What to Watch For: MLS Week Three

March 20, 2015 - Major League Soccer (MLS) Columbus Crew SC FRIDAY

Philadelphia Union vs. FC Dallas (7:00 p.m. ET / UniMas)

FC Dallas heads to Philly in the midst of a red-hot start to 2015. The Hoops are the only team in MLS with six points at the moment, while the Union drew its first two matches. Weather will play a factor in this one as cold and precipitation are expected at PPL Park. Bust out the orange ball!

SATURDAY

New England Revolution vs. Montreal Impact (3:00 p.m. ET)

The Revs will seek refuge in their Gillette Stadium debut after falling on the road in the first two weeks. Can Montreal carry momentum from Wednesday's huge Scotiabank CONCACAF Champions League win into the weekend?

Colorado Rapids vs. New York City FC (4:00 p.m. ET)

Colorado returns to action after having Week Two off, while NYCFC heads west for the first time following its 2-0 win at Yankee Stadium last week.

Orlando City SC vs. Vancover Whitecaps FC (7:30 p.m. ET)

The Lions return to the Citrus Bowl following its first MLS win last week in Houston. Carl Robinson's 'Caps travel to the opposite end of the continent riding Week Two's win in Chicago.

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What to Watch For: MLS Week Three

International Space Station Expedition 43 Crew Prepares for Launch in Kazakhstan – Video


International Space Station Expedition 43 Crew Prepares for Launch in Kazakhstan
At the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, Expedition 43 Soyuz Commander Gennady Padalka and Flight Engineer Mikhail Kornienko of the Russian Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos), NASA ...

By: NASA

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International Space Station Expedition 43 Crew Prepares for Launch in Kazakhstan - Video

NASA Rover Prospects for Water – Simulates Lunar Mission | Video – Video


NASA Rover Prospects for Water - Simulates Lunar Mission | Video
More space news and info at: http://www.coconutsciencelab.com - researchers from NASA #39;s Ames Research Center are using a rover to search for water in the desert near the Mojave National Preserve.

By: CoconutScienceLab

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NASA Rover Prospects for Water - Simulates Lunar Mission | Video - Video

NASA; Five Years of Watching the Sun – Solar material hurled out into space – Video


NASA; Five Years of Watching the Sun - Solar material hurled out into space
NASA; Five Years of Watching the Sun - Solar material hurled out into space Highlights from the Solar Dynamics Observatory #39;s five years of watching the sun. February 11, 2015 marks five years...

By: samuel ezerzer

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NASA; Five Years of Watching the Sun - Solar material hurled out into space - Video

IIN Frontiers in Nanotechnology Seminar Series – Dr. Keith Brown – Video


IIN Frontiers in Nanotechnology Seminar Series - Dr. Keith Brown
Keith A. Brown International Institute for Nanotechnology Northwestern University "Making Room at the Bottom With Scanning Probes" Abstract Through technologies like the integrated circuit,...

By: International Institute for Nanotechnology at Northwestern University

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IIN Frontiers in Nanotechnology Seminar Series - Dr. Keith Brown - Video

Global Nanotechnology in Energy Applications Market Trends Forecast in 2014 2018 and Applications – Video


Global Nanotechnology in Energy Applications Market Trends Forecast in 2014 2018 and Applications
Global Nanotechnology in Energy Applications Market Size, Share, Growth, Company Profiles, Demand, Insights, Analysis, Research, Report, Opportunities, Segmentation, Landscape, scenario.

By: Mark Holman

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Global Nanotechnology in Energy Applications Market Trends Forecast in 2014 2018 and Applications - Video

Nanotech risks must be managed

Ireland has a global reputation for leadership in nanotechnology, with three of its largest industries directly impacted by nano-science: Medical devices, pharmaceutical drugs, and information and communications technology.

Worldwide, nanotechnology is a major driver of economic growth and, while its overall contribution to world GDP is disputed, conservative estimates suggest it is a multibillion-dollar sector in high growth. That said, concerns over the risk posed by this emerging technology threaten to derail the bandwagon.

It is difficult to underestimate the potential of insurance in terms of improving the resilience of the commercial entities that make up the commercial nanotech sector and, by extension, its centrality to the very sustainability of that industry. The importance of SMEs at strategic junctures of the value chain of the sector further emphasises the importance of risk transfer.

SMEs in this sector are vulnerable to changes in risk perception on the part of key stakeholders, particularly the insurance sector. Without the ability to transfer risk or indeed access to insurance markets, the viability of many SMEs operating in this sector is questionable.

The nexus of a regulation, law, and insurance in many jurisdictions, particularly in the areas of workers compensation and environmental liability, means that without insurance operations, nanotech activity may be curtailed.

The ability to communicate risk effectively also has a major impact on regulators and investors, both key communities that sustain nanotechnology in Europe. In the medium term, maintaining, indeed creating, a vibrant sector will require an effective and robust risk-assessment tool.

To this end, researchers at the University of Limerick have assembled a consortium that includes some of the major players in risk governance and nanotech data from across Europe. The combination of major insurance syndicates, together with blue chip IT involvement in the area of artificial intelligence, represents an unprecedented joint effort to fulfil the long-standing ambition to create a state-of-the-art risk governance tool for the nanotech sector.

The contested nature of the nanotech toxicology/exposure field makes this an ideal case for a big data tool. The ability to analyse metadata represents a major step forward in terms of the risk governance of nanotech and of emerging technology more generally

The multidisciplinary team at UL effectively acts as a bridging point between the scientific community and those stakeholders that require more effective risk assessment. A deeper understanding and more granular view of the economic ecosystem that sustains the nanotech sector is an essential prerequisite for effective risk governance.

Our strategic goal is to develop a tool which will place the industry on a more sustainable footing. This will allow interested parties and key stakeholders to efficiently categorise risks pertaining to the sector. At the same time this project will address the key issue of nascent catastrophic risk.

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Nanotech risks must be managed

Victims' fury as BBC refuses to axe show by paedophile supporter

BBC bosses have sparked outrage by broadcasting documentary film Historic film is presented by notorious child sex campaigner Ian Dunn One of 30 archive films on website telling history of gay rights movement Portrays Dunn as a legitimate gay rights activist and makes no reference to his role in setting up the reviled Paedophile Information Exchange (PIE) BBC say film is significant and refused to remove it from their website Campaigners say decision is 'horrifying' and shows contempt for victims

By Marc Horne and Martin Beckford for The Mail on Sunday

Published: 19:31 EST, 21 March 2015 | Updated: 19:36 EST, 21 March 2015

The documentary is presented by Ian Dunn (pictured) one of the founders of the reviled Paedophile Information Exchange (PIE)

BBC bosses have sparked outrage by broadcasting a historic film presented by a notorious child sex campaigner and have refused requests to remove it from the internet.

The documentary is presented by Ian Dunn, one of the founders of the Paedophile Information Exchange (PIE), which campaigned to legalise sex with children.

It is one of 30 archive films on the BBCs website telling the history of the gay rights movement.

The 30-minute documentary Glad To Be Gay? portrays Dunn as a legitimate gay rights activist and makes no reference to his role in setting up the reviled group.

Victims of child abuse described as horrifying the decision to upload the film.

When The Mail on Sunday contacted the BBC to point out the documentary was causing offence, the broadcaster refused to take it down on the grounds that it is a significant work on the history of gay rights.

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Victims' fury as BBC refuses to axe show by paedophile supporter