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Posts Tagged ‘spot’

Harry still looking at the bright side

Harry Redknapp insists the race to finish in the top four is wide open after Tottenham blew their chance of reclaiming the fourth spot in a 0-0 draw with Aston Villa yesterday. Redknapp’s Spurs side had been pushed down to fifth spot following Liverpool’s victory over Everton and their failure

Cricket: S. Africa aim to topple India from Test top spot

South Africa will draw confidence from their record on the subcontinent as they seek to replace India at the top of the world rankings in their two-Test series starting Saturday. India dislodged South Africa as the number one Test side in December after beating Sri Lanka 2-0 at home, and a

Oprah Winfrey Top Television Personality In America

Oprah Winfrey has reclaimed her spot as America’s top television personality, according to a new Harris Poll, conducted by Harris Interactive.

In a poll of 2,276 adults surveyed between Dec. 7 and Dec. 14, 2009, the Queen of Talk was voted the nation’s most popular TV host, followed by controversial FOX News personality Glenn Beck in [...]

Abu Dhabi could find spot on 2011 rally calendar

The UAE could be set to host a World Rally Championship event within two years, after the Abu Dhabi Tourism Authority (ADTA) announced its new Rally Abu Dhabi has been put forward as a candidature event for the 2011 rally calendar. The Automobile Touring Club UAE, the national sporting authority

Amazon Launches Spot Instances for EC2

Amazon Web Services has announced Spot Instances, a new option for purchasing and consuming Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) compute resources.
– Amazon Web Services has announced Spot Instances, a new option for
purchasing and consuming Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) compute resources.
With Spot Instances, customers bid on unused Amazon EC2 capacity and run
those instances for as long as their bid exceeds the current Spot Price, Amazo…


India have top spot in sights

India will reach the top of the ICC Test rankings for the first time if they win the final Test against Sri Lanka, which starts tomorrow. The hosts lead the series 1-0 after thumping their opponents by an innings and 144 runs in last week’s second Test in Kanpur and have been given an added

Cray Jaguar Takes Top Supercomputer Spot from IBM Roadrunner

After more than a year as the worlds fastest supercomputer, IBMs Roadrunner system was knocked down to the second spot by Crays Jaguar. Crays XT5 system got a boost when the computer maker swapped out the quad-core AMD Opterons for the six-core “Istanbul” chips, ramping up the power to more than 224,000 processing cores. Sun and SGI also were represented in the top 10 of the Top500 list of the fastest systems.
– IBMs reign atop the list of the worlds fastest supercomputers is
over, with Crays “Jaguar” system knocking off Big Blues “Roadrunner”
after more than a year as number one.
The Top500 list of the most powerful systems kicks off the
Supercomputer 2009 show in Portland, Ore., which will run until N…


IceWeb, Spot Image Partner on Imagery Appliance

IceWeb announces a partnership with Spot Image, as well as a rugged notebook aimed at government agencies in need of geographical information systems (GIS) forwarding.

Cloud-based storage network company IceWeb announced
a partnership with Spot Image, the U.S. subsidiary of a French satellite
imagery provider, to build and market a turnkey appliance pre-bundled with Spot
Image’s imagery served by Google Earth Enterprise. The appliance will be
d…


LABS GALLERY: Novatel MiFi 2200 Mobile Wi-Fi Hot Spot Provides Powerful Wi-Fi Connection

Access to mobile 3G broadband connections has become more common in recent years, whether through 3G USB dongles or by tethering to smartphones. But options for mobile offices and traveling work teams have been limited. The Novatel Wireless MiFi 2200, available for both Verizon and Sprint networks, offers a simple-to-manage portable Wi-Fi hot spot that provides acceptable 3G broadband connectivity and a surprisingly powerful Wi-Fi connection for such a small device.
– …


Soccer: Palermo goal puts Argentina into World Cup spot

Substitute Martin Palermo struck two minutes into stoppage time to give Argentina a 2-1 victory over Peru in a dramatic, rain-soaked finale to their World Cup qualifier on Saturday. The victory keeps alive Argentina’s hopes of qualifying for the 2010 finals in South Africa as they climbed

Apple’s Snow Leopard OS Pounces on Amazon’s Top Spot

Pre-sales of Apple’s OS Snow Leopard take the software to the top spot on online retailing site Amazon.

An avalanche of pre-orders
for Apples operating system Snow Leopard has catapulted the product to the top
of Amazons bestseller list days after the e-tailer listed the operating
system, officially called Mac OS X 10.6 on its Web site. Amazon is offering
five versions of the softw…



Experts puzzled by bright spot on Venus

Venus (Esa/MPS)

Astronomers are puzzled by a strange bright spot which has appeared in the clouds of Venus.

The spot was first identified by an amateur astronomer on 19 July and was later confirmed by the European Space Agency’s Venus Express spacecraft.

Data from the European probe suggests the spot appeared at least four days before it was spotted from Earth.

The bright spot has since started to expand, being spread by winds in Venus’ thick atmosphere.

Scientists are unsure as to what caused the bright spot tens of kilometres up. However, a volcanic eruption is a possibility.

Much of the planet is thought to have been resurfaced by volcanism. Though no firm evidence for present-day volcanism has been discovered, scientists suspect it could still be happening on Venus.

But an eruption would have needed to be extremely powerful to penetrate this far through the planet’s dense, mainly carbon dioxide, atmosphere.

Another potential source for the bright spot are charged particles from the Sun interacting with Venus’ atmosphere.

Alternatively, atmospheric turbulence may have caused bright material to become concentrated in one area.

This is not the first time bright areas have been spotted on Venus. But this feature is unusual because it is confined to a relatively small region.

The spot was first identified by US amateur astronomer Frank Melillo, from Holtsville, New York.

Astronomers have recently been studying a "scar" on Jupiter, thought to have been caused by a comet or asteroid impact. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Novatel Wireless Expands Personal Hot Spot Line with MiFi 2372

The Novatel Wireless MiFi 2372 offers 3G Internet speeds to multiple users, essentially anywhere theres a compatible cellular connection. The 2372 is a multimode hot spot optimized for HSPA, UMTS, EDGE and GPRS networks. Now all it needs is a carrier.
– Novatel Wireless has expanded its MiFi
personal hot spot line with the addition of the MiFi 2372 with multimode
operation, making it available for use on HSPA, UMTS, EDGE and GPRS networks.

It joins the MiFi 2200, for CDMA 1xEVDO RevA networks, and the MiFi 2352, for
HSPA networks, in offer…



Daughtry beats MJ on US album chart

Rock band Daughtry has outsold Michael Jackson and claimed the top spot in the US album chart.
Fronted by Chris Daughtry, the group went straight to the top of the Billboard 200 album chart with ‘Leave This Town’.
Singer Chris Daughtry was amongst the finalists on TV show ‘American Idol’, reports the BBC.
Daughtry’s album sold 269,000 copies [...]

Phone gadget to spot disease

CellScope prototype

Researchers have developed an add-on to a mobile phone that can take detailed images and analyse them to diagnose diseases such as tuberculosis.

The CellScope works as a so-called fluorescence microscope that can identify the markers of disease.

It is hoped the device will be useful in the developing world, where such medical diagnostics are rare but mobile ownership and coverage are common.

The research is published in the free-access journal PLoS ONE.

The CellScope is made up of conventional microscope optics as well as some equipment to make it function as a fluorescence microscope.

Fluorescence occurs when certain molecules are illuminated with a certain colour and "shine" for a period in a different colour.

Fluorescent "tagging" molecules can be specially designed to latch on to, for instance, the bacteria that are a sign of tuberculosis (TB).

Malaria parasites (D Breslauer)

But diagnosing tuberculosis requires a fluorescence microscope, which can illuminate a blood sample that has been treated with "tagging" molecules and detect just the light that those molecules emit with great sensitivity.

However, typical fluorescence microscopes are bulky, expensive devices limited to hospitals and laboratories.

"There are other people who have been working on developing portable fluorescent microscopes," said David Breslauer, a University of California Berkeley researcher and lead author of the study.

"The innovation on our front is that we’ve integrated that with a cell phone rather than just making a standalone microscope."

The researchers used a standard Nokia handset with a 3.2 megapixel camera, developing a "snap-on" addition that includes the microscope optics and a holder for blood samples on glass slides.

The CellScope uses cheap commercial light-emitting diodes as the light source – in place of the high-power, gas-filled lamps used in laboratory versions of the device, and cheap optical filters to isolate the light coming from the fluorescent tags.

The device has a resolution of just over one millionth of a metre, and the team was able to identify tuberculosis bacteria in a sample. Several other tagging molecules are in development to address the diagnosis of other diseases.

Upon the removal of the filters, they were able to use the CellScope as a standard, white-light microscope, identifying malaria parasites and the misshapen cells typical of sickle cell anaemia.

‘Portable clinic’

Mr Breslauer says that more than just a camera, the incorporation of a mobile phone "gives us access to the computational power of the phone as well as the mobile communications aspect".

CellScope prototype

That computational power could be put to use in running image analysis software, which could easily be built into a small application that the phone runs.

But it is the mobile communication aspect that makes the device particularly useful for use "in the field".

"In many developing world and rural areas, you could be hundreds of miles from hospitals or miles away from power – but the mobile infrastructure is well-established and pretty much blanketing the globe," Mr Breslauer said.

"So if you can have a portable, battery-operated system to take these images, analyse, and transfer them, you’re creating a portable healthcare clinic. Your doctor can see your samples without actually having to be present."

The team is now making a more robust, "field-ready" version of the device, which will be used in field testing and clinical trials in the future.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

ProPublica: Help Us Do Stimulus Spot Checks

by Amanda Michel, ProPublica (flickr user kylemay) It’s the middle of July and we’re all wondering whether the stimulus is working. If we do as…

Spotted online

From city walks in Hamburg to a Roman literary cafe, we bring you the latest instalment of insider tips from blog network Spotted by Locals

Amsterdam: Gartine – breakfast from the owner’s garden

By Maarten-Jan Meyer zu Schlochtern

Gartine is one of my favourites for a unique breakfast, excellent lunch and English high tea – all served on antique chinaware, which has been collected by the owners with loving care over the years. The atmosphere is easy and pleasant.

All ingredients come from the owner’s vegetable garden, so the dishes are always super fresh and of good quality. On top of that, Gartine adopted 58 chickens at the foundation ‘Adopt a Chicken’ and these provide farm-fresh eggs. They also use products of the ‘Ark van Smaak’ from Slow Food Netherlands. So when you eat there, you eat ‘eco and green’.

Gartine is in a small alley called ‘Taksteeg’ in the old centre of Amsterdam, between Rokin and Spui.

• Details about this spot: Gartine, Taksteeg 7, +31 3204132. Big breakfast €10.95. Open Tue-Sun 8am-6pm.

Rome: Bar-a-book – drinking while reading

By Mariaceleste de Martino

Fabiola is the woman who runs it. She prepares excellent aperitifs served on a large wooden table in the middle of the room, so it feels like being at a friend’s party.

There is a list of wines by the glass – not a great variety, I must admit, but they are good at least. The food is homemade: cous cous, vegetable quiches and pies, tarts and little pizzas, sandwiches (mostly vegetarian) and many other snacks, including cakes at times. I like it here because it is located in one of my neighbourhoods, so it really makes me feel at home.

The furniture is totally random – you are surrounded by shelves of books that you can buy – vintage like the neighbourhood. Post second world war kind of design, just like most of the buildings that have been either rebuilt or restored after the area was completely shelled by US aircraft during the war. Now, it is considered one of the trendy-bohemian areas in town.

If you want to do as the Romans do, this is one of the real Roman places to pick.

• Details about this spot: Bar-à-book: drink including buffet food €10,
via dei Piceni 23, S.Lorenzo & Pigneto; +39 (0)645 443358. Tue-Sun 4pm-1:30am. Brunch on Sun 12-4pm.

Lisbon: Miradouro da Graça – the perfect viewpoint

by Maureen Moore

A picture is worth … oh it’s such a cliché I am not even going to finish the sentence, but this is one picture opportunity that shouldn’t be missed. (The photo is looking up towards the tree-canopied viewpoint, not from it.)

From the top of a hillside, hugging the historic and picturesque castle neighbourhood, you can see a maze of red tiled rooftops below, the Baixa district, a river to the south and the red 25th of April bridge beyond that – there is not much that this view doesn’t take in. Just take the 28 tram to one of its end destinations – Graça – and walk left towards the cliff.

A pleasant terrace lined with trees and a small kiosk café serving hot and cold drinks makes it an ideal spot to recharge your batteries. All of Lisbon’s beauty lays below you in her haphazard and slightly dishevelled, but charming, manner. It’s these views that bring the romance to the city.

• Details about this spot: Miradouro da Graca, Alfama & Graça.

Brussels: Recyclart – the sound of the underground

By Wouter Spitters

If you’re not interested in spots where you have to be hip and trendy but want something more ‘underground’, then Recyclart is the place for you.

Literally because of its location beneath the railway track, and even more so because this former railway station is an alternative artistic hotspot. Meet your cultural soulmates in the bar, or have a look at the art exhibitions, photography expositions or architecture projects.

Want to move your feet? Go the the frequently organised parties or concerts and shake your body to the rhythms of dubstep, electro, worldbeat or guitar noise. Disko disko partizani!

• Details about this spot: Recyclart, Rue des Ursulines 25; +3225025734
Tue-Fri 11am-5pm (bar), 12pm-3pm (food).

Hamburg: Alsterwanderweg – away from civilisation and back


By Ute Kreitz

The “Alsterwanderweg” is a hiking trail that runs along the Alster River for about 56km. The southern section of the trail (22km) leads through the ‘Alstertal’ (Alster valley) with wonderful parks and villas, along the outer and the inner Alster, and terminates directly in the heart of Hamburg: at the harbour where the Alster runs into the Elbe River. The trail is very popular with locals year-round as every season brings its own charm to this scenic route.

Take public transport up north to Poppenbüttel to begin your five-hour adventure, either on foot or by bicycle. As you head south, you’ll sometimes follow the meandering river on its right then on its left again.

There are some sections where you’ll need to cross or walk along a street. Some of the many rowing clubs and locks on your way down to Winterhude have restaurants with gorgeous views of the river.

After passing through Eppendorf, you’ll reach the spacious Alsterpark on the outer Alster, a very wide section of the river with a beautiful view of the inner city’s skyline. Finally, you’ll know you’re on the last stretch of the path when you pass under Kennedy – and Lombardsbrücke to arrive at the inner Alster and the city centre.

Leave the Alsterarkaden behind you and terminate this exciting hike at the “Baumwall” or “Landungsbrücken” metro stop. Although the direction of trail is marked by signs, be sure to bring a map with you.

• Details about this spot: Alsterwanderweg, Hamburger Wanderverein e.V, Spaldingstrasse 160; +49 40230086.

• These are edited extracts from spottedbylocals.com.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Obama Campaign Arm Targets Critical Dems And GOP In Late Health Care Push

Barack Obama’s campaign arm is going after Republican and Democratic Senators alike in a major new health care reform advertising campaign that could last for the remainder of the month.

Organizing for America’s 30-second spot, titled “It’s T…