Expanding the Scope of Verification – EE Journal

March 1, 2017

by Kevin Morris

Looking at the agenda for the 2017 edition of the annual DVCon - arguably the industrys premiere verification conference, one sees precisely what one would expect: tutorials, keynotes, and technical sessions focused on the latest trends and techniques in the ever-sobering challenge of functional verification in the face of the relentless advance of Moores Law.

For five decades now, our designs have approximately doubled in complexity every two years. Our brains, however, have not. Our human engineering noggins can still process just about the same amount of stuff that we could back when we left college, assuming we havent let ourselves get too stale. That means that the gap between what we as engineers can understand and what we can design has been growing at an exponential rate for over fifty years. This gap has always presented the primary challenge for verification engineers and verification technology. Thirty years ago, we needed to verify that a few thousand transistors were toggling the right ways at the right times. Today, that number is in the billions. In order to accomplish that and span the complexity gap, we need significant leverage.

The basic fundamentals of verification have persisted. Logic simulation has always been a mainstay, processing vectors of stimuli and expected results as fast and accurately as possible - showing us where our logic or timing has gone awry. Along the way, we started to pick up formal methods - giving us a way to prove that our functionality was correct, rather than trying to exhaustively simulate the important or likely scenarios. Parallel to those two avenues of advancement, we have been constantly struggling to optimize and accelerate the verification process. Weve proceduralized verification through standards-based approaches like UVM, and weve worked to accelerate the execution of our verification processes through technologies such as FPGA-based prototyping and emulation.

Taking advantage of Moores Law performance gains in order to accelerate the verification of our designs as they grow in complexity according to Moores Law is, as todays kids would probably say, Kinda meta. But Moores Law alone is not enough to keep up with Moores Law. Its the classic perpetual-motion conundrum. There are losses in the system that prevent the process from being perfectly self-sustaining. Each technology-driven doubling of the complexity of our designs does not yield a doubling of the computation that can be achieved. We gradually accrue a deficit.

And the task of verification is constantly expanding in other dimensions as well. At first, it was enough to simply verify that our logic was correct - that the 1s, 0s, and Xs at the inputs would all propagate down to the correct results at the outputs. On top of that, we had to worry about timing and temporal effects on our logic. As time passed, it became important to verify that embedded software would function correctly on our new hardware, and that opened up an entire new world of verification complexity. Then, people got cranky about manufacturing variation and how that would impact our verification results. And we started to get curious about how things like temperature, radiation, and other environmental effects would call our verification results into question.

Today, our IoT applications span vast interconnected systems from edge devices with sensors and local compute resources through complex communication networks to cloud-based computing and storage centers and back again. We need to verify not just the function of individual components in that chain, but of the application as a whole. We need to confirm not simply that the application will function as intended - from both a hardware and software perspective - but that it is secure, robust, fault-tolerant, and stable. We need to assure that performance - throughput and latency - are within acceptable limits, and that power consumption is minimized. This problem far exceeds the scope of the current notion of verification in our industry.

Our definition of correct behavior is growing increasingly fuzzy over time as well. For example, determining whether a processed video stream looks good is almost impossible from a programmatic perspective. The only reliable metric we have is human eyes subjectively staring at a screen. There are many more metrics for system success that have followed similar subjectivity issues. As our digital applications interact more and more directly and intimately with our human, emotional, analog world, our ability to boil verification down to a known set of zeros and ones slips ever farther from our grasp.

The increasing dominance of big data and AI-based algorithms further complicate the real-world verification picture. When the behavior of both hardware and software is too complex to model, it is far too complex to completely verify. Until some radical breakthrough occurs in the science of verification itself, we will have to be content to verify components and subsystems along fairly narrow axes and hope that confirming the quality of the flour, sugar, eggs, butter, and baking soda somehow verifies the deliciousness of the cookie.

There is no question that Moores Law is slowly grinding to a halt. And, while that halt may give us a chance to grab a breath from the Moores Law verification treadmill, it will by no means bring an end to our verification challenges. The fact is - if Moores Law ends today, we can already build systems far too complex to verify. If your career is in verification, and you are competent, your job security future looks pretty rosy.

But this may highlight a fundamental issue with our whole notion of verification. Verification somewhat tacitly assumes a waterfall development model. It presupposes that we design a new thing, then we verify our design, then we make and deploy the thing that we developed and verified. However, software development (and Id argue that the development of all complex hardware/software applications such as those currently being created for IoT) follows something much more akin to agile development - where verification is a continual ongoing process as the applications and systems evolve over time after their initial deployment.

So, lets challenge our notion of the scope and purpose of verification. Lets think about how verification serves our customers and our business interests. Lets re-evaluate our metrics for success. Lets consider how the development and deployment of products and services has changed the role of verification. Lets think about how our technological systems have begun to invert - where applications now span large numbers of diverse systems, rather than being contained within one. Moores Law may end, but our real work in verification has just begun.

EDA. Semiconductor.

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Expanding the Scope of Verification - EE Journal

German Spin-off Scores Funding to Treat Atrial Fibrillation – Labiotech.eu (blog)

The Berlin-based startup OMEICOS Therapeutics announced the first closing of a series B financing round of 8.3M and the initiation of a Phase 1 clinical trialfor the treatment of atrial fibrillation.

OMEICOS Therapeutics, a spin-off from the Max Delbrueck Center for Molecular Medicine in Berlin, is taking the next step with its lead compoundOMT-28 for the treatment of atrial fibrillation. After their 6.2M series A funding round in 2015, the biotech was now able to raise another 8.3M in a series B funding round to support the clinical development of OMT-28. The company also announced the dosing of the first subject in afirst-in-human clinical study.

Atrial fibrillation is the most common form of heart arrythmias, affecting around 2-3% of the population. While the condition is not directly life-threatening, without treatment it can haveseriousconsequencessuch asheart failureorstroke. Current antiarryhthmic treatmentswork by slowing down the excitation of the heart cells, but they can also cause severe side effects.

Electrical conduction within the heart under normal conditions and during atrial fibrillation.

OMEICOS lead compound is based on omega-3 fatty acids, known by everynutritional expertfor their positiveeffects on the heart and immune system. The companys therapeutic strategy is based on synthetic derivatives of natural metabolites of omega-3 fatty acids that have a strong antiarrhythmic effect.

OMEICOS has managed to overcome the hurdle of instability of these metabolites by developing synthetic molecules that are as potent as natural metabolites, but much more stable, making them suitable as orally available therapeutics.

Unlike other antiarrhythmic drugs, OMEICOS compounds activate a cardio-protective signaling pathway that stabilizes heart rhythm. In addition, the compounds are expected to provide curative effects to diseased hearts by preventing electrical and structural remodeling, a common cause of heart disease.

According to a study by the consulting firm Grand View Research, the market for atrial fibrillation is expected to reach 15.34B ($16.17B) by 2020 in part due to a an ageing world-population. However, non-pharmacological treatments such as catheter ablationare also expected to increase in application due to newer and improved techniques.

The growing population of AF patients is faced with outdated and extremely limited medical treatment options. Current treatments have insufficient efficacy, risk of severe side effects, and are unable to reduce patient mortality, said Robert Fischer, CSO of OMEICOS Therapeutics.

New pharmacological interventions with different mechanisms and less safety issues are definitely needed and the areais not a crowded fieldfor biotech, making OMEICOS therapeutic strategy seem promising.

Images via shutterstock.com /juzticecreative andDesignua

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Scientists wage fight against aging bone marrow stem cell niche – Medical Xpress

March 2, 2017 This molecular image shows immunofluorescence staining in the soft spongy section of trabecular bone in the femur of a young mouse. Red staining reveals the abundant presence of the protein osteopontin (OPN) in bone and endosteum of the marrow cavity, which is important to maintaining a healthy environment for blood-forming hematopoietic stem cells. Shown in blue are cell nuclei. Researchers report March 2 in the journal EMBO that restoring depleted osteopontin in aging bone marrow can rejuvenate the production of HSCs. The image was taken by Mehmet Sacma, Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Ulm, Germany. Credit: University of Ulm

As people get older so do the hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) that form their blood, creating an increased risk for compromised immunity and certain blood cancers. Now researchers are reporting in the scientific journal EMBO that the bone marrow niche where HSC's form also ages, contributing to the problem.

In a study published March 2, scientists from the University of Ulm in Germany and Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center in the United States propose rejuvenating the bone marrow niche where HSCs are created. This could mean younger acting HSCs that form healthier blood cells, boosted immunity in older people, and a better defense mechanism against certain cancers, according to study authors.

Conducting their study in mouse models, the scientists point to cells in the bone marrow called osteoblasts, which help form bone. Osteoblasts make a protein called osteopontin, which is important to supporting a vibrant bone marrow environment in the creation of blood-forming HSCs.

"We show that the place where HSCs form in the bone marrow loses osteopontin upon aging, but if you give back the missing protein to the blood-forming cells they suddenly rejuvenate and act younger," says Hartmut Geiger, PhD, study lead investigator at the Institute for Molecular Medicine and Aging Research Center at the University of Ulm, and the Division of Experimental Hematology and Cancer Biology at Cincinnati Children's. "Our study points to exciting novel ways to have a better immune system and possibly less blood cancer upon aging by therapeutically targeting the place where blood stem cells form."

Because the study was in mice, its findings cannot at this stage be extended to clinical treatment of human patients, the authors say. But the data provide interesting leads that one day could benefit human health.

Bone marrow time warp

The researchers conducted a number of experiments to test the formation and vitality of cells in and near the bone marrow microenvironment. One test in aging mice looked at the formation of endosteum stroma cells, which form a thin layer of connective tissue on the inner surface of bones. Another experiment monitored levels of osteopontin and other proteins linked to distinct cells in bone marrow during the aging process.

Study authors say they observed reduced production of osteoblasts and other stroma cells in the endosteum of older mice. They also saw decreased osteopontin protein levels in the bone marrow of older animals, which they note was associated with reduced vigor and function of blood-forming HSCs.

Reversing the niche aging process

Scientists followed up the earlier experiments by transplanting bone marrow cells from older mice (19-21 months) into young mice (8 to 10 weeks). In two other experiments, the authors also transplanted aged HSCs from older mice into younger mice, and they treated aged HSCs with a recombinant form of the osteopontin protein.

Transplantation into the younger animals caused cells to act in a younger more vital manner, the authors report. This includes the presence of smaller numbers of HSCs with greater potential for forming different types of blood cells, which included larger populations of B and T cells and smaller production of myeloid cells.

The authors also saw aged HSCs treated with recombinant osteopontin regain their youthful characteristics and capacity to form different blood-cell types. Also observed was diminished signaling of the protein Cdc42, a protein that Geiger and his team previously showed causes HSCs to age.

Osteopontin levels are not only low in the bone marrow niche, but also in the blood upon aging. As a follow up to the current study, the researchers are investigating the possibility to use osteopontin replacement therapy in mice to counter the influence of an aging niche directly in the animals.

Explore further: Changing the environment within bone marrow alters blood cell development

More information: EMBO, emboj.embopress.org/cgi/doi/10.15252/embj.201694969

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Omeicos Raises 8.3M and Starts Phase I with Epoxyeicosanoid Analog for Atrial Fibrillation – Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News

Omeicos Therapeutics reported raising 8.3 million (approximately $8.75 million) in the first close of a Series B financing and confirmed the start of a Phase I study with lead epoxyeicosanoid analog OMT-28, which is in development for treating atrial fibrillation. The investment round was led by Vesalius Biocapital II, SICAR, and SMS Company Group. Other previous Omeicos investors also participated.

We are grateful for the ongoing support of our investors and anticipate this financing to fully fund the company throughout the duration of the Phase I clinical study, which will set the stage for a swift transition into a subsequent Phase II trial, stated Dr. Robert Fischer, CSO and co-founder of Omeicos.

Omeicos is a spinout from the Max Delbrck Center for Molecular Medicine in Berlin. The firm is developing synthetic analogs of omega-3 fatty acid-derived epoxyeicosanoids for the potential treatment of inflammatory, cardiovascular, and other diseases. OMT-28 is an analog of the omega-3 fatty acid metabolite 17,18-EEQ, which Omeicos claims has demonstrated antiarrhythmic and cardioprotective potential in preclinical in vivo models.

The firm states that while all current antiarrhythmic drugs act primarily by the direct inhibition of ion channels, the Omeicos candidates activate an endogenous cardioprotective signaling pathway that both stabilizes heart rhythm and can prevent electrical and structural remodeling.

The firm won a 1.7 million (approximately $1.8 million) grant from the German Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) in November 2015 to support OMT-28 development. In April of the same year, Omeicos raised 6.2 million (roughly $6.5 million) in its Series A financing.

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Omeicos Raises 8.3M and Starts Phase I with Epoxyeicosanoid Analog for Atrial Fibrillation - Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News

This student-made dating app will find you a match based on the hot celeb photos you upload – The Verge

Tinder built its app empire on the idea that dating is superficial, so now, multiple students at the New Jersey Institute of Technology are leaning into that idea. They have developed a new dating app called FaceDate that relies on a facial recognition algorithm to generate potential matches.

When setting up an account, users upload photos of people they find attractive. The app will then suggest people who match their preferences. There probably isnt a George Clooney in the mix, but maybe theres someone with peppered hair or kind eyes. Who knows!

The app definitely sounds slightly off-putting, but Ive thought about this idea before. Im sure you could identify my type if you aggregated my Tinder swipes. I like to imagine I equally swipe right on anyone and in my mind, I dont exclude people who look a certain way or have a certain feature but Im sure an algorithm could find a pattern to my swipes. An app like FaceDate might streamline online dating by filtering out people youre less likely to swipe right on, and in the future, tailored matches would make more sense as a focus, particularly in big cities with thousands of users.

The FaceDate team hopes to bring the Android-based app to iOS this year and to roll their app out to their fellow students in the coming months.

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This student-made dating app will find you a match based on the hot celeb photos you upload - The Verge

Julian Brandt: ‘The more you reveal, the more targets people have to aim at’ – Deutsche Welle

"I don't like talking about my strengths. I'd rather talk about my weaknesses because I have the feeling that when I talk about my strengths I'm praising myself and that's not a role I'm fond of."

Julian Brandt's grin hides the truth of the training session he has just arrived from. His shirt is oversized but smart, and his baseball cap seemingly a permanent fit.

Instantly, he creates an atmosphere of familiarity, and is refreshingly open for someone who prefers the sporting spotlight to the glare of the interview lights. The 20-year-old Brandt has no Facebook page, idolized Diego when he was growing up and admits that Leverkusen's dip in form this season is the strangest he has experienced yet. In the context of modern football, there's undoubtedly an element of the abnormal about the youngster.

Like a child called to the front of the class to recite the correct answers, Brandt eventually does speak aboutsome of his strengths.

"I have relatively solid speed for someone of my height. I feel pretty comfortable when it comes to ball control. Sure there are a few more, but they're definitely accompanied by a few weaknesses."

Even here, Brandt cannot resist shirking the opportunity to heap even a teaspoon of praise on himself. He admits he doesn't win the ball back enough and he wants to score more headed goals, but it's his mind that he seeks the real improvement.

"I don't know if it's a weakness, but it has become somewhat of a seasonal goal for me. In situational play, I need to try and shoot more, which is tough for me at the moment because I have so many things going through my head - I want to dribble more or play another pass. This is a flaw of mine and something I have to change."

A lot of football is gut feeling, but a lot of it is also mental. I think a lot comes from your mind and if you can get things in there, then it's easier physically or mentally," Brandt adds.

His mind seems to be one of the clearest in the game, largely due to his relationship with his father and his almost complete abstinence from social media (he's only on Instagram).

One of Julian Brandt's two goals in the Bundesliga this season in Leverkusen's 3-2 defeat to RB Leipzig on Matchday 11

"Facebook is not really my thing. I try to stay off social media. You post something; you set up a competition It's not me," Brandt says before citing teammateStefan Kiessling's decision to remove his page after receiving endless abuse following his phantom goal against Hoffenheim in 2013.

"My dad said to me: 'The more you reveal the more targets people have to aim at. It's better to play well on the pitch and keep a low profile off it because my private life doesn't concern them.' And in a way, he's right."

His father Jrgen has played more than just the paternal role. From being Julian Brandt's coach when he was a child to being his advisor now, Brandt senior has never been too far away.

"A lot changes in professional football. I was at the academy [in Wolfsburg] at 15 and had to put my childhood to one side. You have to grow up fast. You become a more public figure, you have to put value in things and be an example. And so, relatively quickly, you find yourself in a position where people start to label you arrogant or boastful," Brandt juniorsays.

"The most important thing my father said to me was, 'You don't need to be everyone's best friend. Being polite and having a positive charisma is enough.' He connects that with being down-to-earth. Of course, driving fast cars is fun but you should always remember where you come from and never lose your grip on reality."

And the Bundesliga star seems to havean exceptional understanding of his.

"It's not easy because every time you walk down the street and everyone says how great a player you are, how great a person you are It's not easy to stay normal, because you start to believe them. It isn't necessarily true, but you believe it and if in that moment you don't have good support around you and the money arrives, it's not an easy situation, especially if you're a young player."

Brandt is a youngster both on paper and on the pitch, but in person he appears to be beyond his years - and the car analogy is once again appropriate.

"No player is arrogant just because they drive a fast car, because anyone would do that if they had a lot of money. Not boasting about it, that's the difference."

Posting online and then not performing on the pitch is something Brandt considers "fatal."

"I know myself. I'm not the type to mess around on Facebook for 24 hours, who uploads photos and two days later thinks, crap, I have to upload another one to make sure my fans are happy. I don't even think about crap like that," Brandt says without a hint of impoliteness.

"I like taking on players. It's part of me," Brandt says coolly as if his abilities in one-on-one situations are not oozing with quality beyond his years. "I don't really think. I look at the opponent and try and put him off balance and then get past them," he says, dropping his shoulder as he describes the move.

"The manager knows he doesn't need to say much to me. I can be left to play. I don't need many words," Brandt says.

Head coach Roger Schmidt appreciates what Julian Brandt brings to Bayer Leverkusen's game

Brandt will make his 30th appearance of the season when Leverkusen face Borussia Dortmund on Matchday 23. He has managed only three goals and six assists, a relative low yield for a player who thrilled towards the end of last season with a spate of form that helped deliver Leverkusen a top-four finish.

"I take it as recognition. To feed my own ego would be the wrong thing to do," he says humbly of the many headlines about his future - ones sent to him by his friends, he doesn't seek them out himself.

"You can take the step [abroad], but I don't think you have to. Those that back themselves to do it have nothing in their way. I don't think it's a bad thing to try and find your feet abroad. Julian [Draxler] and Leroy [San] are the best examples of that right now. They are both young players and have huge futures ahead of them," Brandt says.

Whether the club will can continue to offer Champions League football next season will likely affect the future of many of Leverkusen's key players. And Brandt, who is younger than both Draxler and San, is among them.

"I think the allure of being world famous is normal. It would be a lie to say it wasn't alluring, but where and when you never know. Football moves so quickly, and as quickly as things develop positively, they can also go south and see you slip into a place where you're forgotten."

He pauses for a notably long time as he considers his answer, before responding, with a knowing smile.

"It's tough to say. I'm happy here and what happens next, we will see."

Perhaps he knows more than he's letting on. It has long been clear Brandt's talent beckons him to greater things, but his best kept secret is his down-to-earth character.

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Julian Brandt: 'The more you reveal, the more targets people have to aim at' - Deutsche Welle

Filestack launches a new API and changes the game for file uploading – Network World

Once upon a time, the sign of credibility -- indeed, the mark of coming of age for a young man in my home country of New Zealand -- was buying his first car and being able to do an oil change on it himself. A rite of passage was for a father to teach his son how to perform routine maintenance on his vehicle, a skill passed down many generations.

Fast-forward to today, however, and it is decidedly rare to find anyone who does their own oil changes. The fact of the matter is that it is a relatively messy and time-consuming task and one which isn't a particularly good use of time -- these days the thought seems to be, "Why do my own oil change when I can pay someone to do it and enjoy a long brunch with the time I save?"

We have entered the age of abstraction when more and more menial (and, often, not so menial) tasks get handed off to a third-party service provider.

And so it is in the technology space, where developer tools seem to rise on a daily basis to perform some application requirement that a developer could have built themselves, but which is seen as a non-core requirement. Companies like SendGrid and Twilio have grown rapidly by offering, respectively, email capability and communications that can be "embedded" within an application.

Twilio has built a significant business, and taken its company public, based on this idea of abstracting one particular part of an application requirement. And in doing so, it has build massive specific knowledge about the communications area. Developers can leverage this knowledge without having to learn all the minutiae themselves.

Another area that developer tools are looking to is that of file uploading. Most applications have some sort of requirement for file uploading -- from the obvious candidates, file sharing and sync tools, to simple use cases such as uploading a profile pic. File uploading is one of these areas where developers might be looking for a third-party solution.

And when they do, Filestack is there to help them.

Filestack is a developer service for file uploading of user-generated content. It allows software developers to integrate more than 25 social networks and cloud drives with just a few lines of code. End users can upload content from websites and mobile apps like Facebook, Instagram and Dropbox, or wherever that content is stored. Filestack enables developers to upload and store large files, transform and manipulate images and other file types, and deliver that content across any type of desktop or mobile device. The service boasts of some 50,000 worldwide developers using its platform.

When one considers that user-generated content -- in particular images -- is exploding globally, the existence of a solution like Filestack makes sense. Indeed, Kleiner Perkins, the creator of the legendary Internet Trends report, estimates that there are now over 3 billion photos shared per day across the five most popular social media sites. Add to that the estimated 18 billion video views per day across Facebook and Snapchat alone, and you have an enormous number of files that need to be accessed, transformed and delivered.

Filestack is today releasing its redesigned embeddable file picker that itself has been built on top of a new JavaScript library. The rewrite means that Filestack can offer additional capabilities -- namely, accelerated uploads for large files, resumable uploads optimized for spotty mobile connections, enhanced image recognition services powered by Google Vision, and a new unlimited upload plan for high-volume customers.

"Nearly every app built today incorporates some form of user-generated content," said Pat Matthews, CEO of Filestack. "But there are challenges with this. Files are getting bigger. Users are storing files across many different social networks, clouds and devices. Everyone wants access and upload capabilities across any device, even on slow internet connections. These are ubiquitous challenges for all developers. We solve these file management challenges and help developers focus on what drives competitive advantage for whatever they're building."

The new file picker has been redesigned to increase ease of use for both developers integrating the file picker into their app and end users using it to upload content.

End users can transform images on the fly by cropping, resizing and applying Instagram-like filters. Developers can programmatically manipulate and manage images, including new advanced image recognition powered by Google Vision machine learning, which lets developers programmatically tag images based on content and detect explicit content.

The Filestack back end has been redesigned to accelerate uploads of high-resolution images and videos.

To accelerate file uploads, Filestack first divides the file up into chunks and uploads them in parallel, speeding up the upload and reducing any risk of timeouts. Second, it automatically retries failed uploads (an increasingly prevalent situation, especially given the spottiness of many users' internet connections). Third, it accelerates file uploads by optionally sending the file to the closest AWS data center worldwide, without passing through any other infrastructure, thus reducing the distance files need to travel before they can be viewed on other devices.

While fast file uploading is valuable, it really need to be matched with fast load times upon viewing.

Filestack offers file compression and resizing natively. Files are then served via a distributed content delivery network (CDN) with some 28 globally spaced points of presence. Filestack suggests that page load times can be reduced by up to 50% by using its distributed architecture.

You'd be forgiven for thinking that file uploading and manipulation is a pretty stock standard requirement that any developer should be able to build on the back of their public cloud of choice.

The reality, however, is that much like application monitoring, email functionality and communications, building higher-value features in this area is a specialist task. While it may go against the grain for some developers to abstract tasks to a third party, for those looking to maximize their agility, tools such as Filestack provide a valuable option.

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Filestack launches a new API and changes the game for file uploading - Network World

How To File Your Social Security Appeal Online – WFMYNews2.com

moneytips.com , KSDK 8:44 PM. EST March 01, 2017

Was your Social Security claim denied by the Social Security Administration (SSA)? It is your right to appeal the decision, and now you have an even easier method of doing so. As of December 10, 2016, the SSA allows you to file an appeal online for both medical and non-medical issues to dispute adverse actions or denials of a claim. (Non-medical appeals cover issues such as disputes over Medicare premium rates and cases of overpayment.)

The online appeals process extends to recipients living outside the US. Prior to the online process, appeal options were limited and often impractical for those in other countries.

The SSA online appeal site walks you through the appeal process in a user-friendly fashion. The initial menu allows you to choose between medical decisions or non-medical decisions, as well as allowing you to resume a medical appeal that you had already started.

Before you begin the online appeal process, make sure that you have the necessary supporting documents (forms, medical reports, written statements, and legal documents) to process your appeal. Further information on required documents may be found on the SSA website.

Generally, supporting documents may be uploaded through the website, so make sure you have all of your documents in a suitable electronic form for uploading. However, SSA only accepts original or certified copies of some documents; those will need to be mailed into the SSA (or brought into the SSA office if you prefer but in that case why bother with an online appeal?).

SSA estimates that medical appeals should take from 40 to 60 minutes assuming a suitable Internet connection. Non-medical appeals should take less time, approximately 25 minutes.

The online site for non-medical appeals saves answers automatically as you proceed through the process, but you cannot exit the application and come back to complete it later. The medical appeal site also saves answers automatically, but it does allow you to take a break and return to an appeal that has been saved in progress.

The SSA will contact you if there are any questions or updates regarding your appeal. If you have a personal appointed representative for your SSA claim, make sure that his or her contact information is also included with your submitted information.

You can check the status of your appeal from the submissions page at any time. A simple click of a button will direct you to My Social Security, where you can log in to your personal page (or create one if you do not already have one established).

Keep in mind that the same time limits apply to online submissions as they do to other methods. Generally, you have sixty days from the date of receipt of the letter that informs you about the decision. The SSA assumes that you received the letter within five days of the date on the letter. If you received it later than five days beyond the letter date, keep that limitation in mind.

For any other questions regarding the general appeal process, refer to the Social Security Publication "Your Right To Question The Decision Made On Your Claim".

You still have the traditional options of appealing by phone or in person at your nearest Social Security Administration office, if you prefer. We hope you don't have to dispute a Social Security claim at all, but if you do, at least you have choices on the method to use.

Read our article on what you need to get the Social Security benefits you deserve to learn more about the four levels of appeal and the supporting documents you need to submit for your case to be re-evaluated.

This article was provided by our partners at moneytips.com.

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7 Challenges Snapchat’s Parent Company Has to Overcome Before It Can Be Wall Street’s ‘New Facebook’ – Adweek

Snap Inc., the parent company of Snapchat, today is expectedto begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange, whereitsreportedly beingvalued at$24 billion, or $17 per share. The mobile-focused player, founded by CEO Evan Spiegel in 2011, is a classic challenger brand, taking on digital behemoths that came before itas well as traditional media companies.

Its initial public offering will be closely watchedin light of how successful social-media forerunner Facebook turned out to be on Wall Streetcompared withTwitter, which has struggled among investors due to lagging user growth. Whether Snap is the new Facebook or the new Twitteror something completelydifferentwill almost certainlybe more than just a footnote when the next chapters ofdigital mediahistoryarewritten.

We asked marketing execs to weigh in on what Snaps biggest challenges will be after the IPO. Here areseven themesthat stood out:

Its no small task that the company is competing with Google, Facebook and Instagram for ad dollars, but it seems to be off to an auspiciousstartfor instance, the rumored $200 million ad commitment from an unnamed holding company reported last week by the New York Post. Snapchat will bring in $1 billion in ad sales this year, per a report from eMarketer in September 2016.

At the same time, as Adweek reported earlier this week,challenges exist aroundbuilding bespoke content for the mobile apps vertical videos product called Snap Ads as well as its sponsored lenses and geofilters. Those ad products, which are often costly to create, as well as increased competition from Instagram have likely hampered Snapchats sales in the last three to fivemonthsand could continue to do so when it comes to nailing down major deals. The level of success achieved byitsads API,which became widely available in October, will be worth keeping an eye on in the weeks ahead.

Its first task is to convince advertisers that its the right platform to translate user activity to brand engagement, said Guillaume Lelait, U.S. managing director at Fetch.

Sean Zepps, associate director of digital strategy at creative agency Deep Focus, part of Engine Group, suggested that the biggest challenge for Snap maybe investors weighing the company not on its own terms but against the success of Facebook. Its a similar problem Twitter has battled since going public in November 2013.

Whether its their lack of understanding of the app and its young audience or the constant comparison theyll make to the more mature platforms who are borrowing from them left and right, Im preparing myself for an ongoing Spiegel vs. investor battle, Zepps said.

One thing is unusually obvious: For Snap to avoid Twitters current situation on Wall Street, Snapchats user base must continue to expand.

And theres reason for optimism on that front. The apps U.S. audience will grow to 70.4 million by the end of 2017, according toeMarketer.That represents an increase of 14.2 percent from 2016. American adults between 45 and 54 years old are one of the biggest areas of growth, currently making up 6.4 percent of SnapchatsU.S.patrons, according toeMarketer, whose previous projections saw that demo come inat only 4.2 percent.

Meanwhile, because big brands love international scale, Snapchat, which has 158 global daily users, will also have to continue to build its audience in other countries.

Its going to feel some pressure to grow the user base at a more aggressive pace once they have investors at the table, Zepps said. Sadly, the legacy of Twitter lives on in the mind of most technology investors that saw Twitters growth stall. Snap Inc. is going to have to constantly remind them that they didnt mistakenly back a flashy young social-media company, especially with such a lofty evaluation.

Richard McDonald, president of Epsilon Agency, added, Snapchat might be able to find a healthy revenue stream if they can figure out how to grow their audience and monetize effectively without alienating their users. If they cant figure this out, they might very well become the next Twitter.

John Sampogna, co-CEO at interactive shop Wondersauce, pointed to a recent studythat more than 60 percent of Snapchat users skip ads. He suggestedthat stat might represent a bigger problem for the app down the road, since its probably going to have to serve up more video ads to drive revenue and satisfy investors while risking turning off userswhich could hurt brands performances.

Now that [Spiegel]is about to be beholden to someone other than himself, something will have to give, and that pressure may begin to erode the high engagement that the platform sees among younger consumers, Sampogna said.

Mark Read, global CEO at WPP-owned Wunderman, largely concurred. Just like Facebook in its early days, there are bound to be some false starts before they work out how to bring brands onto the platform without disrupting the consumer experience, he said.

ThoughRead was optimistic about its longer-term prospects with users, stating that while the younger audience is even more fickle, all the evidence points to Snapchat as being the media and social destination of choice.

Manyof Snaps challenges are interwoven into competing with digital video giants andTV networksfor ad dollars. Thats been the case for a while. But now, whenit comes to streaming video, getting consumers to watch something has seemingly never been so cutthroat, with Netflix, Hulu, Google-owned YouTube and others increasingly offering content via their over-the-top (OTT) systems.

Just Tuesday,YouTube revealed its $35-per-month subscription service that directly challenges cable television. Whats more, in mid-February,Facebook announcedthat it will debut a video app for television set-top boxes. Of course, both of those platforms already hadrivalries withSnapchat over uploaded mobile videos. In 2017, YouTube and Facebookwhich have more developedad sales teams and superiorscaleare clearly diversifying their video offerings. As one more exampleto that end, few would question thatFacebook-owned Instagram is coming of age as its own video-advertising dynamo.

Snapchat, meanwhile, has been busy ramping up on TV-like programming, inking deals for its media program, called Discover, in the pastyear or so with the NFL, MTV, Food Network, Turner Broadcasting, NBC, ESPN and CNN. Nick Cicero, CEO of startup creative studio Delmondo, suggested that the app needs to do even more to keep up in an environment where television-esque content is available via variouschannels on smartphones.

If Snap wants to become more like TV, he said, theyre going to need to roll out more YouTube-like features to build true audiences around that content like notifications, meaningful subscriptions Theyre also going to have to keep pumping in unique and original content for Snap from partners if they dont want to rely on celebrities and influencers to drive daily video consumption.

Google and Facebook are under greater and greater scrutiny when it comes to their ad metrics, and the pair of digital giants have recently responded by agreeing to an audit by the Media Ratings Council. On Tuesday, The Wall Street Journal reported that advertisers were now demanding Snapchat to do the same, and marketers speaking with Adweek essentially echoed such sentiment.

As they are looking to court advertisers, explained Cicero, their platform remains a black box as they havent opened their analytics up like their competitors Facebook and YouTube. So brands will be hesitant to invest on a platform with an understanding of the returns.

Jason Beckerman, CEO at social marketing company Unified, said he believes that Snaps existing partnerships with metrics companies like Nielsen, Millward Brown, Moat and Integral Ad Science will help steer it through the stormy data conditions affecting the current digital landscape.

Snapchat has set itself up well to avoid major metrics issues post-IPO, he said. Companies like Nielsen and Millward Brown are already set up with Snapchat and [it is]poised to easily add more partners to this roster over time.

Spiegel calls Snap a camera company, which some industry playerssay points to an ambition to combine devices like Spectacles with his app to drive sales. Spectacles are souped-up sunglasses that record video via an integrated camera from the wearers eye-level perspective. Users can then upload 10-second video clips to the Snapchat platform via a smartphone synced through Bluetooth or Wi-Fi. The devices cost $140 apiece.

The potential for hardware sales aside, theres probably a long-game strategy by Spiegel and his engineers to monetize how Spectacles and Snapchat can work together for marketers. Its extremelyearly for the sunglasses, but its not hard to imagine custom packaging of Spectacles content and Snapchat ads in the offing at some point down the road. Brands like Sour Patch Kids and Mountain Dew have been testing the devices for months. And branded SpectaclesRay-Ban would seem like a possible candidatecould also conceivably emerge.

I think [Spectacles] are an interesting preview of whats to come, said Rye Clifton, director of experience, GSD&M. Ill admit I felt too old for Specs when I tried wearing them for a week, but they do change the way you approach photographywhats worth capturing and how you remember it.

Andwhat about the next generation?

It was really interesting to watch my three-year-old play with them, then to play back his perspective on the world, Clifton described. Thats where the gold is.

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7 Challenges Snapchat's Parent Company Has to Overcome Before It Can Be Wall Street's 'New Facebook' - Adweek

Saudi medicine professor breaks another male bastion – Arab News

JEDDAH: Dr. Dalal Moheealdin Namnaqani, a career educator in medicine, has become the first Saudi woman to be appointed dean of a university in which she supervises both male and female faculties. Ahmed Al-Eissa, education minister, appointed this week Namnaqani as dean of the Taif University College of Medicine. Previous appointments to deanship had been limited to men. The highest administrative position for female academics at public colleges and universities was vice-dean. No Saudi woman academic previously occupied a deanship position at a public college or university. Namnaqani said the government, led by King Salman, considers women as important partners in serving the nation in a number of fields, including the Shoura Council, academia and private sector. This is what motivates me to work hard to achieve my aspirations and goals to enhance the academic quality at the college of medicine, in cooperation with my colleagues and members of faculty, Namnaqani said. She expressed appreciation to the education minister for making the appointment. She also praised the director of the university, Dr. Hossam bin Abdulwahab Zaman, who played a role in her nomination for the post. Namnaqani said she did not expect to reach this position due to the organizational structures of Saudi universities, but she said she now realizes that Saudi women have proved their capabilities. I hope all those who care to serve our country will focus on accomplishments and not wait to be appointed in certain positions to begin to be productive, Namnaqani said. We can all cooperate with those in key positions to produce and innovate for the sake our country. The appointment is expected to open the door to other women faculty members at other public Saudi universities and widen employment opportunities for women in academia. Taif University said in a statement that the decision to appoint Namnaqani was based on her high scientific qualifications and merit. Faisal Al-Harthy, a student at the College of Medicine, said Namnaqani enjoys a good reputation throughout the college and is considered one of the most distinct members of the faculty, both at the academic level and in her personal relations with students. Student Adel Bokhari said the deans position should go to someone who has the skills and capability to carry out the role, regardless of the gender. Namnaqani, a consultant of histopathology and anatomic diseases and a member of the Faculty of Medicine at the university, was acting dean of university studies before her appointment to the highest position in the female section. She holds a bachelors degree in medicine and surgery (MBCHB) from King Abdulaziz University (1991), as well as seven fellowships in the cell and tissue diseases sciences. She is member of a number of scientific societies and organizations. She began her career in 1991 working as a doctor at the King Abdulaziz University College of Medicine in Jeddah. She held different positions at that college, as well as at Al-Hada Military Hospital, King Abdulaziz Specialist Hospital in Taif and the University of Taif. Her last position was assistant professor of pathology at the College of Medicine.

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Saudi medicine professor breaks another male bastion - Arab News

Investigation Of Hazmat Situation At Yale School Of Medicine Finds No Cause For Illness – Hartford Courant

Four members of the Yale School of Medicine have been released from the hospital following a hazmat situation at a building on campus, according to the university.

The four individuals fell ill Tuesday afternoon at 333 Cedar St., New Haven, and they were released from Yale-New Haven Hospital the same day, said Karen Peart, external communications director for Yale. Peart said she did not know whether the four people were staff or students.

The situation was investigated by the hospital, Yale Police, the New Haven Fire Department, the State Department of Energy and Environmental Protection - which responds to hazardous materials - and the Yale Environmental Health and Safety office.

DEEP said Wednesday it could not detect anything that would have made the people ill. The department took air samples and other materials for sampling from the building, but recommends Yale retain an industrial hygienist for further testing, spokesperson Cyndy Chanaca said.

Fox 61 reported Tuesday that officials examined a Keurig Coffee maker as a possible source of the illness.

New Haven Deputy Fire Chief Orlando Marcano told the station that at least three people reported feeling sick around 2:40 p.m. after drinking something, likely from the coffee maker, in Sterling Hall.

Attempts to reach Marcano were unsuccessful Tuesday night.

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Investigation Of Hazmat Situation At Yale School Of Medicine Finds No Cause For Illness - Hartford Courant

Environmental officials investigating Yale School of Medicine – WTNH Connecticut News (press release)

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NEW HAVEN, Conn. (WTNH) Environmental officials are still trying to figure out what caused four people to get sick at the Yale School of Medicine on Tuesday.

Officials with the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP) told News 8 that they responded to 333 Cedar Street in New Haven Tuesday afternoon for a report of two unconscious females. The building is a part of the Yale School of Medicine.

New Haven Fire Chief John Alston says just before 2:40 p.m., the call came in for three people feeling sick. Responders found two people in a lab and one in a clerical office. One person fainted and one person felt faint and weak. Chief Alston says another person had already left sick and went home. They were brought back to be examined.

DEEPs Emergency Response Unit took air samples and other materials for sampling and could not detect anything that would have made the people feel ill. The DEEP ERU recommended that the Yale Medical School get an industrial hygienist for further testing.

Officials said all of them drank from the same coffee maker, but nothing was found in air and other samples.

The four victims have been released from the hospital.

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Environmental officials investigating Yale School of Medicine - WTNH Connecticut News (press release)

UCSF Scientists, Leaders Highlight Latest Advances at 2017 Precision Medicine World Conference – UCSF News Services

Scientists, clinicians and entrepreneurs shared the latest innovations and initiatives in the rapidly evolving movement to make health care more personal, predictive and preventive at the Precision Medicine World Conference (PMWC) in January.

UCSF faculty and leaders joined the speakers at the yearly event that shares the latest innovations and initiatives in precision medicine.

UC San Francisco scientists joined about 200 speakers representing business, government, pharma and biotech who talked about advances in cancer therapies, such as liquid biopsies, gene-editing technology, clinical research informatics, deep machine learning, data visualization and digital health.

A few highlights include:

Ensuring that news tools and technology in health and wellness reach as many people as possible was a recurring theme that emerged at the World Economic Summit, UCSF Chancellor Sam Hawgood, MBBS, said in his opening remarks at the PMWC, which UCSF co-hosted.

Hawgood, who attended the forum in Davos, has made precision medicine a priority in his administration. UCSF faculty scientists are working at the local, state and national levels on biomedical research that involves racial and ethnic minorities and the socioeconomically disadvantaged.

We know that minorities and underserved communities both bear a much higher burden of disease, Hawgood said. Addressing health disparities is where precision medicine can have the greatest impact.

With new leadership in Washington, D.C., Tal Behar, co-founder and president of the event PMWC International, opened the three-day conference in Mountain View, Calif., by acknowledging what was on the minds of many: We are anxious, curious and eager to know about the changes in our industry.

While questions remain about the state of science and federal funding in health care and biomedical research in the Trump administration, speakers at the PMWC say scientific and technological innovation will continue through projects already in the pipeline and through public-private partnerships, emerging start-ups and established companies.

The future is still unfolding in precision medicine, a nascent approach that began in 2011 with a National Academy of Sciences report. Precision medicine efforts was expanded nationally by President Obama who announced a bold new research effort to revolutionize how we improve health and treat disease in his 2015 State of the Union address.

The dawn of light is just coming up over the horizon in precision medicine, said Euan Ashley, PhD, director of Stanford Clinical Genomics Service, referring to new developments in immunotherapy, data sharing and digital diagnostics. We should be able to predict and prevent disease.

Executives and entrepreneurs in the technology and health care marketplace say theyre taking a long-term view on investing in new companies. Well wait and see what comes out of Washington, D.C., said Alexis Borisy of Third Rock Ventures. This is a golden time of innovation.

Ultimately, products and services will be judged on the value they bring to patients, physicians and the health care system, said Andrew Schwab of SAM Ventures. He also emphasized that increased diversity of the world will improve the quality of the data if patients are willing to share their information.

In a conversation at the PMWC, Robert Califf, MD, former deputy director of the FDA, and Keith Yamamoto, PhD, UCSF vice chancellor for Science Policy and Strategy, emphasized the critical role that the public and patients have on advancing science and discovery.

Califf, who recently resigned from the FDA, stressed the importance and impact of patient advocacy groups can have to champion investment into research and raise awareness and funds to fight intractable diseases.

Yamamoto says realizing the promise of precision medicine depends upon educating the public about whats at stake and engaging them to be active participants in research by sharing their data.

Our success will be depend upon engaging both patients and healthy people who become convinced that their contributions will benefit the health and wellbeing of themselves, their children and their grandchildren, Hawgood said.

Below are videos of some of the UCSF speakers presentations:

Sam Hawgood, MBBS, UCSF Chancellor Topic: Opening Remarks

Keith Yamamoto, PhD, UCSF Vice Chancellor for Science Policy and Strategy Topic: Fireside Chat: FDAs Role and Responsibility in Expediting Best Treatments for Patients

Atul Butte, MD, PhD Topic: Generating Insights from Multi-modal Healthcare Data for Precision Medicine

Charles Chiu, MD, PhD Topic: Clinical Next-Generation Sequencing for Infectious Disease Diagnosis

Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, MD, PhD, and Robert Hiatt, MD, PhD Topic: Population Precision Medicine

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UCSF Scientists, Leaders Highlight Latest Advances at 2017 Precision Medicine World Conference - UCSF News Services

UNLV medical school faces pivotal Board of Regents vote – Las Vegas Review-Journal

Friday is poised to be a pivotal moment for the fledgling UNLV School of Medicine.

With four months until the school opens, UNLV President Len Jessup will request from the Board of Regents approval of the bylaws and operating agreement for the faculty practice plan, as well as a $19 million line of credit.

It has to get passed, said Barbara Atkinson, dean of the medical school. Ive been meeting with each of the regents separately, and I think Ive had very favorable responses.

The practice plan will allow students and residents to gain experience with patients under the supervision of a UNLV faculty physician.

The plan, if approved, will enable more than 100 teaching physicians and 300 support staff of the University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine to begin working at UNLV by July 1.

Physicians will be compensated for the time they spend teaching, with 10 to 20 percent of their salary paid for by the state. The remainder will come from revenues on the clinical side.

Anybody that starts up a new medical practice has to get credit, because they have those months where they send their bills out, but dont get paid very fast, Atkinson said. And you have all of the expenses all the leases, all the supplies and all the salaries.

The business plan shows the school paying back the loan in five years, but Atkinson hopes to do it in four. The clinical side of the operation is expected to generate roughly $1 million in revenues every week, and about $80 million in its first year.

Atkinson said several banks have responded to the schools request for a proposal.

Contact Natalie Bruzda at nbruzda@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3897. Follow @NatalieBruzda on Twitter.

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UNLV medical school faces pivotal Board of Regents vote - Las Vegas Review-Journal

UNTHSC/TCU Medical School is right on track – TCU 360

Photo byMax Faulkner Fort Worth Star Telegram

TCUs planned medical school should be accepting applications in the Fall of 2018 and students are already making plans to apply.

Morgan Williams, a junior biologymajor in the Class of 2018, said she hopes to claim one of the 20 seats set aside for TCU students.

Its an honor to get into any medical school, let alone to be one of the first students in a newly established school, she said.

Dr. Stuart Flynn, the dean of UNTHSC M.D. school, said he has already made plans for next years opening.

We are admitting 60 students per year,he said. We hope for it to grow over the years based on sustainability and excellence.

Flynn plans on hiring a significant part of the leadership team himself. In five years, the school will have about 700 faculty members, amajority of them being physicians from Tarrant County.

Our medical students will be taught at the highest level to communicate, which is a big deal, Flynn said. We will also have simulation center in which our students will be able to train their procedures before they actually do it on real people.

The UNTHSC/TCU M.D. school will have classes on both university campuses. However, alarge part of the courses will be held in clinical practices.

The reality of it is Fort Worth will be a medical school, Flynn said. We will be a part of the town now, which is going to be great.

The cost of tuition for the school will be the median of a private school tuition $50,000 per year, according to Flynn. He said the community and other people will donate and help contribute money to the school in order to give scholarship money to the students.

I am excited to see the steps and process that the new school will partake in over the next few years, Williams said. And, I hope to be a part of it.

Shelby Kitson is a sophomore journalism student at Texas Christian University.

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UNTHSC/TCU Medical School is right on track - TCU 360

Steph Curry and Liberty University help collect 20000 shoes for children in Africa – CBSSports.com

Two-time NBA MVP and Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry teamed up with Liberty University in collecting shoes for children in Africa. The effort netted more than 20,000 sneakers for Kickn It for a Cause, a lifestyle brand started by a family friend of the Curry family, Chris Strachan.

Despite Currys incredible credentials as a professional that might suggest he was once a blue-chip recruit that played for a college powerhouse, his path ran through small school Davidson, where he went from unheralded prospect to NCAA Tournament star in 2008. So his experience at a small school (and the fact that his brother Seth played one season at Liberty), was part of the reason for his willingness to help. During his visit to Liberty, Curry even addressed the schools team as it gears up for postseason play.

Before all this NBA hoopla, from my journey coming from a small school like Davidson, I had the same kind of look that you all have in your eyes right now, Curry said. Just hyped to play and ready to go. Its an amazing opportunity to do it and do it together. Because every single one of you has a role and a part of your success .. Have fun doing what youre doing, and just enjoy it.

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Steph Curry and Liberty University help collect 20000 shoes for children in Africa - CBSSports.com

Flint Hill’s Krissy O’Malley sets up volleyball future, commits to Liberty – Washington Post

As a middle-schooler,Krissy OMalley would attendevery Flint Hill volleyballmatch she could, watching Ally Fellows set up the Huskies hittersona team that went undefeated and finished atop The Washington Posts rankings in 2014.

Id just hope one day Id be on that team. I remember looking at them and thinking, How could anyone be that good?' OMalley said. When youre little, you look up to someone whos doing everything right and youre like, Oh my gosh.

Now a sophomore and Liberty recruit, OMalleyhasgrown into the type of player she once admired. The 5-foot-9 setter worked on her gameobsessively over the last few years, recording 940 assists in the fall and and earning recognition as an All-Met honorable mention for one of the D.C. areas top teams.

OMalleys competitive drive helps set her apart from other talented players.One of her best performances came againstHoly Cross in the Metro City final. Flint Hill arrived about an hour early, and while the other playersused the extra time to dotheir homework, OMalleyand freshman Sydney Reedwere too excited to focus on anything besides the match.

We were just talking about the game coming up and we were just so in the zone, and I couldnt take my mind or my eyes off the prize, said OMalley, who delivered 29 assists in the three-set victory.

OMalley wanted to be a swimmer when she was younger after watching her oldest sisters meets, but discovered a passion for volleyball in fourth grade, she said. She gravitated toward the setter position, usingher soft touch and court awareness to excel in that role. OMalley sees herself as a quarterback, always thinking about how to put her teammates in position to succeed.

I love running the show. I love calling the plays and knowing who to set at what times. I think thats a really fun part of setting, OMalley said.

Flint Hill Coach Carrol DeNure said that it is this ability that sets OMalley apart.

We take that for granted with her, because she just has a good feel for the game and her teammates, DeNure said.

OMalley verbally committedto Libertylast Thursday.Though college istwo years away, she has beengetting a head start by watching theteam in action keeping a close eye on junior setter Anna Willey as she prepares to play at the next level.

I really want to get fundamentally better. I want to get everything crisper with my setting, OMalley said. Im just pushing to get stronger so when I get to Liberty, Im ready. I not only want to go to Liberty, but I want to succeed.

NUMBER CRUNCH:29

Wins in the past 30 games for Wilsons boys basketball team. The No. 7 Tigers (29-3) defeatedFriendship Tech, 59-56, in overtime last night to advance to Fridays DCSAA semifinal against No. 2 Gonzaga.

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Basketball. Never. Stops. Dan Roth (@ByDanRoth)is in Upper Marlboro for the DouglassCentral matchup in the boys Maryland 2A South region semifinal, and well (@allmetsports) keep youupdatedon the rest of the playoff games around the area, including the girls Virginia 5A quarterfinal games including Salem-Tuscarora, Wakefield-Princess-Anne and Edison-LC Bird.

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Flint Hill's Krissy O'Malley sets up volleyball future, commits to Liberty - Washington Post

Congress can do more for religious liberty abroad, scorecard finds … – Catholic News Agency

Washington D.C., Mar 1, 2017 / 03:02 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The United States Congress can do more to prioritize international religious freedom, and ensuring that bills come up for a vote is key to that, an advocacy organization has found in its new scorecard for Senators and Representatives.

At a time when the three-fourths of the worlds population lives in countries where freedom of religion is significantly restricted, members of U.S. Congress must be held accountable on how much importance they give to protecting and promoting this freedom abroad, The 21st Century Wilberforce Initiative maintained.

Congress can do more to prioritize international religious freedom, the Wilberforce Initiative concluded from its scorecard for the 114th session of Congress.

The card was announced last year as a way to hold members of Congress accountable for their activity or lack thereof in promoting religious freedom abroad.

Most of the major international religious freedom initiatives over the past few decades came from Congress, stated Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.), who earned the top score among members of the U.S. House.

The top scorer in the Senate was Marco Rubio (R-Fla.).

The Wilberforce Initiative announced that collectively, more people are persecuted for their faith now than at any other time in the worlds history. This includes more than 100 million people killed under repressive secularist and communist regimes in the 20th century.

Federal legislators can help our nation lead in the protection and promotion of religious freedom by publicizing various issues and cases, by passing bills in support of religious freedom, and, in some instances, by exerting pressure in support of religious freedom. It is critical that legislators use their influence to support those who are persecuted for their faith.

So the Wilberforce Initiative's scorecard tracks legislators' votes on bills and their sponsorships or co-sponsorships of legislation, as well as their membership in religious freedom caucuses like the International Religious Freedom Caucus, the House Religious Minorities in the Middle East Caucus, and the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission.

Most bills are not ultimately voted on, the Wilberforce Initiative maintained, so they make sure to keep track of members sponsorship of bills in an effort to bring up a vote on an important religious freedom issue. And many items, especially in the Senate, have not yet been voted on and provide ample opportunity for members to prove their commitment to religious freedom in 2017.

What were some of the most pressing matters of religious freedom in 2016?

Two of the biggest score items, according to the Wilberforce Initiative, were H. Con. Res. 75, a congressional resolution stating that the Islamic State was committing genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity against religious and ethnic minorities in Iraq and Syria, which passed the House in March; and the Frank R. Wolf International Religious Freedom Act, which passed both houses in December.

Some of the other items included the Combatting European Anti-Semitism Act of 2016 and Senate resolutions calling for sanctions on Vietnams human rights abusers, and condemning the Government of Irans state-sponsored persecution of its Bahai minority.

House resolutions included a call for the U.S. to support a Nineveh Plain province for its inhabitants who were persecuted by the Islamic State and a call for the global repeal of blasphemy laws.

Most of the highly-recognized leaders on the issue are members of the House, as the Senate has been less engaged in promoting religious freedom than the House, the Wilberforce Initiative noted.

The Wilberforce Initiative also noted that low scores do not necessarily indicate disagreement with international religious freedom, but reflect that it was not a high priority for that legislator. Conversely, high scores demonstrate that a given legislator actively supported international religious freedom legislation and has made support of international religious freedom a priority.

It also stated that a scorecard is an imperfect tool and that there are are additional factors that cannot be reflected, such as quiet diplomacy and casework.

Of legislators who earned an A, 56 percent were Republicans and 44 percent were Democrats. Those with B and C ratings were also majority Republican. But among legislators who scored a D, 62 percent were Republicans and 38 percent were Democrats. No legislators earned an F.

Marco Rubio was the only Senator to receive an A+, while 13 Representatives received the score: Robert Dold (R-Ill.), Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.), Jeff Fortenberry (R-Neb.), Trent Franks (R-Ariz.), Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.), James McGovern (D-Mass.), Joseph Pitts (R-Penn.), Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.), Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.), Brad Sherman (D-Calif.), Chris Smith (R-N.J.), David Trott (R-Mich.), and Juan Vargas (D-Calif.).

Aside from Rubio, 2016's presidential contenders did not fare so well on the list. Sens Bernie Sanders (D-Vt.) and Rand Paul (R-Ky.) got C marks, and Sens. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) and Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) received D ratings.

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Congress can do more for religious liberty abroad, scorecard finds ... - Catholic News Agency

NOEM: Securing the blessings of liberty – Daily Republic

Today, radical Islamic terrorists seek to pose an existential threat to our democracy and the Blessings of Liberty we celebrate. ISIL, al-Qaeda, Boko Haram and others have sought to expand their physical boundaries and the reach of their violent ideology. These groups are convicted to destroy both our people and our values in the most gruesome and brutal manner possible.

President Dwight D. Eisenhower "kept the peace by using our own strength" a sentiment shared by President Ronald Reagan whose foreign policy was summed up with the familiar phrase: "Peace through Strength."

I believe the same approach is needed today.

The United States has the world's most powerful and skilled military. Our men and women in uniform are second to none. But President Obama whittled away at our military and too often muddled its mission, even claiming that climate change could pose a graver threat to our national security than terrorism. Military equipment must be upgraded. Training and new technologies must be invested in. Our readiness must be improved, not only to prepare for a major crisis, but to let our enemies know we're ready to respond to a major crisis.

In his 1983 State of the Union address, President Reagan explained: "Our strategy for peace with freedom must be based on strength economic strength and military strength." America's economy has endured serious blows throughout the last decade. Jobs have been shipped overseas. Taxes and regulations have made it difficult to start a business let alone expand one. We have to get our economy going again, something I'm eager to work with President Trump to accomplish.

At the same time, it's necessary we weaken the economic backing of terror groups. One of the worse outcomes of President Obama's deal with Iran was that it flooded Iran with cash. Iran, one of the world's largest state sponsors of terrorism, received almost immediate sanctions relief, producing an economic impact of as much as $150 billion. I'm optimistic we'll be able to work with the Trump administration to cut off terrorism's economic engines.

Additionally, we have a constitutional responsibility to "insure domestic Tranquility." Too much blood has been shed by terrorists on American soil. Still, our border remains porous and our immigrations policies inadequate. I have participated in classified briefings on this subject. I've visited countries like Greece and Egypt which sit on the front lines of the refugee crisis. I can tell you definitively; our current vetting processes are inadequate.

We often rely on government-to-government relationships to conduct immigration vetting, but in countries like Syria where the government has collapsed, it's nearly impossible to certify that someone is who they say they are. This is why I support putting a temporary pause on accepting refugees and other immigrants from terrorist-held areas until the administration can certify those coming into our country do not present a threat. I've also backed legislation empowering state governors to deny refugee resettlements in their state.

My number-one priority is the safety and security of the American people. That's what our Constitution requires of me and what ultimately will secure the Blessings of Liberty for ourselves and our Posterity.

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NOEM: Securing the blessings of liberty - Daily Republic

Pandora Media Shares Jump After Liberty CEO Seems To Warm To A Deal – Deadline

Liberty Media CEO Greg Maffei seemed to change his tune slightly today when it comes to a possible deal with SiriusXM buying Pandora Media.

The streaming music companys shares jolted to a 2% gain after Maffei,whose company owns 66% of the satellite radio provider, called Pandora a really interesting asset.

You have to give them credit, he told theMorgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference. Depending on how you look at it, its either the seventh or the ninth or the fifth most [used] app among Americans. Great product way under monetized.

He also lauded its big dreams around subscriptions although were not necessarily convinced of the potential. But you have to be impressed with somebody with an 80 million audience listening 20 minutes a day.

That contrasted with Maffeis comment yesterday, in an earnings call, that suggested Pandoras stock price lifted by deal speculation has made the company too expensive.

Pandoras price fell 6.1% after he said thatits not clear that the valuation makes senseAt the right price, interesting. Not clear this is the right price.

Pandora has a market value of about $2.6 billion; its value increased more than 19% over the last 12 months, in part due to investor speculation about a possible sale. SiriusXM is at $24 billion.

Other comments today seemed to suggest that SiriusXM would benefit from an alliance with Pandora, which is primarily ad-supported.

When it comes to selling ads vs. traditional radio Pandora is undermonetized in that space. Radio advertising is a big pool of money. We try to think of ways to go after that pool of revenue.

He also noted that SiriusXM has to think about competition as cars increasingly connect to wireless broadband. Our satellite connection will not be the only connection to the car, Maffei says. But there are many capabilities and features that we have and can do better with having a connected car.

Also, some of SiriusXMs spectrum could be repurposed if you think long term.

On other fronts, Maffei says that he doesnt worry about Howard Stern leaving SiriusXM: In his latest contract we locked up not only his current rights but a whole bunch of library rights and a bunch of other things.

And sports services including ESPN dont have the leverage they once had.

Asked about mergers in the cable industry, the Liberty CEO whose company is the biggest owner of Charter Communications says theres room for more consolidation.

He lauded the change in philosophy at the FCC after President Trump picked Ajit Pai to be its chairman. That leveled the playing field vs. tech companies around privacy, our build out requirements, potentially net neutraliltylots of good stuff on that side.But also probably on the regulatory side in terms of M&A as well.

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Pandora Media Shares Jump After Liberty CEO Seems To Warm To A Deal - Deadline