Saturday, March 9, 2013

Guy Gets Netflix Tattoo, Netflix Gives Him A Free Year Of Service

We understand people who love Netflix. Who needs a dumb cable bill anyways? But some people love their streaming-video service more than others.

Twitter user @TheRealMyron showed his love by getting a tattoo in honor of the website. When he tweeted the tattoo at Netflix, the company's account responded by giving him a free year of the service.

That's really nice and all, but we're pretty sure this guy would have paid for another year of Netflix himself. He seems pretty dedicated. There's clearly no need to convince him to support your company. After that one guy got paid $15,000 to get the Romney logo tattooed on his face, people might think they'll get rewarded for getting dumb things permanently stamped on their bodies. Let's just hope this doesn't become a trend.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/08/netflix-tattoo_n_2838516.html

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Newly Hired Emergency Workers Who Witness Trauma May ...

March 8, 2013

wtc firefighter Newly Hired Emergency Workers Who Witness Trauma May Struggle Afterward

FRIDAY, March 8 (HealthDay News) ? Repeated exposure to disturbing events can raise the risk of mental health problems in police officers and firefighters who are new to the job, a new study finds.

There is no such increased risk among those who have been in their jobs for a longer period of time, however, said the researchers from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, in Baltimore. They also found that police, firefighters and other protective services workers do not have higher rates of mental health problems than people in other occupations.

For the study, the researchers analyzed data from the U.S. National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions to compare rates of mental health problems, such as mood, anxiety and alcohol use disorders, among different groups of workers. The findings appear in the February issue of the journal Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness.

The most common types of traumatic events reported by protective services workers included: seeing someone badly injured or killed; unexpectedly seeing a dead body; having someone close die unexpectedly; and having someone close experience a serious or life-threatening illness, accident or injury.

The association between witnessing traumatic events and having mental health issues was ?virtually confined to the group of early-career protective services workers,? study senior author Dr. Ramin Mojtabai, an associate professor in the department of mental health, said in a Bloomberg school news release.

?Future research should examine the coping skills of protective services workers who have been in these jobs for many years, which might make them less likely to develop psychiatric complications in the face of various potentially traumatic experiences,? Mojtabai added.

The researchers also said special support programs and services for newly hired protective services workers can potentially help prevent mental health problems that might cause them to leave their jobs.

More information

The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration offers resilience resources for emergency-response workers.

HEALTHDAY Web XSmall Newly Hired Emergency Workers Who Witness Trauma May Struggle Afterward

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/03/08/newly-hired-emergency-workers-who-witness-trauma-may-struggle-afterward/

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Spymaster's Orcasub is a $2 million submarine for two

Spymaster's Orcasub is a $2 million submarine for two

Sure, you could use an ROV to feel like a regular Jacques Cousteau (or James Cameron, for that matter), but nothing beats the real deal: a personal submarine. UK department store Harrods used its Technology Showcase 2.0 event to highlight a mockup of Spymaster's Orcasub: a made-to-order $2 million submarine that can drop up to 2,000 feet into the briny depths. A total of two passengers can climb aboard the 4-ton, 22 foot-long submersible thanks to a pair of 360-degree domes that offer 80 hours of life support for each occupant. The battery-powered sub is piloted by using two foot pedals and a joystick, and handles somewhat like an aircraft since it was built with the principles of flight in mind.

Orcasub comes outfitted with sonar for collision avoidance, a digital long-range communications system and a 60,000 lumen LED lighting rig. What you see above is just a miniature, but Spymaster is taking orders for the real, full-size McCoy. In fact, folks who'd like to dive deeper can put in a request for pricier models, with the most expensive version nabbing explorers a maximum depth of 6,000 feet for a cool $9.32 million. If you ask us, this sounds like a perfect escape vehicle for any luxury yacht worth its salt. Hit the source link for Pocket-lint's photo gallery of the craft.

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Source: Pocket-lint

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/09/spymasters-orcasub-personal-submarine/

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Twitter's mobile app tweaked in update

Twitter has added and refined a few features in the latest release of its official Twitter apps for iOS and Android. Search, autocomplete, and the built-in browser all get touch-ups.

Finding a specific tweet, especially a high-profile one, should be easier now: Searching will show one on top of the others that the service thinks you're looking for ? say, Curiosity's enthusiastic tweet after landing on Mars, rather than related ones. Search also should show better autocomplete options for hashtags, users, and so on.

Follow a link in a tweet and you'll be taken to the in-app browser, and now the tweet itself will stay in view at the bottom of the screen. That way, it it feels less like a departure from Twitter.

Head to the App Store or Play Store to download the latest update.

Devin Coldewey is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. His personal website is coldewey.cc.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/gadgetbox/twitters-mobile-app-tweaked-update-1C8732387

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

New 3-D reconstructions show buried flood channels on Mars

New 3-D reconstructions show buried flood channels on Mars [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 7-Mar-2013
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Contact: Isabel Lara
larai@si.edu
202-633-2374
Smithsonian

New maps of the subsurface of Mars show for the first time buried channels below the surface of the red planet. Mars is considered to have been cold and dry over the past 2.5 billion years, but these channels suggest evidence of flooding. Understanding the source and scale of the young channels present in Elysium Planitiaan expanse of plains along the equator, and the youngest volcanic region on the planetis essential to comprehend recent Martian hydrologic activity and determine if such floods could have induced climate change. The findings are reported by a team from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Planetary Science Directorate in the Southwest Research Institute and the Smithsonian Institution, led by Smithsonian scientist Gareth A. Morgan, in a paper, "3D Reconstruction of the Source and Scale of Buried Young Flood Channels on Mars" scheduled for publication in the March 7 issue of the journal Science.

As a consequence of extensive volcanism throughout the past several hundred million years, young lava covers most of the surface of Elysium Planitia, burying evidence of its recent geologic history, including the source and most of the length of the 1,000 kilometer-long Marte Vallis channel system. Marte Vallis has a similar morphology to more ancient channel systems on Mars that likely formed by the catastrophic release of ground water; however, little is known about Marte Vallis due to its burial by lava. The team used data from the Shallow Radar on board the NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft to probe the subsurface of Elysium Planitia. They were able to map the buried channels and establish that the floods originated from a now buried portion of the Cerberus Fossae fracture system.

"Our findings show that the scale of erosion was previously underestimated and that channel depth was at least twice that of previous approximations," said Morgan, geologist at the National Air and Space Museum's Center for Earth and Planetary Studies and lead author on the paper. "The source of the floodwaters suggests they originated from a deep groundwater reservoir and may have been released by local tectonic or volcanic activity. This work demonstrates the importance of orbital sounding radar in understanding how water has shaped the surface of Mars."

###

SHARAD was provided by the Italian Space Agency. Its operations are led by Sapienza University of Rome, and its data are analyzed by a joint U.S.-Italian science team. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter for the NASA Science Mission Directorate in Washington. Lockheed Martin Space Systems in Denver built the spacecraft.

The National Air and Space Museum is on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., at Sixth Street and Independence Avenue S.W. The museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center is located in Chantilly, Va., near Washington Dulles International Airport.


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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.


New 3-D reconstructions show buried flood channels on Mars [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 7-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Isabel Lara
larai@si.edu
202-633-2374
Smithsonian

New maps of the subsurface of Mars show for the first time buried channels below the surface of the red planet. Mars is considered to have been cold and dry over the past 2.5 billion years, but these channels suggest evidence of flooding. Understanding the source and scale of the young channels present in Elysium Planitiaan expanse of plains along the equator, and the youngest volcanic region on the planetis essential to comprehend recent Martian hydrologic activity and determine if such floods could have induced climate change. The findings are reported by a team from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Planetary Science Directorate in the Southwest Research Institute and the Smithsonian Institution, led by Smithsonian scientist Gareth A. Morgan, in a paper, "3D Reconstruction of the Source and Scale of Buried Young Flood Channels on Mars" scheduled for publication in the March 7 issue of the journal Science.

As a consequence of extensive volcanism throughout the past several hundred million years, young lava covers most of the surface of Elysium Planitia, burying evidence of its recent geologic history, including the source and most of the length of the 1,000 kilometer-long Marte Vallis channel system. Marte Vallis has a similar morphology to more ancient channel systems on Mars that likely formed by the catastrophic release of ground water; however, little is known about Marte Vallis due to its burial by lava. The team used data from the Shallow Radar on board the NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft to probe the subsurface of Elysium Planitia. They were able to map the buried channels and establish that the floods originated from a now buried portion of the Cerberus Fossae fracture system.

"Our findings show that the scale of erosion was previously underestimated and that channel depth was at least twice that of previous approximations," said Morgan, geologist at the National Air and Space Museum's Center for Earth and Planetary Studies and lead author on the paper. "The source of the floodwaters suggests they originated from a deep groundwater reservoir and may have been released by local tectonic or volcanic activity. This work demonstrates the importance of orbital sounding radar in understanding how water has shaped the surface of Mars."

###

SHARAD was provided by the Italian Space Agency. Its operations are led by Sapienza University of Rome, and its data are analyzed by a joint U.S.-Italian science team. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter for the NASA Science Mission Directorate in Washington. Lockheed Martin Space Systems in Denver built the spacecraft.

The National Air and Space Museum is on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., at Sixth Street and Independence Avenue S.W. The museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center is located in Chantilly, Va., near Washington Dulles International Airport.


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

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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.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/s-n3r030113.php

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How a cold, irradiated Siberian city hopes to cash in on meteor tourists

Before last month's meteor strike, Chelyabinsk was best known for a 1957 nuclear waste disaster.? Now officials there are trying to turn the meteor into a tourist attraction.

By Fred Weir,?Correspondent / March 5, 2013

A local resident shows a fragment thought to be part of a meteorite collected in a snow covered field last month outside the city of Chelyabinsk. Regional officials are currently weighing plans to capitalize on their meteor-related fame, including developing a meteor theme park or water park.

Andrei Romanov/Reuters

Enlarge

When life hands you lemons, according to the proverbial saying, make lemonade.

Skip to next paragraph Fred Weir

Correspondent

Fred Weir has been the Monitor's Moscow correspondent, covering Russia and the former Soviet Union, since 1998.?

Recent posts

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That message has been received by some residents of Chelyabinsk, an industrial city in the Ural Mountains that's famous for just two things ? both of which were horrifying near-miss catastrophes of potentially biblical proportions.

They say the city should start cashing in on its most recent brush with disaster, a huge meteor strike that might easily have obliterated much of western Siberia, as a motif for theme parks and other tourist attractions that could pull the region out of obscurity.

"Space sent us a gift and we need to make use of it," Natalya Gritsay, head of the regional tourism department, told journalists.

"We need our own Eiffel Tower or Statue of Liberty," she added.

Chelyabinsk's first unwanted claim to fame was a nuclear disaster at the nearby Chelyabinsk-40 atomic reprocessing plant in 1957, in which almost 100 tons of high-level radioactive waste erupted into the atmosphere. That accident was eventually contained and then kept strictly secret by Soviet authorities for over 30 years.

The second was last month's ten-ton meteorite that slammed into the atmosphere and exploded in a series of fireballs almost directly above the city, injuring over 1,200 people but killing no one.

That event was filmed from almost every possible angle by hundreds of CCTV and dashboard cameras, and the videos transmitted around the world almost instantaneously via YouTube and other social media.

It spawned vast amounts of commentary, even some brilliant satire and, of course, plenty of wild conspiracy theories.

But it also, finally, put Chelyabinsk on the map. And many local citizens want it to stay there.

Reached by phone in Chelyabinsk Tuesday, Ms. Gritsay said there was no fully worked-out plan yet. But ideas include developing a tourist zone around Lake Chebarkul, where the biggest meteor fragments came down, along with a diving center where tourists could try their hand at searching the lake bottom for pieces of space rock.

"These ideas need investment," she said. "Right now we have plans organize a festival of fireworks near the lake," to commemorate the event.

Local media have reported scores of other suggestions, including one local official's scheme to build a "Meteor Disneyland," with full special effects so that tourists could relive the experience. Other ideas are a "cosmic water park" near Lake Chebarkul, and a giant, pyramid-shaped flaming monument on the lake's surface to mark the spot where the largest fragment hit.

"It's a good idea; it will help them develop their local brand," says Valery Markin, a regional expert at the official Institute of Sociology in Moscow.

"But it's not just about tourism. A big meteor strike is a very rare event, and this one hit at Lake Chebarkul, a traditional recreation zone for the population of Chelyabinsk.... People are already saying that some superior force saved them from total destruction. In earlier times, people might have designated this a 'sacred place,'" he says.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/0qvE3BE4tiw/How-a-cold-irradiated-Siberian-city-hopes-to-cash-in-on-meteor-tourists

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Column: Our complex politics' short-hand problem

(AP) ? From an early age, Americans are conditioned to see the world in sharp lines ? black-and-white labels in a society where the reality is many shades of gray. The details, the subtleties? Well, those be damned.

Look at Walt Disney World, which attracts visitors by reducing a complex national heritage to its most basic elements. There's so much more to Main Streets throughout America ? much more to frontier times, visions of the future and even other nations ? than the narrow scenes at the theme park.

This thinking extends beyond its gates, and is endemic today in Washington, where Democrats and Republicans constantly maneuver to be seen as the good guys, while painting the other side as simply the bad guys. In the quest for an edge, leaders stoke those stereotypes and play to people's proclivity to view everything ? including their politics ? in extremes.

Americans aren't merely receptive to this shorthand. Many are complicit, enthusiastically categorizing politicians as saviors or enemies ? and consuming a mass media that perpetuates these simplistic views.

It's no coincidence that we have a political landscape that the extremes dominate. But is the system as broken as polls say? Or do Americans simply think it's in shambles because of the barbs that politicians throw and the labels they use?

And all that raises a larger question: With the caricature and hyperbole of today's political conversation, how can Americans cut through the clutter, seek out the nuances and see through the distortion to view what's really happening?

It starts with acknowledging that politics is simply an extension of American life, rather than a separate world of heroes and villains.

Bryan Roberts, a former pastor in Fort Worth, Texas, advocates this model and has urged the church to view elections this way: "Presidential politics is about two people who both want you to choose them to serve their country in the best way they know how. They aren't saviors. They aren't superheroes. They're just civil servants."

Admittedly, this more pragmatic approach would be hard to accomplish in a divided nation where name-calling is the norm. The latest fiscal standoff is only the most recent example.

Almost daily, President Barack Obama's argument has gone something like this: "There are too many Republicans in Congress right now who refuse to compromise even an inch when it comes to closing tax loopholes and special interest tax breaks. And that's what's holding things up right now." And House Speaker John Boehner counters like this: "The administration is trying to play games with the American people, scare the American people. This is not leadership."

The point of both statements: We're with you, they're against you. It's a simple notion. And one that's perpetuated by both ends of the political spectrum.

In 2000, the right reveled in George W. Bush's election, convinced he would rescue the nation; the left went doomsday, convinced he would kill it. With Obama's 2008 victory, the tables turned: Liberals cast him as the chosen one who could do no wrong, while conservatives castigated him as an illegitimate president.

Neither president saved or ruined the nation, of course. But the hero-and-villain mentality permeates every part of our politics, and gets in the way of discussion about what's actually going on.

?The Koch brothers, who bankroll conservative groups, are worshipped on the right, maligned on the left; George Soros, the liberal titan who has given money to like-minded outfits, is seen as a godsend by Democrats, a bogeyman by Republicans.

?The liberal group MoveOn once waged a campaign to turn Gen. David Petraeus, then the commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, into a villain, with ads declaring him "General Betray Us." More recently, the tea party is casting Obama as an unredeemable bad guy and, at times, promoting the falsehood that he wasn't born here and thus can't legally serve.

?Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell once made Obama enemy No. 1 for Republicans by saying that his top goal was to deny the president a second term. And, in 2010, Vice President Joe Biden led a Democratic strategy to cast the tea party as an extraordinarily dangerous arm of the GOP.

The media also speak in such absolutes ? and not just in the United States. The British tabloid The Sun, for example, has a feature called "The Heroes And Villains of Westminster."

In America, outlets sympathetic to conservatives ? on radio, TV and the Internet ? paint Democrats as the nefarious ones, while their liberal counterparts do the same to Republicans.

Yet in the popular culture, there is recent evidence of more subtle views beginning to peek out.

In the Showtime drama "Homeland," the two main characters wear two hats, both battling terrorism and being complicit in it. In fact, some of the best American television of recent years has imbued shades of gray into even the most villainous characters, from the violent but occasionally kind Tony Soprano to the ruthless vampires in "True Blood" to the cruel but oddly moral Al Swearengen of "Deadwood."

And how do we explain conflicted feelings about Lance Armstrong? Even after the famed cancer-beating cyclist admitted lying about doping, he remains a hero to many cancer survivors, a villain to many athletes, and a puzzle to many others.

In such realms, our good-and-evil notions have blurred and become more subtle. But how can the nation bring that sensibility to politics, where the stakes are arguably higher ? not successful entertainment, but rather a successful nation?

While people like to categorize ideas, things and each other in easy-to-explain boxes, both politics and the people involved in it have behaviors more subtle and motives far more ambiguous than the labels we use.

Wouldn't this country be better served if politicians stopped pigeonholing each other as heroes and villains, and if people and the media viewed them simply as men and women who serve the nation? That could produce, among other things, more realistic expectations, more civilized discourse and possibly even a more productive Washington.

Wouldn't it be something if, instead of giving the hero-and-villain tags to politicians, we start doing so with the issues? What if we viewed poverty, disease and crime as the villains that we, the heroes of our own national story, seek to conquer?

That way, the heroes and villains we've adored since childhood visits to Disney parks would remain. But maybe we'd be fighting each other just a little bit less.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? Liz Sidoti is the national politics editor for The Associated Press. Follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/lsidoti

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-04-Heroes%20And%20Villains/id-7a91bf5f92fa43118a2028a678814a18

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Samsung Galaxy S3 Among 20 Phones To Receive CyanogenMod 10.1 Android 4.2.2 Update

CyanogenMod, a free, community built, aftermarket firmware distribution for Android operating systems offers customized versions of the latest OS that can be installed on devices independent of its original firmware. Such ROMs are often used in order to attain specs and features not available on official firmware distributed by vendors of the supported devices, or in order to get OS updates much quicker that they are released by vendors.

The latest version of its more stable ?Monthly? release for Jelly Bean has been pushed out fairly quickly since its initial CM10.1-M1 release in mid-January. Then seen on only a handful of phones, M2 is now available for the following 20 devices:

Acer Iconia a700

Google Nexus S (crespo, crespo4g)

Google Nexus 7 (grouper, tilapia)

Google Galaxy Nexus (toro, toroplus, maguro)

Google Nexus 4 (mako)

Google Nexus 10 (manta)

Google Nexus Q (steelhead)

Hardkernel Odroid-U2

HTC One X (evita)

HTC Incredible 4G LTE (fireball)

HTC Evo 4G LTE (jewel)

HTC One S (ville)

LG Nitro HD (p930)

LG Optimus LTE (su640)

LG Spectrum (vs920)

Samsung Galaxy S (captivatemtd, galaxysbmtd, galaxysmtd, epicmtd)

Samsung Galaxy SII (i9100g, hercules, skyrocket)

Samsung Galaxy SIII (US variants d2att, d2cri, d2mtr, d2spr, d2tmo, d2vzw)

Samsung Note (quincytmo, quincyatt)

Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 7.0 (p3100, p3110)

Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 (p5100, p5110)

While some mobile carries have begun pushing out the Android 4.2.2 update, some others see their most popular phones still suck on even Android 4.1.1. For example, Sprint has rolled out its Android 4.1.2 update for the Galaxy S3, and Verizon recently announced that it will soon roll out 4.1.2, while AT&T, U.S. Cellular and T-Mobile have yet to do so, according to Gotta Be Mobile.

Samsung Galaxy S4: What are they waiting for?

Since the release of Android 4.2 in November 2012, such phones as the LG Nexus 4 and Samsung's Nexus 10 have tasted ?A new flavor of Jelly Bean,? as the OS?s slogan from Google suggests.

Meanwhile the progression of the highly anticipated release of the Samsung Galaxy S4 has many predicting that the Korean-based Company and mobile carriers alike may be holding out on updating a number of their more popular devices until the S4 is on the market or much closer to being released.

A rumored April or May release for the smartphone may see consumers waiting for the phone?s debut ? as it is expected to run Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean natively ? as opposed to waiting for an update for an older OS on an older device.

With Samsung reportedly working toward a lofty sales goal of 100 million handsets in 2013, the company may be attempting to shift focus from its old phones to its new device that is already projected as its bestselling for the year.?

Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/samsung-galaxy-s3-among-20-phones-receive-cyanogenmod-101-android-422-update-1112455

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Even small government incentives can help tackle entrenched social ...

By Leonard A. Jason


As the federal bureaucracy continues to struggle with philosophical issues of the appropriate role of government, many Americans feel that our political parties are incapable of providing credible solutions to the nation?s burgeoning societal and economic problems.

Those who advocate for expanding or at least maintaining government programs to address entrenched social problems and inequities must contend with an escalating national debt and a resultant conservative backlash over out-of-control government spending.?At the same time, many are increasingly dissatisfied with underwriting government programs either because they increase taxes, are perceived as creating dependence rather than autonomy, or both. Clearly there is a need for a new middle ground that can help reconcile the polarities that threaten to cripple our nation.

In the near future, the overwhelming budgetary crisis will constrain our ability to address intransigent national problems. The roots of this disaster began when presidential and legislative decisions led to an expansion in defense spending, while at the same time reducing taxes. In addition, the recent banking and housing crisis reduced revenues and caused a sharp rise in spending on safety-net programs. A further challenge stems from Medicare and Medicaid expenditures, which have long been rising dramatically and are expected to continue to do so over the next few decades as millions of baby boomers retire, creating unprecedented federal budget problems.

Photo by epSos.de, via Flickr

Yet there are ways for society to address critical social and health care concerns without massive government outlays, and precedent exists for government leveraging small investments to motivate significant social change. For example, a significant and pervasive health and economic challenge facing America is alcohol and substance abuse. Approximately 22 million Americans meet diagnostic criteria for drug and alcohol dependence, including 18 million just for alcohol abuse disorders. Annual costs of alcohol abuse alone are estimated at $235 billion dollars in direct treatment and lost productivity.

For many substance abusers, treatment begins in a detoxification program, with a time-limited therapeutic program typically following. However, these programs are becoming shorter and less effective as funding has decreased. For many addicted persons, basic detoxification does not lead to sustained recovery. Instead, these individuals repeatedly cycle through social service delivery and criminal justice programs, driving up costs without any sustainable benefit. The missing element for many patients is a supportive, cohesive setting following treatment for substance abuse. A society that returns its most vulnerable members back into socially high-risk settings upon discharge from treatment can expect to be plagued by an ever-expanding array of social problems.

How then can the average person address these types of social problems when the government and other large institutions have failed?

Oxford House is the largest successful communal-living, self-help alcohol and drug abuse recovery program in the nation, with a network of recovery homes in almost every state. These houses are governed, operated, and paid for by the people who live in them. There is no external, professional staff. With over 10,000 residents across the country, Oxford House exemplifies a grass roots effort to transform our society?s way of dealing with addiction. It expands upon the Alcoholics Anonymous approach by providing former addicts a place to live and a 24/7 support network. In some states, Oxford House residents can borrow $4,000 in government loans to cover the first month?s rent and security deposit, which has to be paid back over two years. One study showed that Oxford House residents had less substance abuse, were less likely to commit crimes, and found better jobs than those in traditional aftercare.

The productivity and incarceration-reduction benefits yielded an estimated $613,000 in savings in a recent study. These findings suggest that there are significant societal benefits for these types of lower cost, non-medical, community-based care options for those battling addiction.

The Oxford House movement has continually evolved through experimentation and trial and error for more than three decades. This is compatible with evidence-based practices that focus on incrementally improving outcomes. Similarly, successful companies use this process to create great products: not with one brilliant idea, but a core product with a succession of improvements.

This broadening self-help movement demonstrates what is possible when people are given the power and responsibility to make their own decisions. Yet, these benefits are not readily available to the homeless, those with chronic health conditions, or those who are released from addiction treatment facilities, prisons, or mental institutions. These individuals often have no voice and are excluded from the basic rights that would empower them to affect their own recovery.

They need supportive, recovery-based environments where they can participate in society and, most importantly, retain some dignity. Those involved in the Oxford House movement and others such as Alcoholics Anonymous are providing democratic environments to the disenfranchised in neighborhoods and communities throughout our country. History has shown that it often takes a grassroots initiative to radically challenge the system or status quo, and this approach can greatly ease the financial burden of addressing major problems facing our nation.

Leonard A. Jason, professor of clinical and community psychology at DePaul University and director of the Center for Community Research, is the author of Principles of Social Change published by Oxford University Press. He has investigated the self-help recovery movement for the last 20 years.

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Image credit: Photo by epSos.de, CC BY 2.0 via Flickr?

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Source: http://blog.oup.com/2013/03/small-gov-social-problems-addiction/

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Can the iPad Rescue a Struggling American Education System?

Matthew Stoltzfus could never get his students to see chemistry like he sees chemistry until he added an iPad to his lesson plan.

Stoltzfus, a chemistry professor at Ohio State University, struggled for years to bring complex chemical equations to life on the blackboard, but always saw students? eyes glaze over. Then he added animations and interactive media to his general chemistry curriculum. Suddenly, he saw students? faces light up in understanding.

?When I see a chemical reaction on a piece of paper, I don?t see coefficients and symbols, I see a bucket of molecules reacting,? Stoltzfus said. ?But I don?t think our students see that big bucket of molecules. We can give students a better idea of what?s happening at a molecular level with animations and interactive elements.?

That is but one example of how tablets are reinventing how students access and interact with educational material, and how teachers assess and monitor students? performance at a time when many schools are understaffed and many classrooms overcrowded. Millions of grade school and university students worldwide are using iPads to visualize difficult concepts, revisit lectures on their own time and augment lessons with videos, interactive widgets and animations.

?In the shift to digital, it?s not just about replacing textbooks but inventing new ways of learning,? Forrester analyst Sarah Rotman Epps said. ?Some of the education apps being developed for iPad are approaching learning in an entirely new way, and that?s exciting.?

Sallie Severns, founder and CEO of iOS app Answer Underground, told Wired that tablets? simplicity, ease of use and the massive range of academically minded applications available are drawing teachers and educational technologists to the platform in droves.

Tablet-based learning is no longer the niche it was a year or two ago when we saw a handful of early adopters jump on board with iPad pilot studies in selected grades and classrooms. Schools and teachers are embracing the technology in a big way. A Pew study of 2,462 Advanced Placement and National Writing Project teachers nationwide found that 43 percent have students complete assignments using tablets in the classroom. A PBS LearningMedia study found 35 percent of K-12 teachers surveyed nationwide have a tablet or e-reader in their classroom, up from 20 percent a year ago.

The iPad is the most popular tablet option among educators. Apple sold 4.5 million of them to schools and other educational institutions nationwide last year (it sold 8 million internationally), up from 1.5 million in 2011.

Tablets have proven especially popular in elementary education, and they?ve been a ?revolution? for kids younger than 8 because they?re fun and intuitive, said Sara DeWitt, Vice President at PBS KIDS Digital. The taps and swipes are easy to learn, so kids spend more time learning their lessons, not their hardware.

?The iPad has given us an opportunity to make technology transparent,? she said. ?The touchscreen interface is so much more natural than a mouse and keyboard, kids can jump right in.?

That said, there?s more to using a tablet in the classroom than handing them out at the door.

Teachers and school district administrators must decide how to best integrate them into the curriculum, considering things like the number of tablets per classroom, which grades receive them first, what content is accessed, and when.

?How tablets are integrated into classrooms is key to success,? Severns said. ?Planning, preparation, implementation and evaluating apps are key to using this new technology.? While adoption is broad, the ways educators are using them varies from class to class, school to district.

Apple?s iTunes U is one tool making iPad-based course integration easier by helping teachers create and curate a wholly digital curriculum. Teachers can pack iBooks textbooks (including titles from major publishers like McGraw-Hill, Pearson Education, and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), audio and video, documents, and even iOS apps into a single package that students navigate as they progress through the course.

When it launched in 2007, iTunes U was a source for audio and video lectures students could use on their iPods, but Apple introduced a new app in January 2012 that leveraged the capabilities of the iPhone and iPad, adding in iOS apps, iBooks, and video to the mix. Downloads have topped 1 billion, and iTunes U is used by more than 1,200 colleges and universities and more than 1,200 K-12 schools and districts.

Severns said iTunes U is ?paving the way for how educators teach and students learn? because it allows for unprecedented ease in distributing and accessing academic content. Simply log on and it?s there.

Still, it can be easier or more beneficial, particularly in K-12 classrooms, for teachers to just round up a collection of dedicated apps (there are more than 75,000 education related apps in the App Store) for students to use. There, tablets are often supplementary rather than being used for the bulk of coursework, so a full blown iPad-based course (like with iTunes U) isn?t necessary. Tablet time is often a reward, where students will get to play a game that isn?t just fun, it?s building on skills and concepts they?re focusing on in class. iOS has built-in controls that can let teachers lock an iPad into a single app and place restrictions on functions like browser access to ensure kids are learning, and not goofing off.

Third party apps also can take advantage of the social networking opportunity inherent to mobile devices. Students can ask questions of each other and the teacher, something Severns said is absolutely necessary to ensure everyone understand the information.

Stoltzfus, the chemistry prof in Ohio, said the social networking aspect allows him to poll students mid-lecture to determine how well they?re understanding the topic. He can adjust his lesson on the fly, which he said is ?where tablets can really really help us in terms of progressing in pedagogy.?

We are approaching the day when tablets won?t be an option, but a requirement.
Arkansas State University, for example, requires all incoming freshman to have their own iPad. Many similar policies.

But as tablet adoption proliferates amongst those students and schools with the money to buy the devices, low income students and cash-strapped schools may be left behind. That could deepen the divide between those with access to the latest learning tools and those with traditional technology and limited Internet access.

We?re seeing this kind of segregation already, but some of it is self-imposed. Many college freshmen, for example, are using iPads in class while many upperclassmen prefer their laptops or even pen and paper for coursework.

?Five years from now when young students come into college, the expectation is going to be a lot different than it is now. They?ll be used to using tablets in middle and high school,? Stoltzfus said. ?We have to be the ones that are pushing the limits.?

Source: http://feeds.wired.com/~r/wired/software/~3/u7SjZKTdB8g/

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Sports Image(R) Franchisee In Colorado Awarded 2nd Territory

March 06, 2013 // Franchising.com // Dayton, OH & Aurora, CO ? A Colorado couple has just been awarded their second Sports Marketing Franchised Territory in under a year. Sports Image?, a leader in the high school sports marketing industry, announced that it has awarded Aaron & Traci Tattersall of Aurora, CO, the Southern Colorado market. This new territory will join with their current Denver metro market. With the two exclusive Colorado territories, the Tattersalls join alongside Mr. Joseph Bland, owner of the northern Colorado market, to make a strong foothold enabling Sports Image? to help schools and organizations across the Centennial State.

?The Tattersalls represent the Sports Image? brand to its fullest,? said Mr. Eric Horstman, President of Sports Image?. "They are very worthy of this second franchise. Many organizations in Colorado such as Legend, Chaparral & Ponderosa high schools have already greatly benefited because of their execution of the Sports Image? systems.?

"We purchased our 1st Sports Image territory a year ago. In one short year, we've given a lot of new equipment and over $16,000 to multiple schools in the Denver metro area,? said Traci Tattersall. ?The Sports Image? model provides our corporate partners a unique and creative way to get their message into local high schools and other grassroots organizations. We feel extremely blessed to be able to help others and to be in an industry that is not driven by our national or local economy. We look forward to a great 2013!" ?Sports Image? is the first national franchise to market through youth sports. We?ve been helping schools, clubs, community Parks and Recs and other youth organizations offset budget constraints for over 10 years. In July 2009 we franchised our organization to put vested business owners on the ground floor in local markets across the country,? said Mr. Horstman. ?We now have 20+ franchisees across the nation helping individual schools and organizations.?

To get involved or to get your school or organization some help - visit www.sportsimageinc.com.

About Sports Image?

Sports Image? (www.sportsimageinc.com) was founded in 2002 in Dayton, OH with the purpose of helping high schools and other grassroots organizations to obtain state-of-the-art equipment and much needed revenue for their athletic programs. To date, Sports Image? has given over $1,000,000 in cash and over $10,000,000 in equipment to schools and organizations throughout the United States and in Canada. In addition, Sports Image? also founded and manages the Good Samaritan Flyin? to the Hoop (www.flyintothehoop.com), a Top-Ranked National High School Basketball Event that pumps over $1.9M into the local Dayton, OH community annually. For more information, contact us at 937-704-9670.

SOURCE?Sports Image

Contact:

Mr. Eric Horstman
Sports Image?
937.704.9670 x112
eric@sportsimageinc.com

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Source: http://www.franchising.com/news/20130306_sports_imagereg_franchisee_in_colorado_awarded_2nd.html

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