Myspace rolls out redesign, targets ‘Generation Y’

November 2nd, 2010 | 4,501 views

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(WASHINGTON-AFP) - Social network pioneer Myspace unveiled a redesign on Wednesday targeting the “Generation Y” younger audience as it seeks to regain ground lost to Facebook.

Myspace, which Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. bought for 580 million dollars in 2005, said its new website and products are intended to “redefine the company as a social entertainment destination for Gen Y.”

“This marks the beginning of an exciting turning point for Myspace,” chief executive Mike Jones said in a statement.

“Our new strategy expands on Myspace’s existing strengths — a deep understanding of social, a wealth of entertainment content and the ability to surface emerging cultural trends in real-time through our users,” Jones said.

Myspace said the relaunch was aimed at “creating a rich, highly personalized experience for people to discover content and connect with other fans who share similar interests.

“The entertainment experience will span music, celebrities, movies, television and games and will be available through multiple platforms, including online, mobile devices and offline events,” it said.

Myspace said it will focus on promoting “curators” — members with knowledge around entertainment and cultural topics and back them with “resources, tools and platform to expand their reach within the Myspace community.”

It said the completely rebuilt website includes “product features that put content center stage.”

“From the color palette to the way the site is organized to the improved navigation, everything has been redesigned to help people easily find relevant content,” Myspace said.

“Once a user logs in to Myspace, the page will instantly populate with content based on the individual’s interests, creating a unique, contextually relevant discovery experience,” it said.

“This is the just the first step, and there will be many more features, programs and improvements to come,” Myspace CEO Jones said.

Myspace boasts over 100 million users worldwide compared with Facebook’s more than 500 million and since being eclipsed by Facebook the site has positioned itself as a platform for musicians and their fans. Myspace said it will release a mobile version of the site later this year along with a new Myspace application for Apple’s iPhone and Android devices.

Myspace said the new site begins rolling out Wednesday in beta, or test, mode and will be available to all users worldwide by the end of November.

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Global warming ‘unquestionably’ linked to humans: France

November 2nd, 2010 | 4,957 views

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(PARIS-AFP) - Global warming exists and is unquestionably due to human activity, the French Academy of Science said in a report published Thursday and written by 120 scientists from France and abroad.

“Several independent indicators show an increase in global warming from 1975 to 2003. This increase is mainly due to the increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide,” the academy said in conclusion to the report.

“The increase in carbon dioxide, and to a lesser degree other greenhouse gases, is unquestionably due to human activity,” said the report, adopted unanimously by academy members.

The report contradicts France’s former education minister Claude Allegre, a geochemist, who published a book called “The Climatic Deception” which claimed that carbon dioxide was not linked to climate change.

The report was commissioned in April by Minister for Research Valerie Pecresse in response to hundreds of environmental scientists who complained that Allegre in particular was disparaging their work.

Allegre is a member of the Academy of Sciences and also signed off on the report.

“He has the right to evolve,” the academy’s president Jean Salencon said. Pecresse said: “The debate is over.”

But Allegre told AFP that the document was a compromise and “I have not evolved, I still say the same thing, that the exact role of carbon dioxide in the environment has not been shown.”

“Of course it’s a compromise, but it’s a satisfactory compromise because what I defend, that is the uncertainty in our knowledge about climate change, is explicitly mentioned, the word uncertainty appears 12 times,” he said.

In his book, Allegre questioned the work of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and criticised worldwide mobilisation around “a myth without foundation.”

He disagreed with linking climate change and an increase in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and said clouds or solar activity had more of an influence.

The IPCC, established to sift through scientific research and produce the most authoritative report possible on climate change for world leaders, has been hit by a raft of criticisms and the UN has said it needs a major overhaul.

Glaring errors were revealed in the panel’s landmark 2007 Fourth Assessment Report — notably that Himalayan glaciers which provide water to a billion people in Asia could be lost by 2035, a claim traced to a magazine article.

The Academy’s report said that “solar activity, which has dropped slightly on average since 1975, cannot be dominant in warming observed during this period” even if the mechanisms involved “are not yet well understood.”

“Major uncertainties remain on how to model clouds, the evolution of marine ice and the polar caps, the connection between the oceans and the atmosphere, the biosphere’s evolution and the carbon cycle,” the report said.

Allegre wrote that it was impossible to predict the climate’s long-term evolution, but the Academy said that “climate evolution predictions of 30 to 50 years are little affected by uncertainties on modelling slow evolution processes.”

“These predictions are particularly useful in responding to society’s current concerns, worsened by the predictable population growth.”

The IPCC’s deputy head, Frenchman Jean Jouzel, welcomed the report.

“Even if in this text lots of space is given to the arguments put forward by climate change sceptics, I note that the document clearly reaffirms the IPCC’s broad conclusions,” he told AFP.

“Clearly sceptics will find some things to make their case. It says that not all is clear about the sun’s role. The debate is never over,” he said.

The report was the result of written contributions as well as closed-door discussions held at the Academy on September 20 and subsequent exchanges, the Academy said.

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Bear attacks surge in Japan, environmental change blamed

October 26th, 2010 | 2,238 views
This handout picture taken by Shari town local government on October 18, 2010 shows two bears walking down the street in Shari town in Japans northern island of Hokkaido.

This handout picture taken by Shari town local government on October 18, 2010 shows two bears walking down the street in Shari town in Japans northern island of Hokkaido.

(TOKYO-AFP) - Bear attacks have shot up in Japan this year and sightings of the animals have spiked, a trend blamed on climatic changes and shifting land use patterns, officials and media reports said Wednesday.

At least four people were killed and 80 wounded in bear attacks between April and September in the island-nation, much of which is covered in mountain forests, topping last year’s total of 64 attacks, said broadcaster NHK.

Some 400 bears were shot dead near human-populated areas by authorised hunters on Japan’s far-northern island of Hokkaido alone, where two people were mauled to death by bears earlier this year, a local official said.

In the mountainous central prefecture of Fukushima, northeast of Tokyo, more than 150 bears were shot dead after they encroached on residential areas.

Some wildlife experts have blamed a record heat wave this summer which impacted the omnivores’ natural food sources and sent the Asiatic black bears foraging for food in more densely populated farming and residential areas.

“The extremely hot summer and other climatic factors may have led to a shortage of acorns or nuts in woodlands this year,” said Tatsuo Sato, an official of the Fukushima prefectural government.

In some areas habitat destruction is blamed for forcing the bears into closer contact with humans. In other parts, farms are being abandoned and reclaimed by nature, reducing buffer zone with the bears’ natural habitats.

In the latest reported encounter, police and hunters went on the hunt Wednesday in Fukuchiyama, Kyoto prefecture, after a one-metre (three-foot) tall bear was sighted in a residential area. Noone was injured.

Another bear was hit by a train on Tuesday in Shiga prefecture, central Japan, a railway company official said.

“We should be fully aware that bears are expanding their range into our living areas,” said an official in Hokkaido, which is home to 1,800-3,600 bears.

He also offered some safety advice to local residents: “In the unfortunate case of a bear encounter, all we should do is look steadily into its eyes and move away slowly without running”.

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‘Harm reduction cigarettes’ light up health concerns

October 26th, 2010 | 7,419 views

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(Relaxnews) - “Safe” cigarettes, which have lower levels of nicotine than conventional ones, may be even more harmful to your health, reveal researchers in California.

In recent years, tobacco companies have been marketing “safer” cigarettes made from complex fibers or genetically altered tobacco plants to reduce nicotine concentration.

But stem cell scientists at the University of California-Riverside in the US have found the smoke coming off the end of a smoldering harm reduction cigarette, known as sidestream smoke, is even more toxic than sidestream smoke from conventional brands.

Researchers say because it isn’t possibly to determine chemical toxicity on actual human embryos, they developed tests with human embryonic stem cells, which model young embryos, to measure the toxicity of smoke. Tests measured both mainstream smoke, when a smoker actively inhales, and sidestream smoke, which contributes to secondhand smoke, from both conventional and harm reduction cigarette brands.

“Harm reduction products are not necessarily safer than their conventional counterparts,” said the study’s lead scientist Prue Talbot in a new release October 20. “Our analyses show there is significant toxicity in harm reduction products, and our data show that reduction of carcinogens in harm reduction mainstream smoke does not necessarily reduce the toxicity of unfiltered sidestream smoke.” Results of the study will appear in the November issue of Toxicological Sciences.

“This information should be valuable to potential users of harm reduction cigarettes and should be taken into account when establishing policies regarding the sale, advertising, and use of harm reduction products,” Talbot said.

Harm reduction brands the team tested were Marlboro Lights, Advance Premium Lights, and Quest, while  Marlboro Red cigarettes represented conventional brands.

Another product touted as a safer option is the controversial electronic cigarette, or e-cigarette. It’s a battery-powered device that provides inhaled doses of vaporized nicotine, but without the smoke or tobacco, or the biggest health risk, combustion of tobacco, retailers say. Global health officials, however, are waving a red flag on the costly product due to major lack of certainty with regards to its safety and effectiveness.

To read tips on quitting smoking:
http://info.cancerresearchuk.org/healthyliving/smokingandtobacco/givingup/

http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/tobacco/smoking

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