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Korean culture may offer clues in Asiana crash

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6 hours ago

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, the wreckage of Asiana Flight 214 lies on the ground after it crashed at the San Francisco International ...

Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, the wreckage of Asiana Flight 214 lies on the ground after it crashed at the San Francisco International Airport, in San Francisco. The pilot at the controls of airliner had 43 hours of flight time in the Boeing 777 and was landing one for the first time at San Francisco International.

Investigators combing through the debris and data recordings from the Asiana Airlines jet that crashed in San Francisco Saturday may learn more about what happened inside the cockpit of the Boeing 777 aircraft by studying an unlikely clue: Korean culture.

South Korea's aviation industry has faced skepticism about its safety and pilot habits since a few deadly crashes beginning in the 1980s. But despite changes, including an improved safety record, Korea's aviation sector remains rooted in a national character that's largely about preserving hierarchy?and asking few questions of those in authority.

"The Korean culture has two features?respect for seniority and age, and quite an authoritarian style," said Thomas Kochan, a professor at the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "You put those two together, and you may get more one-way communication?and not a lot of it upward."

In the Korean language, you speak to superiors and elders in an honorific form that requires more words and can be more oblique than in English, for example. It's less, "Yo! You want water?"; and more, "It's a warm day for a nice refreshment, no?" This may sound trivial. But put this in the context of a cockpit, where seconds and decision-making are crucial, and communication and culture can matter.

The Asiana pilots on Flight 214 apparently did not discuss their predicament, the Los Angeles Times reported Tuesday, citing cockpit voice recordings.

It's still early in the the investigation of the flight from Seoul, South Korea. It will be months before the National Transportation Safety Board can say what happened inside the cockpit, and who communicated what to whom.

But as the details unravel, expect Korea's cockpit culture and training to be scrutinized further. With two Chinese teenagers dead and 180 injured out of more than 300 passengers, the crash offers an abrupt reflection on South Korea's tarnished aviation legacy, which officials there had hoped was behind them.

On Tuesday, Asiana Airlines Chief Executive Yoon Young-doo said the carrier has plans to improve training for its pilots. He said the pilot and co-pilot on the aircraft were qualified. "The two pilots on the plane have enough qualifications, having flown to San Francisco 33 times and 29 times respectively,'' he said.

It was pilot Lee Gang-guk's first time landing a Boeing 777 at San Francisco International Airport. Lee Jung-min, 49, the senior co-pilot in the cockpit with the younger Lee, had more experience flying 777s into San Francisco.

Investigators have started interviewing the Asiana crew, and hope to wrap up interviews Tuesday, Deborah Hersman, chairwoman of the National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating the crash, told CNBC Tuesday. The 46-year-old pilot will be interviewed later Tuesday, said Hersman.

A long-standing flying adage is: aviate, navigate, communicate. "You have to have great communication among people in a team, especially in high-risk environments," said Kochan, also co-director of the MIT Sloan Institute for Work and Employment Research.

(Read More: Captain of Crashed San Francisco Plane Was 'in Training')

The crash Saturday was Asiana's third accident involving fatalities since its founding in 1988. As data recordings were collected on those previous crashes, a trend emerged. "What came up was the military culture in which the South Korean pilots grew up in," said John S. Park, an expert on the Koreas and a Stanton Nuclear Security junior faculty fellow at MIT.

Young men in South Korea must serve mandatory military service, so some air force veterans transition to civilian aviation careers. (Some American veterans, who have served after Sept. 11, are also transitioning into aviation jobs.)

But sometimes that transition into the private sector comes with military baggage.

Korea's authoritarian structure, not surprisingly, is reflected in its industries including aviation, where co-pilots traditionally have not been encouraged to challenge senior pilots. Military training only adds to constant self-awareness about where you are in an organization's pecking order?and not speaking out of turn.

While workplace trends are modernizing, many Korean companies still promote and reward seniority?over merit and achievements. And it's this constant reminder of a pecking order that can grip a military unit, an aviation cockpit?even a national soccer system.

In 2002, South Korea became the only Asian nation to make the World Cup tournament's semifinal round of four after a foreigner?Guus Hiddink, a Dutch coach?squashed cronyism and rewarded players on talent. "They couldn't have made a successful team under the old Korean leadership," said Choe Yong Ho, a University of Hawaii emeritus history professor, at the time.

South Korea's aviation industry has brought in new blood, too. After the crashes during the '80s, Western pilots were hired to bring in fresh blood and ideas. But a culture shift did not come in time for a fatal 1997 Korean Air flight.

(Read More: Entrepreneur Retrains Veterans as Helicopter Pilots)

The most recent crash involving a South Korean carrier was in 1997, when a Korean Air 747 slammed into a hill while approaching the airport in Guam, killing 225 people and later prompting a downgrade of South Korea's aviation rating by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration to category 2.

The rating was restored to Category 1 in December 2001, enabling Korean carriers to open new routes, which they were not allowed to do under the lower category.

In a chapter titled "The Ethnic Theory of Plane Crashes," author Malcolm Gladwell in "Outliers" dissects the flight recorder transcript of the final minutes of KAL Flight 801 between the captain and first officer. As the weather worsened, Gladwell argues culture influenced the way in which the pilots communicated. The first officer politely referred to "weather radar"?instead of using a more direct, Western-style of communication, i.e., "there's trouble ahead."

In 2000, a Delta Air Lines executive was brought in to run KAL's flight operations. The Delta executive made aviation English a priority, Gladwell notes. He also brought in Alteon, a subsidiary of Boeing, to take over company training and instruction programs. A Boeing spokesman declined to comment on that KAL training given the ongoing nature of the current Asiana investigation.

As Korean pilots broadly have worked to improve operations, Korean flight attendants undergo rigorous training with constant evaluation. The Asiana crew on Flight 214 are being praised for their timely response in ushering passengers off the plane. Clad in high-heeled pumps and pencil skirts, the women coolly carried out rescue tasks, NBC News reported. "It's remarkable that on one plane you can have two different cultures," said Park, an MIT fellow.

The larger question for investigators is how on a good weather day, an experienced Asiana crew was flying too slow, and clipped the end of the runway before crashing. Early information from data recordings suggests no mechanical problems, NTSB's Hersman said.

"We really do need to understand, 'Who was the pilot in command?' 'Who was the pilot flying at the time?' 'What kind of conversations were they having?' " Hersman told CNBC Monday. "There is an expectation that anyone who's putting themselves out there to provide passenger service meets minimum safety standards," she said in an additional CNBC interview Tuesday.

The key pilot in question, Lee Gang-guk, had logged 43 hours flying the 777 over nine flights. It was his first landing of a 777 at SFO. It takes 60 hours and 10 flights to be considered fully qualified, the airline told NBC News. When a pilot learns a new type of aircraft, the status before full qualification is known as transition training.

Lee had a long, otherwise untarnished career, including nearly 9,700 hours clocked flying the Airbus A320 and the Boeing 737 and 747, NBC News reported. The senior co-pilot, Lee Jung-min, had more than 3,000 hours on the 777.

?NBC News, the Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

?By CNBC's Heesun Wee; Follow her on Twitter @heesunwee.

? 2013 CNBC LLC. All Rights Reserved

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Rasheed Wallace is a Detroit Pistons assistant coach

Rasheed Wallace played for the Knicks last season.(Photo: Anthony Gruppuso, USA TODAY Sports)

Story Highlights

  • Newly retired Rasheed Wallace sat on Detroit Pistons' bench during summer-league game Monday
  • Wallace is expected to be brought on as assistant coach by new Pistons head coach Maurice Cheeks
  • Wallace played last season with new Brooklyn Nets head coach Jason Kidd on New York Knicks

ORLANDO ? Some things will never change.

Rasheed Wallace had a colorful response today to the initial silence from reporters wanting him to comment on becoming a Pistons assistant coach.

"C'mon, don't shoot at once, now," Wallace said playfully to laughter. "Y'all gotta say something or I'm walking off."

COACH SHEED: 5 things to love about Wallace

JASON KIDD: What he did in coaching debut

SUMMER: Best dunks through month and half

You can excuse the media for being momentarily tongue-tied at the thought of the guy who is the career leader in technical fouls trading in his uniform for a clipboard.

But for Wallace, 38, it's all about a chance to watch his kids, who still live in the Detroit area, grow up.

And despite his well-earned mercurial reputation, the job offers a chance for one of the most fundamentally sound big men of the last 20 years to impart some wisdom to the Pistons young big men Andre Drummond and Greg Monroe.

"It's a blessing in disguise; my kids are still back in Detroit," Wallace said after the Pistons' loss to the Celtics in summer-league action. "I have the best of both now. I'll be able to do what I want and that's to teach young guys how to play basketball the right way and still be with my kids."

It's a far cry from the man who used to scoff at the idea of being a coach. So what's changed?

"Actually a lot," Wallace said. "It has more to do with my kids than anything. With them getting older and working them out and other high school kids out, I guess it was that little coaching bug that started and now here I am up here. But I wasn't expecting to be here."

Wallace joined the team Monday and sat on the bench, just to the right of the players. He has already worked with Drummond at the practice facility.

Hiring Wallace was the idea of new coach Maurice Cheeks, who coached Wallace while both were with the Blazers. The Pistons and Wallace have spent the past several weeks making sure Wallace wanted to make this step shortly after retiring from the Knicks.

Wallace isn't worried about the transition.

"When I was playing, I had that passion and fire, cussing everybody out, but I had the opportunity to change that being out on the floor," he said. "But now that I'm coach, I can still have my passion, but I just have to tone it down. I can't make the difference now. I can talk junk, but I can't back it up."

PHOTOS: 2013 NBA offseason coaching carousel

Vince Ellis writes for the Detroit Free Press.

Source: http://rssfeeds.usatoday.com/~r/UsatodaycomSports-TopStories/~3/NiHpuB-03-A/

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NBA Free Agency Links: Tyler Hansbrough to sign with Toronto Raptors

Reports have former first round pick of the Pacers headed to Toronto for the next two years.

Former Pacers power forward Tyler Hansbrough is reportedly ready to make a fresh start elsewhere official today when he signs with the Toronto Raptors. Looks like Hans will have to make nice with Jonas Valanciunas now.

Reports have Hansbrough signing a two year deal for anywhere from the bi-annual exception ($2.1 mil/yr) to $3 mil/yr. Regardless, that would be less than the qualifying offer the Pacers rescinded which was over $4 mil/yr. When you talk value for Hansbrough, the literal dollar figure was critical.

It didn't make sense for the Pacers to overpay for Hansbrough to be a backup for David West. They drafted Miles Plumlee to add depth to the front court, certainly with an eye toward Hansbrough's departure at the end of his contract. So if Plumlee can offer 10-15 minutes at $1.1 mil/yr and Hansbrough finds more minutes to ply his trade in Toronto, then all sides are happy.

The Pacers still have around $2 million to spend on front court depth which would be wise since Plumlee is more center than forward and recent signee Chris Copeland is more shooter than power forward. But with his obvious development showing in Orlando, Plumlee is the X-factor for the Pacers front court playing rotation.

The Summer Pacers have the day off in Orlando but there are plenty of links with a couple of interviews from Larry Bird who likes the way Plumlee is developing. Also, the Bird and Frank Vogel are back in Indy for a 1 p.m. ET press conference where they can officially discuss their free agent acquisitions.

Check out the links:

Raptors Sign Tyler Hansbrough [Updated] - Raptors HQ

Pacers to Hold Press Conference Wednesday Afternoon | THE OFFICIAL SITE OF THE INDIANA PACERS

Q-and-A with Larry Bird | THE OFFICIAL SITE OF THE INDIANA PACERS

NBA sets 2013-14 salary cap, luxury tax figures | The Point Forward - SI.com

Tyler Hansbrough throws Jonas Valanciunas to the ground (VIDEO) | ProBasketballTalk

Orlando Summer League: Day 3 standouts - TrueHoop Blog - ESPN

What Larry Bird thinks of Brad Stevens, Paul George and the Pacers avoiding the luxury tax | Indianapolis Star | indystar.com

Raptors sign free agent Tyler Hansbrough: Report - The Globe and Mail

Tyler Hansbrough has deal with Toronto Raptors - source - ESPN

Raptors on verge of signing Tyler Hansbrough | Raptors | Sports | Toronto Sun

NBA Summer League 2013 schedule: Orlando Pro Summer League play continues Wednesday - Orlando Pinstriped Post

NBA free agency rumors roundup: Spurs pushed for Andrei Kirilenko, no timetable for Andrew Bynum decision - SBNation.com

Stevens is a great coach, but he has a crummy job in Boston - NBA - CBSSports.com News, Scores, Stats, Fantasy Advice

Rally falls short as Pacers fall to Celtics, 76-74

NBA Free Agency Rumors: Brand out for the Knicks, World Peace potentially interested - Posting and Toasting

Spurs' talks for Andrei Kirilenko end without deal - Yahoo! Sports

Confirmed: Brooklyn Nets to pay nearly $80 million in luxury taxes - NetsDaily

? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

Source: http://www.indycornrows.com/2013/7/10/4510380/nba-free-agency-links-tyler-hansbrough-to-sign-with-toronto-raptors

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College Football 2013: Weekend news roundup

Good morning college football fans, and happy Monday! I hope you had a great weekend ? here are some interesting headlines you may have missed over the last several days.

Blog Photo - College Football 2013: Weekend news roundup- Suspended Notre Dame quarterback Everett Golson announced that he will be looking to re-join the Irish?next spring. He was released for "poor academic judgement" after the 2012-13 calendar year.

- Maryland sophomore running back Wes Brown has been suspended following an arrest last week. He contributed 382 yards and two touchdowns as a freshman last season.

- Colorado landed a versatile safety on Sunday that could play a few different positions at the collegiate level. Three-star Evan White committed to the Buffs, giving them their eighth for the class of 2014.

- Connecticut athletic director Warde Manuel is content to stay in the AAC and will no longer chase other conferences. UConn and Cincinnati were left out of the ACC during the conference realignment phase.

- K.J. Williams committed to Syracuse over the weekend, giving the Orange their biggest pledge of the 2014 class. The four-star ATH is the No. 5 overall overall recruit from the state of Pennsylvania.

Follow @Tyler_Waddell on Twitter

Source: http://www.faniq.com/blog/College-Football-2013-Weekend-news-roundup-Blog-68679

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ৪ জুলাই, ২০১৩

Roamz Hits The Deadpool, But The Team Stays Together With A New Focus

roamz_icon_logoAfter a series of rapid fire pivots, Roamz, one of many services launched during the location-centric app explosion to try and help you find things to do nearby, has shut down. To date, the team had raised around $3.5M, almost entirely from Australian direct mailing/marketing house Salmat.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/dDyLiZJZMHg/

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Sony's Crackle arrives on BlackBerry 10, reminds us to not watch Bad Boys II

Sony's Crackle arrives on BlackBerry 10, reminds us to not watch Bad Boys II

Slowly, but steadily, BlackBerry's building its BB10 app catalog with some major gets. Today, that burgeoning list grows by a very important one with the addition of Sony's Crackle. The free, ad-based streaming video service, which culls together content from Sony's various TV and film studios, is available to download now from BlackBerry World. It's also compatible with the Q10's teeny, 3.1-inch screen, so if you hate your good eyesight, you can devote an hour or two to reliving the opus that is Bad Boys II. Sure, popular apps like Instagram, Hulu Plus and Netflix have yet to make their way over to BB10, but you can't fault the Waterloo-based outfit for getting users what it can. Even if that means bringing them Bad Boys II.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/03/sony-crackle-blackberry-10/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Republicans In the House Go Own Way (WSJ)

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Immigration bill's border focus leaves some liberals wary (cbsnews)

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Sony camera UI leaks from 'Honami' system dump, gets ported to existing Xperia devices

Sony camera UI leaks from 'Honami' system dump, gets ported to existing Xperia devices

We've been hearing stacks of rumors recently about a Sony flagship called Honami, which will supposedly come with Qualcomm's Snapdragon 800 and a 20-megapixel camera. A system dump, purportedly from a Honami phone, surfaced last week and now XDA developer "krabappel2548" has managed to dissect the camera app and get it working on some existing Xperia devices -- including the Xperia Z, ZL and Tablet Z, so long as they've been suitably prepped for hacking. From the resulting screenshots, it looks like Sony is set to introduce features such as augmented reality, "Time shift" (which sounds a lot like HTC's Zoe feature), live filters and an image search engine dubbed "Info-eye". All of this sounds reasonably in tune with the "One Sony" strategy of focusing on mobile and imaging. If Honami is real, and if it comes with the right hardware to support the updated camera module, it could be a big deal.

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Via: XPERIA Blog (1)

Source: XDA Developers

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/02/sony-honami-camera-ui-leaked/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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The Daily Roundup for 07.02.2013

DNP The Daily RoundUp

You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours -- all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/02/the-daily-roundup-for-07-02-2013/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Firefox OS hands-on: Alcatel OneTouch Fire and ZTE Open (video)

Firefox OS hands-on: Alcatel OneTouch Fire and ZTE Open

We've crossed paths with Firefox OS before, but today marks the first time we've played with handsets running the final build of Mozilla's mobile software. The Alcatel OneTouch Fire and ZTE Open you see above are the same hardware we saw at MWC earlier this year -- in fact, the latter just launched in Spain on Telefónica for €69 ($90) contract-free including €30 ($39) of airtime for prepaid customers. We took both phones for a brief spin and immediately noticed a slight improvement in performance. Unfortunately, there's still a significant amount of lag in the UI, especially when scrolling through web pages and navigating the app tray. Websites also take a while to load, even when connecting over Wi-Fi. Then again, what do you expect for €69? Check out the gallery below and hit the break to watch our hands-on video.

Note: the ZTE Open we handled was destined for Movistar (a Telefónica brand) and is launching today for €69 (not €63 as mentioned in our video).

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BlueStacks' second game console, the GamePop Mini, will launch ...

New gaming entrant BlueStacks has announced it will launch a second game console this fall dubbed the GamePop Mini. Like its recently announced $129 GamePop console, the new machine will play mobile games on a big-screen television. The aim is to disrupt traditional game consoles with cheaper Android and iOS-based titles. But this new mini-console will be ?forever free,? says BlueStacks.

The Campbell, Calif.-based BlueStacks calls this the ?Netflixication of gaming.? This means that it plans to disrupt other game businesses by offering $200 in paid games for free, so long as the user pays a $6.99 monthly subscription fee for the company?s GamePop mobile gaming service. The first console, the GamePop, will be free until June 30 for those who sign up for a subscription preorder. But the GamePop Mini will be always free with a subscription. GamePop preorders started on May 9 and the company says they are stronger than expected.

?We have always planned on having a free console option,? said BlueStacks chief executive Rosen Sharma. ?The biggest value of the GamePop service is its content ? not the box. Hardware costs have come down so fast that we?re able to undercut the rest of the market. With the free promotion we?ve been doing in June, we?re already seeing a ton of adoption. That volume then attracts more developers and therefore more and better content. It?s building momentum.?

The new device will be available for preorder on July and will run the Android 4.2 Jelly Bean version and connect to a TV via a HDMI cable. It will come with a curated group of 500 popular mobile games. Partners include?HalfBrick (Fruit Ninja, Jetpack Joyride), Glu (Blood Brothers), and kids app developer Intellijoy. Sharma said that the two consoles will be able to play the same games and use the same subscription service, but the Mini will have less rendering power than the regular GamePop. He also said that the regular GamePop will have more ports, but he declined to be more specific.

It might be easier to do one console at a time, but Sharma said in an interview with GamesBeat, ?We have always been planning to do this for a long time.?

BlueStacks also came out with its ?Looking Glass? technology earlier this month. Looking Glass will enable iOS-only developers to easily launch on GamePop. Titles such as iOS?s first major franchise, the Fieldrunners series, will be able to come to TVs this way.

?We want to make things as easy as possible for app developers to come on board,? said Ben Armstrong on BlueStacks? developer relations team. ?There is a virtuous circle between great content and volume that we?re having a lot of early success jumpstarting that so far. The launch titles a service comes with are critical.?

The GamePop Mini is slated to ship this winter.

BlueStacks was founded in 2009, and it launched an App Player that converts Android software so that it can run on a computer. The company has raised $15 million from Intel, Andreessen-Horowitz, Radar Partners, Redpoint, Ignition Partners, and Qualcomm. App Player has more than 10 million registered users.

The company was particularly inspired by Japanese carrier KDDI?s subscription mobile app service Au Smart Pass, which gives customers access to hundreds of popular paid apps for just a few bucks a month. In just one year, that service managed to bring in $250 million in revenue for KDDI. GamePop does not plan to sell games on an ? la carte basis.

The company will have a lot of competition this fall, including Ouya, the PlayStation 4, the Xbox One, and other Android gaming solutions for the living room.

Source: http://venturebeat.com/2013/06/28/bluestacks-second-game-console-the-gamepop-mini-will-launch-as-a-freemium-bundle/

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DfT confirms $2.4 billion train order with Siemens

LONDON (Reuters) - The Department for Transport (DfT) on Thursday confirmed it had awarded Germany's Siemens a $2.4 billion (1.5 billion pounds) contract to build 1,140 new carriages for use on the Thameslink rail line.

The trains, due to be introduced from 2016, will be used on the Thameslink commuter route that runs through London and connects Bedford with Brighton on the south coast of England.

It is confirmation of a decision made in 2011 to name the German industrial conglomerate as the preferred bidder.

The award was a blow to Bombardier, the train maker based in Derby, central England, which was shortlisted for the contract.

The decision to award the deal to Siemens has been widely criticised by UK unions who say Bombardier should have been given the contract to protect jobs in Derby and numerous local suppliers.

Siemens said the trains would be built in Germany but that many of the components for the new trains would be manufactured in Britain.

(Reporting by Rhys Jones, Editing by Brenda Goh)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dft-confirms-2-4-billion-train-order-siemens-161828468.html

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The World's Fastest Ship Is Basically an Aquatic Concorde Jet

The World's Fastest Ship Is Basically an Aquatic Concorde Jet

This is no lumbering Staten Island Ferry. This is the Francisco, a wave-piercing catamaran loaded with modified jet engines set to blast commuters across the River Plate at 58 knots, faster than any other ship in the world.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/gJRWRgBRxRM/the-worlds-fastest-boat-is-basically-an-aquatic-concor-572876759

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Home Improvement Help You Need To Succeed | DNF678.com

A home has to be safe as well as good looking. That?s why it?s crucial you are aware of what to do prior to beginning a project. This article gives you the information you seek to help you become a natural handyman.

Your porch might be in need of a fresh coat of paint. You should use a high quality exterior paint. Make sure the bases of the old and new paints match. That means using oil-based paint if the existing paint is oil-based, and the same for water-based paints. An oil-based paint is better for trims and will last a long time but you should use a water-based paint for decks or floors since oil-based paint can become slippery in the winter.

TIP! Use old shoe boxes for storage. You can create great designs by adding leftover wallpaper, or even fabric, as a cover to those old shoe boxes.

If your kitchen?s counter space is very limited, look into over-the-range microwaves. Microwave ovens add class and style to your home, and many come with a lot of special features. They are especially good for cooks who aren?t too focused on ventilation, as they use a recirculating filter only.

A drill is perhaps the most important tool for any home improvement project. You can make holes of all sizes for different screws, and you can drill in the screws using various bits. Aim to use a cordless drill that is battery-powered with 9 volts and drill bits that are 1/32 all the way up to 1/4. You also need attachments for driving Phillips and flat-head screws.

Write a list before visiting your local home improvement facility that contains all the items you need. By doing this, you will make sure to get everything you need the first time you are at the store.

TIP! If you are installing new baseboards, think about using stained wood baseboards opposed to painted baseboards. This look is considered classic, and most homes can benefit from the more natural appeal.

If you?re taking on a home improvement task yourself, make sure you use high quality supplies and tools. It can be expensive, but the expense is worth the value of doing things right. In general, quality products tend to have a longer life and can better go through wear and tear. It?s not desirable to replace expensive tools frequently.

Consider installing motion sensor lights to improve your homes exterior. Motion detector lights turn on automatically when an intruder approaches, providing you with the element of surprise and saving you money on electricity! This keeps intruders away even better than regular lights. When they come on it alerts the household that someone is out there.

Fresh paneling can quickly and easily improve the appearance of your home. Paneling can be relatively inexpensive and adds a new look to your home. Another benefit is that the panels can be removed with little work or damage.

TIP! For an economical approach to floor tiling, consider installing vinyl instead of ceramic or stone. This peel-and-stick brand of flooring comes in a wide variety of colors and styles.

Ceiling fans should be considered as a home improvement project. Adding a ceiling fan to your home is a fairly simple project. It is inexpensive and will help you save money on energy costs.

Make sure that you?ve got a good plan before starting any home improvement project. Decisions regarding costs and changes should all be done before you start your project.

Always be flexible when working on home improvement projects. You may think that something has to be done within a certain period of time, but it can take longer than you thought. You may wish to spend a specific amount of money, however, you may need to pay more. You have to learn to be flexible about these things because these factors are sometimes inevitable.

TIP! Adding attic insulation can help you save money on winter heating bills. Heat rises and, over time, a lot of it is lost during the colder seasons in houses that have poor insulation in the attic.

When preparing to install kitchen cabinets, you should draw a horizontal bench-mark line all around your kitchen?s perimeter. Use this line as a point of reference when measuring for the installation of the base cabinets and wall cabinets. The high point of the floor is the key spot for the benchmark line.

If you will be working around gas in your house, turn it off first. Just because you don?t smoke doesn?t mean you won?t end up creating a spark. Keep in mind that you might let some gas loose while moving lines, even if they are not open.

Trees make a lovely addition to any property. You can plant trees to grow the value of your property that your home sits on. It has been estimated that each tree planted that grows to full size increases your property value by 1,000 dollars.

TIP! It can be simple to make window screens if you can?t find any you like. Frame kits are customizable to various sizes and are inexpensive to use.

You could drastically hurt your home if you don?t know what you?re doing regarding repairs and home improvements. Utilize the information learned in the above article in your next home improvement project.

Source: http://www.dnf678.com/?p=26

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Mars Life Search Hindered by Planetary Protection Concerns, Scientists Say

Current policies designed to safeguard Mars against biological contamination from Earth are hampering exploration of the Red Planet and should be relaxed, some scientists say.

These "planetary protection" requirements impose heavy financial burdens on Mars?missions, partially explaining why no robots have searched for life on the Red Planet's surface since NASA's twin Viking landers ceased operations three decades ago, researchers Alberto Fairen of Cornell University and Dirk Schulze-Makuch of Washington State University write in a commentary published online today (June 27) in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Further, such restrictions are unnecessary, because Earth life has doubtless made it to the neighboring Red Planet already inside chunks of rock blasted off our planet by asteroid strikes, the scientists say. [The Search for Life on Mars (A Photo Timeline)]

"If Earth micro-organisms can thrive on Mars, they almost certainly already do; and if they cannot, the transfer of Earth life to Mars?should be of no concern, as it would simply not survive," Fairen and Schulze-Makuch write in the commentary. "We cannot see how our current program of Mars exploration might pose any real threat to a possible Martian biosphere."

Sterilizing spacecraft

NASA and other space agencies abide by planetary protection guidelines when drawing up missions to solar system bodies such as planets, moons, comets and asteroids.

For example, NASA's Mars rover Curiosity?was sterilized before launch, to ensure that it carried a total of no more than 300,000 bacterial spores on any surface that could allow transfer to the Martian environment. (Getting rid of every last Earth microbe would be pretty much impossible, researchers say.)

Such rigorous spacecraft cleaning is time-consuming and expensive, especially for missions that aim to search for signs of life on Mars. For instance, sterilization procedures accounted for more than 10 percent of the Viking mission's overall $1 billion budget, Schulze-Makuch said.

The Viking figures are in 1970s-era dollars. The costs would be even higher today for missions to Martian locales thought to be capable of supporting microbial life ("special regions" in planetary protection parlance).

"Bottom line is that a thorough cleaning of a spacecraft aimed to in situ search for life on a special region of Mars today would easily cost around $500 million," Schulze-Makuch told SPACE.com via email.

"With that amount of money, you can entirely finance a 'Discovery-type' mission to Mars, similar to Pathfinder or InSight," he added. "Therefore, if we'd relax planetary protection concerns in a Viking-like mission today, we could add another low-budget mission to the space program."

Revising the protocols

Fairen and Schulze-Makuch argue for a general rethink of the sterilization protocols for Mars-bound spacecraft. (Their commentary in Nature Geoscience does not address planetary protection guidelines for other solar system bodies, most of which have not traded material over the eons the way Earth and Mars have.)

Sterilization should be waived for Mars orbiters and surface craft on geological missions, they say. Life-hunting landers and rovers should still be cleaned, but only to make it easier to determine if the microbes they spot are native to Mars (as opposed to hitchhikers from Earth). The protocols for such missions should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.

Fairen and Schulze-Makuch don't expect their opinion piece to spur immediate and drastic policy changes, but they do hope it stimulates discussion about Mars exploration and planetary protection requirements.

"Changes in space policies and regulations are made slowly and with the greatest possible consensus, and that's good," Fairen told SPACE.com via email. "We simply thought this is an interesting debate and this was a good moment to open it."

Follow Mike Wall on Twitter?@michaeldwall?and?Google+.?Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook?or Google+. Originally published on?SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mars-life-search-hindered-planetary-protection-concerns-scientists-112342935.html

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Inbee Park takes early lead at US Women's Open

SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (AP) ? Top-ranked Inbee Park took the early lead in the first round of the U.S. Women's Open as she tries to make history by winning the first three majors of the year.

Park had just one bogey in a 5-under 67 for the best score of Thursday's morning groups. Caroline Hedwall of Sweden was a shot back, with six players at 2 under.

Concerned about bad weather, tournament officials moved up the tees, and with the rain holding off, Park was able to play aggressively.

"I never had practiced from those tees, so I was a little bit shocked when I went to the tees," Park said.

Not that she was complaining.

She repeatedly gave herself short putts, and the way she has excelled in her short game lately, Park cruised to a low score.

"So instead of hitting like 5-irons, we were hitting 9-irons, and that was making the course much easier," she said. "I was actually able to go for some pins and give myself a lot of opportunities today. I made a lot of putts and didn't leave much out there."

No player has won the first three majors in a season with at least four majors. The 2008 U.S. Women's Open champion, Park has already won five times this year, including her last two tournaments.

Starting on No. 10, Park birdied her first hole, then started racking up pars. She made the turn at 2 under before birdies on three of her next four holes.

At 5 under, Park briefly struggled with her tee shots, needing to save par on Nos. 5 and 7. On No. 6, her 15th hole of the day, she had to lay up out of the tall grass and settled for her lone bogey.

Park got herself back to 5 under on the par-5 No. 8 with a chip shot to about 5 feet for an easy birdie putt.

Hedwall was at 5 under heading into her final hole, No. 9. But she hit over the green into the rough, then just missed her par putt to finish with a 4-under 68.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/inbee-park-takes-early-lead-us-womens-open-171813820.html

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Stocks gone wild: Why are investors so panicked?

wall-street

June 24, 2013 at 3:25 PM ET

Traders gather at the post of specialist Patrick Murphy, right, on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Monday. Traders in the U.S. dumped stoc...

Richard Drew / AP

Traders gather at the post of specialist Patrick Murphy, right, on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Monday. Traders in the U.S. dumped stocks, bonds and commodities, prompted by signs of distress in China's economy and worries about the end of the Federal Reserve bank's easy money policies.

The Federal Reserve thinks the economy is improving, so much so that it has hinted it may throttle back a bit on easy money policies in place since the financial crisis. So why are the financial markets acting like the sky is falling?

Stock markets have been in turmoil since Fed chairman Ben Bernanke last week suggested that if the economy continues to perk up the central bank will remove a least some of the low interest rate punch bowls that banks and businesses have been drinking from for years. And while part of Monday's stock drop could be blamed on worries about China's economy, the world's second largest, it came against a backdrop of fears about what the Fed may do later this year.

Stocks dropped again Monday, though the markets recovered some of their losses later in the day. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed nearly 250 points before making up some of that lost ground, closing 140 points lower, nearly 1 percent down. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq also finished off their lows. So far this month, the S&P has shed about 3.5 percent.

Several Fed officials spent the day trying to talk the financial markets off a ledge, and they partly succeeded. But investors remain jittery. They have have good reasons to be concerned. They hate uncertainty, and few people alive today have ever lived through an economic and financial cycle like this one. That?s because the financial panic of 2008 was deeper than any since the Great Depression. And the remedies applied by the Federal Reserve have never been tried on such a giant scale.

But causes of the gut-wrenching market plunge of the last week are pretty easy to spot. Here are the big ones:

Why are interest rates moving higher?

Soon after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008, the flow of capital around the planet seized up as banks and investment firms feared lending to one another. No one knew which bank might be the next Lehman. The global credit machine completely froze.

To restart lending, the central banks around the world began pumping trillions of dollars into the financial system. Since then, the Fed has continued pumping $85 billion a month of surplus into the credit markets to keep rates low.

But at its regular policy meeting last week, central bankers said they?re getting ready to ?taper off? that flow of cash. With less money sloshing around the system, the cost of borrowing will begin rising.

That means I?ll get a higher return on my savings account, right? What?s wrong with that?

Nothing, as long as the economy keeps humming along and employers keep creating new jobs. But the worry is that those higher rates could make consumers more reluctant to use their credit cards, or potential home buyers think twice about taking out a mortgage to buy a house.

The Fed, though, thinks the economy may be nearly ready to sustain those higher rates. Consumer confidence and spending have been gathering momentum ? partly because house prices have begun recovering and the job market continues to improve, albeit slowly. And while stock prices have fallen nearly 5 percent in just the last four days trading days, prices are still 20 percent higher than they were a year ago. That extra stock market wealth has also helped fill in the $7 trillion crater in household wealth that was created by the twin collapses of the housing and financial markets five years ago.

Is the market going lower?

Yes, and then higher. But we have no idea when. Or how far. This is a website, not a psychic hotline.

If the folks at the Fed spooked the markets, can?t they calm them down again?

Yes and no. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has made it clear that as central bankers begin slowing the flow of the money fountain, they can always restore full pressure if the economy falters or the markets begin to tank. And the Fed hasn?t actually started to taper off the flow of money ? they?re just telling the world they?re beginning to think about how and when to do so.

But while the Fed?s money machine is the biggest in the world, and the dollar is the closest thing to a global currency, the U.S. central bank isn't the only game in town.

The latest market jitters have been heightened by a much more immediate ? and severe ? credit clampdown in China. On Friday, the People's Bank of China (the country's central bank) tried to cut off the financial oxygen of a loose network of speculators and informal lenders who have been inflating a bubble in stocks and real estate. In doing so, the People's Bank let short term interest rates spike as high as 25 percent.

That sounds a lot like the kind of credit crunch that started this whole mess five years ago.

It certainly spooked investors around the world ? that?s why stocks markets have fallen in unison over the last few week.

But there?s a big difference between the panic-induced collapse of Lehman Brothers and the People's Bank- engineered Chinese credit crunch. China?s central bankers can restore the flow of credit with the click of a mouse (or two).

That makes the Chinese crunch more like the U.S. interest rate spike of the early 1980s, when then Fed chairman Paul Volcker all but strangled the U.S. bond market. Volcker?s move was designed to snap a decade of runaway inflation and reignite growth. It worked. Once inflation subsided, the Fed let rates fall, and the economy and stock market roared back to life.

China faces a very different set of problems, and the Chinese state-owned banking system is very different than the U.S. But the current credit crunch that is rippling through Asia could easily be reversed.

Chinese officials are betting that a short-term credit squeeze will throw enough cold water on the speculators and show banking lenders to prevent another bubble-bust cycle.

But there?s not a lot that Fed Chairman Bernanke and his Fed colleagues can do if the People's Bank made the wrong bet.

More business news:

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Group: Kenya police death squad kill 2 suspects

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ? Kenyan police say a terror suspect was killed in a gun battle and present weapons to the media. Hours later another suspect accused of terror links is dead in what police described as a shootout.

Witnesses and the family of the slain suspects tell a different story: That the suspects were arrested without a fight. One was handcuffed, and both were executed.

Human rights group, Muslim for Human Rights, says that police last week targeted the two terror suspects for execution. The group said Wednesday Kenya maintains a police death squad tasked with eliminating suspects with links to terror groups.

The head of Kenya's Anti-Terrorism Police Unit, Boniface Mwaniki, denied that a death squad exists, calling the allegations "outrageous."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/group-kenya-police-death-squad-kill-2-suspects-125911424.html

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Melanoma Deaths More Likely in Young Men Than Women

Young men are more likely to die of the skin cancer melanoma than young women, regardless of the severity of the tumor, a new study found. This suggests there are fundamental biological differences between melanoma in men and women, the researchers said.

Looking at melanoma cases among a population of young, white men and women over 10 years, the researchers found that men accounted for 40 percent of the cancer cases, but 64 percent of the deaths.

Overall, men were 55 percent more likely to die of melanoma than women of the same age, after adjusting for other factors such as a tumor's type, thickness and location, according to the study published today (June 26) in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

In an editorial accompanying the study in the journal, experts said that the study revealed a "striking disparity" between men and women in terms of survival.

"The findings are so consistent that they imply a fundamental biological difference in 'male' versus 'female' melanoma," wrote editorial authors Dr. David Fisher, a dermatologist at Harvard Medical School and Alan Geller, a lecturer at Harvard School of Public Health.

Previous studies showing a gender difference in skin cancer have focused on older people, in whom skin cancer is more likely to occur. They have found that in older people, male patients have poorer survival from skin cancer than females.

The difference has been attributed to behavioral factors ? for example, the fact that women are more likely to examine their skin and visit doctors, which helps early detection and better survival.

"We thought that it would be novel and interesting to look at a younger population," said study researcher Dr. Susan Swetter, a professor of dermatology at Stanford University. "Younger people don't tend to see a doctor as frequently," she said.

In the study, the researchers included about 26,000 white adolescents and young adults ages 15 to 39, who were diagnosed with melanoma between 1989 and 2009. White people are far more likely to develop melanoma than those of other races.

During the study period, 1,561 patients died from melanoma. Men were more likely to die in each category of the tumor, and each age group, the study showed.

Among patients who had an additional cancer besides melanoma, men were twice as likely to die.

The researchers said women's survival advantage may be due to habits such as better health maintenance or more visits to the doctor, which helps detect tumors when they are smaller and more curable.

However, among those who had the thinnest tumors, men were still twice as likely to die, which suggests that men's disadvantage is due to biological differences rather than behavioral ones, according to the study.

Little is known about the biological differences that might result in different melanoma survival rates in men and women. Some proposed explanations involve the immune system, sex hormones, genetic factors and vitamin D metabolism.

While further studies are needed to investigate these possible biological differences, the dramatic difference in survival calls for behavioral interventions to promote early detection strategies in young men, the researchers said.

Public health messages that warn against risky behavior such as skin tanning are more likely to be heeded by women. Swetter said that such messages should target men too, and emphasize that men are at higher risk of dying of melanoma.

Email Bahar Gholipour or follow her @alterwired. Follow?LiveScience?@livescience, Facebook?& Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/melanoma-deaths-more-likely-young-men-women-211706971.html

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Christian Rocker Slams Kanye West as Blasphemous, False God

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/christian-rocker-slams-kanye-west-as-blasphemous-false-god/

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Disney renames Mouseketeer stage for Funicello

BURBANK, Calif. (AP) ? The stage at Walt Disney Studios where "The Mickey Mouse Club" was filmed is now officially the Annette Funicello Stage.

Disney chief Bob Iger led a ceremony Monday dedicating the soundstage to Funicello, the Mouseketeer-turned-movie star who died in April at age 70.

Iger confessed to having a crush on Funicello when he was growing up, as many who watched the perky brunette on TV did.

Former Mouseketeers, Funicello's family and colleagues and Mickey Mouse himself also participated in Monday's dedication. Frankie Avalon, Richard Sherman and Leonard Maltin were among those honoring the late actress.

Julie Andrews is the only other entertainer to have a namesake stage at Disney studios.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/disney-renames-mouseketeer-stage-funicello-005521197.html

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Is Twitter photo of Kate Gosselin racist?

Celebs

1 hour ago

It doesn't look good. But what, exactly, does this photo -- posted on Twitter, featuring Kate Gosselin but not apparently posted to the former reality TV star's account -- actually say?

Here's what we know: Someone calling him or herself "KatieDeen" created a fresh account on Twitter on Sunday evening, and posted just one item -- this picture, with the accompanying caption information.

The comment -- that Gosselin "makes fun of Asians with 8 half Korean children" is making an assumption about what's going on in the picture, which shows Gosselin wearing a dark-haired plastic wig (with a bun on the top that could be said to resemble a geisha hairdo) and pulling the far corners of her eyes back.

The pose could be interpreted as a Caucasian trying to make "Asian eyes," a particularly offensive, racially-imitative motion that has popped up occasionally in odd places, including in 2008 when the Spanish Olympic Team were photographed en masse for an advertisement making the gesture.

Us Weekly speculated that the photo may have been taken prior to her separation from Jon Gosselin in 2009, owing to the band on her wedding finger.

Worth noting: The comment appended to the Twitter post itself is somewhat ill-informed. Gosselin's children, with her ex-husband Jon Gosselin, are not "half Korean": Jon Gosselin was born in Wisconsin, and his parents are a mix of European and Korean descent. Not that this should matter -- but it's clear a lot of jumping-to-conclusions are being done with one photo.

A representative for Kate Gosselin did not respond immediately to a request for comment.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/twitter-photo-kate-gosselin-racist-6C10435408

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Doctors make progress toward 'artificial pancreas'

Doctors are reporting a major step toward an "artificial pancreas," a device that would constantly monitor blood sugar in people with diabetes and automatically supply insulin as needed.

A key component of such a system ? an insulin pump programmed to shut down if blood-sugar dips too low while people are sleeping ? worked as intended in a three-month study of 247 patients.

This "smart pump," made by Minneapolis-based Medtronic Inc., is already sold in Europe, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is reviewing it now. Whether it also can be programmed to mimic a real pancreas and constantly adjust insulin based on continuous readings from a blood-sugar monitor requires more testing, but doctors say the new study suggests that's a realistic goal.

"This is the first step in the development of the artificial pancreas," said Dr. Richard Bergenstal, diabetes chief at Park Nicollet, a large clinic in St. Louis Park, Minn. "Before we said it's a dream. We have the first part of it now and I really think it will be developed."

He led the company-sponsored study and gave results Saturday at an American Diabetes Association conference in Chicago. They also were published online by the New England Journal of Medicine.

The study involved people with Type 1 diabetes, the kind usually diagnosed during childhood. About 5 percent of the 26 million Americans with diabetes have this type. Their bodies don't make insulin, a hormone needed to turn food into energy. That causes high blood-sugar levels and raises the risk for heart disease and many other health problems.

Some people with the more common Type 2 diabetes, the kind linked to obesity, also need insulin and might also benefit from a device like an artificial pancreas. For now, though, it's aimed at people with Type 1 diabetes who must inject insulin several times a day or get it through a pump with a narrow tube that goes under the skin. The pump is about the size of a cellphone and can be worn on a belt or kept in a pocket.

The pumps give a steady amount of insulin, and patients must monitor their sugar levels and give themselves more insulin at meals or whenever needed to keep blood sugar from getting too high.

A big danger is having too much insulin in the body overnight, when blood-sugar levels naturally fall. People can go into comas, suffer seizures and even die. Parents of children with diabetes often worry so much about this that they sneak into their bedrooms at night to check their child's blood-sugar monitor.

In the study, all patients had sensors that continuously monitored their blood sugar. Half of them had ordinary insulin pumps and the others had pumps programmed to stop supplying insulin for two hours when blood-sugar fell to a certain threshold.

Over three months, low-sugar episodes were reduced by about one-third in people using the pump with the shut-off feature. Importantly, these people had no cases of severely low blood sugar ? the most dangerous kind that require medical aid or help from another person. There were four cases in the group using the standard pump.

"As a first step, I think we should all be very excited that it works," an independent expert, Dr. Irl Hirsch of the University of Washington in Seattle, said of the programmable pump.

The next step is to test having it turn off sooner, before sugar falls so much, and to have it automatically supply insulin to prevent high blood sugar, too.

Dr. Anne Peters, a diabetes specialist at the University of Southern California, said the study "represents a major step forward" for an artificial pancreas.

One participant, Spears Mallis, 34, a manager for a cancer center in Gainesville, Ga., wishes these devices were available now. He typically gets low-sugar about 8 to 10 times a week, at least once a week while he's asleep.

"I would set an alarm in the middle of the night just to be sure I was OK. That will cause you to not get a good night of rest," he said.

His "smart pump" stopped giving insulin several times during the study when his sugar fell low, and he wasn't always aware of it. That's a well-known problem for people with Type 1 diabetes ? over time, "you become less and less sensitive to feeling the low blood sugars" and don't recognize symptoms in time to drink juice or do something else to raise sugar a bit, he said.

Besides Medtronic, Johnson & Johnson and several other research groups are working on artificial pancreas devices.

___

Online:

Diabetes info: http://diabetes.niddk.nih.gov/

___

Marilynn Marchione can be followed at http://twitter.com/MMarchioneAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/doctors-progress-toward-artificial-pancreas-150106873.html

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