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How to instantly share files between Macs with AirDrop

How to instantly share files between Macs with AirDrop

AirDrop is a convenient way to share files between Macs without the need for email, Dropbox, or any other file sharing service. As long as both parties are using a supported Mac and running OS X Lion or later, using AirDrop to share and transfer files between computers is as simple as dragging and dropping.

Not sure where to find AirDrop or how to use it? Follow along and we'll show you how.

How to share a file from another Mac using AirDrop

  1. Open a finder window on your Mac by holding down on the Finder icon in your dock and selecting New Finder Window.
  2. In the left hand navigation, click on AirDrop.
  3. Any other Mac users that have AirDrop open will automatically populate in the AirDrop window. They'll need to have it open too in order to accept a file.
  4. Now just simply drag the file you'd like to share to the icon for their Mac.
  5. You'll be asked to confirm that you'd like to share the specified file, simply click Send.
  6. You'll see a message saying AirDrop is waiting for the user to accept it. Once they do, you'll see a blue circle go around their icon as the data transfers. Once the circle makes its way all the way around and disappears, the file transfer is complete.

How to accept a shared file from another Mac using AirDrop

  1. Open a finder window on your Mac by holding down on the Finder icon in your dock and selecting New Finder Window.
  2. In the left hand navigation, click on AirDrop.
  3. Any other Mac users that have AirDrop open will automatically populate in the AirDrop window. Both parties must have it open in order to send and receive files.
  4. If you've received a file, a notification will show up by that person's icon. Either click on Save or Save and Open.
  5. If you selected the regular save option, the file will be automatically stored in the Downloads folder of your Mac. You can access it there anytime you'd like.
    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/XR1JHXamfpw/story01.htm

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Researchers discover new weapon in fight against cervical cancer

Researchers discover new weapon in fight against cervical cancer [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Chris Bunting
c.j.bunting@leeds.ac.uk
44-113-343-2049
University of Leeds

Scientists at the University of Leeds have found a way to target and destroy a key protein associated with the development of cervical and other cancers.

The E7 protein is produced early in the lifecycle of the human papillomavirus (HPV) and blocks the body's natural defences against the uncontrolled division of cells that can lead to cancer.

Researchers at the University of Leeds' School of Molecular and Cellular Biology have synthesised a molecule, called an RNA aptamer, that latches onto the carcinogenic protein and targets it for destruction, significantly reducing its presence in cells in the laboratory derived from cervical cancers.

There are many types of human papillomavirus. Some are transmitted by sexual contact and associated not only with cervical cancer but also head and neck cancer. Although an increasing proportion of young women in the United Kingdom are vaccinated against the virus, most women in their mid-20s or older are not vaccinated and many may already be HPV positive.

"We therefore need to maintain screening and to develop novel therapeutic strategies," lead researcher Dr Nicola Stonehouse said. "Currently, if you have advanced cervical cancer or head and neck cancerboth of which are associated with human papillomavirusyou really have little choice but surgery. If we can use this aptamer to target the carcinogenic protein, we might be talking about much less radical surgery in the future."

Aptamers are a relatively new tool for molecular biologists and a topic of intense research interest. Like the much better understood antibodies, aptamers can identify and target other molecules as well as viruses and bacteria. However, unlike traditional antibodies, they offer the possibility of insertion into live cells and can be artificially designed in the test tube.

The Leeds team, which received funding from Yorkshire Cancer Research and the BBSRC, was originally looking for an aptamer for use as a research tool.

"We were not trying to develop a therapy. We wanted to create better ways of looking at the virus infection because the current tools that we have are very limited," Dr Stonehouse said. "But what we found was that the aptamers caused the E7 protein to actually disappear. They seem to target it to be degraded. In a cell which is producing lots of E7 and is therefore dangerous, the level of E7 goes down if these RNA aptamers are there".

The new study is based on laboratory cell lines rather than real cancer cases, but the discovery of a molecule that targets one of the key proteins involved in HPV-related cancers raises the possibility of less invasive treatments.

The new aptamer might be used in the future to help stop residual cancerous material from re-establishing itself after surgery and therefore allow less aggressive approaches to surgery. The next challenge is to effectively target the new aptamer at real cancers.

The paper is published in the journal PLOS One.

###

Further information:

Dr Nicola Stonehouse is available for interview. Contact: Chris Bunting, Press Officer, University of Leeds; phone: +44 113 343 2049 or email c.j.bunting@leeds.ac.uk

The full paper: Clare Nicol, zlem Cesur, Sophie Forrest, Tamara Belyaeva, David Bunka, G. Eric Blair, Nicola Stonehouse, 'An RNA aptamer provides a novel approach for the induction of apoptosis by targeting the HPV16 E7 oncoprotein,' PLOS ONE (2013) (DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0064781; URL: http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0064781)


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Researchers discover new weapon in fight against cervical cancer [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Chris Bunting
c.j.bunting@leeds.ac.uk
44-113-343-2049
University of Leeds

Scientists at the University of Leeds have found a way to target and destroy a key protein associated with the development of cervical and other cancers.

The E7 protein is produced early in the lifecycle of the human papillomavirus (HPV) and blocks the body's natural defences against the uncontrolled division of cells that can lead to cancer.

Researchers at the University of Leeds' School of Molecular and Cellular Biology have synthesised a molecule, called an RNA aptamer, that latches onto the carcinogenic protein and targets it for destruction, significantly reducing its presence in cells in the laboratory derived from cervical cancers.

There are many types of human papillomavirus. Some are transmitted by sexual contact and associated not only with cervical cancer but also head and neck cancer. Although an increasing proportion of young women in the United Kingdom are vaccinated against the virus, most women in their mid-20s or older are not vaccinated and many may already be HPV positive.

"We therefore need to maintain screening and to develop novel therapeutic strategies," lead researcher Dr Nicola Stonehouse said. "Currently, if you have advanced cervical cancer or head and neck cancerboth of which are associated with human papillomavirusyou really have little choice but surgery. If we can use this aptamer to target the carcinogenic protein, we might be talking about much less radical surgery in the future."

Aptamers are a relatively new tool for molecular biologists and a topic of intense research interest. Like the much better understood antibodies, aptamers can identify and target other molecules as well as viruses and bacteria. However, unlike traditional antibodies, they offer the possibility of insertion into live cells and can be artificially designed in the test tube.

The Leeds team, which received funding from Yorkshire Cancer Research and the BBSRC, was originally looking for an aptamer for use as a research tool.

"We were not trying to develop a therapy. We wanted to create better ways of looking at the virus infection because the current tools that we have are very limited," Dr Stonehouse said. "But what we found was that the aptamers caused the E7 protein to actually disappear. They seem to target it to be degraded. In a cell which is producing lots of E7 and is therefore dangerous, the level of E7 goes down if these RNA aptamers are there".

The new study is based on laboratory cell lines rather than real cancer cases, but the discovery of a molecule that targets one of the key proteins involved in HPV-related cancers raises the possibility of less invasive treatments.

The new aptamer might be used in the future to help stop residual cancerous material from re-establishing itself after surgery and therefore allow less aggressive approaches to surgery. The next challenge is to effectively target the new aptamer at real cancers.

The paper is published in the journal PLOS One.

###

Further information:

Dr Nicola Stonehouse is available for interview. Contact: Chris Bunting, Press Officer, University of Leeds; phone: +44 113 343 2049 or email c.j.bunting@leeds.ac.uk

The full paper: Clare Nicol, zlem Cesur, Sophie Forrest, Tamara Belyaeva, David Bunka, G. Eric Blair, Nicola Stonehouse, 'An RNA aptamer provides a novel approach for the induction of apoptosis by targeting the HPV16 E7 oncoprotein,' PLOS ONE (2013) (DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0064781; URL: http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0064781)


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/uol-rdn053013.php

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Rogers, Videotron extend reach with network-sharing deal

By Euan Rocha and Alastair Sharp

TORONTO (Reuters) - Rogers Communications Inc and Quebecor Inc's Videotron wireless arm plan to build and operate a shared high-speed wireless network in and around Qu?bec, a cost-saving arrangement that is expected to stoke competition in the French-speaking Canadian province.

Rogers, the nation's largest wireless provider, now spends far more on its network than its main rivals, Telus Corp and BCE Inc's Bell unit, do on their shared network.

The pairing with Videotron, announced late on Wednesday, means Rogers will narrow that gap. The deal will also help Quebecor's Videotron arm broaden its range of wireless services and perhaps increase market share in Qu?bec, where the three national operators already have a head start in wireless.

"Quebecor with this deal gets a lot of tools to become more competitive," said Desjardins analyst Maher Yaghi, adding that the deal could eventually lead to an even broader asset sharing arrangement between the two sides.

The 20-year network sharing deal will help the companies expand a high-speed wireless network using technology known as long-term evolution, or LTE, in Qu?bec and the Ottawa region. The two sides will continue to compete for customers.

"It's going to save both on operating costs and capital requirements to maintain and evolve that wireless network," said Izabel Flis, a buy-side research analyst with Bissett Investment Management, which owns Rogers stock.

Over 10 years, Videotron is set to pay Rogers C$200 million ($194.20 million), and Rogers will pay Videotron C$93 million, based on the fair value of the services each is providing.

Quebecor shares jumped 4.1 percent to C$46.59 in afternoon trading, while Rogers stock was down 0.3 percent at C$47.80.

OTTAWA EYES DEALS

The companies also said Rogers would pay C$180 million to buy Videotron's unused spectrum in the greater Toronto area. Videotron bought those airwaves in a 2008 auction in which the federal government set aside some airwaves for new entrants, including Videotron.

The deal on spectrum puts pressure on the government, whose attempts to foster competition within the sector have been stymied as the small players have struggled. Telus earlier this month bid C$380 million bid for Mobilicity, an upstart that is now fighting to stave off insolvency.

The three major telecoms are scrambling to buy up smaller competition or obtain their airwaves, the lifeblood of mobile providers, as demand explodes for speedy mobile streaming of video and other data-heavy applications.

"Ottawa is in a tight position," Bissett's Flis said. "It's a challenge for them because they really wanted more players ... and it doesn't seem like that's going to be the case, except for Qu?bec, where Videotron is pretty strong."

Asked to comment on the Rogers-Videotron transaction, the government said all spectrum transfer requests remain subject to its approval. It is currently reviewing a recent Rogers deal to buy spectrum from Shaw Communications, as well as its broader policy on the transfer of spectrum licenses.

Shaw, a dominant cable company in Western Canada without a mobile telephone business, had bought set-aside spectrum in 2008 but later nixed plans to build a wireless network.

Although the government has indicated it is displeased with the Rogers-Shaw deal, Desjardins' Yaghi said the agreement with Videotron may stand a better chance of passing muster, given that company's track record of forcing down prices in Quebec.

"Of the deals that have been announced, Videotron has actually implemented in Quebec what the government hoped to have in creating a fourth, very competitive player," he said.

(Additional reporting by Randall Palmer in Ottawa; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn and Nick Zieminski)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rogers-videotron-reach-network-sharing-spectrum-deal-125627514.html

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ৩০ মে, ২০১৩

GMO Wheat Found In Oregon Field. How Did It Get There?

Genetically modified wheat has been discovered growing in a field in Oregon. GMO wheat is not approved for sale in the U.S. Above, a wheat field in Arkansas.

Danny Johnston/AP

Genetically modified wheat has been discovered growing in a field in Oregon. GMO wheat is not approved for sale in the U.S. Above, a wheat field in Arkansas.

Danny Johnston/AP

A farmer in Oregon has found some genetically engineered wheat growing on his land. It's an unwelcome surprise, because this type of wheat has never been approved for commercial planting.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture says it's investigating, trying to find out how this wheat got there. The USDA says there's no risk to public health, but wheat exporters are worried about how their customers in Asia and Europe will react.

In fact, worry about export markets is the main reason why genetically engineered wheat isn't on the market in the first place.

The biotech company Monsanto did create varieties of wheat that tolerate the weedkiller glyphosate, or Roundup ? just as it created "Roundup Ready" corn, soybeans, cotton and canola. It also carried out field trials of this wheat in 16 different states.

But the country's wheat growers told the company that they did not want it.

"We are not in favor of commercializing any biotech trait unless it's gone through regulatory approvals in the U.S. and in other countries," says Steve Mercer, vice president of communications for U.S. Wheat Associates. Many countries, including some that import wheat from the U.S., are quite hostile to genetically engineered crops.

Monsanto dropped the wheat project. It never asked for government approval, and it ended its field trials of wheat in 2005.

Fast forward eight years. About a month ago, a farmer in eastern Oregon noticed some wheat plants growing where he didn't expect them, and they didn't die when he sprayed them with Roundup.

The farmer sent samples of these curious plants to Carol Mallory-Smith, a scientist at Oregon State University who has investigated other cases in which genetically engineered crops spread beyond their approved boundaries.

She found that this wheat was, in fact, genetically engineered. She passed samples on to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which confirmed her results.

Bernadette Juarez, an official with the USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, said in a statement that her agency is collecting more samples from the farm, conducting more tests. "We have a team of dedicated investigators working on the ground daily to figure out what's going on here," she says.

Nobody knows how this wheat got to this farm. Monsanto's last field trials in Oregon were in 2001. After all such trials, the genetically engineered crops are supposed to be completely removed.

Also, nobody knows how widely this genetically engineered wheat has spread, and whether it's been in fields of wheat that were harvested for food.

According to the USDA, even if it has, there's no danger to public health.
Still, if further tests show that this unapproved wheat has spread into the food supply, it could play havoc with wheat sales.

In 2006, traces of genetically engineered rice ? also unapproved ? were discovered in large parts of the American rice harvest. That discovery shut down America's rice exports to some countries. Exporters lost millions of dollars. The wheat harvest is much bigger.

Steve Mercer, from U.S. Wheat Associates, says there's no indication that this will happen to wheat. Right now, it's just a few isolated plants growing in eastern Oregon.

"We're in the process of getting in touch with all of our customers," he says. "We are going to work to make sure that they have all the information that they need to make their decisions, and reassure them that this isolated trait hasn't entered commerce."

So far, he says, those customers aren't making any decisions. They're just asking for more information.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/05/30/187103955/gmo-wheat-found-in-oregon-field-howd-it-get-there?ft=1&f=1007

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Nepal Celebrates 60th Anniversary of First Everest Climb (Voice Of America)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/309057660?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Tim Cook: The magic is at the intersection

Tim Cook: The magic is at the intersection

As part of the D11 conference, Tim Cook deferred questions about the future of iOS and OS X to WWDC 2013, which is now less than two weeks away. He did, however, address the new management, with software, services, and design, among other things, all now under unified leadership.

Cook also basically said that, given the quality of Jony Ive's work on Apple hardware design over the years, letting him loose on the software was a no-brainer. (Rumors of a flatter, more monochromatic iOS 7 have been making the rounds lately.)

When it comes to differences between Cook and Jobs' management style, Cook said there were many, but the similarity was the most important: Keeping Apple as Apple.

And that it remains at the intersection of software, hardware, and services that Apple's magic lies.

Nothing new there really, but does it make you feel more or less confident about what you expect to see at WWDC in June?

Via: The Verge

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/eu6cwYYJxB4/story01.htm

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Real-estate broker, 78, attacked at home west of Yakima | Local ...

A 78-year-old real-estate broker was listed in serious condition at a Seattle hospital Sunday after being assaulted at a home west of Yakima on Saturday, according to the Yakima County Sheriff?s Office.

Vernon Holbrook, who is listed as the designated broker and owner of Aspen Real Estate in Yakima, had shown homes in the Cowiche-Tieton area late Saturday morning when co-workers became concerned that he failed to keep later appointments, according to a news release from the Sheriff?s Office.

Worried co-workers searching for Holbrook found him around 7:30 or 8 p.m., the release said. He had suffered head trauma.

He was initially taken by ambulance to Yakima Valley Memorial and was later transferred to Seattle?s Harborview Medical Center. Holbrook was listed in serious condition late Sunday morning but hospital officials later in the day said they had no information on Holbrook.

A spokesman for the Sheriff?s Office said Sunday afternoon that no further information was available about the assault and no suspects had been identified.

Holbrook has been a licensed real-estate agent in Yakima since 1965, according to the Aspen Real Estate website.

Rich Culver, a real-estate broker who has worked with Holbrook for almost three years, said he was stunned when he learned of the incident Sunday afternoon.

?It makes me really upset that here?s a man in his late 70s and someone assaults him,? Culver said in a telephone interview.

Culver said Holbrook is a respected and hardworking businessman. ?He?s one of the hardest-working men, at that age, I?ve ever known in my life,? Culver said.

Fellow Seasons board member Pat Strosahl said Holbrook has been a ?terrific? member of the organization for the past three years.

?I think he?s just been a really fine contributor, and I don?t mean just financially,? Strosahl said. ?He?s done what he can to help us through some difficult situations.?

Strosahl, as vice president of the local homebuilding company United Builders, said he also had business dealings with Holbrook for more than a decade.

?He?s a prodigious producer when it comes to real- estate sales because he likes it and is able to put together deals a lot of other people can?t,? Strosahl said.

Kathie Fitzpatrick, also a broker with Aspen Real Estate, said Holbrook is a man without enemies.

?It?s hard to believe anyone would have anything against Vern,? Fitzpatrick said.

Deputies urged anyone with information to call their office at 509-574-2500 or Crime Stoppers Yakima County at 800-222-TIPS. Text messages can be sent to 274637 plus YAKCO.

Source: http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2021070766_realestateattackxml.html

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PFT: Remembering Tillman on Memorial Day

QuickGetty Images

One drew comparisons to Terrell Owens.? The other had a ?miserable? rookie season.? Both will be counted upon to justify their draft status.

Joe Lyons of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch takes a look at receiver Brian Quick and running back Isaiah Pead.? Both arrived via round two in 2012.? Neither has actually arrived.

Quick finished his rookie season with 11 receptions, Pead with 10 rushes.? The latter landed at No. 3 on the depth chart, thanks to missing offseason workouts due to the outdated rule prohibiting participation until a school?s exams have concluded.

?The crazy thing was, I wasn?t even in school at the time,?? Pead said.? ?So I was just sitting around.

?I had a playbook, but I couldn?t explain it to myself. I missed all but a week of [offseason practices] last year, so this year, I just feel like I?m that much farther along.??

And so, for now, Pead?s not miserable.

?New year, new season.? That?s the way I look at it,?? Pead said.? ?The second year, it?s completely different because you have a better idea of what to expect and you have a better idea of what?s expected of you.

?Last year obviously didn?t go the way I wanted, but I survived it and I?m ready to move forward.??

Quick basically said the same thing.

?Last year, for me, was a learning year, and that?s something I?m looking to build on,?? Quick said.? ?It?s a big step, coming to the NFL because everything at this level, physically and mentally, is so much faster.? You have to adjust, but you can?t force it.

?But now, after that first year, I really feel like I have a better feel for the offense and my role here.? I?m ready to take my game to the next level.??

Pead has a better chance to make an impact, given that Steven Jackson is gone and the Rams didn?t replace him with a veteran.

?We?re all competitors and we?re all looking to be No. 1,?? Pead said.? ?But it?s not like we?re enemies.? We?re truly a unit, trying to do everything we can to make sure that we?re all getting better, as individuals and as a group.??

For Quick, having rookies Tavon Austin and Stedman Bailey around could cut into the total opportunities, but it also could make it easier for Quick to get open since the much-hyped youngsters will be getting more attention.

Regardless, the team that was viewed as having a great draft in 2012 needs a strong contribution from a pair of second-round picks who haven?t contributed much so far.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/05/27/the-circumstances-of-pat-tillmans-death-dont-change-the-sacrifice-he-made/related

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Dow ends at record as central banks reassure Wall Street

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks advanced on Tuesday, with the Dow ending at yet another record closing high, in the wake of Wall Street's first three-day losing streak of the year, after central banks reassured investors that they will keep policies designed to foster global growth.

The Dow Jones industrial average <.dji> gained 106.29 points, or 0.69 percent, to end unofficially at a record 15,409.39. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index <.spx> rose 10.46 points, or 0.63 percent, to finish unofficially at 1,660.06. The Nasdaq Composite Index <.ixic> climbed 29.74 points, or 0.86 percent, to close unofficially at 3,488.89.

(Reporting by Leah Schnurr; Editing by Jan Paschal)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stock-futures-solidly-higher-central-bank-comments-111050764.html

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Flickr (for Android)


Mobile photo sharing has been dominated by social platforms like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, and (of course) Instagram. With a surprise mobile redesign, the venerable online photo sharing site Flickr wants a piece of that mobile action?and they're on the right track. The new Flickr app for Android (free) has a slick interface, photo editing tools, and filters for an all-in-one photo experience wherever you are. But it might not be social enough to beat out the competition.

Focused on Content
While the site languished under Yahoo!'s watch until recently, it's still popular with professional photographers and artists. Flickr wisely chose to make this high-quality content the centerpiece of the app, frequently pushing an endless stream of the service's best photographs.

The app shows off most of its content through the Explore section, which also display algorithmically selected images your location or recent images nearby. This is a really neat feature, showing off different takes on familiar areas and some you might not have seen before. It's almost like looking through someone else's eyes.

Be careful, though: when you select an image to view full screen, you Android device won't dim the screen or go to sleep automatically.

However, I'd like to explore images from locations other than where I am currently standing. This is available on the Flickr website, but isn't supported in the app.

Shooting With Flickr
A small camera icon appears in the upper right corner of just about every single screen in the app, so you can quickly shoot and upload new pictures. I hadn't used Flickr's Android app before, and was surprised to find a bunch of Instagram-like filters at the first stage of mobile uploading. I'm sure this is going to be a contentious point for die-hard Flickr users, but it's a fun addition that can give your mobile phone pictures just a little more life.

Thanks to the Aviary editor, Flickr's mobile app includes a robust slate of photo editing tools. These give Flickr a strong leg-up on its competitors, but the editing button is small and almost hidden in the upper right of the image. It's really easy to miss, though I like that it's not a required part of the upload process.

You can also geo-locate your image ? la Instagram, as well as add tags, sets, titles, safety rating, and privacy settings as you would through the website. The process is streamlined, so some of these options hidden in an "advanced" section. That's fine, but I'd like the fields to be larger for easier reading and finger tapping.

You can also upload photos you took earlier, and Flickr beats out Instagram here by simply allowing you to select multiple photos for upload. Unfortunately, the app's navigation gets a bit confusing here. If you want to edit each photo before you upload, and you probably will, you need to swipe left and right during the edit phase. If you hit the inviting blue Next button, you'll be too late.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/bXW6jbjtoxg/0,2817,2419487,00.asp

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Rookies shine during WNBA's opening weekend

Brittney Griner and Elena Delle Donne put on a quite a show to cap off an impressive opening weekend for the WNBA.

The top two picks in the draft showcased their unique skills Monday night ? even if the game between their teams was surprisingly one-sided.

Delle Donne scored 16 of her 22 points in the first half as the Chicago Sky built a 24-point lead over Griner and the Phoenix Mercury before cruising to an easy victory.

Unlike when she faced constant double and triple teams in college, the 6-foot-5 Delle Donne saw single coverage. She hit from all over the court, finishing with the sixth-highest total in a WNBA debut. While Griner had a little tougher time because of foul trouble, she became the first player in the league's 17-year history to dunk twice in a game.

The two young stars were only part of a strong opening weekend for the league. The defending champion Indiana Fever came away with an easy rout Friday to kick off the season, while Bill Laimbeer and Anne Donovan returned to the sidelines for the first time in a few years Saturday.

"For months, our fans, partners and teams have been saying they couldn't wait for the season to tip off," WNBA president Laurel Richie told the Associated Press. "So, to have an opening weekend like this with great play on the court, great crowds and to have it all capped off by a pair of highly entertaining games on ESPN2, was a terrific way to launch the season."

Griner's debut had downtown Phoenix buzzing with people and created an atmosphere inside US Airways Center that felt like a playoff game. It also brought out stars like Arizona Cardinals receiver Larry Fitzgerald, and NBA players Grant Hill and Jason Richardson.

The Mercury's fans didn't go away totally unhappy after Griner dunked twice in the second half. Her dunks ? a one-handed slam and a vicious two-handed one ? were the fourth and fifth ever in the league's regular season.

"I wish it was in a win, but whenever I can dunk, the crowd got into it," said Griner, who finished with 17 points, eight rebounds, four blocked shots and the two highlight-reel dunks.

Griner did most of her work in the second half because she was saddled with three fouls in the first quarter.

Sadly, Delle Donne and Griner won't face each other again until Sept. 11.

Like Griner, Skylar Diggins ? the third pick in the draft ? is also looking for her first pro victory. Diggins and her Tulsa Shock played twice during the opening weekend. They lost both their games, falling at Atlanta on Saturday before dropping their home opener in overtime to Washington on Monday.

Diggins averaged 12 points and seven assists in the two losses.

The good news for the Shock, who won just nine games last season, was that Liz Cambage looked dominant in her return to the league. The Australian star, who didn't play in the WNBA last season because of the Olympics, is still working her way back from a broken wrist she suffered playing overseas. Still, she had 21 points and 10 rebounds in Monday's loss.

"I was a bit rusty. I have a lot of room to improve," Cambage said. "It's been three months since I have played. I only started shooting last week when I got cleared (from the broken wrist)."

The WNBA also welcomed back Laimbeer, who hadn't coached in the league since 2009. His New York Liberty dropped their opener to Donovan and the Connecticut Sun on Saturday night. Donovan spent the last three seasons coaching at Seton Hall before returning to the WNBA this season.

Laimbeer wasn't too concerned, figuring it would take a few games or so for his new group to come together.

Indiana picked up right where it left off with a rout of San Antonio in its opener. Tamika Catchings scored 19 points and the Fever coasted to the victory over an injury-depleted Silver Stars team. Becky Hammon is expected to miss a month after breaking her right middle finger. She sat on the bench with a cast covering her hand and extending down to her wrist.

Los Angeles routed Seattle in its opener, beating the Storm 102-69. The Sparks shot 62 percent from the field ? including shooting 75 percent from behind the 3-point line in the blowout.

"We're a very unselfish team," said Sparks guard Kristi Toliver. "I think that's the main thing, we have threats at all five positions. You can't just focus on one or two people when everybody is a threat to score the basketball."

Seattle was missing stars Sue Bird (knee) and Lauren Jackson (hamstring), who will both be sidelined for the entire season. Bird did make a TV appearance as an in-studio analyst on Monday for ESPN.

In all, 11 of the 12 teams played over the past three days. Only Minnesota, which lost in the finals to Indiana last year, didn't get its season started yet. The Lynx open Saturday against Connecticut.

The league can only hope that the second weekend continues the success of the first.

___

Follow Doug on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/dougfeinberg

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rookies-shine-during-wnbas-opening-weekend-073351628.html

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Ohio man, 87, skydives to aid sick great-grandson

AAA??May. 26, 2013?4:01 PM ET
Ohio man, 87, skydives to aid sick great-grandson
AP

This photo provided by Skydive Warren County, Inc. shows Clarence Turner, an 87-year-old World War II veteran who parachuted into Japan, parachuting in tandem with instructor Jeff McGinnis at the Red Stewart Airfield near Waynesville, Ohio, Saturday, May 25, 2013. Turner made the jump to generate attention for the plight of his 10-month-old great-grandson, Julian Couch, who suffers from a lung disease. (AP Photo/Skydive Warren County, Inc., Elod Otbos)

This photo provided by Skydive Warren County, Inc. shows Clarence Turner, an 87-year-old World War II veteran who parachuted into Japan, parachuting in tandem with instructor Jeff McGinnis at the Red Stewart Airfield near Waynesville, Ohio, Saturday, May 25, 2013. Turner made the jump to generate attention for the plight of his 10-month-old great-grandson, Julian Couch, who suffers from a lung disease. (AP Photo/Skydive Warren County, Inc., Elod Otbos)

This photo provided by Skydive Warren County, Inc. shows Clarence Turner, an 87-year-old World War II veteran who parachuted into Japan, right, celebrating with instructor Jeff McGinnis after they parachuted in tandem at the Red Stewart Airfield near Waynesville, Ohio, Saturday, May 25, 2013. Turner made the jump to generate attention for the plight of his 10-month-old great-grandson, Julian Couch, who suffers from a lung disease. (AP Photo/Skydive Warren County, Inc., Elod Otbos)

(AP) ? An 87-year-old World War II veteran has parachuted from a plane in an Ohio to support his ailing great-grandson.

Clarence Turner of Fairfield made the jump Saturday with an instructor. He says he wanted to generate attention for the plight of 10-month-old Julian Couch, who suffers from a lung disease that could require a transplant.

WLWT of Cincinnati reports that (http://bit.ly/14RYHF1) Julian is hospitalized in Columbus. A fundraiser is planned for June 2.

Turner also made a jump at age 85 to fulfill a goal to experience freefalling and landing as he did in the Army. He served from 1944-47, and his last jump was in Japan.

Turner says he also hopes to someday make a parachute jump at an older age than former President George H.W. Bush, who's 88.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2013-05-26-US-Great-grandpa's-Skydive/id-5d09058dc6f64e04b0f1df7c97dc229d

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Peter Molyneux's Curiosity cube is now open, contents still a mystery (update: prize revealed!)

After seven months of cooperative tapping, Peter Molyneux's Curiosity experiment is finally over: the cube is open. As Molyneux's studio, 22Cans, teased the game's last layer over Twitter, players descended upon it, chipping away the last million cubelets in a matter of minutes. "We have a winner," the game's creator wrote on the social network. "They should get a message now." 22Cans is currently trying to validate the player who tapped away the final block. After the final block disappeared, so did the cube, presumably to be opened privately by the winner. So, what was inside the box? We may never know -- but if you just happened to win, fill us in, would you?

Update: The winner asked Molyneux to share the winner video with the community. Their prize? Godhood, according to 22Cans. The winner will be featured as a deity in the company's next game, Goddess, and will able to "decide on the rules that the game is played by." The winner will get a share of the revenue generated by the title. Check out the full video for yourself after the break.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/26/peter-molyneuxs-curiosity-cube-is-now-open-contents-still-a-my/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Group: Morocco activist arrests up since charter

RABAT, Morocco (AP) ? Since Morocco's adoption of more democratic constitution during the Arab Spring, the arrest of political activists has increased, the country's main human rights group said Monday.

Morocco prided itself for avoiding the turmoil of the Arab Spring by enacting reforms and amending the constitution, but activists say at least 70 members of their pro-democracy February 20 movement remain in prison.

"The arrests of activists have increased since the adoption of a new constitution in July 2011," Mohammed Sadkou of the Moroccan Association for Human Rights said. "The most worrying is that they are prosecuting political activists for ordinary criminal offenses... we are returning to the Tunisian model."

Under authoritarian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, Tunisia was known for targeting political activists for trumped up criminal charges until his overthrow in January 2011 that sparked pro-democracy uprisings across North Africa, including Morocco.

King Mohammed VI defused popular anger by amending the constitution to give more power to elected officials and then holding early elections that were won by an Islamist opposition party.

Activists from the February 20 movement, named for the day in 2011 their protests began, maintain the reforms are illusory and the corruption and despotism of the system persists.

Since the end of 2011, however, their demonstrations have garnered little obvious support, shrinking generally to a few hundred in size.

An attempt by the movement to hold marches in several cities Sunday to call attention to their jailed colleagues were brutally repressed by police, with 23 injured in Rabat alone, including elderly members of the human rights organization, it said. There were no arrests, however.

During the press conference, defense lawyer Naima El Guellaf said that Morocco feared tarnishing its international image as a reformer by jailing activists on charges of unauthorized protests and so has changed tactics.

"The authorities realized that these trials hurt their image as a country respecting human rights, so they started convicting activists in criminal trials," she said.

Driss Boutarda was known for his creative costumes during protest marches, including dressing up in an outfit reminiscent to that of the king. He was arrested in December 2012 and charged with drug possession.

Guellaf's client Hamid Majdi, a labor activist in the southern city of Ouarzarzate, was charged with drug trafficking, though he was eventually acquitted.

In an interview with French television in February, however, Prime Minister Abdelilah Benkirane maintained that there were no political detainees in Morocco.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/group-morocco-activist-arrests-since-charter-155935440.html

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সোমবার, ২৭ মে, ২০১৩

Suspected killer of British soldier was held in Kenya

By Peter Griffiths and Drazen Jorgic

LONDON/NAIROBI (Reuters) - One of two men arrested over the murder of a British soldier in a London street was detained in Kenya in 2010 on suspicion of seeking to train with an al Qaeda-linked group in Somalia, Kenyan police said on Sunday.

Confirmation that Michael Adebolajo was held in Kenya and deported to London will intensify calls for Britain's spy agencies to explain what they knew about the suspect and whether they could have done more to prevent Lee Rigby's killing on Wednesday.

The British parliament's security committee will next week investigate the security services' actions in the run-up to a killing that has put pressure on Prime Minister David Cameron to take a harder line on radicals.

The Nairobi government initially said Adebolajo had never visited Kenya. But on Sunday, Boniface Mwaniki, head of Kenya's anti-terrorism police, said Adebolajo was arrested in November 2010 and deported to Britain.

"He was arrested with a group of five others trying to travel to Somalia to join militant group al Shabaab," he told Reuters.

The Islamist force, which is linked to al Qaeda, wants to impose a strict version of Islamic law across Somalia.

A Foreign Office spokeswoman in London confirmed the arrest and said consular officials had provided assistance.

Adebolajo, 28 and Michael Adebowale, 22, are under guard in hospital after being shot and arrested after the murder of the 25-year-old Afghan war veteran. They have not been charged.

Spy agencies have come under scrutiny after uncorroborated allegations by a friend of Adebolajo on Friday that intelligence officers tried to recruit him six months ago.

Asked whether the security services had contacted the men, Home Secretary (interior minister) Theresa May told the BBC: "Their job is about gathering intelligence. They do that from a variety of sources and they will do that in a variety of ways. And yes, they will approach individuals from time to time."

A source close to the investigation told Reuters this week that both suspects were known to the MI5 domestic security service. However, neither was thought to pose a serious threat.

'POISONOUS NARRATIVE'

The government also said it is forming a group to combat radical Muslim preachers and others whose words could encourage violence.

Prime Minister David Cameron's office said the group aimed to fight radicalism in schools and mosques, tighten checks on inflammatory internet material, and disrupt the "poisonous narrative" of hardline clerics.

Rigby's killing fuelled public anger about radical Islam. It has also raised questions over whether more could have done more to prevent the attack and put pressure on Cameron to tackle suspected militants more forcefully.

Witnesses said the soldier's killers shouted Islamist slogans during the attack. Bystanders filmed one of the suspects saying it was in revenge for Britain's involvement in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Successive British governments have wrestled with how to prevent people from becoming radicalised without alienating the wider population with draconian measures.

Former British prime minister Tony Blair tried to tighten rules against hate preachers after the London bombings in 2005 that killed 52 commuters. The measures stirred a long debate over how to balance free speech and civil rights with a strong counter-terrorism strategy.

Britain's two-party coalition government is divided over a planned new law that would allow police and spy agencies to monitor people's use of the internet and mobile phones.

The Muslim Council of Britain, a religious umbrella group, said new government measures risked "making our society less free, divided and suspicious of each other".

(Additional reporting Nicolas Bertin in Paris and Joseph Akwiri and Humphrey Malalo in Kenya; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/britain-target-radical-muslim-preachers-soldiers-killing-120155282.html

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A whale of a time for cruise passengers - Stuff

Humpback whale

Black Cat Cruises

DROPPING IN: A humpback whale plays in the water near Akaroa.

Passengers on board an Akaroa Harbour cruise in Canterbury today were treated with views of a breaching humpback whale.

Black Cat Cruises managing director Paul Bingham said the whale provided some spectacular sights leaping out of the water.

He said the mammal was just off Akaroa heads and briefly came into the harbour.

The whale was thought to be on its way north from Antarctica to warmer tropical waters.

Humpback whales have wide-ranging but distinctly seasonal migration patterns, travelling thousands of kilometres between high-latitude summer feeding grounds and low-latitude winter breeding and calving grounds, Bingham said.

They travel mainly along the east coast and through Cook Strait during winter and return along the west coast in spring.

- ? Fairfax NZ News

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Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/8719135/A-whale-of-a-time-for-cruise-passengers

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Cambodian documentary wins Cannes prize for innovative cinema

By Belinda Goldsmith

CANNES (Reuters) - A documentary using small clay figures to tell the story of how Cambodian filmmaker Rithy Panh's family perished under the Khmer Rouge regime won the top prize in the second most important competition at the Cannes film festival on Saturday.

"L'Image Manquante" (The Missing Picture) was among the 18 films that premiered in the Un Certain Regard category that was set up to encourage emerging and innovative filmmakers and run alongside the main competition at the world's top film festival.

Panh, 49, a prolific filmmaker whose films concentrate on the brutality in Cambodia when an estimated 1.7 million people were killed during the 1975-79 Khmer Rouge regime, said the prize was important for his country.

"For a country that has emerged from its difficulties and years of war, it is important to say we are still alive," Panh told Reuters after receiving his award at a red carpet ceremony in the French Riviera resort.

The jury led by Danish director Thomas Vinterberg, whose film "Jagten" (The Hunt) won Mads Mikkelsen the best actor award at Cannes last year, described the documentary as "one of the most powerful films I have seen in many years".

The runner-up was "Omar" by Palestinian director Hany Abu-Assad, a political thriller involving Palestinians living under Israeli occupation in which a young baker, Omar, is tortured by Israel's secret police to betray his friends.

"Omar", which was shot in the West Bank and Israeli-Arab town of Nazareth last year, received a standing ovation at its premiere as the first film fully funded by the Palestinian cinema industry.

"It is the only festival that I think still cares about different films," said Abu-Assad, known for the 2005 award-winning film "Paradise Now", as he received his award.

Another director in Un Certain Regard to get a standing ovation was Iran's Mohammad Rasoulof who was jailed in 2010 for anti-regime propaganda but came to Cannes this year with "Manuscripts Don't Burn", shot in secret in his home country.

The non-professional actors of "La Jaula de Oro" (The Golden Cage), a film about three young Guatemalans trying to cross the Mexico-U.S. border from director Diego Quemada-Diez won an award for best cast.

(Additional reporting by Alexandria Sage and Rollo Ross)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cambodian-documentary-wins-cannes-prize-innovative-cinema-005950565.html

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Republicans: Obamacare Is Key To 2014

WASHINGTON -- If Republicans were writing a movie script for next year's congressional elections, the working title might be "2014: Apocalypse of Obamacare."

The plot: The rollout of President Barack Obama's health care law turns into such a disaster that enraged voters rebuke him by rewarding the GOP with undisputed control of Congress.

But there's a risk for Republicans if they're wrong and the Affordable Care Act works reasonably well, particularly in states that have embraced it. Republicans might be seen as obstinately standing in the way of progress.

The law already has been a political prop in two election seasons, but next year will be different.

Voters will have a real program to judge, working or dysfunctional. Will affordable health care finally be a reality for millions of uninsured working people? Or will premiums skyrocket as the heavy hand of government upends already fragile insurance markets for small businesses and individuals?

"The end of this movie has not been written," said Robert Blendon, a Harvard professor who tracks public opinion on health care. He says next year's movie actually will be a documentary: what happens in states that fully put the law in place and those that resist ? "a message of reality."

One of the most prominent doomsayers is Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, who predicts "Obamacare" probably will be the biggest issue of 2014 and "an albatross around the neck of every Democrat who voted for it."

"This thing can't possibly work," says McConnell. "It will be a huge disaster in 2014."

Counting on that, House Republicans are busy framing an election narrative, voting to repeal the health law and trying to link it to the scandal over the Internal Revenue Service's targeting of tea party groups. It could help excite the conservative base.

But Democratic pollster Celinda Lake doubts reality will follow the GOP script. Next year, "we won't have to worry about the mythology laid out by the right wing about Obamacare: death panels and dramatic cuts to Medicare," she said.

Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., said uninsured people in her state will have over 200 coverage options to choose from. "We have been hearing the fear, but in states like mine, people are seeing the reality," she said.

In just about five months, people without access to coverage through their jobs can start shopping for subsidized private insurance in new state markets. The actual benefits begin Jan. 1. But because of continuing opposition to the law from many Republican governors and state legislators, the federal government will be running the insurance markets in more than half the states.

Another major element of the law, the expansion of Medicaid to serve more low-income people, also has run into problems. With many legislative sessions over or winding down, it looks like fewer than half the states may accept the expansion. That means millions of low-income people are likely to remain uninsured, at least initially.

Other early indicators of how well the health care rollout might fare are mixed.

In a dozen or so states that have started releasing details of their new insurance markets, there's robust insurer interest in participating, according to the market research firm Avalere Health. That's a good signal for competition.

There still are concerns about a spike in premiums for people who already buy their own coverage, particularly the young and healthy. That could happen for several reasons.

The health care law forbids insurers to deny coverage to sick people, and it limits what older adults can be charged. Also, the plans that will be offered next year are more comprehensive than many bare-bones policies currently available to individuals.

Another big source of angst is the Obama administration. The Health and Human Services Department will be running the program in half the country while trying to fight off attempts by congressional Republicans to starve it financially. Unusual for a social program, the administration is largely operating behind a veil of secrecy.

Will Obama's underlings turn out to be the Keystone Kops of health care?

Frustration that he and his constituents couldn't get basic information from the administration led one of the authors of the law, Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., to warn recently that he sees "a huge train wreck coming down."

Republicans loved it. Lost in the uproar was the fact that Baucus was referring to potential problems with implementation. He stills thinks the health care law itself is a good thing.

The administration official running the rollout, Gary Cohen, told Congress this past that he didn't agree with the senator's statement. "We are very much on schedule," Cohen said.

Republican pollster Bill McInturff says he's skeptical of what he hears from the administration as well as from his own party. McInturff, who has made polling on health care his specialty, says the launch of any national program is bound to have problems. President George W. Bush's Medicare prescription benefit went through several weeks of chaos before things got smoothed out.

"Life experience says to me there is not going to be some simple, clear narrative that is sitting here today," McInturff said.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/26/republicans-obamacare_n_3339853.html

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রবিবার, ২৬ মে, ২০১৩

Thousands of bridges at risk of freak collapse

In this photo provided by Francisco Rodriguez, a man is seen sitting atop a car that fell into the Skagit River after the collapse of the Interstate 5 bridge there minutes earlier Thursday, May 23, 2013, in Mount Vernon, Wash. (AP Photo/Francisco Rodriguez)

In this photo provided by Francisco Rodriguez, a man is seen sitting atop a car that fell into the Skagit River after the collapse of the Interstate 5 bridge there minutes earlier Thursday, May 23, 2013, in Mount Vernon, Wash. (AP Photo/Francisco Rodriguez)

Chart shows the percentage of problematic bridges by year

A collapsed section of the Interstate 5 bridge over the Skagit River is seen in an aerial view Friday, May 24, 2013, in Mt. Vernon, Wash. Part of the bridge collapsed Thursday evening, sending cars and people into the water when a an oversized truck hit the span, the Washington State Patrol chief said. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee on Friday declared a state of emergency in three counties around the bridge, saying that the bridge collapse has caused extensive disruption, impacting the citizens and economy in Skagit, Snohomish and Whatcom Counties. (AP Photo/The Seattle Times, Mike Siegel) MAGS OUT; NO SALES; SEATTLEPI.COM OUT; MANDATORY CREDIT

A collapsed section of the Interstate 5 bridge over the Skagit River is seen in an aerial view Friday, May 24, 2013, in Mt. Vernon, Wash. Part of the bridge collapsed Thursday evening, sending cars and people into the water when a an oversized truck hit the span, the Washington State Patrol chief said. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee on Friday declared a state of emergency in three counties around the bridge, saying that the bridge collapse has caused extensive disruption, impacting the citizens and economy in Skagit, Snohomish and Whatcom Counties. (AP Photo/The Seattle Times, Mike Siegel) MAGS OUT; NO SALES; SEATTLEPI.COM OUT; MANDATORY CREDIT

A collapsed section of the Interstate 5 bridge over the Skagit River is seen in an aerial view Friday, May 24, 2013, in Mt. Vernon, Wash. Part of the bridge collapsed Thursday evening, sending cars and people into the water when a an oversized truck hit the span, the Washington State Patrol chief said. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee on Friday declared a state of emergency in three counties around the bridge, saying that the bridge collapse has caused extensive disruption, impacting the citizens and economy in Skagit, Snohomish and Whatcom Counties. (AP Photo/The Seattle Times, Mike Siegel) MAGS OUT; NO SALES; SEATTLEPI.COM OUT; MANDATORY CREDIT

(AP) ? Thousands of bridges around the U.S. may be one freak accident or mistake away from collapse, even if the spans are deemed structurally sound.

The crossings are kept standing by engineering design, not supported with brute strength or redundant protections like their more modern counterparts. Bridge regulators call the more risky spans "fracture critical," meaning that if a single, vital component of the bridge is compromised, it can crumple.

Those vulnerable crossing carry millions of drivers every day. In Boston, a six-lane highway 1A near Logan airport includes a "fracture critical" bridge over Bennington Street. In northern Chicago, an I-90 pass that goes over Ashland Avenue is in the same category. An I-880 bridge over 5th Avenue in Oakland, Calif., is also on the list.

Also in that category is the Interstate 5 bridge over the Skagit River north of Seattle, which collapsed into the water days ago after officials say an oversized truck load clipped the steel truss.

Public officials have focused in recent years on the desperate need for money to repair thousands of bridges deemed structurally deficient, which typically means a major portion of the bridge is in poor condition or worse. But the bridge that collapsed Thursday is not in that deficient category, highlighting another major problem with the nation's infrastructure: Although it's rare, some bridges deemed to be fine structurally can still be crippled if they are struck hard enough in the wrong spot.

"It probably is a bit of a fluke in that sense," said Charles Roeder, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Washington.

While the I-5 truck's cargo suffered only minimal damage, it left chaos in its wake, with two vehicles catapulting off the edge of the broken bridge into the river below. Three people involved escaped with non-life threatening injuries.

The most famous failure of a fracture critical bridge was the collapse of the I-35W bridge in Minneapolis during rush hour on Aug. 1, 2007, killing 13 people and injuring more than 100 others. The National Transportation Safety Board concluded that the cause of the collapse was an error by the bridge's designers ? a gusset plate, a key component of the bridge, was too thin. The plate was only half of the required one-inch thickness.

Because the bridge's key structures lacked redundancy, where if one piece fails, there is another piece to prevent the bridge from falling, when the gusset plate broke, much of the bridge collapsed.

Mark Rosenker, who was chairman of the NTSB during the I-35W bridge investigation, said the board looked into whether other fracture critical bridges were collapsing. They found a few cases, but not many, he said.

"Today, they're still building fracture critical bridges with the belief that they're not going break," Rosenker said.

Fracture critical bridges, like the I-5 span in Washington, are the result of Congress trying to cut corners to save money rather than a lack of engineering know-how, said Barry B. LePatner, a New York real estate attorney and author of "Too Big to Fall: America's Failing Infrastructure and the Way Forward."

About 18,000 fracture critical bridges were built from the mid-1950s through the late 1970s in an effort to complete the nation's interstate highway system, which was launched under President Dwight Eisenhower, LePatner said in an interview. The fracture critical bridge designs were cheaper than bridges designed with redundancy, he said.

Thousands of those bridges remain in use, according to an AP analysis.

"They have been left hanging with little maintenance for four decades now," he said. "There is little political will and less political leadership to commit the tens of billions of dollars needed" to fix them.

There has been little focus or urgency in specifically replacing the older "fracture critical" crossings, in part because there is a massive backlog of bridge repair work for thousands of bridges deemed to be structurally problematic. Washington state Rep. Judy Clibborn, a Democrat who leads the House transportation committee, has been trying to build support for a tax package to pay for major transportation projects in the state. But her plan wouldn't have done anything to revamp the bridge that collapsed.

National bridge records say the I-5 crossing over the Skagit River had a sufficiency rating of 57.4 out of 100 ? a score designed to gauge the ability of the bridge to remain in service. To qualify for federal replacement funds, a bridge must have a rating of 50 or below. A bridge must have a sufficiency rating of 80 or below to qualify for federal rehabilitation funding.

Hundreds of bridges in Washington state have worse ratings than the one that collapsed, and many around the country have single-digit ratings.

Clibborn said the Skagit River crossing wasn't even on the radar of lawmakers because state officials have to prioritize by focusing on bridges with serious structural problems that are at higher risk of imminent danger.

Along with being at risk of a fatal impact, the I-5 bridge was deemed to be "functionally obsolete," which essentially means it wasn't built to today's standards. Its shoulders were narrow, and it had low clearance.

There are 66,749 structurally deficient bridges and 84,748 functionally obsolete bridges in the U.S., including Puerto Rico, according to the Federal Highway Administration. That's about a quarter of the 607,000 total bridges nationally. States and cities have been whittling down that backlog, but slowly. In 2002, about 30 percent of bridges fell into one of those two categories.

Spending by states and local government on bridge construction adjusted for inflation has more than doubled since 1998, from $12.3 billion to $28.5 billion last year, according to the American Road and Transportation Builders Association. That's an all-time high.

"The needs are so great that even with the growth we've had in the investment level, it's barely moving the needle in terms of moving bridges off these lists," said Alison Premo Black, the association's chief economist.

There is wide recognition at all levels of government that the failure to address aging infrastructure will likely undermine safety and hinder economic growth. But there is no consensus on how to pay for improvements. The federal Highway Trust Fund, which provides construction aid to states, is forecast to go broke next year. The fund gets its revenue primarily from federal gas and diesel taxes. But revenues aren't keeping up because people are driving less and there are more fuel-efficient cars on the road.

Neither Congress nor the White House has shown any willingness to raise federal gas taxes, which haven't been increased since 1993. Many transportation thinkers believe a shift to taxes based on miles traveled by a vehicle is inevitable, but there are privacy concerns and other difficulties that would preclude widespread use of such a system for at least a decade.

Transportation spending got a temporary boost with the economic stimulus funds approved by Congress after President Barack Obama was elected. Of the $27 billion designated for highway projects under the stimulus program, about $3 billion went to bridge projects, Black said.

States are looking for other means to raise money for highway and bridge improvements, including more road tolls, dedicating a portion of sales taxes to transportation and raising state gas taxes. Clibborn, the Washington state lawmaker, has proposed a 10-cent gas hike to help pay for projects, though the effort has been held up by a dispute over how to rebuild the Columbia River bridge connecting Vancouver, Wash., and Portland, Ore.

"We can't possibly do it all in the next 10 years," Clibborn said. "But we're going to do the first bite of the apple."

___

Lowy reported from Washington, D.C. AP Writers Manuel Valdes and Gene Johnson contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-05-25-US-Bridge-Collapse-Accidents/id-ccd1a92fd9c543b8a7a2343b95756cf0

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