Monthly Archives: February 2017

Royal Caribbean CIO Sets Sail For Digital Innovation – Forbes

Posted: February 15, 2017 at 12:34 am


Forbes
Royal Caribbean CIO Sets Sail For Digital Innovation
Forbes
When Mike Giresi joined Royal Caribbean Cruises as its chief information officer 18 months ago, he did so after having been a CIO three times over, at Tory Burch, Direct Brands, and Godiva Chocolatier. He had depth of knowledge in retail, but not as ...

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You can take a family vacation the Caribbean – AZCentral.com

Posted: at 12:34 am

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If you thought an all-inclusive Caribbean getaway was out of reach until your kids headed off to college, you were wrong in the best way.

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Sonesta Maho Beach Resort in the Caribbean.(Photo: Sonesta Resorts)

If you thought an all-inclusive Caribbean getaway was out of reach until your kids headed off to college, you were wrong in the best way.

Sonesta Maho Beach Resort on the island of St. Maarten is a huge resort with features just for kids, according toMelanie Reffes in a special for USA TODAY.

Kids over age 3 can splash in the watery playground, hang out in the indoor kids club, go on beach treasure hunts and clamber up the tree-house. Dining options abound with five restaurants.

Pajama and disco nights as well as movies by the pool appeal to kids of all ages.

Best of all,kids under 12 stay, play and eat free, and the nightly rate for 13- to 17-year-olds is $45.

Andread on about two more family-friendly Caribbean resorts.

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Program Director, Latin America and Caribbean – Ecosystem Marketplace

Posted: at 12:34 am

The Program Director, Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) promotes the NatureServe Network mission to be the most comprehensive source of biodiversity data and expertise in the Western Hemisphere. The Program Director helps NatureServe ensure that the Network Programs in the region are financially stable, engaged in strategic alliances with other biodiversity experts, and fully participate in the NatureServe Network. Key activities include identifying and cultivating clients, creating funding opportunities, and co-developing collaborative projects. The Program Director will report to, and work with, the Director of Network Capacity to initiate and execute these and other LAC capacity-building activities.

The essential job functions listed below are not meant to be all-inclusive and may be subject to change at any time.

ESSENTIAL JOB FUNCTIONS:

REQUIRED EXPERIENCE AND QUALIFICATIONS:

PREFERRED SKILLS:

ESSENTIAL PHYSICAL REQUIREMENTS:

Ability to remain in a stationary position 50% of the time

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Five Reasons to Fall in Love with The Bahamas – Yahoo Finance

Posted: at 12:33 am

NASSAU, Bahamas, Feb. 14, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- A picture is normally worth a thousand words, yet pictures of The Bahamas do the multi-island destination no justice. You'll simply have to come and see it for yourself, and when you do, we guarantee you'll fall in love - fall in love with The Islands of The Bahamas and with your partner all over again.

Perhaps you'll consider these activities to make your trip even more memorable than you had imagined. This Valentine's Day we're highlighting five (of many) reasons to fall in love with The Bahamas.

Looking for more things to love about The Bahamas? Log on to http://www.Bahamas.com or call 1-800-Bahamas for more information. Happy Valentine's Day from The Islands of The Bahamas!

The Islands Of The Bahamas have a place in the sun for everyone. Each island has its own personality and attractions for a variety of vacation styles with some of the world's best golfing, scuba diving, fishing, sailing, boating, as well as, shopping and dining. The destination offers an easily accessible tropical getaway and provides convenience for travelers with preclearance through U.S. customs and immigration, and the Bahamian dollar is on par with the U.S. dollar. Do everything or do nothing, just remember It's Better in The Bahamas. For travel packages, activities and accommodations information, call 1-800-Bahamas or visit http://www.Bahamas.com. Look for The Bahamas on the web on Facebook Twitter and YouTube.

Photos accompanying this release are available at:

http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/prs/?pkgid=42177

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Bran: Bahamas ‘Eye Opener’ From Cruise Line’S Cuba Switch – Bahamas Tribune

Posted: at 12:33 am

By NEIL HARTNELL

Tribune Business Editor

nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

The DNAs leader yesterday urged the Bahamas to up its tourism game as a result of Norwegian Cruise Lines decision to divert 25 sailings to Cuba, warning: If thats not an eye opener, I dont know what is.

Branville McCartney told Tribune Business that the Bahamas was already out of time to prepare for Cubas opening to mass market US tourism, with the cruise lines move another warning sign to this nation.

Arguing that this nation should have been ready yesterday, Mr McCartney said the Bahamas had failed to address weaknesses he had identified almost a decade ago while minister of state for tourism in the former Ingraham administration.

Apart from crime, high costs, cleanliness and service, the DNA leader added that the Bahamas also need to improve on the product itself, suggesting it had failed to incorporate its own culture into tourisms offerings and give it a distinctly Bahamian flavour.

Mr McCartney said there were enough tourists to go around to blunt the impact of Cubas potential US opening up, but this depended on the Bahamas getting it right.

Responding to Norwegians decision to switch 25 four-day cruises to an overnight stop in Havana, eliminating calls on Nassau and Freeport during the 2017 second half, the DNA leader told Tribune Business: If thats not an eye opener for us as a country, I dont see anything else being so. But the Minister of Tourism almost brushed it off.

The bottom line is that we have to recognise that Cuba is in the tourist market. They are getting more tourists than us now, and the fact they are now more open will cause more tourists to go there to experience Cuba. We have to up our game in the Bahamas.

Tribune Business revealed Norwegians decision to switch the 25 cruises from Nassau and Freeport, to Havana, last week, in a bid to both alert Bahamians to the increasing competitive threat posed by Cuba and the potential for other cruise lines to follow its lead.

Mr McCartney said the challenge presented by Cuba had been exacerbated because the Bahamas had failed to address weaknesses he had identified in his last speech as minister of state for tourism.

I said we will continue to lose our place in the tourist market if we dont clean up crime; reduce our rates, as its too expensive to come here; if we dont ensure we have a clean environment, the DNA leader told Tribune Business.

Look at how dirty we are. Every time you drive to the airport you see the KFC boxes dumped by the sides of the road.

We must also improve our service. We must realise that we are not doing the tourists a favour by serving them. They are doing is a favour by coming here and spending money in our economy. Our service has to improve.

Agreeing that other cruise lines may now follow Norwegians trail to Cuba, Mr McCartney emphasised: We must get our act together. We must also improve on the product itself.

What do we have to offer? We have sun, sand and sea. So does Cuba. Weve had the same tourism product since the 1960s and not enhanced it.

Norwegian Cruise Lines talked up Cuba, and Havanas, cultural, historic and other attractions in the statement announcing its 25 cruise-switch. With Cuba having been closed for more than 50 years, many Americans are likely to be attracted to the prospect of exploring a new destination.

Asked how much time the Bahamas has left to prepare for Cubas growing threat, Mr McCartney added: The time has gone already. We are always reactionary as a people, and probably more so as a government.

The time was yesterday when we needed to start working on this thing. Were out of time. We needed to start yesterday.

Still, the DNA leader acknowledged that where Cuba was concerned, all was not lost for the Bahamas yet.

If we get it right, theres enough tourists to go around, Mr McCartney added. But we need to get it right. The Bahamas is unique in itself, and if we get it right we will cause people to come here.

We have our culture, which no one else has, and we ought to enhance it through tourism.

Mr McCartney added that the Bahamas also needed to target niches such as sports, medical and religious tourism, strategies that have been adopted by successive PLP and FNM administrations in the past.

We need to get on it, and get on it quickly, he reiterated of the Bahamas weaknesses. Getting here should not be so expensive. The cost of living is a turn-off for people.

Its less expensive to go to Miami from Nassau than it is to go from here to the Family Islands. Keeping our country clean and the service. These things must be acted upon.

Mr McCartney added that crime is already killing our tourism product, with cruise lines warning passengers about the dangers of Nassau and to avoid certain areas, and the US Embassy issuing numerous warnings.

Obie Wilchcombe, minister of tourism, lambasted Tribune Businesss revelation about Norwegian Cruise Lines switch to Cuba, saying it did a disservice to all the work the Bahamas was doing to enhance its cruise tourism product.

Mr Wilchcombe referred, in particular, to the investment by Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC) at Ocean Cay, and Carnivals upcoming cruise port in east Grand Bahama, as evidence of the Bahamas bolstering its competitive position.

Both these facilities, though, are own ports/private islands located well away from large population centres. While they provide some employment and entrepreneurial opportunities for Bahamians, the majority of the benefits from private ports go to the cruise lines, who often control the mark-ups and margins charged to passengers by providers.

Mr McCartney agreed, saying: The benefits go to the cruise lines, and the funding goes out the country. Theres hardly any benefit to the Bahamas.

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OPEC Report: Pressure On Offshore Drilling Remains – Seeking Alpha

Posted: at 12:33 am

I was reading the latest OPEC report with great interest, in part because oil (NYSEARCA:USO) is a major determinant for many asset classes, and in part because oil price is a key factor for the industry of my special interest, offshore drilling. The news of an OPEC/non-OPEC deal has surely provided significant support for the oil market, but now oil will have to trade on facts rather than assumptions. The first fact check is neutral to slightly bearish, in my view.

OPEC producers generally followed their quota. They knew they should do it after they created so much fuss about the deal - otherwise, oil would be way below $50 per barrel. However, since it's winter in the Middle East, the real test of the OPEC members' dedication to the deal has not started.

OPEC's own view on the demand/supply balance in 2017 is probably more problematic than the challenge of switching air conditioning on in spring in the Middle East states. The cartel estimates that oil demand in 2016 was 94.62 mb/d and that it will rise to 95.81 mb/d in 2017. Whether demand will indeed be this strong is not as important because supply is a crucial factor. OPEC estimates that world oil supply in January fell by 1.29 mb/d to 95.82 mb/d. However, OPEC's estimate of demand is lower than that of IEA.

IEA believes that the current supply/demand situation implies a 0.6 mb/d draw from OECD inventories. As per latest OPEC report, OECD inventories were 299 mb/d above the five-year average. Thus, it would take 498 days to bring them back to normal.

In my view, this is the reason why Brent oil (NYSEARCA:BNO) consistently fails to go past $57.50 per barrel. Even if the current supply/demand balance causes decline in inventories, the pace is too slow. The inventory overhang will continue to plague the market for months if the current situation persists. The key question here is whether the increase in demand will outpace the increase in supply from the countries that are not part of the deal.

Should the balance remain in place, OPEC countries will lose their market share and have more incentive to cheat or abandon the deal. Another reason for concern is that speculative long positions are at very high levels:

This is a recipe for major downside if the fundamental data does not support the long thesis. I would like to highlight that this level of speculative activity was reached without additional upside in oil. Thus, the cumulative speculative buyer was met by a fundamental seller - most likely represented by mass hedging of oil producers.

In my view, significant uncertainty remains in the market. The longer Brent oil spends below $57.50, the bigger chances for a domino effect once it breaks below $53. Given the chance to hedge, the situation looks normal for oil producers, but much less so for services companies, especially offshore drillers, which will continue to experience low levels of contracting activity. Current data is not good enough for a major bull thesis. Thus, oil companies remain in a defensive mode, preferring short-cycle opportunities.

This year, we will see a divergence between the "survival group" - Rowan (NYSE:RDC), Diamond Offshore Drilling (NYSE:DO), Transocean (NYSE:RIG), Ensco (NYSE:ESV), and Noble Corp. (NYSE:NE) - and the restructuring group - Seadrill (NYSE:SDRL), Ocean Rig (NASDAQ:ORIG), Pacific Drilling (NYSE:PACD), and North Atlantic Drilling (NYSE:NADL). Seadrill Partners (NYSE:SDLP), which should get confirmation that it is not part of Seadrill restructuring, and Atwood Oceanics (NYSE:ATW), whose debt is not big but whose backlog is a major problem, lie somewhere in between the two groups.

The year 2017 will be very difficult fundamentally even for the "survival group." From oil majors' plans to the cartel's report - everything points to continued pressure on the offshore drilling market due to low oil prices and general uncertainty on the future price levels.

Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.

I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Additional disclosure: I may trade any of the abovementioned stocks.

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Still no relief for the offshore sector – WorkBoat (blog)

Posted: at 12:33 am

Confidence is growing that the global oil industry has entered the recovery mode in all sectors well all except for offshore.

CEOs of the leading offshore service companies suggest that the weak offshore market willlikely hang around for another two to three years. If that happens, how much damage will be done to the offshore service business now and in its future?

Recent fourth-quarter earnings calls gaveoffshore service company CEOs the chance to offertheir views on the near-term business outlook. There is little reward for being overly optimistic about the pace of an industry recovery since there is nothing worse for a CEO than having to explain why his optimism has proven to be wrong. Almost uniformly, the CEOs offered no hope for much improvement this year.

The question for offshore workers and investors is whether they will see the first green shoots of an offshore industry recovery spring up before the end of 2017. If so, then 2018 would mark a transition year, and 2019 would be the first year of potentially normal conditions.

But even that scenario may be optimistic. Marc Edwards, president and CEO of Houston-basedDiamond Offshore, told investors earlier this month that despite some stabilization in the price of oil, we have yet to see a floor in the declining demand of deepwater assets. He addedthat the industry is now entering an unprecedented third consecutive year of declining investment in offshore spend.

That latter point is critical, as the world will need additional oil production in the future, a significant portion of which was targeted to come from offshore and be driven by the activities of the major oil companies.

In a Feb. 6 call, Rob Saltiel, president and CEO of Atwood Oceanics, Houston, discussed the oversupply in the offshore drilling sector and his puzzlement at the slow pace of rig attrition, a condition needed to bring supply and demand back into balance. Saltiel showed more optimism, telling investors that we may soon see an uptick in the number of offshore rigs that are confirmed as exiting the marketed supply.

Still, no one sees any quick turnaround for the business. As Jeff Platt, president and CEO at New Orleans-based offshore service vessel company Tidewater, told his investors on Feb. 8, We believe it will be quarters and not months before a meaningful recovery commences.

Maybe it is always blackest before the dawn.

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Suspect in high-seas homicides hospitalized, putting case on hold – Sacramento Bee

Posted: at 12:32 am


Sacramento Bee
Suspect in high-seas homicides hospitalized, putting case on hold
Sacramento Bee
Former Sacramento resident Silas Duane Boston, charged in the 1978 murder of two British tourists and suspected in the 1968 disappearance of his wife, has been hospitalized due to apparent complications from heart and liver disease, defense attorneys ...

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Holograms Aren’t The Stuff of Science Fiction Anymore – Singularity Hub

Posted: at 12:29 am

The world seems to be full of illusionsand were not talking about fake news from Macedonia.

Holograms appear to be all around us now. Long-dead rapper Tupac Shakur showed up at the 2012 edition of the Coachella music festival. Microsofts HoloLens seems akin to a wearables version of Star Treks holodeck, allowing its user to interact with 3D objects in an augmented reality. Startups like Edinburgh-based Holoxica can create digital 3D holograms of human organs for medical visualization purposes.

While some of these light shows are far from mere parlor tricks, none of these efforts are holograms in the sense depicted most famously in movies like Star Wars. True hologram technology is mostly still a science fiction fantasy, but earlier this year scientists revealed innovations to move the technology forward a few light years.

A study published online in Nature Photonics by a team of researchers in Korea has developed a 3D holographic display that they write performs more than 2,600 times better than existing technologies. Meanwhile, researchers led by a team in Australia claimed in the journal Optica to have invented a miniature device that creates the highest-quality holographic images to date. The papers were published within three days of each other last month.

Holography is a broad field, but at its most basic, it is a photographic technique that records the light scattered from an object. The light is then reproduced in a 3D format. Holography was first developed in the 1940s by the Hungarian-British physicist Dennis Gabor, who won the 1971 Nobel Prize in physics for his invention and development of the holographic method.

Most holograms are static images, but scientists are working on more dynamic systems to reproduce the huge amount of information embedded in a 3D image.

Take the work being done by researchers at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST).

Our ability to produce dynamic, high-resolution hologramsthink Princess Leia pleading with Obi-Wan Kenobi for the Jedis helpis currently limited by whats called wavefront modulators. These devices, such as spatial light modulators or digital micromirror devices, can control the direction of light propagation.

An imaging system with a short focal length lens can only create a tiny image that has a wide viewing range. Conversely, a system with a long focal length can generate a larger image but with a very narrow viewing range. The best wavefront modulator technology has only been able to create an image that is one centimeter in size with a viewing angle of three degrees.

Its possible to do better by creating a complex and unwieldy system using multiple spatial light modulators, for example. But the team at KAIST came up with a simpler solution.

This problem can be solved by simply inserting a diffuser, explains YongKeun Park, a professor in the Physics Department at KAIST. Because a diffuser diffuses light, both the image size and viewing angle can be dramatically increased by a factor of a few thousands, according to Park.

But theres still one more problem to overcome: a diffuser scrambles light.

Thus, in order to utilize a diffuser as a holographic lens, one needs to calibrate the optical characteristics of each diffusor carefully, Park says by email. For this purpose, we use wavefront-shaping technique, which provides information about the relationship between impinging light onto a diffuser and outgoing light.

Parks team succeeded in producing an enhanced 3D holographic image with a viewing angle of 35 degrees in a volume of two centimeters in length, width, and height.

The enhancement of the scale, resolution, and viewing angles using our method is readily scalable, he notes. Since this method can be applicable to any existing wavefront modulator, it can further increase the image quality as a better wavefront modulator comes out in [the] market.

Near-term applications for the technology once it matures include head-up displays for an automobile or holographic projections of a smart phones user interface, Park says. [Holograms] will bring new experiences for us to get information from electronics devices, and they can be realized with a fewer number of pixels than 3D holographic display.

For true tech heads, physicist and science writer Chris Lee, writing for Ars Technica, provides an in-depth description on how the KAIST system works.

Meanwhile, physicists from the Australian National University unveiled a device consisting of millions of tiny silicon pillars, each up to 500 times thinner than a human hair. The transparent material is capable of complex manipulations of light, they write.

"Our ability to structure materials at the nanoscale level allows the device to achieve new optical properties that go beyond the properties of natural materials, says Sergey Kruk, co-lead on the research, in a press release from the university. The holograms that we made demonstrate the strong potential of this technology to be used in a range of applications."

The researchers say they were inspired by films such as Star Wars. We are working under the same physical principles that once inspired science fiction writers, Kruk says in a video interview.

Kruk says the new material could someday replace bulkier and heavier lenses and prisms used in other applications.

With our new material, we can create components with the same functionality but that would be essentially flat and lightweight, he says. This brings so many applications, starting from further shrinking down cameras in consumer smart phones, all the way up to space technologies by reducing the size and weight of complex optical systems of satellites.

Speaking of space exploration: What if the entire universe is a hologram? What does that mean for pseudo-holograms of Tupac Shakur? Not to mention the rest of us still-living 3D beings?

Theoretical physicists believe they have observed evidence supporting a relatively new theory in cosmology that says the known universe is the projection of a 2D reality. First floated in the 1990s, the idea is similar to that of ordinary holograms in which a 3D image is encoded in a 2D surface, such as in the hologram on a credit card.

Supporters of the theory argue that it can reconcile the two big theories in cosmology. Einstein's theory of general relativity explains almost everything large scale in the universe. Quantum physics is better at explaining the small stuff: atoms and subatomic particles. The findings for a holographic universe were published in the journalPhysical Review Letters.

The team used data gleaned from instruments capable of studying the cosmic microwave background. The CMB, as its known, is the afterglow of the Big Bang from nearly 14 billion years ago. Youve seen evidence of the CMB if youve ever noticed the white noise created on an un-tuned television.

The study found that some of the simplest quantum field theories could explain nearly all cosmological observations of the early universe. The work could reportedly lead to a functioning theory of quantum gravity, merging quantum mechanics with Einsteins theory of gravity.

The key to understanding quantum gravity is understanding field theory in one lower dimension, says lead author Niayesh Afshordi, professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Waterloo, in a press release. "Holography is like a Rosetta Stone, translating between known theories of quantum fields without gravity and the uncharted territory of quantum gravity itself.

Heavy stuff no matter what dimension you come from.

Image Credit: Shutterstock

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East Ascension holds off upset-minded McKilney 46-44 – The Advocate

Posted: at 12:27 am

GONZALES The District 5-5A basketball showdown between McKinley and East Ascension was everything that was expected of the top two teams.

After a close first half, the teams traded runs in the final two quarters before East Ascension held on for a 46-44 win at the Spartans gym.

East Ascension (25-6, 9-0) had already wrapped up the district title but still has its eye on earning a top-four playoff seeding. McKinley (19-12, 5-4) can wrap up sole possession of second place with a win over Catholic High in its final district contest.

East Ascension coach Barry Whittington complimented his teams poise after the Spartans fell behind 38-30 to start the fourth quarter.

These kids have seen a lot, Whittington said. We had some close games we didnt win last year and we had some this year. Its helped us to not panic.

We managed the clock well at the end and that helped us a lot.

Cameron Wire led the Spartans with 15 points with support from LeAaron Cain (13) and Jimel London (10). McKinley also had a trio in double figures with Patrick Collier (12), Tyrese Radford (11) and Marcus Coleman (10).

McKinleys Josh Gofdeon scored the first basket of the fourth quarter giving the Panthers a 38-30 lead. EA responded with a 13-0 run over the next four minutes.

Cain scored six points and London added four during the run. The Spartans, who benefited from five McKinley turnovers during the run, led 43-38 after Londons driving basket with two minutes left.

McKinley got as close as 43-42 after Colemans 3-pointer and a free throw by Radford. Justin Harris then fed Wire for an inside basket to put EA up 45-42 with 30 second to go.

Gordon scored again to cut the Panthers deficit to one. London hit a free throw before Frederick Carrs attempt at atying basket was off the mark as time ran out.

A big thing was the 50-50 balls, McKinley coach Harold Boudreaux said. Youve got to get them. Another big part of the game was key turnovers. It was just a tough game.

East Ascension took a 24-23 halftime lead, but McKinley made five of its first six shots to start the third quarter. A.J. Lee and Radford each scored four points as McKinley took a 33-27 lead.

The Panthers lead grew to 36-27 with 1:20 left in the quarter. EAs Marques Anderson hit a free throw and Cole Hatcher beat the buzzer with an inside bucket as McKinleys lead was trimmed to 36-30 after three quarters.

The third quarter has been one of our better quarters, and we werent knocking down shots, Whittington said. We didnt have good body language or chemistry. We switched over to a full-court press and got some turnovers.

Boudreaux gave East Ascension credit for playing well all season.

Lets give it to East Ascension, he said. They were prepared tonight. Theyve got some good seniors and this is their year.

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