Thursday, February 14, 2013

Google Maps with Street View now live on Nintendo's Wii U eShop

Google Maps with Street View now live on Nintendo's Wii U eShop

This morning's Nintendo Direct was all about the games, specifically those starring the likes of Luigi. But inbetween news of DLC updates, Nintendo's Bill Tritten made casual mention of Google Maps with Street View availability for North American Wii U owners. To recap, the service -- which is free-to-download right now on the eShop -- brings the GMaps you know and love to the widescreen and the GamePad, as well. What's still unknown, however, is whether or not Nintendo intends to eventually charge users for access to the app's Panorama View-like feature, much like the company plans to do in Japan later this summer.

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Source: Nintendo Direct

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/14/google-maps-with-street-view-now-live-nintendos-wii-u-eshop/

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Archos releases free version of Android Video Player, placates penny-pinching cinephiles

Archos Video Player Android app now has a free version, pennypinching movie lovers rejoice

While there's no dearth of video playing apps available on Android, French outfit Archos' $5 offering stands out as an especially feature-rich option. For those that shied away from the Archos Video Player just because of the outlay involved however, there's now a free version up for grabs. Supported by ads, it provides all the functionality of its premium cousin, including hardware-accelerated encoding, ability to play network content and online retrieval of movie information like posters and subtitles. Entertainment aficionados can snag the goods at the source link for the unarguable cost of zero, and likely spend the saved scratch on some high-definition bird-slinging action instead.

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Via: Android Central

Source: Google Play

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/14/archos-video-player-android-free/

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February 8, 2013 -- IN THE NEWS: An oil tax could be one of the least painful ways to trim the deficit

Friday, February 8, 2013
Washington Post&nbsp &nbsp(Browse all news)

By Brad Plumer

February 6, 2013

Like it or hate it, policymakers in Washington are still obsessed with the deficit. That?s why think tanks keep churning out clever plans to cut spending and raise taxes.

And here?s a new paper from the Council on Foreign Relations offering an interesting twist on the theme. Using economic modeling, Michael Levi and Citgroup?s Daniel Ahn suggest that a tax on oil consumption could be one of the least harmful ways to trim the budget deficit.

How do they figure? Levi and Ahn first assume that Congress will enact a big deficit-reduction package over the next 10 years that cuts spending by 3 percent of GDP by 2020 and raises corporate and income taxes by 1 percent of GDP by 2020. That may be unlikely in the real world, but it?s fairly similar to the much-discussed Simpson-Bowles proposal.

Next, the authors look at what would happen if Congress scrapped some of those tax hikes and spending cuts and instead replaced them with a tax on oil consumption. This would could involve simply raising existing taxes on gasoline, diesel fuel, and jet fuel. They assume the oil tax would be phased in over time and come to about $50 per barrel of crude oil in 2020, or an extra $1.20 per gallon of gasoline.

After running their economic model, Levi and Ahn found that using the oil tax to fend off some of the spending cuts and income tax hikes could be beneficial to the U.S. economy. In other words, a deficit package with an oil tax could be less harmful than a deficit package without one. Here?s the key chart:

In Variation 1, the gold line, the oil tax is used to restore part of the government spending cuts in the big deficit-reduction deal. In Variation 2, the blue line, the oil tax is used to restore part of the spending cuts and keep taxes lower. In Variation 3, the red line, the oil tax revenue is used to keep income and corporate tax rates at their current levels.

The end result: The U.S. economy performs better when there?s oil tax revenue to fend off spending cuts and tax hikes. GDP rises faster and unemployment falls further.

Why might this be? For one, Levi explained in a phone interview, a portion of the oil tax would fall on foreign countries, since the United States still imports about 40 percent of its crude. What?s more, oil in the United States is relatively lightly taxed. ?Raising taxes on something that?s under-taxed, like oil, rather than something that?s already heavily taxed, like income, can yield good results,? Levi said.

Of course, this is a rather simplistic scenario, and Levi and Ahn model a few other possibilities in their full paper (pdf). For instance, it?s quite possible that an oil tax would curb U.S. fuel consumption, which might in turn lower global oil prices. (Though that?s hardly certain; a lot would depend on how OPEC responded.) In that case, the U.S. economy could see a slightly bigger boost.

?

Meanwhile, there are distributional consequences to consider. An oil tax is likely to be quite regressive ? many poorer Americans spend a greater fraction of their income on gasoline. So Levi and Ahn looked at what would happen if half of the oil tax revenue was kicked back to consumers as lump-sum rebates, while the other half was used to reduce taxes and maintain spending levels. Even in that case, the economy performs better than it does under a standard deficit-reduction plan.

In theory, a tax on oil could have other benefits as well ? if it reduces domestic fuel consumption, that would make the U.S. economy less vulnerable to large swings in global oil prices. But those benefits aren?t factored in here.

?

Last year, a similar study from MIT looked at the effects of using a broader carbon tax to trim the deficit. That study found that carbon taxes only offered a slight advantage over other budget-cutting measures. But there?s an important difference here ? unlike the MIT study, Levi and Ahn?s paper doesn?t assume that the U.S. economy will be running at full employment anytime soon. And in that case, finding ways to blunt the impact of deficit reduction over the next 10 years could have a big effect on the course of the economy.

Source: http://globalchange.mit.edu/news/news-item.php?id=244

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Monday, February 11, 2013

Adobe VideoBite leads iOS Apps of the Week

Adobe's latest mobile software for editing video content kicks off this week?s best apps. Adobe VideoBite is a great app for quickly and easily editing video shot with iOS devices. Also, the legendary Mr. T returns in app form, a handy translator app for traveling to other countries, a social networking app that connects you with city locals, and an app for collaborating with co-workers.

Adobe?s iOS apps are known for being lightweight versions of its well-known content editing software for PC and Mac. VideoBite continues the trend of their easy-to-use touch-based apps that are great for flash editing. With VideoBite, you can favorite and mark video clips, and the app quickly stitches them together. VideoBite also cuts clips together from several videos, and you can share them across Facebook and Twitter.

Next time you?re traveling to a place where don?t grasp the language, you might want to take Travel Voice Translator along with you. The app is like having a pocket interpreter; you speak into the microphone of your device and tell the app which language you need the words translated to, and Travel Voice Translator does the work. You can get both text and voice output for a number of languages, making it easy to help you communicate in just about any place you travel.

Sendgine is great for collaborating with co-workers and friends, and expands beyond brainstorming to sending actual content between users. It?s a bit like a chat app, where you can see all the messages sent between collaborators on a project arranged on a single timeline, but the app also makes it easy to send images, documents, and PDFs. The app keeps everything in the context of the timeline, so you always know to what a piece of content relates and why it was sent.

If you haven?t heard, Mr. T is back! He?s got a Twitter account, a new YouTube show, and an official mobile app. It comes with a number of cool, funny features, starting with a photo booth that lets you add Mr. T?s signature Mohawk and beard. You can also ask Mr. T questions, magic 8-ball style, and get some fairly hilarious video responses. You can even check in on what?s going on with Mr. T?s Twitter feed. If you?re a fan of novelty apps, this is a pretty great one.

Visiting a new city for the first time? You?ll want to grab Sooligan, an app specifically designed to help you find the best stuff in a city, especially when you?ve never been there. Sooligan is a social network for asking questions of people who live in a specific city. Questions that can help you find the hidden gems, like the best places to eat or grab coffee, and the off-the-beaten-path activities that only locals know about. And you can also use the app to field questions for other users, steering them to places worth visiting in your own town.

Download the Appolicious Android app

Source: http://www.appolicious.com/tech/articles/13209-adobe-videobite-leads-ios-apps-of-the-week

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Saturday, February 9, 2013

microRNA Used to Identify Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Subtypes

Dr. Charles Shapiro. Photo: The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center

Columbus, OH (Scicasts) ? A new, large-scale study of triple-negative breast cancer shows that small molecules called microRNA can be used to define four subtypes of this aggressive malignancy.

The findings, by researchers at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center ? Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC ? James) working with collaborators in Italy, could lead to new screening methods, prognostic markers and perhaps new targeted treatments for this aggressive and often-fatal form of breast cancer.

?The treatment of women with triple-negative breast cancer is challenging because this malignancy can be very different genetically from one patient to another,? says co-senior investigator Dr. Charles Shapiro, director of Breast Medical Oncology and professor of internal medicine at the OSUCCC ? James.

?We believe these microRNA signatures define novel sub-sets of triple-negative breast cancer and offer new insights into the biology of the disease and better ways to treat these patients,? Shapiro says.

The microRNAs that compose the signatures are involved in regulating cell growth, proliferation and survival, and in cell movement and migration.

?These findings strongly suggest that microRNAs play an important role in triple-negative breast cancer and might be used to better identify the most effective treatment for a patient?s tumour,? says co-senior investigator and researcher Dr. Kay Huebner, professor of molecular virology, immunology and medical genetics at Ohio State.

?Several of the deregulated microRNAs we found in the cancer samples are involved in chemo-resistance or radio-resistance. MicroRNA profiles can help us to improve and personalize therapies for individual patients,? she says.

Triple-negative breast cancer accounts for about 15 percent of all breast cancers. It is characterized by cancer cells that lack oestrogen, progesterone and HER2 receptors. For this reason, these tumours do not respond to hormone therapies or HER2-targeted treatments.

MicroRNAs help regulate the kind and amount of proteins that cells make. They do this by binding with messenger RNA (mRNA), molecular copies of genes that are translated into proteins. When microRNA is bound to an mRNA, the messenger molecule cannot be translated into a protein. Instead, it is either temporarily stored or destroyed.

This study investigated associations between microRNA expression levels, mRNA expression levels and overall survival and distant-disease-free survival in women with triple-negative breast cancer.

Shapiro, Huebner and their colleagues evaluated 59 normal, 165 tumour and 54 metastatic matched tissue samples, obtained through The Stefanie Spielman Fund for Breast Cancer Research at the OSUCCC ? James.

The researchers ran a complete microRNA profile and a cancer-focused panel of genes for each sample. They then generated microRNA signatures represented by certain prognostic microRNAs that, when deregulated, indicate odds of survival.

?This was a large cohort of triple-negative breast cancer cases and a major analysis effort that we believe makes this work extremely valuable,? Huebner says.

To stratify the cancers, the researchers determined microRNA and mRNA expression profiles in tumour, adjacent-normal tissue and lymph-node metastatic tissue from 173 women with the triple-negative breast cancer.

?We identified microRNAs and mRNAs that uniquely represent primary and metastatic tumours, and that are specifically deregulated in that stage of the disease, says co-author Dr. Pierluigi Gasparini, a postdoctoral researcher in Huebner?s laboratory.

The results define microRNA expression signatures that characterize and contribute to the differences between primary and metastatic tumours.

?We now want to learn which of these deregulated microRNAs might represent early biomarkers for cancer or metastasis detection,? Gasparini says.

The study?s key technical findings include:

  • ?? ?The microRNA signatures correlated with prognosis and were correlated with changes in mRNA expression;
  • ?? ?Two microRNA signatures were predictive of overall survival and distant disease-free survival, respectively, in patients 50 years of age or younger;
  • ?? ?mRNA expression profiling resulted in clustering of triple-negative breast cancer into four molecular subclasses with different expression signatures.

?We believe these findings will be a reference point not only for our lab but also for many other research teams that might not have access to large patient populations, and hope that they will accelerate even more research on triple-negative breast cancer,? Huebner says.

The study is published in the journal PLoS ONE.

Source: http://scicasts.com/cancer/5394-microrna-used-to-identify-triple-negative-breast-cancer-subtypes

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New Yorkers can track snowplows online

This week isn't the first time New Yorkers have used the word "snowpocalypse." It emerged during a storm in 2010 that was remarkable not only for up to 30 inches of snowfall but also for the inexplicable absence of plows to move it. A staggering number of plows and salt spreaders ? 258 ? got stuck in the snow, and New Yorkers reported seeing crews sitting around, sleeping and even drinking.

In response, the city created in February 2012 a program called "PlowNYC," and this storm is its first big test. GPS systems are on 1,700 city vehicles, including about 3,000 plow trucks and salt spreaders. They transmit 15,000 data points per minute to a Web service where residents can enter their address to see when plows have gone by and when they are expected back. The maps are updated every half hour.

New Yorkers can also see how likely a plow is to come at all. The city designates four types of streets, from the most critical to ones that don't get plowed at all. [See also: Snowmageddon Alerts Hit NYC Cellphones ]

New York isn't the only city to GPS-track its snowplows. Chicago, for example, debuted a similar system in January 2012. And Calgary, in Canada, launched one in 2010, though it still hasn?t equipped all its trucks with GPS. Several counties around the U.S. also have plow-tracking programs, as does the state of New Jersey, according to the GPS-focused news site, Rocky Mountain Tracking.

Besides letting New Yorkers see where the trucks are, PlowNYC can show city officials where things are going wrong.

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Burgher Recreation Club v Saracens Sports Club 322/6 *

Sarsc 322/6 (92.0 ov, L Abeyratne 99*, MNM Aslam 1*, S Madanayake 1/47) - Stumps | Live Scorecard | ESPN Cricinfo

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Premier League Tournament, Group A: Burgher Recreation Club v Saracens Sports Club at Colombo (Burgher), Feb 8-10, 2013 Tweet

Source: http://www.freecricket.tv/2013/02/08/burgher-recreation-club-v-saracens-sports-club-3226/

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Friday, February 8, 2013

Side-Dominant Science: Are You Left- or Right-Sided?

Are you left- or right-sided? Your brain might work differently depending on which side of your body you use most. Image: George Resteck

Key concepts
Brain
Laterality
Handedness
Sidedness
Left/right dominance

Introduction
If you write with your right hand, you might also prefer to draw a picture, throw a ball or eat food with the same hand. But have you ever wondered if your right foot is also more dominant than your left foot? What about your right eye and ear?do you prefer to use them more than your left ones? In this activity you'll get to find out whether people have a sidedness?that is, whether they generally prefer to do most activities with one side of their body?and which side that is.

Background
Each person's brain is divided into two sides?the left and right hemispheres. In some cases, one hemisphere may be more active than the other during a certain activity. For example, when someone processes language, one hemisphere is usually more active than the other. Doing this or other activities, however, is not absolutely limited to using one hemisphere or the other, or even certain hemispheric parts. Different brain areas are important and work together for different activities, such as speech, hearing and sight. But if part of a hemisphere is damaged when a person is young, other parts of the brain can often take over doing whatever the damaged regions of the brain used to do.

What do the brain's hemispheres have to do with sidedness? When someone is processing language, one hemisphere is usually working harder than the other. There is also some correlation between the side(s) we use in our brain and the side we use on our body. This preference to use one side of the body over the other is known as sidedness, laterality or left/right dominance.

Materials
? Paper
? Pen or pencil
? A coin
? Paper towel tube or toilet paper tube
? A seashell or phone
? At least five volunteers

Preparation
? Have all of the materials ready so that you will be able to quickly test each volunteer.
? Prepare a small data table on a piece of paper to record your results. Going down the left side of the paper, write: "Hand," "Foot," "Eye" and "Ear." Going across the top of the paper, write your volunteers' names.

Procedure
? Ask your first volunteer to write their name on a piece of paper. Which hand do they write their name with? Record the result (writing either "Right" or "Left") in your data table in the row labeled "Hand," in the column under the volunteer's name.
? Place a coin on the floor directly in front of your first volunteer. Ask them to step onto the coin. Which foot is used to step on the coin? Record the result in your data table in the "Foot" row, under the volunteer's name.
? Give your first volunteer a paper towel tube or toilet paper tube and ask them to look at a distant object through it. Which eye do they use to look through the tube? Record the result in your data table in the "Eye" row, under the volunteer's name.
? Give your first volunteer a seashell or phone and ask them to listen to it. Which ear do they put the shell or phone up to? Record the result in your data table in the "Ear" column, under the volunteer's name.
? Repeat this process with at least four other volunteers. Be sure to record the results under the new volunteer's name each time.
? Are more of your volunteers right-handed or left-handed? What about right-footed versus left-footed, right-eyed versus left-eyed and right-eared versus left-eared? What side is the most common overall?
? How many people that are right-handed are also right-footed? (How about for lefties?) What about for the other possible combinations? Do you see a correlation?
? Extra: In this activity you only used one test to check for dominance in your volunteer's hands, feet, eyes and ears. Using additional tests would help you check and confirm your results. Can you think of other ways to test for sidedness using objects from around your home? Using other tests, are the results the same as the ones you got doing the original activity?
? Extra: If you collect additional data on your volunteers and test more volunteers, you can check your results and also test whether sidedness is linked to another factor. Does the trend in your results hold as you test more volunteers? Do you see a correlation between sidedness and other factors, like age, gender or being genetically related?
? Extra: Sometimes sidedness can run in families. Try to find volunteers from different families and then group your results by family. Do different families have similar or different percentages?


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=ea837f15a099286d7fb3254bbb374a2a

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Woe Is . . . Them? (Powerlineblog)

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20 new jobs for environmental firm SLR Consulting - Business News ...

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.nebusiness.co.uk/business-news/latest-business-news/2013/02/07/20-new-jobs-for-environmental-firm-slr-consulting-51140-32761395/

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Radical reforms might not save Europe's fish stocks

There certainly aren't plenty more fish in Europe's sea. Its stocks have crashed, and imports now account for more than half the fish consumed in the European Union. Now, the EU hopes that radical reforms to its system of fishing quotas will restore fisheries by 2020. The plan is a big step forward, but experts are concerned that politicians could yet ignore scientific recommendations in implementing it.

The Common Fisheries Policy, set up in 1970, governs the European fishing industry, with annual fishing quotas for each EU member state. These are set by a gathering of ministers called the Council of the European Union.

"Almost everyone agrees it has been a complete failure," says Markus Knigge, a Belgium-based adviser to the Pew Charitable Trusts' European Marine Programme. Despite the quotas, overfishing has continued for decades, fish populations have dwindled and the industry is dependent on subsidies. "We are importing 60 per cent of our fish consumption in the EU," says Knigge.

The problem is that the Council tends to ignore scientific evidence on the state of the fisheries and then sets quotas too generously, says Callum Roberts of the University of York, UK. He has shown that, between 1987 and 2011, European fishing quotas were on average a third higher than scientific recommendations (Marine Pollution Bulletin, doi.org/bwrrgc).

The proposed reforms aim to make European fishing sustainable by 2015, and to restore stocks by 2020. That will require limiting catches to sustainable levels, allowing the fish to maintain their populations. "That is a complete paradigm shift," says Knigge.

Not watertight

But Roberts says the system will not be watertight. The maximum sustainable yields will not be written into law, so the Council will still be able to set quotas too high. "There is no commitment on ministers to binding targets."

Instead the annual quotas will be replaced by longer-term plans spanning several years, making it harder for ministers to push quotas up. "That's good if you stick to the plan," says Roberts. But at December's meeting, it emerged that North Sea cod was not recovering as planned. That should have meant a 20 per cent cut in the quota ? but it never happened. "Instead the ministers abandoned the recovery plan ."

Restoring fish stocks is in everyone's interest. Falling yields have made fishing unprofitable: in 2010 Roberts found that the commercial productivity of UK fisheries fell 94 per cent between 1889 and 2007 (Nature Communications, doi.org/dt8nts).

Last year the New Economics Foundation, a think tank based in London, claimed that paying fishermen not to do any fishing for 10 years would pay for itself in higher yields within five years once fishing had resumed.

It's not just about fish as a food source. Overfishing damages marine ecosystems that are beneficial to humanity, says Roberts. The sea is losing its ability to process human waste, and it may also struggle to take up carbon dioxide, a major greenhouse gas.

Overfishing also makes the ocean more prone to toxic algal blooms, jellyfish blooms and dead zones.

"The functionality of the marine ecosystem is at stake," Roberts says. "That in turn will impact on human welfare."

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

When Family Falls Apart - James Dobson on "Fatherless"

Dr James Dobson has been one of the most recognized and influential evangelical Christian American leaders for over three decades. With a doctorate in child development from USC, he developed extremely popular parenting books and videos, and founded?Focus on the Family?in 1977. Through his organizational leadership, through his writings and radio broadcasts, and through his political influence and counsel to American Presidents, Dr. Dobson has served as a strong and consistent voice on behalf of the unborn, children, marriage, and the traditional family.

His new book,?Fatherless, coauthored with Kurt Bruner, represents his first foray into fiction. Based on current projections and demographic trends, it tells the story of what happens to American society three decades hence when the old outnumber the young on whom they depend, when fatherlessness is epidemic, and when the traditional family structure is all but a memory. Promoted as dystopian fiction similar to 1984 or The Hunger Games, it tells the story of several characters, especially reporter Julia Davidson, who are striving to make their way in an increasingly dangerous society where clashing agendas threaten to tear the nation apart. What happens to a culture that?s forgotten what healthy family looks like?

I?m grateful to Dr. Dobson for this interview:

Lewis and Chesterton, among many others, sought to communicate Christian truths simultaneously through non-fiction and fiction works. To this point, I believe you?ve always written nonfiction works. What inspired you to write a piece of fiction? Does fiction give you an opportunity to flesh things out in a different way than you could otherwise??

I?ve always loved reading fiction, but this is my first attempt to write it and I?ve really enjoyed the process. Sometimes a compelling story can shape the imagination better than non-fiction. Abraham Lincoln said a novel called Uncle Tom?s Cabin started the Civil War. We couldn?t be more excited about the potential of this new trilogy to embody themes on which I have been writing, speaking and broadcasting for decades.

Your critics often allege that you?re too political, or have moved Christian conservatives into an overly partisan position. What about this book? Is it a political piece, a partisan cannon-blast in the culture wars? Or does it reach to something deeper?

Who would have imagined that saying marriage is between a man and a woman or that human life is sacred would get you labeled political? Part of the problem is that people wrongly equate defending righteousness in the public square with partisan politics. Fatherless is not a culture war book. It is dystopian fiction similar to Brave New World or The Hunger Games. We wanted to create a gripping story set three decades in the future when our looming demographic crisis comes to fruition. Dramatically falling fertility over the past few generations brings with it breathtaking implications for the next. What happens when the old and feeble outnumber the young and healthy? What happens when the protective, nurturing presence of a father is the exception rather than the norm? Such questions motivated this series.

Christians like ourselves who engage in the public square debate on behalf of the unborn and on behalf of the traditional family structure often say that the family is the fundamental building block of society, and warn that the disintegration of the family precedes the disintegration of society. But it sounds very abstract. Is this book an attempt to flesh out what the breakdown of the family looks like, and what consequences it might have upon our society?

That is correct. These novels don?t predict the future, they simply project the trajectory of current demographic trends. The story is set in the year 2042 when the economic pyramid flips, with too few young bearing the burden of a rapidly aging population. These trends are already creating headlines around the globe. Japan, for example, has the oldest average citizen on the planet. Last year they sold more adult diapers than baby diapers ? a trend coming fast to every developed nation in the world, including the United States. A few weeks ago the finance minister of the newly elected government said the elderly need to ?hurry up and die? because they can?t sustain the social safety net.

Bleak? You bet. Where we?re headed? The best demographers tell us it is inevitable since we can?t go back in time and make more children.

And yet presumably you?re also hoping to tell a rollicking good story. How did you make sure that the characters and the story would be compelling?

My co-author, Kurt Bruner, has extensive experience with storytelling. He led the teams at Focus on the Family creating various dramatic productions including Adventures in Odyssey and such Radio Theatre classics as Les Miserables and the entire Chronicles of Narnia series. That?s part of why I found our collaboration so enjoyable. We?ve been gratified by the feedback from readers to date who say the story grabs them from page one. One reader told us he started reading Fatherless and decided to skip watching the Super Bowl because he couldn?t stop!

Whom are you hoping to reach with this book? How are you hoping it impacts the world?

We hope to remind readers that marriage and parenthood are honorable pursuits and that the natural family retains a resilient beauty and importance nothing can replace. We need to support those willing to make the sacrifices required to raise up a new generation of kids rather than making it more difficult for them to do so. We need to thank women who choose to bear and nurture children and honor men who model the heroic self-sacrifice of loving fatherhood. We need to do what once came naturally and remember what everyone understood: that the family is vital to the health and stability of the future. In short, we need to move from a fatherless world to a world filled with ?bright spots? called mom, dad, sister, brother, grandma and grandpa!

Can you give us a glimpse of what?s coming in later installments?

The second book, Childless, will release later this year. The third, Godless, comes out in early 2014. Each storyline builds on the previous theme with an entertaining mix of political intrigue, spiritual warfare, futuristic speculation and educated conjecture about the kind of world our children will face. Kurt Bruner and I believe a happy home is the highest expression of God?s image on earth. There are forces that want to destroy that image, not all of them visible to human eyes. But the good news, as these novels show, is that the natural family retains a resilient beauty the most ardent forces of hell cannot destroy.

*

Dr James Dobson is?the Founder and President of Family Talk, a nonprofit organization that produces his radio program, ?Family Talk with Dr. James Dobson.? He is the author of more than 30 books dedicated to the preservation of the family. He has been active in governmental affairs and has advised three U.S. presidents on family matters. Dr. Dobson is married to Shirley and they have two grown children, Danae and Ryan, and two grandchildren. The Dobsons reside in Colorado Springs, CO. You can find Fatherless at Amazon.

Source: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/philosophicalfragments/2013/02/06/when-family-falls-apart-james-dobson-on-fatherless/

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Microsoft and Symantec Just Busted a Major Cyber Crime Ring

It sounds like the plot of a movie: two major software corporations join together to shut down an evil global cyber crime operation and engage in wacky hijinks along the way. While the latter can be neither confirmed nor denied, according to an exclusive report by Reuters, Microsoft and Symantec did shut down servers that had been controlling hundreds of thousands of PCs without their users being any the wiser. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/TlrZrwbJUEI/microsoft-and-symantec-joined-forces-to-bust-a-major-cyber-crime-ring

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