Wednesday, June 26, 2013

The 16 Best Movies Disappearing From Amazon Prime This Weekend

The 16 Best Movies Disappearing From Amazon Prime This Weekend

Not all of us turn to Netflix for our streaming fix; there are plenty of Amazon Prime members out there who lean on Instant Video instead. And if you're one of them, you might want to fill up your Watchlist with these classics. They'll be gone come Monday. And come to think of it, most of them aren't on Netflix, either.

It's not quite on the same apocalyptic level of the Great Netflix Starz Purge of 2012, but there are plenty of titles here that you'll miss. Hey, at least that free two-day shipping's not going anywhere, right?

There are over 150 titles in all disappearing on June 30th. Here are the ones you'll miss the most, in no particular order:

Of the 16 we've highlighted, it looks like only six (Braveheart, A League of Their Own, Grizzly Man, Hoosiers, and Serpico) are currently available on Netflix. That means once they're gone, you've got nowhere to turn. You can check out the complete list here for any favorites that we left out.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/the-16-best-movies-disappearing-from-amazon-prime-this-578630828

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

David Wild: "Nowhere Man": A Playlist For Edward Snowden

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To some Edward Snowden is a traitor. To others, Edward Snowden is a hero. To me, Edward Snowden just seems like a narcissistic creep who wants to be a star on the global stage. But rest assured that would never stop me from making the man a playlist that's perfect for long trips from Moscow to Ecuador in the company of Wikileaks lawyers. So as always, please spill the beans and add your own Songs For Snowden.


NOWHERE MAN - Paul Westerberg
DO YOU WANT TO KNOW A SECRET? - The Beatles
DON'T YOU RUN AWAY - Shuggie Otis
TIME TO HIDE - Paul McCartney & The Wings
I'D RUN AWAY - The Jayhawks
LONG DISTANCE RUNNER - Buckingham Nicks
RUNNING TO STAND STILL - U2
HIDE AWAY - Freddie King
A LITTLE TRAVELING MUSIC, PLEASE - Barry Manilow
SECRET AGENT MAN - Johnny Rivers
HONESTY - Billy Joel
SECRETS - Van Halen
FOX ON THE RUN - The Sweet
TRAITOR - The Sugarcubes
RUN - Tin Machine
NEVER KEEPING SECRETS - Babyface
STORIES WE COULD TELL - John Sebastian
NOWHERE TO HIDE - Eric Carmen
DON'T RUN AND HIDE - The Everly Brothers
HIDEAWAY - Todd Rundgren
YOU CAN RUN (BUT YOU CAN'T HIDE) - Jerry Butler
HIDE IN YOUR SHELL - Roger Hodgson
ALWAYS ON THE RUN - Lenny Kravitz
BORN TO RUN - Bruce Springsteen
50 WAYS TO LEAVE YOUR LOVER - Paul Simon
RUNNING CHILD RUNNING WILD - The Temptations

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Follow David Wild on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Wildaboutmusic

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-wild/nowhere-man-a-playlist-fo_b_3494108.html

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Saturday, June 22, 2013

Obama plans speech at Organizing for Action summit (The Arizona Republic)

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High court sets stage for frantic week

The U.S. Supreme Court, Oct. 8, 2010 (Chip Somodevilla/Getty)

To the dismay of court watchers everywhere, the Supreme Court did not hand down decisions in the four biggest pending cases Thursday, leaving their simultaneous release for the final, frantic week of the court's term.

Opinions that could drastically expand the rights of gays and lesbians in society, sharply curtail the use of race in college admissions, and strike down civil rights legislation protecting minorities at the ballot box could all be released at the same time on Monday, unless the court adds more decision days to its schedule for later that week.

Though undoubtedly every case the nine justices decide has important effects on the legal system, each term a handful of controversial cases particularly capture the public's attention. This year, the court decided to wade into the gay marriage debate for the first time in its history, and also took up two landmark cases involving race. One of the cases, a challenge to the University of Texas' affirmative action program, was argued in front of the court all the way back in October, and many legal experts are stumped as to why the justices have taken such an unusually long time to release an opinion.

It's common for the court to delay releasing its biggest decisions until the very last day. Last year, the court did just that, releasing its bombshell decision upholding the health care law on June 28. This is often because the controversial cases are the most difficult, and require more back and forth between the justices' dissents and the main opinion and concurrences.

Two highly anticipated gay marriage cases?Perry v. Hollingsworth and Windsor v. United States?are sure to have attracted just this sort of judicial shuffling.

In the Perry case, the court is expected decide whether California voters discriminated against gay people when they voted "yes" to Proposition 8, which bans same-sex marriage in 2008. In Windsor, the court is weighing whether the federal Defense of Marriage Act?which limits all federal marriage benefits to opposite sex couples?violates the constitutional rights of same-sex couples.

Justice Anthony Kennedy, a conservative-leaning swing vote on the court with a history of backing gay rights, is expected to decide the fate of both cases.

But it's possible that the justices could dodge the legal heart of those two cases?whether gays and lesbians have a fundamental right to marriage?and instead rule narrowly on procedural or standing grounds.

David Boies, an attorney representing same-sex couples in California in the Perry case, has said he believes the justices will rule that the proponents of Proposition 8 do not have the legal standing to challenge the lower court's ruling striking down the ban. (In the Prop 8 case, California elected officials opted not to appeal the lower court's ruling, and it's unclear if an unelected coalition of Prop 8 supporters have the legal right to appeal on behalf of California voters.) If the court rules on these narrow grounds, it would make same-sex marriage legal again in California without having any implications for the dozens of states that currently ban same-sex marriage. This would punt the fundamental gay marriage question down the road for the court to decide later.

In the DOMA case, the justices may decide to strike it down based on the federalist argument that states should be allowed to define marriage for themselves. It's also possible that the justices will decide that Congress doesn't have the standing to defend the law, after the Obama administration's justice department declined to defend it in court. Either possibility would result in a narrow decision without much legal implications for the gay rights movement's larger argument that same-sex couples should be allowed to wed.

The two cases involving race, Shelby County v. Holder and Fisher v. University of Texas, will also most likely be released Monday or another decision day next week.

In Shelby, the justices could significantly scale back the federal government's right to supervise states with a history of voting discrimination against minorities. If the justices decide to strike down this key part of the Voting Rights Act?a cornerstone of the civil rights movement that helped dismantle decades of discriminatory voting restrictions?states would have more leeway to pass laws the Obama administration considers to be discriminatory. These include laws that tighten identification requirements and limit early voting hours at the ballot box, which have passed in dozens of states in the past few years.

In Fisher, the court will decide whether universities can use race as a factor in undergraduate admissions. The Supreme Court established in 2003 in Grutter v. Bollinger that universities could use race as a factor in admissions as long as they did not use quotas (for example, that 10 percent of the class must be black). The justices said affirmative action was still necessary to counteract the effects of institutionalized racism that had prevented minorities from attending college in the past. The majority wrote that they believed that in 25 years, affirmative action would no longer be necessary and should be stopped.

It's possible that the justices will use Abigail Fisher's complaint that she was rejected from UT because she is white to step up the timeline set out in the 2003 decision, and reject the college's use of affirmative action as unconstitutional. The college argues that Fisher's grade point average and standardized test scores made her inadmissible regardless of her race, and that using race as one factor in admission helps them maintain a diverse student body.

The justices also have the option of not deciding some of the cases at all, which would mean they would have to be reargued in October. But that's rare. A hectic Monday full of four legal landscape-changing decisions is much more likely.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/supreme-court-holds-big-four-cases-final-frantic-170036331.html

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Saturday, June 15, 2013

Empathy and Disgust Do Battle in the Brain

Rats don't usually come out into daylight, especially not on a busy morning in New York City. But there it was, head awkwardly jutting out in front of its body, swinging from side to side. What injured the creature, I have no idea, but its hind legs could no longer support its weight. The rat dragged them like a kid drags a garbage bag that parents have asked be taken out?reluctantly. The muscles in the front legs rippled as they propelled the body forward along the sidewalk. The rodent was surprisingly quick considering the injury. But its aimlessness suggested distress. Two girls, no more than 15 years old, spotted the wounded rat from about 10 feet away. They held each other close, squealing and giggling, inching toward the animal theatrically. Staring them down, I scowled. How could they not appreciate this creature?s suffering or be touched by its desperation? I looked on, saying nothing. In The Last Child in the Woods, journalist Richard Louv talks about "nature deficit disorder," something we urbanites have picked up over the last hundred years or so. He say that city-dwellers have become so disconnected from nature that they cannot process the harsh realities of the natural world, like the sight of an injured animal. But if those young women were suffering from urban disconnection, then why didn?t I?a city slicker through and through?react that way as well? What made me respond with empathy instead of disgust? Evolutionary theorists believe that many of our behaviors are adaptive in some way. "Empathy probably started out as a mechanism to improve maternal care," says Frans de Waal, a primatologist at Emory University and author of The Age of Empathy. "Mammalian mothers who were attentive to their young?s needs were more likely to rear successful offspring." These offspring were, in turn, more likely to reproduce, so being able to sense another?s feelings was beneficial because it helped mammals to pass on their genes?the ultimate prize in the game of life. Mammalian males also show empathy, de Waal says, because ?the mechanism spread from mother-offspring to other relations, including friends." Although there is still a lot about empathy that scientists do not yet understand, theories abound. From a mechanistic standpoint, some researchers believe that a specific type of neuron?called a ?mirror neuron??might be a key to empathy. These neurons fire both when an individual, carries out an action and when that individual watches another perform the same action. If the theory holds true, mirror neurons might connect us to other living things. "But apes have mirror neurons too and yet they only do very sporadic empathy, much less than us," says Jonathan Haidt, a social psychologist at New York University. ?"So they are only a part of the story." Some scientists argue that hormones provide the rest of the narrative. And if hormones are the story's main characters, then its hero may be oxytocin?a neurotransmitter that some scientists call the ?love hormone.? Researchers have shown that oxytocin, made in the hypothalamus, is involved in human trust, bond formation, generosity and, of course, empathy. One 2010 study, demonstrated that men feel more empathy toward crying children and grieving adults after receiving an aerosol shot of oxytocin compared with a placebo. The science of oxytocin is still in its infancy, however, and although some of the research indicates that the hormone enhances trust and caring, in some cases, it might suppress it. In addition to the physiological underpinnings of empathy, humans have to be able to imagine another?s situation in order to feel empathy. According to de Waal, this means adding a crucial cognitive layer on top of it all?the ?thinking? part of the empathy reaction. This cognitive layer is the reason we held our breath during the Boston marathon bombing as we watched paramedics, runners and law enforcement personnel run to aid the debris-covered victims. It is why we teared up when we saw the bloodstained pavement once the chaos had been cleared away. In such moments, the benefits of being able to perceive another person's emotions are readily apparent (how else could one comfort a person in need?). But exactly what we humans have to gain from perceiving the pain of non-human animals is less clear-cut. Pat Shipman, an anthropology professor at Pennsylvania State University and author of The Animal Connection, believes that it all comes down to domestication. ?The ability to ?read? another species? emotions underlies all successful domestication of animals,? she says. ?If you are going to take a wild animal into captivity, you have to have a tremendous understanding of what that animal needs.? Shipman thinks that those humans who were able to perceive and anticipate the needs of other animals were more successful in keeping them than those who weren't as aware. ?Domestication turns us into much more efficient hunters and gatherers. We don?t have to evolve that specific strength, shape or size?we can borrow it from our animal partners instead,? Shipman explains. In short, humans who were more empathetic were also more prosperous. Viewed that way, the girls who squealed at the sight of the injured rat probably wouldn?t have made good hunter-gatherers. But those girls were not just unsympathetic toward the rat. They were disgusted by it. Could disgust, like empathy, be adaptive? According to Valerie Curtis, director of the Hygiene Center at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, disgust is the voice in our heads that tells us to avoid things?foods and animals?that could harbor ?disease-like bodily emanations.? Rats definitely fit that bill. ? The Center for Disease Control and Prevention lists 11 different types of diseases that rodents can transmit to humans, including hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome and bubonic plague. Breathing dust from places where rats dwell or drinking water in which rodents have defecated are the main modes by which humans contract these illnesses. Of course, bites from infected rats also pose a risk. Researchers think that these diseases explain why humans tend to find rats revolting, but not other rodent species such as hamsters and guinea pigs, which historically have carried less disease. Similarly, when we recoil at the sight of squirming maggots or gag while throwing out rotting food, we are protecting ourselves from the pathogens that they might carry. These feelings of disgust are evolutionary messages telling us to get as far away as possible from the source of our discomfort. Researchers believe that many areas of the brain participate in the formation of these messages, but the anterior insulae?located deep within a fold of the brain known as the lateral sulcus?are among one of the most important, Curtis says. ?They help us monitor our bodies? interiors and notice nausea.? ? But with conflicting signals from empathy and disgust flooding our brains, how does one emotion prevail over the other? ?We are full of conflicting desires, that is the nature of human beings,? Curtis observes. ??At any one time we have to weigh different motives and make a decision what to do based on circumstances, so people may simultaneously want to comfort a sick animal and recoil from its open wound.? What you choose to do, she says, ?depends on the strength of your disgust and the strength of your desire to care.? And when it comes to short-term survival, disgust is often the strongest feeling, Haidt says. We might prefer to think of ourselves as compassionate?a quality that aids long-term survival?but when we find ourselves in potentially life-threatening situations, our immediate desire to keep on living, often expressed through disgust, tends to win out. ? That's why "disgust is much more powerful close up," Haidt says. People might feel a lot of compassion for other creatures in the abstract, but if you show them a sickly animal and ask them to touch it, their empathy won't always translate into action. On the sidewalk at 9 a.m., I somewhat foolishly expected a crowd to gather around the rat. But the bystanders who weren't rushing to work were rushing to grab coffee at the nearest food-cart. And besides, if people, including me, don?t stop for faltering homeless people on the street, why would they stop for an injured subway rat? It occurred to me that I should spare the creature the agony of a slow death by dehydration, or of a quick one by predation. But what would people think if they saw me killing a rat on Lafayette Street? Would I even be able to stomach it? Sometimes cultural norms supersede even our most primal instincts. Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/empathy-disgust-battle-brain-120000167.html

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Thursday, June 13, 2013

Two-step mechanism of inner ear tip link regrowth

June 11, 2013 ? A team of NIH-supported researchers is the first to show, in mice, an unexpected two-step process that happens during the growth and regeneration of inner ear tip links. Tip links are extracellular tethers that link stereocilia, the tiny sensory projections on inner ear hair cells that convert sound into electrical signals, and play a key role in hearing. The discovery offers a possible mechanism for potential interventions that could preserve hearing in people whose hearing loss is caused by genetic disorders related to tip link dysfunction. The work was supported by the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD), a component of the National Institutes of Health.

The findings appear in the June 11, 2013 online edition of PLoS Biology. The senior author of this study is Gregory I. Frolenkov, an associate professor in the College of Medicine at the University of Kentucky, Lexington, and his fellow, Artur A. Indzhykulian, Ph.D., is the lead author.

Stereocilia are bundles of bristly projections that extend from the tops of sensory cells, called hair cells, in the inner ear. Each stereocilia bundle is arranged in three neat rows that rise from lowest to highest like stair steps. Tip links are tiny thread-like strands that link the tip of a shorter stereocilium to the side of the taller one behind it. When sound vibrations enter the inner ear, the stereocilia, connected by the tip links, all lean to the same side and open special channels, called mechanotransduction channels. These pore-like openings allow potassium and calcium ions to enter the hair cell and kick off an electrical signal that eventually travels to the brain, where it is interpreted as sound.

The findings build on a number of recent discoveries in laboratories at the NIDCD and elsewhere that have carefully plotted the structure and function of tip links and the proteins that comprise them. Earlier studies had shown that tip links are made up of two proteins -- cadherin-23 (CDH23) and protocadherin-15 (PCDH15) -- that join to make the link, with PCDH15 at the bottom of the tip link at the site of the mechanotransduction channel, and CDH23 on the upper end. Scientists assumed that the assembly was static and stable once the two proteins bonded.

Tip links break easily with exposure to noise. But unlike hair cells, which can't regenerate in humans, tip links repair themselves, mostly within a matter of hours. The breaking of tip links, and their regeneration, has been known for many years, and is seen as one of the causes of the temporary hearing loss you might experience after a loud blast of sound (or a loud concert). Once the tip links regenerate, hair cell function returns, usually to normal levels. What scientists didn't know was how the tip link reassembled.

To study tip link assembly, the researchers treated young, postnatal (5-7 days) mouse sensory hair cells with BAPTA -- a substance that, like loud noise, damages and disrupts tip links. To image the proteins, the group pioneered an improved scanning electron microscopy (SEM) technique of immunogold labeling that uses antibodies bound to gold particles that attach to the proteins. Then, using SEM, they imaged the cells at high resolution to determine the positions of the proteins before, during, and after BAPTA treatment.

What the researchers found was that after a tip link is chemically disrupted, a new tip link forms, but instead of the normal combination of CDH23 and PCDH15, the link is made up of PCDH15 proteins at both ends. Over the next 24 hours, the PCDH15 protein at the upper end is replaced by CDH23 and the tip link is back to normal.

Why tip links regenerate using a two-step instead of a neat one-step process is not known. For reasons that are still unclear, CDH23 disappears from stereocilia after noise damage while PDCH15 stays around. Looking to regenerate quickly, the lower PDCH15 latches onto another PDCH15, forming a shorter and functionally slightly weaker tip link. Later, at some time during the 36 hours after the damage, when CDH23 returns, PDCH15 gives up its provisional partner and latches onto its much stronger mate in CDH23. In other words, PDCH15 prefers to be with CDH23, but in a pinch it will bond weakly with another bit of PDCH15 until CDH23 shows up.

The researchers coupled the SEM observations with electrophysiology studies to show how the functional properties of the tip links changed throughout this two-step process. The temporary PCDH15/PCDH15 tip link has a slightly different functional response than the permanent PDCH15/CDH23 combination. Researchers were able to correlate the differences in function with the protein combinations that make up the tip link.

Additional experiments revealed that when hair cells develop, the tip links use the same two-step process.

Previous research has shown that both CDH23 and PCDH15 are required for normal hearing and vision. In fact, NIDCD scientists in earlier studies have shown that mutations in either of these genes can cause the hearing loss or deaf-blindness found in Usher Syndrome types 1D and 1F.

"In the case of deaf individuals who are unable to make functional CDH23, knowledge of this new temporary alliance of PCDH15 proteins to form a weaker, but still functional, tip link could inform treatments that would encourage the double PCDH15 bond to become permanent and maintain at least limited hearing," said Tom Friedman, Ph.D., chief of the Laboratory of Molecular Genetics at the NIDCD, where the research began.

The research was supported by NIDCD intramural funds DC000048-15 and NIDCD/NIH grants R01 DC008861, R01 DC002368, R01 DC012564, and P30 DC0058983.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/9PRaE_iu7Pk/130611204644.htm

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Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom gets reviewed before it's even official (updated)

Samsung Galaxy S 4 Zoom gets reviewed before it's even official

If previous leaks had us fairly convinced Samsung's Galaxy S4 Zoom cameraphone was a real device, this latest one has us certain. A Russian website has published what can only be described as a full review of the Zoom, before it's even been made official. The main camera hosts a 16-megapixel sensor and is capable of 10x optical zoom, performed by rotating a ring that runs around the lens; this ring is also used to launch the camera mode. A piece of glass sits flush with the end of the lens for dust protection, and a xenon flash will give you extra light when you need it.

Inside, the Zoom is similar to the S4 Mini, running a dual-core 1.5GHz Exynos processor, 1.5GB of RAM and eight gigs of internal storage (naturally, there's a microSD slot for boosting that). Facing you is a 4.3-inch qHD (960 x 540) display showing Android 4.2.2 (with a TouchWiz coating, of course), a 1.9-megapixel front-facing camera, and powering the whole thing is a huge 2,330mAh removable battery. For connection and communication, you've got WiFi, Bluetooth 4.0, NFC and the increasingly popular IR blaster, but it appears the Russian model doesn't have an LTE radio. From the raft of sample pictures available, image quality looks pretty good on the whole. hi-tech.mail.ru reports that the Zoom is scheduled to launch in Russia in July at a cost of 19,990 rubles, or around $618 by conversion.

Update: Samsung's gone and announced the thing, but it's still worth heading to the source for all the hardware shots, sample pictures and first impressions. If you're in a rush, we've put a profile shot of the cameraphone and our favorite sample image from the review after the break.

[Thanks, Max]

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Source: hi-tech.mail.ru

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/12/samsung-galaxy-s-4-zoom/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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