Thursday, March 14, 2013

Samsung Galaxy S IV gets detailed in extensive early preview, screen examined up close

Galaxy S IV gets detailed in extensive early preview, screen examined up close

We haven't exactly been lacking for leaks of Samsung's new Galaxy S IV ahead of its launch later today, but those looking for yet more can now get their fix courtesy of an extensive preview/review of the still-unofficial phone published by IT168. That's the same site that's been the source of a number of those aforementioned leaks in recent days. While it's still not clear if the phone in their possession is identical to Samsung's final retail device, it certainly appears to be a well-polished version, and decidedly familiar for anyone accustomed to the Galaxy S III. The preview goes particularly in-depth on the phone's screen, even going so far as to put it under a microscope to compare it to the Galaxy S III and Note II. Hit the source link below for a closer look yourself.

[Thanks, Humberto]

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Source: IT168

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/14/galaxy-s-iv-gets-detailed-in-extensive-early-preview-screen-exa/

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The Power of a Logo in Web Design - Graphic Design Junction

Logos are important to all businesses. They give potential clients a snapshot of the company: what it does, its values and its sensibilities are all reflected in a good logo. It is one of the few things that companies will put on everything from business cards to white papers, so it has to reflect the business perfectly.

This is all the more important in the fast-paced, easily distracted world of the internet. On the internet, a logo can make all the difference on a website, on a company?s social media pages, on other market materials and on its apps.

You may be interested in the following modern trends related articles as well.

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On the website

Website Template

A company website is like the virtual headquarters of a company. Like an office, it shows what a company is like during its day-to-day operations. It is the public face of the company, acting as company historian, salesperson, customer service and more. With so many purposes, a website has to be absolutely perfect in look and tone.

That need to look perfect especially applies to the logo for a couple of reasons. First, it is usually put at the very top of the website, so it is one of the first things visitors to the site will notice. Second, because it is the one thing that is included in almost all outward-bound materials, like letterhead and brochures, it tends to direct the design of the website. The fact that it is the first thing people notice and the thing that drives the overall design makes a logo the most powerful element in a website?s design.

On ads, emails and other marketing materials

Online ads, email marketing and other online marketing materials are used by companies to get their name and their services out there, the way ads, brochures and other marketing techniques are used in the physical world. There are a lot of fishy (and phishy) people on the internet, though, and internet users often use the look of ads, emails and other materials to judge whether a site ? and a company ? are trustworthy.

As mentioned before, logos tend to drive the look and feel of the website design. This, in turn, is used to shape the design of ads, emails and similar items. With the exception of search result ads, these tend to include the logo. The logo has to look professional and trustworthy because an unprofessional logo can be the difference between getting a new customer and being flagged as spam.

On the social media pages

Social media marketing has been a sticky issue for companies almost for as long as it has been around. A company needs to have a presence in the realm of social media to look like a credible online service or store, but users of social media tend to have strict rules about what companies can and cannot do. They do not want a company that just blasts them with ads and marketing materials; they want a company that is interesting and one that might occasionally offer a freebie or a discount.

The logo is usually the profile picture of a company on social media, and it serves the same purpose that a profile picture of a person does. It gives other users a way to decide if the company is worth their time. After all, humans judge things by appearance at the initial moment of introduction, nowhere more than in social media, and a company?s logo is its first introduction to a potential new client or customer. Because people want the companies they follow on social media to be entertaining or useful, a logo that looks like it belongs to a friendly or professional company has more power to draw in more followers than a logo that is dull or unprofessional does.

On apps

Logos are perhaps more crucial to the success of apps than to the success of any of these other things. Apps are simply little programs people download to their computers or mobile devices which serve some purpose. They can help users organise their lives, or they can distract users with simple games.

When people are deciding which app to download for a specific purpose, they can look at many different criteria. They can look at total worldwide downloads. They can look at reviews, stars and marks out of ten. They can do a simple search on their preferred app distribution platform to see which one pops up first. However they choose to do this, they will always see one thing: the logo. The logo sits beside the profiles, and it is the thumbnail icon on a desktop. The logo will tell users immediately what kind of app they are looking at, and just as with marketing materials, social media profiles and the website, the logo can either assure users that it is a great product, or it will tell them not to waste their time.

As demonstrated above, a logo has the power to influence the look of web design and how people react to the design, the company and its products. It shapes how a website looks, how effective marketing tools are, how well people respond to the social media efforts of a company and even whether or not people will use an app. In short, logos have most of the power in all areas of web design.

Source: http://graphicdesignjunction.com/2013/03/the-power-of-a-logo-in-web-design/

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FDA probes new pancreas risks with diabetes drugs

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Food and Drug Administration is looking into new evidence that suggests a group of recently approved diabetes drugs can increase the risk of pancreatitis and other problems.

The agency said Thursday samples of pancreas tissue taken from a small number of patients showed inflammation and cellular changes that often precede cancer. Academic researchers took the samples from diabetes patients who were taking the new medications, after they died from various causes.

Details of the research have not yet been published, but the agency said in an online statement it is seeking more information.

While the FDA has issued previous alerts about the pancreatitis risk, the agency had not notified the public about pre-cancerous cell changes seen with the drugs.

For now, regulators say they are still investigating the issue.

"FDA has not concluded these drugs may cause or contribute to the development of pancreatic cancer," the agency said in an online statement. "At this time, patients should continue to take their medicine as directed until they talk to their health care professional."

The drugs under review come from a wave of recently approved diabetes medications, including Merck's Januvia and Janumet, Novo Nordisk's Victoza and Bristol-Myers Squibb's Byetta and Bydureon, among others. All the drugs mimic natural hormones that the body usually produces to spur insulin production after a meal.

Citi Investment Research analyst Andrew Baum told investors the investigation would likely have "minimal impact" on drug sales. Similar investigations in recent years have not resulted in safety restrictions, he says.

"We believe that the likely worst case for the market incumbents is that the FDA could add additional warnings about increased risk of pancreas-related adverse events" Baum stated in a research note.

People with type 2 diabetes are unable to properly break down carbohydrates, either because their bodies do not produce enough insulin or because they've become resistant to the hormone, which controls blood sugar levels. These patients are at higher risk for heart attacks, kidney problems, blindness and other serious complications.

Many diabetics require multiple drugs with different mechanisms of action to control their blood sugar levels.

With more than 25 million people living with diabetes in the U.S., some of the world's biggest drugmakers have launched new treatments in recent years, though safety questions have emerged.

The FDA previously added information about cases of pancreatitis, some of them fatal, to the labels of Byetta in 2007, and Januvia and Janumet in 2009.

A recent study of insurance records found that use of those drugs could double the risk of developing acute pancreatitis, according to the FDA.

Januvia is a once-a-day pill. Janumet combines the drug with metformin, a decades-old drug commonly prescribed for diabetes. Byetta is a twice-a-day injection originally developed by Amylin Pharmaceuticals. Bristol-Myers acquired the drug last year, along with the newer formulation Bydureon, which is taken once-a-week.

Byetta and Bydureon are part of a drug class that mimics the GLP-1 hormone, triggering insulin production after a meal.

Januvia and Janumet work by blocking the DPP-4 enzyme, which spurs release of more insulin from the pancreas. Those drugs brought in a total of about $5.75 billion last year, making them Merck's biggest franchise.

The pancreas produces various hormones, including insulin, that help the body break down sugar. Pancreatitis causes an inflammation of the organ and can lead to fatal complications, including difficulty breathing and kidney failure.

Shares of Whitehouse Station, N.J.-based Merck & Co. Inc. fell 32 cents to $44.27. Shares of New York-based Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. declined 1 cent to $38.48.

____

AP Business Writer Linda A. Johnson contributed to this story from Trenton, N.J.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fda-probes-pancreas-risks-diabetes-drugs-155501841--finance.html

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California Democrats seem to hit supermajority sweet spot (San Jose Mercury News)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/291155353?client_source=feed&format=rss

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To mayor, NYC soda ruling just 'temporary setback'

NEW YORK (AP) ? Despite Mayor Michael Bloomberg's bullishness, political realities and legal questions make for an uncertain future for one of the premier pieces of his legacy: a now-blocked ban on supersized sugary drinks.

The city lost no time Tuesday getting started on the next round of the fight after a judge nixed the first-of-its-kind regulation. Bloomberg called the strongly worded court ruling a "temporary setback" and emphasizing that the city is confident about winning an appeal. He predicted that in the meantime, the novel regulation would become a bellwether in the national fight against obesity.

"I don't think there's any doubt that momentum is moving in our direction," he said after convening a thicket of news cameras at a Manhattan diner that is voluntarily complying with the stricken-down rule.

While the city has ultimately prevailed in some similar cases, legal experts say it's unclear how judges will view whether health regulators overshot their authority in this one. Moreover, the appeal could linger beyond Bloomberg's term when it ends this year, and several of his would-be successors don't appear to have his appetite for pursuing it.

State Supreme Court Justice Milton Tingling's decision, issued Monday, says that the soda rule has so many exemptions that it's illegally arbitrary and that the Bloomberg-appointed Board of Health trod on the City Council's turf to impose it.

"This is a serious challenge to the city," particularly for saying the health board violated the separation-of-powers principle, said James Fanto, a Brooklyn Law School professor who specializes in business law and regulation.

The city filed a formal notice Tuesday of its appeal. The American Beverage Association and other opponents of the rule said they felt the judge's decision was strong and were confident in it.

The city's appeal will likely argue that the judge took too narrow a view of the 147-year-old health board's powers. Officials have noted that other groundbreaking health initiatives on Bloomberg's watch have survived court challenges: a 2006 rule requiring some restaurants to post calorie counts, for instance, was struck down, revised, challenged again and upheld.

To attack the finding that the law is arbitrarily ridden with loopholes, city lawyers could argue that any given regulation can't be expected to get at every source of a problem, said Cary Coglianese, a University of Pennsylvania Law School professor who studies regulatory processes.

The city also is stressing what it sees as the stakes: a city population in which 60 percent of adults and 40 percent of children are obese, $4 billion a year in obesity-related medical spending in the city alone, and national and local studies linking sugary drinks to weight gain.

Government actions generally enjoy some leeway in courts in light of the separation of powers. But judges tend to afford less deference to the decisions of executive agencies than to the majoritarian work of legislatures ? in this scenario, the City Council, said Steven Goldberg, a Pace Law School professor and former dean.

Bloomberg said Tuesday he has no plans to try to get the council to pass the soda rule, which bars eateries as disparate as corner delis and arena concessions from selling non-diet soda, sweetened juice and some other sugary drinks in portions bigger than 16 ounces. The city believes in the health board's authority over the issue and wants a higher court to affirm it, he said.

The appeal could easily take a year or more, potentially leaving the next mayor with a decision about whether to keep pressing it.

Several Republican and Democratic contenders have criticized the ban. "Thank goodness the court intervened," cheered one, Democrat John Liu, now the city comptroller.

City Council Speaker and frequent Bloomberg ally Christine Quinn, so far the Democratic front-runner in the heavily Democratic city, told CNN host Piers Morgan on Monday that the big-soda ban "isn't something I support." But she said Tuesday that officials should "let this make its way through the court, and we'll see where we end up."

Meanwhile, one of her Democratic rivals, city Public Advocate Bill de Blasio, was by Bloomberg's side applauding the measure.

"This is a crisis that must be addressed, he said, and "the mayor is doing that."

For a mayor who has made unconventional public health initiatives a key part of his agenda, Monday's court decision is at least a distracting roadblock.

The soda rule revived complaints that he's turning a tough town into a "nanny state." The New York Post has pictured him as "Mayor Poppins" alongside stories about it.

And the court ruling could fuel longtime perceptions of him as high-handed and sometimes deaf to the democratic process, a criticism that hit a fever pitch when he persuaded the City Council to extend term limits in 2008 so he could run again after voters had twice approved the previous limit.

Tingling, the trial-level court judge, called the sugary drinks regulation "arbitrary and capricious," language that comes from a legal standard but could strike non-lawyers as an echo of the "imperial mayor" his critics sometimes deride.

Fairly or not, the ruling "makes it easier to paint him as someone who's kind of overbearing and autocratic," said Queens College political science professor Michael Krasner.

New Yorkers are divided on the issue, with 51 percent against it and 46 percent supporting it in a recent Quinnipiac University poll.

For his part, Bloomberg shrugs off questions about whether the soda contretemps has sapped his political capital, saying he's "trying to do what's right" and thinks the public ultimately will agree with him. He foresees smaller sodas becoming as normal as smoke-free bars, another change that was controversial when he led a charge for it more than a decade ago. The City Council passed it in 2002.

"The mayor's right: Leadership requires sticking your neck out," says Douglas Muzzio, a Baruch College political science professor who specializes in city politics.

As for whether the public will reward him for it, "This may not be one of those cases, or it may be."

___

Follow Jennifer Peltz at http://twitter.com/jennpeltz

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mayor-nyc-soda-ruling-just-temporary-setback-223759267--finance.html

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Hotwire Reveals Top U.S. Destinations for Best ... - Auto Rental News

Hotwire.com released its seventh annual Hotwire Travel Value Index study examining the top destinations for the best value on March 5.

The study reveals the top 10 cities where consumers planning their next trip can find the best combination of low prices, discounts and entertainment.

Low prices on air, hotel and rental cars make up 50% of overall score; discounts on air, hotel and rental cars make up 25%; and affordable entertainment is the last 25% of the score.

The top 10 U.S. destinations for value vacations in 2013 include:

Rank/City Overall TVI Rating Rank Last Year Highest Scoring Category
Orlando, Fla. 100 1 Low prices
Atlanta, Ga. 100 2 Discounts
Tampa, Fla. 94 6 Low Prices
Dallas-Fort Worth, Tex. 94 3 Discounts
Pheonix, Nev. 92 5 Entertainment
Raleigh, N.C. 85 n/a Low Prices
Charlotte, N.C. 83 8 Discounts
Houston, Tex. 83 4 Discounts
St. Louis, Mo. 82 n/a Discounts
Sacramento, Calif. 79 n/a Discounts


The Hotwire Travel Value Index is based on a statistical model combining both in-house and third-party research. Hotwire evaluates the top 50 U.S. leisure markets, rating them across three individual categories to generate an overall ranking for consumer vacation value.

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Source: http://www.autorentalnews.com/News/Story/2013/03/Hotwire-Reveals-Top-U-S-Destinations-for-Best-Value.aspx

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Friday, March 1, 2013

Inside Benedict's spectacular temporary home

Alessandro Di Meo / EPA

A garden at the Apostolic Palace of Castel Gandolfo, the pope's summer residence, on the outskirts of Rome. Pope Benedict XVI officially steps down on Thursday, Feb. 28. Benedict will stay at Castel Gandolfo until renovations on his permanent home are completed. Click the image for more photos.

By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

Even though Pope Benedict XVI is leaving the papacy, he'll remain in sumptuous, familiar surroundings ? at least for a few weeks.

Sometime in April, Benedict will take up permanent residence in Mater Ecclesiae, a modest convent for cloistered nuns at the Vatican. The convent is under renovation, however, so in the meantime, Benedict?will live at Castel Gandolfo, the small town of about 8,000 people a few miles southeast of Rome that has been the summer retreat for popes for almost four centuries.


Vatican records indicate that Benedict has spent an average of five weeks a year at the grand Apostolic Palace at Castel Gandolfo since he assumed the papacy in 2005, so he should feel quite at home.

Alessandro Di Meo / EPA

A light switch bears the Papal seal.

And what a home it is. The complex, which overlooks Lake Albano and what's left of the enormous villa of the first-century Roman Emperor Domitian, actually dwarfs Vatican City by almost 400,000 square feet. It comes complete with landscaped gardens, an arboretum, natural conservatories, museums and fish ponds.

Step inside Pope Benedict's temporary new home

The sculptured gardens, which make up more than half of the estate, are a favorite retreat for popes, who have been known to frequently take long walk along their paths.?

And don't forget the 25 dairy cattle, which are reputed to produce some of the finest milk in Europe.

The town is named for the castle of the Gandolfi family of Genoa, which was built around 1200. It was originally a fortress against marauders, which explains its high walls and other ancient barriers.?

Franco Origlia / Getty Images

The Apostolic Palace and the Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo on Lake Albano will be the Pope Benedict XVI's residence during the next Conclave, in Rome, Italy. The Apostolic Palace of Castel Gandolfo, 10 miles south Rome, is also the summer residence for popes.

Formally speaking, the Vatican assumed control of Castel Gandolfo only in 1929 under the Lateran Treaty, which formalized relations between Italy and the independent state of Vatican City. But in reality, it has been the church's domain since 1596, when Pope Clement VIII seized it from the Savelli family in lieu of unpaid debts, according to the Vatican's official history.

Today, it's home not only to the Apostolic Palace but also the Vatican Observatory (where visitors can see a moon rock collected during the Apollo XVII mission), the Villa Barberini (where many remains of Domitian's palace are still visible), Villa Cybo (which is used by school of the Maestre Pie Filippini religious community), apartments for 21 employees and the Pontifical Church of St. Thomas of Villanova.

Castel Gandolfo, where Pope Benedict XVI will live until his permanent home is completed, has been a quiet sanctuary for 400 years. NBC's Savannah Guthrie reports.

The spectacular view of Lake Albano from the complex has inspired many artists. Landscapes of the scene by Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot, J.M.W. Turner and Claude Lorraine, among others, hang in some of the world's premier museums.

The complex itself is the setting for stunning works of religious art, as well, among them frescoes by Jan Henryk de Rosen and Angelo Righetti's statue "Madonna of the Park."

The Pontifical Church, designed in 1658 by Gian Lorenzo Bernini, the leading sculptor of his age, features interior domes and statues by Antonio Raggi, famous for grand pieces such as the "Virgin and Child" in Paris and the marble "Death of Saint Cecelia" in Rome. One of Bernini's own masterpieces, a fontana, or fountain, adorns the the piazza facing the Apostolic Palace.

At Castel Gandolfo, "I find everything: a mountain, a lake; I even see the sea," Benedict remarked in 2011. Those words are now engraved on a plaque in the town hall.

Benedict will move in to Castel Gandolfo late Thursday afternoon. He'll get there by helicopter ? a tradition started in 1975 by Pope Paul VI, who wanted to avoid traffic on the ancient Appian Way.

Paul VI was an especially enthusiastic visitor to Castel Gandolfo. In 1972, he described its charms in words that might resonate with Benedict, who said he was abdicating because of his age and declining health:

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A view of a grotto inside the pope's summer residence.

"We, too, enjoy this God-given gift, by breathing the fresh air, admiring the beauty of our natural surroundings, appreciating the enchantment of its light and silence and seeking here to restore our lack of energy, which is never enough and now even a little scarce."

Related:

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/27/17106028-inside-castel-gandolfo-pope-benedicts-spectacular-temporary-retirement-home?lite

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