Wednesday, November 7, 2012

CNN projects Romney wins Kentucky in presidential race

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Right on schedule, OS X 10.9 appears in server logs

Now that Apple's on an iOS-like yearly update schedule for the Mac's OS X operating system, it'd be big news if we didn't start to see traces of the next version, OS X 10.9, start appearing in server logs sometime that is soonish. Well, no cause for concern, because the next big cat is out of the bag and stealthily surfing the web. Seth Weintraub from 9to5Mac posted this morning that he'd been seeing 10.9 in his logs, so I checked iMore's and sure enough, it's there too.

We probably won't hear much more about 10.9 until Apple formally announces the beta sometime next year. But if nothing else, you can rest assured newly anointed SVP of Software Engineering, Craig Frederighi and company are already hard at work on it.

And since they might be reading this very post, why not take a minute and let them know what you'd like to see in OS X 10.9? Per-app AirPlay so we can work on one app while mirroring another? iBooks for OS X? Reupholstering of the linen and stitched leather to something more Ive-inspired, like aluminium? Documents in the Cloud that aren't tied to specific apps but can be accessed via a unified repository? A much better, much more social Game Center?

What's on top of your OS X hit-list?



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/If6HiqNuq8U/story01.htm

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List Building Tips ? Archives - Steve Wagenheim's Personal Website

In this installment of List Building Tips, I?m going to talk about archives. This may be one of the sneakiest and cleverest ways to build a list that you will ever run into. And the best part is, it?s totally ethical.

Let me start out by saying that this isn?t a tactic you can use when you first create your newsletter and it doesn?t work with a canned series. I?ll explain what I mean by a canned series shortly. But let?s first explain why this doesn?t work with a new newsletter. To understand why, you have to first understand exactly what I mean by an archive.

An archive is a collection of old content, whether it be articles, photos or whatever. Most people create archives because they don?t want to clutter up the main page of their site. For example, a Magic the Gathering site I go to has a series of articles for different topics. The main article for each topic is on the main page. The back issues are all archived and can be viewed by clicking on a link to get to the archive section. This way, your main page doesn?t look like a train wreck and take forever to load.

Great, so how can we apply this to a newsletter? Again, this doesn?t work with a brand new newsletter and it won?t work with fixed length newsletters, meaning those that have X number of emails that go out and then stop.

What you do is simple. After an installment of your newsletter goes out, you copy and paste the content onto a web page and upload it. I recommend uploading each installment separately and then uploading a page that has an index to each installment. As you then send out each subsequent installment of your newsletter, you will include that installment as part of your archive.

After you?ve done all that, what you then do is simply drop links to your archive wherever you can. Make sure the index page has an opt in form so that if people want to read future installments they can sign up and get them immediately instead of waiting for the archive to be updated.

Will some people just keep checking back for the archive, not wanting to be on any mailing list? Sure, some. But there are going to be those who won?t want to wait. They?re going to want to get these installments right away, especially if they?re timely. This tactic works very well if your newsletter deals with time sensitive issues.

Like I said, you can?t use this method with a fixed length series because the archive will never be updated. And you have to wait until you have a few installments that you can upload. But if your newsletter seems to be a good fit for this model, you might want to consider it.

Because even if just ONE person reads your archive and joins your mailing list, that?s one more person than you had the day before.

To YOUR Success,

Steven Wagenheim

Want more great list building tips? Check out my review of Paul Myers? Profit Plan VI at Profit Plan VI and pick up 162 ways to build a large and responsive list.

Source: http://stevewagenheim.com/blog/internet-marketing/list-building-tips-archives.html

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Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Man climbs Chicago skyscraper with bionic leg

Zac Vawter's stands on his bionic leg after he arriving on the 103rd floor of Willis Tower, becoming the first person ever to complete the task wearing the mind-controlled prosthetic limb, Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012 in Chicago. Vawter, who lost his right leg in a motorcycle accident, put the smart limb on public display for the first time during an annual stair-climbing charity event called ?SkyRise Chicago? hosted by the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, where he is receiving treatment. (AP Photo/Teresa Crawford)

Zac Vawter's stands on his bionic leg after he arriving on the 103rd floor of Willis Tower, becoming the first person ever to complete the task wearing the mind-controlled prosthetic limb, Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012 in Chicago. Vawter, who lost his right leg in a motorcycle accident, put the smart limb on public display for the first time during an annual stair-climbing charity event called ?SkyRise Chicago? hosted by the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, where he is receiving treatment. (AP Photo/Teresa Crawford)

Zac Vawter stands on "The Ledge" of the Willis Tower in Chicago after walking up the stairs of the building Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012, to become the first person to climb the 103 floors of one of the world's tallest skyscrapers with a bionic leg. Vawter was wearing a prosthetic leg controlled by his mind while participating in "SkyRise Chicago." (AP Photo/Chicago Sun-Times, Brian Jackson) CHICAGO LOCALS OUT, MAGS OUT

Zac Vawter, a 31-year-old amputee, is interviewed after walking up the stairs of the Willis Tower in Chicago, Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012, to become the first person to climb the 103 floors of one of the world's tallest skyscrapers with a bionic leg. Vawter was wearing a prosthetic leg controlled by his mind while participating in "SkyRise Chicago." (AP Photo/Chicago Sun-Times, Brian Jackson) CHICAGO LOCALS OUT, MAGS OUT

Zac Vawter, a 31--year-old amputee, emerges after walking up the stairs of the Willis Tower in Chicago, Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012, to become the first person to climb the 103 floors of one of the world's tallest skyscrapers with a bionic leg. Vawter was wearing a prosthetic leg controlled by his mind while participating in "SkyRise Chicago." (AP Photo/Chicago Sun-Times, Brian Jackson) CHICAGO LOCALS OUT, MAGS OUT

Zac Vawter, left, a 31-year-old amputee, walks up the stairs of the Willis Tower in Chicago, Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012, to become the first person to climb the 103 floors of one of the world's tallest skyscrapers with a bionic leg. Vawter was wearing a prosthetic leg controlled by his mind when he participated in "SkyRise Chicago." (AP Photo/Chicago Sun-Times, Brian Jackson) CHICAGO LOCALS OUT, MAGS OUT

(AP) ? The metal on Zac Vawter bionic leg gleamed as he climbed 103 floors of Chicago's iconic Willis Tower, becoming the first person ever to complete the task wearing a mind-controlled prosthetic limb.

Vawter, who lost his right leg in a motorcycle accident, put the smart limb on public display for the first time during an annual stair-climbing charity event called "SkyRise Chicago" hosted by the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, where he is receiving treatment.

"Everything went great," said Vawter at the event's end. "The prosthetic leg did its part, and I did my part."

The robotic leg is designed to respond to electrical impulses from muscles in his hamstring. When Vawter thought about climbing the stairs, the motors, belts and chains in his leg synchronized the movements of its ankle and knee.

The computerized prosthetic limb, like something one might see in a sci-fi film, weighs about 10 pounds and holds two motors.

Bionic ? or thought-controlled ? prosthetic arms have been available for a few years, thanks to pioneering work done at the Rehabilitation Institute. Knowing leg amputees outnumbering people who've lost arms and hands, the Chicago researchers are focusing more on lower limbs. If a bionic hand fails, a person drops a glass of water. If a bionic leg fails, a person falls down stairs.

This event was a research project for us, said Joanne Smith, the Rehabilitation Institute's CEO.

"We were testing the leg under extreme conditions. Very few patients who will use the leg in the future will be using it for this purpose. From that perspective, its performance was beyond measure," Smith added.

To prepare for his pioneering climb, Vawter said, he practiced on a small escalator at a gym, while researchers spent months adjusting the technical aspects of the leg to ensure that it would respond to his thoughts.

When Vawter goes home to Yelm, Wash., where he lives with his wife and two children, the experimental leg will stay behind in Chicago. Researchers will continue to refine its steering. Taking it to the market is still years away.

"We've come a long way, but we have a long way to go," said lead researcher Levi Hargrove of the institute's Center for Bionic Medicine. "We need to make rock solid devices, more than a research prototype."

The $8 million project is funded by the U.S. Department of Defense and involves Vanderbilt University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Rhode Island and the University of New Brunswick.

"A lot of people say that losing a leg is like losing a loved one," said Vawter. "You go through a grieving process. You and establish a new normal in your life and move on. Today was a big event. It's just neat to be a part of the research and be a part of RIC."

Nearly, 3,000 climbers participated in the annual charity event, called SkyRise Chicago. Participants climbed about 2,100 steps to the Willis Tower's SkyDeck level to raise money for the institute's rehabilitation care and research.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-04-Bionic%20Stair-Climber/id-65a5bd181d384afca97c3d2cc5c03d94

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Enjoy Egypt Holidays Through Luxor Cruises And Sailing Boats

Just in case, you are looking for a good holiday destination, then an Egypt trip is thoroughly recommended. Egypt holidays can fill you with the kind of euphoria which perhaps no other destination can match. This is owing to the inimitable historic charm of the country and the unique culture which never fails to bewitch the foreign tourists. And amongst its many cities, Luxor always makes it to the must-visit list of the travelers. Luxor is replete with architectural buildings, crumbling monuments, sedate temples and other remnants from the past which will evoke a flood of emotion within you.

The best way to discover the country is by sailing over the Nile. Luxor cruises are incredibly famous and pack in all the punch to make your voyage an utterly unforgettable one. Where else in the world can you explore a country on its river! Nile is not merely a river famed for its length; it is a source of eternal joy for tourists from all parts of the country and across all eras. Many scholars, historians and authors have chronicled the beauty of Nile through their pen. One Hercule Poirot novel by Agatha Christie has its setting on a Nile cruise. The charm of the river is very infectious! No wonder, even authors couldnt hold themselves from singing to the glory of this river.

The cruise ships and sailing boats which sail through Nile give you a very panoramic view of the surroundings, the river and the sky. The cruises travel through a pre-defined destination and you get the opportunity to witness most of the treasures and gems of the country. Be it Cairos monuments or Aswans dams or Luxors temples- you get a chance to set your eyes on all the good things which the country has to offer. The pyramids and the sphinxes are special attractions of the country. Luxor cruises throw a special emphasis on these sites and even make a landing at certain destinations so that tourists can walk over, take pictures and soak in the historical pleasure.

These sailing boats will promise you more than you could have expected even in your wildest dream. Throughout the day and night, you can feel the cool wind flirting with your hairs and the sun & moon playing hide-n-seek with the white clouds. You will cruise along in the wake of the river which has been nourishing the country for thousands of years. The experience can give you goose bumps and there wont be a boring moment.

Luxor cruises come in different packages to suit the need of various tourists. In accordance to your requirement and sightseeing preference, you can make a booking. The cruises are available separately for daytime and nighttime. If you wish to see the country under the sun, then you can go for day bookings. And if you wish to witness the sites under the dark skyline, then night bookings can also be done. Owing to heavy demand for cruise Egypt holidays, you will have to make advance bookings.

The nature, the temples, the pyramids and the sand- amidst all of these, you will go joyously mad!

About the Author:
This article is written by Nancy Jackson on behalf of Andrew Holtom, this is having topics on Luxor cruises, Egypt holidays, sailing boats. For more details Click here

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Enjoy-Egypt-Holidays-Through-Luxor-Cruises-And-Sailing-Boats/4251971

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3 Economical Steps to Restore Your Home from Fire Damage

One of the most detrimental catastrophes that can happen to your home is being a victim of fire damage. Everything you?ve worked for can be gone in minutes. It?s difficult not to get discouraged, but you can get out of this hole as long as you go about the restoration process in the right way.

The first thing to do is know what kind of home insurance you have and how your plan will treat fire damage. Contact your insurance provider immediately. They will be able to assist you in what to do next and what to expect in the restoration process, including directing you to a recommended restoration service company. Once you know what insurance plan you have and what it covers, then you can commence your three step restoration process.

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photo credit: think4photop

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Perform Your Own (Prep) Work

One way to save money is to do a lot of the work yourself. Believe me, it?s as terrible as it sounds, but it will save you money in the long run. Preparation for the restoration process is the first step. If the fire damage isn?t too bad, you find out what you?ll need to get back on track again and start a budget.

?Utilize Home Restoration Organizations


This can be provided through your insurance company, but try and find a fire damage Restoration Company that is insured, bonded and has experience. One that works with your insurance company is a must, plus one that will work well with you. Don?t be afraid to negotiate, too. Also,a great nonprofit organizational project that focuses on providing affordable furniture, home improvement goods and other home accessories is Habitat for Humanity?s Restores. However, please only utilize a nonprofit organization only if you absolutely need to.

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photo credit: photostock

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Go Minimalistic/Buy Used


The best way to cut back on costs while restoring your fire damaged home is to become minimalistic or buy used goods, at least until you can afford to upgrade. If times are hard, then it?s time to act like it. Hold off on entertainment electronics or elegant furniture. Just remember it?s only a setback, not a permanent change.

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Paul Davis Restoration of Kansas City is an insured, bonded and experienced fire damage restoration company that has been around since 1966 and has restored over 2 million homes.

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Learn all you need to know about buying your home ? The Complete Home Buying Guide For First-Time Home Owners

Source: http://www.moredollarsathome.com/?p=837

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Monday, November 5, 2012

10 Must-Read Tech Stories in China This Week

For those of you in China whose internet is not undergoing maintenance, there were more than a few interesting technology news stories from the Middle Kingdom this past week. Here are a few stories that caught our eyes this week.

1. China Mobile Leads in 3G Subscribers, But Transition from 2G is Slow

As China?s three major telecoms released their subscriber totals for September, we went back to take a look and compare how each has been growing. While China Mobile is still the clear leader in total subscribers, its growth is not as fast as its two rivals.

2. Skillcity.cn is a P2P University With Courses That Are Actually Interesting

Online education is an exciting space these days, and it?s good to see that things are happening in China as well. We took a look at Skillcity.cn, which has a diverse lineup of course offerings ranging from programming to tennis to ?history of cocktails.? Fun stuff!

3. Chinaccelerator Graduates 2012 Batch of 8 Killer Startups

Chinaccelerator recently held its demo day in downtown Beijing, with a number of standout startups emerging in this latest batch. Be sure to check them out.

4. China?s Top Pinterest Clone Mogujie Confirms Series C Funding

Rumors of Mogujie?s funding were finally confirmed recently, as the social commerce site says that it is now effectively values at $200 million. The series C round was led by IDG.

5. Chinese Search Engines Sign Code of Conduct, Agree to Ease Up on the Back-Stabbing

After way too much drama over the past year in the Chinese search engine space, this apparent peace pact between 12 web companies may or may not improve relations between rival companies.

6. Xiaomi TV Box Spills its Guts In Possible Leaked Photo

We had heard rumors of this set top box from Xiaomi earlier in the week. But on Friday, Sina Tech reported on some leaked photos which appear to give us a glimpse of the hardware. Or at least, of its system board anyway. A new video app in the latest developer build of its MIUI operating system is further evidence a set top box is coming.

7. Zhou Hongyi Aiming for 15?20% of China?s Search Market

Speaking of search, Qihoo 360?s CEO Zhou Hongyi recently told reporters that he is targeting between 15 and 20 percent of China?s search market. The company currently sits at about 10 percent, and its initial growth spurt appears to have stalled.

8. Playstation 3 Gets Certification in China, Ban on Gaming Consoles May Be Ending

Six years after its initial release, Sony?s Playstation 3 has finally received regulatory approval in China. We don?t know if this means the console will actually be sold in China, but it is encouraging news for gaming fans nonetheless, as game consoles are not officially available in the country.

9. Alibaba Capital and Citi Ventures Lead Series D Funding into China?s DDMap

After raising $40 million in funding just six months ago, deals and listings company DDMap has closed another major round, this time led by Alibaba Capital and Citi Ventures.

10. Shops in One Beijing Electronics Market Caught Cheating Customers

It?s not exactly news to hear that Chinese electronics vendors might be occasionally shifty towards its customers. But Beijing?s BuyNow has been attracting an unusual amount of attention of late, including that of an undercover reporter.

That?s all for this week, folks! For our full spread of China coverage, you can click here or subscribe to our China RSS feed.

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About Rick Martin

Rick Martin lives in Tokyo where he writes about technology in Japan, China, and around Asia. Besides TechInAsia, he is a tech columnist for The Japan Times. He can be reached via his website, 1Rick.com

Source: http://www.techinasia.com/china-this-week-nov-4-2012/

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Ryan: Romney 'will become great president' (The Arizona Republic)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

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Acts of Kindness: Generous Surprises You Can Try Today

2012-10-11-omaglogo.jpg
By Joan Tupponce


Here are a few of Patience Salgado's stealth-kindness missions which anyone can duplicate in her own neck of the woods.

Patience Salgado, master of the small act of generosity, is making the world a friendlier place.

On her popular "Kindness Girl" blog (kindnessgirl.com), Richmond, Virginia, mom Patience Salgado catalogs her good deeds -- and encourages others to carry out their own. She places $5 Starbucks gift cards on bus stop benches, spends the first day of school writing chalk messages on campus sidewalks ("Don't be shy, we're all new friends!"), and has even staged a free cotton candy drive-through. The effect can be staggering: "People just melt," Salgado says.

But her work isn't all sweetness and cheerful slogans. In 2010, when a hate group announced plans to picket local Jewish and LGBT organizations, Salgado helped found Pennies in Protest, urging residents to donate to the organizations being targeted. In one week, they raised nearly $14,000. (She also sent the hate group a note to thank them for inspiring such generosity.)

Salgado first learned kindness as a child -- "We delivered meals, we visited hospitals; that was just who my parents were," she says -- and now she's passing it on to her own four kids. Their favorite guerrilla goodness mission is an update of the old "ding-dong ditch" prank. Instead of ringing a stranger's doorbell and running away, Salgado and her brood leave a gift before they flee the scene. Often it's flowers -- though, says Salgado, "we've left actual Ding Dongs, too."

Try one of Salgado's stealth-kindness missions.

  • Tie a message -- "It's going to be okay!" is a favorite of Salgado's -- to a flower, and leave it in a public place. (Or, as Salgado did one Halloween, swap the flowers for pumpkins.)

  • Get your kids involved: Invite them to give balloons to other children at your local playground, or to leave sweet notes in popular library books before returning them.

  • Next time you let a four-letter word fly, donate to Salgado's online communal swear jar (<a href="http://www.swearingiscaring.com/">swearingiscaring.com</a>). All proceeds are donated to charity.

  • During back-to-school season, leave a gift certificate for an ice cream cone in the pocket of new backpacks at a department store.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/04/acts-of-kindness-surprises-generous-generosity_n_1927068.html

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Sunday, November 4, 2012

Atlanta police helicopter crash kills 2 officers

ATLANTA (AP) ? A police helicopter flying low over Atlanta on a nighttime search for a missing 9-year-old boy plunged to the ground in a neighborhood of shops and apartments, killing the two officers aboard, authorities said Sunday.

Both officers died on impact in the crash about 10:30 p.m. Saturday, but no one was hurt on the ground, police spokesman Carlos Campos said. The crash occurred in a district near heavily traveled Interstate 20 filled with fast food restaurants, shopping plazas and apartments where utility lines bristle overhead.

A photograph aired on a local TV newscast showed what appeared to be flaming debris in a roadway. The helicopter fell in an area roughly 4 miles west of downtown Atlanta. Power was blacked out to a pharmacy and other nearby businesses, and a utility crew was seen apparently working to restore electricity.

"It appeared to hit the utility wire on the way down," Campos told The Associated Press, citing preliminary information. But he emphasized: "We don't know what caused it" and referred all queries to the Federal Aviation Administration, which was just opening its investigation.

Bystander Darryl James, 42, told the AP that he had gone with a companion to a check-cashing store Saturday night when he heard the helicopter flying overhead and thought it was rather low.

"The tail end went down and then there was an explosion," James said. He said he tried to get close to the wreckage. "As soon as I got close enough to it, poom! It exploded." He added of the helicopter's occupants: "They could not survive it."

James said people are often waiting at a normally busy bus stop near the crash site, adding, "Thank God nobody was out there."

After the crash, fire trucks and police cars with lights flashing converged on the area, blocking surrounding roads. Police put up yellow crime scene tape and kept bystanders so far back they were unable to see the crash site behind a small rise. The names of the dead were withheld early Sunday while relatives were notified, police said.

Meanwhile, Atlanta's police force was mourning.

"Losing an officer is the most difficult thing a police chief can face," Atlanta Police Chief George Turner said in a news release. "Losing two is an unthinkable tragedy. Our hearts go out to the families of these officers and our thoughts and prayers are with them."

He called it a difficult day for the Atlanta force and "a reminder of their bravery and the sacrifices made by our officers every day."

Police said the helicopter was called in to join the search after police received a report shortly after 9 p.m. of a missing child. Campos said the boy was later found unharmed, but he had no further details on that search.

Kathleen Bergen, a spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration, told AP by email that the FAA was investigating and the National Transportation Safety Board would also be involved, seeking to determine the cause. She didn't know the type of helicopter involved yet.

Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed also said early Sunday that he was saddened by what he called a "terrible accident."

"We mourn these two brave men and offer our deepest condolences to their families and loved ones," Reed said in a statement.

Early Sunday, about 20 people still watched the investigation hours after the crash near the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr. and Hamilton E. Holmes drives, near I-20.

Rodney Christian, 22, stood by, lamenting the loss of lives.

"It's sad. It's tragic ... for someone to lose their lives trying to find a kid, trying to keep another family together," Christian told the AP. He added that he has a 1-month-old baby at home and was shaken just by the thought of the tragic events.

"It makes me want to rush home and get back to my kid."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/atlanta-police-helicopter-crash-kills-2-officers-132905915.html

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New oil workers key bloc in all-important ND Senate race

MANNING, N.D. (AP) ? Shirley Meyer grew up on a ranch north of Dickinson, N.D., and has represented her rural district in the state House for a decade. But when she knocks on doors in her re-election campaign, she sometimes feels like a stranger in her own home.

"I was just shocked at how many new people there were," Meyer said during a recent campaign swing through a south Dickinson mobile home park. "I didn't see one North Dakota (license) plate."

The oil boom that has transformed North Dakota's economy and reshaped the rolling prairie landscape has also added an element of mystery to next week's election by adding thousands of potential new voters to the region's tiny electorate. And the political suspense is tied to the national question of which party controls the Senate in January.

North Dakota's contest is one of several states with Senate contests that have remained tied for months, with no signs of clarifying before Tuesday's election. A handful of them, such as Montana's Senate race one state west, may not even be resolved then.

Republicans are still looking to gain four seats they need to win the Senate majority if President Barack Obama wins reelection, three if GOP presidential hopeful Mitt Romney prevails.

Workers from all over the country have pouring into western North Dakota for jobs in the booming Bakken oil shale region. Dickinson, a city of 16,000 that didn't grow at all between 1990 and 2000, is now surging past 20,000 residents, with acres of new temporary housing. By one state measure, the number of oilfield workers has increased from 5,600 to 14,000 since the last presidential election. And many of the new arrivals are eligible to vote.

What that means for North Dakota politics, or individual candidates, is anyone's guess.

"I'm just hoping that I have enough ballots," said Joan Hollekim, the county auditor in Mountrail County, North Dakota's biggest oil producer. She increased her ballot printing order by 25 percent, and already has more than 600 early votes, a record.

Beth Innis, the auditor in neighboring Williams County, said she's already booked more than 2,500 absentee votes, which is double what she expected.

"I thought it would be big," Innis said of the rising number of voters. "I didn't think it would be this big."

In North Dakota, the only state that does not have voter registration, any citizen over 18 who has lived in the same place for at least 30 days can cast a ballot. That would include oilfield workers who may actually be living elsewhere and commute home to see their families.

Democrat Heidi Heitkamp and Republican Rick Berg are both pitching hard for the votes of North Dakota's energy workers. In a final campaign swing this week, Berg visited an oilfield trucking service company, a natural gas processing plant and a coal mine in western North Dakota.

Heitkamp talks up her advocacy for North Dakota's oil and coal industries when she served as state attorney general and tax commissioner. In one of her television ads, she speaks over the noise of a passing train of oil tanker cars while promising to support development of a new North Dakota refinery to process crude.

The oil industry is making sure its work force knows how to participate. A recent newsletter from the North Dakota Petroleum Council instructed workers who live in recreational vehicles or "skid shacks"? tiny huts, often no larger than a single-car garage, which can be hauled on flatbed trailers ? how to request mail ballots.

The Brighter Future Alliance, a nonprofit group with ties to prominent North Dakota Republicans, has conducted voter information workshops in several of the temporary housing camps dotted throughout western North Dakota.

"We have focused on what we think is a critical thing for the country, and that is to pursue domestic energy supplies..." said Shane Goettle, an alliance official and former aide to Republican Sen. John Hoeven. "I think they can well be motivated to show up."

It's unclear how many new workers will vote.

Patty Caldwell, who started cleaning trailer houses at North Dakota oil well drilling sites more than a year ago to stave off foreclosure of her home in Oregon, said she wanted to make her voice heard.

"I just figured that I'm part of this community now," said Caldwell, whose company is in New Hradec, a hamlet about 10 miles north of Dickinson. "I have friends here. There's issues that I'm concerned about."

Monty Leonard, who drives a truck for a company that hauls water for the oil industry, came here from Oklahoma two years ago. He is casting his first vote in North Dakota.

Leonard said he has been following the presidential campaign, but is not familiar with the North Dakota candidates.

"I haven't been here very long, so I don't know the people," Leonard said of the candidates.

The potential magnitude of the oilfield vote ? if it votes ? is clearly visible. Across the area, rows of temporary trailers are plunked in the middle of brown, treeless pastures, while smoke-belching earth movers prepare space for new housing developments and business construction.

This year, as many as 4,300 new voters have been added to a state voter database in the nine largest oil-producing counties. That's more people than live in 26 of North Dakota's 53 counties, and a significant number in a state where 160,000 votes could elect either Berg or Heitkamp in their closely fought race.

Almost 533,000 North Dakotans are eligible to vote, a 7 percent increase since the last presidential election, the state Commerce Department says.

Meyer, a Democrat, said she has tried to "hit the new areas" in her re-election campaign.

She said some of the workers had absentee ballot paperwork.

"The vast majority of them that I visited with said, 'We work 16 hours a day, and we have no intention of voting" in North Dakota, she said.

Other lawmakers said they doubted the new residents would be rushing to the polls.

"I don't think they're going to influence (election results) a lot for the local stuff. They're really just doing their work, and sending money home to their families," said state Rep. Bob Skarphol, a Republican from Tioga.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/oil-workers-key-bloc-nd-senate-race-151819797--election.html

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Saturday, November 3, 2012

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Difficult-to-read font reduces political polarity, study finds

ScienceDaily (Nov. 2, 2012) ? Liberals and conservatives who are polarized on certain politically charged subjects become more moderate when reading political arguments in a difficult-to-read font, researchers report in a new study. Likewise, people with induced bias for or against a defendant in a mock trial are less likely to act on that bias if they have to struggle to read the evidence against him.

The study is the first to use difficult-to-read materials to disrupt what researchers call the "confirmation bias," the tendency to selectively see only arguments that support what you already believe, psychology professor Jesse Preston said.

The new research, reported in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, is one of two studies to show that subtle manipulations that affect how people take in information can reduce political polarization. The other study, which explores attitudes toward a Muslim community center near the World Trade Center site, is described in a paper in the journal Social Psychological and Personality Science.

By asking participants to read an overtly political argument about capital punishment in a challenging font, the researchers sought to disrupt participants' usual attitudes to the subject, said graduate student Ivan Hernandez, who led the capital punishment/mock trial study with University of Illinois psychology professor Jesse Preston.

The intervention worked. Liberals and conservatives who read the argument in an easy-to-read font were much more polarized on the subject than those who had to slog through the difficult version.

In a separate experiment, people were shown documents that praised or criticized the behavior of a defendant in a mock trial before they saw the (rather sketchy) evidence against him. As expected, those who read an unflattering account of the defendant's character were much more likely to convict him than those who read a more complimentary report. The two sides were far apart on their assessment of the evidence.

"But when people read a difficult-to-read summary of the evidence, then they became more moderate," Hernandez said. "Those with the positive impression suddenly thought maybe he could be guilty and gave more guilty verdicts than those who had read the evidence in a normal font. And the people who didn't like him started giving more not guilty verdicts relative to before."

The study is the first to use difficult-to-read materials to disrupt what researchers call the "confirmation bias," the tendency to selectively see only arguments that support what you already believe, Preston said. And it is the first to show that the intervention can moderate both deeply held political beliefs as well as newly formed biases, she said.

"Not only are people considering more the opposing point of view but they're also being more skeptical of their own because they're more critically engaging both sides of the argument," she said.

"We showed that if we can slow people down, if we can make them stop relying on their gut reaction -- that feeling that they already know what something says -- it can make them more moderate; it can have them start doubting their initial beliefs and start seeing the other side of the argument a little bit more," Hernandez said.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Ivan Hernandez, Jesse Lee Preston. Disfluency disrupts the confirmation bias. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 2013; 49 (1): 178 DOI: 10.1016/j.jesp.2012.08.010

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/living_well/~3/afRu-FXUxeI/121102151946.htm

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In Kentucky, evacuation enters third day after derailment, fire

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Campaigns lawyered up for election overtime chance

Voters line up at the Downtown West location in Knoxville, Tenn., to cast their early voting ballot on Thursday, Nov. 1, 2012. Early voting in Tennessee ends on Thursday with the general election occurring on Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/Knoxville News Sentinel, Bruce Carillon)

Voters line up at the Downtown West location in Knoxville, Tenn., to cast their early voting ballot on Thursday, Nov. 1, 2012. Early voting in Tennessee ends on Thursday with the general election occurring on Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2012. (AP Photo/Knoxville News Sentinel, Bruce Carillon)

(AP) ? Legions of lawyers are ready to enter the fray in case Election Day turns on a legal challenge. One nightmare scenario would be for the results in a battleground state like Florida or Ohio to be too close to call, with thousands of absentee or provisional ballots yet to be counted.

The key, experts say, is whether the difference in votes between the two candidates is within what's known as the "margin of litigation" ? that is, the number of outstanding votes must be much greater than the margin separating Obama and Romney when the smoke clears. And, it must be in a state that's decisive.

"You'd have to have a state whose Electoral College votes are absolutely pivotal or there would have to be a massive problem involving voters," said Richard Hasen, law professor at the University of California, Irvine, and founding editor of the Election Law Journal. "There not only have to be problems in an election. They have to be widespread enough or the margin close enough that litigating would actually make a difference."

Legal and campaign officials on both sides say lawyers are poised at both the national level and in the key states to respond immediately if a court challenge is needed. The political parties have gained a lot of experience in legal fights over U.S. Senate and House seats. The last major legal battle over the presidency was the 2000 race, settled by the U.S. Supreme Court favoring George W. Bush over Al Gore.

On the Republican side, Washington attorney Benjamin Ginsberg leads the team. Ginsberg was deeply involved in the 2000 court fight as national counsel to the Bush campaign. Ginsberg is assisted by Kathryn Biber, the Romney campaign's general counsel, and Lee Rudofsky, who is the campaign's Election Day operations director.

Calling the shots for the Democrats is Robert Bauer, another well-known Washington lawyer, who is a former Obama White House counsel and Democratic National Committee attorney. Bauer oversees hundreds of lawyers who have volunteered to set up shop in "boiler room" operations in battleground states and across the country.

Both sides will have local attorneys on the team as well.

The Obama campaign will rely on a computerized system to track Election Day incidents in real time. Democratic poll monitors and operatives can call in incidents as they occur and the computer-based system will quickly give campaign officials in Chicago the ability to track and compare the reports and respond quickly.

"No one's going to be flat-footed here, or for that matter anyplace else," said Stephen Hunter Johnson, general counsel to the Miami-Dade County Democratic Party. "Whatever the challenges are, we're up and ready."

The Romney campaign has its own real-time incident response system. Poll workers can press smartphone apps that allow them to link up with campaign officials to report voting irregularities.

Lawyers from both campaigns will observe at targeted polling places, joined by tea party activists and voting abuse critics on the Republican side and civil rights and union groups on the Democratic side. And in crucial battleground states such as Ohio, Florida, Wisconsin and Virginia, Republicans have added legal and political muscle from governors, secretaries of state and GOP-dominated legislatures.

Some legal skirmishes have already begun. Bauer, for instance, wrote this week to Wisconsin's secretary of state raising questions about reports that some Romney poll watchers were being trained with information that could mislead or intimidate voters. State officials said they did not find evidence of egregious transgressions, but the issue could resurface in a potential postelection legal fight.

In a new memo issued Friday, Bauer complained that a Romney campaign video used in Iowa instructed poll workers to check voters for photo identification even though the state does not require them. A Romney campaign official Friday dismissed the allegations as legal bluster.

"We stand by the accuracy of our training materials," Romney campaign spokesman Ryan Williams said.

Election law experts say it's most likely that litigation over the presidency would come down to Florida or Ohio and probably involve either absentee ballots or provisional votes, meaning those that must be verified later by local election officials for a variety of reasons, such as a voter showing up at the wrong precinct, not having proper identification or having their eligibility to vote called into question by a poll watcher.

Edward Foley, director of the election law program at Ohio State University, came up with a hypothetical scenario in which Romney leads Ohio by 10,000 votes the day after the election ? but there are 150,000 outstanding provisional ballots that must be examined. Ohio law gives voters 10 days, until Nov. 17, to provide officials with any information needed to show they are eligible to vote.

Under this scenario, if Obama were trailing, Foley said the president's legal team would try to "rescue" as many provisional ballots as possible and likely would head to court to obtain lists of voters' names they could contact.

That would mean Americans might not know the identity of their next president until well into November.

The provisional votes also could come up in Florida, the other big battleground state. University of Florida political science professor Daniel Smith noted than in the August primary about 22 percent of all provisional ballots were rejected by local canvassing boards. That too could become a source of court battles over the validity of such rejections, if the initial outcome in Florida is close enough.

"There's no question we're going to have a boatload of provisional ballots as well as overseas ballots that are not going to be tabulated until after Nov. 6," Smith said.

Sometimes evidence of election problems doesn't lead to litigation, even though it could. In 2004, Democratic nominee John Kerry initially refused to concede because of issues with provisional ballots and other problems in Ohio. But the day after the election, when Bush's lead in the state swelled to about 100,000 votes, it was clear a court fight wouldn't matter and the Democratic lawyers backed off.

It's all about the margin, said Johnson of the Miami-Dade Democrats, who said:

"Litigation can be expected unless there's a clear outcome on Election Day."

___

Braun reported from Washington.

___

Follow Curt Anderson on Twitter: http://twitter.com/Miamicurt

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-11-02-Campaign-Lawyering%20Up/id-cd83e8c94e184aaebda1526b7e4e3d09

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Breezy Point residents wonder where help is

Miranda Leitsinger/ NBC News

Joe Adinolfi, a firefighter, and John Manning, an EMT, stand in the front of the home of Manning's mother in Breezy Point, N.Y. Her basement was flooded, and the pair said they were concerned about getting the services needed to help with the cleanup as the temperatures chilled. The community lost more than 100 homes to a fire triggered by Hurricane Sandy, and many others were damaged or destroyed by flooding in the storm.

By Miranda Leitsinger, NBC News

BREEZY POINT, N.Y. -- Some residents in Breezy Point, a tiny seaside community in New York inundated by flooding and ravaged by a fire triggered by Hurricane Sandy, questioned Wednesday when help would arrive from the American Red Cross, the National Guard, and the Sanitation Department and other city agencies that would provide key services.

While they cleaned their homes of the debris, some worried about rotting food and mold, while others said it would be nice to have a blanket or a hot cup of tea or coffee as the New York weather dipped into the low 50s with chilly gusts off the ocean making it feel even colder. Others asked about getting dumpsters or a temporary cell tower, since a weak signal made it very tough to make calls after the disaster.

?Don?t leave us. Don?t leave us,? said John Manning, a 45-year-old EMT with the New York Fire Department. His friend, firefighter Joe Adinolfi, said he had for the first time less than an hour before spotted the Red Cross in Breezy Point, where the fire claimed more than 100 homes.


?I understand there's casualties and tragedy everywhere, and I?m sure they are spread out thin,? Manning said.

He noted that firefighters and police were assisting the community, and that there were casualties and destruction elsewhere, but he said he had seen workers from city agencies come down to Breezy Point and take photos -- and then leave without helping.

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?That?s very disheartening. A community has a hardship, a total disaster,? he said. ?Help us, don't come down and take pictures.?

As he stood in ankle-high water in the basement of his mother?s flooded house, where streams of pink insulation hung in rows, he said that he was overwhelmed by the cleanup prospect and the disaster that had struck his community. His sister?s house nearby was damaged as was his own, too.

?I'm numb. I have no emotions,? he said. ?And I know it?s going to come. I?m going to break down real soon. ? I?m just numb. I?m overwhelmed.?

NBC's Kerry Sanders takes an aerial look at the Breezy Point community in Queens, New York, which suffered a devastating fire during this week's storm and still has flood waters filling the desolate streets.

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/01/14863522-dont-leave-us-breezy-point-residents-wonder-when-help-will-come?lite

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Asia stocks mixed ahead of BOJ meeting

BANGKOK (AP) ? Asian stock markets were mixed Monday, with traders widely expecting the Bank of Japan to announce new measures to help the country break out of its deflationary slump.

The central bank's monetary policy committee meets Tuesday and is expected to grapple yet again with the country's longstanding economic doldrums.

"The faster-than-expected deterioration in the economy requires further policy support from the central bank," analysts at DBS Bank Ltd. in Singapore said in a market commentary. "Market expectations are building that the BOJ will ease policy again."

The Nikkei 225 in Tokyo rose marginally to 8,937.796, giving up some morning gains. South Korea's Kospi reversed course and fell 0.2 percent to 1,888.62. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 gained 0.3 percent to 4,485. Benchmarks in the Philippines and India rose while Singapore fell. Mainland Chinese shares were mixed.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 0.2 percent to 21,499.09, with property shares leading the way down in the wake of an announcement by the government to tamp down prices by imposing a 15 percent tax on nonresident buyers of Hong Kong properties.

"I think they blame the nonresident buyers, mainly from China's mainland, for driving up the prices of residential properties in Hong Kong," said Francis Lun, managing director of Lyncean Holdings in Hong Kong. "But any kind of control is not good. You will distort the market. The key is to increase the supply."

The tax will also apply to companies to close a loophole that has seen companies buying up residences and then transferring them to nonresidents.

Hong Kong-listed Henderson Land Development Co. plummeted 8.1 percent and Sino Land Co. slid 6.3 percent.

Japanese car maker Honda Motor Corp. fell 4.2 percent after lowering its forecasts for fiscal year 2013 due to a recent sales drop in China sparked by a territorial dispute.

On Wall Street on Friday, stocks finished mixed after investors found little to like in weak corporate earnings reports and news of only tepid growth in the U.S. economy in the third quarter.

The government estimated that the U.S. economy expanded at a 2 percent annual rate from July through September. That was better than the previous quarter but not strong enough to bring down the unemployment rate.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.03 percent to close at 13,107.21. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 0.07 percent, to 1,411.94. The Nasdaq composite rose 0.06 percent to 2,987.95.

Benchmark oil for December delivery was down 37 cents to $85.91 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose 23 cents to finish at $86.28 in New York on Friday.

In currencies, the dollar rose to 79.68 yen from 79.66 yen late Friday in New York. The euro fell to $1.2928 from $1.2932.

___

Follow Pamela Sampson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/pamelasampson

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asia-stocks-mixed-ahead-boj-meeting-050738582--finance.html

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Beats vs obsessions, columns vs. blogs, and other angels dancing on pins

It seems we like dichotomies when discussing changes in the media. We pick two words, and then fight over them.

I have no intention to revisit the stale old debate about journalists vs. bloggers, as it was silly to begin with, and was resolved back in 2005, oh wait, in 2008, or was it in 2009, or, oh, OK, in 2010?ah, well.

That old debate was just un-serious. People who used to write anti-blog screeds did a dereliction of journalistic duty, writing pieces about phenomena they knew nothing about, and did not bother to get informed and educated about. All the scorn that was heaped upon them at the time was fully deserved.

I am more interested in some more recent discussions, where two words are compared by people who put some thought into it and wrote interesting pieces about it, not just knee-jerk emotional reactions. Perhaps there is nothing to it, in the end, but I?d like to know at least WHY is it so important to so many people in the media to have these discussions in the first place.

Beats vs obsessions

Recent launch of Quartz, an innovative online magazine, incited a round of articles and blog posts discussing the distinction between traditional media ?beats? and the new concept, inaugurated by Quartz, of ?obsessions?.

The distinction is fuzzy, to say the least, and not everyone can figure out the difference yet. The ?obsessions? are just another effort at replacing ?beats?, now seen as an archaic concept originating in the necessities of internal organization of media outlets printing on paper.

I guess the main difference people are noting is that obsessions are narrower ? in scope of the topic, or (geographic) space, or in time. A crime beat is a broad category. Obsessively following every detail of a particular crime for a while until it?s solved (or there is nothing more to say), is an obsession. Once the story is over, obsession is closed, and the reporter moves to a new topic.

But another way the difference is explained is that an obsession is actually broader, not narrower, by being multidisciplinary. Instead of looking at many stories from one angle, it focuses on a single story from many angles. This may be a way to solve some Wicked Problems. So, looking at the Big Picture of crime, e.g., causes of crime and what measures potentially reduce crime in various parts of the globe, cultures, past eras, etc, from every angle possible, is also an obsession.

Finally, the third difference I saw in these articles, is the question of institutional organization. A beat is organized to cover a particular institution. Crime beat is coverage of cops and courts and prisons, not sociological causes of crime, or lives of criminals. You don?t cover war, you cover the military. You don?t cover policy, you cover Congress. You don?t cover education, you cover schools and school boards. You don?t cover health and medicine, you cover hospitals.

You learn the jargon, you learn their rules and laws, you learn who?s'who in that institution, and you make nice with your sources in institutions you cover. An obsession breaks out of those boundaries and covers a phenomenon or topic or theme from a perspective of people interested in that topic, different angles your audience brings to it. You need to be much more responsive, do more listening and less preaching. Notice how SciAm categories are not disciplinary (e.g., Astronomy, Physics, Chemistry, Biology?), but broader themes as people are interested in them (Evolution, Space, Energy & Environment, Mind & Brain, Technology?).

Columnists vs. bloggers

At about the same time, another distinction arose, that between columnists and bloggers (see the Storify of tweets of this discussion as well).

Here, the distinction IS essentially zero.

But let?s not confuse IS with OUGHT.

Obviously some people see a difference and are trying to put their finger on where exactly it is. Is column edited, blog not? Mostly yes, but there are edited blogs and un-edited columns.

Are blogs online, columns on paper? Everything is online these days (and everything can and sometimes is re-purposed for the print edition as well, or vice versa in old-skool organizations that are not digital-first yet but are still somehow surviving).

Columns have word-limits, blogs don?t (thus blog posts tend to be longer than columns)? Online, there is no need for word-limits no matter what the format.

Columns are paid, blogs are not? Ask all the professional bloggers about it, heh, though this may still somewhat persist quantitatively rather than qualitatively, with columnists being paid at a higher rate than bloggers for purely historically contingent reasons, not tied to quantity or quality of writing. There is also a balance of control in play, i.e., more you pay someone, more editorial control you can exert over that person?s work, but can reciprocate by giving the dignified title of ?columnist?.

This blog network has three bloggers who consider themselves to be columnists. They started out as columnists in traditional media, and feel insecure without the safety net of copy-editors. Those three bloggers? posts do get copy-edited (and if necessary edited, though not by me ? I only edit Guest Blog and Expeditions with its outside authors). Other bloggers know they can use our copy-editing services, but it never occurs to them to ask ? they are used to doing everything themselves without a safety net. I did the kindest, gentlest arm-twisting to persuade the three columnists to use the word ?blogger? when they refer to themselves, for a number of reasons. First, everyone is equal, and I do not want to have perceptions that some people are more equal than others. If you use blogging software, you are a blogger. But more importantly, the word ?blogger? gives you more freedom. Let me explain?

Column is an old term, and we all have a pretty good idea what it is, what to expect when we read one. There are traditions in length, form, format, language, tone, style, etc. Those traditions are now overly restrictive. On the other hand, word ?blog? is new and still being defined. It is about regular posting online, with experimentation being an important aspect of it ? all kinds of lengths, forms, voices, styles etc can be used and nobody will find it unusual if the site is called a ?blog?. Photoblogs, podcasts, videoblogs, are just as unsurprising as purely textual ones. Humor, funny photoshops, or profanity are just as ?normal? on blogs as are long treatises, deep expertise and long lists of references. Heck, just look around our network: huge diversity of styles and forms, even though you can argue that the range of ?acceptable? is narrower here than in the blogosphere as a whole.

Emotional effect of words

A few days ago, I discussed the distinction between beats and obsessions with a veteran journalist who?s been doing this for decades. We discovered that we have very different, essentially opposite, emotional reactions to those two words.

For him, the word ?beat? denotes something regular, steady, reliable and predictable, like a beat of a metronome, or heartbeat. Something that is comfortable and comforting. On the other hand, ?obsession? seemed dangerous to him, unpredictable, almost pathological. Obsessed people are not reliable, one never knows what crazy thing they will do next.

For me, the word ?beat? has a negative connotation. It is something aggressive, implying violence, as in ?beating the dead horse?, or self-satisfactory, as in ?beating off?. On the other hand, for me ?obsession? is a sister-word to ?passion?. Without obsession, work is not worth doing. Without obsession, love is not worth loving. Without obsession, or passion, nobody will do anything risky and innovative, which is what we need in times of disruption of the entire system. During ten years in research, I was obsessed with it, thinking, dreaming, doing and breathing my science 24/7. I am just as obsessed with science communication, building the new media ecosystem, and discovering/promoting new writing talent now.

I was stunned by this difference in our reactions. Perhaps this is because English is second language to me, so my impressions of the words are colored by the context in which I first encountered them years ago when I was learning English? Or is it due to our temperamental (or even age) differences, me being always anti-authoritarian and kinda revolutionary, always proselytizing the new thing, the new order? Am I the one being crazy here?

So (and thanks to K.R. for giving me this idea in the first place), I checked the original etymologies of the two words. Apparently, we are both half-right. Both words are aggressive. The etymology of ?beat? indeed has something to do with physical violence. But etymology of ?obsession? is just as bad ? implying near-possession by demons! But words evolve?

As someone who entered the media horizontally (from science to blogging to newsroom) as opposed to vertically (through j-school, or starting in the mailroom and working my way up), I am not emotionally wed to terms like ?beat?, or ?column?. For me, they have the patina of the old days of constraining tradition, not the comfort of ?good old days? I don?t remember (or don?t remember as ?good?).

On the other hand, whenever one encounters a new word (or a word new to the person), it always looks strange. One way to deal with strangeness is to find it funny and laugh. This was the commonly voiced reaction by curmudgeon journalists to the new words like ?blog? and ?twitter?. If they find the word funny, then the phenomena those words denote are not worth studying or taking seriously, but are perfectly OK to make fun of in public. They thought they were savvy, but they quickly discovered they looked stupid, in public. They fell for their own emotional reactions.

Oh, did I mention I hate the word ?verticals?? How uni-dimensional (and hierarchical) for a network that is the Web!

Other subtle effects of words

There is another subtle difference in the way I subconsciously (well, consciously as of today) respond to the words ?beat? and ?obsession?.

Beat is repeated action. Obsession is a continuous action.

Oh, wait! Column writing is a repeated action. Blogging is a continuous action.

Or rather, beat (and column) is a repeated action, it?s work. Obsession and blogging are constant emotions that spur one into action all the time, out of love.

This is something related to a theme I often talk about (and write about, e.g,. here and here).

Blogging, unlike writing a column (or writing news pieces, or features, etc.), rarely produces stand-alone pieces that can be read in a vacuum. Blogging at its best is a series of posts, each building on what was previously written, and each connected to what other people have written (or what one has written elsewhere).

I have a beat here at my blog. Animal physiology and behavior, especially in respect to time (daily and seasonal rhythms), and especially when studied out in the field, within ecological and evolutionary contexts. Most of my blog posts on those topics are more or less stand-alone pieces. They link to scientific papers, or media coverage, but rarely link to my older posts.

I also have an obsession ? studying the way the media ecosystem is changing. My blog posts on this topic are all connected. Which is why, just like the one you are reading right now, my posts on this obsession are chock-full of links, both to my older posts (so you can see where I am coming from, how my thinking evolved, etc) and to other people?s writing (to see the context within which I am thinking, who are the other people who are influencing me, etc).

A number of our other editors also do both. They produce perfectly traditional self-contained news pieces for the Observations blog (and elsewhere on the site, or in the print magazine), and fantastically gripping, innovative and experimental blog posts on their own personal blogs here (see their blogs on the pull-down menu above: Brainwaves, Streams of Consciousness, Talking Back, Octopus Chronicles, Budding Scientist, Critical Opalescence, Degrees of Freedom).

Our network bloggers are all over the spectrum here ? most have some topics that are beats, some topics that are obsessions. For example, John Platt has a beat ? endangered species (though he does obsess about a couple of species he writes about over and over again). Cassie Rodenberg has an obsession ? addiction, from every possible angle: chemical, medical, societal, historical, ethical, legal, political, psychological, journalistic, artistic, and even personal. One can read most of Platt?s posts in isolation. One has to read many of Rodenberg?s posts before becoming acquainted with her enough to be able to, for example, post an appropriate comment.

So, most of us here on the network are sometimes columnists, sometimes bloggers, sometimes just wonderful storytellers, and sometimes something in-between. And that is probably the best. It is up to readers to recognize where they have just landed after following a link to a blog post. Is it a traditional piece that stands alone? Or is it a post that is one of many in a series, and digging through the archives and following for a few weeks or months are needed to really start understanding what is going on ? at which point you will be richly rewarded because you have discovered a person with unique expertise and unique voice?

And this brings us to the next pair of words journos love to discuss: generalists vs. specialists.

Generalists vs. specialists

The Web has allowed many angles, many points of view, and yes, many truths to be available to everyone. Some of those angles and truths are more legitimate than others, but who?s the referee any more? It used to be the gatekeepers of the traditional media, but with so many voices out there now, and the trust in traditional media at a historic low, the MSM is not a referee of truth any more. It cannot do that as an institution, but it can regain some of it by hiring people who are referees of truth by virtue of having the relevant expertise.

Landing on the New York Times page after you followed a link tells you something about it, to a certain extent. You still have to figure out if you trust the article you are about to read. Your expectations are higher than if it was Daily Mail, but you are still on guard. How do you decide in advance? By the name in the byline. If it is Maureen Dowd, you expect entertainment, but not much depth. If it?s David Brooks, you expect seductively beautiful writing that is based on pseudo-sociology he picked out of thin air to conform to his ideology. But if it?s Paul Krugman, you know you will get a better understanding of some aspect of economics because the guy knows his stuff ? he is an expert.

Every expert will have naysayers. There is always some fringe group that for emotional, political or financial reasons has an interest in promoting an alternative, illegitimate ?truth? (see: global warming denialists, creationists, anti-vaxxers, anti-GMOs, animal rightists, etc). But for most people, expertise matters. Most people rightfully believe what Krugman says about economics. I hope people believe me when I write something about circadian rhythms. Expertise counts.

Expertise does not require a PhD in the topic. There are several bloggers on this science blogs network that came originally from English degrees, or journalism. But they developed obsessions for some areas of science, and over the years they became experts. And you know they are experts because they keep writing about it over and over again, they back up their claims with copious links to trustworthy sources, and they get general agreement from other experts in the same field in the comments or in responses on their own blogs. Over time, they earned respect and reputation for being experts on the topics they usually write about (and nothing wrong with occasionally using the blog to test new ideas in a new field, as a learning tool, perhaps as a test for moving from the old obsession to a new one).

A generalist who covers a different topic each time will never become known for expertise in any group of readers passionate about any of those topics. The articles and posts may be OK, but they will never be as inspiring or awesome as articles written by experts. A generalist may gain reputation among editors as a reliable freelancer who does good work, meets deadlines, is easy to work with and does not require too much time and effort to edit. But that reputation is inside baseball, it does not turn the writer into a personal brand, but one dependent on (usually declining, and often disappearing) institutional brands. In the world of ?Friends in Low Places?, that is probably not the best strategy.

Thus, it is not surprising that j-schools are now trying to train experts, though that may be misguidedly turned into training computer programmers instead of journalists. Furthermore, some places are now taking existing experts and turning them into journalists.

When an expert keeps writing, that is more likely to be an obsession than a beat. It is more likely to look like a blog than a column. It will be continuous, rather than repeatable. It will be a constantly developing corpus of work, rather than a collection of unrelated articles. It will be an opportunity to gain regular audience and to build reputation, respect and a personal brand that is easy to move from one institution to another (or to freelancing). A person with a brand is attractive to hire by media organizations that understand that their institutional brand depends on the quality and reputation of the expert writers they hired ? as bloggers, treated and paid as if they were columnists of yore.

?Bloggers vs. journalists? really makes no sense any more, does it?

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=b735d02e43e61322278c6755d15d943c

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