বুধবার, ৩১ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

NYU To Remain Closed Through Saturday Due To Hurricane Sandy

New York University announced Tuesday evening that classes will be canceled through Saturday and students at the school's residence halls in lower Manhattan are being evacuated.

Many of NYU's buildings are without power after Hurricane Sandy ravaged New York City during Monday's overnight hours. NYU Langone Medical Center was forced to evacuate the hospital late Monday night, and the storm damage there could put years of research in jeopardy.

NYU president John Sexton cited power outages around NYU buildings and residence halls as reasons to close down academics for the week.

"We did not make this decision lightly, and we understand that significant logistical implications accompany it," Sexton said in an email sent to students Tuesday.

"The electrical outages continue to present significant challenges for us at the Washington Square campus," Sexton said. "We can safely provide food and shelter for our students in facilities that are powered by our Co-Generation facility. However, many of these are the same facilities that we need to carry on the normal rhythms of our academic mission, and the absence of Con Edison power makes it extremely difficult to do both. As a university, we rely heavily on such systems as the Con Edison electrical system and the MTA?s mass transit systems for our daily operations."

Sexton said food service will be provided to all students at Weinstein Residence Hall and Kimmel Center. Another email from senior associate vice president of student affairs Tom Ellet said Kimmel is available 24 hours a day as a charging station for students' electronic devices.

NYU also announced that students at several residence halls -- 2nd Street, 7th Street, 13th Street, Alumni, Broome, Brittany, Carlyle, Coral, Greenwich, Hayden, Lafayette and Rubin -- will need to evacuate for the time-being. If students do not leave Tuesday night, they're required to vacate the residence hall by 3 p.m. Wednesday. As long as the relocation order stands, students will be allowed back into their dorms between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.

NYU is making academic buildings available for students who are displaced by residence halls which have lost power.

Other residence halls where students are not required to leave are operating on emergency lighting, and some do not have running water, according to NYU officials. The Student Health Center is open only for limited walk-in hours. Sexton's email also said spring registration for classes may be rescheduled, but no final decision has been made.

According to an email sent out to NYU students from Jules Martin, vice president for global security and crisis management, most residence halls lost power Monday night as the storm barreled down on Manhattan.

NYU has upwards of 45,000 students enrolled. While not all of them live in an NYU dorm, all students are guaranteed a spot to live in university residence halls during their time in college.

Classes at colleges around New York have been canceled as many residents are still without power and the subway system is likely to remain shut down through the week. Power outages have displaced many lower Manhattan residents.

"New Yorkers are always at their best when things seem at their worst," Sexton said, "and once again the citizens of this city and of this university have shown their mettle."

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/31/nyu-hurricane-sandy_n_2047588.html

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Pumpkin Hot Chocolate(Vegan) - Food Doodles

by Heidi @ Food Doodles on October 30, 2012

Today is a rainy, cold, miserable day here.? Although I?m sure it is far more miserable elsewhere in the world and I?m keeping those on the east coast in my thoughts.? I did think that some hot chocolate would be a nice thing to share today.? I think we could all use a mug of this :)

I made this hot chocolate vegan by using almond milk.? And to be totally honest, it was awesome.? I almost think dairy milk would have been too thick and rich unless you use low fat.? Sometimes I really prefer almond milk, and this is one of those instances.? But go with what you enjoy.? The pumpkin in this makes it slightly thick and creamier than regular hot chocolate.? I did use a homemade pumpkin puree though so a store bought pumpkin puree will be thicker.? I?m not sure if I?d want this any thicker, so maybe use less of a store bought pumpkin puree.

Oh and that in the background?? I?ll share that soon.? I may tweak the recipe a little before I share it though.? That?s chai spiced apple butter in the center of those bars though.? Can you say yum?? I?m happy to have to make those again soon to test the recipe out :D

For now, enjoy some hot chocolate and I hope everyone stays safe over the next couple days!

Pumpkin Hot Chocolate

Serves 2-3

  • 2 C milk(almond milk works perfectly)
  • 1/4 C homemade pumpkin puree(use less of store bought puree as it?s thicker)
  • 3/4 tsp pumpkin pie spice
  • 3 tbsp unsweetened cocoa
  • 3-4 tbsp maple syrup
  • pinch of salt
  • dash of vanilla

On the stove in a small pot, whisk together the milk, pumpkin, pumpkin pie spice, cocoa, maple syrup(or honey) and pinch of salt.? Heat over medium heat until it comes to a boil.? Whisk and cook for 2 minutes.? Remove from the heat, stir in the vanilla and cool until ready to serve, or serve immediately with a splash of extra milk, a dollop of whipped cream, marshmallows or your favorite other hot chocolate toppings.

Source: http://fooddoodles.com/2012/10/30/pumpkin-hot-chocolatevegan/

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Social Shopping Network BeauCoo Wants To Help Women Find Clothes That Really Fit

WET3rCF4pUzZXVnlBmmHP6g1e1Sj8i3zrHrzueDHJzQShopping for cloths online is difficult, especially because one brand's size 10 can be another brand's size 8. BeauCoo, a Calgary-based startup that is launching out of beta today, combines social networking based on women's real body dimensions with mobile photo sharing and shopping to help female shoppers find the clothes that will look good on them. BeauCoo is currently only available on the iPhone, but the company plans to launch web, tablet and Android apps in the next six week. An API is also in the works and is scheduled to launch next year.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/6v9gvMG_e4U/

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Empathy represses analytic thought, and vice versa: Brain physiology limits simultaneous use of both networks

ScienceDaily (Oct. 30, 2012) ? New research shows a simple reason why even the most intelligent, complex brains can be taken by a swindler's story -- one that upon a second look offers clues it was false.

When the brain fires up the network of neurons that allows us to empathize, it suppresses the network used for analysis, a pivotal study led by a Case Western Reserve University researcher shows.

How could a CEO be so blind to the public relations fiasco his cost-cutting decision has made?

When the analytic network is engaged, our ability to appreciate the human cost of our action is repressed.

At rest, our brains cycle between the social and analytical networks. But when presented with a task, healthy adults engage the appropriate neural pathway, the researchers found.

The study shows for the first time that we have a built-in neural constraint on our ability to be both empathetic and analytic at the same time

The work suggests that established theories about two competing networks within the brain must be revised. More, it provides insights into the operation of a healthy mind versus those of the mentally ill or developmentally disabled.

"This is the cognitive structure we've evolved," said Anthony Jack, an assistant professor of cognitive science at Case Western Reserve and lead author of the new study. "Empathetic and analytic thinking are, at least to some extent, mutually exclusive in the brain."

The research is published in the current online issue of NeuroImage.

A number of earlier studies showed that two large scale brain networks are in tension in the brain, one which is known as the default mode network and a second known as the task positive network. But other researchers have suggested that different mechanisms drive this tension:

One theory says that we have one network for engaging in goal directed tasks. This theory posits that our second network allows the mind to wander.

The other theory says that one network is for external attention, and the second network is for internal attention.

The new study shows that adults presented with social or analytical problems -- all external stimuli -- consistently engaged the appropriate neural pathway to solve the problem, while repressing the other pathway. The see-sawing brain activity was recorded using functional magnetic resonance imaging.

Jack worked with former Case Western Reserve undergraduates Abigail Dawson, now a graduate student at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand; Katelyn Begany, now a graduate student at the University of California, Berkeley; and Kevin P. Barry, now a graduate student at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Other co-authors are, from Case Western Reserve: former research assistant, Regina L. Leckie and Angela H. Ciccia, an assistant professor of psychological sciences; and Abraham Z. Snyder, MD, a professor of radiology at Washington University in St. Louis.

Jack said that a philosophical question inspired the study design: "The most persistent question in the philosophy of mind is the problem of consciousness. Why can we describe the workings of a brain, but that doesn't tell us what it's like to be that person?"

"The disconnect between experiential understanding and scientific understanding is known as the explanatory gap," Jack said. "In 2006, the philosopher Philip Robbins and I got together and we came up with a pretty crazy, bold hypothesis: that the explanatory gap is driven by our neural structure. I was genuinely surprised to see how powerfully these findings fit that theory." Philip Robbins is an associate professor of philosophy at the University of Missouri.

These findings suggest the same neural phenomenon drives the explanatory gap as occurs when we look at a visual illusion such as the duck-rabbit, he continued. The drawing of the head of the animal can be seen as a duck facing one direction or a rabbit facing the other, but you can't see both at once.

"That is called perceptual rivalry, and it occurs because of neural inhibition between the two representations," Jack said. "What we see in this study is similar, but much more wide-scale. We see neural inhibition between the entire brain network we use to socially, emotionally and morally engage with others, and the entire network we use for scientific, mathematical and logical reasoning.

"This shows scientific accounts really do leave something out -- the human touch. A major challenge for the science of the mind is how we can better translate between the cold and distant mechanical descriptions that neuroscience produces, and the emotionally engaged intuitive understanding which allows us to relate to one another as people."

The researchers recruited 45 healthy college students, and asked each to take five 10-minute turns inside a magnetic resonance imager. Meanwhile, the researchers randomly presented them with 20 written and 20 video problems that required them to think about how others might feel and with 20 written and 20 video problems that required physics to solve.

After reading the text or viewing the video, the students had to provide an answer to a yes-no question within seven seconds. Each student's session in the MRI included twenty 27-second rest periods, as well as variable delays between trials lasting 1, 3 or 5 seconds. Students were told to look at a red cross on the screen in front of them and relax during the rests.

The MRI images showed that social problems deactivated brain regions associated with analysis, and activated the social network. This finding held true whether the questions came via video or print. Meanwhile, the physics questions deactivated the brain regions associated with empathizing and activated the analytical network.

"When subjects are lying in a scanner with nothing to do, which we call the resting state, they naturally cycle between the two networks," Jack said. "This tells us that it's the structure of the adult brain that is driving this, that it's a physiological constraint on cognition."

The finding has bearings on a variety of neuropsychiatric disorders, from anxiety, depression and ADHD to schizophrenia -- all of which are characterized by social dysfunction of some sort, Jack said. "Treatment needs to target a balance between these two networks. At present most rehabilitation, and more broadly most educational efforts of any sort, focus on tuning up the analytic network. Yet, we found more cortex dedicated to the social network."

Perhaps most clearly, the theory makes sense in regards to developmental disabilities such as autism and Williams syndrome. Autism is often characterized by a strong ability to solve visuospatial problems, such as mentally manipulating two and three-dimensional figures, but poor social skills. People with Williams syndrome are very warm and friendly, but perform poorly on visuospatial tests.

But, even healthy adults can rely too much on one network, Jack said. A look at newspaper business pages offers some examples.

"You want the CEO of a company to be highly analytical in order to run a company efficiently, otherwise it will go out of business," he said. "But, you can lose your moral compass if you get stuck in an analytic way of thinking."

"You'll never get by without both networks," Jack continued. "You don't want to favor one, but cycle efficiently between them, and employ the right network at the right time."

The researchers continue to test the theory, studying whether brains will shift from the social network to the analytical when students in the MRI see people depicted in a dehumanizing way, that is, as animals or objects. The group is also studying whether disgust and social stereotyping confound our moral compass by recruiting the analytical network and depressing social network activity.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Case Western Reserve University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Anthony I. Jack, Abigail Dawson, Katelyn Begany, Regina L. Leckie, Kevin Barry, Angela Ciccia, Abraham Snyder. fMRI reveals reciprocal inhibition between social and physical cognitive domains. NeuroImage, 2012; DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2012.10.061

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/CgV_MJ971XY/121030161416.htm

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সোমবার, ২৯ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

SMS Vs. SMTP, whats the difference? | Slick Text's Text Marketing ...

Text Marketing

Regulated SMS vs Unregulated SMTP messaging

?

???????? Whats the difference between the two?

In this short article we will educate you on them and explore some differences between the two protocols.

What is SMS/SMPP messaging?

SMPP stands for Short Message Peer-to-peer Protocol and was designed in the late 90?s to communication on a peer-to-peer scale which contains just small messages of up to 160 characters.? SMPP is very similar to SMS. SMPP is mainly text communicating with text. SMS stands for Short Message Service, which means phone, web, or mobile communication systems, using standardized communications protocols that allow the exchange of short text messages between fixed line or cell phone. A fancy way of saying, I can text you from a software application and it is still considered a text.

The true SMS protocol was developed by the telecommunications industry specifically for text messaging.?In contrast, the?SMTP protocol was never meant for that. Messages sent through short code and the?SMPP protocol are regulated by the wireless carriers, all the necessary regulation is in place. SMTP is not regulated by the wireless carriers or?Mobile Marketing Association?and does not have the regulation like short codes and SMPP do. The use of SMTP is a loophole in the carrier regulations.

What is the SMTP messaging?

SMTP is way of transporting emails to cell phones in the mid 90?s to allow cellular users to receive directly to their phones in the form of text. SMTP is short for Simple Mail Transport Protocol. Still in use today by many bulk SMS providers and companies it is a slow, complicated and Un-Regulated way of communicating to your customers for marketing purposes. Through each wireless provider, customers have been given the ability to receive emails via text through a unique email that includes the customers cell number.

Example: 18479488574@Verizon.com

What this allows the sender to do is compose a message or full-blown email to be sent and converted in SMS format so it can be read on the receiving end through a text message, for mobile marketing purposes this is highly against the laws and regulations set in place by the Mobile Marketing Association and Federal Communications Commission.

There are many reasons you should not trust or use services with this technology. Communications coming from SMTP source typically come from a long digit code of 7 numbers instead of a carrier approved and regulated short code, which consist of 5 to 6 digits and is necessary for any ethical bulk text provider to have registered for business use. 5 to 6 digit short codes are monitored and legally registered to use for marketing and communications. 7 digit codes being used for marketing and communication purposes for businesses and organizations are against regulations and federal laws. Not to mention receiving a message from an SMPT/email to text message can still charge a small percentage of customers a premium charge on their cellular monthly bill. With SMS/SMPP your message begins as a text, is sent as a text and is received as a text. There is no email involved so messages do not get stuck in spam filters and messages are regulated to 160 characters at the most. Example: You have Verizon and your friend has AT&T. You send him a text and it counts a 1 text on your cellular monthly bill. If you have unlimited texting it wont have an effect at all. Another big reason not to use long codes is that fact that any one can be added to the list and spammed. With short codes this cannot happen. Customers/contacts must add themselves as stated by the Mobile Marketing Association guidelines. This means your customers have to be 100% opting into your campaigns.? Your customers have to want to hear what you have to say. With long codes people can harvest your personal Verizon or other providers emails and spam messages straight to your phone and then you get charged a premium for the conversion of SMTP to SMS delivery. Not cool.

?

If your service is not straight SMS then you should consider switching to an ethical up to par service provider such as SlickText.com. For more information please visit https://www.slicktext.com/

?

Source: http://www.slicktext.com/blog/2012/10/sms-vs-smtp-whats-the-difference/

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শুক্রবার, ২৬ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

lern2play Resources and Information. This website is for sale!

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Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/lern2play

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৫ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

Are cancer patients' hopes for chemo too high?

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