With efforts ongoing to boost efficiencies statewide, NDSU?s Information Technology Division has entered into a service-level agreement to provide 3 terabytes of backup data storage for Dickinson State University.
In April, Todd Hauf, DSU?s director of computer services, approached Marc Wallman, NDSU?s interim vice president for information technology, about providing offsite data storage for disaster recovery purposes.
?As part of our formal disaster recovery plan, we were looking for an offsite location for backup storage,? Hauf said. ?We?ve been aware of the IT services and support that NDSU offers for a number of years. After looking at outside vendors, we determined that NDSU would be able to offer us the data storage service we need at a fair price.?
Galen Mayfield, interim assistant vice president for enterprise computing and infrastructure at NDSU, said that his team saw the project as a mutually beneficial opportunity to extend current resources in support of another state institution. ?This is an efficient use of resources,? he said. ?Given that NDSU already has a robust storage architecture in place, we can use our resources to serve other campuses and save them the cost of developing such a service.?
Hauf consulted with the North Dakota University System chief information officer?s office and decided to move forward with the project in June. NDSU and DSU negotiated a one-year service-level agreement for 3 terabytes of storage. After testing the data transfer process between the two campuses, the requested storage space was made available for use beginning Aug. 1.
Mayfield explained that IT Division staff are typically able to provision data storage within hours or days of a request. However, the timeline regarding the DSU storage project was expanded to allow for thorough testing of data transfer speed and bandwidth usage given the geographical distance between the two campuses.
?During testing, we started out by transferring a small amount of data in order to find the rate of speed for the transfer, which Dickinson State found acceptable,? Mayfield said. That speed topped out at around 40 megabytes per second, according to Greg Wettstein, NDSU?s principal IT engineer. After testing the speed of the transfer, NDSU and DSU staff monitored DSU?s connection to the North Dakota Statewide Technology Access for Government and Education network to make sure that the amount of data being transferred would not congest the network.
The network provides broadband connectivity among all state agencies, colleges and universities, local government and K-12 institutions. Hauf said his team has scheduled the daily backup data transfer process late at night to avoid using too much of the network?s bandwidth during peak traffic hours.
NDSU has been building its data storage services for on-campus departments and external constituencies since 1999. Currently, NDSU?s storage architecture has a capacity of more than 80 terabytes. On-campus departments receive a base amount of storage for shared use, with the option to purchase more as needed. NDSU faculty and staff also have the option to request individual storage at no cost. Mayfield said the NDSU IT Division is looking into increasing the base levels of storage offered to departments and individuals.?
NDSU is capable of providing data storage for institutions located anywhere across the state, regionally, nationally and even internationally. ?This is a great example of opportunities that exist for public institutions in North Dakota to collaborate, reduce costs, and provide greater benefit to faculty, staff and students,? Wallman said.
For more information about data storage and other services, including server hosting and application development, please contact the NDSU IT Help Desk at 1-8685 or ndsu.helpdesk@ndsu.edu.
NDSU is recognized as one of the nation's top 108 public and private universities by the Carnegie Commission on Higher Education.
Any money you can save in your PPC advertising budget is money that can be diverted to money making campaigns.? You want the most targeted traffic for the lowest cost possible and every business owner wants to beat their competitors right?
PPC Management involves weekly maintenance with systems and procedures in place to work efficiently and effectively.? The necessary monthly investment of PPC related software tools to help sift through the mountains of data each week and the experience & diligence required to know what to do, when to do it, where to apply and how it should be done.
Below are the four main areas of focus each week as we seek to improve our PPC Clients? campaigns.? Here at Small Business Online Coach (?SBOC? for short), we believe strongly based on our results that incremental changes in the positive direction will compound over time to create the desired result of greater return on investment (ROI) for all our Clients.
It?s a win win scenario to strive for, where are Clients get more traffic, which turn into sales and profits and we continue to grow our mutually beneficial relationship.
Sifting & Identifying Negative Keywords
The first thing we do each Monday morning, is we look at your search query data for the previous week, and identify keywords that are not related to you getting a potential customer, but are costing you money.
Your search query data are all the keyword variations that triggered the display of your ads , so some accounts depending on the combination of keyword match types set, number of campaigns and adgroups within them running can have hundreds of new search query keyword variations each month.
This is due to the variety of different personalities out there, where they are within the sales cycle, and their different searching habits account for the large keyword variants.
For example, let?s say each week?
?there are 100 new search query keyword variations and by combing through them analyzing them for:
commercial intent (the right audience that are most likely in the buying stage and not information gathering stage OR unrelated search in comparison to the offering of your business)
meaning (for words that come up that are industry related, competitor brand, unrelated or unrecognised words)
So in this example, let?s say each week, there are 20 negative keyword variations, so we would:
make that phrase or combination of keywords into an exact negative phrase so if it ever comes up again, it will not trigger your ads
then we take the root keyword in that phrase that changes the intent of that specific search and we put on a different list
At the end we have 20 exact negative keyword phrases excluded and 20 root keywords in a list.
Then we add those keywords in your campaigns, so any variation that any searcher types up with those root keywords in their search phrase will not trigger your ads
Then we download your entire negative keyword list and record them in a master spreadsheet (XL) for your business.
So in this example, let?s say these 20 negative keywords have a combined daily search volume of 10, so that?s 300 each month at an average cost of $3 per click and your ads are achieving an excellent clickthrough rate (CTR) of 3%,
then that means that 300 X $3 X 3%= $27/mth X 12mths= $324 X 4wks of maintenance= $1296 savings per year in negative keywords!
Optimizing Keyword Bids
In a second section of reducing bids on keywords that have low return on investment (ROI)- the reduction in the bid prices is then multiplied by the number of estimated clicks and added to the total annual savings of the negative section.
For example, there are 20 keywords that can be lowered because:
they have been running for a while and have conversion numbers that are not desirable
they have #1 ad position for a while now, so we can lower bids to move the ads to position 2 or 3
NOTE: We want to always begin a new adgroup with super aggressive bidding to get the top position and then by getting high CTR?s we will have a lower cost per click (CPC) compared to the competitors, at that point we can play with backing down the bids
So let?s say these 20 keywords bids in total were lowered by 50cents each, so that?s $10 in savings that wk, then for example sake we did this same amount for each week, that?s $40 for the month X 12mths= $480
Add that to the $1296 in the negative keyword sifting & identifying and your total annual saving is now $1776!
Review Costly Keywords
Then in the third section of weekly maintenance, we look for keywords that are costing you money in clicks, but not yielding any conversions, then we pause those keywords.? Let? say 20 are found a month at a combined cost of $108/mth, then savings is $1296 (same as negative keywords in this example).?
Now the total is $3072 for the year in savings!!
Adding High Value Keywords
Adding new keyword opportunities, increases your costs, but gets you more traffic and more leads.? How we calculate this is we SUBTRACT the cost of adding these new keywords from the potential savings we?ve accumulated so far.
So let?s say we find 20 new keywords to add to your existing adgroups.? In this example let?s say that it?s the same numbers as in the Sifting & Identifying Negative Keywords and Optimizing Keyword Bids sections and the total new added cost is $108/mth, so that?s an added cost of $1296.
So the potential annual savings of $3072 minus $1296 of new keywords added, now the actual annual savings from the month?s cumulative work produces $1776 in annual savings!
PPC Management is Essential
The value of proper PPC management cannot be ignored.? There are companies paying Google 30% or more than they have to in Adwords click costs by trying to do it themselves.
If you want to succeed in paid advertising, then you have to either do it all yourself, hire an employee, then train and support them with the proper software tools or contract out PPC Management Services.
Just look at your business- you are the expert in your industry.? When people hire you it is because it is more cost effective and you produce better results to provide them those services than it is for them to do it themselves isn?t that the case?
Top Chennai Web Design Company Launches New Website Siva Shree Info System is one of the leading Web Design Company in Chennai India and web development company launched their new website on August 15, 2012. Siva Shree Info Systems is a diminutive and exclusive with developing company. We developed from the foundation, in the year of 2011; it has been capitalized by great IT professionals. We accommodate executive website design with rich user interaction, smart screen flow, advanced Ajax, PHP development, hosting and promotion of website and web development, ecommerce and web applications makes Siva Shree info systems to a one of non-stop service provider for your internet needs.
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We have a simple and elegant design process that is enjoyable for both our small team and our clients. We utilize the latest technologies to cater to the need of the client ranging from simple to complex and highly advanced solution. Application Development Our team has excellent capabilities in LAMP (PHP / MYSQL) and ASP.NET / SQL for web application development in Chennai. We use 3 tier architecture for most of our applications and believe in modular approach to development. About Siva Shree Info Systems Sivashree Info System Pvt Ltd is ranked as one of the fastest growing website design company in Chennai, India, providing creative website design services to many customers who have gained from our deep industry insights and domain expertise. Reach us and get a free quotation on our business communication solutions like Online marketing, Web solutions, Web design, Graphic design, SEO, SMO, Local Listing, Hosting & maintenance, Enterprise solutions and so on. To know more details, visit our website at http://www.sivashree.in
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) - Evan Longoria homered twice, Tampa Bay roughed up Matt Harrison and the Rays beat the Texas Rangers 8-4 Wednesday night to snap a four-game losing streak.
After dropping the last two against the AL-West leading Rangers by one run, the Rays avoided the three-game sweep.
Harrison (15-8) allowed seven runs and 12 hits in 5 1-3 innings. He took a no-hitter into the seventh and permitted two hits in eight shutout innings in his last outing Friday night against Minnesota.
Tampa Bay had scored only 11 runs during their losing skid before breaking out for 16 hits against Texas.
Longoria hit a two-run homer in the first and a solo shot in the ninth. B.J. Upton had a three-run home run and Elliot Johnson added a solo blast.
Jeff Keppinger went 4 for 5 and Ben Zobrist had three hits for the Rays.
Jake McGee (5-2) pitched a perfect sixth and five Tampa Bay relievers combined for 4 1-3 scoreless innings.
Josh Hamilton hit his 36th home run for Texas, a solo shot that brought Texas within 6-4 in the fifth.
The Rangers wrapped up a 10-game homestand with a 7-3 record.
Harrison gave up seven runs and a career-high 14 hits in an 8-4 loss to the Rays on April 27. The All-Star left-hander struggled again against Tampa Bay on Wednesday night, giving up six runs and a pair of home runs by the second inning.
Zobrist's RBI double in the first snapped a 13-inning scoreless drought.
Longoria drove a 3-1 fastball from Harrison 409 feet to center. The two-run shot extended Tampa Bay's lead to 3-0. Longoria is 6 for 9 with three home runs against Harrison in the regular season.
In the second inning, Sam Fuld tripled with one out and Desmond Jennings walked to set the stage for Upton.
After Texas pitching coach Mike Maddux visited Harrison, Upton lined a fastball into the seats in left for his 16th home run of the season.
Johnson led off the sixth with a home run and Harrison was chased out of the game two batters later.
It was the first time Harrison allowed three home runs in a game since April 21, 2010 against Boston.
Texas' Mitch Moreland hit a two-run homer in the second, his 15th of the season. Nelson Cruz's RBI groundout got the Rangers to within 6-3.
Hamilton's 424-foot shot landed in the upper deck in right and gave him 112 RBIs, which leads the majors.
Rays starter Alex Cobb allowed eight hits and four runs in 4 2-3 innings.
Notes: Tampa Bay OF Matt Joyce, who left Tuesday's night's game with a strained left forearm, was not in the lineup. Manager Joe Maddon said Joyce might be available Thursday night at Toronto. ... Cruz was in the lineup after being hit in the left elbow Tuesday night. ... The Rays are 15-7 since Longoria came off the disabled list Aug. 7.
? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) - Evan Longoria homered twice, Tampa Bay roughed up Matt Harrison and the Rays beat the Texas Rangers 8-4 Wednesday night to snap a four-game losing streak.
Early career distinction: Prestigious award recognizes physicist's work in electron dynamicsPublic release date: 29-Aug-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]
Contact: Matthias Kling kling@k-state.edu 785-532-1615 Kansas State University
MANHATTAN, KAN. -- A Kansas State University professor has received a prestigious award for his research that could lead to faster electronics and affect communication technology.
Matthias Kling, assistant professor of physics, recently received the Early Career Research Program Award from the U.S. Department of Energy. Kling will receive $750,000 to support his research titled "Electron Dynamics in Nanostructures in Strong Laser Fields."
The award is very competitive -- only 68 out of 850 applicants were chosen this year, according to the Department of Energy.
Kling will perform his research in a new laboratory space being built in the university's James R. Macdonald Laboratory. His work will focus on two aspects: studying how electron motion and nanomaterials can be controlled and developing ways to build devices that control electrons with the electric field of light waves.
For the first part of the project, Kling will explore the controlling of electrons in nanosystems -- the first step to improving electronics. If he can do so, it may speed up electrons by a factor of 100,000, which can greatly improve communication technology.
Currently, communication technology across oceans is transferred by optical fibers that can transmit information at the speed of light. This information must be coded and decoded by computers, which can slow down the technology. Kling's research may build the basis to remove this bottleneck.
"What we dream about is having optical devices where electrons are really controlled by the light waves themselves and we can use that to replace conventional electronics," Kling said.
For the second part of the project, Kling wants to not only control the electrons, but see them in action as well.
To observe the motion of electrons, Kling and his research team use attosecond time flashes to take "pictures" of electrons. An attosecond is one-billionth of a billionth of a second.
"By the light flash being there for only a short time, you can freeze the motion of the electrons and get a very sharp picture of the electron at the time the light illuminates it," Kling said. "By putting lots of these pictures together, we obtain a movie of electron motion across the nanostructure."
Kling has spent a research leave at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in Garching, Germany, where he performed preliminary research on this project. He helped to record correlated electron motion with light waves and studied how to use short laser pulses to control electron motion -- all fundamental to what Kling will apply to nanosystems in the Macdonald Laboratory.
A new laser, a new laboratory space
For his research, Kling will use ultrafast laser sources from the Macdonald Laboratory and he will work in a new laboratory space being built at the lab. The space will be completed this summer.
The new space will include a new $1.3 million laser system funded by the Department of Energy. The university is providing more than $500,000 to fund the laboratory space.
"The new lab space is a state-of-the-art ultrafast laser lab," said Itzik Ben-Itzhak, university distinguished professor of physics and director of the Macdonald Laboratory. "It accommodates a high repetition rate, intense laser system that will serve a multitude of experiments mainly focused on attosecond physics. These experiments and the laser system require a high level of environmental control, which the new lab provides."
In addition to Kling, other researchers with the Macdonald Laboratory group will use the space to study the interaction of ultrashort laser pulses with matter.
"This lab and laser system will put the Macdonald Laboratory group among the leading laboratories in the world of attosecond science research," Ben-Itzhak said.
###
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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.
Early career distinction: Prestigious award recognizes physicist's work in electron dynamicsPublic release date: 29-Aug-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]
Contact: Matthias Kling kling@k-state.edu 785-532-1615 Kansas State University
MANHATTAN, KAN. -- A Kansas State University professor has received a prestigious award for his research that could lead to faster electronics and affect communication technology.
Matthias Kling, assistant professor of physics, recently received the Early Career Research Program Award from the U.S. Department of Energy. Kling will receive $750,000 to support his research titled "Electron Dynamics in Nanostructures in Strong Laser Fields."
The award is very competitive -- only 68 out of 850 applicants were chosen this year, according to the Department of Energy.
Kling will perform his research in a new laboratory space being built in the university's James R. Macdonald Laboratory. His work will focus on two aspects: studying how electron motion and nanomaterials can be controlled and developing ways to build devices that control electrons with the electric field of light waves.
For the first part of the project, Kling will explore the controlling of electrons in nanosystems -- the first step to improving electronics. If he can do so, it may speed up electrons by a factor of 100,000, which can greatly improve communication technology.
Currently, communication technology across oceans is transferred by optical fibers that can transmit information at the speed of light. This information must be coded and decoded by computers, which can slow down the technology. Kling's research may build the basis to remove this bottleneck.
"What we dream about is having optical devices where electrons are really controlled by the light waves themselves and we can use that to replace conventional electronics," Kling said.
For the second part of the project, Kling wants to not only control the electrons, but see them in action as well.
To observe the motion of electrons, Kling and his research team use attosecond time flashes to take "pictures" of electrons. An attosecond is one-billionth of a billionth of a second.
"By the light flash being there for only a short time, you can freeze the motion of the electrons and get a very sharp picture of the electron at the time the light illuminates it," Kling said. "By putting lots of these pictures together, we obtain a movie of electron motion across the nanostructure."
Kling has spent a research leave at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in Garching, Germany, where he performed preliminary research on this project. He helped to record correlated electron motion with light waves and studied how to use short laser pulses to control electron motion -- all fundamental to what Kling will apply to nanosystems in the Macdonald Laboratory.
A new laser, a new laboratory space
For his research, Kling will use ultrafast laser sources from the Macdonald Laboratory and he will work in a new laboratory space being built at the lab. The space will be completed this summer.
The new space will include a new $1.3 million laser system funded by the Department of Energy. The university is providing more than $500,000 to fund the laboratory space.
"The new lab space is a state-of-the-art ultrafast laser lab," said Itzik Ben-Itzhak, university distinguished professor of physics and director of the Macdonald Laboratory. "It accommodates a high repetition rate, intense laser system that will serve a multitude of experiments mainly focused on attosecond physics. These experiments and the laser system require a high level of environmental control, which the new lab provides."
In addition to Kling, other researchers with the Macdonald Laboratory group will use the space to study the interaction of ultrashort laser pulses with matter.
"This lab and laser system will put the Macdonald Laboratory group among the leading laboratories in the world of attosecond science research," Ben-Itzhak said.
###
[ | E-mail | 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.
The former editor of the Scottish edition of Rupert Murdoch's News of the World tabloid was arrested on Wednesday and charged in connection with the defamation action of a former lawmaker.
Bob Bird, 56, was charged with attempting to pervert the course of justice over Tommy Sheridan's successful legal action against the newspaper in 2006.
Bird was held for questioning at a police station in Glasgow before being released around four hours later.
"I just want to say I'm really sad and disappointed that things have come to this today," Bird told broadcasters after his release.
"I have always tried to do the right thing throughout my 30, 40-odd years in journalism and I will be denying the charge that has been made against me today.
"On legal advice, I can't say any more at the moment."
Bird edited the now-defunct tabloid when it reported allegations about the flamboyant Sheridan's private life.
The former member of the Scottish Parliament sued the newspaper for defamation and was awarded ?200,000 ($315,000, 250,000 euros) in damages.
Sheridan was subsequently charged and convicted of perjury and jailed for three years, but was released after serving one year of his sentence.
In May, British Prime Minister David Cameron's former media chief Andy Coulson was arrested and charged over evidence that he gave at Sheridan's perjury trial.
Coulson is a former editor of the London-based edition of the News of the World.
Murdoch shut down the News of the World in July last year amid a storm of allegations that it had hacked the phones of a murdered schoolgirl and accessed the voicemails of hundreds of celebrities and politicians.
By 2050 or so, the human population is expected to reach nine billion, essentially adding two Chinas to the number of people alive today. Those billions will be seeking food, water and other resources on a planet where, scientists say, humans are already shaping climate and the web of life. In Dot Earth, which recently moved from the news side of The Times to the Opinion section, Andrew C. Revkin examines efforts to balance human affairs with the planet?s limits. Conceived in part with support from a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, Dot Earth tracks relevant developments from suburbia to Siberia. The blog is an interactive exploration of trends and ideas with readers and experts.
Slide Show
A Planet in Flux
Andrew C. Revkin began exploring the human impact on the environment nearly 30 years ago. An early stop was Papeete, Tahiti. This narrated slide show describes his extensive travels.
Video
Dot Earth on YouTube
Many of the videos featured here can be found on Andrew Revkin?s channel on YouTube. Recent reader favorites:
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Dishing out work to other people is a great way to cut down your list of tasks, but since you still hold responsibility for the outcome you want to make sure it's done right. To help outline the task, productivity blog Day-Timer suggests you always hand off work with an expectations and deadline list.
Delegating out a task is always a risk, but instead of messing around with the how-to and details that don't really matter, Day-Timer suggests it's best to simply list the result you want, and when you want it:
Ask yourself "What am I doing this week that doesn't have to be done by me?" Think of people - co-workers, your spouse, even your kids ? who might have better time or resources to help you. Before delegating, always be certain that you offer a specific, detailed explanation, and never hand off the project until you have discussed:
a) expectations
b) deadline
How the delegated person accomplishes the task doesn't matter. Instead, it's all about getting the same result as you would.
Today's Productivity Tip: Improve Your Delegation | Day-Timer Blog
WASHINGTON (AP) ? As Chris Christie's moment at the microphone neared, delegates to the Republican National Convention were atwitter at the chance to hear the New Jersey governor speak. After all, who knew what might happen? "He doesn't seem to have a filter," said David Shimkin, a delegate from New York.
But the famously freewheeling Christie does in fact have filters: He's using a teleprompter, and he's reading from a speech that has been vetted and approved.
Americans hunger for authenticity ? or, at least, say that they do. The explosion of reality TV is testament to that desire for the unscripted moment (even if that unscripted moment is, well, scripted). So the slick choreography of the modern political convention, while understandable, also seems odd. And, some say, it's actually counterproductive to what the parties say they want to accomplish: generate passion that translates into votes.
"This regard for order, this insistence on order, it's just weird," says Richard Bensel, a professor of American politics at Cornell University.
It's that need to control the message and the messengers that led Texas Congressman Ron Paul to hold his own alternative rally Sunday in Tampa, Fla., drawing a crowd of thousands. "It's exactly what the Republican Party should have wanted ? real spirit, real emotion," Bensel says. "That enthusiasm shouldn't be offstage. It shouldn't be in an independent rally."
But it's the way things work these days. And Robert Lehrman, who was Vice President Al Gore's chief speech writer for three years, says that if he were GOP nominee Mitt Romney, he would insist on an orderly convention.
"You're trying to show a unified, strong party that represents your views," says Lehrman, author of the 2009 book "The Political Speechwriter's Companion." ''And to have those kinds of debates doesn't help the campaign."
"Used to be 30 years ago, you had platform fights, and they would come from the floor and be debated," he says. "Now, they had some platform stuff on CSPAN, where 30,000 people watch it. But 30 million people have no idea about those things."
In the 19th century, the candidates mostly avoided the conventions altogether. In 1860, Lincoln stayed home in Springfield and his supporters did the work. To do otherwise, Lehrman says, "was considered immodest."
Harry Truman was such a terrible speaker that his aides, at the 1948 Democratic convention, decided to give him a list of talking points instead of a speech. To make things worse, just as he reached the stage, a woman rushed up with a cage full of "doves of peace" ? which promptly got loose and, as one aide would later write, "did what pigeons do." The speech went on to be one of Truman's more memorable, but it's hard to forget the pigeons.
There was a time when a rousing convention speech could make history. William Jennings Bryan was a little-known former Nebraska congressman when he arrived in Chicago for the 1896 Democratic National Convention to make a speech in favor of the free-silver movement. Most newspapers covering the event listed him sixth or lower ? if at all.
"He was technically a candidate, but in the way, say, Ron Paul is. Even less than that, actually," says Bensel, author of "Passion and Preferences: William Jennings Bryan and the 1896 Democratic Convention." But after Bryan delivered his now legendary "Cross of Gold" speech, he walked away with the party's nomination ? and a place in the history books.
Sociologist and essayist John Shelton Reed understands that the Republicans don't want another "Pat Buchanan moment" ? the former presidential candidate's infamous "culture war" speech at the 1992 GOP convention in Houston.
"There is a religious war going on in this country," Buchanan thundered from the podium. "It is a cultural war, as critical to the kind of nation we shall be as the Cold War itself. For this war is for the soul of America. And in that struggle for the soul of America, Clinton and Clinton are on the other side, and George Bush is on our side."
"Everybody seemed to agree that was not helpful," Reed says. "They didn't check it in advance, I'm pretty sure."
Christie is famous for speaking bluntly and loudly. But he understands that Tampa is not the place for winging it. In an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," Christie acknowledged as much. "I don't use text almost ever," he said. "So most of the time I think about what it is I want to talk about, and then I get up there and I talk about it."
Given the venue and the time restrictions, Christie said, "they want you to work off a text, and that's fine." But he noted that former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour reminded him that he needed to "be Chris.'"
"If that means I stray a little off the prompter every once in a while," he said, "that's the way it goes."
It's that delicate balance ? preparation without overpackaging ? that is so difficult to strike. Rick Andrews, who teaches improv at New York's Magnet Theater, works with businesspeople trying to communicate better. The trick for politicians, he says, is to try to "appear casual, off the cuff ? when you're not."
"We would be shocked if they weren't prepared," Andrews says. "But we also don't want them to appear to be overly prepared."
Republicans, including Romney, have openly mocked President Barack Obama's use of the teleprompter. But Ann Romney, the former Massachusetts governor's wife, seemed relieved to know she would not be up on that stage alone. She told reporters Tuesday that she had "never gone off of a written text."
"I had a lot of input in this, I must say, and a lot of, um, tweaking where I felt like was getting what I really wanted to say and from my heart," she said.
Mitt Romney has a reputation for being somewhat stiff. But Lehrman is looking forward to his performance Thursday evening ? particularly given that the GOP nominee has been working with an oratory coach. "I see him being more impassioned and more natural," Lehrman says. "He's been able to fake naturalness better."
And in the process, perhaps, something valuable is lost. That's how Bensel sees it. By sculpting their conventions so carefully, he says, both political parties are missing out on the chance to make history.
"The problem is, when you script the speech, the crowd isn't involved and there's no feedback, there's no spontaneity," Bensel says. "The whole connection between the party rank and file as audience and whoever's speaking is broken. You are just an audience. You aren't a participant in the creation of a political moment."
___
Associated Press writers Thomas Beaumont and Kasie Hunt contributed to this report. Follow AP National Writer Allen G. Breed on Twitter at http://twitter.com/AllenGBreed
When you read the economic news these days, the last word you expect to see is ?boom.?
After all, we all know it?s tough out there. Unemployment is high, growth is slow, and companies all over the country seem reluctant to hire again and get the economy back on track.
But even if the national economic picture is somewhat gloomy, there's no reason that individual states can?t find success. In fact, there are a number of local successes that many Americans can be proud to talk about ? especially people who live in the states we?re listing here.
1) North Dakota
The national unemployment rate may not be a pretty picture, but in North Dakota the employment story is painting a very different picture indeed. In fact, in 2011, BusinessInsider.com quoted North Dakota?s unemployment rate at an astoundingly-low 3.9 percent. But that?s not all. A recent boom in the oil fields of the Bakken area in North Dakota has helped to lead an energy charge across the state that is keeping North Dakotans at work. North Dakota has been growing since 2002, so it?s no surprise that they?ve been able to weather the most recent economic turbulence.
2) Alaska
It may be geographically isolated from the rest of the United States, but when it comes to economic isolation from the rest of the country, maybe it?s not all so bad.?
That?s the case in Alaska, where the budget continues to be balanced, the energy sector continues to add jobs, and the AAA bond rating has kept the financial side of things nice and tidy.
3) Texas
The old saying ?everything?s bigger in Texas? also seems to apply to economic news, because Texas in 2011 had added almost half a million new jobs in the business and financial sector over the previous decade. Texas is managing to effectively do this in a variety of sectors across the board, including everything from energy to finance. Considering Texas is also a big exporter, it?s a state that?s well set up to handle financial calamity in the future as well as the present.
4) Oklahoma
For more local growth, just check out Texas? neighbor to the north, a state that is also adding plenty of jobs in the energy sector over the last decade. Oklahoma?s Quality Jobs program has also attracted some interest, as it rewards businesses that are able to both create and keep new jobs. Maybe that?s the type of program more states should be looking to add.
5) Wyoming
For Wyoming, it?s all been about natural resources and mining. In other words, Wyoming is another state that has been able to add a lot of energy-related jobs over the years because of what?s under the soil. This has been one of the hallmarks for growing states across the country, which goes to show that energy just may be where the economy overall is heading. Wyoming also has a number of other healthy financial factors working in its favor that makes it a potential destination to people looking to settle long-term.
These examples give hope for the future, as well as ideas for ways these types of successes might be replicated in other areas of the nation.
About the author : Paul Moore works with North Hill Suites in North Dakota, a new extended-stay hotel that developed in response to the need for more housing. You can see the web site at http://northhillsuites.com/
KABUL (Reuters) - Afghanistan said on Sunday it believed that a top commander of the militant Haqqani insurgent network had been killed in a U.S. drone strike, citing intelligence reports that it said countered Afghan Taliban claims that Badruddin Haqqani was still alive.
Haqqani, who was head of operations and ran the network's vital business interests, was thought to have been killed during the strike this week in Pakistan's tribal North Waziristan, both Afghanistan's Interior Ministry and national spy agency said.
"The elimination of Badruddin Haqqani will deal a major blow and serious setback to the Haqqani Network," Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi said.
Shafiquallh Tahriri, spokesman for Afghanistan's spy agency the National Directorate of Security, also said that Haqqani was killed last week, based on intelligence from Afghan agents collected from sources in Pakistan.
Tahriri declined to say what evidence was in the reports the government had received, including whether anyone had actually seen Badruddin Haqqani's body.
However, Afghanistan's Taliban, allies of the Haqqani network, dismissed claims of Badruddin's death on Saturday as propaganda from Pakistan's military and the NATO-Afghan coalition.
Maulvi Ahmed Jan, a senior Haqqani network commander, also denied that Badruddin - the son of the network's founder Jalaluddin Haqqani - had been killed and said the insurgents would soon provide proof he was alive.
U.S. officials blame the al Qaeda-linked Haqqanis for some of the worst recent attacks in Afghanistan, including an April 15 attack on embassies, NATO headquarters and the parliament in Kabul which lasted 18 hours, killing 11 Afghan security forces and four civilians.
Another attack in June which Afghan and Western officials blamed on the Haqqanis saw insurgents armed with rocket-propelled grenades and heavy machineguns storm a hotel on the outskirts of Kabul, killing 20 mostly civilians.
The United States accuses Pakistan's intelligence agency of supporting the Haqqani network and using it as a proxy in Afghanistan to gain leverage against the growing influence of its arch-rival India in the country.
Pakistan denies the allegations.
(Writing by Rob Taylor; Editing by Louise Ireland)
The LG Intuition may be one of Verizon's more poorly-kept secrets of recent memory. Apart from LG itself having confirmed that an Optimus Vu rebranding is due for the US within weeks, there's been pricing and even an uncannily detailed FCC filing to fill in the gaps. Why not throw official press images into the mix? From the renders DroidDog has managed to obtain, the Intuition is a bit more than just a one-for-one port of the original Korean phablet. While Verizon's influence is light outside of that attention-grabbing logo, there's a switch-up in the navigation keys to reflect that Android 4.0 will be there from the beginning -- a nice break from the ancient-feeling Android 2.3 layout of the original. About the only question left at this stage is that of the exact release date. There's a September 15th mention in one of the images, but we all know how dates in press imagery can be misleading.
According to new reports, not only does Miley Cyrus not mind jokes about her haircut making her seem to be ?leaning towards gay? she ?loves? lesbians, and takes it as a compliment.
An anonymous friend of Cyrus told HollwoodLife:
?Miley isn?t a lesbian at all but she takes it as a compliment. Lesbians are awesome and courageous and she loves them.
?Her hair is just an edgy style that she loves and it?s something she thought of on her own. She isn?t hurt or otherwise offended by people talking about her hair negatively, and she doesn?t think that being called a lesbian is a bad thing at all.?
Last week, Evan Rachel Wood had tweeted, with reference to Miley Cyrus? new, short haircut: ?I called it! Miley cyrus is leaning toward gay.?
Wood took to Twitter to defend herself, to explain that she meant no harm, and that she only ever intended the tweet as a joke for friend, Miley.
An active gay rights advocate, Cyrus recently criticised the president of Urban Outfitters for anti-gay campaign support, has received hate mail for her support of gay rights?and she recently got a tattoo representing the sentiment ?equal love for?all.?
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LANDOVER, Md. (AP) ? Robert Griffin III was the last player announced during pregame ceremonies. He emerged from the tunnel, through the large inflatable Washington Redskins football helmet and onto the field, raising both arms to pump up a crowd eager for his first head-to-head matchup with Andrew Luck.
Like everything else about the rookie, Griffin was doing something new ? but looking as if he'd done it before.
"I've never had my own introduction ever, high school or college, so that was extremely fun with the smoke and everything," Griffin said. "It was like you're in a movie."
In many ways, Saturday's game was promoted like a movie opening, the curtain raiser for a budding quarterback rivalry between the Nos. 1 and 2 picks in the draft. The co-stars responded with a display of A-list poise and promise as Griffin's Redskins defeated Luck's Indianapolis Colts 30-17.
Top pick Luck completed 14 of 23 passes for 151 yards and a touchdown to fellow rookie T.Y. Hilton. Heisman Trophy winner Griffin went 11 for 17 for 74 yards and a scoring throw to veteran Santana Moss.
Both quarterbacks played one series into the third quarter in the teams' dress rehearsal for the regular season, with the Redskins ahead 14-7 when the subs took over.
"I haven't had any overall bad performances for myself. ... I thought he did a good job out there as well," Griffin said. "They blew this up as a head-to-head, and we'll see what happens next."
Barring an incredible pair of Super Bowl runs from two teams rebuilding from bad seasons, the first Luck-RGIII encounter that really counts won't come until the 2014 regular season.
Still, the comparisons will continue.
"It's not something you can just push away or put aside," Griffin said. "It's everywhere. It's going to be there for our entire careers."
The game was marketed to the hilt, offering a ground-floor glimpse at two players given the burden of reviving proud franchises. The Colts (No. 32 AP Pro32) are coming off a 2-14 season as they embark on the post-Peyton Manning era, while the Redskins (No. 25) went 5-11 last year for a fourth consecutive last-place finish in the NFC East.
Even so, it was merely a preseason game. The atmosphere in the stadium was far from electric ? attendance was announced as 60,047 ? and the offenses were still running basic schemes, saving the more creative stuff for their regular-season openers in two weeks.
And while Griffin gave himself good marks for his performance, Luck was more downcast despite putting up decent numbers.
"I'm not happy," Luck said. "But I realize a preseason game is a chance to learn."
Luck's touchdown was an impressive moment. He stepped up in the pocket to avoid the rush, then put a deep ball down the left side into the arms of third-round pick Hilton for a 31-yard touchdown, wrapping up an 80-yard drive.
Griffin responded on the next drive, which also went 80 yards. He took a high-and-wide shotgun snap and drifted to the right to find Moss for a 4-yard score.
Through three preseason games, Luck is 40 for 64 for 514 yards with three touchdowns, two interceptions and a 90.2 rating. Griffin is 20 for 31 for 193 yards with two touchdowns, no interceptions and a 103.2 rating ? not to mention an approving coach.
"He keeps on getting better and better," Redskins coach Mike Shanahan said, "more comfortable with the system, with what we're trying to do."
Meanwhile, someone forgot to tell Redskins rookie running back Alfred Morris that the game wasn't all about him. The sixth-round draft pick, getting the start because of a rash of injuries, ran for 107 yards on 14 carries and a touchdown. Evan Royster (knee) and Roy Helu Jr. (Achilles) both sat out, while Tim Hightower was limited to five carries in his first game since tearing the ACL in his left knee last season.
The game got predictably messy after Luck and Griffin departed. Seventh-round pick Chandler Harnish was whistled for delay of game on his first Colts series, then was tackled for a safety by linebacker Chris Wilson on the next play.
Rex Grossman, who started 13 games last season, was welcomed with a smattering of boos when he ran onto the field to replace Griffin. He answered by going 8 for 8 for 127 yards and two touchdown passes, a 13-yarder to Joshua Morgan and a 12-yarder to Dezmon Briscoe.
One thing that was clear early: Luck and Griffin will need better protection to succeed anytime soon. Griffin never got sacked, but he was under severe pressure twice in his first drive. Luck was sacked twice on one series and had another drive thwarted by a clipping penalty.
"We've got to keep him clean," Colts coach Chuck Pagano said.
Notes: The Colts had a laundry list of injuries. NT Brandon McKinney (knee) and CB Jerraud Powers (knee) will have MRIs on Sunday. CB Korey Lindsey and WR Jabin Sambrano took shots to the heads and will be evaluated. WR Griff Whalen was on crutches after aggravating a left foot injury from his college days; he will also have an MRI. Hilton left the game with a shoulder injury. QB Drew Stanton missed the game after flying home Saturday morning when his wife went into labor. ... Redskins NT Chris Baker suffered an ankle injury but returned to the game.
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Follow Joseph White on Twitter: http://twitter.com/JGWhiteAP
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Online: http://bigstory.ap.org/NFL-Pro32 and http://twitter.com/AP_NFL
PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - Tropical Storm Isaac strengthened on Friday as its lashing rains took aim at flood-prone Haiti, but it was not expected to become a hurricane until it barreled into the Gulf of Mexico early next week.
On its current path, forecasters said Isaac would hit Cuba and the southern tip of Florida before making landfall anywhere from the Florida Panhandle in the northwestern part of the state to Alabama and as far west as New Orleans.
Forecasters put the entire coast of south Florida under tropical storm watch as of 5 p.m. EDT (2100 GMT) on Friday.
But the biggest immediate concern was heavily deforested Haiti, where the U.S. National Hurricane Center (NHC) said the full force of the storm was expected to be felt later Friday.
Isaac comes as Republicans gather in Tampa, on Florida's central Gulf Coast, for Monday's start of their national convention ahead of the November presidential election.
The convention is still due to proceed as planned but Gulf of Mexico operators began shutting down offshore oil and gas rigs on Friday ahead of the storm.
By nightfall, rain and wind gusts were reported along parts of Haiti's southern coast from the city of Jacmel to Les Cayes, and on the island of Ile-a-Vache. Rain also began to fall in the capital, but winds were still light.
Life-threatening flash-floods and mudslides, which are common in Haiti, could add to the misery of about 350,000 people still living in tent cities and camps after the January 2010 earthquake that killed more than 250,000 people.
The NHC said Isaac was centered about 90 milessouth-southeast of the seaside Haitian capital Port-au-Prince at 8 p.m. EDT (2400 GMT), packing top sustained winds of 65 miles per hour (100 km per hour).
The storm was moving northwest at 10 mph and it was expected to dump between 8 and 12 inches of rain over parts of Haiti, with total accumulations of up to 20 inches in some areas.
The storm prompted Haitian President Michel Martelly to cancel a planned trip to Japan.
"I know your worries," Martelly said in an address to the nation. "I also know we're a strong people."
About 3,000 volunteers from the government's Civil Protection office have been dispatched across Haiti, to warn people about flood and landslide risks, and about 1,250 shelters -- schools, churches or other community buildings -- have opened their doors to house people seeking refuge from the storm.
But Red Cross officials said the number of shelters could be grossly inadequate and Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe acknowledged Haiti had "limited means" to ensure public safety.
Red Cross and International Organization for Migration representatives joined Martelly and other government officials in trying to evacuate 8,000 people, including 2,500 sick and disabled, from 18 tent camps in low-lying coastal areas of Port-au-Prince on Friday.
"NOTHING WE CAN DO"
Many people refused to abandon their makeshift homes, apparently due to fears of theft, said Bradley Mellicker, head of disaster management for the International Organization for Migration.
"There's a lot of people who are resisting because they are scared of losing what little they have now," Mellicker said.
Many Haitians, most of whom scrape by on less than $1 per day, consider disaster an inevitable part of life in the poorest country in the Americas.
"We live under tents. If there's too much rain and wind, water comes in. There's nothing we can do," said Nicholas Absolouis, an unemployed 34-year-old mechanic at one camp for homeless people on the northern edge of the chaotic capital.
"If he's coming, he's already on the way," added Juliette Jean-Baptiste, 26, another resident of the camp. "Our tents leak already."
"We're not worried," said Olivier Oge, who was playing dominoes with friends as wind kicked up the tarp over their heads in Tapis Rouge, a sprawling camp for quake survivors near a ravine on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince.
When Isaac comes, "we'll still be playing until the pieces fly away," he said.
"The next 24 hours will be critical for the population of Haiti," said France Hurtubise of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies in Haiti. "There are still too many people living in the camps. There's a good chance that those might be destroyed with the passage of the cyclone."
Flooding could also help rekindle a cholera epidemic in Haiti, which has killed more than 7,500 people since the disease first appeared in October 2010, foreign aid workers said.
The U.N. Mission in Haiti said it was preparing to distribute emergency supplies including food for more than 300,000 people. It said some 5,700 U.N. troops stood ready to deploy once the storm passes to assess damage and clear roads for emergency response teams and evacuations.
Isaac has drawn especially close scrutiny because of the Republican Party's convention, a four-day meeting during which former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney will receive the party's presidential nomination.
Party officials insist the convention will go ahead, even if they have to alter the schedule. But NHC meteorologist Rick Danielson said Tampa could potentially be hit by coastal flooding and driving winds or rain.
"There is still a full range of possible impacts on Tampa at this point," he said.
The NHC is no longer forecasting Isaac to rev up to hurricane force until Monday night or early Tuesday, long after it crosses Haiti and Cuba. If Isaac reaches hurricane strength, the storm is expected to be a weak Category 1.
Danielson said it was very hard to project intensity before Isaac passes over mountainous Cuba on Saturday and Sunday and enters the Florida Straits. But the Florida Keys, the island chain off the southernmost part of the state, were definitely in harm's way.
Florida has not been hit by a major hurricane since 2005, and forecasts showed Isaac was not expected to have top sustained wind speeds above 85 mph.
(Writing by Tom Brown; Additional reporting by David Adams and Kevin Gray in Miami, Manuel Jimenez in the Dominican Republic and Kristen Hays in Houston; Editing by Xavier Briand)
You have done your overall planning for the four years and you know which classes your student needs for this year. Now what?
There are a number of alternatives for teaching the different subjects.
1. Many purchase textbooks for each class and have the student work through the texts, answering the questions and taking the tests. This can be an easy way with at least some assurance that you are covering all the bases.
For a student who works well independently, this could work. It would give that student a starting and finishing point. Skills developed using this method may include reading comprehension, some writing skills and some time management skills.
On the other hand, for a student who struggles with reading and writing, or needs more interaction with others, it may not be the best way.
Also, it may be boring for some students. While those unfamiliar with the subject matter, using a textbook can help, but remember that no textbook perfectly covers every aspect of the topic that you may consider important for your child to learn.
2. Others choose to delegate one or more of the courses to specialists in those fields. This can be in the form of a local class (homeschool co-op, community college classes, enrollment in a private school that works with homeschoolers) or online.
3. Perhaps you grew to enjoy unit studies in the earlier grades or your student gets bored with the textbook/class choice. You can integrate different subjects into a unit study or just apply the unit study approach to individual classes. At the high school level, you can actually get much more input from your children and allow them to do much more of the planning. Here are some possible steps:
- Find a scope and sequence online for the subject or a grade level textbook (borrow or find at Goodwill or library sale). Using a scope and sequence or table of contents in a book provides an outline or list of concepts usually covered for that subject. You have the option of excluding or including different parts, but this provides a guide. - Brainstorm - make a Mind Map of all the ideas that come to mind. To make a mind map, begin by writing the large topic in the center of a blank sheet of paper. Branch out adding more to this web of ideas and groups of ideas. Write anything that comes to mind. Later you can rewrite using only the ideas that you want to use. - Brainstorm or make additional entries for each of the ideas on your mind map. - Enter the activities and resources on the course plan in your planner where they can be checked off as completed.
4. With a little more planning, you can combine subjects like History and English. As you brainstorm you would use the scope and sequences for both of these subjects. By doing this, you can include a number of types of assignments that develop a wide variety of skills including research, hands-on-projects as well as reading and writing. I am not suggesting you double count work done in an integrated class. This can allow for more in-depth coverage of an area.
If the unit study approach sounds interesting, but hard to implement, try it first with one class. As you become more experienced, you can expand to other courses. You may also benefit from working with a homeschool consultant in this area. As a homeschooling parent, you are in the driver's seat of your child's education, and you have many choices.
Maggie Dail operates the Center for Neuro Development in Lakewood, Washington along with her husband, Ronnie. The Center is affiliated with Academy Northwest and Family Academy. They home schooled two foster sons and have worked with home schooling families for nearly 20 years. Maggie earned her M.A. in Special Education in 1989 and has taught for nearly 40 years.
Homeschool Testing and other services - on location or by Skype / Phone / E-mail - http://www.homeschoolhelps.com
Academy Northwest is a state approved private extension program for homeschoolers and accredited by the Northwest Accreditation Commission. Local and online services available. Family Academy offers an online home school parent's course that includes more information about developing your own Unit Studies and much more: Able to Teach http://www.familyacademy.org
BERLIN (AP) ? A tiger escaped its enclosure at Cologne Zoo in western Germany on Saturday and killed a female keeper before being shot dead by the zoo's director, police said.
The tiger slipped through a passage between the enclosure and an adjacent storage building, where it fatally attacked the 43-year-old keeper, said police spokesman Stefan Kirchner.
"It appears the gate wasn't properly shut," Kirchner told The Associated Press.
The zoo was evacuated and a SWAT team was called in, police said. But before it arrived the zoo's director managed to kill the tiger by climbing onto the storage building and shooting it through a skylight using a high-caliber rifle.
Kirchner said it was unlikely that members of the public had witnessed the incident.
"This is the darkest day of my life," the zoo's director, Theo Pagel, was quoted as saying by Cologne newspaper Express.
The paper said on its website that the Siberian tiger was a 4-year-old male called Altai that came to Cologne Zoo from an animal park in England. In November it fathered three cubs with a 7-year-old Siberian tiger called Hanya, according to the zoo's website.
Police said the zoo reopened after Saturday's incident, which occurred around noon (1000 GMT; 5 a.m. EDT). However, a planned late-night opening of the zoo has been canceled.
Cologne Zoo is one of the oldest in Germany. It was founded in 1860 and houses some 10,000 animals comprising more than 700 different species.
Astronomers offer explanations for source of light around object with an unusual yearly behavior
Web edition : Friday, August 24th, 2012
BEIJING ? A black hole about 290 million light-years away has just begun slurping material from its surroundings, an annual ritual revealed by a periodic brightening in X-ray wavelengths.
?It is picking up again, just today ? or last night ? which is good,? astronomer Roberto Soria of the International Center for Radio Astronomy Research in Perth, Australia, said August 22 at the 28th General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union. ?I was starting to get a bit worried because this cycle was three or four days late.?
The black hole, known as HLX-1, is 10,000 times as massive as the sun and the only known specimen in its weight class. Middleweights like HLX-1, which should be numerous, are intermediate between the supermassive black holes at galactic cores ? as massive as billions of suns ? and the featherweights with just a few solar masses.
First detected by X-ray telescopes in 2009, HLX-1 has since been spied upon in visible wavelengths by the Hubble Space Telescope and other instruments. Those observations revealed a mysterious, bluish glow surrounding the object, which hovers above the plane of a distant galaxy. Now, scientists are trying to determine where the glow is coming from, how HLX-1 formed, and where the rest of the intermediate-mass black holes are hiding.
The most popular theory so far is that the glow is starlight, produced by a cluster of young, blue stars.
But young stars aren?t the only candidates. A different scenario implicates a debris field, or accretion disk, formed by the black hole's annual feasting on a companion star.
?When the [light] was first discovered, it wasn?t clear whether it was a single star, an accretion disk, or a star cluster,? Soria said. ?The issue is still not resolved.?
Soria prefers the accretion disk scenario, in which the light comes from a glowing disk formed by the material stolen from a small, companion star. Because the star?s orbit is elliptical, it comes close enough for HLX-1 to slurp some of the star?s mass about once a year. That material then spirals into the disk, creating a transient brightening. Astronomers see an X-ray brightening around the black hole every 366 days or so, presumably the result of this periodic nibbling.
Though that?s a plausible theory, there are some problems with it, said Sean Farrell, an astronomer at Australia?s Sydney Institute for Astronomy, whose observations produced the young star cluster theory.
?I think there is a disk component. We see it in the X-rays; we see it with other black holes,? he said. ?The problem is, it?s not enough on its own. The light we see is too bright to be a single star. We think there has to be a cluster of young stars.?
Observing the system again using the Hubble Space Telescope should help resolve the issue, he said.
This class of black holes consisting entirely of HLX-1 was, until 2009, merely theoretical. What?s confounding is that intermediate mass black holes should be numerous, populating the middle ground between featherweight stellar-mass black holes and the supermassive cosmic drains around which galaxies swirl.
Farrell suggests they?re hard to see because most are invisible, stripped of the stars and gas that telescopes can spy on. He speculates that these middleweights are the remains of collapsed primordial stars. Eventually, some became the centers of dwarf galaxies. Then the dwarf galaxies collided, booting their middleweight seeds into space.
?They?ll be floating around in the halos of galaxies, which is exactly where we see this one,? Farrell said. ?There could be hundreds of them in every Milky Way?sized galaxy.?
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Vice President Joe Biden on Friday postponed a campaign trip to Tampa, Florida that had been scheduled for next week on the same day as Republicans open their presidential nominating convention in the city.
An Obama campaign announcement said Biden will not attend events on Monday in Tampa, where the Republican National Convention is being held, due to security concerns.
The campaign said it wants to ensure that all emergency resources are focused on Tropical Storm Isaac, which could impact Florida during the convention.
"This change in schedule is being taken out of an abundance of caution to ensure that all local law enforcement and emergency management resources can stay focused," the campaign said in a press release.
President Barack Obama captured Florida when he won the White House in 2008, but Republicans want their week-long convention to boost their profile in the key battleground state.
The campaign announcement did not detail which events Biden will keep on his schedule later in the week. He is scheduled to be in Orlando and St. Augustine, Florida on Tuesday.
(Reporting By Margaret Chadbourn; editing by Christopher Wilson)
Vita game Everybody's Golf (Hot Shots Golf: World Invitational in US) will be making its way to PS3 next month in Japan.
The new PS3 version will don all of the Vita version's download content out of the box, and support Cross Play with Vita players, according to Andriasang.
It'll also come with Move support and new content of its own: a new 'Slot Mode' which apparently rewards players with advantages that win 'via slots', and a "Minna no Short Course" mode that restricts competition to the game's shortest courses.
It'll be out in Japan on September 22. There's no word on a Western release, but it wouldn't be a huge surprise to see the PS3 rendition arrive here before long.