19th-Century Concept, With a Few Upgrades (New York Times)

Pat Metheny’s new album and tour celebrate a major technical feat: thousands of moving parts executing one man’s programmed score.

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Art Picks: O’Keeffe, Albers, Cézanne, Ginsberg, Munch and more (Washington Post)

6 — “Georgia O’Keeffe: Abstraction.” This Phillips Collection show should offer an antidote to O’Keeffe’s flower and landscape imagery, which can sometimes seem a bit overripe. I’m especially looking forward to getting another look at her early abstractions in blue ink, when she was still very m…

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Books pulled from Amazon in pricing dispute with publisher Macmillan

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Books pulled from Amazon in pricing dispute
NEW YORK — New copies of Hilary Mantel’s “Wolf Hall,” Andrew Young’s “The Politician” and other books published by Macmillan were unavailable Saturday on Amazon.com, apparently the biggest rift yet in the ongoing dispute over e-book prices.
An official with knowledge of the dispute said the two sides … Read more >>>.

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70% HR Workers Reject Candidates for Their Irresponsible Online Behavior

  We observed Data Privacy Day couple of days back. This is Microsoft sponsored non holiday that was observed to create public awareness among Internet users to protect on line data. As per the recent study of the software giant, we are very negligent about our online behavior and that has a negative impact in … Read the original article on Gaea Times at : 70% HR Workers Reject Candidates for Their Irresponsible Online Behavior.

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How to See Who visited your Facebook Profile

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Unlike most of the social networking sites like hi5, Facebook doesn’t allow you to check who visited your profile. The no-so- popular Orkut queues-up visitors list according to most recent visit. The major chunk of social bees would oppose such undesired intrusion to flout their privacy. For Facebook as they say “privacy is a … Read : How to See Who visited your Facebook Profile.

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VoIP free calls for iPhone over 3G networks with updated apps

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We had a stint with VoIP free calls from Nokia long back, this time we gotta catch up with iPhone VoIP calls.  Unfurling the much-craved revelation two major VoIP service providers iCall and Fring updated their apps to support calls over 3G network. iPhone VoIP apps now offer calling over 3G network. Voice over … Original article on : VoIP free calls for iPhone over 3G networks with updated apps.

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iPhone OS 3.2 expected new features: Video Calling, File Downloads and SMS

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In exciting leak a day ago, iPhone OS 3.2 would-be features were uncovered. Engadget confirmed from trusted sources that iPhone OS 3.2 would include support for video calling. This could explain that mysterious space at the top of the device. There are hooks to accept and decline video conferencing, and flip a video feed, …. Read the original article  : iPhone OS 3.2 expected new features: Video Calling, File Downloads and SMS.

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Mass Effect 2 Romance Guide

SAN FRANCISCO (GaeaTimes.com)- Mass Effect 2 is the sequel to the Mass effect video game that was quite a hit with the gamers. The Mass Effect 2 Romance Guide, is being searched widely, with people trying to find their character’s love partners as soon as possible.

Mass Effect 2 is actually a ‘role-playing game’ that was … Read this article on Gaea Times at : Mass Effect 2 Romance Guide.

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Association to transfer longevity risk to capital markets  (Reuters via Yahoo! UK & Ireland News)

LONDON (Reuters) — A new association has formed to transfer longevity and mortality-related risk to the capital markets in the same way that some of the world’s biggest perils, such as hurricanes and earthquakes, are protected against by shifting the risk to investors via catastrophe bonds.

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Financial Times FT.com (Financial Times)

The move, which marks the first significant co-operative effort to set up standardised products, comes as UK corporate and public pension schemes become more focused on longevity , the risk that they will pay pensions to retirees for far longer than they have assumed.

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Ramorama Ads

Ramorama

Ramorama

Nice looking ads that read “Expose Yourself” for tee-shirt company Ramorama.  Their site contains lots of anatomy imagery as well…

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Morbid Anatomy Presents at Observatory: "In the Henry Darger Archive," Illustrated Lecture by Jaimy Mann, 2009 Darger Study Center Research Fellow


Next Friday, February 5th, Morbid Anatomy and Observatory are proud to present an illustrated lecture about reclusive outsider artist Henry Darger by 2009 Darger Study Center Research Fellow Jaimy Mann.

Full details follow. Hope very much to see you there!

Morbid Anatomy Presents at Observatory
“In the Henry Darger Archive: From Rebellious Transsexual Child Slaves in Oz to Korean and Vietnamese Orphans”
An illustrated lecture by Jaimy Mann,, 2009 Henry Darger Study Center Research Fellow
Friday, February 5th
8:00 PM
$5

Outsider artist Henry Darger (1892-1973) is commonly remembered as a reclusive janitor who spent his life secretly creating a richly realized, bizarre and perverse fantasy world discovered only upon his death. While most who have considered Darger have seen his work as a spontaneous act of solitary and warped imagination, in tonight’s lecture, Darger scholar Jaimy Mann will reexamine the accepted narrative by discussing Darger’s work within the larger context of American cultural history and Darger’s personal biography. She will also introduce us to the holdings of the Henry Darger Archive held by the American Folk Art Museum in New York — where she conducted research as the 2009 Henry Darger Study Center Research Fellow — and give advice on how interested parties can gain access.

Contrary to popularly held beliefs, Henry Darger’s work–Mann argues– was not created in the vacuum of one cloistered man’s mind. While many of his paintings depict naked and brutalized child slaves and transexual transformation, L. Frank Baum’s phenomenally popular Oz books–which Darger read and collected– explored many similar topics normally taboo in the mainstream of American culture. “In the Realms of the Unreal,” Darger’s 15,000 page epic, draws from and inter-textualizes Oz, as well as the larger cultural obsessions with white slavery, seen, for example, in the passage of the “White Slave Traffic Act” in 1910. Further, Darger was personally affected by the instability and vulnerability that marks the existence of displaced children. When his mother died in childbirth, his baby sister was put up for adoption, and while in the home for feeble-minded children, Darger himself was almost adopted. He also desperately worked to adopt a child for decades as an adult, and in the archive, Mann investigated some rarely-exhibited collages (which will be on view at the American Folk Art Museum in 2010) that make use of photographs of Korean and Vietnamese children culled from newspapers. When looked at in this larger context of American cultural history, Mann believes that Darger is a key figure for understanding the notion and draw of “cuteness” in the United States, and will discuss how this notion is united with violence, race, and adoption.

Jaimy Mann is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Florida, specializing in Children’s Literature and Culture and Gender Studies. She is based in Los Angeles, where she is raising her two-year-old daughter Querelle Magdalena while completing her dissertation “The Transnational Transracial Politics of Cute and Kawaii.” She was the 2009 Henry Darger Study Center Research Fellowship at the American Folk Art Museum in New York, where she had unlimited access to Darger’s books, paintings, and personal collection of newspaper clippings, collages, letters, religious items, and various other ephemera, which are housed in the museum archive. For more, please see http://jaimym.pixelfix.com

You can find out more by clicking here. You can get directions by clicking here. You can find out more about Observatory here, join our mailing list by clicking here, and join us on Facebook by clicking here.

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ASGCT: Gene Therapy Shows Promise for Patients with Pompe Disease (PRWeb via Yahoo! News)

New research in gene therapy is bringing doctors and patients closer to a comprehensive treatment for a rare disease portrayed in a new Hollywood film, according to the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy.

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10 Get Fit Tips for 2010 from ConsumerReports.org

The text below consists of some edited excerpts from Consumer Reports and is illustrated with Amazon products:

- Take the stairs. Just 7 minutes a day of walking up stairs may help protect your heart. Only 6% of people take the stairs in public buildings.

- Weigh in. 75% of “successful weight losers” weigh themselves at least weekly. Frequent weigh-ins help you keep small weight gains from accumulating.
- Lose the TV. People who lost 10% of their weight and kept it off for five years or more had fewer TVs in their homes than overweight people.

- Try exercise toys. Dumbbells, resistance bands, a jump rope, stability balls, and more can be used to keep your workout interesting, particularly if you work out at home.

- Use an exercise machine: a treadmill, a bike, a ski machine, or an elliptical machine.

- Do your chores. You can trim your to-do list and your waistline at the same time. a half-hour of dusting burns about 75 calories; painting and decorating, 90 calories; vacuuming, 105 calories; and lawn-mowing, 165 calories.

- Get the right shoes.

- Be more social. People are happiest when exercising with people in their age group.
- Join a close-by gym.

References:

10 get-fit tips for 2010. Consumer Reports.

Related:

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What causes skin cancer


There are a few major causes of skin cancer, but by far the most over-riding is excessive or constant over-exposure to ultraviolet (most often known as “UV”) radiation form the sun. Many people forget that the sun’s energy is actually a type of radiation and it consists of both visible and invisible rays. Invisible infrared radiation is what makes the sunlight feel hot. Ultraviolet rays are also invisible, and these are what precipitate both sun tans and skin cancer. This is where the sun tan myth should be entirely exploded: Many people, especially in Western cultures, have-for a protracted period of time-prize sun tans as visible manifestations of health and wellness.

In fact, nothing could be further from the truth. Consider the earlier statement that UV rays cause the skin to tan and you begin to realize what is actually happening. A sun tan actually denotes damaged, burned skin, and this will affect the cells, damaging DNA which is the genetic material that comprises genes. This, in the case of severe genetic damage, causes the otherwise normal skin cell to grow in a disorder and uncontrolled way – which is a prime function of cancer cells – and this is what has made incidents of skin cancer rise steeply in many western countries. There are two different kinds of ultraviolet ration, and these are ultraviolet A (UVA) and Ultraviolet B (UVB). Where once scientists believed that over-exposure to UVB rays was the principal cause of skin cancer they now believe that AVA is also implicated. This is why it is so important to cover exposed skin and apply effective sunblock products in order to protect your skin when the sun is at its strongest.

Having said this there are other factors that may herald the onset of skin cancer, among them are hereditary causes which is why people with instances of skin cancer in their family history should be extra careful. In such cases skin cancer is caused by a child’s abnormal genes that are inherited from their parents. When taking UV factors and the fashionable trend for desiring sun tans into account people should also consider the use of tanning booths, which are also heavily implicated in instances of skin cancer.

Impairment of the immune system, called immunosuppression, can also make a person more prone. In such cases the immune system, the mechanism that protects the body from foreign matter such as germs, ceases to function properly and thus leaves the body more susceptible to infections and diseases. This may happen as a result of other illnesses or due to medicines taken to fight auto-immune diseases. People that have had an unusually high number of x-rays or exposure to radioactive or immunosuppressing chemicals are also at greater risk, as are those who come into frequent contact with certain chemicals such as arsenic. Such people may include farmers and miners. Those with fair skin that freckle easily or with light colored hair (blond or red) are also in a higher risk category for skin cancer and should exercise greater caution in the sun.

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(AFX UK Focus) 2010-01-31 07:15 Association formed to transfer longevity risk to capital markets (Interactive Investor)

By Sarah Hills

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Association formed to transfer longevity risk to capital markets (Interactive Investor)

By Sarah Hills

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2010 Award Recipients Announced By The Genetics Society Of America

The Genetics Society of America (GSA) is pleased to announce the recipients of its five awards for distinguished service to the field of genetics. These awards represent sustained activity and contributions by members of the genetics community…

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Making Complex Science Understandable And Entertaining

The University of Utah Genetic Science Learning Center Web sites that have brought millions of viewers fascinating animations of the size and scale of cells, drug-addicted mice, and other captivating lessons in genetics, have been honored by the journal Science with the first Science Prize for Online Resources in Education (SPORE) Award…

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UT-Battelle Licenses Tissue Regeneration Technologies To NellOne Therapeutics, Inc.

In a major step toward commercialization of a promising therapeutic treatment, Oak Ridge National Laboratory contractor UT-Battelle has exclusively licensed patents on inventions based on the Nell-1 gene to NellOne Therapeutics, Inc. (NellOne), a company spun out of the Department of Energy laboratory…

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New Way To Study How Enzymes Repair DNA Damage

Researchers at Ohio State University have found a new way to study how enzymes move as they repair DNA sun damage — and that discovery could one day lead to new therapies for healing sunburned skin. Ultraviolet (UV) light damages skin by causing chemical bonds to form in the wrong places along the DNA molecules in our cells…

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RTI Biologics Donates Matrix HD™ To Treat Young Child With Rare Genetic Skin Condition

RTI Biologics Inc. (RTI) (Nasdaq:RTIX), the Florida-based processor of orthopedic, dental, hernia and other biologic implants, has donated a sterilized dermis allograft, Matrix HD™, to treat an eight-year old patient with a rare skin disease called recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (EB)…

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Congressman Rothman secures 1.49M in federal dollars for EHMC’s bloodless medicine program (News-Medical-Net)

Congressman Steve Rothman (D-NJ) will be the featured speaker at Englewood Hospital and Medical Center today, 1:00-2:00 pm. Congressman Rothman will announce the latest batch of federal funds, $1.49 million, for the Institute for Patient Blood Management and Bloodless Medicine and Surgery. This brings the total amount of federal funding secured by Congressman Rothman for this institute to $4.69 …

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ASGCT: Gene Therapy Shows Promise for Patients with Pompe Disease (PRWeb)

New research in gene therapy is bringing doctors and patients closer to a comprehensive treatment for a rare disease portrayed in a new Hollywood film, according to the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy. (PRWeb Jan 31, 2010) Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/gene_and_cell_therapy/Pompe_disease/prweb3539914.htm

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Fred D’Aguiar on Tate Liverpool’s Afro Modern (Guardian Unlimited)

Black Atlantic culture – spanning Africa, the Americas and Europe – has had a profound influence on artists, from Picasso to Chris Ofili. Fred D’Aguiar celebrates the power of art to debunk historical stereotypes Paul Gilroy has a lot to answer for. Not since Edward Said’s Orientalism has a book – Gilroy’s The Black Atlantic – generated such intellectual curiosity and exerted so wide an …

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