Friday, March 8, 2013

Engadget Mobile Podcast 172 - 03.07.13

Engadget Mobile Podcast 172 - 03.07.13

You might think that after last week's major event, that there's be little to talk about this week. Seriously? If you were actually thinking that, then we're guessing you're new around these parts! Get your weekly mobile-news hug right below.

Hosts: Myriam Joire (tnkgrl), Brad Molen

Producer: James Trew

Music: Tycho - Coastal Brake (Ghostly International)

Hear the podcast

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/07/engadget-mobile-podcast-172-03-07-13/

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Asus’s 18-inch Transformer All-in-One runs both Android and Windows 8, starts at $1300

windows-8-dropcap

The gigantic tablet-desktops we saw at the Consumer Electronics Show are heading to stores, beginning with the Asus Transformer All-in-One that wowed us in Las Vegas. Asus just announced that the tablet-desktop hybrid will be heading to North America some time between April and June, so it?ll be ready for dorm rooms and back-to-school season.

As we mentioned in our hands-on coverage, the Transformer AiO is basically two computers in one. The 18.4-inch IPS tablet-display is powered by a quad-core Nvidia Tegra 3 processor, while the base of the desktop dock has a built-in third-generation Intel core chip with Nvidia GeForce GT 730M discrete graphics that turns the slate into a serious machine.

When you detach the tablet from its base, the screen becomes a table-sized slate that you can either run Windows 8 or Jelly Bean (Android 4.1). You can either take advantage of its 178-degree wide viewing angle and 10-point multi-touch display by playing Fruit Ninja with friends, or enjoy editing your Excel spreadsheet on an 18.4-inch touchscreen via Asus? wireless Remote Desktop technology. The slate?s 1920 x 1080 pixel resolution means you won?t be staring at pixelated HD movies but YouTube is another matter. At 0.7-inch thick and 5.3-lbs, the Transformer has about the same heft as a standard laptop but we don?t expect you to travel with this bad boy. Asus claims this Transformer tablet can last 5 hours before it needs to be plugged in, but we?ll have to put it to the test in a more thorough review.

Slide the tablet into the ?PC Station? dock and the tablet becomes an all-in-one desktop with a touchscreen. The Transformer AiO comes with a keyboard and mouse along with the computer dock and tablet, so the machine is ready for any way you?d like to use this convertible device. Not only is the base embedded with an Intel processor and discrete graphics, it also offers four USB 3.0 ports and a HDMI-out port, in case you want to set up multiple monitors.

Starting at $1300 for configuration with the third-gen Core i5 CPU, the Transformer AiO from Asus won?t come cheap, but might be worth the costs if you need to flexibility and space efficiencies of a detachable tablet-display running two different OSes.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/digitaltrends/~3/SE0SvKh-Nu8/

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'Breaking Bad' star goes on rant against airline

Chris Pizzello / AP file

Dean Norris had a bad experience with Delta Airlines, and let the whole Twitter world know about it.

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, TODAY

We've all been there: An airline messes with your flight plans via mechanical difficulties, staffing problems, seemingly random rescheduling or other groan-inducing, life-affecting woes. This week, it happened to "Breaking Bad" star Dean Norris, who plays DEA agent and Walt's brother-in-law Hank Schrader, and he let the whole Twitter universe know about it.

Don't read through Norris' Twitter stream if you're sensitive to profanity. He wields the f-word like a baseball bat, with fans even tweeting at him encouraging him to swear at them.?

On Saturday, a frustrated Norris tweeted, "Delta airlines SUCKS. wish I had a more intense word for suck to describe how much they SUCK," with a profanity-filled hashtag to accompany his thoughts.

Next, Norris retweeted a fan's tweet that informed him "Delta stands for 'don't ever leave the airport.'" Other fans chimed in, suggesting the airline's name stood for "Don't Expect Luggage To Arrive" or "Doesn't Everybody Like This Airliner?"

On Wednesday, Norris was still mad, tweeting "Back on (expletive) hole Delta 2nd flight 3 days delayed cause missing flight attendant!!!what a (expletive) company hub system=no choice=(expletive)."

That's when Delta jumped in to try and smooth things over, tweeting at Norris from its @DeltaAssist account, "@DeanJNorris?I'm terribly sorry for your travel experience. Pls follow and DM your confirmation number. I'd like to make things right."

An airline spokesperson told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution's Rodney Ho that the airline promised Norris it would "make further amends down the road."

Things looked up, though, a little later, when Norris tweeted a photo of himself at a Delta desk with two uniformed employees, writing "Just kidding. LOVE DELTA. Please don't spit in my drinks."

Can you relate to Norris' airline frustration? Tell us on Facebook.

Related content:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/03/07/17224558-breaking-bad-star-goes-on-profane-rant-against-airline?lite

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Valerie Harper: I Have Brain Cancer and 3 Months to Live | TMZ.com

Valerie Harper
I Have 3 Months
To Live

Breaking News

0306_valerie_harper_ipad_article

Valerie Harper

has terminal brain cancer and doctors are giving her around 3 months to live.

Harper, who famously played the character Rhoda on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and the spin-off, "Rhoda," was diagnosed with leptomeningeal carcinomatosis, a rare form of cancer in which cancer cells spread into the membrane surrounding the brain.?

Harper, 73, told People, "I don't think of dying.? I think of being here now."

0306_valerie_harper_footer

Source: http://www.tmz.com/2013/03/06/valerie-harper-terminal-brain-cancer-3-months-dying/

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1 region, 2 functions: Brain cells' multitasking key to understanding overall brain function

1 region, 2 functions: Brain cells' multitasking key to understanding overall brain function

Thursday, March 7, 2013

A region of the brain known to play a key role in visual and spatial processing has a parallel function: sorting visual information into categories, according to a new study by researchers at the University of Chicago.

Primates are known to have a remarkable ability to place visual stimuli into familiar and meaningful categories, such as fruit or vegetables. They can also direct their spatial attention to different locations in a scene and make spatially-targeted movements, such as reaching.

The study, published in the March issue of Neuron, shows that these very different types of information can be simultaneously encoded within the posterior parietal cortex. The research brings scientists a step closer to understanding how the brain interprets visual stimuli and solves complex tasks.

"We found that multiple functions can be mapped onto a particular region of the brain and even onto individual brain cells in that region," said study author David Freedman, PhD, assistant professor of neurobiology at the University of Chicago. "These functions overlap. This particular brain area, even its individual neurons, can independently encode both spatial and cognitive signals."

Freedman studies the effects of learning on the brain and how information is stored in short-term memory, with a focus on the areas that process visual stimuli. To examine this phenomenon, he has taught monkeys to play a simple video game in which they learn to assign moving visual patterns into categories.

"The task is a bit like a baseball umpire calling balls and strikes," he said, "since the monkeys have to sort the various motion patterns into two groups, or categories."

The monkeys master the tasks over a few weeks of training. Once they do, the researchers record electrical signals from parietal lobe neurons while the subjects perform the categorization task. By measuring electrical activity patterns of these neurons, the researchers can decode the information conveyed by the neurons' activity.

"The activity patterns in these parietal neurons carry strong information about the category that each motion pattern gets assigned to during the task," Freedman said.

Over the years, his team's work on categorization has zeroed in on the lateral intraparietal (LIP) area. Studies have shown that this area is vital to directing spatial attention and eye movements. But it had been unclear how an area involved in spatial attention and eye movements could also play a role in non-spatial functions such as visual categorization.

To compare spatial and category functions in the parietal lobe, Freedman and his team added a twist to the monkeys' task. During the category task, the researchers required the subjects to make eye-movements to visual cues at various positions on the computer screen, but the subjects still had to categorize the visual patterns at the same time that they made these eye movements.

Since this parietal brain area is known to be involved in eye movements, the eye movements could have disrupted category information in that part of the brain. Instead, parietal brain cells showed a simultaneous and independent encoding of both eye-movement and category information?multiplexing of information at the level of single brain cells.

"These signals rode right on top of the eye-movement signals," said the study's first author, Chris Rishel, PhD, a recent graduate from Freedman's laboratory. "We could decode both the eye-movement and the category signals with high accuracy. This tells us that different kinds of information that are usually considered quite unrelated were simultaneously and independently represented by neurons in this particular brain area."

Their results, the study authors note, "support the possibility that LIP plays a key role in transforming visual signals in earlier sensory areas into abstract category signals during category-based decision-making tasks."

What does the brain gain from this territorial arrangement?

"There has long been a tendency to look at the many distinct anatomical areas of the cerebral cortex of the brain and to assume that each area is like a specialized module that plays a very specific function." Freedman said. "Our results support the growing sense that most, if not all, of these brain areas have multiple overlapping roles."

A brain that includes such overlapping functional centers may be more efficient, Freedman suggests. "It makes mapping these regions more complicated for scientists like us, but it may boost the brain's capacity. If each area can do a number of different things, you can squeeze a lot more function into the same space."

A next step is to understand how neuronal category representations develop in LIP neurons during the learning process, the authors said.

###

University of Chicago Medical Center: http://www.uchospitals.edu

Thanks to University of Chicago Medical Center for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127178/__region____functions__Brain_cells__multitasking_key_to_understanding_overall_brain_function

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Egypt's leader mulls army takeover of restive city

CAIRO (AP) ? The Egyptian president is considering whether to give the military full control of the restive Suez Canal city of Port Said after days of deadly street clashes stoked by excessive use of force by riot police, officials said Tuesday.

Mohammed Morsi met with his security chief and top military officers to discuss pulling out the police force and putting the military in charge to defuse the cycle of violence that has gripped the city, officials from the military and the president's office said.

The latest round of rioting and violence in Port Said, which erupted on Sunday, has killed at least three civilians and three policemen and injured hundreds.

"The presidency is considering this option after relations between the security apparatus and the people of Port Said deteriorated," said one of the officials. He added that the idea behind the proposal is that once the army takes control, it would presumably not get into confrontation with protesters.

The officials spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media about the president's deliberations.

The military sent reinforcement to Port Said late on Monday, after protesters torched a government building and police headquarters there. Witnesses said protesters lay down and slept on the asphalt to prevent fire engines from reaching the buildings on fire.

The officials said police have lost control over the city and the only way out was to hand it over to the military, which enjoys considerable support among Port Said residents.

Morsi's deliberations come amid reports of tense relations between the president and the country's Defense Minister Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi following a rumor that the minister could be sacked because he resisted to bring the military under the sway of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood group.

Some opposition groups and figures want to see the military take over power after perceiving the country's new Islamist leadership as incapable of ending Egypt's deteriorating economy and increasing unrest.

The turmoil in Port Said started on Jan. 26, the day a court in the city on the northern edge of the Suez Canal handed down death sentences against 21 mostly Port Said residents over their involvement in a deadly February 2012 soccer riot in the city that killed 74 people, mostly fans of a rival Cairo soccer club, Al-Ahly.

Following the verdicts, Port Said residents said they were used as scapegoats to defuse a possible eruption of violence in the capital, Cairo, Morsi's seat of power. Ahead of the court's decision, die-hard Al-Ahly fans had warned of "pools of blood" if the sentences were light.

In the first wave of violence after the verdicts, more than 40 people died in the city. Port Said residents allege Morsi gave the green light for excessive use of force by the police.

Morsi then imposed a curfew and a state of emergency in Port Said and two other Suez Canal cities, deploying the military to impose law and order. However, the orders were defied by the residents, who held night rallies during curfew hours until the measure was eased.

The city continued with a civil disobedience campaign and general strikes, for over two weeks, demanding Morsi open an investigation into the latest killings.

Violence flared anew on Sunday, when Port Said residents took to the streets following reports that other defendants still on trial in the deadly soccer riot were moved from the local prison ahead of their March 9 verdicts.

Egypt is in a deep crisis amid stark polarization between the ruling Muslim Brotherhood and the mostly liberal and secular opposition parties, which accuse the Islamists of monopolizing power two years after the 2011 ouster of longtime autocratic President Hosni Mubarak.

The Islamists argue that they came to power through the ballot box in the first free elections after the uprising that ousted Mubarak.

The Port Said unrest comes only a few weeks ahead of the parliamentary elections, which are due to start in April and which the opposition is boycotting.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-leader-mulls-army-takeover-restive-city-084314982.html

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Before Chavez death, WH said it was looking for a "functional and productive relationship" with Venezuela (Washington Bureau)

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