2013年1月30日星期三

Holder of Navion type certificate targets new aircraft production

South St Paul, Minn.-based Sierra Hotel Aero Inc., holder of the type certificate for the Navion,Professionals with the job title tooling are on LinkedIn. says it is two to three years away from bringing the aircraft back into production.

The type certificate came up for auction about 10 years ago, said Chris Gardner, owner of Sierra Hotel Aero. “At the time, we had been developing an STC to put a baggage door on the aircraft, since the original didn’t have one,” he said.

Gardner said he has always loved the design of the Navion, which made him interested in the type certificate. “My father originally had one in early 1960s, then got another one in the early 1990s, and I helped him work on the aircraft,Product information for Avery Dennison customkeychain products.” he recalled. “I had experience with the P-51 (Mustang), and was interested in how the airplanes were similar in design.

The Navion was originally built in the late 1940s by North American Aviation, the manufacturer that also built the P-51. It was built to target what was seen as a growing post-war civilian market, but 83 were ordered by the Army Air Force. Ryan Aeronautical Company bought the Navion’s type certificate in 1948. Sierra Hotel Aero bought the certificate from Navion Aircraft Co.This frameless rectangle features a silk screened fused glass replica in a rtls tile and floral motif. of Bowling Green, Ohio, said Gardner.

“I loved the way it looked and how it flew. And at that time, the type certificate happened to come up while I was getting things rolling to do structural work and more modifications on the aircraft,” Gardner said.

Since receiving the type certificate, Sierra Hotel Aero has upgraded the fuel system, said Gardner. “The FAA issued an airworthiness directive to replace the faulty fuel selectors, which were worn out,” he said. “We immediately got a valve design approved that was better than the original.”

Sierra Hotel Aero has also upgraded the electrical system and is working on upgrades to the powerplant, taking the engine from 185 horsepower to 310 hp,Do you know any polishedtiles wholesale supplier? said Gardner. “We’re also working on an STC for replacement propellers,” he said.Features useful information about ventilationsystem tiles. “The original propellers are either obsolete or very expensive to acquire. This will give owners more options to have newer equipment.”

Navion owners can receive everything from minor maintenance to complete factory rebuilds at Sierra Hotel Aero, said Gardner. “We utilize the original factory fixtures and tooling, which was part of the purchase of the type certificate,” he said.

“Everything we’ve done with the existing fleet is a test plan that gives us the basis to put out a new model airplane. We hold a Parts Manufacturer Approval, and can build that into a production certificate, which will lead to newer, more modern aircraft,” said Gardner. “We can take the knowledge gleaned from the original fleet and design a new model as if we’ve been the producer all along.”

Gardner estimates that around 1,200 Navions are still flying worldwide. “More people are buying them and fixing them up,” he said. “We’ve heard about Navions recently in Australia, Switzerland, and Uruguay.

Navion owners are devoted to their aircraft because of the way it flies and handles, said Gardner. “Owners also love the way it looks and its warbird heritage and it’s a very easy aircraft to fly,” he said. “It’s very versatile and a workhorse.”

As we mull the Eagles of the present and the future and gauge just how much re-tooling this roster needs, Trent Cole's name as to be one of the most pressing at the top of the list. He isn't just any ordinary player on this defense. Cole has been a linchpin of production for years since the Eagles smartly used a fifth-round draft pick on him and then developed him from a 235-pound 'tweener to a 270-pound rock of a man at right defensive end.

Cole's rep, well earned, is one of a warrior on the football field who exhausts every ounce of energy and effort on every play. He is in the mold of former Eagle Hugh Douglas, a fighter on every play who finds a way to beat his man -- often, in fact, two men -- on the path to the quarterback.

Defensive ends, though, are a tricky breed to project. We've seen it many times as the Eagles have used high draft picks through the decades on defensive ends, only to see those players achieve varying degrees of success. Cole is one who made it in the NFL and stayed at a high level and now, as his ninth season waits in the distance, is a huge, very important question mark that needs to be answered the right way.

What if, the thinking goes from this perspective, the Eagles want to move to a 3-4 defense from what they've been running, the 4-3 front? Instead of putting his hand on the ground and emerging from the snap of the ball from a three-point stance, Cole would be asked to line up in space outside the tackle box as a rush linebacker.

Balta Group showcases new collections at Domotex 2013

Balta's laminate division Balterio was present in Hall 9, Booth C17 and showcased new decors with the introduction of Integro, chlorine free design floors. Next to the area Rug Division, Balta Rugs in hall 6 Booth A30, the Residential Broadloom Division of the company, Balta Broadloom, ITC and Domo Floorcoverings displayed its products. The Contract Division modulyss showcased its exclusive assortment of carpet tiles in the same booth.

Domo Floorcoverings presented a whole range of innovations in different segments. Several new carpets were introduced to join Domo Floorcoverings’ polyamide and polypropylene portfolio for 2013.Professionals with the job title tooling are on LinkedIn. The PP twist Clyde design from Dormo will be renewed and extended as Clyde Plus,One of the world's oldest art forms oilpaintingreproduction offer endless possibilities for both modern and classic design. with a selection of trendy stripes. Few additions were introduced to the Twist family such as Saffron Saxony, Gleneagles, Redwood Twist and Moonstruck.

The two new product ranges Carezza and Terra in the segment of polyamide Saxony carpets offer absolute softness. The polyamide loop pile segment is updated with the new products Perla and New Total. This range uses a 2-ply yarn which mixes tight and loose loops into a subtle textured appearance in new contemporary colours.

The polyamide frisé family added various segments including Celeste, Boutique and Chronos, all well designed and attractive floorings. Next to wall-to-wall carpets Domo Floorcoverings also presents a range of residential carpet tiles whose colours perfectly match. Carpet tiles are available in different colours, textures and patterns. There are unlimited creative design possibilities as the tiles can not only be used independently, but also in combination with each other to give the floor an extra dimension and an exclusive look.

Timeless and Utopia are two new additions from Balta Broadloom’s newest soft and shiny SENSIT yarns. These new generation SENSIT polypropylene yarns combine practicality and a luxurious comfort and feel. These ranges have a silky luster and soft refined colours.We open source luggagetag system that was developed with the goal of providing at least room-level accuracy.

Prisma is an affordable heather twist in vibrant colours, made from Balta’s StainSafe bleach cleanable yarn.We offer a wide variety of high-quality standard howotractor and controllers. Marrakesh Twist combines the look and feel of wool and Stainsafe polypropylene. It is made with a traditional berber spun yarn in 100% StainSafe PP. Grand Slam is a new range StainSafe Saxony with a pile weight of almost 3.000 grams per square metre. A Dozen Stripes is a package of three striped carpet collections with four colours. This carpet is suitable for children’s rooms and for use on stairs.

With the official launch of two new brands, AMAIZE and arc edition, ITC has expanded its large offering of innovative flooring products for contract and domestic environments. A new collection was introduced in the show named as the AMAIZE collection. It comprises a selection of five ecological carpets made from a new fibre containing 37% renewable corn sugar. The AMAIZE floors provide built-in stain protection, a natural feature of the yarn that will never wear off or wash away.

Arc Edition was introduced as a new commercial brand for Balta’s Broadloom Division. An initiative of Balta’s Broadloom Division, the arc edition collection comprises an array of high-performance class 32 and 33 heavy-duty carpet styles to provide choice for a host of locations spanning the leisure, hospitality and office sectors. Divided into two ranges, the standard in-stock SERVICE and bespoke TAILOR MADE (incl. Chromojet technology), arc edition provides unlimited solutions for specifiers, designers and contractors.

For Domotex Hannover 2013, Balta Rugs laid special attention to the Modern frisé product group, in both divisions Line A & Berclon. With a broad diversity of qualities, colours and designs this product group offers a wide range of qualities from entry-level, elegantly hand carved new Picasso, to high-end frisé.

Next to these novelties Balta Rugs has re-enforced some of its existing collections. These re-enforcements - such as innovative yarns,Researchers at the Korean Advanced Institute of Science and Technology have developed an indoortracking. use of structure, trendy designs and colours - can be discovered in the success products Prisma, Victoria, Grace, Mya, Essenza, Sapphire, Crystal and Opale Cosy. Balterio disclosed new decors in several ranges, and celebrated the commercial introduction of Integro, chlorine free design floors.

TRAFFIC is a high traffic laminate floor and is designed for intensively used areas where the floor is subject to heavy traffic. It is also anti-static. This high-traffic laminate floor is suitable for the project market and for shops, offices and restaurants. Balterio offers a lifetime guarantee* on its Traffic floorings. The Soft Touch Mat structure gives the impression of authentic wood and provides a soft, mat effect that has a silky feel to it. The 760 Kalahari Oak decor, however, is True-to-Nature. Planks from the Traffic range measure 1261 x 189 mm, are 8 mm thick and do not have a V-groove. Traffic will be available in eight separate designs as from 1 February 2013.

Sporting five new, contemporary decors (Oslo oak, Portobello oak, Washed pine, Barista elm and Farm oak), Authentic Styleplus represents renovation and actualization. Authentic Styleplus is designed to be synonymous with standard, no-frills laminate. It is a suitable living room floor, bringing warmth and an alluring atmosphere to interiors. The new Authentic Styleplus decors will be available on 1 February 2013.

With its two new decors, Wild Pine and Suede Oak, Tradition Sapphire returns to the key product advantage of this range: a four-sided, irregular V-groove – a Balterio exclusive feature – on a rustic decor. This rough plank floor with its randomly fabricated V-grooves re-introduces that bygone nostalgia into home. The two new decors in Tradition Sapphire will be available as from 1 February 2013.

Integro is the new chlorine-free design floor that caresses the senses. Introduced to the world at the 2011 Domotex show, Integro has a sensational feel, provides excellent walking noise reduction, can be recycled and is water tight on top. Integro also offers life long, sustainable quality.

modulyss designs and manufacturers carpet tiles for the international contract market. The production process enables them to deliver carpet tiles that stretch the boundaries of performance and design to deliver products that stand out from the crowd. Geared towards architects and designers seeking a high-quality and trend defining floor space, modulyss carpet tiles are available in a huge array of colours, structures and patterns.

Next to several new products, modulyss has brought ‘hot couture’ at Domotex with the Alternative100 carpet tile collection. It was a perfect complement to the Cambridge collection where the structure of Alternative100 added a fancy flair to each floor. This ecological loop pile tip sheared carpet tile – known for its stylish luxurious look – is made from 100% recycled nylon yarn.

2013年1月29日星期二

The High Stakes of Native Resistance

The blossoming of the Idle No More movement signals the return of native resistance to the political and social landscape of Canada and Quebec. With its origins in Saskatchewan in October 2012, this mass movement has taken on the federal government and more specifically the adoption of Bill C-45. Its origins lay not in the work of established organizations such as The Assembly of First Nations (although the AFN fully supports the initiative), but in a grassroots mobilization that has arisen in several parts of the country. This process echoes other recent citizen mobilizations such as the student carrés rouges in Quebec and the worldwide Occupy movement.

Bill C-45 is perceived by native people as an attempt to further weaken their already limited powers to resist the invasion of their lands and the continuing exploitation of their natural resources. In the eyes of these communities, this adds to a long list of initiatives and legislation put forward to undermine their autonomy.

In neo-conservative circles, the existence of First Nations peoples is seen as an anachronism, best relegated to the past. Their future, if indeed they do have one, lies in assimilation into Canadian society.

Even though this attempt at social erasure began prior to the election of the present government, the process of destruction of native culture and identity has intensified under the Harper government.

However, it would be an error to believe that this attack is driven solely by neo-conservative ideology. The present strategy of the Conservative government, one also shared by the economic elite, sees the occupation of the northern and western stretches of Canada as a key piece of a thoroughgoing re-tooling and refashioning of the Canadian economy, in which Canada,Researchers at the Korean Advanced Institute of Science and Technology have developed an indoortracking.Austrian hospital launches drycabinet solution to improve staff safety. in the words of the Prime Minister, must become an “energy superpower.”

From this perspective one thing is clear – the native populations are in the way. Given this, it also means that it makes little sense to work toward resolving the horrendous health, housing, employment and education problems of Attawapiskat and elsewhere.

A brief look at the past is necessary to better understand the present crisis. At the beginning of the 16th century, the French colonists came into contact and conflict with native communities. These encounters provoked a long history of resistance by native peoples on both shores of the St-Lawrence. More through necessity than through choice, France was forced to come to an agreement,You Can Find Comprehensive and in-Depth Original buymosaic Descriptions. the Great Montreal Peace of 1701,Creative glass tile and plasticmoulds for your distinctive kitchen and bath. to share the territory. This, in turn, led to the somewhat surprising Franco-Native alliance which then jointly resisted the British imperial forces.

But during the 18th century,All realtimelocationsystem comes with 5 Years Local Agent Warranty ! the British forces prevailed and the process of colonization continued apace.

This economy was built upon the pillage of natural resources and the subjugation of the native and French-Canadian populations. Then, in 1837, came the revolt of the Patriotes in Quebec. This uprising, with republican impulses, demanded democratic reform and insisted that the native population have the same rights as all. But the British forces were too powerful and these promising efforts were defeated. The colonial power then proceeded to attempt to extend and consolidate its control over the western frontier, an area occupied by several important native communities, including the Métis of Saskatchewan and Manitoba. This resistance also suffered a bloody defeat.

In 1867, Canada emerged as a semi-independent state. The Anglo-Canadian elite, learning their lessons well from the Empire, adopted the imperial tactic of divide and rule. The subjugated peoples were in disarray and their elites co-opted into the colonial apparatus. The native populations were herded onto reserves after signing treaties under unfavourable conditions which provided few benefits.

Following the Second World War, the Canadian variant of capitalism aligned itself with a new empire – the American one this time, a growing colossus desperate for resources. This led to a series of megaprojects in the hydro-electric and oil sectors in the 1950s and 60s. At the same time, the Canadian state, under the rubric of ‘modernization,’ moved to further reduce the autonomy of native communities, all the while refusing to address the colonial relationship imposed upon native peoples.

In the 1970s, the federal state was challenged by the national and political movements in Quebec. The Parti Québécois wanted to build a Quebec nation, within the context of North American capitalism, but with local control of natural resources.

From the Quebec side, the relations with natives remained ambiguous. Both had aspirations to nationhood but the lines were never clearly drawn as to the question of the division of territory. However, concessions were forced on all sides as the federalist forces in Ottawa had to be faced.

The native populations saw an opening and attempted to mobilize. And it was the Cree in Quebec who succeeded in opening a serious breach. They managed, in negotiating the James Bay Agreement, to obtain certain new powers, as well as financial resources, in exchange for allowing Quebec to develop important hydro-electric projects on their territory. This turn of events sparked native resistance in the rest of Canada who looked to follow the Cree example and gain similar victories. But it was a no go in the West and in Ontario. Negotiations dragged on interminably and gains were minimal.

Following the defeat of the indépendantist project in Quebec in the 1990s, new conflicts surfaced. The Oka Crisis is the start of a cycle of resistance in several native communities close to urban areas. Mass actions, such as the blockading of highways, spread throughout Ontario, Northern Quebec and elsewhere. At the same time, the development of natural resources became an imperative for Canadian capital, more and more in synch with its American counterparts. Native groups and the Assembly of First Nations were pushed into a corner, leading to their opposition to the constitutional reform of Meech Lake from which they were excluded.

Finally in 2006, Stephen Harper undertook to recast the Canadian state and put in place a no-holds barred capitalism wrapped in religious rhetoric and social conservatism.

The First Nations have no place in this neo-conservative world. Territorial claims are off the table and the administrative framework for dealing with these communities had to be dismantled. To justify this abrupt and drastic change of course, the government, with the help of a compliant media, mounted a major campaign of denigration and defamation. However, the native people didn't back down. A striking example of this resistance was the setting up of roadblocks by the Atikamekw Nation to deny access to companies seeking to exploit forest resources on their land.

2013年1月24日星期四

You Win Again episode review

If you watched, you don’t need me to tell you how great Nashville was last night.Make your house a home with Border and luggagetag Tiles. “You Win Again” was packed with drama, with texture, tension, and the finest acting we’ve seen so far. [Especially Hayden Panettiere, who brought her A+ game and impressed me quite a bit last night.

We begin with Rayna and Juliette closing a show in Dallas with “Wrong Song,” which has charted at the number one spot and instantaneously reinvigorated both careers, it seems. There’s renewed public interest, the tour is selling well, and Edgehill is throwing them both a party to celebrate the success of their co-write. Rayna and Liam have great stage chemistry—not unlike the chemistry she shared with Deacon—though they’re putting baby in the corner as Juliette fades into the background. And though the song was a co-write, it does seem that it’s Rayna who is benefitting the most, and getting the most notoriety for it. In fact, the second she steps off stage in Dallas, she’s met by Calista, president of Countless, a rival record label. They agree to meet sometime soon, as Rayna’s about to hop on Juliette’s plane—that Rayna does not have her own is a point of friction, and indicative of previous and present label priorities—and head back to Nashville for the party this weekend.

Then there’s this strange, brief moment between Liam and Rayna in the wings. Liam says that Calista wants Rayna, wants to sign her and pull her from Edgehill. Some small talk is made about how great the show was. And then there’s this second of tension wherein Rayna, like Pavlov’s dog except with lead guitarists, leans in. Who knows what she’s leaning in toward: a kiss? toward intimacy? toward chaos? We’ll never know, as Rayna’s manager interrupts before they’re close enough to have to make that choice. It’s a more telling moment for Rayna than it is for Liam, who doesn’t seem to have much skin in the game. But there are echoes of Deacon here, echoes that back home, are resonating with Deacon, too.

He’s officially out of the Revel Kings—that was quick!—and back home in his sized-to-scale rancher, surrounded by take-out containers and Martin guitars. He’s having a hard go of it already, and then he cracks the spine of the latest music rag and sees a full page spread, the headline of which reads: The Axe Falls Hard on Guitarman Deacon Claybourne. It’s the article Carmen wrote while following the band on tour, and we gather it doesn’t paint Deacon with pretty colors.Wholesale various Glass Mosaic Tiles from handsfreeaccess Tiles Suppliers. Not to mention that the reason he left the band—the lead singer mauling his niece—goes unheard.

Charles Esten really impressed me in this episode. Not that he’s been phoning it in so far, because I’ve always enjoyed his character and his delivery, but this episode gives him the best material to work with so far in the series. The screaming match he has on the phone with Carmen, a poignant conversation he was with Juliette, and, later, a blow-out with Rayna: they all give Esten some wonderful opportunities here. We see both a tougher and a softer side of Deacon, both of which endeared me more than his mellow, go-with-the-flow attitude in the first few episodes.Our aim is to supply indoortracking which will best perform to the customer's individual requirements. Considering that the unresolved business between Rayna and Deacon—twenty years of it, in fact—is the foundation of so much of the show’s drama, all roads leading back to it, it’s good to see that thread be focused on with more intensity in this episode.

In a courtroom across town, Juliette waits with her mother and a lawyer that looks like a young Ed Koch. Truthfully, I don’t remember whether or not we were ever clued into what her mother’s charges were, but we know it’s because she was three sheets to the wind, and that’s all that really matters. Deacon, despite the fact that he’s falling apart over that article, comes by to offer testimony as promised, though both he and the lawyer agree that it’d be best if Juliette did it herself. She knows her mother best, and she’s the most affected by her addiction. If she could voice confidence and faith in her mother, the judge might demand nothing more than that she complete her rehabilitation program.

Juliette agrees, begrudgingly, but when it comes time for her to speak, she goes quiet, has little to say, sounds like a translated Hallmark card. No affection, no waterworks. And, surprise surprise, it doesn’t fly with the judge, who grants only a postponement. We can tell that Juliette feels a bit guilty, but this is a young girl who, just last week, had to sign on the dotted line of an annulment that made her out to be a fraud. And that’s on public record. Maybe she doesn’t want to do that twice.

As a consolation prize, Deacon says he’ll take Juliette’s mother as his +1 to the Edgehill party. Juliette agrees, and again, begrudgingly.

In the land of Avery-Scarlett-Gunnar—which is, across the board, on everything I read about Nashville, everyone’s least favorite thing—there are only minor developments, and they resonated with the A-story, save Avery’s, rather nicely again this week. Scarlett runs into Avery’s old bandmates at one of Avery’s shows they’ve both snuck into briefly for gawking purposes. They reminisce about the impromptu show they played a few weeks back, and it is decided that Scarlett will ask Gunnar if he’d be interested in combining forces and creating a band. In theory, this sounds promising. And despite Gunnar’s initial protests, by the episode’s end everyone is rehearsing one of the catchier songs we’ve heard on the show so far. I’m very interested in the possibilities. Will the band open for Rayna someday? Will being with Avery’s ex-bandmates and, eventually, his ex-girlfriend cause Gunnar to have an identity crisis wherein he reads nothing but Kierkegaard and cries about his fugitive brother? This remains to be seen.

The centerpiece of the episode is, per usual, the party. This is a clever device Nashville has pulled off more than once. It gets more characters in the same room than we’d usually expect to see, there’s music and stage time for our characters, and it’s also a central hub from which the show spiderwebs its plotlines. We’ve seen so many: Watty White’s celebration at the Grand Ole Opry in the pilot, fundraisers for Teddy’s campaign, Edgehill’s anniversary party at the Ryman, and now tonight’s party, which gets a bunch of people in the same room, including some real-life country stars playing themselves, but whose names and faces were lost on me. [I’m mostly into Loretta Lynn, Patsy Cline, Tammy Wynette. I don’t know who Big or Rich is, and couldn’t pick a Rascal Flatt out of a three-man lineup.

One of the guests at the party is of course Marshall Evans, the head of the label, who exposes Liam as a liar in two sentences or less. That impromptu deal from Calista? Liam does have skin in that game, by which I mean that there’s two contracts at stake: one for Rayna, and one for Liam. Marshall Evans isn’t wrong to call it “double-dipping.” And just like that, the partnership is dissolved. Rayna doesn’t suffer fools, and she doesn’t like anything going on behind her back. Goodbye, Liam. We hardly knew you.

After the party, back at the James mansion, Rayna is finally ready to talk to Teddy. It goes well enough, both of them acknowledging the troubled roads that led them to one another, that they love one another, that there have been transgressions. This is a marriage that’s worth saving, if only for their daughters.All our rtls are vacuum formed using food safe plastic. Teddy says they keep making the wrong choice for the right reasons. A linguistic mask? Maybe.Our team of consultants are skilled in project management and delivery of large scale moldmaker projects. But it makes sense here.

A similar confrontation is happening across town, as Juliette breaks into Deacon’s to find that he’s smashed a guitar, a lamp, some furniture, but isn’t smashed himself. [A smart choice. We don’t need to see him fall off the wagon, not now anyway.

Coaches linked by blood

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Until last season, when they faced each other across a football field for the first time, John Harbaugh had never rooted against his little brother, Jim.

Except for the one time they were on different American Legion baseball teams in high school — and John wants it known that his team won, 1-0 — the brothers were always on the same side, whether it was on their high-school football team or on the ice rink they made in the backyard of their childhood home.

On Feb. 3, the brothers, separated by just 15 months but alike in so many ways, will be on different sides of the country’s biggest sporting event when the Balti-more Ravens, the team John has coached for five seasons, play the San Francisco 49ers, the team Jim has coached for two, in the Super Bowl.

The Harbaughs are the first brothers to be head coaches in the NFL. For two weeks at least, the Harbaughs will supplant the Mannings as the first family of football, the title game serving as the next installment of a sibling rivalry that used to include competitions to see who could throw a football over a towering tree and fights over which brother was scheduled to mow the big backyard lawn at their parents’ home in Ann Arbor,Do you know any chinamosaic wholesale supplier? Mich.

Jim Harbaugh said that playing his brother in the Super Bowl is “a blessing and a curse.” The blessing is that he’s proud of his brother and has a fondness for the Ravens organization, for whom he played briefly near the end of his career.

“The curse part would be that the talk of the two brothers playing in the Super Bowl and what that takes away from the players that are in the game,” he said.

Added John: “We’re not that interesting. There is nothing more to learn. It’s just like any other family. We get it, it’s really cool and it’s exciting and all that. It’s really about the players.”

That the brothers have reached the pinnacle of their careers at exactly the same moment seems fitting,Professionals with the job title solarpanel are on LinkedIn. because their lives have wound around each other, fierce competition and football since they were children.

Among many stops in his long coaching career, Jack Harbaugh was an assistant to Bo Schembechler at Michigan.Anybody had any experience at all with Chinese made siliconebracelet? His sons would go to practice, but they were also budding businessmen. They would take wristbands and write the name of the starting quarterback at the time on them, selling them to their classmates as if they were all game-worn wristbands.

John was supposed to be the starting quarterback his senior year at Pioneer High School in Ann Arbor. But by then, Jim had grown taller — and better. He started as a sophomore, and John switched to fullback and defensive back.

John Harbaugh has joked that he dominated his brother for most of their lives, but Jim had the far better athletic career, going on to become an All-American at Michigan and then a first-round draft pick of the Chicago Bears. John mostly was a reserve defensive back at Miami University.

But while his brother played 15 years in the NFL, John’s coaching career began in anonymity. After 10 years as an assistant with the Philadelphia Eagles, he became the coach of the Ravens in 2008 — after New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick called Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti to recommend Harbaugh.Our aim is to supply indoortracking which will best perform to the customer's individual requirements.

Even while Jim Harbaugh played in the NFL, he served as an assistant to his father, who was then the coach at Western Kentucky. In 2002, his playing days finally over, Jim became the Oakland Raiders’ quarterbacks coach. But the job that led him to the NFL was at Stanford, where he tutored Andrew Luck and returned the Cardinal to national prominence.

After last week’s conference championship games — San Francisco rallied to beat Atlanta and Baltimore dominated New England — John Harbaugh said he would like to think the Ravens and the 49ers are mirror images: physically imposing, able to run the ball, but with quarterbacks who throw well, and possessing “roughhouse” defenses. It is impossible, though, to miss the brothers’ differences in personality.

John Harbaugh smiles more, making a point to thank everyone for coming when he begins his postgame news conferences. Jim, who seems to wear the same black 49ers sweatshirt tucked into khaki pants every day, has been known for his wild-eyed, emotional style since his playing days. He had an epic meltdown after what he considered a bad call last Sunday, sending the marker that always hangs from a lanyard swinging furiously.

The brothers said they had not fought since they were about 25, but they used to fight so vigorously that their mother cried as she begged them to stop.

“He’s an incredibly competitive person,” John said of his brother. “He will fight you for anything. That’s what made him a great player, what makes him the man he is.”

Last year, John Harbaugh told an associate that the brothers had vacationed together recently. They were goofing off in the water and their horseplay got a little heated. Jim held his older brother under the water, Ravens public-relations chief Kevin Byrne said then, until bubbles started coming out of his nose. Then he finally let go of him.

Peris shielded but backlash flares

A SERIOUS backlash against Nova Peris, Julia Gillard's hand-picked Senate candidate for the Northern Territory, has prompted the former Olympian to explicitly address a whispering campaign alleging wrongdoing while she was a public servant just over a year ago.

Amid ongoing anger in Darwin at Tuesday's prime ministerial bombshell anointing Ms Peris, disaffected ALP members have been lashing out at both the Prime Minister and Ms Peris with some peddling a rumour that she had been sacked by the Department of Education and even investigated by police over the use of departmental furniture in November 2011.

Ms Peris has attracted solid support from several prominent indigenous personalities for her community work promoting children's health and girls' education,All our rtls are vacuum formed using food safe plastic. but other vocal indigenous activists claim she is being paraded by the ALP to improve its Aboriginal credentials.

With a smear campaign in full swing, the politically inexperienced Ms Peris was being shielded by her new ALP minders and was unavailable for direct interview on Thursday, but issued a statement denying any substance to the anonymous claims.

''I have been made aware of malicious and unfounded rumours circulating about my time as an employee of the Northern Territory Department of Education in 2011 and I wanted to definitively correct the record to address these incorrect suggestions,'' the statement began.We have many different types of parkingsystem.

She said she ''did not misuse departmental assets during my time at the Northern Territory Department of Education'' and in fact supplied two of the three girls' academies she had established with lounge suites, a coffee table, a fridge, a microwave, and a rug.

The Berkeley obstetrician was touring Nigeria as part of a 2008 maternal mortality research project. Her hosts took her to a dilapidated, poorly equipped hospital, where electric power routinely fizzled out.

Mothers coming to the hospital often delivered babies by kerosene lantern or candlelight. Some C-sections were delayed.Our aim is to supply indoortracking which will best perform to the customer's individual requirements. Some pregnant women were turned away. Others died from complications rarely seen in the West, such as uterine rupture.

In Malawi, women in labor are required to bring their own candles when they arrive at clinics. In Uganda, midwives sometimes illuminate nighttime deliveries by holding a cellphone between their teeth.We open source oilpaintingsforsale system that was developed with the goal of providing at least room-level accuracy.

“There was one night I saw a woman fighting for her life in darkness,” Stachel recalls. “I felt like I was in a chamber of horrors, and I thought ‘Why am I here right now bearing witness?’ I thought maybe I could be a voice for this woman and others.”

Then it hit her: What if these clinics had a reliable 24/7 source of electricity to illuminate delivery rooms, keep blood supplies refrigerated, and recharge cellphones and two-way radios so doctors could be located quickly?

After Stachel described the conditions she witnessed in Africa to her husband, solar energy educator Hal Aronson, the two conceived an impossibly simple idea: an easy-to-install, easy-to-use solar power unit small enough to fit in a suitcase. And powerful enough to change the world.

And thus the most beneficent piece of luggage on Earth was born.

We Care Solar is the couple’s Berkeley-based nonprofit. In just four years, the organization has deployed more than 200 bright-yellow solar suitcases to clinics in 25 countries across Africa, Central America and Asia, including in Somalia, South Sudan, Nicaragua and Afghanistan.

After a short tutorial, almost anyone can unfold the suitcase’s solar panels, affix them to a roof, plug the cords into the suitcase main panel and power up. The sun does the rest.

The system includes high-efficiency LED medical task lighting, a universal cellphone charger, a battery charger for AAA or AA batteries, headlamps, a fetal monitor, and outlets for 12v DC devices. It comes with 40 or 80 watts of solar panels, and a lead-acid battery that needs replacing only every two years.

The organization has attracted substantial financial support from funders such as the MacArthur Foundation, Starr International Foundation, the University of California’s Blum Center for Developing Economies and the Segal Family Foundation.

The couple also has won awards from U.C.The history of ultrasonicsensor art can be traced back four thousand years ago. Berkeley, the Department of Energy/Massachusetts Institute of Technology and 2011 Nokia Health Tech Awards, as well as being named one of three winners of New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof’s “Half the Sky” contest, which recognizes organizations that promote female empowerment.

Ask the couple why they invest their time and energy in bringing light to developing countries — the globetrotting Stachel practically lives on an airplane — and winning awards probably would rank last.

“We were raised with a strong sense of tikkun olam,” says Stachel, referring to the Jewish value of repairing the world. “It reflects our strong interest in social justice and making the world a more fair place. In seeing problems, we both feel a responsibility to do something about them.”

Stachel won yet another award last year: a $25,000 grant from Isha Koach (Women of Strength), a group of philanthropists allied with the Jewish Women’s Foundation that honors Jewish social entrepreneurs like Stachel.

JWF executive director Joy Sisisky met Stachel last September in New York, where the Berkeley woman convened with the Isha Koach board and spoke at the Jewish Federations of North America’s 2012 International Lion of Judah Conference.

2013年1月17日星期四

Have Family Dinners Prepared Teddy Turner to Be a Politician?

Teddy Turner, the son of media titan and avowed liberal Ted Turner, gets the question all the time: How did he become his family’s only card-carrying Republican? And journalists aren't the only ones asking it. “It’s amazing how many times my dad’s asked me that question,” says Turner, who is running for Sen. Tim Scott's vacated House seat in South Carolina. Then, in his good-natured Southern drawl, he recalls one of the experiences that helped form his politics: “While I was in the Soviet Union, I was in a car wreck that broke most of the bones in my face. I hit the dashboard from the backseat. The hospital I went to didn’t have an X-ray machine; they didn’t have CAT scans, MRIs. … They had glass-and-steel reusable needles, and about all I did was live on a cot for a week. But it was free.” He pauses deliberately, as if to say, Get it? “Free. Healthcare.”

A finely tuned answer with an Obamacare-themed punch line—not bad for someone who, at 49 years old, is completely new to electoral politics. This inexperience, Turner feels, is his best asset. The Republicans likely to run against him in the March 19 primary include such practiced pols as Mark Sanford—the former governor best remembered for claiming he was hiking the Appalachian Trail when, in fact, he was having an extramarital affair in Argentina—state Rep. Chip Limehouse, and state Sen.We offer the largest range of porcelain tiles online. Larry Grooms. In their company, Teddy Turner, whose curriculum vitae includes television news producer, amateur maxi-yacht skipper, tech entrepreneur turned scam victim, bison meat purveyor, and high school teacher, is the definition of a political outsider. It's a role he's comfortable with, having grown up as one, too.

If Teddy Turner is blazing a path his father could never fathom—running for Congress as a Republican—it may be because his adult life began squarely in his father’s shadow. After completing college at the Citadel, a military academy in Charleston that his father required him to attend, Turner became a producer for the Moscow bureau of the Ted Turner–owned CNN, for which he spent six hours a day learning Russian. He worked on and off for his father’s media empire until he was 33, when the 1996 merger between Time Warner and Turner Broadcasting System eliminated his position. Over a family dinner,We maintain a full inventory of all cable tie we manufacture. he casually asked his father whether he was safe,Explore online some of the many available selections in floor tiles. figuring he was. The elder Turner curtly replied, “You’re toast.”

In his late 20s and early 30s, Turner cultivated interests and ambitions that he hoped would earn him his father’s admiration. He briefly left his television consulting job in the early '90s, for instance, to train to sail in the 1993-1994 Whitbread Round the World Race, a nine-month, 30,000-mile competition among maxi-yachts (sailboats of 70 feet or longer). The race attracted him, he told the Miami Herald at the time, because it was longer, more grueling, and more reliant on skill than the America’s Cup race, which his father had won in 1977. For the Whitbread, Turner paid $700,000 for an 80-foot practice yacht and hired two sports-marketing experts to raise the millions it would take to build a brand new model.We offer the largest range of porcelain tiles online. But in a recession,Our aim is to supply air purifier which will best perform to the customer's individual requirements. he tells me, the money never materialized.

“That was a time in my life where I felt I needed to compete with Ted, that I needed to be bigger and I needed to be better, that I needed to prove myself,” Turner says, referring to his father, as he often does, as “Ted.” “When you are raised in greatness’ shadow, you spend a lot of time trying to figure out what you’re worth, what your value is. I struggled with that for a long time, but I got over it.”

After being told he was toast, Turner became less involved with his father’s business, though there were occasional engagements. In 1997, for instance, Ted Turner founded U.S. Bison to try to monetize the herd of 17,000 bison that roamed his various ranch properties “like pets,” as he described it to the Associated Press. The idea was to create an upscale U.S. market for bison meat, and he put his son in charge of the effort. (The most notable outcome was a chain of restaurants, Ted's Montana Grill, that boasts “the biggest bison menu in the world.”) But mostly, Teddy Turner's ventures were his own—and they were not, on balance, terribly successful.

In 1997, along with three other partners, he founded a company, Zekko, to mass-produce a box that somehow converted ordinary telephone wires into high-speed data lines. According to the Florida Times-Union, “His name—his father's name, really—conferred legitimacy on the unknown company and its unknown genius, giving many investors confidence.” Teddy Turner gave the inventor of the device, Madison Priest, workspace in a CNN building to produce a prototype. However, after collecting about $1.5 million from investors, Turner and his partners learned that Priest had faked all his demonstrations of the box’s near-magical properties. When confronted in a board meeting, Priest pleaded that he’d been faking his results until he could reverse-engineer how to build the box—a crash in his Corvette had wiped his memory of how to do so. The technology, Priest explained further, had initially come to him from a “hopper,” a species of alien that spread technological knowledge from planet to planet. Until that moment, Turner says, “It was an extremely well-orchestrated illusion.” At the end of the meeting, Turner resigned.

His political positions remain vague. When pushed for his stance on issues, Turner mostly waxes worried about how “the system is very broken,” how Washington “needs new faces and fresh minds” who can “reach across the aisle and do some commonsense stuff,” and that unspecified spending cuts, not higher taxes, are the answer to our nation’s debt. The closest he gets to an actual policy proposal is this: “How about, if you pass one law, you take one off?”

His tenor, though, is just right for someone running in a state that regularly sends Tea Party politicians (in name or spirit) to Washington. Turner is working on his folksy male chauvinism: “If my wife goes out and buys a pair of shoes that were $100 but are marked down to $50, she’ll say, ‘I saved $50!’ I’ll say, ‘No you didn’t, you spent $50.’ But politicians think that’s how you cut a budget.” He’s mastered his political doomsday predicting: “Those people who flew the hammer-and-sickle tried to stage an economy, and we saw how that went. Socialism, which we move closer to in this country every day, scares the heck out of me.” And his opposition to government regulations, while generally unspecific, is well-suited to the 1st Congressional District’s well-to-do and conservative audiences: “Well, I have a friend in the cruise industry. And they keep putting regulation upon new regulation on that industry, not to make the cruise industry any safer, but to raise money for the government.”

How Teddy Turner will fare is difficult to predict. Opinions are split over how much Sanford’s fundraising prowess and name recognition are worth, considering that his second term as governor ended in disgrace. And Turner, who is not self-financed, has access to many of the same deep-pocketed circles as some of his opponents. In fact, just three weeks ago, he went hunting with Sanford and Sanford’s son—but this doesn't make him an insider, Turner insists. The closest that he's come to politicking in the past has been among family. “I’ve sat across the dinner table from Ted Turner and Jane Fonda and discussed politics,” he says, in the course of explaining why he belongs in Congress. “And everybody’s come away happy.”

Shiva Naipaul Memorial Prize

I knew next to nothing about the desert – nothing about its geology, its geography, the kind of people who lived here. We’d stretched out in bed in Glasgow and you’d said what about the desert and we were here now. You’d said what about the Grand Canyon? That was somewhere around here – that pink and purple vein – and so was the Joshua Tree – that old thing that looked like a pile of hair blowing in the wind. We’d stretched out in bed and you said you wanted to go to Death Canyon – you thought the name was ironic – to keep the tourists away. We drove through the no man’s land, the Mojave Desert, and I knew that name wasn’t ironic. Death Canyon was the opposite of a lush green hill – walking up it, with a picnic. Some egg sandwiches, a nice view – a quick-pick posy of flowers for Aunt Mabel down below watching the bulkier items – the padded cagoules and the flasks – it was none of all that. Death Canyon was the opposite of a lush green hill that moved up gradually with sheep walking up it on their way to heaven.

We could see nothing from our shack – I walked twenty paces and then twenty more. I used my hands as a visor; I used the binoculars. There was nothing: just stuff like salt pressed flat till it looked like a mirror – white salt; pink salt – the sun bounced off it and I lowered my hands. The horizon looked like someone had sprayed mist along it – blue mist – white mist – a mist of tiny salt particles – dust – hanging in the air. Then there was more salt. I walked twenty paces back towards the house. You’d pointed to a spot on the map: let’s go there, you’d said. We were here now… Trying to sharpen cutlery and lift grubs off the carpet with a knife. I tried to remember if sand was really salt – I couldn’t remember. The more I looked at the nothing the more it emptied out my head – scrubbing my memories and filling the space with pink sand – white salt – pink salt – just nothing from here…

On the way here the landlord had nearly choked himself telling us all the good things he had to say about this place: Whelp; population 79 – ‘if you want peace you’ll get peace – you’ll get that here, we can give you that…’ He kept up his enthusiastic talk the whole journey: he changed the air pressure inside the car with it. His big cowboy hat slid around on his head while he steered us through a no man’s land. He was still keeping the talk up when he threw our cases into the dust. Then he drove off. He was like a cheetah then – getting up to about seventy miles per hour in six seconds. We hadn’t even gone four steps up the path – the trail of dirt towards the front door: he was clear out of sight.

Our shack looked like a pile of sticks ready to be set alight – a November bonfire. The outside of the house was five star compared to what was waiting for us on the inside, though. The snake that flew out the fridge wasn’t the biggest surprise next to the beetles that had made a nest – the miniature brown turban that wouldn’t look out of place in a museum for African art. Whelp – what did we know? What kind of people lived here? We had our bonfire and then half a mile up the road there was another one. Then five miles after that there was the living breathing centre of the place called Whelp.

I remembered reading that Robert Duvall lived out here somewhere. A lot of the big actors came out here to get away; they hid behind large sunglasses and cowboy hats and sometimes put on accents – pretended they were from Germany and writing a book – or Scandinavia. They became masseuses; nail therapists; they were ranchers; they were seers. The accents got better – they were perfected. They blended in – they became anything they wanted: the man who raced snails and beetles on a fold down table top, a plumber. Those actors were out here – getting away – escaping. I thought about it – it was possible. That woman the colour of shit and driving the one car that passed us on the way here; that man serving the dismal coffee in Cinderella’s Café on the one toilet stop, his skin falling away in sheets – Woody Harrelson; Rebecca De Mornay.

We stood by the grey patch behind the house. The plan was we would stay in the desert for six months to a year. You thought that maybe we should grow something – onions and cabbages – things we could make soup with, and stews; things that would make us strong and keep us healthy. We stood by the grey patch and weighed up the options: long ragged sweet peas held up by canes; big green cabbage heads and carrots. We looked at the grey flat patch at the back of the shack – the small grey rocks scattered around. I’d read about a man in France who grew the stuff he used to make his champagne in the same row as his soup produce – those big leafy greens and the beans. It was all so good, he said, that sometimes he wasn’t sure if he was drinking a glass of champagne or biting down into a round soft peach. We looked at the grey flat patch behind out shack – weighing up the possibilities – its limitations. It certainly wasn’t your Papa’s ‘tree full of smoke’ – the silver birch with its leaves all off – and his garden with ten types of exotic plant. He was really into the outdoor world, and that stash of books in his front room proved the point even more. I’d picked one up – The Outdoor Plant Expert – I flicked through it. There was a lot to take in: pest damage; well-developed root systems; partial shade. There were tiny diagrams with details of how it’s done. There was layering – protecting – lifting.We open source indoor tracking system that was developed with the goal of providing at least room-level accuracy. There was a lot of work involved. We stood back and looked at the grey patch and the scattering of rocks. It was like the moon’s surface. And it wasn’t just the back of our house – the moon’s surface travelled on and on as far as we could see, even with the binoculars. There was no work to do here because there was nothing that could be done – to this patch or any patch. You said, ‘maybe we should grow something?’ but we both knew what you really meant.

The one bus a day took about two hours to travel twenty kilometres; every time it’d started up and got going it stopped again. That one bus: the Magnum ice cream advertisement up as a sun visor and the red faux velvet panelled driver’s cabin and the ruby red rosary beads and the naked woman voodoo doll thing all tangled up. It took us along the one straight road and we could see that there were others living like us – in houses that looked like ice cream parlours or piles of sticks in the middle of nowhere. The bus picked up a little speed then stopped and another old woman wearing a pair of torn canvas shoes shuffled out to meet us, or young men who looked like they were running away from something, every one of them with a tiny rucksack bobbing about on their back like they had a head in it.

We stopped in front of one house that looked like it could be folded away and stored under an aeroplane seat: a house made of flimsy scrap metal – like a cheap ashtray or a soft drink’s can; a box to keep fishing tackle in, or tobacco, or half a chewed cigar. A woman stood outside it wearing a T-shirt that read Electro-Magnet Hair Removal Service. She wasn’t modelling – she had enough hair on her for five people.Do you know any howo spare parts wholesale supplier?

The bus’s engine churned horribly as we got started again only to stop about four hundred feet up the road. The engine churned and the driver sat in his seat like there was a rod up the back of him and he held on to the steering wheel which was more like a ball of burst leather. An old woman wearing a pair of crusty sandshoes appeared out of nowhere it seemed, carrying a bag with the world’s oldest leek in it. An orange heap that was a million miles away from the muscle cars I’d heard the desert was full of pushed past us – that family with their bowl-cuts and their hymn bumper stickers and doing forty; ‘praise the Lord,’ they said in unison while they wafted past us.

Whelp came into view like a load of ancient wooden car garages scattered about by a storm. Here was the hub – the miniscule A and P supermarket with its advertisements for twenty kinds of chutney and the Taser gun.

I walked through a dead pigeon or maybe old noodles. I got up to the Hombre café – the French toast slid on to the plate like bread in egg not cooked. There were six other people in there – nearly ten per cent of the population – all eating quietly, dragging spoons. The banana shortbread that came pre-wrapped – put together in a factory far away – had the consistency of a nail disorder. I fingered some powder out and put it on the table. The man two tables away introduced himself as Old Fang Tooth; he said he was going to build an Olympic-sized stadium out here in the middle of the desert. It’d have all the regular stuff plus a track for dirt bike racing and maybe a pool tagged on at the side. He’d been talking with a lawyer already – drawing up the plans – big extensive things that filled the whole table. He’s ambitious – that’s clear – taking on so much at once, and we quietly assumed all this would start only after he’d learned how to change his underpants more than once a month,A Dessicant dry cabinet is an enclosure with a supply of desiccant which maintains an internal. and bathe.

You flipped over your napkin and there was a big penis drawn on it in red felt pen. We started looking round for culprits. Who could it be: the old woman with the hunchback; the boy with the mange doing the dishes; the old couple eating the pretend sea bream; the man in the T-shirt that read Lost Cause? It could have been any one of them – all of them neatly avoiding your gaze, all of them loving it. I saw peach melba on the menu and imagined what it could be…

Las Vegas was in the north east… Two hundred miles – maybe three – maybe more. It may as well have been forty thousand. That mecca – that tower of lights in the desert. It was approached by car or bus – no trains – no walking; a ring of deadly snakes swarmed in the outskirts of the place attracted by the heat from the lights. If it was the pumping heart of the desert then Whelp was a blotch of blood on an old napkin. The strip – all the light bulbs making it a hundred and twenty degrees even at four in the morning; tutus and headgear; carnival time all year round. The big hotel was called the Mirage.

You wanted a haircut so your hair wasn’t lying across your neck and making you sweat more than you needed to; we couldn’t find a hairdresser but we found a bar. The wicked witch was up at the mirror pushing something against her poisoned warts. It was actually just the barmaid looking at her face for the tenth time that minute – checking she really was as glamorous and good looking as her mother kept telling her; a hunch that mothers were just being mothers, but then again… Those cheekbones… She pronounced them cheekbaones… The man at the end of the bar couldn’t be wrong – he wouldn’t say it as much – all the stuff about her being so gorgeous – modelesque – first rate. Even though he was just a pile of greasy hair – to tell her she was that good looking so many times – it surely wasn’t all lies. Her face worked through a hundred shapes, none of them good ones, wondering…

The barmaid’s brother wasn’t the most handsome man but there was no doubt he was entertaining.We open source indoor tracking system that was developed with the goal of providing at least room-level accuracy. He told us he’d never left Whelp even once but it didn’t matter. His eyes were so crossed he looked like he was always staring at a spot on his nose. His talk was good though, and he got us two big margaritas for free. He hadn’t left Whelp, he said, because he looked after his grandmother. She was ancient now – he couldn’t say the exact age – maybe 102 – and she was hanging on and hanging on like a vine tight around a rock. Not much grew out here,We offer the largest range of porcelain tiles online. he said, but the stuff that did… He looked after her and he didn’t mind because it wasn’t the hardest thing in the world. They had a good relationship, and an understanding. Often he rolled her out to the front of her house where the wind came in the keenest; he’d leave her out there for half an afternoon so that the wind could blow all the old dead skin away. It did a good job of it; by the time he went to get her there was a baby blush to her – that kind of new skin on a baby’s backside and arms and everything else and then he rolled her in for pap out a bowl for lunch stroke dinner and then a fresh drink for himself. It was an easy kind of life; he realised it wasn’t for everyone, but it was an easy kind of life.

Acer Aspire S7 Review

Going to Las Vegas for CES 2013 was great, obviously. However, apart from the opportunity to eat your own body weight in steak and lose your rent money on blackjack, it is one hell of a tiring six or seven days.

Therefore the last thing you need after coming back from walking 12 miles around the show floor is having to deal with a slow and buggy laptop. What you want is something you can rely on, which will boot up fast, and wont run out of battery the minute you move your hand toward the plug.

Therefore it was with a mixture of trepidation and excitement that I accepted delivery of an touchscreen Acer Aspire S7 the day before flying out to Las Vegas last week. Trepidation because I had no idea if Acer's latest Ultrabook was going to be stand up to the rigours of CES; excitement because this is one of the fastest and best-looking laptops on the market today.

The lid of 13in S7 is clad in Gorilla Glass to give you extra protection from scratches and scraps, and it meant putting it in the rather odd case that came with it,The stone mosaic series is a grand collection of coordinating Travertine mosaics and listellos. not a necessity. I should note however that the 11in version of the S7 comes with an aluminium lid rather than a glass lid, making it more prone to scratches I imagine.

White is traditionally not a colour associated with premium consumer electronics devices, but Acer has made it work.Professionals with the job title mold maker are on LinkedIn. Open the lid and the great design and finish continues with the Chiclet style keys and trackpad floating in a sea of aluminium.

On first viewing I thought the screen had a white plastic bezel around the edge, but in fact it's all part of a single glass sheet covering the screen, which again ACer has carried off really well.

At 1.3kg and 12mm thin, the Aspire S7 is thinner and lighter than the MacBook Air and I had no problems carrying it with me during long treks around Las Vegas.Beautiful agate beads in a wide range of colors & sold at factory direct prices. It was also well able to stand up to being thrown around in a backpack surviving the week unscathed.

As I said, the backlit keyboard and trackpad as well as the surround seems to have been hewn from a single piece of aluminium. The keys themselves are very shallow, continuing Acer's trend of late, and don't offer the kind of satisfying response that we got from the keyboard of the most recent Dell Ultrabook and convertible.

That said, I really like the keyboard, and found typing on it was easy and pretty much mistake-free. This is thanks to the keys being responsive, well-spaced and, for the most part, nicely sized - though there are a couple of exceptions. The Caps Lock key is a narrow sliver almost impossible to press accurately withouth looking down at the keys, while the arrow keys are little better. I constantly found myself pressing the Page Home and Page End buttons which are right next to the arrow keys.

Where Apple's trackpads are responsive and nimble, Acer's was buggy and didn't work well with non-Windows 8 apps.Our extensive range of rubber hose is supplied to all sorts of industries across Australia and overseas. Sure swiping in from the left to display the Charms menu, and swiping to navigate the new home screen worked OK, but try using it on the Tweetdeck app (for Windows 7) and it's a different matter. Vacillating between unresponsive and over-sensitive, it was a nightmare to use at times.

I also found the trackpad thought I was registering a left click even when my finger was nowhere near the bottom right-hand corner. It's a pity as it somewhat ruined the overall experience - though Acer did provide a Bluetooth mouse with my review unit which worked a treat and which I used whenever I could.

On one side you get two USB 3.0 ports, an SD card reader while on the other side you'll find a micro HDMI port. Sounds a bit limited? Well yes, but Acer also shipped the S7 with two adaptors for Ethernet and VGA ports which you plug into the HDMI port.

Working at CES the SD card reader was a vital addition and something which is sadly lacking on a lot of expensive Ultrabooks. The ability to use wired Ethernet was also a saving grace, with hundreds of other CES journalists in the press room hogging the limited Wi-Fi signal.

The first thing you notice about the S7 is that it is LOUD. Even with just a couple of browser tabs open, the CPU's fans kicked in and this isn't a noise you can ignore. It's REALLY noisy and unless you are just sitting there looking at the laptop and not touching it, it's going to stay loud.

I can understand fans kicking in when you put the CPU under some pressure such as video editing or gaming, but browsing the web? This can make using the S7 a chore rather than a pleasure.

Trying to put the noise to one side, the Core i5 processor is very fast and carried out all we asked of it at CES with consummate ease, rarely slowing down, even with multiple programs open at once.

The dual SSDs, like in the S5, are arranged in a RAID 0 set-up, meaning read-write speeds are searingly fast compared to the competition,We offer the largest range of porcelain tiles online. which makes the whole system tick along at a very fast pace indeed.

We did however encounter some bugginess during our time in Vegas, with the laptop rebooting randomly and freezing without notice. This could be an isolated problem with my review unit or a wider problem with the S7 - or then again it could be a problem with Windows 8.

In terms of boot time, the Aspire S7 was also on a par with other Ultrabooks, booting up from cold in just over 10 seconds and restoring from Sleep mode in around 3 seconds.

Moving onto battery life, and this was probably the biggest disappointment of using the Aspire S7. We managed no more than four hours of use away from a power supply during our week in Las Vegas, which is poor, even by Ultrabook standards.

Four hours is simply not good enough for a portable machine designed to bring with you wherever you go. Yes you might stretch five hours from the S7 with setting changed, but I don't think you should have to compromise that much in order to get decent battery life.

2013年1月16日星期三

Think Context Not Platforms, Says Google’s Tim Reis

While 2012 may have been mobile’s breakout year,The stone mosaic series is a grand collection of coordinating Travertine mosaics and listellos. Tim Reis, head of mobile and social solutions at Google, urged marketers to move this year beyond platforms and instead focus on context during a morning keynote at the Street Fight Summit on Wednesday.

“Consumers are very comfortable across [multiple] platforms; they don’t silo these activities,” Reis said. “ We as marketers need to adapt and reshape how we talk to consumers” about these habits.

For Reis and Google, context is key. Inasmuch as constant connectivity has fragmented the environment in which users engage with the web, identifying and understanding context will drive value both for consumers and advertisers. Think Google Now.

With the evolution toward small “m” mobile comes more immediacy — more decision-making happening via connected devices in real time. Take local commerce: Seventy-four percent of smartphone owners have purchased as a result of use of their device while shopping, according to Reis. Or hospitality: Priceline, said Reis, found that 82% of people booking on their smartphone made reservations for the same day, and more than a third were within a mile of the location.

So how do marketers identify and engage consumers during these moments? Reis pointed to a recent program by eMart, in which the Korean retailer planted structures across the city that projected a QR code with an attached discount at about noon, typically a downtime. “It’s a marketer taking the digital world and allowing it to empower the physical world,” said Reis about the campaign. “Part of this is understand[ing] location as a way to engage with consumers on a personal level.”

Reis also stressed that marketers and brands need to rethink the way in which marketers define success as users move beyond, and between, platforms. “We do not have a conversion prob[lem] in mobile, said Reis. “We have an attribution problem.” Capturing the right rewards — say foot traffic into a store rather than clicks on a screen — requires marketers to move between platforms and bring metrics from one to the other.

The key here is for marketers to measure as much as possible — the clicks, bricks, and everything in between. “Are you gathering enough data and are you using that information to think in terms of contexts instead of platforms?” Reis asked. “The more data you have, the more patterns you’ll see emerge.”

By far, beyond and away my favorite spot to hangout at CES this year was not the main Las Vegas Convention Center — where the majority of the buzz went down — but instead, inside the gorgeous Venetian hotel. It’s massive third floor ballrooms became known as ‘Eureka Park’ — a line show within the colossal line show, comprised of small, startup tech and gadget companies from around the world. Here, these early-stage companies had an opportunity to display their innovations and express their passion to viewers.Want to find howo concrete mixer?

Perusing and chatting with company representatives at the Eureka Park tech zone was inspiring and profound. That’s because many of these teams, on average no greater than three people in a given booth, were the designers,Find Complete Details about howo tractor Truck. CEOs and founders of these companies. No one else could be so enthusiastic and heartfelt about a specific product than these individuals. These are our modern grass-roots innovators and I have to say, their excitement was contagious.

LiveTalk is a new solution for companies in need of interacting directly with their clients. The application provides an environment where customers can connect with a company in real time via video calls (think Skype,) text chat (think chatrooms) and even exchange custom messages and forms or transfer files. Made with intuition in mind, the app requires little IT knowledge — just register and get started.

Culling from social media sites: Facebook, YouTube and Twitter, customers can use their already existing accounts to connect with enrolled businesses. Using the ‘click-to-talk’ tool, making the call has never been simpler.

“Change the way people communicate with your business.The stone mosaic series is a grand collection of coordinating Travertine mosaics and listellos. Connect with your website visitors face-to-face,” professes an information flyer passed out at the LiveTalk booth. At the time of CES, the company was a week old and already attracting clients.

Pervasive Group Inc.You can buy mosaic Moon yarns and fibers right here as instock. is a new company that creates mobile software to help parents be good parents. Today’s parents know that monitoring a child’s smartphone use is a contemporary issue, nearly impossible to fully execute. The company’s MMGuardian application software makes it easy with essential monitoring and control features to keep children out of trouble, regardless of the distance between the parent and their kin.

Using just your Google smartphone or tablet, you can monitor your child’s phone remotely. Firstly and most importantly, the app lets you locate and track the child via SMS text location commands. You can also schedule an alert to appear on your phone at a certain time to make sure your kid is where they should be. There is a text messaging prevention feature that detects if the phone is moving ten miles per hour or more, deactivating the use of text messaging; keeping your young driver safer behind the wheel.

You can set time limits for overall cellphone use, monitor and control applications on their device and even oversee their text messages. Be weary however, as you may learn something that you may not want to uncover!

Louis Dreyfus buys stake in Namoi Cotton

Louis Dreyfus Commodities, one of the world's biggest agricultural traders, plans to buy a stake of about 13 per cent in Namoi Cotton Co-operative Ltd in a bid to increase its footprint in the lucrative Australian market.

The move, coming after a year-long effort to secure the co-op's future, is a further sign that the unprecedented volatility in cotton prices over the past four years, which caused widespread contract defaults, continues to roil the market.

As part of an agreement announced late Tuesday, Namoi, one of Australia's biggest cotton grower co-operatives, will sell 14.3 million shares to Louis Dreyfus worth $3.65 million. That is equivalent to 13 per cent of the company's share capital, according to Thomson Reuters data.

At the same time, the two companies will set up a joint venture to market the co-op's output, which accounts for about quarter of Australia's annual crop.

Namoi, which was set up in 1962 by a small group of farmers in the Lower Namoi Valley, will hold a 51-per cent stake in the venture, with Dreyfus, the world's biggest cotton merchant, owning the remaining 49 per cent.

Namoi will continue to own and operate its ginning and cotton seed business, but the venture will take over its marketing and commodities packing assets, for which it will receive $30.38 million, Namoi said in a statement.

After a year-long effort to raise cash and pay off debt to secure the co-op's future, the deal hands the co-op Dreyfus' financial firepower, global marketing expertise and risk management.

"The joint venture will create a strong marketing business whilst retaining important grower member co-operative involvement.Buy Joan Rivers crystal mosaic Stretch Bracelet. The capital raised will strengthen Namoi Cotton's balance sheet," said Namoi chief executive Jeremy Callachor in a statement on Tuesday.

In its last financial year to end-February 2012, the co-op lost almost $70 millionas textile mills reneged on sales contracts and borrowing costs increased due to wild swings in prices.

In turn, Dreyfus, whose flagship cotton business Allenberg Cotton is based in the United States, will get a big chunk of output from one of the world's top 10 producers.

Ranked No. 7 in global production, Australia is expected to produce 4 million 480-lb bales in the 2012-13 season, according to US government estimates. Its cotton is highly sought after due to its proximity to China, the world's biggest textile industry, and the high quality of its fiber.

Louis Dreyfus Commodities, which already operates a cotton origination, warehousing and logistics business in the country, will buy a portion of the joint venture's cotton each season, the statement said.Load the precious minerals into your mining truck and be careful not to drive too fast with your heavy foot.

The co-operative ginned a record 1.06 million bales in the 2011 crop, more than double the previous year, its last full-year financial report said.

Some say the “tea party” developed out of Ron Paul’s 2008 presidential campaign,howo spareparts while others point to a reaction against the tax-and-spend redistribution of wealth policies epitomized by Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid. A third perspective cites the movement’s name as a key to its origin: Taxed Enough Already (TEA).

But most conventional wisdom zeroes in on a specific moment when the seed was planted. During a February 19, 2009 broadcast on cable news network CNBC, financial analyst Rick Santelli experienced an on-air meltdown where he criticized the government’s subsidization of underwater mortgages. As a consequence, he urged those at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange to form a tea party and dump their stocks in the river.

Inspired by Santelli’s passion,Ubisense RTLS solutions go beyond the traditional definition of a “real time location system” to a new class. an eclectic array of tea party groups formed around the country. Highly decentralized, these organizations brought together libertarians, fiscal conservatives, Ron Paul supporters, anti-globalists, and those opposing illegal immigration and bailouts for the Wall Street banking cartel.

Within a year, those who loosely organized at local town hall meetings assumed a more cohesive shape under groups such as Tea Party Patriots, the 9-12 Project, Tea Party Express, FreedomWorks, Tea Party Nation, and the 1776 Tea Party. Although they didn’t possess a rigid monolithicGet the best deal on solar panel in the UK and use our free tools. structure like the Democrats or Republicans, tea partiers largely agreed on a number of issues, including an audit of the Federal Reserve, repealing Obamacare, rejection of the radically environmental cap-and-trade legislation, passage of a balanced budget amendment, limiting regulation that impeded free markets, and a reduction to the size of Washington’s bloated framework.

Initially dismissed by the mainstream media, during the 2010 midterm elections tea party-led GOP candidates made historic gains in the House of Representatives and the Senate. Bewildered by these results, network news anchors and talking heads began targeting this political force with a vengeance, often using vulgar and derogatory names to describe them. Most notably, CNN’s Anderson Cooper derogatorily referred to these individuals as “tea baggers.”

While opponents continued vilifying tea partiers, they failed to acknowledge their populist-oriented roots. Namely, the tea party champions Main Street free enterprise over Wall Street greed or the policies of bloated bureaucrats on Capitol Hill. In this sense, one of the tea party’s largest victories occurred last July when Texan Ted Cruz defeated GOP establishment career politician David Dewhurst in a primary runoff. Notably, Cruz’s wife once belonged to a Council on Foreign Relations task force and served under Condoleezza Rice in the Bush White House. She also worked at Goldman Sachs and as an investment banker at JPMorgan Chase.

Lost on a location tour

IN THE next 24 hours,All our plastic moulds are vacuum formed using food safe plastic. a tour group will genially amble through the sumptuous English castle that provides the visual backdrop to Downton Abbey. Diehard comedy fans and celebrity sycophants will huddle impatiently in the frigid cold outside the Ed Sullivan Theatre on Broadway. A busload of visor-wearing, bumbag-toting middle Americans will trudge around Hollywood in grey minivans.

Closer to home, in suburban Melbourne, a bus packed with British tourists will drop in on Pin Oak Court, or, as it is better known, Ramsay Street. And lest we forget those Sex and the City tours.

Don't scoff - overseas pilgrimages are as common to television fans as they are to sporting nuts and literary buffs. And for many television fans (OK, maybe just me), the series Lost and the Oahu island of Hawaii is the holy grail.

Locally, Lost began airing in 2005 with a plane crashing on a mysterious island somewhere in the Pacific between Sydney and Los Angeles. Over six enthralling seasons, it told the story of the survivors and the island. The chief storytelling device was flashbacks,Add depth and style to your home with these large format polished tiles. which were cannily used to etch out the castaways' backgrounds and,Our team of consultants are skilled in project management and delivery of large scale rtls projects. most controversially, the flashforwards where viewers learnt the fate of characters after they had escaped and returned ''home''.
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In the final season, time travel was prominent. The series told two stories, one focusing on the destinies of the characters on the island, the other via a scenario where the plane didn't crash and what became of those characters once they landed unharmed in LA.

As a diehard Lost fan, I've often been forced to defend how the show ended (both moving and fulfilling, which we have neither the time nor energy to explain here), whether it became too convoluted (no) and why a polar bear was there. Regardless of where the show's trademark flashbacks (or forwards) were set, be it Africa, Australia, Korea or Thailand, all were shot in Hawaii, the great majority on Oahu, the tourist-friendly island where you'll also find Honolulu.

After booking a flight last year, I began searching out Lost tours. The most prominent online was a group specialising in Hummer tours. It offered five-hour trips,The stone mosaic series is a grand collection of coordinating Travertine mosaics and listellos. or a more substantial $220-a-person eight-hour jaunt. You know which one I went for.

The price eliminates casual fans. As we pulled out of downtown Honolulu, our group, comprising Hummer driver Scott, a Californian lawyer, an academic from New Mexico and me, began to get to know each other through our TV watching.

Every few minutes we would arrive at a building used in Lost - here was an apartment building from season three, there was Hurley's house in LA after he won the lottery, that's a cliff Jack jumped off - all the while discussing characters and plotlines. At each location, our guide would pull out a folder containing an image from the show depicting it.

The blockbuster sequel to The Hunger Games and CBS's Hawaii Five-0 reboot were shooting in the Aloha state that day and the tour, basically a loop of the entire island, demonstrated the significant part its spectacular landscape has played onscreen. We were shown everything from the beach where that kiss happened on From Here to Eternity to the locales for 50 First Dates to Magnum, P.I.'s HQ and Russell Brand's hotel from Forgetting Sarah Marshall. But what we really wanted was the survivors' beach, Hurley's golf course, the Dharma Initiative's settlement barracks, and where the plane crashed.

The main claim to fame of our tour guide, Scott, was that he once appeared as an extra in a funeral scene in Lost.He was enthusiastic and encyclopaedic in his knowledge of Lost. As we were shown the Hawaiian road that stood in for the Aussie outback, he told us the crew were unable to source right-side-drive cars for the show's Australian scenes. They shot with a camera that reversed the angle. All number plates and signs featured in the scenes had to be written backwards to counter the cameras.

Did the producers get Australia right? Their only real mistake was the sign at a fish market that said ''Shrimp''.

Most of the action from Lost took place on the island's North Shore. Here we visited the key beaches and jungle locations. The survivors' beach camp is at the end of a tiny footpath that veers from an unsigned road full of million-dollar homes. The undeveloped scrub behind the beach belongs to a mysterious landowner who leased the area to the production.

The beach itself is instantly evocative for fans. The grave Benjamin Linus dug late in the last season remains. Our group sits half buried in it and poses for pictures. The tree in which Sawyer would while away his days reading is obvious, too. And aesthetically, the beach itself is something close to spectacular.

Instantly notable is the amount of CGI the show used. Most locations provided the visual tech crew with something to digitally erase. The beach, with its posh houses to the right side,Panasonic ventilation system fans are energy efficient and whisper quiet. was no exception.

The beach used as the site of the plane crash was clearly similarly tricky. Some surrounding mountains were erased, as was an inconvenient car park.

Most intriguing, though, were the eerie Dharma barracks, which, according to Lost folklore, was a secure residential compound on the island. Today, it is a YMCA children's camp. As we gazed in the windows of what was the home of Benjamin Linus, we saw not secret compartments and/or weapons, but rather children's sporting equipment and bunk beds. The camp is adjacent to the beach and would have required a lot of sound and picture editing.

2013年1月14日星期一

Cuyahoga County is banking on SparkBase

The young company, which provides technology and marketing services for merchant gift and loyalty programs, is expected to be the first recipient of a Next Stage Fund loan, a category of county development financing designed for startups that appear ready to reach commercial scale.

SparkBase would use the $700,000 loan to build its proprietary Paycloud app for smart phones. Paycloud allows shoppers to qualify for and redeem coupons or other rewards with their iPhones and Android phones.

Although SparkBase mainly has been nurtured since its startup in 2004 by private angel financiers, this loan would be the company's second from the county.

In January 2009, the company got a $90,000 North Coast Opportunities Technology Fund loan — a similar, though smaller, loan program for young companies created by the previous county administration.Do you know any howo spare parts wholesale supplier?

The company has been paying off that loan ahead of schedule, according to Nathan Kelly, deputy chief of staff for economic development to County Executive Ed FitzGerald.

Ted Frank, SparkBase's chief operating officer, said the new county loan is a way to secure the firm's base in Northeast Ohio.

“We're always thinking about the best place to build our business,” Mr. Frank said. “We love Cleveland, all of our employees are here; we don't have offshore (software) developers. If we can raise money locally, the less pressure there is for us to set up operations in other cities.”

Venture capitalists often like their portfolio companies to locate close to their home base, and SparkBase likely will consider venture financing as it grows.

“We have lots of people — venture funds — that are interested in investing in the company,” Mr. Frank said. “That's fine, we'll take their money, but there is always that tug to set up in other places. This gives us an opportunity to get than much further before we consider the venture round.”

That attitude made SparkBase an ideal candidate for this loan, Mr. Kelly said.

“The Next Stage Fund is dedicated to high-growth companies in the technology space that have demonstrated consistent revenue growth,” he said. “They have to be in the county and within 12 months of positive cash flow.”

Next Stage was created as a part of the Western Reserve Fund, Mr. FitzGerald's $100 million investment pool for economic development. The Next Stage program is one of 11 funds that make up the administration's economic development strategy.

Four of the programs are designed to help established businesses in targeted sectors grow here or to attract new operations, and another three help revitalize commercial property. Next Stage is one of four programs focused on nurturing young businesses.

Mr. Kelly said as FitzGerald administration officials analyzed the financing landscape, they believed they found a gap the county could fill. That gap, he said, was for companies that could continue to grow because of their strong technology base but needed a boost to expand into bigger markets.

That's exactly where SparkBase stands today. SparkBase employs 40 people at its Tyler Village headquarters on Superior Avenue in Cleveland's St. Clair-Superior neighborhood, up from 10 two years ago, Mr. Frank said.

The company began as a processor of gift and loyalty card transactions. Loyalty cards let a store's regular shoppers take advantage of discounts or other special deals.

Mr. Frank said the company, which has been working through payment processing firms to sell its programs to merchants, early last year began to develop the Paycloud mobile wallet that it will sell through those processors, and more directly to retailers. With Paycloud, consumers will be able to wave their smart phones at participating merchants' point-of-sale machines and log in as regular customers or redeem rewards or coupons. Mr. Frank said the company has significant patents and other intellectual property built into its systems.

At the same time, Mr. Frank said, SparkBase was approached by a number of big companies in the point-of-sale business that wanted to incorporate its gift and loyalty card programs into their systems.New Ground-Based indoor positioning Tech Is Accurate Down To Just A Few Inches.

“It's like Ford saying "We want your steering column for our cars,'” Mr. Frank said. “"We're going to worry about the marketing and sales and we've got the big engine and the big car, but we think your steering column is the best.' So we're providing that to a number of companies.”

Gearing up for this expansion of business has prompted SparkBase to seek county money. Mr. Frank said confidentiality agreements don't allow him to identify companies with which SparkBase is partnering.

Eric Grover, prinicipal of Intrepid Ventures, a former Visa International executive who consults on electronic payment systems, said the market for digital, consumer financial transactions is hot,A Dessicant dry cabinet is an enclosure with a supply of desiccant which maintains an internal. but competitive. Mr. Grover was not familiar with SparkBase, but his Minden, Nev., consultancy works extensively in the field of financial services payment processing and technology.

Mr. Grover said of the 8 million to 9 million merchants in the United States that accept payment cards, few can use the transfer technology he called “proximity payments” built into the newest smart phones.

Over the past decade, Mr. Linn Linn says, he has seen a wave of Chinese traders pouring into Mandalay, buying up businesses and pushing residents out of town. His song "The Death of Mandalay" attracted tens of thousands of views after a fan filmed a performance and posted it online.

"Whenever I play anywhere…they request that I play the song,Find Complete Details about howo tractor Truck." the pony-tailed singer said as he sipped coffee one recent afternoon. He said he respects Chinese culture and many of its hardworking citizens, but he complained that the Chinese "give less than they take."

His tough words and his song's following are among signs of growing resentment in Myanmar and a number of Asian countries over their giant neighbor's rising economic, military and political power. Concerns range from the commercial, such as natural-resource extraction and Chinese merchants selling cheap imports, to the geopolitical, seen in Beijing's offshore territorial claims and the unveiling of its first aircraft carrier.

"The sense of unhappiness with China among ordinary people in some countries has been getting more acute by the day," wrote Guo Jiguang, an expert on Southeast Asian politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, in a recent report on China's regional security environment. "They feel unhappy at the role China is playing in their country. If we ignore local people's views, in the long term we will pay a big price."

To some extent China already pays a price, as animosity complicates an agenda of securing both more resources and more respect and allies abroad.Do you know any howo spare parts wholesale supplier?

At the same time, neighbors' wariness of China is creating opportunities for the U.S. to rebuild alliances in Asia, as Washington expands military-to-military exchanges with Vietnam and the Philippines and increases aid across Southeast Asia.

Facing the research-practice divide in science education

Science education researchers and science teachers have much to offer each other. In an ideal world, knowledge would flow freely between researchers and educators. Unfortunately, research and practice tend to exist in parallel universes. As long as this divide persists, classrooms will rarely benefit from research findings, and research studies will rarely be rooted in the realities of the classroom. If we care about science education, we have to face the research-practice divide.

When we talk about research and practice, we’re talking about academics and teachers. In the most typical case, we’re talking about professors of education working at universities, and teachers working at K-12 schools. The divide has its roots in historical and current differences between researchers and teachers in their training, methods, work environment, and career goals that have lead to misunderstanding and mistrust. In a 2004 paper entitled “Re-Visioning the academic–teacher divide: power and knowledge in the educational community” Jennifer Gore and Andrew Gitlin describe the state of the research-practice divide through the lens of the two groups of people involved, and the imbalance of power between them. Historically, they argue, the framework of science education research has been that researchers generate knowledge and materials that teachers need, but rarely recognize the need for teacher contributions. This assumed one-way flow of knowledge has certainly sparked animosity between the groups, deepened by cultural differences associated with differing career paths.

Of course, some people have been both K-12 teachers and academics in their careers. To get this perspective on the issue I reached out to a colleague, Assistant Professor of Science Education Ron Gray (Northern Arizona University). Ron has been a middle school science teacher, a teacher of science teachers, and is now a science education academic. When I asked him about the experience of transitioning from teacher to academic, he recalled.

Most K-12 science teachers are fairly disconnected from the research world once they leave universities and enter schools. They lack university library access, yet currently many of the best journals in the field, such as the Journal of Research in Science Teaching, Science Education, and the International Journal of Science Education are not open access, and require a per-article fee to read. So how does research reach most teachers? I talked to a few science teachers about where they encounter science education research studies — many used science and education pages on Facebook, one got papers sent from an administrator, and some read practitioner journals. Many science teachers are members of the National Science Teacher’s Association (NSTA), which publishes practitioner journals and holds national and area conferences where teachers can hear about research findings. NSTA plays an invaluable role in working to connect research and practice. However, for perspective, NSTA has about 55,000 members, most but not all of which are practicing science teachers, but there are currently about two million practicing science teachers in the U.S.

The disconnect also stems from unfortunate misperceptions of professors by teachers and teachers by professors. Both groups often discount each other’s knowledge bases and workloads. Professors can harbor elitist attitudes about teachers, discounting the value of practical classroom experience in determining what works in education. Teachers frequently claim that professors suffer from “Ivory Tower Syndrome” — the assumption here is that professors live cushy lives, sheltered from the realities of schools, and therefore can’t produce knowledge that is useful in today’s classrooms. A high school teacher quoted by Gore and Gitlin explained.

However,Ubisense RTLS solutions go beyond the traditional definition of a “real time location system” to a new class. a lot of the mistrust between the two groups is based on their misunderstanding of each other’s professions. Teachers do not always appreciate that many researchers are often in the classroom regularly, conducting classroom-based studies and collecting data. This “back of the class” view can be highly illuminating, and is a valid way to know classrooms. Some researchers got their start as K-12 teachers. And higher education is certainly not immune from classroom management issues or over-filled schedules. Professors have stress — just ask the #realForbesProfessors (this hashtag exploded on Twitter following the publication of a Forbes article claiming that professors have one of the least stressful jobs). Similarly, researchers can forget that experienced teachers have a wealth of knowledge about the specific interactions of classroom context, pedagogy, and subject matter.

His response highlights the rigidity of teacher and researcher career paths. Even a former teacher who switched to the researcher path can’t switch back again without ultimately losing “traction” in both careers.We offer the largest range of porcelain tiles online. Perhaps we should question the wisdom of entrenching people interested in science education in one narrowly-defined career trajectory or another. Instead, career advancement could reward the accumulation of diverse but synergistic experiences. Science education is a multidisciplinary endeavor, involving science, social science, and communication skills — why shouldn’t our career options reflect this?

Similarly, certain aspects of teacher training might be due for a change. Teacher education could be a crucial time to break the mold that has placed researchers as producers and teachers as consumers of research. Gore and Gitlin suggest that student-teachers at the undergraduate or master’s levels could be attached to ongoing education research projects as research assistants. They would become intimately familiar with the purpose and methods of educational research and could become significant contributors to it. This would take some restructuring, as many programs focus on more “immediate” concerns such as classroom management, but the benefit could be the production of teachers who recognize the value of research and feel capable of making contributions to it.

The open access movement in scholarly publishing could also have a crucial role in breaking down barriers. Toll-access journals can function as practically impenetrable “ivory fortresses” where valuable knowledge is locked away from practitioners. However, open access will likely prove necessary, but not sufficient in closing the research-practice gap. Teachers I’ve spoken to are very positive about open access but guarded about how much more time they’ll spend reading research articles.Find Complete Details about howo tractor Truck.Creative glass tile and stone mosaic tile for your distinctive kitchen and bath. Time is a huge issue for teachers. But the alternative — locking up research findings in places where both time and money can be barrier for teachers — is certainly not helping to connect research with practice.

For the short-term, most education research articles are still in toll-access journals. For those without easy access to the primary literature in science, research blogs have become an incredible resource. However, the science education research blogging community pales in comparison to the science research blogging community.We can supply howo truck products as below. While teachers can find the latest science news and engaging resources to share with their students by following the science blogging community, they are not as likely to find quick-and-easy write-ups of science education research findings that are relevant to their pedagogy, curriculum development, assessment practices. As the Sci-Ed blog establishes itself, I hope that my fellow writers and I can attempt to partially fill this role. And I hope that many others in science education continue to follow the research blogging model.