Virtual Star Party December 1, 2013 – Dying Comets, Smashing Galaxies & Cosmic Bees – Video


Virtual Star Party December 1, 2013 - Dying Comets, Smashing Galaxies Cosmic Bees
This video is sponsored by XE.com. Streamed live on Dec 1, 2013 Hosts: Fraser Cain and Scott Lewis Astronomers: Gary Gonella, Roy Salisbury, Steven Coates, T...

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Virtual Star Party December 1, 2013 - Dying Comets, Smashing Galaxies & Cosmic Bees - Video

Workington Comets maul Glasgow Tigers in cup match

By John Walsh

Last updated at 16:43, Monday, 31 March 2014

Workington Comets 60 Glasgow Tigers 31: Workington Comets powered their way to a clear-cut home victory in their opening Premier League Cup tie at Derwent Park.

Comets Kyle Howarth on the inside and former Comet Rusty Harrison

The result was never in doubt after the Comets had opened-up a 15-point lead after six heats, and by which time the visitors had used their first tactical ride.

The Comets blasted out seven heat maximums and all five contracted riders had at least one victory on the night. Reserve guest Chris Schramm was the only one to miss out on a personal victory.

Workington had gone into the match without Ricky Wells and Ashley Morris, who were both on Elite League duty with Wolverhampton. Schramm filled in at reserve while the Comets used the rider replacement facility for Wells.

With the Ian Thomas Shield already on the Comets sideboard, Workington had started the competitive season installed as favourite to lift the Premier League crown.

The best way to justify that tag is to dominate the early-season League Cup competition and Workington certainly showed in this opener that they have the personnel capable of going all the way.

Skipper Rene Bach was beaten by ex-Comet Rusty Harrison in his second ride of the night but apart from that turned in a faultless performance, knocking out five straight wins afterwards for a 17-point tally.

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Workington Comets maul Glasgow Tigers in cup match

Gameday: Comets vs. Iowa

March 30, 2014 - American Hockey League (AHL) Utica Comets IOWA WILD (26-30-6-4) @ UTICA COMETS (29-29-4-4)

Utica Memorial Auditorium, 3pm

Radio: 94.9 K-Rock

Tonight's Game: The Utica Comets look to rebound after a tough two game set with Abbotsford, as they host the fellow first year Iowa Wild. Tonight's contest is a crucial one for the Comets, as they sit seven points out of the Western Conference's final playoff position.

When They Last Met: The Comets rode a career high 43 saves from Joe Cannata to defeat the Iowa Wild 3-2 in a shootout back on February 5 at Wells Fargo Arena in Iowa. Nicklas Jensen and Colin Stuart scored for Utica and Alex Biega found the game winner in the ninth round of the shootout. Jeremy Welsh and Patrick Mullen also scored shootout goals for Utica.

Comets Outlook: The Utica Comets were handed one of the worst defeats in franchise history, as they dropped a 7-2 decision to the Abbotsford Heat. Jeremy Welsh and Alex Biega scored for Utica, which fell to 29-29-4-4 with the defeat. The Comets received 18 saves form Joacim Eriksson, who took the loss, and 12 saves from Joe Cannata in relief. Ben Street led all scorers with three points (1-2-3) for Abbotsford, while Brett Olson had two goals. Netminder Joni Ortio made 32 saves on 34 shots to earn the victory.

Wild Outlook: The Wild picked up a 2-1 shootout victory over the Toronto Marlies last evening at Ricoh Coliseum. Jamie MacQueen scored in his first game with the Wild while Johan Gustafsson recorded 38 saves on 39 shots to earn the victory. Carson McMillan and Zack Phillips scored during the 2-0 shootout victory. Peter Holland was the lone goalscorer for Toronto, while Garret Sparks made 25 saves on 26 shots for the victory.

To Biega Or Not To Biega: Defenseman Alex Biega recorded his third goal of the season, with a marker during the third period. Biega is now tied with Colin Stuart for the team lead with two shorthanded goals. The Harvard University graduate now has 19 points (3-16-19) in 64 games to lead all Utica defenseman this season.

Friesen Willy: Center Alex Friesen was the only Comet with a multi-point evening on Saturday, with assists on both Utica goals. Friesen now has nine points (3-6-9) over eleven games this month, which places him second on the team behind only Cal O'Reilly.

I Don't Jer. I Love It: Center Jeremy Welsh scored for the first time on home ice last evening, with a second period tally against Abbotsford. Welsh, who now has nine points (3-6-9) since he was returned on loan from Vancouver, was also tied with Biega for the team lead with five shots on goal.

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Gameday: Comets vs. Iowa

How To Heal Psoriasis Naturally | Scalp Psoriasis Home Remedies | Scalp Psoriasis Treatment – Video


How To Heal Psoriasis Naturally | Scalp Psoriasis Home Remedies | Scalp Psoriasis Treatment
VISIT: http://psoriasis.vital101.com How To Heal Psoriasis Naturally - Scalp Psoriasis Home Remedies - Scalp Psoriasis Treatment Psoriasis is a common ...

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GBTA: China On Track To Be World's Business Travel Spending Leader By 2015

By Michael B. Baker

China could overtake the United States as the world's largest business travel market as early as 2015, according to a report published Monday by the Global Business Travel Association.

Spending on business travel originating in China grew by 15.1 percent year over year in 2013 to $225 billion, the report indicated. It projected business travel spending to increase by 16.5 percent this year and by an additional 17.8 percent, to $309 billion, in 2015.

Already the second-largest business travel market in the world, China has been closing the spending gap separating it and the United States. That difference dropped from $66 billion in 2012 to $47 billion in 2013, and projections from both markets show China could overtake the United States by 2015, according to GBTA's report.

Researchers wrote that "slower and more consistent economic growth may extend the amount of time required to wrest this laurel from the United States, but current economic performance and near-term prospects suggest that China remains on track. Monthly industrial production, retail sales, management sentiment and exports are all signaling better times ahead for both domestic and international outbound business travel."

The GBTA report noted that public spending restrictions in China have impacted meetings and events demand. For example, the number of events with more than 1,000 participants dropped by 75 percent between 2010 and 2012. But GBTA's research found that private sector events and growing transient domestic travel have offset that.

Meanwhile, growth in outbound international business travel from China has been "relatively tepid," according to the report. Such spending during the past three years has grown between 10 percent and 15 percent, compared with growth rates of about 30 percent in 2009 and 2010. GBTA projected growth will remain at about 15 percent this year and suggested improving economic conditions in Europe could help boost that rate in 2015.

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GBTA: China On Track To Be World's Business Travel Spending Leader By 2015

That's epic!

Mythological narratives are getting a major upgrade with science fiction and fantasy writers injecting them with strong doses of reinterpretation and realism, finds Daniel Pinto

Writers are ushering India's myths into the realm ofspeculative fiction such as sci-fi and fantasy. One such writer isUS-based entrepreneur and IT professional Ravi V whose The ExiledPrince, the first in his Crystal Guardian trilogy, was releasedrecently. The series, told from Rama's point of view, begins and endsin the British Raj and seeks to seamlessly connect magic, futuristictechnology and the mystical Crystal of Creation which is critical tomankind's survival."The series explains events that happen in Rama'slife and the reason why his name sounds in every corner of thiscountry," says Ravi.However, the writer, who spent three years researchinglegends before embarking upon the series, maintains that he isn'tretelling folklore.

"My series is not the Ramayana; it just usesthe tale as a vehicle to deliver the plot. The book would be auniquely presented perspective with twists and turns in the sciencefiction format, and as one reads between the lines, the lateral plotwill present itself".When one mentions the marriage of science-fiction andscripture, the seminal comic series Ramayan 3392 AD which wasenvisioned by filmmaker Shekhar Kapur and self-help guru DeepakChopra comes to mind. The series, which started in the now defunctVirgin Comics in 2006 in the US, details the exploits of Prince Ramain a post-apocalyptic future where mankind is plagued by Ravan,depicted as a transhuman entity.Shamik Dasgupta, the writer of the series, reveals howthe characters in his universe differ from those in myth.

"Wemade them more realistic and instilled real modern human emotions inthem except Ravan, who is a synthetic being. Rama doesn't havegreatness bestowed upon him.From the beginning he has to strive andfight for greatness, he has to prove himself in this postmodern,savage, dystopian world, and it is not easy, not by a long shot."Dasgupta credits the series for revolutionising the artof graphic novels in India. "It is true that Ramayan 3392 AD isresponsible for the emergence of modern graphic novels and comicbooks in India, with high caliber art and intricate storytellingmeant for all ages and not just kids."Another sci-fi work which is injected with a heavy doseof mythology is The Guardians of Karma. The novel, penned by MohanVizhakat, CTO & EVP of Manappuram Finance Ltd, fills the voidthat is India's prehistoric past with a saga that sees two advancedcivilizations, the spiritually inclined Dev Lok and theall-conquering Daityan Empire, face off.

"The idea germinated few years back while readingabout the apparent disconnect between Indian mythology's rich legacyand the lack of any tangible archaeological evidence to support it.This got me thinking that if the myths had any shred of truth, theymust have been long forgotten or misinterpreted, either because ithappened so far back in prehistory that no records have survived orpossibly because all such evidence must be deep under sea ever sincemuch of the habitable world during the ice-age became submerged,during the deluge following global ice-melt," says Vizhakat."The book also explores the age-old wisdom of thescriptures from the perspective of modern scientific analysis,especially considering latest advancements in the fields ofrelativity, quantum mechanics, dark energy and biocentrism,"says Vizhakat who added that he relied heavily on mythological themessuch as the destruction of the demonic realms of Tripura depicted ashi-tech, free-floating cities.What is it about the golden age of yore that makes itsuch a haven for anarchronistic technological advancement?

"Anythingrelative to ancient Vedic mythologies can be looked at from thescience fiction point of view. It is known that, the father ofnuclear bomb, RJ Oppenheimer had quoted the Gita and has mentionedthat he may not have been the first to know about these atomicweapons. Take the Brahmastra; it is said as a source that can destroyworlds, like a nuclear weapon. But then these legends used to firethem from a bow and arrow! Did that technology exist or was it purelyfiction? We can't really say, but it does make a fantastic storyand that spawned imagination of several creative geniuses across theglobe," says Ravi.The Aryavarta Chronicles, a series by KrishnaUdayasankar, a lecturer at at Nanyang Business School, Singapore, isanother example of a "genre-bending" fantasy books look at thepower tussles in the titular kingdom in India's distant past. Thoughit reimagines the Mahabharata, there are supernatural elements.

But,that's not to say there's no sci-fi. "Utopia is supposed to be theultimate aim or achievement of humankind and science is the tool thatwill get us there. This is the premise of the story. An order ofscholars, the Firewrights, believe that their science and technologyis the means to peace and prosperity until things go wrong and theirweapons became a cause for terrible bloodshed," she explains.She happily categorises her books as fantasy. "Fantasystories have a structure or flow that fascinates me most of themare stories of an age, that show, in their own way, revolution andchange. It is this element that fascinates me, as also the fact thatthere is a certain sense of dramatic growth and transformation thatcharacters go through as though the story is their journey. Ifeel quite thrilled when readers place The Aryavarta Chronicles asfantasy, the reason being that I think there is the same sense ofmythopoesy, the creation of a story-world distinct and complete initself, not unlike Tolkien's Middle Earth," she says

Elaborating on why she chose to keep things real, shesays "Both religion and mythology have been, and still are, usedto legitimise or justify social elements that range from irrelevantto downright reprehensible. So, the attempt to demystify ancientstories is like a quest for a more believable truth, an attempt tomake these amazing characters and stories more 'real.' I want tobelieve that things were not always the way they are now; thatequality, compassion and reason were things heroines and heroesfought for and that's what makes my stories fantasy."

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That's epic!

Samsung's 28-inch, 4K monitor to sell for $699.99

Samsung's 28-inch UD590 4K monitor

Samsung has followed up its many ultra-high-definition TVs with a 4K monitor that may help bring down the average cost of super-high-resolution displays for bleary-eyed computer users.

The UD590, a 28-inch 4K monitor priced at US$699.99, displays images at a resolution of 3840 x 2160 pixels, which is four times higher than current 1080p high-definition monitors or TVs. Samsung has already released 4K TVs, both straight and curved, and the UD590 monitor is for computer users.

Samsung's new monitor can display 1 billion colors, the company said in a statement. The product will ship on April 18, according to an order page for the UD590 monitor on Amazon.com.

Prices for 4K monitors are falling as more products become available and Samsung, a big player in the display market, could accelerate this trend.

The UD590's price is a bit higher than the lowest-priced 4K monitor, Dell's 28 Ultra HD Monitor P2815Q, which has been selling for $661.99. However, Dell's monitor shows up as "no longer available" when orders are placed for it on Dell's website.

Dell's 28-inch monitor was criticized for its refresh rate of just 30Hz. The refresh rate is an important metric in determining how monitors are able to cope with moving images while reducing flickering. The refresh rate on Samsung's UD590 through an HDMI 1.4 port is 30Hz, and a more desirable 60Hz with a DisplayPort 1.2 port. The monitor has two HDMI ports and a single DisplayPort port.

Samsung has also brought some of its TV features to the monitor. It can convert lower-definition video content to the 4K resolution, and has a picture-in-picture feature to show content from two sources. The monitor has a "Game Mode" button that reduces screen lag, improves color and alters the "screen's contrast to make dark spots darker and light spots lighter" when playing games, according to a UD590 specification page.

Other technical specifications of the monitor include a 1-millisecond response time, 170-degree viewing angle, and the ability to tilt from 1 degree to 15-degrees.

Other 4K monitors are expected to become available this year, but many still remain priced well over $1,000. A 31.5-inch 4K monitor from Asus is selling for $2,899 on Amazon.com, while a 32-inch Sharp 4K monitor is priced at $3,595. Lenovo is due to ship two 4K monitors this year, including a 28-inch monitor that will be priced at $799.99, the company said in January.

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Samsung's 28-inch, 4K monitor to sell for $699.99

Computer Maps 21 Distinct Emotional Expressions–Even "Happily Disgusted"

Released: 3/26/2014 2:00 PM EDT Embargo expired: 3/31/2014 3:00 PM EDT Source Newsroom: Ohio State University Contact Information

Available for logged-in reporters only

Newswise COLUMBUS, OhioResearchers at The Ohio State University have found a way for computers to recognize 21 distinct facial expressionseven expressions for complex or seemingly contradictory emotions such as happily disgusted or sadly angry.

In the current issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, they report that they were able to more than triple the number of documented facial expressions that researchers can now use for cognitive analysis.

Weve gone beyond facial expressions for simple emotions like happy or sad. We found a strong consistency in how people move their facial muscles to express 21 categories of emotions, said Aleix Martinez, a cognitive scientist and associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at Ohio State. That is simply stunning. That tells us that these 21 emotions are expressed in the same way by nearly everyone, at least in our culture.

The resulting computational model will help map emotion in the brain with greater precision than ever before, and perhaps even aid the diagnosis and treatment of mental conditions such as autism and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Since at least the time of Aristotle, scholars have tried to understand how and why our faces betray our feelingsfrom happy to sad, and the whole range of emotions beyond. Today, the question has been taken up by cognitive scientists who want to link facial expressions to emotions in order to track the genes, chemicals, and neural pathways that govern emotion in the brain.

Until now, cognitive scientists have confined their studies to six basic emotionshappy, sad, fearful, angry, surprised and disgustedmostly because the facial expressions for them were thought to be self-evident, Martinez explained.

But deciphering a persons brain functioning with only six categories is like painting a portrait with only primary colors, Martinez said: it can provide an abstracted image of the person, but not a true-to-life one.

What Martinez and his team have done is more than triple the color palettewith a suite of emotional categories that can be measured by the proposed computational model and applied in rigorous scientific study.

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Computer Maps 21 Distinct Emotional Expressions--Even "Happily Disgusted"