Daily Archives: September 24, 2015

Paul Allen: The Singularity Isn’t Near | MIT Technology Review

Posted: September 24, 2015 at 11:47 pm

The Singularity Summit approaches this weekend in New York. But the Microsoft cofounder and a colleague say the singularity itself is a long way off.

Futurists like Vernor Vinge and Ray Kurzweil have argued that the world is rapidly approaching a tipping point, where the accelerating pace of smarter and smarter machines will soon outrun all human capabilities. They call this tipping point the singularity, because they believe it is impossible to predict how the human future might unfold after this point. Once these machines exist, Kurzweil and Vinge claim, theyll possess a superhuman intelligence that is so incomprehensible to us that we cannot even rationally guess how our life experiences would be altered. Vinge asks us to ponder the role of humans in a world where machines are as much smarter than us as we are smarter than our pet dogs and cats. Kurzweil, who is a bit more optimistic, envisions a future in which developments in medical nanotechnology will allow us to download a copy of our individual brains into these superhuman machines, leave our bodies behind, and, in a sense, live forever. Its heady stuff.

While we suppose this kind of singularity might one day occur, we dont think it is near. In fact, we think it will be a very long time coming. Kurzweil disagrees, based on his extrapolations about the rate of relevant scientific and technical progress. He reasons that the rate of progress toward the singularity isnt just a progression of steadily increasing capability, but is in fact exponentially acceleratingwhat Kurzweil calls the Law of Accelerating Returns. He writes that:

So we wont experience 100 years of progress in the 21st centuryit will be more like 20,000 years of progress (at todays rate). The returns, such as chip speed and cost-effectiveness, also increase exponentially. Theres even exponential growth in the rate of exponential growth. Within a few decades, machine intelligence will surpass human intelligence, leading to The Singularity [1]

By working through a set of models and historical data, Kurzweil famously calculates that the singularity will arrive around 2045.

This prediction seems to us quite far-fetched. Of course, we are aware that the history of science and technology is littered with people who confidently assert that some event cant happen, only to be later proven wrongoften in spectacular fashion. We acknowledge that it is possible but highly unlikely that Kurzweil will eventually be vindicated. An adult brain is a finite thing, so its basic workings can ultimately be known through sustained human effort. But if the singularity is to arrive by 2045, it will take unforeseeable and fundamentally unpredictable breakthroughs, and not because the Law of Accelerating Returns made it the inevitable result of a specific exponential rate of progress.

Kurzweils reasoning rests on the Law of Accelerating Returns and its siblings, but these are not physical laws. They are assertions about how past rates of scientific and technical progress can predict the future rate. Therefore, like other attempts to forecast the future from the past, these laws will work until they dont. More problematically for the singularity, these kinds of extrapolations derive much of their overall exponential shape from supposing that there will be a constant supply of increasingly more powerful computing capabilities. For the Law to apply and the singularity to occur circa 2045, the advances in capability have to occur not only in a computers hardware technologies (memory, processing power, bus speed, etc.) but also in the software we create to run on these more capable computers. To achieve the singularity, it isnt enough to just run todays software faster. We would also need to build smarter and more capable software programs. Creating this kind of advanced software requires a prior scientific understanding of the foundations of human cognition, and we are just scraping the surface of this.

This prior need to understand the basic science of cognition is where the singularity is near arguments fail to persuade us. It is true that computer hardware technology can develop amazingly quickly once we have a solid scientific framework and adequate economic incentives. However, creating the software for a real singularity-level computer intelligence will require fundamental scientific progress beyond where we are today. This kind of progress is very different than the Moores Law-style evolution of computer hardware capabilities that inspired Kurzweil and Vinge. Building the complex software that would allow the singularity to happen requires us to first have a detailed scientific understanding of how the human brain works that we can use as an architectural guide, or else create it all de novo. This means not just knowing the physical structure of the brain, but also how the brain reacts and changes, and how billions of parallel neuron interactions can result in human consciousness and original thought. Getting this kind of comprehensive understanding of the brain is not impossible. If the singularity is going to occur on anything like Kurzweils timeline, though, then we absolutely require a massive acceleration of our scientific progress in understanding every facet of the human brain.

But history tells us that the process of original scientific discovery just doesnt behave this way, especially in complex areas like neuroscience, nuclear fusion, or cancer research. Overall scientific progress in understanding the brain rarely resembles an orderly, inexorable march to the truth, let alone an exponentially accelerating one. Instead, scientific advances are often irregular, with unpredictable flashes of insight punctuating the slow grind-it-out lab work of creating and testing theories that can fit with experimental observations. Truly significant conceptual breakthroughs dont arrive when predicted, and every so often new scientific paradigms sweep through the field and cause scientists to revaluate portions of what they thought they had settled. We see this in neuroscience with the discovery of long-term potentiation, the columnar organization of cortical areas, and neuroplasticity. These kinds of fundamental shifts dont support the overall Moores Law-style acceleration needed to get to the singularity on Kurzweils schedule.

The Complexity Brake

The foregoing points at a basic issue with how quickly a scientifically adequate account of human intelligence can be developed. We call this issue the complexity brake. As we go deeper and deeper in our understanding of natural systems, we typically find that we require more and more specialized knowledge to characterize them, and we are forced to continuously expand our scientific theories in more and more complex ways. Understanding the detailed mechanisms of human cognition is a task that is subject to this complexity brake. Just think about what is required to thoroughly understand the human brain at a micro level. The complexity of the brain is simply awesome. Every structure has been precisely shaped by millions of years of evolution to do a particular thing, whatever it might be. It is not like a computer, with billions of identical transistors in regular memory arrays that are controlled by a CPU with a few different elements. In the brain every individual structure and neural circuit has been individually refined by evolution and environmental factors. The closer we look at the brain, the greater the degree of neural variation we find. Understanding the neural structure of the human brain is getting harder as we learn more. Put another way, the more we learn, the more we realize there is to know, and the more we have to go back and revise our earlier understandings. We believe that one day this steady increase in complexity will endthe brain is, after all, a finite set of neurons and operates according to physical principles. But for the foreseeable future, it is the complexity brake and arrival of powerful new theories, rather than the Law of Accelerating Returns, that will govern the pace of scientific progress required to achieve the singularity.

So, while we think a fine-grained understanding of the neural structure of the brain is ultimately achievable, it has not shown itself to be the kind of area in which we can make exponentially accelerating progress. But suppose scientists make some brilliant new advance in brain scanning technology. Singularity proponents often claim that we can achieve computer intelligence just by numerically simulating the brain bottom up from a detailed neural-level picture. For example, Kurzweil predicts the development of nondestructive brain scanners that will allow us to precisely take a snapshot a persons living brain at the subneuron level. He suggests that these scanners would most likely operate from inside the brain via millions of injectable medical nanobots. But, regardless of whether nanobot-based scanning succeeds (and we arent even close to knowing if this is possible), Kurzweil essentially argues that this is the needed scientific advance that will gate the singularity: computers could exhibit human-level intelligence simply by loading the state and connectivity of each of a brains neurons inside a massive digital brain simulator, hooking up inputs and outputs, and pressing start.

However, the difficulty of building human-level software goes deeper than computationally modeling the structural connections and biology of each of our neurons. Brain duplication strategies like these presuppose that there is no fundamental issue in getting to human cognition other than having sufficient computer power and neuron structure maps to do the simulation.[2] While this may be true theoretically, it has not worked out that way in practice, because it doesnt address everything that is actually needed to build the software. For example, if we wanted to build software to simulate a birds ability to fly in various conditions, simply having a complete diagram of bird anatomy isnt sufficient. To fully simulate the flight of an actual bird, we also need to know how everything functions together. In neuroscience, there is a parallel situation. Hundreds of attempts have been made (using many different organisms) to chain together simulations of different neurons along with their chemical environment. The uniform result of these attempts is that in order to create an adequate simulation of the real ongoing neural activity of an organism, you also need a vast amount of knowledge about the functional role that these neurons play, how their connection patterns evolve, how they are structured into groups to turn raw stimuli into information, and how neural information processing ultimately affects an organisms behavior. Without this information, it has proven impossible to construct effective computer-based simulation models. Especially for the cognitive neuroscience of humans, we are not close to the requisite level of functional knowledge. Brain simulation projects underway today model only a small fraction of what neurons do and lack the detail to fully simulate what occurs in a brain. The pace of research in this area, while encouraging, hardly seems to be exponential. Again, as we learn more and more about the actual complexity of how the brain functions, the main thing we find is that the problem is actually getting harder.

The AI Approach

Singularity proponents occasionally appeal to developments in artificial intelligence (AI) as a way to get around the slow rate of overall scientific progress in bottom-up, neuroscience-based approaches to cognition. It is true that AI has had great successes in duplicating certain isolated cognitive tasks, most recently with IBMs Watson system for Jeopardy! question answering. But when we step back, we can see that overall AI-based capabilities havent been exponentially increasing either, at least when measured against the creation of a fully general human intelligence. While we have learned a great deal about how to build individual AI systems that do seemingly intelligent things, our systems have always remained brittletheir performance boundaries are rigidly set by their internal assumptions and defining algorithms, they cannot generalize, and they frequently give nonsensical answers outside of their specific focus areas. A computer program that plays excellent chess cant leverage its skill to play other games. The best medical diagnosis programs contain immensely detailed knowledge of the human body but cant deduce that a tightrope walker would have a great sense of balance.

Why has it proven so difficult for AI researchers to build human-like intelligence, even at a small scale? One answer involves the basic scientific framework that AI researchers use. As humans grow from infants to adults, they begin by acquiring a general knowledge about the world, and then continuously augment and refine this general knowledge with specific knowledge about different areas and contexts. AI researchers have typically tried to do the opposite: they have built systems with deep knowledge of narrow areas, and tried to create a more general capability by combining these systems. This strategy has not generally been successful, although Watsons performance on Jeopardy! indicates paths like this may yet have promise. The few attempts that have been made to directly create a large amount of general knowledge of the world, and then add the specialized knowledge of a domain (for example, the work of Cycorp), have also met with only limited success. And in any case, AI researchers are only just beginning to theorize about how to effectively model the complex phenomena that give human cognition its unique flexibility: uncertainty, contextual sensitivity, rules of thumb, self-reflection, and the flashes of insight that are essential to higher-level thought. Just as in neuroscience, the AI-based route to achieving singularity-level computer intelligence seems to require many more discoveries, some new Nobel-quality theories, and probably even whole new research approaches that are incommensurate with what we believe now. This kind of basic scientific progress doesnt happen on a reliable exponential growth curve. So although developments in AI might ultimately end up being the route to the singularity, again the complexity brake slows our rate of progress, and pushes the singularity considerably into the future.

The amazing intricacy of human cognition should serve as a caution to those who claim the singularity is close. Without having a scientifically deep understanding of cognition, we cant create the software that could spark the singularity. Rather than the ever-accelerating advancement predicted by Kurzweil, we believe that progress toward this understanding is fundamentally slowed by the complexity brake. Our ability to achieve this understanding, via either the AI or the neuroscience approaches, is itself a human cognitive act, arising from the unpredictable nature of human ingenuity and discovery. Progress here is deeply affected by the ways in which our brains absorb and process new information, and by the creativity of researchers in dreaming up new theories. It is also governed by the ways that we socially organize research work in these fields, and disseminate the knowledge that results. At Vulcan and at the Allen Institute for Brain Science, we are working on advanced tools to help researchers deal with this daunting complexity, and speed them in their research. Gaining a comprehensive scientific understanding of human cognition is one of the hardest problems there is. We continue to make encouraging progress. But by the end of the century, we believe, we will still be wondering if the singularity is near.

Paul G. Allen, who cofounded Microsoft in 1975, is a philanthropist and chairman of Vulcan, which invests in an array of technology, aerospace, entertainment, and sports businesses. Mark Greaves is a computer scientist who serves as Vulcans director for knowledge systems.

[1] Kurzweil, The Law of Accelerating Returns, March 2001.

[2] We are beginning to get within range of the computer power we might need to support this kind of massive brain simulation. Petaflop-class computers (such as IBMs BlueGene/P that was used in the Watson system) are now available commercially. Exaflop-class computers are currently on the drawing boards. These systems could probably deploy the raw computational capability needed to simulate the firing patterns for all of a brains neurons, though currently it happens many times more slowly than would happen in an actual brain.

UPDATE: Ray Kurzweil responds here.

See the rest here:
Paul Allen: The Singularity Isn't Near | MIT Technology Review

Posted in The Singularity | Comments Off on Paul Allen: The Singularity Isn’t Near | MIT Technology Review

SINGULARITY: a Joshua Gates, Destination Truth …

Posted: at 11:47 pm

Going to miParacon to see Josh and other paranormal personalities? Tweet your experiences and photos to @joshuagatesfans I will also be monitoring for stuff to share on the fan page once the convention is over!

Josh has been pretty quiet on social media lately. Could it be because we're going to get some news soon? Here is a clue, to your left. I won't say what/where it is or my sources, but I'll just say to "stay tuned" 🙂

The show has been met with much praise and according to Brad at the production company, viewer numbers have been good. For now, it looks like the only criticisms fans have had for the show are that they miss the ghost hunting/cryptids search elements, and they'd like the crew who follows him and helps make the show to be featured. Fans cannot deny the better quality of filming, the fact that each episode only focuses on one case, and because the episodes are less rushed, we get to see more of the destination, and humor is definitely not missing from EXU.

In the meantime, here's some news!

Be sure to follow Josh on Twitter HEREand follow this fan page on Twitter for fan interaction and exclusives HERE. Photo credit to Brandt, who you can follow on Twitter HERE

Read more from the original source:
SINGULARITY: a Joshua Gates, Destination Truth ...

Posted in The Singularity | Comments Off on SINGULARITY: a Joshua Gates, Destination Truth …

Top NSA Banner – National Security Agency

Posted: at 9:48 am

NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY CENTRAL SECURITY SERVICE

FORT GEORGE G. MEADE, MARYLAND 20755-6000

NSA PRESS RELEASE 5 March 2012 For further information contact: NSA Public and Media Affairs, 301-688-6524

Augusta, Georgia, Mar. 5 The National Security Agency/Central Security Service officially opened the new NSA/CSS Georgia Cryptologic Center at a ribbon-cutting ceremony where officials emphasized how the $286 million complex will provide cryptologic professionals with the latest state-of-the-art tools to conduct signals intelligence operations, train the cryptologic workforce, and enable global communications.

NSA/CSS has had a presence in Georgia for over 16 years on Ft. Gordon, when only 50 people arrived to establish one of NSA's Regional Security Operations Centers.

As a testament to this rich heritage, GEN Keith B. Alexander Commander, U.S. Cyber Command, Director, NSA/Chief, CSS told the guests at the ceremony, which included federal, state, and local officials, that the NSA/CSS workforce nominated Mr. John Whitelaw for the honor of having one of the buildings in the complex dedicated in his name, because they considered him influential to the establishment and success of the mission in Georgia. In 1995 Mr. Whitelaw was named the first Deputy Director of Operations for NSA Georgia and remained in that position until his death in 2004.

"And there have been many successes here at NSA Georgia as evidenced by the fact that this site has won the Travis Trophy six times," said GEN Alexander. The Travis Trophy is an annual award presented to those whose activities have made a significant contribution to NSA/CSS's mission.

"This new facility will allow the National Security Agency to work more effectively and efficiently in protecting our homeland," said Sen. Saxby Chambliss. "It will also attract more jobs to the Augusta area. The opening of this complex means that Georgians will play an even greater role in ensuring the safety and security of our nation."

The new NSA/CSS Georgia Cryptologic Center is another step in the NSA's efforts to further evolve a cryptologic enterprise that is resilient, agile, and effective to respond to the current and future threat environment.

NSA/CSS opened a new facility in Hawaii in January 2012 and is also upgrading the cryptologic centers in Texas and Denver to make the agency's global enterprise even more seamless as it confronts the increasing challenges of the future. More information about the National Security Agency is available online at http://www.nsa.gov.

See the original post here:
Top NSA Banner - National Security Agency

Posted in NSA | Comments Off on Top NSA Banner – National Security Agency

Jitsi (Build 3132)

Posted: at 9:48 am

Unbeknownst to many people, there are a growing number of free stand-alone VoIP clients, some of which arent half bad. Today Im going to be doing an in-depth look at one of these free downloadable clients, Jitsi, which is described as an audio/video Internet phone and instant messenger that supports some of the most popular VoIP and instant messaging protocols such as SIP, Jabber, AIM/ICQ, MSN, etc

The list is extensive, but it had me at SIP and Jabber.

Jitsi, which is written mostly in Java, is a free and open source VoIP, and instant messaging application for Windows, Mac, and Linux. Its currently in alpha. Stable releases come out every so often while nightly builds are released several times a day. When appropriate, users are automatically prompted to download and install the latest build (or you can just tell it to do this all without asking).

What separates this application from others like it is the inclusion of enterprise VoIP features such as attended and blind call transfer, call recording, call encryption, conferencing, and video calls.

This version of the application looks and feels great. The main UI is simple and clean, the pop-up call handling screen is easy to use, and the instant messaging feature is handled nicely. Jitsi certainly aims to accomplish a lot. While you can almost expect a few glitches here and there, it is certainly worth trying out.

[ Relevant Sidenote: This review was conducted on a Macbook Pro. ]

As usual, I am going to do a quick walk through of how to setup OnSIP with Jitsi. A lot of these steps apply no matter which VoIP provider youre using so I noncustomers will also find this useful. Youre going to need your user credentials. They can be found in your OnSIP admin portal under users. Here is an example of the fields you will need:

Setting Up VoIP Calling

Open up Jitsi and select +Add New Account under File. You should see a screen pop up that looks like this:

Select SIP as your choice from the options provided in the Network dropdown menu, and then hit Advanced in the lower left corner.

Youll be taken to another menu with 3 parts: Account, Connection, and Presence. Account is pretty self-explanatory. Under SIP id, youll want to input your entire SIP address. Password is your SIP password, and display name can be anything you want.

Next, in Connection, input your Proxy/Domain in the field marked Registrar, and your Auth Username into the field marked Authorization name. Youll want to uncheck Configure proxy automatically if it isnt already, and type sip.onsip.com into the field labeled Proxy if you are an OnSIP customer (Port 5060). Make sure that preferred transport is UDP and that the Keep alive method is Register.

In Presence, simply check Enable presence (SIMPLE) and leave everything else unchecked.

Hit the Next button. Youll be taken to a summary page where you can go over your settings one last time before you sign in.

Go into the Jitsi preferences. You should see a screen that looks something like the image above, with a list of all your active and inactive accounts. Select Audio and make sure that the codecs (or encodings) enabled are G722, PCMU, PCMA, and telephone-event.

Setting Up XMPP

Setting up IM is even easier. Here Ill show you how to get your my.OnSIP contacts in Jitsi. Once again, select +Add New Account under File. This time, youll want to select Jabber in the Network dropdown menu, and hit Advanced in the lower left corner. Youll be taken to another menu with 3 parts: Account, Connection, and Advanced. In Account, input your my.OnSIP login credentials. Skip the Connection section since you dont need to change anything there and uncheck the three options you see in Advanced (Use ICE, Auto discover STUN/TURN servers, and Use Jitsis STUN server in case no other servers are available). Click Next at the bottom of the menu, and then Sign In on the summary page that follows.

At Junction Networks, we put each of the phones we use through a multi-step interoperability test in which we apply ~30 test cases. An example of a test case would be the following:

Test phone calls phone B

B picks up

B puts Test phone on hold

B calls phone C

C picks up

B transfers test phone to C

Call must be transferred correctly to C. B must be released correctly after the transfer. When C picks up, audio must work in both ways between test phone and C. When test phone is on hold, there is no audio between it and phone B.

Build 3132 passed our test cases with no issues.

When I first installed Jitsi a couple of months ago, there was so much static that having an intelligible conversation was impossible. Whatever the issue was, it has since been patched and resolved.

Jitsi supports G.711 as well as the G.722 wideband codec. Narrowband calls sound about as good as a regular landline call.

High definition calls with the Jitsi sound absolutely fantastic. You can get HD VoIP calls as long as the person youre on the call is also using an HD capable device. I heavily recommend using a USB headset when making calls with a soft phone on your computer to get the optimum experience. You can pick up a good headset for less than $30.

For something that costs the end user nothing, Jitsi is a surprisingly good attempt at a unified communications client. I like to think of it as a bare-bones version of Microsoft Lync that doesnt cost me $700+ to setup, and $100 per download.

The main user interface of Jitsi looks a lot like any other IM client, except that you can have a dedicated section for voice contacts in your consolidated buddy list. Clicking on what looks like a small watch face will take you to your call history. You can conveniently redial from this screen. Right next to the watch face button is a search field, which will draw from both your contacts list and your call history. This field will also act as your dialer. Start typing in any number or SIP address, and a small green handset will appear that you can click to initiate the call.

Every contact in your buddy list and call history menus can be dragged and dropped into an ongoing call. What do I mean by that? With Jitsi, every call gets its own pop up window. Its here that youll find all of your call handling options: dialpad, create a conference call, hold, mute, record, video, desktop share, transfer, etc. Dragging and dropping people from your buddy list or call history menu into an ongoing call automatically creates a conference call. This seems to work without a hitch, and youre not just limited to a 3-way conference.

The image above shows the popup window you see during each call. You can have several calls going at once (simply call another number or SIP address using the dialer field in the main Jitsi UI and any active calls you have at the time will automatically be put on hold), and each one opens up a new window. Ill very briefly go over some of the functions of interest.

Youll notice that almost everything you can do with Jitsi is laid out in a row at the bottom. At the very left is a button that looks like an old school rotary dialer. This will append a numpad to the bottom of the window so that you can interact with attendant menus, etc. Next is your conference button. This brings up a window that you can use to invite multiple people to the call at the same time.

The next three buttons are self-explanatory: hold, mute, record (you can designate which file you want to save your recordings in the Advanced section of the application preferences).

Next is the button to turn on the video. Supported video compression formats include H.263 and H.264. Ill admit that I havent spent too much time testing out video calls on Jitsi, but the few video calls I have done (on Wifi, with just the built-in iSight camera on my Macbook and H.264 selected) were better than I was expecting. No experience-ruining frame rate or picture resolution issues here. I did try doing a video call with a coworker on her Counterpath soft phone and we werent able to get it working, despite the fact that they were using the same codec. We will do more testing and Ill update this review with our findings. Also keep in mind that a lot of factors will affect the quality of your video calls, and many of the problems you or I experience may have very little to do with the application. We plan to include video calling cases as part of JN interoperability test in the near future for applicable user agents.

According to the Jitsi development roadmap, there are tentative plans to implement multi-party video conferencing in Q1 2011.

Finally, Jitsi users can easily conduct blind and attended transfers. If only one call is active, clicking on the transfer button brings up a window where you can quickly input the transfer destination and send the caller on his/her way. If you have multiple calls active, clicking on the transfer button will open up a dropdown menu that includes all your active calls so that you can quickly conduct an attended transfer. Of course you can also choose to transfer to another number as well.

Now lets talk about some of the stuff that doesnt work quite as well.

If youre a my.OnSIP user, then you might be used to having the ability to click-to-dial and IM the same contact. You dont really get the same experience with Jitsi. My.OnSIP uses XMMP for IM and OnSIP uses SIP for voice, which means that youll have to have two separate accounts, and two separate contact lists for the same group of people. It can get especially confusing if the two types of contacts for one person look exactly the same. Long story short: Remember to use your SIP account for calling and your Jabber (XMMP) account for IM.

Adding phone numbers to the voice contacts could be better streamlined. Here is what the add contact form looks like:

Youll notice that you only get to specify the contact name. It actually works fine if youre adding a SIP address. If I type jondoe@example.onsip.com into the contact name field, Jitsi will know to use that as the SIP address, and will even cut off the domain in my contact list so that only jondoe is displayed. Adding actual telephone numbers is a little annoying since the contact name field is really the what to dial field. Sure you can go back after the contact is added and rename the number to a persons name but this seems like an unnecessary step.

Since Jitsi is a project that is literally updated several times every day, I dont think a Final Thoughts section is necessarily appropriate. The application has come a long way in a very short time, and there are big plans for the coming year. We expect a lot of updates and fine-tuning.

I would recommend giving this soft phone a download if you do not already have one on your computer, or if youre completely new to VoIP and SIP and just want a way to test out IP calling. Its free so what have you got to lose?

More here:
Jitsi (Build 3132)

Posted in Jitsi | Comments Off on Jitsi (Build 3132)

Liberty Flames College Football Clubhouse – ESPN

Posted: at 9:46 am

4d

Josh Woodrum threw for 260 yards and two touchdowns, Damian King threw a touchdown pass on a trick play, and Liberty defeated Montana 31-21 on Saturday night.

12dJake Trotter

West Virginia continues to play good defense, and young receivers Shelton Gibson and Jovon Durante continue to impress in a win against Liberty.

12d

Skyler Howard threw three touchdown passes and Wendell Smallwood scored twice, leading West Virginia to a 41-17 victory over Liberty on Saturday.

15d

No more scheduling FCS opponents. That's the message West Virginia coach Dana Holgorsen is sending to his fellow FBS programs.

18d

Josh Woodrum connected with Darrin Peterson on a pair of touchdowns as Liberty defeated Delaware State 32-13 in a season opener for both teams on Saturday night.

146d

Ron Brown, the former Nebraska assistant who took a job under Bo Pelini at Youngstown State in January, is leaving the Penguins to become associate head coach and receivers coach at Liberty.

291d

Villanova comeback tops Liberty 29-22 in FCS

299d

Liberty outlasts James Madison 26-21

306d

Liberty edges Coastal Carolina 15-14 to win title

313d

Charleston Southern hangs on to tip Liberty, 38-36

320d

Abnar carries Liberty past Monmouth, 34-24

Read this article:
Liberty Flames College Football Clubhouse - ESPN

Posted in Liberty | Comments Off on Liberty Flames College Football Clubhouse – ESPN

Liberty – Home

Posted: at 9:46 am

Please note that Liberty is no longer in development. Any issue reports made will not be resolved.

Also, Liberty does not work with Halo: The Master Chief Collection and there are no plans to add support for it in the future.

information;

Liberty is the first Halo 4, Halo: Reach, Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary, Halo 3, and Halo 3: ODST campaign editor that is 100% free and doesn't require registration. It also supports more features than all of the current editors around. 100% of it was made from our own research and we had no help at all from anyone who already had information on campaign saves. It is licensed under the version 2 of the GNU General Public License (GPL).

about;

Liberty was developed by 3 people:

With special thanks to:

features;

anniversary/halo 3/odst/halo 4;

reach;

Q&A;

Q: When I load a modified Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary save, why does it say my save is corrupt?

A: We don't know what causes this, but we are trying to work it out. Just press A and it will let you play your mods. (However, if you die before getting a checkpoint, it will restart the level).

Q: I get an exception saying my save is an invalid package...watdo?

A: Well, that means it isn't a valid Halo campaign save (only Halo 3, ODST, Reach, Halo 4, and Anniversary saves are supported) or it is corrupted. Try getting a new one.

Q: When i try to load a save from my USB, why can't it detect my flash drive?

A: Make sure that you don't have any other device viewers open. Also, make sure that your device actually has a save on it. Start a mission, save and exit, and make sure that it gets saved to your device.

Q: I edited my ODST save to give myself invincibility, but my character glitched up. Why?

A: ODST has issues with invincibility in some missions. If you're having problems, your only choice is to play that section of the mission legitimately.

videos;

Pre-Release Teaser FATX Save Loader Demo Bipd Swapping Demo

images (version 3.0.0.0);

anniversary;

reach;

Link:
Liberty - Home

Posted in Liberty | Comments Off on Liberty – Home

Home – Liberty Elementary School District

Posted: at 9:46 am

Thank youfor visiting Liberty Elementary School District

Liberty Elementary School District is located roughly 30 miles west of Phoenix, Arizona. The district covers approximately 285 square miles of both rural and suburban communities. Libertys boundaries span county land as well as the cities of Buckeye and Goodyear. Founded in 1887, Liberty is one of the oldest school districts in Arizona. The building currently being used for music class at one of our schools was built in 1910 and is the oldest still in use school building in the state. The Liberty District consists of four K-8 schools and one PreK-8 school.

In the Liberty District our mission is to build world-class schools in our neighborhoods. Our goal is to provide every one of our students with a world class education and our programs, foci and instruction are tailored to achieve that goal. One way that Liberty is working toward this goal is by offering an extensive array of education options for parents and students. For example, in recent years our schools have been innovating and maximizing their strengths by implementing a unique school focus. These foci include S.T.E.M.(Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics), IB (International Baccalaureate), Leadership, Agricultural Sciences, Visual and Performing Arts and Dual Language Immersion. Liberty District also offers open enrollment opportunities for students. Open enrollment gives parents and students that might go to another school in the district, or go to a school in a neighboring district, the option to choose which school and focus is right for them. All of our schools offer the usual programs that you would expect to find in most schools like art, music, PE and sports. However, the schools also have some more unique programs like Graphics Arts, Foreign Language, Choir, Concert Band, Drama Club, Science Club, Lego Robotics Club and Math Counts.

Normal Hours of Operation 8:00 am to 4:30 pm M-F Closed on Holidays

SummerHours of Operation 8:00 am to 4:30 pm M-Th Closed on Holidays

See the article here:
Home - Liberty Elementary School District

Posted in Liberty | Comments Off on Home – Liberty Elementary School District

North Carolina – First Amendment Center

Posted: at 7:45 am

State Supreme Court says attorney-client privilege means documents involved in redistricting can remain confidential.

4th Circuit rules that officials did not violate mans rights when it fined him for painting Screwed By The Town of Cary on his house.

Brian France, who has fought for years to keep confidential the details of his 2008 divorce, had appealed judges ruling that documents in the case should be made public.

Religious colleges in North Carolina, Illinois are challenging rules that require the schools to provide free contraceptives to employees.

Game operators had argued that 2010 law banning sweepstakes machines as a form of gambling violated their free-speech rights.

North Carolina cant offer anti-abortion license plates unless it also makes plates available for people who support abortion rights, court finds.

At issue is a new North Carolina law that strengthens a cyberbullying statute to provide extra protection to school employees from online defamation.

ACLU says statute, which may be the first of its kind in the country, could chill students speech and vows to seek plaintiffs for a possible court challenge.

North Carolina elementary school that told girl to remove reference to God before reading her poem to students was technically defensible, but it probably would have been better to let her read it as written.

Federal appeals panel finds inmate failed to explain how denial of outdoor circle for Asatru ceremony violated his religious beliefs.

All of America used to be a free-speech zone, says John Murdock of New York after police direct convention protesters who disrupted traffic into designated fenced-in area.

Critics fear that in enforcing new Charlotte, N.C., ordinances, authorities could trample on peoples constitutional rights in the name of protecting public safety.

During discussion about candidates, North Carolina social studies teacher tells high school students they could be arrested for criticizing the president.

Anti-abortion protesters sued after Jacksonville police, citing safety concerns, refused to issue them a permit to picket outside a womens clinic.

Split three-judge panel says law is overbroad and infringes on the free-speech rights of game operators.

Visit link:
North Carolina - First Amendment Center

Posted in First Amendment | Comments Off on North Carolina – First Amendment Center

DNA Learning Center

Posted: at 7:44 am

Laboratory experiments, computer explorations, and an interactive exhibition for students, educators, and the public.

Sign-up for info on new resources and educational opportunities! See our archived newsletters.

The DNALC has teamed up with the Breakthrough Prize and Khan Academy to design a cutting-edge $100,000 Science Lab as part of the $400,000 grand prize for this new competition. Move fast! The deadline is October 7, 2015.

Join the world-renowned Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory as a Faculty Teaching Fellow at DNA Learning Center Asia China's first hands-on genetics education center.

Gene Screen was named the National Human Genome Research Institute's and Smithsonian Institution's August 2015 "Resource of the Month" on Unlocking Life's Code!

The DNALC family of websites includes 2- and 3-D animations, scientist interviews (including 12 Nobel laureates!), historical images, and teaching aids.

Roll over a screenshot for info. Click to launch site.

The Eugenics Archive includes 2,400 photographs, pedigrees, letters, brochures, manuscripts, and articles from archives in the US and UK. Essays by science historians put the vast image database into context.

Discover the concepts and experiments that define the fields of genetics and molecular biology. This animated primer features the work of over 100 scientists and researchers. Includes animations, scientist video interviews, biographies, photo galleries, and links.

Animations present the cause, inheritance, and treatment of 15 common genetic disorders. Interviews with doctors, researchers, healthcare providers, and individuals affected by a disorder offer personal perspectives. Partner site to DNA from the Beginning.

DNAi looks back on the discovery of the DNA structure with a vast collection of interviews and interactive 2- and 3-D animations. myDNAi provides teacher-oriented resources including guides, activities, lesson plans, and the online Lesson Builder.

Explore cancer biology, cancer pathways, and the molecular basis of diagnosis & treatment. Use Teacher Center to inform students on how molecular and cellular genetics are integrated into cancer prevention, diagnosis, and treatment.

The maize genome sequence is just the most recent of experiments with corn stretching back 10,000 years. Weed to Wonder tells the story how human ingenuity transformed a common Mexican weed (Teosinte) into a modern food and fuel wonder (corn).

Learn About SMA, developed with support from the Spinal Muscular Atrophy Foundation, is a resource for SMA patients, families and researchers, including stories of living with SMA and the science behind emerging therapies.

G2C Online is modeled on principles of neural networking, which examines current research to discover the molecular and cellular basis of human thinking. Use network maps to explore our library of 750+ items, including an interactive 3-D brain.

These sites are built around laboratory and bioinformatics experiments and were often developed in collaboration with Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory scientists.

Roll over a screenshot for info. Click to launch site.

Analyze your DNA with the DNALC's bioinformatics tools: Sequence Server, Allele Server, and Simulation Server. Compare your DNA with DNA from other humans and other species stored in a database maintained by the DNALC.

Kits developed in collaboration with Carolina Biological Supply Company provide lab protocols online and for download and accompanying resources.

Learn about plant genomes by using bioinfomatics to analyze newly sequenced genes in rice and maize. Animated tutorials lead into step-by-step analysis of a gene model using Apollo, research software for gene annotation.

Gene Boy is a simple, multi-function, sequence analysis tool. Enter your own sequence or use a preloaded sequence to perform several analyses and tranformations on the sequence.

Find out what DNA tells us about human origins. Use your own DNA to explore relationships between different ethnic populations. Complete with laboratory protocols and information on how to send samples to the DNALC for sequencing.

Bring students up-to-date on advances in plant genetics and genomics by integrating laboratory experiences with online bioinformatics resources.

Use this lab notebook with experiment- and bioinformatics curriculum on RNAi in C. elegans. Has laboratory protocols, photos and videos of C. elegans mutants, and a check-out system for C. elegans mutants and E. coli feeding strains.

The Urban Barcode Project (UBP) is a science competition spanning the five boroughs of New York City made possible by funding from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. In the project, student research teams use DNA barcoding to explore biodiversity in NYC.

Lab Center provides pre- and post-visit activities for laboratory field trips. Video intros, online and downloadable protocols, animations, and videos enhance student understanding. Password-protected teacher resources also included.

DNA Barcoding 101 includes experimental method and supporting resources for using DNA barcoding to identify plants or animals - or products made from them.

DNA Subway is a bioinformatics workspace that makes high-level genome analysis available to biology students and educators. Predict and annotate genes in up to 100,000 basepairs of DNA and prospect entire plant genomes.

See original here:
DNA Learning Center

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on DNA Learning Center

Ancestry DNA Tests for Genealogists – Information

Posted: at 7:44 am

Monty Rakusen/Photodisc/Getty Images

Popularized by its use in high-profile criminal investigations and paternity cases, DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid, is most commonly used to prove a relationship to an individual. New tests created in recent years, however, have also turned DNA into a popular tool for determining ancestry and predicting health and genetic traits. As DNA is passed down from one generation to the next, some parts remain almost unchanged, while other parts change greatly.

This creates an unbreakable link between generations and it can be of great help in reconstructing our family histories.

While it can't provide you with your entire family tree or tell you who your ancestors are, DNA testing can:

DNA tests have been around for many years, but it is only recently that the cost of genetic testing has finally come down into the realm of possibility for the average individual interested in tracing their roots. Some homeDNA test kits can often be ordered for less than $100 (cost varies by test)andusually consist of a cheek swab or a spit collection tube to easily collect a sample of cells from the inside of your mouth. You send back the sample through the mail and within a month or two you receive the results - a series of numbers that represent key chemical "markers" within your DNA.

These numbers can then be compared to results from other individuals to help you determine your ancestry.

Confused with all the talk of markers, mutations and haplotypes? See Genetic Basics: Understanding the Clues Found in Our DNA

There are threebasic types of DNA tests available for genealogical testing. Each has a different purpose and one can only be used by males.

Autosomal DNA (atDNA)(All lines, available for both men and women) - Available for both men and women, this test surveys 700,000+ markers on all 23 chromosomes to look for connections along all of your family lines (maternal and paternal). The test results provide some information about your ethnic mix (thepercentage of your ancestry that comes from Central Europe, Africa, Asia, etc.), as well as as helps to identify cousins (1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc.) on any of your ancestral lines. Autosomal DNA only survives recombination (the passing down of DNA from your various ancestors) for an average of 57 generations, so this test is most useful for connecting with genetic cousins and connecting back to more recent generations of your family tree.

mtDNA Tests(direct maternal line, available forboth men and women)- Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is contained in the cytoplasm of the cell, rather than the nucleus. This type of DNA is passed by a mother to both male and female offspring without any mixing, so your mtDNA is the same as your mother's mtDNA, which is the same as her mother's mtDNA. mtDNA changes very slowly, so iftwo people have an exact match in their mtDNA, then there is a very good chance they share a common maternal ancestor, but it is hard to determine if this is a recent ancestor or one who lived hundreds of years ago. It is important to keep in mind with this test that a male's mtDNA comes only from his mother and is not passed on to his offspring.

Example: The DNA tests that identified the bodies of the Romanovs, the Russian imperial family, utilized mtDNA from a sample provided by Prince Philip, who shares the same maternal line from Queen Victoria.

Y-DNA Tests(direct paternal line, available for males only)- The Y chromosome in the nuclear DNA can also be used to establish family ties. The Y chromosomal DNA test (usually referred to as Y DNA or Y-Line DNA) is only available for males, since the Y chromosome is only passed down the male line from father to son. Womendon't have a Y chromosome!Tiny chemical markers on the Y chromosome create a distinctive pattern, known as a haplotype, that distinguishes one male lineage from another. Shared markers can indicate relatedness between two men, though not the exact degree of the relationship. Y chromosome testing is most often used by individuals with the same last name to learn if they share a common ancestor.

Example: The DNA tests supporting the probability that Thomas Jefferson fathered the last child of Sally Hemmings were based on Y-chromosome DNA samples from male descendants of Thomas Jefferson's paternal uncle, since there were no surviving male descendants from Jefferson's marriage.

Markers on both mtDNA and Y chromosome tests can also be used to determine an individual's haplogroup, a grouping of individuals with the same genetic characteristics. This test may provide you with interesting information about the deep ancestral lineage of your paternal and/or maternal lines.

Next > What Can I Expect to Learn From the Tests?

See the article here:
Ancestry DNA Tests for Genealogists - Information

Posted in DNA | Comments Off on Ancestry DNA Tests for Genealogists – Information