Saturday, January 26, 2013

Intero Real Estate Services Finds the Luxury Market Hot Through the ...

Cupertino, CA WASHINGTON, D.C. ? January 25, 2013 ? (RealEstateRama) ? The holidays are traditionally a quiet time for buyers and sellers of luxury homes, but Intero Real Estate Services found different this season closing on several Prestigio listings recently. Intero?s luxury property marketing program, Intero Prestigio has been in effect since last March and has definitely seen much success in its first year.

?Case in point, year over year through November, Intero registered an increase of 73% of listings sold over $1.5M, the entry level to tier 1 of the Prestigio program,? says Alain Pinel, Senior Vice President/General Manager Intero Prestigio international. ?It?s been a strong year for the luxury market and we?re looking forward to 2013 being even better,? says Gino Blefari, President and CEO of Intero Real Estate Services. ?The Prestigio program has helped us to make our mark in the high-end.?

Four of the most notable homes sold included 16350 Matilija Drive. Located in Los Gatos, the property is a modern architectural masterpiece. Sold for $6,500,000, the home includes a breathtaking view of San Jose to San Francisco through its floor to ceiling windows.

The second home, listed by Cathy Jackson of Intero?s Los Gatos office and Karen Black of Intero?s Willow Glen office, sold for $6,000,000. 221 Jackson Street located in Los Gatos is approximately 10,700 square feet of Mediterranean charm on a 1.7 acre lot. The property includes an electronically gated entrance, 3 car garage, wine cellar, exercise room, mahogany paneled library, and cabana.

The third property at 1171 Ruth Drive was also listed by Cathy Jackson of Intero?s Los Gatos office alongside Kris Myers of Intero?s Willow Glen office. The property which is located in San Jose?s extremely desirable Willow Glen neighborhood sold for $1,550,000. Custom built, the home is full of exquisite details including beautiful flooring, high ceilings, and extensive molding with quality finishes.

The fourth home of mention closed in the beginning of January to kick start 2013. 388 Marich Way located in Los Altos sold for $2,416,000 by Dominic Nicoli of the Intero Los Altos office. This custom Mediterranean style home was built in 2005 with every detail considered. A 5 bedroom, 4.5 bathroom home with approximately 4,345 square feet on an approximate 10,200 square foot lot, features an enchanting courtyard, beautiful marble staircase, gourmet kitchen, luxurious master retreat and three courtyard terraces.

When asked about her experience with the Prestigio program, Cathy Jackson states, ?It?s quite amazing what [agents] can take advantage of through the Prestigio program. The broad marketing plan, which includes extensive international exposure, was definitely a factor in our ability to sell quickly. Having everything outlined from the beginning helped to keep our clients in the loop regarding what marketing was taking place when. Intero agents are lucky to have this unique program to take advantage of.?

To see more homes like these and learn more about Intero Prestigio visit www.interoprestigio.com.

Tagged as: luxury, Luxury Marke

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  • Intero Real Estate Services announces new Vice President of Community and Government Relations
    CUPERTINO, SILICON VALLEY, USA - January 15, 2012 - (RealEstateRama) -- Governance and Community Philanthropy veteran, David Casas, teams with Intero Real Estate Services to manage and expand the company's strategic relationships with legislators and global communities. Mr. Casas will work directly with local, state, and federal governments, as well as directing relationships with communities-based, regulatory, and advocacy organizations...

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Source: http://www.realestaterama.com/2013/01/25/intero-real-estate-services-finds-the-luxury-market-hot-through-the-winter-ID018388.html

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Access Hollywood section

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Source: http://www.today.com/id/7358550/ns/today-entertainment/

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Brains vs. immunity: Genes hint at tug of war

Mandel Ngan / AFP - Getty Images file

A skull from an ancient specimen of Homo sapiens (foreground, right) is compared with a Neanderthal's skull at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History in Washington. Researchers suggest that a gene linked to the immune system played a roundabout role in brain evolution.

By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

Scientists say our genes contain the hints of an evolutionary tug of war that took place in the wombs of our ancestors, balancing the drive to bigger brains with the need for a strong immune system.

The push and pull of these genetic variants apparently became more pronounced after pre-humans branched off from the ancestors of chimpanzees, according to biologists Peter Parham of Stanford University and Ashley Moffett of the University of Cambridge.

Two years ago, Parham and other researchers suggested that interbreeding with now-extinct cousins such as Neanderthals and Denisovans may have given early humans a boost of immunity. Parham says the same kind of cross-species hanky-panky may have played a role in the genetic diversity that he and Moffett discuss in a paper published online by?Nature Reviews Immunology.


"It quite nicely dovetails with all this other stuff," Parham told NBC News. "There is an inherent instability in the way the underlying mechanism works."

How natural killers work
The two biologists focus on how particular types of white blood cells, known as natural killer cells, work in the human immune system. In addition to fighting infections and tumors, natural killer cells help regulate the growth of the placenta during pregnancy. Humans are unique among primates in having two variants of the genes that control the receptors for natural killer cells.

"B haplotypes are favored during reproduction. A haplotypes are more specialized toward defending against infections," Parham explained. "These are subtle effects. On average, if you're an individual that has two A haplotypes and no B haplotype, you're going to have a slightly more robust immune system in terms of dealing with disease."

Having two B haplotypes, in contrast, would allow for a more robust placenta. That would provide the fetus in the womb with more of the nutrients needed to grow a bigger brain. "In the course of human evolution, you had the evolution of these B haplotypes, which really did enable the brain to get bigger. ... There are correlations between the size of the brain of the baby and these genetic factors," Parham said.

A detailed analysis of human genetic diversity suggests that the genes for the B haplotype emerged in the time frame lasting from about 7 million years ago to 1.7 million years ago. That?would cover a period starting with the divergence of human and chimp ancestors, and ending with the human migration out of Africa.

The A-vs.-B breakdown is found in all present-day human populations, suggesting that both variants were important to have for different situations. Parham and Moffett speculate that the A variant was important when a population was facing a disease epidemic, while the B variant became important for brain-building once the epidemic passed.

The role of the birth canal
When our ancestors began walking upright, that introduced another push-pull effect for brain size. "It's difficult to document, but it's generally thought in the field of obstetrics that birthing is more difficult for humans than it is for other species," Parham said. The dimensions and layout of the human birth canal is one constraint: If a baby's skull were to get significantly bigger, it wouldn't fit through the canal.

Scientists in Germany have captured the first video of a childbirth using an MRI scanner. TODAY.com's Richard Lui reports.

Another constraint is pregnancy's effect on the mother's cardiovascular system. In some situations, a potentially fatal condition known as preeclampsia can occur.

"Part of the compromise is that the human population has tolerated a certain amount of death in childbirth, due to obstructed labor or preeclampsia. ... Both of these types of death in childbirth have been quite common in our species, as has been documented in so many 19th-century novels," Parham said.

The genetic record indicates that the human species passed through a series of "bottlenecks" in prehistoric times that reduced population diversity to perilously low levels. That's where interbreeding with Neanderthals could have played a part. "One way that modern humans replenished the genetic diversity lost in populations was through the selection of new variants ... another, and possibly more effective, mechanism was to acquire old variants by mating with archaic humans," Parham and Moffett write.

Today, modern medicine has leveled the evolutionary playing field. But in ancient times, all these genetic and physiological factors seem to have interacted to make our brains what they are today.

"Basically, we've got the nervous system and the brain putting pressure on the immune system and the reproductive system," Parham said.

More about human evolution:


Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page?to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/24/16682451-big-brains-vs-strong-immunity-genes-hint-at-evolutionary-tug-of-war?lite

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Myanmar rebels say army ignoring president's ceasefire

YANGON (Reuters) - Myanmar's president said on Sunday he wanted peace talks with all ethnic rebel groups in the country, but government troops again attacked rebel positions in Kachin State in the northeast despite his order to cease fire, rebels and a local source said.

President Thein Sein had issued the ceasefire order on Friday to troops in the La Ja Yang area of Kachin State near the border with China, where fighting has been fiercest.

It was due to take effect on Saturday morning, but Colonel James Lum Dau, Thai-based spokesman for the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), told Reuters the army had continued to attack over the weekend, both in La Ja Yang and elsewhere in the state.

Thein Sein denied that the army, known as the Tamadaw, aimed to capture Laiza, where the KIA and its political arm, the Kachin Independence Organization (KIO), have their headquarters.

"Now the Tamadaw members are an arm's length from the KIA/KIO headquarters in Laiza but I have ordered them not to occupy Laiza," he said at a meeting with non-governmental groups in Yangon, the commercial capital.

"In order to gain sustainable peace all over the country, there is no other way but to hold talks at the negotiating table as soon as possible," he added.

A 17-year ceasefire with the KIA broke down in June 2011 and fighting has been particularly intense in recent weeks.

Twenty months of fighting has displaced tens of thousands of people and, for some analysts, raised doubts about the sincerity of all the political and economic reforms pursued by Thein Sein in Myanmar, also known as Burma.

On Saturday, addressing a development forum attended by donor countries and international aid organizations, Thein Sein had invited the Kachin rebels to a "political dialogue" with the government and ethnic rebel groups from other states. No date was given.

Ten other major rebel groups have already agreed ceasefires.

The KIA's Lum Dau said an offensive in La Ja Yang from about 8 a.m. on Sunday morning (8:30 p.m. EST Saturday) had involved artillery and infantry.

A local source in Kachin, who did not want to be identified, confirmed the army attacks on Sunday, including one on a rebel position about five miles (eight km) from Laiza. Fighter jets had flown over the area but had not attacked, the source said.

New York-based Human Rights Watch last week accused the army of indiscriminately shelling Laiza.

Loud explosions were also heard by residents of the town of Mai Ja Yang who felt the vibrations, the source said.

MORE GOODWILL NEEDED

Lum Dau said the KIA had sent the president a reply saying it would not attend talks until there was more evidence of goodwill on the government side, involving a ceasefire in the whole state, or at least a big reduction in fighting.

"We already agreed to a ceasefire in 1994 and look at where we are now ... We didn't break any agreement," he said, expressing KIA mistrust of central government that has persisted even after Thein Sein took office in 2011 at the head of a quasi-civilian government after half a century of military rule.

The KIO said in a statement that "the government should reduce offensive operations all over Kachin State instead of suspending operations in La Ja Yang region". Further clarification of its demands was not immediately available.

Lum Dau said the government was simply buying time and would use any ceasefire to prepare another assault on rebel positions.

He argued that it had only agreed to the partial ceasefire in response to diplomatic pressure from the United States and others, including China, which called for a halt to fighting on January 15 after a shell landed on its side of the border.

There was no immediate response from the government to the accusations of continued attacks in La Ja Yang but it said rebels were responsible for violence elsewhere in Kachin.

Presidential spokesman Ye Htut said rebels attacked Kamine police station in the Phakant area early on Saturday, killing two policemen, wounding five and setting the building on fire.

He also blamed rebels for setting off mines that wounded about 20 people in cars on the road from Bamaw to Lwejei on Saturday.

(Writing and additional reporting by Alan Raybould; Editing by Nick Macfie and Daniel Magnowski)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/myanmar-rebels-army-ignoring-presidents-ceasefire-073241496.html

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Two antiscience bills in Oklahoma | NCSE

Two antiscience bills, Senate Bill 758 and House Bill 1674, have been prefiled in the Oklahoma legislature.

First, Senate Bill 758 (document), styled the Oklahoma Science Education Act, would, if enacted, require state and local educational authorities to "assist teachers to find more effective ways to present the science curriculum where it addresses scientific controversies" and permit teachers to "help students understand, analyze, critique, and review in an objective manner the scientific strengths and scientific weaknesses of existing scientific theories pertinent to the course being taught." Unusually but not uniquely, no scientific topics are specifically identified as controversial, but the fact that the sole sponsor of SB 758 is Josh Brecheen (R-District 6), who introduced specifically antievolution legislation in the two previous legislative sessions, is telling.

In late 2010, Brecheen announced his intention to file antievolution legislation in a column in the Durant Daily Democrat (December 19, 2010): "Renowned scientists now asserting that evolution is laden with errors are being ignored. ... Using your tax dollars to teach the unknown, without disclosing the entire scientific findings[,] is incomplete and unacceptable." In a subsequent column in the newspaper (December 24, 2010), he indicated that his intention was to have creationism presented as scientifically credible, writing, "I have introduced legislation requiring every publically funded Oklahoma school to teach the debate of creation vs. evolution using the known science, even that which conflicts with Darwin's religion."

What Brecheen in fact introduced in 2011, Senate Bill 554, combined a version of the now familiar "academic freedom" language ? referring to "the scientific strengths [and] scientific weaknesses of controversial topics ... [which] include but are not limited to biological origins of life and biological evolution" ? with a directive for the state board of education to adopt "standards and curricula" that echo the flawed portions of the state science standards adopted in Texas in 2009 with respect to the nature of science and evolution. SB 554 died in committee. In 2012, Brecheen took a new tack with Senate Bill 1742, modeled in part on the so-called Louisiana Science Education Act; SB 1742 likewise died in committee.

With SB 758, Brecheen seems now to be following the lead of Tennessee's "monkey law" (as it was nicknamed by House Speaker Emeritus Jimmy Naifeh), enacted (as Tenn. Code Ann. 49-6-1030) over the protests of the state's scientific and educational communities in 2012. The major difference is that SB 758 omits the monkey law's statement of legislative findings, which cites "biological evolution, the chemical origins of life, global warming, and human cloning" as among the topics that "can cause controversy" when taught in the science classroom of the public schools. The history of Brecheen's legislative efforts clearly demonstrates that it is evolution which is primarily the target of the new bill, however.

Second, House Bill 1674 (document), styled the Scientific Education and Academic Freedom Act, would, if enacted, similarly require state and local educational authorities to "assist teachers to find more effective ways to present the science curriculum where it addresses scientific controversies" and permit teachers to "help students understand, analyze, critique, and review in an objective manner the scientific strengths and scientific weaknesses of existing scientific theories pertinent to the course being taught." Unlike SB 768, however, HB 1674 specifically mentions "biological evolution, the chemical origins of life, global warming, and human cloning" as subjects which "some teachers may be unsure" about how to teach.

The sole sponsor of HB 1674 is Gus Blackwell (R-District 61). In 2012, Blackwell revived House Bill 1551, which was originally introduced in the Oklahoma House of Representatives by Sally Kern (R-District 84) in 2011. HB 1551 was rejected in the House Common Education Committee in 2011, but Blackwell resurrected the bill in 2012, adding a reference to controversial "premises in the areas of biology, chemistry, meteorology, bioethics and physics." The revised bill quickly passed the House Common Education Committee, which amended it slightly to provide "Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to exempt students from learning, understanding, and being tested on curriculum as prescribed by state and local education standards."

HB 1551 passed the House of Representatives on March 15, 2012, by which time it managed to attract condemnation from national scientific and educational organizations. The American Association for the Advancement of Science's chief executive officer Alan I. Leshner expressed his concerns with the bill, for example, writing (PDF) in a March 21, 2012, letter, "There is virtually no scientific controversy among the overwhelming majority of researchers on the core facts of global warming and evolution," and adding, "asserting that there are significant scientific controversies about the overall nature of these concepts when there are none will only confuse students, not enlighten them." HB 1551 died in the Senate Education Committee in April 2012.

The new bill, HB 1674, is apparently identical to the final version of HB 1551 as passed by the House of Representatives and unconsidered by the Senate, and only slightly different from Oklahoma's Senate Bill 320 from 2009, which a member of the Senate Education Committee memorably described to the Tulsa World (February 17, 2009) as one of the worst bills that he had ever seen. In its detailed critique (PDF) of SB 320, Oklahomans for Excellence in Science Education argued, "Promoting the notion that there is some scientific controversy is just plain dishonest." With respect to the supposed "weaknesses" of evolution, OESE added, "they are phony fabrications, invented and promoted by people who don't like evolution."

Concerned Oklahomans are urged to get in touch with Eric Meikle at NCSE and Oklahomans for Excellence in Science Education.

Source: http://ncse.com/news/2013/01/two-antiscience-bills-oklahoma-0014686

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Friday, January 18, 2013

California teacher fired for porn films loses appeal to keep job

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A California middle school teacher fired for appearing in pornographic scenes under the alias "Tiffany" has lost an appeal to get back into the classroom after a panel found she acted immorally.

The Oxnard school board in April voted unanimously to fire Stacie Halas, 32, over allegations that she was unfit to continue in her job as a teacher at Richard B. Haydock Intermediate School because of her role as a porn actress.

Halas appealed the dismissal, and under state law has been entitled to receive full pay since she was placed on administrative leave in March 2012, said district spokesman Tom DeLapp.

On Friday, a three-person panel of the state Commission on Professional Competence upheld her termination, potentially clearing the way for the Oxnard school board to take her off paid administrative leave. A vote on that was expected later on Wednesday in Oxnard, 50 miles northwest of Los Angeles.

The movies Halas starred in include "Boobaholics Anonymous 2," "Unnatural Sex" and "Who's That Girl," the commission said. She admitted to appearing in about a dozen porn scenes, according to the commission.

Halas, who since early in her educational career was dogged by rumors of her porn career, maintained during her appeal that her work in the industry predated her employment as a full-time, paid teacher.

"Of course we're very disappointed with the decision, and with all due respect to the commission I believe that they have confused Ms. Halas' embarrassment and nervousness concerning her participation in the adult film industry years ago with what they believe is her credibility," said Halas' attorney, Richard Schwab. "She obviously is not a sophisticated woman. She is a very good, hardworking, dedicated teacher."

In upholding her dismissal, the panel discounted Halas' arguments that she appeared in porn scenes because she was left with a crushing debt of $100,000 after a split with her fiance.

The panel instead found she could have opted for bankruptcy or a modification of her student loans, and said she was a poor "role model" for students and had been dishonest with the school district during its investigation.

"Respondent's pornographic scenes may demonstrate for viewers a lack of respect for herself and may send a message that she endorses the degradation of women and deviant sexual behavior," the panel said in its decision.

Halas was in porn scenes shot between December 2005 and August 2006, and during that time also served as a student teacher at elementary campuses in two other school districts, the commission found.

Halas is not the first teacher fired over a porn career. In Florida, a teacher was fired in 2011 when it was revealed he was in gay porn films, but a school commission later reinstated him because he technically did not violate any rules.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Steve Orlofsky)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/california-teacher-fired-porn-films-loses-appeal-keep-225157848.html

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Be Prepared: Reasons to Buy Travel Insurance | 365 Days of Travel

Whether you?re heading off on a round-the-world trip of a lifetime, spending a romantic weekend in a luxurious city centre hotel or taking the kids to a sun-drenched all-inclusive resort, it?s essential to have a solid travel insurance policy in place before you leave.

J. Star versus Temporal Artery, Round 1: FIGHT!
Reasons to Buy Travel InsuranceJ. Star / Foter.com / CC BY-NC-SA

The main reason to take out travel insurance is to obtain complete peace of mind. Insurance allows you to enjoy your holiday safe in the knowledge that, should something unexpected go wrong at any stage, you won?t have to worry about finding the money to sort it out.

For most travellers, the single biggest outlay is the cost of the trip itself. With the rise of DIY holidays where, rather than using travel agents, people source their own flights, hotel accommodation and transfers, insurance has become even more essential. Should an airline, hotel chain or transportation company collapse during your trip, no one will have any obligation to find you an alternative.

Expenses.

Another good reason to buy travel insurance policy is to protect your personal belongings. If your bags are lost or stolen, you may no longer have your passport, credit cards or any way of getting hold of some cash. Many travel insurance policies provide free telephone hotlines that you can call from anywhere in the world and will then arrange to cover all your immediate expenses.

Safeguarding against getting sick or having an accident while on holiday is another key benefit of travel insurance. In parts of Europe that fall outside the EU and in other countries of the world, most notably the United States of America, the cost of emergency medical care can be extremely high. Most travel insurance policies cover this kind of medical treatment that could otherwise easily run to tens of thousands of pounds.

The best policies will also cover additional costs such as the use of an air ambulance. This can be particularly useful if you are going skiing or hiking in remote areas where the cost of taking you to hospital is likely to be higher. Be sure to check the small print of your policy to ensure any sporting or leisure activities you plan to take part in are not excluded.

Cancellation.

If you are forced to cancel your trip at short notice, you risk losing all your money unless you are insured. Most policies only cover cancellation under certain circumstances, such as the death or serious illness of a close relative or a flood taking place at your home while you are away.

Although it may be tempting to keep costs down by simply taking out the cheapest policy you can find, this could turn out to be a false economy. If your policy is not suitable for the trip you are making it could prove to be worse than having no insurance at all. Not only will you have wasted your money, but you will also still be left with a large bill.

Policies vary a great deal in terms of what exactly they cover, so it?s a good idea to shop around. If you take your time and check carefully, it should be possible to find a policy that provides fuller coverage than others, despite costing no more.

Considering how stressful it can be dealing with missed flights, medical emergencies, lost luggage or finding yourself the victim of a crime, knowing that any financial implications are already taken care off can go a long way toward easing your worries.

Source: http://www.365.travel/be-prepared-reasons-to-buy-travel-insurance/

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

ZTE U956 poses for pics, said to offer a 5-inch 720p screen, quad-core CPU

ZTE's 'affordable' U956 poses for pics, reportedly offers 5inch 720p screen, quadcore CPU, 8megapixel camera

ZTE's no stranger to phones that provide more bang for your buck, so it's hardly surprising to see evidence of a new mid-range phablet from the Chinese outfit. The leaked images may not point towards another world first, but the U956 apparently runs Android 4.1.2 and is rumored to pack a 5-inch, 1,280 x 720 display and a quad-core MediaTek MT6589 SoC. There's also support for China's TD-SCDMA networks, while an 8-megapixel camera joins some China Mobile branding on the back. Some specifications are still missing, but if the pricing is as low as expected, the smartphone could likely be an option for penny-pinchers who can't afford its designer cousin.

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Dutch judge agrees with Samsung: iPad's rounded corners are not unique

VentureBeat writes, Rounded corners are not patentable in Holland. A Dutch court has ruled that Samsung?s Galaxy tablets do not infringe Apple?s design patents on its iPad tablet. This new judgement follows Apple?s UK spanking?over the same issue, and the Dutch judge referenced the UK ruling in his judgement. In a statement to Reuters, Samsung twisted the knife: We continue to believe that Apple was not the first to design a tablet with a rectangular shape and rounded corners and that the origins of Apple?s registered design features can be found in numerous examples. While Germany has proved kinder to?

Continue reading Dutch judge agrees with Samsung: iPad?s rounded corners are not unique at VentureBeat

Source: http://mobilitybeat.com/venturebeat-mobile/81191/dutch-judge-agrees-with-samsung-ipads-rounded-corners-are-not-unique/

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