Monday, April 8, 2013

Safety Eyes and Yarns for Amigurumi Restocked ... - saplanet originals

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I have been really busy since returned from February vacation. The personal life and work life are competing aggressively against each other, to see who wins the race!

There has been a delay in shipment for the safety eyes, and we are still chasing for the short-shipment. I guess it?s just super busy for everyone in the first quarter of a new year.

Nonetheless, most of our safety eyes and yarns are restocked, but some eyes (oval 7mm) are still low stock in inventory?until the short-shipped items are received. We are also negotiating the possibility in stocking up triangle noses in more sizes (currently all triangle noses are out of stock!). That may take a while longer as the factory has to work out the schedule to accommodate to our request.

NEW PATTERNS

New designs are scheduled to be worked on from late April ? exciting new things are happening in my personal life, and it doesn?t involve a living thing (if that is what you are guessing).

CUSTOM (MADE-TO-ORDER) ORDERS ? Finished Products

Custom order is shelved indefinitely because of very heavy schedule. Finished products will be offered in Ready-Made segment, when?I am more adjusted to my new timetable.

PERSONAL LIFE ASPECT

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

A 'light switch' in the brain illuminates neural networks

Friday, April 5, 2013

There are cells in your brain that recognize very specific places, and have that as one of their main jobs. These cells, called place cells, are found in an area behind your temple called the hippocampus. While these cells must be sent information from nearby cells to do their job, so far no one has been able to determine exactly what kind of nerve cells, or neurons, work with place cells to craft the code they create for each location. Neurons come in many different types with specialized functions. Some respond to edges and borders, others to specific locations, others act like a compass and react to which way you turn your head.

Now, researchers at the Kavli Institute for Systems Neuroscience at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology have combined a range of advanced techniques that enable them to identify which neurons communicate with each other at different times in the rat brain, and in doing so, create the animal's sense of location. Their findings are published in the 5 April issue of Science.

"A rat's brain is the size of a grape. Inside there are about fifty million neurons that are connected together at a staggering 450 billion places (roughly)," explains Professor Edvard Moser, director of the Kavli Institute. "Inside this grape-sized brain are areas on each side that are smaller than a grape seed, where we know that memory and the sense of location reside. This is also where we find the neurons that respond to specific places, the place cells. But from which cells do these place cells get information?"

The problem is, of course, that researchers cannot simply cut open the rat brain to see which cells have had contact. That would be the equivalent of taking a giant pile of cooked spaghetti, chopping it into little pieces, and then trying to figure out how the various spaghetti strands were tangled together before the pile was cut up.

A job like this requires the use of a completely different set of neural tools, which is where the "light switches" come into play.

Neurons share many similarities with electric cables when they send signals to each other. They send an electric current in one direction ? from the "body" of the neuron and down a long arm, called the axon, which goes to other nerve cells. Place cells thus get their small electric signals from a whole series of such arms.

So how do light switches play into all of this?

"What we did first was to give these nerve arms a harmless viral infection," Moser says. "We designed a unique virus that does not cause disease, but that acts as a pathway for delivering genes to specific cells. The virus creeps into the neurons, crawls up to the nucleus of the cell, and uses the nerve cell's own factory to make the genetic recipe that we gave to the virus to carry."

The genetic recipe enabled the cell to make the equivalent of a light switch. Our eyes actually contain the same kind of biological light switch, which allows us to see. The virus infection converts neurons that have previously existed only in darkness, deep inside the brain, to now be sensitive to light.

Then the researchers inserted optical fibres in the rat's brain to transmit light to the different unidentified cells that now had light switches in them. They also implanted thin microelectrodes down between the cells so they could detect the signals sent through the axons every time the light from the optical fibre was turned on.

"Now we had everything set up, with light switches installed in cells around the place cells, a lamp, and a way to record the activity," Moser said.

The researchers then turned the lights on and off more than ten thousand times in their rat lab partners, while they monitored and recorded the activity of hundreds of individual cells in the rats' grape-sized brains. The researchers did this research while the rats ran around in a metre-square box, gathering treats. As the rats explored their box and found the treats, the researchers were able to use the light-sensitive cells to figure out which cells were feeding information to the place cells as the rat's brain created the map of where the rat had been.

When the researchers put together all the information afterwards they concluded that there is a whole range of different specialized cells that together provide place cells their information. The brain's GPS ? its sense of place ? is created by signals from head direction cells, border cells, cells that have no known function in creating location points, and grid cells. Place cells thus receive both information about the rat's surroundings and landmarks, but also continuously update their own movement, which is actually independent on sensory input.

"One mystery is the role that the cells that are not part of the sense of direction play. They send signals to place cells, but what do they actually do?" wonders Moser.

"We also wonder how the cells in the hippocampus are able to sort out the various signals they receive. Do they 'listen' to all of the cells equally effectively all the time, or are there some cells that get more time than others to 'talk' to place cells?"

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Norwegian University of Science and Technology: http://www.ntnu.edu

Thanks to Norwegian University of Science and Technology for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127609/A__light_switch__in_the_brain_illuminates_neural_networks

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Vice President of Ticket Sales and Service (Sports Management/Finance/Admin) - Pro Sports (United States)

Vice President of Ticket Sales and Service (Sports Management/Finance/Admin)

Job Number: 84239752
Company Name:Pro Sports
Location: Denver, US
Career Focus:Sales & Sales Management
Vice President of Ticket Sales and Service (Sports Management/Finance/Admin)
The Vice President of Ticket Sales and Service will report to the team President. The position is responsible for all ticket sales and activities related to the conceptualization, implementation and direction of all team ticketing programs and ticketing staff for both sales and service. The position is based in Denver, Colorado.

Essential Duties and Responsibilities

Establish ticketing strategy in collaboration with Team President and Chief Marketing Officer in accordance with overall team marketing and branding strategy
Analyze existing ticket prices and policies and set annual direction and price points and programs
Manage full and part-time ticket sales team
Achieve overall ticketing revenue targets
Manage box office staff
Manage existing customer database
Conduct annual goal setting, mid-year and annual performance reviews for direct reports
Network with community leaders regarding ticketing partnerships
Work game nights
Train sales staff and manage their workflow
Institute a sales and service culture that maximizes top level sales, service and retention
Responsible for development of ticketing staff and timely performance management
Other duties as requested

Qualifications

Bachelor degree
Minimum of 5 - 7 years of proven ticket sales experience, preferably in sports / entertainment industries
Public speaking and presentation skills
Highly motivated
Previous financial experience with revenue and expense budgets and ability to achieve financial goals
Microsoft Word, Excel and Power Point
Ability to meet tight deadlines and work well under pressure
Experience in managing teams
Ability to prioritize and manage multiple tasks / projects
Ability to work collaboratively with others and ability to build strong interpersonal relationships
Availability and willingness to work extended hours, including nights and weekends and be on-call as necessary

Compensation

Salary will be commensurate with experience
Compensation will be a combination of salary, sales commission and team profit sharing
Health benefits, 401K, parking

Get Started Applying for this Job by entering your email address below.

Source: http://www.job-search-engine.com/job/000000008umlu9?impression_id=q4_GUnGcTCyZGMIXSqj6_Q

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Saturday, April 6, 2013

IKEA halts moose lasagne sales after pork traces found

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Furniture retailer IKEA said on Saturday it had halted sales of moose lasagne after traces of pork were found in a batch of the product.

Sales of the lasagne, of which about 10,000 tonnes has been produced by a Swedish supplier for IKEA, were stopped at its stores in 18 countries across Europe after tests by Belgian authorities late last month revealed traces of pork.

"We received confirmation on Friday that one production series contained minced pork in very small quantity, roughly 1 percent," IKEA spokeswoman Tina Kardum said, adding that the tainted series totaled just over 17,000 packages.

"Due to this, we are now in dialogue with our supplier, which has taken steps to make sure this does not happen again."

In February IKEA halted sales of its trade-mark meatballs after tests showed a batch contained horsemeat, a discovery that widened a Europe-wide horsemeat scandal that has damaged confidence in the continent's food industry.

(Reporting by Niklas Pollard; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ikea-halts-moose-lasagne-sales-pork-traces-found-081318481--finance.html

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Thursday, April 4, 2013

Colorado is 'a model of what's possible'

By Jeff Mason

DENVER (Reuters) - President Barack Obama sought to rally public support for proposed background checks for all gun buyers, touting new gun control measures enacted in Colorado - the scene of two of the deadliest gun massacres in American history - as "a model of what's possible."

Obama is aiming to revive stalled momentum in Congress for several gun control measures, including universal background checks for gun buyers, that he called for after a gunman killed 20 children and six adults at a Connecticut school in December. The Senate is set to take up gun control next week.

Speaking in a Western state that Obama noted has a strong tradition of gun ownership and hunting, the president said that taking action to reduce gun violence does not have to infringe on Americans' gun rights, enshrined in the Constitution's Second Amendment.

"There doesn't have to be a conflict between protecting our citizens and protecting our Second Amendment rights," Obama told a cheering crowd in Denver.

Democratic Governor John Hickenlooper last month signed into law legislation passed by Colorado legislators to require universal background checks for gun buyers and ban ammunition magazines with more than 15 rounds.

"I've come to Denver today in particular because Colorado is proving a model of what's possible," Obama said, adding that the state has shown that "practical progress" can be made.

Obama met privately with law enforcement and elected officials as well as relatives of victims of two Colorado mass shootings: at a movie theater last year in the Denver suburb of Aurora and at Columbine High School in 1999.

Obama devoted most of his speech at the Denver Police Academy to trying to build the case for expanding the existing background checks to cover all gun buyers. Loopholes in the law have exempted many gun buyers from such checks.

"Now understand, nobody is talking about creating an entirely new system. We are simply talking about plugging holes, sealing a porous system that isn't working as well as it should," Obama said.

"If you want to buy a gun, whether it's from a licensed dealer or a private seller, you should at least have to pass a background check to show you're not a criminal or someone legally prohibited from buying one. And that's just common sense," Obama added.

No major gun legislation has passed the U.S. Congress since 1994, but Obama has made gun control one of his top legislative priorities. Opinion polls show strong support for background checks and other gun control proposals, but gun rights advocates led by the National Rifle Association have lobbied fiercely against any new measures.

'THEATERS OF WAR'

In Denver, Obama mentioned some of his other gun control proposals - reinstating the ban on assault weapons and cracking down on high-capacity ammunition clips - that already appear to have little chance of passing the Democratic-led Senate, let alone the Republican-controlled House of Representatives.

"I don't believe that weapons designed for theaters of war have a place in movie theaters. Most Americans agree with that," Obama said.

Obama urged Americans to call their senators and House members to ask where they stand and demand votes on his proposals. "There are already some senators back in Washington floating the idea that they might use obscure procedural stunts to prevent or delay any of these votes on reform," Obama said.

Obama drew applause when he pressed for the assault weapon ban despite its bleak prospects in the Senate. At least 15 of the 55-member Senate Democratic caucus are expected to join all the chamber's 45 Republicans to reject the measure.

Even a bipartisan measure to crack down on gun trafficking may be in trouble, according to congressional aides, because of a possible change being pushed by the NRA to weaken it.

The only provision that appears to have strong bipartisan support is a relatively minor one that would provide schools $40 million a year for 10 years to bolster security. This drew Republican backing only after Democrats slashed the proposed price by more than a half.

Obama met with two representatives of hunters' groups in Colorado. The president said he has received "stacks of letters" from gun owners who want gun violence stopped. Obama urged Americans on both sides of the gun debate to listen to each other and try to be more empathetic.

Obama plans to visit Connecticut next week to continue his push for action on reducing gun violence. Connecticut legislators were expected to vote on Wednesday on proposals to expand a state ban on assault weapons and require registration of high-capacity clips.

(Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton and Thomas Ferraro; Editing by Will Dunham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/colorado-law-shows-u-whats-possible-gun-control-201340568.html

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This is the Modem World: When we Google too much

Each week Joshua Fruhlinger contributes This is the Modem World, a column dedicated to exploring the culture of consumer technology.

DNP This is the Modem World When We Google Too Much

Our cat Mischa is ill, and I am sad. But sadness is only one of the things I am feeling. Because of technology and the internet, I am angry, frustrated and a little bit freaked out.

Here's why.

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Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/03/when-we-google-too-much/

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Rumor: iOS 7 Is Behind Schedule, So Apple is Pulling Resources From OS X

Unofficial Apple spokesman John Gruber has written a short post on Daring Fireball suggesting that iOS 7 is running well behind schedule—and that as a result Apple is hauling man power from its OS X development team. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/mxu9BnON6cY/rumor-ios-7-is-behind-schedule-so-apple-is-pulling-resources-from-os-x

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