Sunday, May 12, 2013

What to expect from your physical therapist - Cabinet.com

Reader Submitted

Friday, May 10, 2013

By CATHY LEER

Special to the Journal

(This is the last in a three-part series on How to Choose a Physical Therapist.)

Now that you have talked to a physical therapist about possibly starting a treatment program, and he or she has told you what can be done to help you achieve your medical objectives, you need to be aware of what to expect and demand from your PT.

This article covers these key expectations and the red flags to watch for as you select a physical therapist and commit to a treatment program.

What you should expect from your Physical Therapist or physical therapy clinic:

? Highly trained and experienced physical therapists.

? Specific course of treatment based upon a thorough evaluation and identification of the source of your symptoms.

? A single therapist for the duration of your course of treatment.

? Dedicated hands-on care.

? One-on-one care.

? No double-booking.

? No group sessions unless specific to your needs and billed appropriately.

? Private treatment rooms to assure your privacy as well as to assure that your PT is devoting 100 percent of his or her attention to you and your needs.

? Positive changes or results within two weeks. That doesn?t mean that you will be fully recovered by then, but you should have enough change to indicate that you are on the correct plan of care.

? Communication among your health care professionals.

? Courteous and professional care from your physical therapist as well as the entire staff.

? Appropriate transition and inclusion of home exercises to maximize outcome and effectiveness of care and carryover of benefits from treatment to treatment.

? Educated and articulate answers to your questions relative to your condition or to the suggested plan of care.

To recap, here are a few important points or ?red flags? to keep in mind:

Physicians who send you to facilities they own are profiting from the referral, and that brings up an ethical question. What are they more concerned with, their profit or your well-being?

Physicians who are employees of hospitals are generally ?encouraged? to refer to other hospital-owned departments and oftentimes suffer from negative reviews or punishments if they don?t comply (another ethical dilemma).

New graduates, assistants or trainers don?t have the experience, certification or advanced training that PTs with years or decades of experience have. They are less equipped to ascertain the source of your symptoms, which equates ineffective or longer terms of care.

Hospital-owned, outpatient facilities are often up to four times more expensive than the same services at physical therapist-owned private practices.

Not having the same therapist treatment to treatment equates inefficiency and lack of continuity of care.

Hopefully, you have been able to glean some valuable information from this article to help you make an informed decision on a very important matter: your health and well-being. The ?bottom line? for a business may be profit, but your ?bottom line? should be who can provide the best care at the best price, in the most expeditious and professional manner and achieve the best outcomes for your recovery. You have a right to choose, and the choice is yours.

Cathy Leer has been practicing physical therapy for 30 years. She is founder of Family Physical Therapy Services in Bedford and Chichester, and director of Physical Therapy. She is also an advocate for patient care and rights. Leer specializes in manual orthopedic physical therapy. She can be reached at Family Physical Therapy Services at 644-8334.

Source: http://www.cabinet.com/bedfordjournal/bedfordreadersubmitted/1004022-308/what-to-expect-from-your-physical-therapist.html

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US Navy's Ion Tiger drone leans on liquid hydrogen for longer-lasting spy flight

Ion Tiger leans on liquid hydrogen for recordbreaking endurance flight

The US Navy's quieter way to spy, the Ion Tiger, just bested its own 2009 flight record with a key assist from liquid hydrogen. The unmanned aerial vehicle had previously relied on 5000-psi compressed hydrogen for fuel, but for its latest flight test the Naval Research team swapped that out for a new cryogenic tank and delivery system that relies on the liquid stuff; a choice made for the element's increased density. With that one significant change in place, the craft was able to outperform its last endurance run of 26 hours and two minutes by almost double, lasting 48 hours and one minute in a flight made mid-April. Spying: it's not only good for the government, it's good for the environment, too.

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Source: US Naval Research Laboratory

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/10/us-navy-ion-tiger-drone-record-flight/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Saturday, May 11, 2013

Texas Tech Lady Raider Tennis Coach Todd Petty Previews the NCAA Lubbock Regional [AUDIO]

texastech.com

The Texas Tech Lady Raider Tennis Team is hosting the first and second rounds of the tournament this weekend in Lubbock.

Lady Raider head coach Todd Petty joined The Sports Shack with Scott Fitzgerald on Friday morning to preview the Lubbock Regional.

The Lady Raiders have won consecutive Big 12 women?s tennis regular season championships and are hosting their first regional in school history.

Tech will host College of Charleston, Duke, and Ole Miss starting Saturday at the McLeod Tennis Center on the Tech campus.

Tickets for adults are $5 and childrens tickets are $3 with Duke and Ole Miss starting their match at 11 a.m. on Saturday followed by Tech and Charleston at 2 p.m.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

The Sports Shack with Scott Fitzgerald airs weekdays from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. on Sports Radio 1340 The Fan.

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Source: http://1340thefan.com/texas-tech-lady-raider-tennis-coach-todd-petty-previews-the-ncaa-lubbock-regional-audio/

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Guess Where You Are in the World with Google Street View

Think you know your geography? Think you know what a country looks like? What if you were dropped in the middle of no where and had to figure out where you were? That's what GeoGuessr is. It's an insanely fun game that gives you an image from Google Street View and asks you to point out where you are on Earth. It's pretty hard.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Ejbak_TQOE0/guess-where-you-are-in-the-world-with-google-street-vie-499328420

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Methylphenidate 'normalizes' activation in key brain areas in kids with ADHD, study suggests

May 9, 2013 ? The stimulant drug methylphenidate "normalizes" activation of several brain areas in young patients with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), according to a review published in the May Harvard Review of Psychiatry.

Studies using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) show increased activation of key brain areas after a dose of methylphenidate in young patients with ADHD, according to the systematic review by Constance A. Moore, PhD, and colleagues of the University of Massachusetts Medical School. They write, "In most cases, this increase 'normalized' activation of at least some brain areas to levels seen in typically developing children."

How Do ADHD Medications Affect the Brain in ADHD Patients?

In a research review, Dr Moore and colleagues identified nine previous studies using fMRI to study patterns of brain activation in response to a single dose of methylphenidate. Perhaps best known by the brand name Ritalin, methylphenidate is a common and effective treatment for ADHD. "Although methylphenidate has been shown to significantly improve the behavioral symptoms associated with ADHD, both the mechanism behind its therapeutic effect and its direct effects on brain function are unknown," the researchers write.

The studies evaluated methylphenidate-induced fMRI changes in various brain areas, as the participants performed different types of tasks. Most of the studies included adolescent boys with ADHD, along with matched groups of young people without ADHD.

Methylphenidate altered activation patterns in widely distributed areas of the brain in ADHD patients, the results showed. The main brain areas involved were the frontal lobes, the basal ganglia, and cerebellum: "Abnormalities in these regions have all been implicated in patients with ADHD," Dr Moore and coauthors write.

Different areas were activated during different types of fMRI tasks. Several studies assessed performance on "inhibitory control" tasks -- the ability to control certain types of accustomed ("prepotent") responses. In three out of five studies, methylphenidate "at least partially normalized" brain activation in ADHD patients, compared to healthy young people.

Different Tasks Affect Different Brain Areas

A few studies showed similar normalization of brain responses with methylphenidate on tasks of selective attention and time perception -- although not on tasks evaluating working memory. Methylphenidate mainly affected activation in the frontal lobes during inhibitory control tasks. During selective attention tasks, a wider range of brain areas were affected.

Since none of the studies evaluated ADHD symptoms on and off methylphenidate, there was no way to link the changes in brain activation with clinical improvement. Brain activation patterns with methylphenidate differed for patients who were versus were not previously treated with stimulants for ADHD.

Patients with ADHD have "age-inappropriate frequency or severity of inattentive or hyperactive-impulsive behaviors," according to the authors. It affects about five percent of children worldwide, and a growing body of evidence suggests that ADHD persists throughout adolescence and into adulthood. Functional fMRI provides a safe, noninvasive way to study how stimulants like methylphenidate may act in the brain of ADHD patients.

The new analysis suggests that methylphenidate partially normalizes activation in key brain areas thought to be involved in ADHD. The studies "may provide evidence that methylphenidate facilitates the return of brain function in ADHD patients to, or close to, a typically functioning state," Dr Moore and colleagues write. They call for further research to confirm that methylphenidate-induced changes in specific brain areas are correlated with improvement in ADHD symptoms.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/child_development/~3/gE80DnD6Eno/130509123329.htm

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Friday, May 10, 2013

Microsoft: Apple reluctant to build a "Metro" iTunes for Windows 8

Microsoft Apple reluctant to build a 'Metro' iTunes for Windows 8While Microsoft has invited Apple to produce a Windows 8 iTunes app, Cupertino's response has essentially been "don't hold your breath."

Speaking to CNNMoney, Microsoft's chief financial officer Tami Reller said, "The welcome mat has been laid out [for Apple]. It's not for a lack of trying." Note that Windows 8 customers can use iTunes, but only on the desktop. That's a less-than-optimal experience, and poor Surface RT users are without iTunes altogether, as the device wont' run non-Microsoft desktop software.

As CNNMoney points out, Apple's position is understandable. With the best-selling tablet in the market, why would it rush to make Microsoft's offering more competitive?

Still, Reller believes that the Windows app store will feature all of the most popular apps from Apple's App Store by the holiday season. "That's not just our goal, but it'll be realistic to achieve that. We're almost there."


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Source: http://www.tuaw.com/2013/05/10/microsoft-apple-reluctant-to-build-a-metro-itunes-for-windows/

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For many Republicans, immigration is risky subject

In this photo from April 29, 2013, Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., gestures during a town meeting in Nebraska City, Neb., Monday, April 29, 2013. Fischer?s opposition to a pathway to citizenship for people in the country illegally resounds loudly with her rural Nebraska constituents, yet clashes with calls from Republicans elsewhere for compromise. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

In this photo from April 29, 2013, Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., gestures during a town meeting in Nebraska City, Neb., Monday, April 29, 2013. Fischer?s opposition to a pathway to citizenship for people in the country illegally resounds loudly with her rural Nebraska constituents, yet clashes with calls from Republicans elsewhere for compromise. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

In this photo from April 29, 2013, Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., walks past a prairie mural on her way to a town meeting in Nebraska City, Neb., Monday, April 29, 2013. Fischer?s opposition to a pathway to citizenship for people in the country illegally resounds loudly with her rural Nebraska constituents, yet clashes with calls from Republicans elsewhere for compromise. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

In this photo taken April 29, 2013, Susan Gumm of Omaha, Neb., right, asks Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., a question about immigration reform, during a town meeting in Nebraska City, Neb. Gumm said Republicans who advocate writing new law over enforcing statutes on the books are giving up on a key tenet of the GOP, and will destroy the Republican Party. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

In this photo taken April 29, 2013, Susan Gumm of Omaha, Neb., talks to the Associated Press about her views on immigration reform, after attending a town meeting with Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., rear right, in Nebraska City, Neb. Gumm said Republicans who advocate writing new law over enforcing statutes on the books are giving up on a key tenet of the GOP, and will destroy the Republican Party. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

In this photo from April 29, 2013, Sen. Deb Fischer, R-Neb., gestures during a town meeting in Nebraska City, Neb., Monday, April 29, 2013. Fischer?s opposition to a pathway to citizenship for people in the country illegally resounds loudly with her rural Nebraska constituents, yet clashes with calls from Republicans elsewhere for compromise. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

(AP) ? Rodney Vandenberg was the first to greet Republican Sen. Deb Fischer when she dropped by the Falls City's Chamber of Commerce office last week. He wasted no time bracing her about immigration, an issue that a Senate committee takes up Thursday in the form of sweeping overhaul legislation.

"There can be no shortcuts to citizenship for anyone," the retired banker and former mayor said, gripping Fischer's hand with both of his.

"My views have not changed," she replied, assuring him of her opposition.

That's what Vandenberg wanted to hear, but it's an ominous message for Republican leaders who believe that making the party dominant nationally hinges on accepting a more welcoming immigration policy, one that would attract more Hispanic voters. A bill that would make it easier for people living in the country illegally to obtain legal status is being debated by a Senate committee.

Key Republicans are supporting the idea, including Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida and Rand Paul of Kentucky, likely 2016 presidential candidates, and Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, the party's vice presidential nominee in 2012.

But while the shift to a less hard-edged position on immigration might make good political sense for the GOP nationally, with the nation's Hispanic population growing steadily, it makes little sense locally for many of the Republican lawmakers who will be asked for vote for it. Their political fortunes depend on conservative white voters who have strong feelings about people slipping across the border to live in this country.

The gap between these two perspectives could mean trouble for a sweeping new immigration overhaul. A bill may emerge from the Senate, which is controlled by Democrats who are largely supportive, but it would face an uncertain fate in the conservative, GOP-controlled House, where more members do not have to answer to Latino voters.

A swath of two dozen states in the middle and southern parts of the country make up the Republican heartland, overwhelmingly electing Republicans to the Senate and House. Despite the recent Hispanic population surge, that region remains more than 80 percent white, and whites account for more than 90 percent of the votes that successful Republican candidates there receive, according to exit polls. In the Senate, 22 of the 45 GOP members come from states where minorities are still below 30 percent of the population.

The demographic picture is much different in other places, with the Hispanic population in the U.S. up 65 percent since 2000. Republican candidates are struggling in some of them, and Republican Mitt Romney's defeat in the 2012 presidential race was attributed in part to his receiving only 27 percent of the Hispanic vote.

"At some point Republicans have to make a decision to move forward or continue to live with their heads in the sand," said Greg Strimple, a Republican pollster and campaign adviser.

But for Midwestern members like Fischer, the strategists' arguments are countered again and again by the voices of her supporters, many of them rural conservatives, who elected her last year over Democrat Bob Kerrey by a margin of 58 to 42 percent.

"What I hear from most Nebraskans is the same," she told Vandenberg.

On her trip home during last week's congressional recess, Fischer traveled the rolling farm roads of the southeastern part of her state, meeting with small town residents and hearing them out.

"What's important is following the laws of the land," said Mary Gerdes, a farmer from tiny Johnson who drove the hour to see Fischer in Falls City. "Marco Rubio and John McCain don't speak for me, even though we're all Republicans."

Local Republican officials in the area also haven't adopted a new line.

By accepting those who entered illegally, "We're just permitting people to scoff at the law," said Nathan Bartels, a farmer and chairman of the Johnson County Republicans. "Should we accommodate rape and murder? Breaking the law is breaking the law."

Fischer, a rancher and conservative state senator before her election last year, says she will strictly oppose giving the immigrants a "pathway to citizenship." She said she does not support the provision in the bill co-sponsored Rubio, McCain and a bi-partisan group of six other senators.

She also said the bill's provision to clamp down on the illicit flow over the U.S.-Mexican border ? which is aimed at making the measure more palatable to conservative Republicans ? is inadequate.

"How do you monitor it, to verify that it is truly happening?" Fischer said after a meeting in Nebraska City. "I don't know that the gang of eight, if they've looked at that."

The immigrant population is more visible in Nebraska, particularly in the agriculture industry. Not far from Bartels' farm, the Smart Chicken plant in Tecumseh employs about 150 workers, many of whom are Hispanic.

But at Nebraska City's Lied Lodge, the hotel workers ? an occupation that draws immigrants elsewhere ? is mostly white and English-speaking.

Outreach to Hispanic voters is not yet a pressing concern. In the 2010 census, the state's population was 82 percent white and 5.7 percent Hispanic.

Other Nebraska Republicans sound the same pessimistic note about accommodating immigrants. Gov. Dave Heineman, who is weighing a campaign for Nebraska's other seat, said, "We're all opposed to amnesty."

In neighboring Iowa, the Hispanic population is more apparent. In Iowa, Hispanic workers fill the state's numerous meatpacking plants. In Republican-leaning Utah, the state's fruit and vegetable industries thrive with migrant labor.

But Republican members of Congress there are conscious of the strong feelings of their core supporters. Iowa Sen. Charles Grassley has said he's skeptical about aspects of the bill. Utah Sen. Mike Lee said the bill lumps too many facets of immigration together.

In most of these Republican states, GOP candidates worry more about challenges from ultra-conservatives on the right flank of their party than from Democrat opponents.

"There's no doubt in certain Republican populations, people are saying 'No way,' " said GOP pollster Strimple.

Susan Gumm, who drove 60 miles from Omaha to Nebraska City to see Fischer last week, said Republicans who would soften the nation's immigration laws to curry favor with new voters will alienate the voters they have.

"They will destroy the Republican Party," she said.

------

Associated Press writer Margery Beck contributed from Omaha, Neb.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-05-09-Immigration-GOP/id-c5c0f1eeb42d46d9823798768d047564

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NM legislators receive pensions, but no salary

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) -- Voters booted Republican Dan Foley from office after a decade in the New Mexico Legislature, and within months he began collecting taxpayer-financed pension benefits ? even though he was only 39 years old.

By the time he turns 67 and qualifies for full Social Security benefits, Foley will have received nearly $450,000 in pension payments in exchange for the $5,000 he contributed to the plan while serving in the state House of Representatives.

New Mexico's unique and generous legislative retirement program has raised questions as lawmakers have trimmed pension benefits for some government workers, yet resisted scaling back their own program.

"Pensions are for people when you are old and are not able to earn a living anymore," said former Rep. Dennis Kintigh, a Roswell Republican who pushed unsuccessfully last year to establish a minimum retirement age of 62 for legislators.

New Mexico is the only state in the nation where lawmakers don't receive a salary, but collect a pension. Supporters say the pension partly compensates lawmakers for their unsalaried work and offers a financial incentive for legislators to leave office rather than cling to power as career politicians. The job is supposed to be part time, but lawmakers regularly devote long hours to their duties attending legislative sessions and committee meetings.

Legislators can receive retirement benefits at any age after leaving office provided they've served 10 years. That allowed Foley to begin collecting retirement checks in 2009 even though he was in the prime of his life.

"At the end of the day, we paid money into it. It was a retirement plan that was available," said Foley, a Rio Rancho insurance agent who represented a Roswell-area district. "We signed up for and took advantage of the opportunity that was there for it."

The Legislature's pension plan differs significantly from what's offered to other public employees in New Mexico.

No teacher or state worker could begin receiving a retirement check at age 39, as Foley did, after only a decade on the job. A state agency employee would need to work 25 years before retiring with full benefits at any age.

Legislators also contribute far less into their pensions than other public employees. For every $1 that legislators paid into the program in 2012, taxpayers contributed $43. In contrast, taxpayers put in $1.12 into the pension system for state and local government workers for every $1 contributed by employees

"Given the generous taxpayer-funded benefits these pension plans generate, I have long believed that legislative member contributions are woefully inadequate," GOP Gov. Susana Martinez said in vetoing a measure last month that would have allowed former or current legislators to participate in the retirement system after missing enrollment deadlines ? years ago in some cases.

Instead of an annual salary, New Mexico lawmakers receive a daily expense allowance ? currently $154 but it varies from year to year ? while in session in Santa Fe or attending committee meetings in other communities. Legislative sessions last 30 days in even-numbered years; 60 days in odd-numbered years.

The legislative pension is tied to that per diem rate and a lawmaker's years of service. Pension contributions and benefits for public employees are based on their salaries and how long they worked for the government.

An unsalaried 65-year-old legislator retiring after serving five years would currently qualify for an annual pension of about $5,100. A state employee retiring at the same age and five years of service would need an average salary of almost $34,000 to collect the same pension.

New Mexico isn't alone, however, in having generous retirement plans for legislators. Although eligibility and benefits vary widely among the 40 states offering pensions to their lawmakers, a few states stand out for allowing legislators to inflate their earnings that will be used to calculate retirement benefits.

In Texas, lawmakers tie their pensions to the salary of a district judge earning $125,000 rather than the $7,200 annual legislative salary. And it's possible for long-serving lawmakers to receive pension benefits up to that salary of $125,000. Legislators also can collect their pension checks while still in office, but the state keeps it confidential who's taking advantage of that provision.

The Texas plan, without doubt, is sweeter than what's available in New Mexico.

A Texas lawmaker can start collecting benefits at age 50 after serving 12 years, and currently would receive about $34,500 a year. A 12-year veteran of the New Mexico Legislature, regardless of age, would qualify for a yearly pension of about $12,197 after leaving office today.

In another example, a rank-and-file Kansas lawmaker whose salary is $7,979 for the 90-day legislative session can end up having earnings of nearly $86,000 for determining a pension. Legislators can count expense payments along with their base salary and annualize what they receive. A legislator could earn an annual pension of $15,019 after retiring with 10 years of service at age 62, according to the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System.

In New Mexico, more than 30 former legislators and their survivors receive higher pensions than Foley, according to records of the Public Employees Retirement Association.

Former Democratic Senate leader Manny Aragon, who's serving a federal prison sentence for a kickback scheme in the construction of an Albuquerque courthouse, collects yearly legislative retirement benefits of $27,311. His pension payments total $204,000 since 2005.

Foley's yearly pension benefits are $13,254 currently. He averaged about $16,400 in expense payments during his last two years in the Legislature, according to state records, but his pension will exceed that amount in about a decade because of the compounding effect of cost-of-living adjustments.

"Should taxpayers be funding that? That's a tough question because we don't make anything as a legislator," said Foley. "I could tell you that I spent just thousands of dollars a year when I was in the Legislature, whether it was doing constituent services, whether it was time, whether it was resources that I spent doing the things I had to do to be in the Legislature for nothing in return. We know that when we sign up. So I am not crying in my milk telling you this is the way it is."

___

Follow Barry Massey on Twitter at https:/twitter.com/bmasseyAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nm-legislators-receive-pensions-no-133853058.html

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Thursday, May 9, 2013

Eurostop launches new Windows 8 omni-channel version of its e-pos system

Eurostop, a leading supplier to the fashion, footwear and lifestyle sectors has launched the latest Microsoft Windows 8 omni-channel version of its e-pos system. Eurostop e-pos can be used for standalone shops, concessions and franchises and can easily be integrated with the e-rmis head office system for larger users. The latest version, which is expected to be the first e-pos solution available on the new Microsoft platform, has been designed with a Windows 8 look and feel, with icons that can be adjusted on the display to suit the user. The new Eurostop e pos has been optimised to run on hand held devices including tablets and smartphones.

The new Windows 8 e-pos is written in .net which reduces development time and the epos software is also available on tablet and smartphone devices. The software is not just feature rich; it is also easier and more intuitive for staff to use. Reducing the requirement for training, and utilises mobile technology such as voice activation, making reporting for managers much quicker.

The latest release will run alongside current versions of e-rmis in a mixed environment ie Windows 7, Windows 8 and provides a flexible and risk free upgrade path for existing customers.

Phillip Moylan, Sales & Marketing Manager at Eurostop commented; ?At Eurostop we continually strive to improve our systems to make it easier for retailers to run their businesses. This latest version of e-pos will bring the latest look and feel to the till point, reflecting the trends in new hand held and tablet technologies and making it easier to use. Linked to our other business systems it will assist retailers to better serve customers, increasing sales and profitability.?

-ends-

NOTES TO EDITORS

About Eurostop

Founded in 1990, with operations in London, Singapore and Shanghai, Eurostop provides complete solutions for Retail Management for the Fashion, Footwear and General Merchandise sectors encompassing both hardware and software.

Eurostop?s flagship products consist of:

e-rmis: A suite of head office management applications.
e-pos: EPOS system for standalone shops, concessions and franchises that can be easily integrated with e-rmis for larger users.
m-pos: a mobile version of e? pos enables sales transactions and stock enquires from anywhere within the store. When combined with Express Checkout can help to manage queues at busy times.
e-commerce: Custom e commerce solutions for independent retailers that provide a hosted and fully integrated service.
m-commerce uses fluid layout and responsive design principals so that the website is automatically optimised to fit any screen size
e-data: The collection of tenants? data from Shopping Malls for multi-purpose use.
e-cubes: Data Mining - a bespoke reporting tool which allows the slicing and dicing of data as well as selective publication of results and graphical representation.
e-time: The capture of staff working hours which aids in monitoring both stores? and staff performances and productivity.
e-fulfilment: Intelligent optimisation of e-commerce orders for multi-channel retailers.
Paperless Receipts: Receipts by email
Mobile and Online Coupons: Coupons and gift vouchers redeemable in store by smartphone.

All Eurostop?s solutions can be fully integrated with other management and business systems, and all major ERP systems.

As well as advising on and supplying suitable hardware, Eurostop also undertakes training, support and custom development. Its systems are available in several different languages including Chinese.

Eurostop has accreditation for Chip and PIN solutions, and together with partner Anderson Zaks provides a Chip and PIN managed service.

High profile customers include: Aquascutum, Ann Summers, Ben Sherman, Cult Clothing, Daks, Ghost, Joseph, Joy, Marie-Chantel, Matches, Oliver Sweeney, Paul & Joe, Pavers Shoes, Pentland Brands Plc, Speedo, Trespass and many more.

For more information visit: www.eurostop.com or contact:

Editors? Contacts:

Phillip Moylan
Eurostop Limited
Tel: 020 8991 2700
Email: phillipm@eurostop.co.uk

Andreina West
PR Artistry Limited
Tel: 01491 639500
email: andreina@pra-ltd.co.uk

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ReleaseWireComputingAndTelecoms/~3/hpzYpsoadCY/eurostop-launches-new-windows-8-omni-channel-version-of-its-e-pos-system

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Tuesday, May 7, 2013

New class of drug targets skin cancer

New class of drug targets skin cancer [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 6-May-2013
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Contact: Susi Hamilton
susi.hamilton@unsw.edu.au
61-422-934-024
University of New South Wales

7 May, 2013 -- Sydney, Australia:

A new class of drug targeting skin cancer's genetic material has been successfully tested in humans for the first time, opening the way to new treatments for a range of conditions from skin cancers to eye diseases.

The research involves the drug Dz13, a targeted molecular therapy, which was developed at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) and has now been found to be safe in a clinical trial of patients with the common skin cancer, basal-cell carcinoma.

"This is the first report of a drug of this type to be used in humans," says UNSW Medicine's Professor Levon Khachigian, who has been developing the DNAzyme technology for 10 years.

"It's a smart drug, which targets a bad protein that controls tumour growth and spread," says Professor Khachigian, the Director of the UNSW Centre for Vascular Research. The collaborative trial was conducted by researchers from UNSW, the University of Sydney and Royal Prince Alfred Hospital.

The findings have been published today in the prestigious journal The Lancet.

"Even though we were only testing for safety, there were unexpected positive effects," says Professor Khachigian.

"The drug knocked down levels of this bad protein and the tumours shrunk in the majority of patients."

The researchers hope subsequent trials will prove that larger doses of the drug over a longer time period will be more effective.

"Targeted molecular therapy like this might also offer novel, effective, and less invasive therapeutic options for basal-cell carcinoma," says Professor Gary Halliday, from the University of Sydney, who is one of the co-authors of the study.

If the next stages of the clinical trials in basal-cell carcinoma are successful, the researchers hope that within three years, the drug could be used as a treatment for these cancers, reducing scarring and the costs and inconvenience associated with surgery.

Basal-cell carcinoma is the most common cancer among fair-skinned people worldwide with Australia having the highest incidence.

"This may be a 'one-size fits all' therapy, because it targets a master regulator gene called c-Jun which appears to be involved in a range of diseases," says Professor Khachigian, who predicts that melanoma and eye diseases including macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy are the likely future targets for research.

A phase one trial in skin melanoma is expected to begin in a month.

###

Media contact: Susi Hamilton, UNSW media


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New class of drug targets skin cancer [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 6-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Susi Hamilton
susi.hamilton@unsw.edu.au
61-422-934-024
University of New South Wales

7 May, 2013 -- Sydney, Australia:

A new class of drug targeting skin cancer's genetic material has been successfully tested in humans for the first time, opening the way to new treatments for a range of conditions from skin cancers to eye diseases.

The research involves the drug Dz13, a targeted molecular therapy, which was developed at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) and has now been found to be safe in a clinical trial of patients with the common skin cancer, basal-cell carcinoma.

"This is the first report of a drug of this type to be used in humans," says UNSW Medicine's Professor Levon Khachigian, who has been developing the DNAzyme technology for 10 years.

"It's a smart drug, which targets a bad protein that controls tumour growth and spread," says Professor Khachigian, the Director of the UNSW Centre for Vascular Research. The collaborative trial was conducted by researchers from UNSW, the University of Sydney and Royal Prince Alfred Hospital.

The findings have been published today in the prestigious journal The Lancet.

"Even though we were only testing for safety, there were unexpected positive effects," says Professor Khachigian.

"The drug knocked down levels of this bad protein and the tumours shrunk in the majority of patients."

The researchers hope subsequent trials will prove that larger doses of the drug over a longer time period will be more effective.

"Targeted molecular therapy like this might also offer novel, effective, and less invasive therapeutic options for basal-cell carcinoma," says Professor Gary Halliday, from the University of Sydney, who is one of the co-authors of the study.

If the next stages of the clinical trials in basal-cell carcinoma are successful, the researchers hope that within three years, the drug could be used as a treatment for these cancers, reducing scarring and the costs and inconvenience associated with surgery.

Basal-cell carcinoma is the most common cancer among fair-skinned people worldwide with Australia having the highest incidence.

"This may be a 'one-size fits all' therapy, because it targets a master regulator gene called c-Jun which appears to be involved in a range of diseases," says Professor Khachigian, who predicts that melanoma and eye diseases including macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy are the likely future targets for research.

A phase one trial in skin melanoma is expected to begin in a month.

###

Media contact: Susi Hamilton, UNSW media


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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/uons-nco050313.php

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Hiromi: I've got Rhythm

Hiromi is a big deal Japanese jazz pianist who's getting pretty famous in the U.S. now, too. She's been touring around the world for awhile and her compositions are really great. Oh and her playing is totally badass.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/xKfv62v2KhQ/hiromi-ive-got-rhythm-492832717

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Justin Timberlake Reveals The 20/20 Experience Sequel Album, Solo Tour Dates

World tour will kick off on October 31 in Montreal, second disc hits stores on September 30.
By Gil Kaufman

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1706831/justin-timberlake-new-album-tour-dates.jhtml

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An iWatch Concept Has Never Looked This Good

We've got just about as much (or really as little) information about Apple's fabled iWatch as we ever have, but it never stops being fun to fantasize a little. This latest concept whipped up by designer Martin Hajek has got to be the best?and most Apple-like?we've seen yet.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/BzugQ2s-LW8/an-iwatch-concept-has-never-looked-this-good-493109921

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Friday, May 3, 2013

Antimatter might fall up, say physicists

A paper published this week suggests that antimatter could exhibit antigravity, potentially resolving some of physics' biggest mysteries.

By Eoin O'Carroll,?Staff / April 30, 2013

This 2010 image shows untrapped antihydrogen atoms annihilating on the inner surface of the ALPHA trap.

CERN/AP

Enlarge

Does antimatter fall up?

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That's what particle physicists are asking after they reported their first direct measurements, published in the current issue of Nature Communications,?of gravity's effects on the antimatter equivalent of hydrogen.?

The measurements were taken at CERN, the huge particle physics laboratory on the French-Swiss border. CERN's ?Antihydrogen Laser Physics Apparatus,?or?ALPHA, captures positrons and antiprotons, which are just like regular electrons and protons except that they have opposite charges and quantum "spins," in a vacuum chamber where they combine to form antihydrogen.?

When antimatter comes into contact with ordinary matter, the two obliterate each other in a flash of radiation and other subatomic smithereens (which is why we should all be grateful that Isaac Newton was never struck on the head by an antiapple). So, to get a good look at the antihydrogen before it vanishes, the ALPHA scientists trap it in a magnetic "bottle" that takes advantage of the antiatoms' magnetic properties to hold them in place.

The ALPHA team has actually gotten pretty good at confining antihydrogen: In 2011, they set a record by trapping the atoms for more than 16 minutes, an eternity for particle physics.

Now they're asking what happens after the magnets are turned off and the antihydrogen is released. Does it fall down or up?

Sadly, the measurements were inconclusive. The antihydrogen atoms have proven too squirrely and the ALPHA equipment too imprecise to give a definitive answer.

?This is the first word, not the last,? said Joel Fajans, a?University of California at Berkeley physicist and ALPHA team member, in a UC Berkeley press release. ?We?ve taken the first steps toward a direct experimental test of questions physicists and nonphysicists have been wondering about for more than 50 years. We certainly expect antimatter to fall down, but just maybe we will be surprised.?

If antimatter were to fall up, it could help explain one physics' greatest mysteries, namely, why the universe seems to contain so much matter ? such as stars, planets, belly-button lint and so on ? and so little antimatter, which, as far as we know, exists only as products of?radioactive?decay, exploding stars, and very strong electric fields.?

According to the standard model of particle physics, the universe should have the same amount of matter and antimatter. "Have had" actually, because, if at the time of the Big Bang there were equal amounts of matter and antimatter, the two would have annihilated each other in short order, leaving only photons.

Because we're here, physicists suspect that this didn't happen. But nobody really knows why.

If antimatter falls up though, then the prevalence of matter over antimatter might make sense. As CERN physicist?Dragan Slavkov Hajdukovic argued in a 2011 paper, a cosmos in which matter and antimatter repel each other would experience a series of expansions and contractions ? Big Bangs and Big Crunches, if you will ? with each successive universe cycling between being dominated by matter and antimatter. Under this model, our present-day universe is mostly matter because the previous one was mostly antimatter. (Residents of that universe probably just called it matter.)?

Elsewhere?Hajdukovic argued that gravitantionally repulsive antimatter?does away with the need to posit the existence of dark matter, thus resolving one of physics' other big mysteries.?

So when will we find out if antimatter falls up? ALPHA is currently being upgraded and will reopen in 2014, and physicists hope to find out after that.?

If antimatter is indeed antigravity, we would need to revise quite a bit of current physics. But then again, current physics can't explain where half of our universe went, so perhaps a revision is just what we need. ?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/Q-aKEZs4GmE/Antimatter-might-fall-up-say-physicists

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Official: SD tribe can't pay for Wounded Knee site

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) ? The president of a South Dakota tribe facing a deadline on whether to buy a piece of land where 300 of their ancestors were massacred more than a century ago says his tribe does not have the money for the purchase.

The Oglala Sioux faced a Wednesday deadline to buy a 40-acre piece of the Wounded Knee National Historic Landmark on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

Owner James Czywczynski (see-ZIHN'-skee) had said if the tribe did not agree to the $4.9 million asking price for that parcel and another parcel, he would open up bidding to outside investors.

Tribal president Bryan Brewer tells The Associated Press the tribe will not purchase the land, which has been appraised at less than $7,000 apiece.

Czywczynski has not responded to calls for comment.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/official-sd-tribe-cant-pay-wounded-knee-183843920.html

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