYSE: HRS)

Published on ASDNews: Sep 18, 2012
?

More News from Harris Corporation (NYSE: HRS)

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Oct 1 - 3, 2012 - Joint Base Lewis-McChord, WA, United States

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Source: http://www.asdnews.com/news-45010/Harris_Receives_$25_M_from_Government_in_Middle_East_for_Falcon_HF_Tactical_Radios.htm

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ShowBed.com ? Blog Archive ? Arguments for An Internet Business ...

17 September

Author: FruchterMahi ?/ ?Category: Uncategorized

As the web gets more and much more integrated into nearly all some people?s lives, many small business owners opting for to run online marketers. Whilst becoming successful on this form of enterprise may have been challenging about ten years ago, starting an Internet business at home has become a lot more probable than in the past. Why don?t we now talk about some reasons why somebody need to commence such a company and a few related positive aspects.

One of the greatest causes is the low initial costs associated with an online business. Although an owning a traditional physical firm might have massive expenses, functioning a great Internet business is relatively low-cost. The truth is, some corporations like online business merchants along with niche websites only require funds regarding hosting which usually is less expensive when compared with $10 a month. If an individual implements money making strategies just like adverts along with internet affiliate marketing, there isn?t any expenses. Even if he is doing promote his very own goods, residence safe-keeping is often enough for storing goods. Although starting an enterprise has been normally risky during the past, you?ll find low hazards involved when nowadays business online.

One more reason would be the fact a good Internet business from your own home can work Round the clock, 1 week every week along with One year a year on its own. For instance, if an individual managed the internet commerce shop, he or she might improve the particular sales deal process and make funds when he beds down. Rather than hiring employees as well as working hard, a person might develop their business online when it can be convenient. An online keep does not demand smashes and will even work throughout the holidays. Therefore, sales is often made with a minimal amount of hard work.

Additionally, there is an built in a sense freedom links along with jogging the Internet business. Whenever a person works for a classic company, he is typically stuck with any chosen timetable that will requires the pace regarding his / her living. Doing work on the web is various due to the fact an individual can end up being his very own supervisor and also call the actual pictures. In the event that he or she needs to please take a day away from the guy can undertake it. In the event that he or she really wants to take a prolonged trip the guy can take action. Due to the fact that most internet businesses can be run everywhere using a wifi link, an individual can generally function from any location along with consider his company with him. Because of this, there is a large degree of overall flexibility connected with this specific profession alternative.

Furthermore, functioning on-line for one?s personal is likely to use a fair degree of security. When compared to your regular task for a manager, a person isn?t really subject to downsizing, outsourcing techniques or another type that can risk his work. This would result in higher balance and also necessity may be lessened.

Looking for any kind of ideas with regards to bisnis internet? Have a look at incorporate some suggestions and also information for all of us who wish to begin making money online from the bisnis internet.

Source: http://showbed.com/uncategorized/2012/09/17/arguments-for-an-internet-business-at-home/

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Marketing michael vick jersey A House: The Most Effective Real ...

In this day and age, there is insufficient information and facts that you can get michael vick jersey with regards to promoting real estate property. You might not only require help creating your own new choices, but you may even have to firm up what you are aware. This informative article ought to assist you to as a result of obvious and to the point manner that details are provided.

Always be ready to work out the buying price of your home. If you are not willing to budge on the price, you should have a tough time promoting. Have in your mind minimal sum you are willing to sell, and price it beyond that so there exists some wiggle room.

Hold out to market. If your home?s market price costs are not as high as you believe they must be, usually do not sell yet. The housing industry remains improving, which means that your property price will likely rise better and better the more time you wait. Give it michael vick jersey serious amounts of get the total amount you want.

When marketing a property, paint the wall space a fairly neutral shade. During the visit of the home, a fairly neutral shade about the walls will allow the possible shopper to feel a lot more confident. It will always be much easier for them to image them selves in your home if their environment are not too colorful and deafening.

Bathrooms and kitchens would be the two primary locations of your house that may have the top return with regards to marketing your real estate property. For best outcomes, give attention to these regions when you are performing any remodeling or changing to obtain the most significant value for your money.

Facebook or twitter michael vick jersey is a wonderful on the internet connection source today and it can be very helpful when you?re marketing your property. Use the strength of networking to get the word out in regards to the property you may have available for purchase. Request your Real estate agent to complete the identical. Be sure you always keep any really distinct information and facts private even so, as protection must be noted.

When possible residence purchasers check out a property for the first time, they frequently consider all the switches, knobs, faucets, and units. Develop an ideal very first impression simply by making sure all taps and lighting fixtures are thoroughly clean, polished, and completely functional. Tiny troubles or plastic defects can readily accumulate within the michael vick jersey imagination of your potential customer.

When staging a home to demonstrate to a prospective buyer, don?t ignore the washroom. A thoroughly clean, bright white shower room curtain will make a toilet sense less grungy and more such as the hygienic place it should be. Under no circumstances in case you present a home with the older owner?s shower area curtain nevertheless in position.

If you have to are living at your residence till you sell it off, you may continue to allow it to be more inviting by limiting mess. Regrettably trying to hide it in the cabinet or even in the basement as if you would for an organization will not do, considering that possible buyers would like to see individuals places too. Alternatively, purchase storing spots and throw or hand out michael vick jersey what you absolutely do not need.

To conclude, you cannot get sufficient details about selling real-estate. With a little luck you had the ability to clearly process all the tips and tricks supplied. Using the specifics offered on this page, you should certainly not just make smart alternatives all by yourself, but likewise be able to provide other people with beneficial information

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Source: http://lmaureen.com/marketing-michael-vick-jersey-a-house-the-most-effective-real-estate-property-advice/

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Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Pegatron reportedly nabs 50 to 60 percent of iPad mini orders, breaks up Foxconn's monopoly

While folks are waiting for their precious new iPhones to arrive on their doorsteps, word has it that the leaky iPad mini has unsurprisingly entered mass production, but with a twist. According to today's front page news on Taiwan's Economic Daily News, reports from two local securities firms claim that Pegatron's managed to nab a staggering 50 to 60 percent of iPad mini orders from Apple, meaning Foxconn is finally no longer the sole assembler of iPads. Together (plus component suppliers Foxlink, AUO, TPK and others), both companies will apparently be able to churn out up to 5 million iPad minis monthly.

Then there's the iPhone 5 as well: the paper says at least 53 million units are expected to be shipped this year, therefore Apple's adding Pegatron to the assembling front line as early as Q4 in order to maintain a steady supply of products. Obviously we can't use this information alone to deduce whether Apple is moving away from Foxconn, but as long as people get their iDevices then it's all dandy.

Filed under: ,

Pegatron reportedly nabs 50 to 60 percent of iPad mini orders, breaks up Foxconn's monopoly originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 Sep 2012 16:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceEconomic Daily News (Chinese)  | Email this | Comments


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

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LG unveils new flagship smartphone

Models pose with LG Electronics' new smartphone the Optimus G during its unveiling ceremony in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012. LG Electronics will launch the Optimus G smartphone next week in South Korea, pinning hope on the new Android device to help revive its loss-making mobile business. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

Models pose with LG Electronics' new smartphone the Optimus G during its unveiling ceremony in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012. LG Electronics will launch the Optimus G smartphone next week in South Korea, pinning hope on the new Android device to help revive its loss-making mobile business. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

Models pose with LG Electronics' new smartphone the Optimus G during its unveiling ceremony in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012. LG Electronics will launch the Optimus G smartphone next week in South Korea, pinning hope on the new Android device to help revive its loss-making mobile business. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

A model holds LG Electronics' new Optimus G smartphone during its unveiling ceremony in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012. LG Electronics will launch the Optimus G smartphone next week in South Korea, pinning hope on the new Android device to help revive its loss-making mobile business. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

A model holds LG Electronics' new Optimus G smartphone during its unveiling ceremony in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012. LG Electronics will launch the Optimus G smartphone next week in South Korea, pinning hope on the new Android device to help revive its loss-making mobile business. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

Models pose with LG Electronics' new Optimus G smartphones during its unveiling ceremony in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012. LG Electronics will launch the Optimus G smartphone next week in South Korea, pinning hope on the new Android device to help revive its loss-making mobile business. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) ? LG Electronics will launch the Optimus G smartphone next week in South Korea, pinning high hopes on the new Android device to help revive its loss-making mobile business.

LG said Tuesday that the Optimus G will go on sale in Japan next month and in the U.S. in November. That would put LG's new phone, which costs $894 without subsidies from operators in South Korea, in competition with Apple's iPhone 5 and Samsung's Galaxy Note II smartphones during the fall and the winter holidays.

Previous Optimus smartphones have failed to make a mark in the fastest-growing segment of the mobile phone market. LG's mobile division posted losses of nearly 1 trillion won ($895 million) in 2010 and 2011 combined.

LG's mobile chief said the company hopes the G smartphone will help accelerate the division's turnaround.

"The Optimus G is our flagship phone with a competitive edge," Park Jong-seok, LG's mobile business president, told reporters at a media event. "We are trying to make phones differentiated from our rivals."

LG Electronics Inc. was the world's third-largest handset maker before being overtaken by Apple in the high-end market and China-based ZTE Corp. in the low-end.

Analysts said LG was focused on making handsets primarily for voice calls and text messaging, which delayed its response when Apple's iPhone took the mobile market by storm.

The Seoul-based company has reduced its reliance on rudimentary phones to bank on advanced gadgets using Google's Android operating system. But its efforts have not paid off so far. LG's mobile communications division reported an operating loss of 57 billion won in the second quarter.

International Data Corporation puts LG at No. 5 among global mobile-phone makers after Samsung Electronics, Nokia, Apple and ZTE in the three months ending in June.

As LG's struggles with mobile phones continue, various affiliates at LG Group, a major industrial group in South Korea, joined forces to create the G smartphone.

LG Display, which supplies screens for Apple's iPhone and iPad, manufactured 4.7-inch displays for the G, while other LG affiliates made a battery and a 13-megapixel camera. The G smartphone is powered by Qualcomm's quad-core processor and supports access to a faster wireless network.

LG also added new video-related features. The G can dim the video in a translucent layer, allowing users to send text messages or write emails while watching the show in the background. It also allows users to zoom into a scene while playing the video using a two-finger pinch.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2012-09-18-SKorea-LG-New%20Phone/id-44f6ad7be84e41dabae620b553f8fdcf

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