Friday, May 31, 2013

Accommodation In San Diego - Forgot your Password? Just Take a Pill

Source - http://www.smh.com.au/
By - Press Release
Category - Accommodation In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Accommodation In San Diego
Having trouble remembering all those passwords for all those tablets, smartphones and apps?
Well, Motorola may have the solution – just pop a pill.
Motorola Mobility's head of advanced technology and projects group, Regina Dugan, unveiled its latest concept at the All Things Digital conference in California on Thursday - and while it's still in the gestation phase, so to speak, it could point to the future.
The pill in question is no ordinary tablet – it contains a tiny chip but no battery – instead it gets its power from the acids in your stomach.
According to Geek.com, the pill will send out an 18-bit authentication signal, which your device will pick up and use in lieu of a password.
The pill, which Motorola calls "the authentication vitamin", has reportedly been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration.
Of course, the experimental technology isn't ready yet but you can check out a video of it on Slate.com.
If you don't have the stomach for the pill, then how about a tattoo?
The company, owned by Google, showed off another authentication device at the conference – a tattoo with a chip that, like the pill, sends out a signal that your smartphone or tablet will pick up.
But the tattoo is more a sticker that you place on your wrist and won't be inked into your body.
In the future, both the pill and tattoo could serve other purposes – such as opening your front door or starting your car.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Affordable Hotels In San Diego - Asia Stocks Down As Fed Fears Weigh On Markets

Source - http://www.newsday.com/
By - PAMELA SAMPSON
Category - Affordable Hotels In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Affordable Hotels In San Diego
Concerns that the Federal Reserve might start scaling back its stimulus program due to improvement in the U.S. economy sent Asian stock markets lower Thursday.

Sharp rises in global stock markets this year have been partly fueled by central bank actions to keep interest rates super low to support economic recovery in the U.S., Europe and Japan. Positive signs of growth in the U.S., including data released Tuesday showing improved consumer confidence and housing prices, have also helped to boost Wall Street stocks to record highs.

However, an improving U.S. economy increases the chance that the Fed might ease back on its massive bond-buying program, known as quantitative easing. The purchase of $85 billion a month in Treasury bonds has helped keep interest rates down and been a boon to stock markets, where investors have fled in search of higher returns.

Investment energy was also curbed by warnings from the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which said Wednesday that Europe's recession risked hurting the world economy. The OECD slashed its forecast for the combined economy of the 17 countries that use the euro, saying it will shrink by 0.6 percent this year, after a 0.5 percent drop in 2012.

Japan's Nikkei 225 index tumbled 3.6 percent to 13,804.44. Hong Kong's Hang Seng shed 0.5 percent to 22,447.81. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 dropped 1.1 percent to 4,921.80. Benchmarks in Singapore, Taiwan, Indonesia, and the Philippines also fell more than 1 percent. South Korea went against the flow, rising 0.1 percent to 2,002.98.

Daniel Martin of Capital Economics in Singapore said two concerns are generally weighing on emerging market stocks.

"The first is that the Fed might soon start tapering its assets purchases. The second is that growth in Asia has generally disappointed the market this year, as the global trade recovery has faltered," he said.

One particular pocket of concern is China. A survey by HSBC Corp. said that manufacturing in world's No. 2 economy slipped in May, a sign the country's fragile recovery might be weakening. The official monthly figure on factory output is due Saturday.

Otherwise, the lack of major data releases for the day deprives investors of reasons to wade into stocks, analysts said.

"A lack of first tier data releases today will limit activity although the tone will likely remain relatively downbeat," said Mitul Kotecha of Credit Agricole CIB in a market commentary.

The latest speculation surrounding the Fed came after the release of positive consumer confidence and housing news on Tuesday. That led investors to fret over the prospect of the Fed reducing its bond-buying.

With the approach of the end of the month, investors also were booking profits.

Japanese export stocks fell as the yen crept higher against the dollar. Honda Motor Corp. fell 2.9 percent. Yamaha Motor Co. lost 2.6 percent.

On Wednesday, the Dow Jones industrial average fell 0.7 percent to close at 15,302.80. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 0.7 percent to 1,648.36. The Nasdaq composite index fell 0.6 percent, to 3,467.52.

Benchmark oil for July delivery was up 11 cents to $93.24 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract for the benchmark grade fell $1.88 to close at $93.13 a barrel on the Nymex on Wednesday.

In currencies, the euro rose to $1.2959 from $1.2934 late Thursday in New York. The dollar fell to 101.05 yen from 101.15 yen.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Trip To San Diego - Home Price Rise Key Sign For Economy

Source - http://www.thenewstribune.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Trip To San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Trip To San Diego
The United States experienced another round of broad-based home price gains in March, reinforcing the housing recovery’s important role in driving economic growth.

All 20 cities tracked by the Standard & Poor’s Case-Shiller home price index posted year-over-year gains, as they have done for three consecutive months now. The 20-city composite index rose 10.9 percent over the last year. That is the biggest annual increase since April 2006. Several cities — Charlotte, N.C.; Los Angeles; Portland, Ore.; Seattle; and Tampa, Fla. — had their largest month-over-month gains in more than seven years.

Pierce County’s next roundup of home prices is expected to be released June 5. In April, median prices for the county rose by a double-digit margin, jumping 13 percent to $217,000 from $192,000 last April, the combined single-family residence and condo data showed from Northwest Multiple Listing Service.

Continued strength in the housing market is welcome news for the rest of the economy, particularly given federal government spending cuts that went into effect in March and the end of the payroll tax holiday in January. With home values rising, the construction industry has been more motivated to ramp up building and rehire workers.

Consumers also are feeling wealthier and so are more willing to spend money. Consumer confidence surged this month to its highest level in more than five years as optimism increased about the state of the economy and its prospects for the rest of the year, according to a closely watched private barometer released Tuesday.

The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index jumped to 76.2 in May from the previous month’s upwardly revised reading of 69. The figure exceeded analyst expectations of a more modest increase.

The last time the index was this high was in February 2008, at the start of the Great Recession.

The index now has risen two straight months after plunging in March amid concerns about the effect of tax increases that kicked in at the start of the year as well as the federal budget cuts known as sequestration.

“Back-to-back monthly gains suggest that consumer confidence is on the mend and may be regaining the traction it lost due to the fiscal cliff, payroll-tax hike, and sequester,” said Lynn Franco, director of economic indicators at the Conference Board.

The positive effect of rising home values and the appreciating stock market is expected to offset “at least a third of the fiscal tightening,” said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomic Advisors.

“Five years after the start of the financial crisis in earnest, and four years and a week’s time from the beginning of the economic recovery, we’re finally starting to get more of a pickup, more of a reduction in caution in terms of consumers’ behaviors,” said John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics. “It’s been a very drawn-out process, but you have to remember what we’ve been digging our way out of, and after all it’s a far less drawn-out process than what’s been taking place in Europe.”

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 106 points to close at another record Tuesday, bouncing back from a loss the week before. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index also gained. The S&P is on track for its seventh straight monthly increase, the longest winning streak since 2009.

“They say the stock market tends to lead the economy. Now we’re starting to see the improvement on the economic front, so there’s some justification for this rally,” said Ryan Detrick, a senior technical strategist at Schaeffer’s investment research.
The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, The Associated Press and staff writer Rolf Boone contributed to this report.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Place To Visit In San Diego - Samsung Sells 10 Million Galaxy S4 Handsets In First Month.

Source - http://www.xbitlabs.com/
By - Anton Shilov
Category - Place To Visit In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Place To Visit In San Diego
Samsung Electronics has announced that global channel sales of its flagship Galaxy S4 smartphone has surpassed 10 million units sold in less than one month after its commercial debut. Launched globally on April 27, the phone is estimated to be selling at a rate of four units per second. While the success of Samsung’s Galaxy S line is indisputable, the phones still do not sell as good as Apple’s iPhones do.

Samsung’s Galaxy S4 sets a new record for Samsung, generating sales quicker than any of its predecessors. Sales of the Galaxy S III reached the 10-million mark 50 days after its launch in 2012, while the Galaxy S II took five months and the Galaxy S seven months to reach the same milestone. By contrast, Apple sold five million of iPhone 5 in the first weekend of sales and supplied 47 million iPhones in the first quarter of iPhone 5 availability.

“On behalf of Samsung, I would like to thank the millions of customers around the world who have chosen the Samsung Galaxy S4. At Samsung we’ll continue to pursue innovation inspired by and for people,” said JK Shin, chief executive officer and president of the IT and mobile communications division at Samsung Electronics.

Samsung Galaxy S4 is available in more than 110 countries and will gradually be rolled out to a total of 155 countries in cooperation with 327 partners.

Samsung Galaxy S4 is powered by either Samsung Exynos 5 Octa application processor or Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 APQ8064T application processor. The new flagship smartphone from Samsung has 5" Super AMOLED capacitive touchscreen with 1920*1080 resolution [441 pixels per inch density, higher than that of Apple iPhone 5] and Corning Gorilla Glass 3. The Galaxy S4 features 2GB of LPDDR3 RAM and can be equipped with 16GB, 32GB or 64GB of NAND flash storage as well as microSD memory card slot.

Samsung equipped its flagship Galaxy S4 model with 13MP main and 2MP front cameras, 802.11 a/b/g/n Wi-Fi, GPS/GLONASS, NFC, Bluetooth 4.0 (LE), IR LED, multiple sensors (RGB light sensor, digital compass, gyroscope, barometer, accelerometer, proximity sensor, gesture sensor, temperature and humidity sensor), MHL 2.0 output, 2100mAh battery and so on. The S4 comes with Google Android 4.2.2 "Jelly Bean" operating system and supports all 2.5G, 3G, 3.5G (up to HSPA+ with 21Mb/s) types of networks as well as 4G/LTE where available.

Samsung is planning to introduce more color variations to meet various consumer tastes and preferences. In addition to the currently available White Mist and Black Forest, new color iterations will be added this summer, including Blue Arctic and Red Aurora, followed by Purple Mirage and Brown Autumn.

Monday, May 27, 2013

SeaWorld San Diego - What Can Go Wrong Next? Global Arrows Pointing At The Apple Over Ireland's Head

Source - http://www.forbes.com/
By - David Monagan
Category - SeaWorld San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

SeaWorld San Diego
The uproar over Apple AAPL +0.67%, Inc.’s avoidance of billions in U.S. taxes through an ingenious offshore shell game has created a public relations nightmare for the Republic of Ireland, home to more than a thousand multinational corporations and hungry for more.  They’re an economic lifeline here, and the Irish government has been circling its wagons to insist that there has been no skullduggery in le affaire Apple as the country is taking a barracking in the global press and being branded on the front page of today’s Sunday Times (U.K.) as the “third biggest U.S. tax haven.”  Implication: Angola, or Bermuda or Cuba  next bed.

Might they know of the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico?

“We would want to be very careful that we don’t join in this claque of criticism when in fact the Irish taxation system is totally transparent.  We do not want to be the whipping boy for some misunderstanding in a hearing in the U.S. Congress,” Minister of Finance Michael Noonan stressed in a meeting of the Irish parliament on May 22. One had the impression that these guys didn’t know what to say next and were trying to stamp out a fire blowing up around the hems of one the most wonderful stories of economic recovery the West hasr seen in three decades. Why?  Nobody seemed to know what to say next.

Speaking in Brussels, Taioseach Enda Kenny, the prime minister, said much the same over allegations that Ireland created a special sweetheart deal of a 2 percent tax rate for Apple alone. “ I’d like to repeat that Ireland’s corporate tax rate is statute based, is very clear, is very transparent and we do not do special deals with any individual companies in regard to that rate.”

Of course, Ireland has long sought to offer the sweetest possible corporate tax rates across the board to bring in foreign investment – and why wouldn’t a country with scarce natural resources and generation after generation of mass emigration do just that? Until 1981, companies like Apple set up shop in Ireland because it offered not only an eager, English-speaking work force and ready access to European markets, but a 10 year tax rate of zero percent.

It wasn’t until 1996 that the country, under EU pressure, raised its corporate tax rate to its presently sacrosanct 12.5 percent level. That in itself has been subject to immense pressure from European powers wanting competitive pay backs for their own electorates for Ireland’s 80 billion euro bail-out of 2008.

The Apple imbroglio’s worst fall out for Ireland may be that the big boys of Brussels are kicking at the country’s shins again.

But hold on: The Dutch are launching a new program to draw in multinationals with a special circumstances tax rate of 5 percent. And the Brits, furious two weeks ago about a Google GOOG -1.1% scheme to gut tax exposure in the U.K. through clever legal foot work in Dublin, have announced a new multinational tax rate of 10 percent on profits drawn off of new patents.

The sanctimony arising out of Carl Levin’s U.S. Senate Committee of Permanent Investigations was ten ways to China myopic. Apple has argued that the real scandal in all this is a U.S. corporate tax rate of 35 percent that drives companies like itself, and oh Google and Microsoft MSFT +0.35% (exact same controversy on the Irish books) to seek kinder shores.  Curious are the facts. The United States territory of Puerto Rico, with a not dissimilar situation to Ireland’s, offers a tax rate of 4 percent to relocating corporations, nearly ten times lower than what Apple faces in California. That rate is but a touch higher than the pre-Obama number that provoked the American Revolution — the 3 percent duty on imported tea from the British Crown.

Nonetheless, in the case of Apple we are talking about real money – as the late great Illinois senator Everett Dirksen said, “a billion here, a billion there… it adds up.” And as the New York Times reported this week, Apple, employs but 4 percent of its global work force – 4,000 people a not insignificant figure in a city the size of my native Waterbury, Connecticut (which could use 4,000 jobs tomorrow) – but filtered $26 billion in its worldwide income last year through offices on the next hill from where this column is being inked.

As far as Ireland is concerned, le affaire Apple is a public relations nightmare because it is universally conflating two issues into a muddle of one. To wit: (1) whether the 2 percent effective rate of tax Apple has paid for the last decade for its actual Irish operations is scandalous according to America’s present moral code, and (2) or whether Apple’s funneling its billions from everywhere outside Europe to a stateless, untaxable paper entity through a twist in Irish law that was purposefully abetted by past and present Irish governments.

As to the first issue, there is no question that Ireland allows relocating multinational corporations generous write offs against debts, R &D, and the like, and the Irish government’s own figures show that the effective corporate tax rate in Ireland in 2010 for profits actually generated here was not 12.5 percent but 6 percent. How Apple wheedled their pay outs down to only 2 percent is likely a tricky question involving accountants who studied Kant.

Irish Minister for Finance Michael Noonan has insisted that Apple has been fully tax compliant concerning all profits generated from Ireland. “That’s the only liability they have in Ireland,” he said to a restive Irish parliament this week. “We can’t tax their profits worldwide.”   .

“Worldwide” in Apple’s case involves Apple’s clever routing of billions through loopholes that allow a resident corporate entity in Ireland to register its subsidiaries doing business elsewhere without having to pay any tax on them in Ireland. Such subsidiaries do not even have to file a tax return in Ireland, as they pass the cash earned from far away onto some place next reached by Ryanair – in Apple’s case, Bermuda.

Friday, May 24, 2013

La Jolla Cove Attractions - Banks To Repay 8.1 bln Euros Of ECB Crisis Loans

Source - http://www.reuters.com/
By - FRANKFURT
Category - La Jolla Cove Attractions
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

La Jolla Cove Attractions
ECB President Mario Draghi said after the May policy meeting that the ECB is ready to cut borrowing costs further if the economy deteriorates, including the deposit rate now at zero, which would mean charging banks to hold their money overnight.

Since then economic data have painted a bleak picture of the recession-stricken economy. The euro zone wallowed in recession for a sixth straight quarter at the start of this year and economists do not expect growth until next year.

The ECB also decided at its May meeting to extend its provision of unlimited funds to banks, saying it would prime them with as much liquidity as they need until at least July 2014. This gives banks more funding assurance.

Banks took over 1 trillion euros of three-year loans from the ECB in two long-term refinancing operations (LTROs) in December 2011 and February 2012, of which the first matures in January 2015.

Banks now have the option to repay the loans early and on Friday, the ECB said five banks would repay 6.208 billion euros from the first LTRO on May 29 and four banks would repay 1.915 billion euros from the second.

A Reuters poll of euro money market traders had expected banks to return a total of 2 billion euros next week.

Announcements on details of LTRO early repayments (bln euro) First LTRO (Dec. 2011) Second LTRO (Feb. 2012)

Jan. 25, 2013 137.1591

Feb. 1, 2013 3.4840

Feb. 8, 2013 4.9925

Feb. 15, 2013 3.7900

Feb. 22, 2013 1.7440 61.092

March 1, 2013 4.1760 8.319

March 8, 2013 1.3360 2.894

March 15, 2013 0.385 6.432

March 22, 2013 1.565 0.371

March 28, 2013 3.845 3.160

April 5, 2013 4.092 3.972

April 12, 2013 6.555 4.238

April 19, 2013 8.874 2.068

April 26, 2013 1.661 0.615

May 3, 2013 0.008 0.608

May 10, 2013 1.205 5.152

May 17, 2013 1.020 0.104

May 24, 2013 6.208 1.915

===============================================

Amount outstanding as of May 24

281.554 424.480 ($1 = 0.7751 euros) (Writing by Paul Carrel; Editing by Catherine Evans)

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Balboa Park San Diego - Japanese Stocks Fall Sharply

Source - http://online.wsj.com/
By - DANIEL INMAN
Category - Balboa Park San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Balboa Park San Diego
Japanese stocks plunged, pushing the Nikkei stock index down 7.3% to notch its biggest loss since the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami, leading to deep declines across the rest of Asia and Europe.

The frenzied selling started after a report early Thursday in Asia trading showed the manufacturing sector contracted in China, a key trade partner for Japan and the rest of Asia, which raised fresh doubts about the strength of the world's second-largest economy. Signs that the Federal Reserve will pull back on its bond-buying program also added to the gloom and led to a selloff in debt, pushing yields sharply higher.

It was a volatile trading day in Asia, with strong gains in Japanese stocks at the start of the day, but they sharply reversed direction following the Chinese manufacturing data, which triggered safe-haven buying of the Japanese currency.

The Nikkei Stock Average lost 1,143.28 points to end the day at 14,483.98. Elsewhere, Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index fell 2.7%, though the Shanghai Composite Index in mainland China fell 0.7%.

The effect of the weak manufacturing data from China was felt in Australia, where the local currency dropped to US$0.9605, a fresh one-year low, from US$0.9665 before the figures were released.

Fed chairman Ben Bernanke told lawmakers the Fed could start reducing its $85 billion-a-month bond-buying program at one of its "next few meetings." That pushed Treasurys down in U.S. trading and spilled over to Japan where the 10-year Japanese government bond earlier climbed to above 1%, its highest level in more than a year. Yields move inversely to bond prices.

In addition, minutes from the U.S. central bank's last policy meeting showed that some officials were prepared to start pulling back the program as early as its June meeting. Although the group as a whole wasn't in complete agreement, the minutes further raised expectations that there could be a change in monetary policy.

The U.S. dollar also gained ground against South Korea's won, and was recently at 1,123.5 won to the dollar. South Korea's Kospi Composite was 0.6% lower.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Attractions In San Diego - Flickr Can Store Any Data, Not Just Photos

Source - http://www.informationweek.com/
By - Thomas Claburn
Category - Attractions In San Diego 
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Attractions In San Diego
In a bid to revive interest in Flickr, Yahoo has redesigned its photo community website and increased the amount of free storage available to Flickr users to 1 terabyte.

That amounts to more than 500,000 photos taken at 6.5 megapixels, which is about the size generated by current smartphone cameras.

 It's enough space to attract the interest of developers who see Flickr as a resource for storing any file, not just image files. The reason is simple: A free terabyte of storage is a pretty good deal, particularly when you consider that Flickr is charging $499 a year for 2 terabytes.

Online storage prices vary widely. Google charges $50 a month to store 1 terabyte of files using Google Drive. That's on the high side: CrashPlan, an online backup service, offers unlimited storage for $60 a year -- although CrashPlan doesn't allow immediate, random file access like Drive does. Amazon's Glacier costs about $10 a month to store a terabyte, with additional fees for outbound transfers. An actual 1-terabyte hard drive costs from about $75 to several hundred dollars, depending on features.

[ Yahoo's trying to reinvigorate its business. Read Yahoo's Mayer Promises: We Won't Ruin Tumblr. ]

The problem with using Flickr for general storage is that it's only designed for images. To get around that, developer Ryan LeFevre has posted Ruby code to Github called flickr-store that lets users encode data as a .PNG image file, so it can be stored using Flickr.

LeFevre, in an email, said that another developer, Ricardo Tomasi, implemented a similar project at about the same time he published flickr-store.

LeFevre said he would not advise anyone to use his code to store critical files. "The ability to store files on Flickr by encoding them as PNGs was more of an academic exercise than anything," he said. "That said, there have been some similar successful projects in the past, such as GmailFS, so it's possible that the project could mature into a somewhat useful tool. Encoding/decoding data from PNG files is also, unfortunately, a bit slow. There is a lot of room for improvement."

There are other programs designed to encode data in the format of an image, such as the Windows applications Clotho, Hide In Picture and Free File Camouflage. Steganography applications do the same thing, although they often are designed to encode small text files in images, rather than large arbitrary files.

The flickr-store code requires a Flickr API account, although it remains to be seen whether the code conforms to the Flickr's terms of service and the Flickr API. A Flickr representative didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

LeFevre said that the permissibility of his project under Flickr's terms of service isn't clear. "I'm sure they frown upon it, but they claim that you cannot upload anything that interferes with the services and I don't believe this does," he said.

Flickr's redesign, which is part of a broader effort to restore Yahoo's lost luster, is about more than upgraded storage capacity.

According to Flickr head of product Markus Spiering, the Home page, the Activity Feed, Photostreams and Sets all have been redesigned. Slideshows, search and social features also have been improved, and facial recognition capabilities have been added to simplify photo organization. There's even a new Android app for Flickr in the Google Play store.

Hotels San Diego Downtown - Tinton Falls Store Sold $95M Mega Millions Lottery Ticket

Source - http://littlesilver.patch.com/
By - Christopher Sheldon
Category - Hotels San Diego Downtown
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Hotels San Diego Downtown
A winning Mega Millions lottery ticket worth $95 million was purchased at a Tinton Falls store, according to a press release issued by the New Jersey Lottery.

New Jersey Lottery Executive Director Carole Hedinger announced that the ticket was bought at Kwik Farms located at 590 Shrewsbury Ave. in the borough. The convenience store is located at a Lukoil gas station.

The ticket is one of only two winners in the nation, and as of Saturday, the Lottery has not been contacted by the winning ticket-holders, Hedinger said. The total payout for the May 17 Mega Millions Jackpot is $190 million and it will be split between the two winners.

The winning numbers for the May 17 drawing were 11, 15, 35, 43 and 49. The Gold Mega Ball was 41 and the Megaplier Multiplier was 04.

Lukoil will earn a $30,000 bonus for selling the winning jackpot ticket.

“We are thrilled to have another winner in New Jersey," Hedinger said in the release. "The sale of this winning jackpot ticket marks the third time in 2013 that New Jersey has produced a major jackpot winner."

"The winning ticket for the $65.7 million January 25, 2013 Mega Millions drawing was sold here, followed-up by the sale of the winning ticket for the $338.3 million March 23, 2013 Powerball drawing," Hedinger said in the release.

A second winning ticket was sold in Monmouth. Ramtown Pharmacy at 145 Newtons Corner Rd. in Howell sold a $10,000 according to the release.

Monday, May 20, 2013

San Diego Hotel Meeting Space - Climate Change: Human Disaster Looms, Claims New Research

Source - http://www.guardian.co.uk/
By - Fiona Harvey
Category - San Diego Hotel Meeting Space
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

San Diego Hotel Meeting Space
Some of the most extreme predictions of global warming are unlikely to materialise, new scientific research has suggested, but the world is still likely to be in for a temperature rise of double that regarded as safe.

The researchers said warming was most likely to reach about 4C above pre-industrial levels if the past decade's readings were taken into account.

That would still lead to catastrophe across large swaths of the Earth, causing droughts, storms, floods and heatwaves, and drastic effects on agricultural productivity leading to secondary effects such as mass migration.

Some climate change sceptics have suggested that because the highest global average temperature yet recorded was in 1998 climate change has stalled. The new study, which is published in the journal Nature Geoscience, shows a much longer "pause" would be needed to suggest that the world was not warming rapidly.

Alexander Otto, at the University of Oxford, lead author of the research, told the Guardian that there was much that climate scientists could still not fully factor into their models. He said most of the recent warming had been absorbed by the oceans but this would change as the seas heat up. The thermal expansion of the oceans is one of the main factors behind current and projected sea level rises.

The highest global average temperature ever recorded was in 1998, under the effects of a strong El Niño, a southern Pacific weather system associated with warmer and stormy weather, which oscillates with a milder system called La Niña. Since then the trend of average global surface temperatures has shown a clear rise above the long-term averages – the 10 warmest years on record have been since 1998 – but climate sceptics have claimed that this represents a pause in warming.

Otto said that this most recent pattern could not be taken as evidence that climate change has stopped. "Given the noise in the climate and temperature system, you would need to see a much longer period of any pause in order to draw the conclusion that global warming was not occurring," he said. Such a period could be as long as 40 years of the climate record, he said.

Otto said the study found that most of the climate change models used by scientists were "pretty accurate". A comprehensive global study of climate change science is expected to be published in September by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, its first major report since 2007.

Jochem Marotzke, professor at the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Hamburg and a co-author of the paper, said: "It is important not to over-interpret a single decade, given what we know, and don't know, about natural climate variability. Over the past decade the world as a whole has continued to warm but the warming is mostly in the subsurface oceans rather than at the surface."

Other researchers also warned that there was little comfort to be taken from the new estimates – greenhouse gas emissions are rising at a far higher rate than had been predicted by this stage of the 21st century and set to rise even further, so estimates for how much warming is likely will also have to be upped.

Richard Allan, reader in climate at the University of Reading, said: "This work has used observations to estimate Earth's current heating rate and demonstrate that simulations of climate change far in the future seem to be pretty accurate. However, the research also indicates that a minority of simulations may be responding more rapidly towards this overall warming than the observations indicate."

He said the effect of pollutants in the atmosphere, which reflect the sun's heat back into space, was particularly hard to measure.

He noted the inferred sensitivity of climate to a doubling of carbon dioxide concentrations based on this new study, suggesting a rise of 1.2C to 3.9C, was consistent with the range from climate simulations of 2.2C to 4.7C. He said: "With work like this our predictions become ever better."

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Accommodation In San Diego - Yahoo wants to buy Tumblr. Will Facebook swoop in at the last minute?

Source - http://gigaom.com/
By - Om Malik
Category - Accommodation In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Accommodation In San Diego
Yahoo wants to buy Tumblr. We hear Facebook might spoil the party. But the question is: is Tumblr the fountain of youth that Yahoo badly needs or will this be case of a pathetic old-middle aged guy hanging with youngsters trying to be hip.
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Yahoo chief executive Marissa Mayer thinks that what Blogger did for Google, Tumblr could do for her aging Internet company — make it relevant and a major player on the modern web. And for that she is willing to spend a billion dollars (or perhaps higher) in order to buy New York-based social publishing and sharing platform.

The news of the pending deal was first reported by AllThingsD and later Adweek reported rumors of their deal as well. At least a couple of our own sources say that the talks are serious. We have also learnt that the deal is being championed by CEO Mayer who according to Kara Swisher, has met with the team from Tumblr. We have learned that Yahoo’s New York-based corporate development team is leading the process, though like all deals, talks could fall apart. (We have reached out to respective parties for their comments, but so far we have not heard back from them. We are going to update the post to reflect their responses.)

Tumblr says it has nearly 108 million blogs, over 50 billion posts and it is said to have 117 million visitors a month according to comScore. Forbes.com reports that Tumblr made $13 million in 2012 and is looking to bring in about $100 million, thanks to its new advertising initiatives. The company also recently introduced mobile advertising. For Yahoo this could be a much needed foray into mobile advertising and also into pushing new native ad-formats that help diversify its ad business away from the usual web advertising.

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Affordable Hotels In San Diego - NEC Laptop Is One Of The First With Intel's 'Haswell' Chip

Source - http://news.cnet.com/
By - Brooke Crothers
Category - Affordable Hotels In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Affordable Hotels In San Diego
NEC has apparently jumped the gun, releasing the full specs of a laptop based on Intel's 4th Generation Core processor, aka, Haswell.

That processor, along with a crush of new systems, is slated for rollout on June 3 at Computex in Taiwan.

But NEC is talking specs already in Japan.

In addition to the Haswell chip (about which NEC provided little additional data), the LaVie L will sport a 15.6-inch IPS touch screen (1,920x1,080 resolution), 8GB of memory, 1TB hard drive with a 32GB solid-state drive cache, Windows 8, and Microsoft Office Home and Business.

The higher-end model is expected to be priced in Japan around 200,000 yen (a little less than $2,000) at retail in Japan.

Intel's Haswell announcement on June 3 is expected to bring a flood of desktop, laptop, convertible, detachable, and tablet announcements.

Haswell is mostly about better battery life and improved graphics performance. So, expect, for instance, Haswell laptops that last longer -- maybe a lot longer if other power-saving technologies are also used -- than today's latest and greatest offerings.

Haswell's Iris graphics chip will deliver a 2X (two-fold) 3D performance increase over the 3rd Gen Intel Core "Ivy Bridge" chips for both the U- and Mobile H-series processors designed for ultrabooks and higher-performance laptops, respectively, Intel said on May 1.

The first Haswell processors out of the chute are expected to be the quad-core variety aimed at high-end laptops.

At the other end of the spectrum will be a new variety of ultra-power-efficient Haswell chips that should allow PC makers -- and Apple if it so chooses -- to offer newfangled ultrathin designs with good performance.

And, like NEC's LaVie L, touch will be a big factor because of Windows 8.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Trip To San Diego - Samsung Advances Toward 5G Networks

Source - http://www.nytimes.com/
By - CHOE SANG-HUN
Category - Trip To San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Trip To San Diego
Samsung Electronics said Monday it had made a key breakthrough in developing mobile technologies for so-called fifth-generation networks that would provide data transmission up to several hundred times faster than the current fourth-generation, or 4G, technology.

 The breakthrough helped Samsung overcome limitations in transmitting large volumes of data over long distances using a broad band of frequencies, the company said in a news release. Samsung, the world’s biggest maker of mobile phones, said it would accelerate the research and development to commercialize those technologies by 2020.

“Samsung’s latest innovation is expected to invigorate research into 5G cellular communications across the world,” the company said. “The company believes it will trigger the creation of international alliances and the timely commercialization of related mobile broadband services.”

Once commercialized, 5G mobile technology will allow users to transmit huge data files, like high-quality digital movies, “practically without limitation,” it said.

The European Union announced earlier this year a plan to invest €50 million, or $65 million, in research to deliver 5G mobile technology by 2020.

Monday, May 13, 2013

Place To Visit In San Diego - Samsung To Launch 5G By 2020, Hits Speeds Of 1Gbps In Tests

Source - http://techcrunch.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Place To Visit In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Place To Visit In San Diego
Samsung Electronics has developed core technology that will allow it to deliver high-speed 5G wireless data connections to consumers by 2020, the company announced today. The system allows data transmission up to several hundred times faster than current 4G networks.

5G mobile communications technology is the next generation of 4G LTE networks tech and can offer data transmission speeds of up to several tens of Gbps per base station. Once 5G networks are commercialized, they will allow users to transmit massive data files, including UHD movies and remote medical services, “practically wihtout limitation,” Samsung claims.

4G connections have gradually become available to consumers around the world since 2008, but many countries, including China, are still working toward launching their LTE networks. Samsung says, however, that its new adaptive array transceiver technology overcomes the limitations that millimeter-wave bands had when transmitting data over long distances. It transmits data in the millimeter-wave band at a frequency of 28 GHz at a speed of up to 1.056 Gbps to a distance of up to 2 kilometers.

“The millimeter-wave band is the most effective solution to recent surges in wireless Internet usage. Samsung’s recent success in developing the adaptive array transceiver technology has brought us one step closer to the commercialization of 5G mobile communications in the millimeter-wave bands,” said Samsung executive vice president and head of digital medial and communication R&D ChangYeong Kim.

Samsung isn’t the only company to announce that it has developed 5G core tech. In February, NTT DoCoMo confirmed that it had successfully conducted a 10Gbps wireless test.

Friday, May 10, 2013

SeaWorld San Diego - New Ideas On Interest Rates

Source - http://www.insidehighered.com/
By - Libby A. Nelson
Category - SeaWorld San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

SeaWorld San Diego
With just over seven weeks remaining until the interest rates on some federal student loans are set to double, Republicans in the House of Representatives introduced legislation to avert the increase and change how student loan interest rates are determined.

The legislation, the Smarter Solutions for Students Act (H.R. 1911), would tie the interest rate for federal student loans to the interest rates on 10-year Treasury notes, meaning the rate would vary with the market. Rates would also vary over the life of the loan: borrowers’ interest rates, and monthly payments, would change from year as they repay the loan.

Right now, interest rates on federal student loans are set by Congress as part of legislation passed in 2007. If Congress doesn’t act by July 1, the interest rate for subsidized Stafford loans -- which don’t accumulate interest while students are enrolled in college -- will increase from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent. The 2007 legislation had gradually lowered the rate from 6.8 percent that year to 3.4 percent in 2011 -- and timed it to shoot up again last year to 6.8 percent once more. But students lobbied hard against the change, President Obama’s re-election campaign seized on the issue, and Congress extended the 3.4 percent rate for an additional year, until July 1 of this year.

This year, both the Obama administration and House Republicans are pushing for a long-term solution based on interest rates in the broader economy. Senate Democrats are more skeptical -- meaning that the fate of the measure could rest on whether the House legislation introduced Thursday could pass with broad bipartisan support and overcome opposition within the president’s own party.

Several other interest rate proposals are already on the table. President Obama’s, included in his budget request for fiscal year 2014, would also tie interest rates to 10-year Treasury bonds. Senate Republicans have introduced a bill similar to the president’s plan. And two Senate Democrats introduced their own plan Thursday, which would create a variable interest rate tied to the 91-day rate on Treasury bonds.

The House Republican plan would set interest rates for all Stafford undergraduate loans at the 10-year Treasury yield plus 2.5 percentage points; for PLUS loans, the 10-year Treasury yield plus 4.5 percentage points. Stafford loans issued today under the plan would have an interest rate of 4.3 percent, lower than the current interest rate for unsubsidized student loans (and higher than the 3.4 percent interest rate for subsidized loans).

The interest rate formula varies slightly from the administration and Senate Republican proposals (see chart below). But the House Republican plan has two bigger differences. It would create a truly variable interest rate -- one that resets each year over the life of the loan -- for the first time since 1992. And interest rates would be capped so they couldn’t rise indefinitely with the market. For Stafford loans, the highest possible interest rate would be 8.5 percent; for PLUS loans, 10.5 percent.

Neither Obama’s plan nor the Senate Republican proposal included an interest rate cap. Since those proposals were first put forward, student advocates have argued strongly in favor of capping interest rates, and some House Democrats seemed sympathetic to their arguments. They’ve warned that if interest rates increase to the historic highs of the 1980s, students could be forced to take out loans with interest rates above 15 percent. But the Obama administration sees its expanded income-based repayment program, which ties borrowers' repayment to their discretionary income and forgives the debt after 20 years, as the best way to ensure that borrowers can afford their loan payments.

An Unusual Alliance

While the White House and Congressional Republicans have said they want a long-term fix for the interest rate problem now, many Senate Democrats are said to prefer a short-term extension of the 3.4 percent rate on subsidized Stafford loans.

The Higher Education Act is up for renewal next year, and members of the Democratic leadership in the Senate view that legislation as the natural place for an interest rate fix. Senator Tom Harkin, chairman of the Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, is said to be working on a bill -- with the support of the majority leader Harry Reid -- that would extend the 3.4 percent rate for another two years on subsidized Stafford loans.

The measure would cost $8.3 billion, and lawmakers are still determining how to pay for it, lobbyists and other observers here said Thursday.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

La Jolla Cove Attractions - South Korea Is the Latest to Cut Interest Rates

Source - http://www.nytimes.com/
By - BETTINA WASSENER
Category - La Jolla Cove Attractions
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

La Jolla Cove Attractions
The South Korean central bank on Thursday surprised analysts by trimming interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point — the latest central bank to do so in the face of tepid growth.

Australia, Europe and India have all lowered borrowing costs this month in a bid to oil the wheels of faltering economic activity.

The euro zone is still haunted by its festering debt crisis, while in Asia, the giant Chinese economy is in the midst of a major transition that entails slower growth driven more by domestic demand. In addition, economists have said the constant saber-rattling from North Korea may take a toll on sentiment.

In trimming rates to their lowest level since early 2011 — the cut took the base rate to 2.5 percent — the central bank in Seoul joined separate growth-bolstering efforts by the government, which on Tuesday signed off on plans for billions of dollars’ worth of additional stimulus spending to pump-prime the economy.

The “sluggishness of economic activities in the euro area” has deepened, the Bank of Korea said in a statement accompanying its rate decision, while economic indicators in emerging market countries such as China “have been weaker than initially anticipated.”

For South Korea, the weakening of the currency in Japan, a major competitor to South Korean exporters in many areas, also adds to the pain of an already tough trade environment. The yen has fallen sharply against major currencies, including the Korean won, in the wake of efforts by the Japanese government and central bank this year to combat persistent deflation and reinvigorate growth.

“The rate cut will lower the funding cost of investment and may revive the prolonged slump of the property and construction sector,” Raymond Yeung, an economist at ANZ in Hong Kong, wrote in a research note.

“As the government is also pushing forward a supplementary budget and other fiscal stimulus packages, today’s cut will help accelerate recovery and increase the upside of Korea’s” gross domestic product, he added.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Balboa Park San Diego - Programs For Mentally Ill Teens, Adults Improve Skills

Source - http://www.upi.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Balboa Park San Diego
Posted by - San Diego Hampton Inn

 
Balboa Park San Diego

Programs for mentally ill U.S. teens and adults achieve positive outcomes in behavioral and emotional health, skills, employment and education, officials say.

A report by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration also showed older adolescents and young adults who had participated in these SAMHSA-supported treatment programs reported lower levels of substance use disorders.

The report, Promoting Recovery and Independence for Older Adolescents and Young Adults Who Experience Serious Mental Health Challenges, indicates that 20 percent of young adults living in U.S. households had a mental health condition in the last year. Of these, more than 1.3 million had a disorder so serious that their ability to function in many aspects of everyday life was compromised, the report said.

For example, among older adolescents and young adults participating in the SAMHSA-sponsored Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services for Children and Their Families Program, 28 percent showed significant improvement in their behavioral and emotional health within the first six months, and 38 percent showed significant improvement within the first year.

Many participants reported they had greater confidence in their abilities to perform important life skills such as preparing meals and securing rental agreements, while homelessness dropped by 36 percent after six months among those ages 18 and older.

"These data show that treatment is effective," Pamela S. Hyde, administrator of SAMHSA, said in a statement. "Young people who experience mental or substance use disorders can recover and lead healthy, productive lives with improvements in employment opportunities, housing, education and emotional well-being."

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Attractions In San Diego - Migraine Drugs While Pregnant May Decrease Baby's IQ

Source - http://abcnews.go.com/
By - MATTHEW PERRONE
Category - Attractions In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Attractions In San Diego
U.S. health regulators are warning doctors and women of child-bearing age that half-a-dozen medications used to treat migraine headaches can decrease children's intelligence if taken while their mothers are pregnant.

The Food and Drug Administration said Monday that the drugs, including Depakote and Depacon, should never be taken by pregnant women for the prevention of migraine headaches.

The pills, which all contain the ingredient valproate sodium, already carry a boxed warning about the risk of birth defects. But the FDA said it is adding new warnings to the drugs after a study showed they decreased IQ scores in children whose mothers took them while pregnant.

"We have even more data now that show the risks to the children outweigh any treatment benefits for this use," said Russell Katz, the FDA's director for neurology drugs.

Earlier this year, researchers at Emory University reported that valproate-containing drugs were connected with an 8 to 11 point reduction in IQ scores for children at age 6. The study compared children whose mothers had taken different classes of neurological drugs while pregnant. The results supported similar findings from when the children were age 3.

Depakote and similar drugs are also used to treat bipolar disorder and seizures. While the FDA said it would not contraindicate the drugs for those uses, the agency said women of child-bearing age should only them as a last resort.

"Women who can become pregnant should not use valproate unless it is essential to managing their medical condition," the agency said in a statement.

Depakote is marketed in the U.S. by AbbVie, which was spun off earlier this year from parent company Abbott Laboratories. AbbVie also markets several other versions of the drug, including Depacon, an injectable formulation. The FDA's warning also affects Stavzor, a pill marketed by Noven Pharmaceuticals for bipolar disorder.

The FDA said it is working with the drug manufacturers to change their products' pregnancy code for migraines to X. The code indicates that the drug's risks outweigh its benefits for the given use.

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Hotels San Diego Downtown - Neil Armstrong's Heartbeat Taken When He Stepped Onto The Moon

Source - http://www.thedenverchannel.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Hotels San Diego Downtown
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Hotels San Diego Downtown
AMHERST, N.H. - A New Hampshire auction house is offering an EKG of Neil Armstrong’s heartbeat taken at the moment he first set foot on the moon.

Amherst-based RR Auction will take bids on the electrocardiogram, which registered a normal heartbeat, and other artifacts during an online auction from May 16 through May 23.

The auction house will also accept bids on other space and aviation items in addition to the heartbeat of the Apollo 11 commander.

Other artifacts include the joystick controller operated by Apollo 11 astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins in the Apollo 11 command module.

Auction officials say over 85 lots of Apollo 11 material will be featured in the auction.

Armstrong took his "giant leap for mankind" on July 20, 1969. Buzz Aldrin later joined him on the moon's surface.

Armstrong, an Ohio native, died in August at age 82.

San Diego Hotel Meeting Space - AIG Beats Estimates, Property And Casualty Business Shines

Source - http://www.reuters.com/
By - Lauren Tara LaCapra
Category - San Diego Hotel Meeting Space
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

San Diego Hotel Meeting Space
The long-awaited turnaround in AIG's property and casualty business helped the company beat analysts' quarterly profit expectations on Thursday, sending its shares up 3 percent in after-hours trading.

The unit reported a combined ratio of 97.3 percent last quarter, the first time that ratio has dropped below 100 since the third quarter of 2010. A combined ratio below 100 indicates an underwriting profit, meaning an insurer is receiving more in premiums than it is paying out in claims.

"The important thing for this quarter is that the combined ratio improved," said Josh Stirling, an insurance analyst with Bernstein Research. "That's the thing people will focus on: they actually made money."

Insurers have had trouble raising prices in the property and casualty business for some time. AIG has not reported an annual underwriting profit there since 2007, but the first quarter seems to have been a turning point. Travelers Companies Inc (TRV.N), Chubb Corp (CB.N) and ACE Ltd (ACE.N) also beat earnings expectations last month, citing higher pricing.

AIG's property and casualty unit reported operating income of $1.6 billion in the first quarter, up from $1 billion a year earlier. Its first-quarter, property-and-casualty underwriting income of $231 million compares with a $180 million underwriting loss in the same period a year ago.

AIG's life insurance business also reported some improvement, with higher returns on alternative assets and gains on the value of securities held in its investment portfolio. Its operating income rose to $1.4 billion from $1.3 billion a year ago. But like other life insurers, the business is still navigating a low interest-rate environment that hurts interest income from bonds and makes it difficult to sell fixed annuities.

Overall, AIG's profit fell 35 percent to $1.98 billion, or $1.34 per share, from $3.05 billion, or $1.71 per share a year earlier. On an operating basis, AIG earned $1.34 per share, compared with an average analyst estimate of 87 cents per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

The profit decline was related to lower premium income because of special items, including foreign currency fluctuations. Excluding those factors, net premiums rose 4 percent compared with the year-ago period. AIG also spent more to upgrade infrastructure, technology and personnel, driving expenses higher.

In a memo to employees obtained by Reuters, Chief Executive Robert Benmosche called it a "strong quarter," but said further improvement was needed.

"Our priority this year is to improve operating fundamentals and reduce costs," he said. "Whether this means lowering the cost of capital, re-engineering our systems, or focusing on business lines and geographical locations that make strategic sense for our company, each one of us should be looking for ways to improve efficiencies and eliminate expenses."

The March quarter was an important benchmark for AIG, because it was the first in which the U.S. government had fully exited all its bailout-related holdings.

The Federal Reserve and Treasury Department together offered $182 billion in combined support for AIG stemming from the 2008 financial crisis. After years of restructuring, selling assets and returning its government-owned stock to the public, AIG eliminated the government's last financial interest in March when it bought back warrants from the Treasury for about $25 million.

DIVIDEND QUESTION LINGERS

Despite that progress, there are still some questions hanging over AIG, including how it will be treated under its presumed status as a "systemically important financial institution," or SIFI, which the Federal Reserve has not yet officially designated, and when it will be able to resume dividend payments.

AIG shares have risen 19 percent this year, closing at $42.13 on Thursday. But they remain well below the company's book value of $59.39, excluding market gains and losses.

Analysts say investors are hesitant to value AIG as richly as other insurers because of its bailout, its volatile earnings since 2007 and its ongoing turnaround plan.

While management is investing in some long-neglected areas of AIG, overall it is trying to reduce costs and staff. Benmosche also wants AIG's property and casualty business to produce a return-on-equity of at least 10 percent and a coverage ratio of 90 to 95 by 2015.

Some investors are also waiting for the company to reinstate its dividend, which has been suspended since 2008. The company has so far offered cautious guidance on that topic.

While resuming dividend payments is important to management, AIG's first priority is getting ratings agencies and regulators comfortable with its capital levels, executives have said.

AIG has also been using excess capital to buy back some of its more expensive debt and its stock.

The company called $1.1 billion of junior subordinated notes and spent $1.3 billion buying back debt during the first quarter, which will reduce interest payments by $165 million a year. AIG is also considering calling another $750 million in callable hybrids in the second quarter, which would save it another $50 million in annual interest payments.

"I would love to be able to put a dividend on the stock," Benmosche said in a conference call in February.

But he also noted that ratings agencies "want more time to see us continue to evolve with the good, solid earnings that you've seen so far."

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Accommodation In San Diego - Caterpillar Announces 300 Additional Layoffs

Source - http://herald-review.com/
By - CHRIS LUSVARDI
Category - Accommodation In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Accommodation In San Diego
Another round of layoffs at the Caterpillar Inc. facility in Decatur were set Friday to take effect in July.

The Peoria-based company said 300 employees will be laid off in 60 days. The announcement brings the total number of Decatur workers to be idled in the next two months to 760. Before the reductions started, Caterpillar employed about 4,000 people in Decatur.

Caterpillar spokeswoman Barbara Cox said the actions are necessary to bring production in line with demand.

“Products built in Decatur are used in the mining industry, which has witnessed weaker market conditions when compared to last year,” Cox said. “While some cost-reduction measures such as temporary layoffs, shutdowns and shortened workweeks have already been implemented, further measures must be taken in the near-term.”

The affected employees work in production and support/management roles, with Caterpillar saying the majority are from the production work force.

Although unemployment rates in other areas of the country have shown recent signs of improving, state Rep. Bill Mitchell, R-Forsyth, said that has not been the case locally. Mitchell said the announcement “is terrible news for Decatur.”

“Unfortunately, the improvement in the economy has bypassed Illinois and Macon County,” Mitchell said. “While I understand Caterpillar’s decision was based largely on a weakening mining industry, we have to do better. More must be done to improve our economy locally and get Illinois working again.”

The Decatur-area unemployment rate has been among the highest in the state. It was 11.8 percent in March, according to the Illinois Department of Employment Security.

Conditions in the mining industry could remain volatile in the near future, said Craig Coil, president of the Economic Development Corporation of Decatur and Macon County.

“We hope this is the end of it,” Coil said. “It’s all up in the air right now. Caterpillar is doing everything it can to keep the work force in place.”

As with its announcement in April, Caterpillar said it plans to help the affected employees. Coil said groups such as Workforce Investment Solutions are available to assist those looking for new jobs.

“We know this is difficult for our employees and their families, and the company will do what it can to ensure impacted employees have support during this time,” Cox said.

Jobs are available elsewhere for qualified workers, but Coil said likely not in the kind of numbers that Caterpillar employs.

Decatur isn’t the only Caterpillar facility facing changes and cuts. Layoffs in Peoria and Joliet recently were announced.

Temporary layoffs are being implemented in the Milwaukee area, and a plant in South Carolina will be closed, leaving 280 employees out of work.

Friday, May 3, 2013

Affordable Hotels In San Diego - Is Your Child a Budding Psychopath? Now There's a Way To Find Out

Source - http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/
By - Press Release
Category - Affordable Hotels In San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

Affordable Hotels In San Diego
A study compared 37 boys with serious conduct problems, including causing harm to others, dishonesty, general aggression and other antisocial traits, with a control group of 18 boys who had no such behavioural issues.

Researchers placed them in a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machine that identifies which parts of the brain respond to stimulus.

The boys were shown a series of 192 photos of hands and feet in situations that were potentially painful or not painful - such as a hand resting on a table top with a knife beside it, or the same hand on the table with the point of the knife blade about to pierce it.

The brains of ''problem children" showed reduced activity in the anterior cingulate cortex and in the insula, both of which are critical to empathy.

With lower levels of empathy, these boys were less reactive to the pain of others. Researchers believe the "callous traits" that characterise psychopathy have their roots in this condition.

"(Reduced response to pain in other people) could reflect an early neurobiological marker indexing risk for empathic deficits seen in adult psychopathy," the study, published in today's Current Biology journal, concluded.

However, it was possible to alter a child's psychological course with early intervention, according to University College London (UCL) psychologist and languages specialist Essi Viding.

"Our findings indicate that children with conduct problems have an atypical brain response to seeing other people in pain," Professor Viding, who co-authored the report, said.

"It is important to view these findings as an indicator of early vulnerability, rather than biological destiny.

"We know that children can be very responsive to interventions, and the challenge is to make those interventions even better, so that we can really help the children, their families, and their wider social environment."

Statistics indicate about five per cent of children suffer from conduct problems - a diagnosis known as CP for short - but not all of them exhibit psychopathic markings, the study said.

Professor Paul Frick of the University of New Orleans - who was not involved in the study but specialises in childhood psychopathology - lists 10 warning signs to look for in youngsters:

1.  They persistently hurt, bully or fight others, or violate their rights by stealing or vandalising.

2.  They break major rules, such as running away from home or staying out late.

3.  They show no guilt when told off for doing wrong, e.g., pushing another child into the road.

4.  They show a persistent callous disregard for other people’s feelings — not just siblings (e.g., pushing another child off a swing and being unmoved by their distress).

5.  They persistently don’t care about how well they do in, say, school, even when the expectations are clear and they are capable.

6.  They seem cold and unfeeling, only showing emotions to intimidate or manipulate.

7.  They blame others for their mistakes, rather than accept responsibility themselves.

8.  They are fearless and like doing novel and dangerous activities.

9.  They are unmoved by the threat of punishment (e.g., ‘if you do that, I am going to take away your bike’).

10.  They are highly motivated by reward or what they’ll get out of something, even if it hurts others (e.g., stealing).
 

Trip To San Diego - Only 20% Of U.S. Adults Get Enough Exercise

Source - http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/
By - Sarah Glynn
Category - Trip To San Diego
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn

 
Trip To San Diego

Only 20% of adults in the U.S. are getting the recommended amount of exercise, according to a new report by the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention).

The research showed that one in five American adults is meeting both the aerobic and muscle-strengthening components of the physical activity guidelines issued by the federal government.

Data were gathered and analyzed from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System - an annual phone survey of adults aged 18 and older conducted by state health departments.

According to The Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans, adults should be getting at least two and a half hours each week of moderate-intensity aerobic activity - like walking - or one hour and 15 minutes each week of vigorous-intensity aerobic activity - like jogging - or a mixture of both.

The recommendations also say that adults should engage in muscle-strengthening activities, including sit-ups, push-ups, or exercise using resistance bands or weights.

All major muscle groups should be involved in these activities, which should be done at least two days every week.

Almost half of American adults are meeting the recommendations for aerobic activity and approximately 30% are getting the recommended amount of muscle-strengthening activity.

 Differences among states and the District of Columbia were also found. According to the results, the rates of adults getting the recommended amount of exercise ranged from 27% in Colorado to 13% in Tennessee and West Virginia.

The highest proportion of people who met the guidelines lived in the West (24%) and the Northeast (21%).

Individuals who were least likely to get the recommended amount of exercise included:

    Hispanics
    women
    older adults
    obese adults

A previous report revealed the guidelines stress that exercise benefits everyone regardless of age or ethnic group and are formulated so that people can easily include physical activities that they enjoy into their daily lives.

Some of the benefits of exercising regularly that are listed in the guidelines include a lower risk of:

    stroke
    premature death
    high blood pressure
    coronary heart disease
    depression
    colon and breast cancer
    type 2 diabetes

A previous study indicated that nearly two thirds of adults in the UK are not getting enough exercise, putting themselves at greater risk for potentially fatal illnesses.