Friday, October 25, 2013

Raw live results: October 21, 2013

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Source: http://www.wwe.com/shows/raw/2013-10-21/wwe-raw-results
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IBM licenses ARM's mobile processors for communications chips


IBM has licensed smartphone and tablet processor designs from ARM, which will be used in new communications and networking gear.


With the new licenses, IBM has the "capability to add mobile processing to complement our high-performance networking and mobile 'front-end' businesses -- tablets and handsets," said Michael Corrado, an IBM spokesman, in an e-mail.


[ Keep up on the day's tech news headlines with InfoWorld's Today's Headlines: Wrap Up newsletter. ]


IBM has licensed ARM's Cortex-A15, Cortex-A12, Cortex-A7 processors, which are largely for use in smartphones and tablets. IBM did not directly comment on whether it would build smartphones and tablets based on the chips, but said it will make communications and networking gear as it prepares for the "convergence of networking and consumer applications," Corrado said.


IBM has been an ARM licensee for 13 years and the deal is an extension of that partnership. IBM already makes ARM-based chips in its foundries and the companies have also partnered on chip research and manufacturing technologies.


"It certainly could be part of a larger network-to-the-endpoint offerings," said Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT.


IBM could also make networking chips in its foundries for its customers based on ARM's intellectual property, King said.


But the new 32-bit cores licensed by IBM have been used more in mobile devices than networking equipment. Companies like Broadcom and Cavium have instead turned to ARM's new 64-bit ARM Cortex-A57 and A53 cores for use in networking gear. The 64-bit processor designs can be tweaked to handle network tasks like packet inspection and security.


IBM won't build smartphones and tablets for consumers, King said. But the new processors could be used in communications equipment for industrial customers, he said.


As an example, he said the processors could be used in point-of-sale systems, which are becoming increasingly portable.


IBM has also licensed the Mali-450 graphics processing unit, which is not ARM's most advanced graphics processor design. The extremely low-power Cortex-M0 processor was also licensed by IBM.


The new ARM licenses won't have an effect on IBM's Power core for low-power chips.


"Our Power IP will continue to play a key role in this segment," Corrado said.


Agam Shah covers PCs, tablets, servers, chips and semiconductors for IDG News Service. Follow Agam on Twitter at @agamsh. Agam's e-mail address is agam_shah@idg.com


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/computer-hardware/ibm-licenses-arms-mobile-processors-communications-chips-229501
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What Happens When You Just Give Money To Poor People?





Bernard Omondi got $1,000 from GiveDirectly.



Jacob Goldstein/NPR

A couple months ago, we reported on an new charity called GiveDirectly that's trying to help poor people in the developing world in an unusual way: By sending them money with no strings attached.


The idea behind this is simple. Poor people know what they need, and if you give them money they can buy it.


But to some veterans of the charity world, giving cash is worrisome. When we first reported on this we spoke with Carol Bellamy, who used to run UNICEF, and who said people might spend the money on things like alcohol or gambling.


To see whether this was actually happening, researchers did an actual experiment. They surveyed people in Kenya who received money from GiveDirectly, and a similar group of people who didn't get money.


The results from the study are encouraging, says Johannes Haushofer, an economist at MIT's Poverty Action Lab who was one of the study's co-authors.


"We don't see people spending money on alcohol and tobacco," he says. "Instead we see them investing in their kids education, we see them investing in health care. They buy more and better food."


People used the money to buy cows and start businesses. Their kids went hungry less often.


(Full disclosure: Haushofer's co-author helped found Give Directly, but no longer works there. The study, which is described here, was done in partnership with Innovations for Poverty Action.)


I ran the results by Carol Bellamy, the former UNICEF director who had been skeptical about giving cash. "I was impressed," she said. "The return on investment was more positive than I would have anticipated."


There were two areas where the study did not find significant improvement. Even though households were spending more on health and education, it didn't seem to be having much effect. People who got money were sick just as often as those who got less. And school attendance rates for their kids didn't really change. Bellamy says those findings suggest that, while cash seems to help in the short run, it's still unclear whether it helps in the long run.


Paul Niehaus, one of Give Directly's founders, does think cash can have long-lasting effects. He points to a similar study in Uganda where the government gave people money and people's incomes went up — and stayed up, even years later. People had used the money to start small businesses, like metal working or tailoring clothes.


Niehaus says for him, the most interesting results from the new research were the improvements in mental health. Getting money made people happier, less stressed out.


"There is this growing realization that being poor is really stressful, and that hat can make it hard to organize your life and plan and make good decisions," Niehaus says. "If one of the things that giving people wealth is doing is enabling them to feel more sane and more in control of their life, that could ultimately be one of the more important things."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2013/10/25/240590433/what-happens-when-you-just-give-money-to-poor-people?ft=1&f=1001
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Mother Knows Best

Presumably one day large numbers of people will seamlessly sign up for health care on the newly created health care exchanges. When that day comes, the Obama administration will still face its primary challenge: getting large numbers of bros—that is to say, healthy, 18- to-29-year-old single men—to sign up for Obamacare.














The economics of the Affordable Care Act make bros matter a lot. Like any insurance pool, the state exchanges will depend on buy-in from young, healthy people, who are cheaper to insure, to ballast premiums. Of the 7 million people the White House wants to sign up for the exchanges by next March, about 2.7 million of them are under the age of 35. The problem is many young people either don’t see the value in signing up for the exchanges or don’t understand how they work.










And that’s why this ad from a nonprofit promoting Colorado’s health exchange is so genius:
















“Keg stands are crazy,” the ad reads. “Not having health insurance is crazier. Don’t tap into your beer money to cover those medical bills. We got it covered.” Another bro-care ad reads, “My girlfriend broke my heart, so me and the bros went golfing. Then my buddy broke my head. Good thing Mom made sure I got insurance.”










State organizations—like the creators of the “brosurance” ad—are faced with the same basic conundrum as Monday Night Football advertisers: How do you convince young men to buy something they don’t think they need? The brosurance ad was created by the Colorado Consumer Health Initiative as part of a campaign targeting groups of people who hit the insurance “sweet spot”—people who aren’t poor enough to qualify for Medicare but are unemployed or don’t get insurance through their work. Other ads feature a pregnant woman, a bike-riding hipster, and an athletic middle-aged rock climber.










Adam Fox, the group’s director of strategic engagement, says the publicity the brosurance ad has garnered shows the type of viral approach these PSAs need to have if they are going to reach young men. “This is a demographic that hasn’t really been successfully marketed to in health insurance,” Fox says. “If people aren’t going to look at it, they’re not going to learn anything.”










So, the success of Obamacare doesn’t just hinge on enrolling sick people (or a functional website, for that matter). Ultimately, young people will decide how much they and everyone else will pay depending on how many of them buy into the exchanges.










It isn’t necessarily a tough sell. In one poll, 70 percent of people under 30 said having health care was “very important” to them. Still, many young people are skeptical of whether it’s cost-effective to sign up for the exchanges, even though most of them will be eligible for subsidies. A 21-year-old in California making less than $34,470 will receive at least some help from the government to pay for a silver plan. Those who make more than $34,470 (or 300 percent of the federal poverty line) will have to pay at least $216 a month and won’t receive any federal subsidies. They can also turn down the exchanges and pay a $95 fine for the first year.










Aside from cheeky ads, how can states get young men to buy in? Enter Mom. Mothers make the health care decisions in 80 percent of families, and they’re the most effective “messengers” to persuade their kids to sign up for health care. Anne Filipic, who leads the nonprofit group Enroll America, says men may be the ultimate target for groups promoting the exchanges—they are more skeptical of health insurance and tend to visit the doctor less—but they’re focusing on women because of their decision-making role. “The messenger matters a lot,” Filipic says. “The most effective thing we can do is get moms and women the information, so in their day-to-day conversations they can be spreading the word.”










Mothers make the health care decisions in 80 percent of families, and they’re the most effective “messengers” to convince their kids to sign up for health care.










Enroll America surveyed young people and asked who they were most likely to trust talking to them about health care. For young women, “someone like me” was the most persuasive messenger. For young men, it was their mom, followed by their spouse or girlfriend. That’s why the Obama administration has promoted the exchanges on mom-friendly media like allrecipes.com, Good Morning America, and Elle magazine. The group MomsRising is even recruiting mothers to proselytize on the law’s benefits for young people through its “Wellness Wonder Teams.” The AARP has created a site called Your Mom Means It (or, en EspaƱol, Tu Mama Sabe), with e-cards for moms to guilt their kids into signing up for the exchanges. “I don’t mind being the reason you get health insurance,” one reads. “You’re the reason that I drink wine out of a box.” Another: “As a reward for signing up for health insurance, I’ll defriend you on Facebook.”










Winning the support of moms has become its own battleground between pro- and anti-Obamacare groups. In dueling videos, Americans for Prosperity and Organizing for Action compete to capitalize on mothers’ attention to their young children’s health. Anti-Obamacare groups are also targeting young people, like Generation Opportunity, which gave a tongue-in-cheek “Youth Defender Award”  to the creators of healthcare.gov for preventing people from signing up for the exchanges. (You may also remember the group’s creepy Uncle Sam ads from September.) The White House worked with Funny or Die on a Scandal spoof, and Rep. Darrell Issa used Lolcats, that memetic workhorse, to make fun of the Obamacare help line.










Of course, cat GIFs don’t do it for everyone. Young people aren’t a monolith. There are high school dropouts and those with graduate degrees; those who are covered by their parents’ insurance and those who aren’t; single men and pregnant, married women; young people who’ve never broken a bone in their body and others who have cancer. Whether or not they sign up for government health care or pay a penalty is ultimately up to them. But everyone will be better off if the bros decide to get those totally jacked biceps state-insured.








Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/politics/2013/10/obamacare_brosurance_and_mothers_the_affordable_care_act_s_unlikely_allies.html
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Gawker Texas Mom Ripped Off Son's Scrotum and Then Superglued It Back On | io9 Are women really bett

Gawker Texas Mom Ripped Off Son's Scrotum and Then Superglued It Back On | io9 Are women really better multitaskers than men? | Jezebel Here's a Very Awkward Marriage Proposal That Happened Live on 'Today' | Kotaku Video Game Tries To Be Cute, Is Instead Horrifying

Read more...


    
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Twitter sets $17 to $20 per share range for IPO

A Twitter app on an iPhone screen is shown in this photo, in New York, Friday, Oct. 18, 2013. The New York Stock Exchange isn't taking any chances with Twitter's initial public offering. The Big Board said Friday it would allow trading firms to conduct a dry run of their systems, Saturday Oct. 26, 2013 to prepare for Twitter's IPO. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)







A Twitter app on an iPhone screen is shown in this photo, in New York, Friday, Oct. 18, 2013. The New York Stock Exchange isn't taking any chances with Twitter's initial public offering. The Big Board said Friday it would allow trading firms to conduct a dry run of their systems, Saturday Oct. 26, 2013 to prepare for Twitter's IPO. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)







(AP) — Twitter has set a price range of $17 to $20 per share for its initial public offering and says it could raise as much as $1.6 billion in the process. The pricing is relatively conservative considering that Twitter is poised to pull off the year's hottest IPO.

Twitter Inc. said in a regulatory filing Thursday that it will put forth 70 million shares in the offering. If all the shares are sold, the underwriters can buy another 10.5 million shares.

At the $20 share price, Twitter's market value would be around $12.5 billion, roughly one-tenth of Facebook's current valuation. Twitter's value is based on 625.2 million outstanding shares expected after the offering, including restricted stock units and stock options.

The San Francisco-based short-messaging service plans to list its stock under the ticker symbol "TWTR" on the New York Stock Exchange. The shares will likely start trading in early November. Twitter will begin its IPO "roadshow" as early as Friday, meeting with prospective investors to pitch its stock.

The company's valuation is conservative. Some analysts had expected the figure to be as high as $20 billion. Back in August Twitter priced some of its employee stock options at $20.62, based on an appraisal by an investment firm.

Other publicly traded companies in the $12 billion range include tool maker Stanley Black & Decker and pharmaceutical company Forest Laboratories. LinkedIn Corp., meanwhile, stands around $27 billion based on its closing stock price Thursday.

Twitter's caution suggests that the company learned from Facebook's rocky initial public offering last year. Rather than set expectations too high, Twitter is playing it safe and will very likely raise its price range closer to the IPO, and thus fuel demand.

Facebook's IPO was marred by technical glitches on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange in May of 2012. As a result, the Securities and Exchange Commission fined Nasdaq $10 million, the largest ever levied against an exchange. Those problems likely led Twitter to the NYSE.

Last week, Twitter disclosed that it lost $65 million in the third quarter, three times as much as in the same period a year earlier. It was the company's biggest quarterly loss since 2010. Founded in 2006, Twitter has never posted a profit, but its revenue is growing. Revenue for the latest quarter more than doubled from the same period last year, to nearly $169 million.

The IPO has been long expected. The company has been adding to its arsenal of advertising products and working to boost ad revenue in preparation. Still, it's ad revenue is small compared with Facebook. Twitter says it has more than 230 million monthly users, compared with Facebook's roughly 1.2 billion.

A big part of Twitter's appeal is in its simplicity and public nature. Users can send short messages that consist of up to 140 characters. Anyone can "follow" anyone else, but the relationship doesn't have to be reciprocal, which makes the service especially attractive for celebrities and companies that use Twitter to communicate directly with fans and customers.

__

AP Technology Writer Michael Liedtke contributed to this story from San Francisco.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-10-24-Twitter-IPO-Pricing/id-c113897056a5418d9c3921d2d6e21088
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Thursday, October 24, 2013

Unleashing the power of the crowd

Unleashing the power of the crowd


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

24-Oct-2013



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Contact: Katherine Gombay
katherine.gombay@mcgill.ca
514-398-2189
McGill University



McGill online game expands to connect global scientific community with citizen scientists




Over the past three years, 300,000 gamers have helped scientists with genomic research by playing Phylo, an online puzzle game. Now Jrme Waldisphl, the McGill computer science professor and his colleagues, who developed the game are making this crowd of players available to scientists around the globe. The idea is to put human talent to work to improve on what is already being done by computers in the field of comparative genomics.


Phylo is a cross between Tetris, Rubik's cube and an old-fashioned sliding-tile puzzle game. As gamers line up coloured rectangles that represent real genetic material (in the form of DNA sequences), they are helping to pinpoint the genetic anomalies that may be the key to a range of diseases that include diabetes, breast cancer and retinoblastoma (the most common form of malignant tumour in the eyes of children). Since it was first launched, players who range from teenagers to seniors have suggested solutions for over 4,000 puzzles based on genomic data that has already been gathered. Now these gamers will be put to use helping scientists with a whole new range of research.


Waldisphl and his colleagues are hoping that along with providing solutions to genomic problems, this process will also help to promote a better general understanding of scientific research. "Playing a game helps lower the barriers that sometimes exist between scientists and the population in general," says Waldisphl. "Since we launched Phylo, what I've most enjoyed are the conversations I've had with people who are interested in science and want to know more about the research. Our goal now is to connect thousands of scientists around the globe with hundreds of thousands of gamers."




Waldisphl and his colleagues have already fielded inquiries from scientists working on viral bioinformatics at the University of Victoria. And they hope soon to hear from many others. Phylo is already available in 10 languages, including German, Russian, Chinese and Hebrew, and a future goal is to translate the website into Japanese, Arabic and Italian.


###


To access the game online: http://phylo.cs.mcgill.ca/


To contact the researcher directly: jerome.waldispuhl@mcgill.ca




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Unleashing the power of the crowd


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

24-Oct-2013



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Contact: Katherine Gombay
katherine.gombay@mcgill.ca
514-398-2189
McGill University



McGill online game expands to connect global scientific community with citizen scientists




Over the past three years, 300,000 gamers have helped scientists with genomic research by playing Phylo, an online puzzle game. Now Jrme Waldisphl, the McGill computer science professor and his colleagues, who developed the game are making this crowd of players available to scientists around the globe. The idea is to put human talent to work to improve on what is already being done by computers in the field of comparative genomics.


Phylo is a cross between Tetris, Rubik's cube and an old-fashioned sliding-tile puzzle game. As gamers line up coloured rectangles that represent real genetic material (in the form of DNA sequences), they are helping to pinpoint the genetic anomalies that may be the key to a range of diseases that include diabetes, breast cancer and retinoblastoma (the most common form of malignant tumour in the eyes of children). Since it was first launched, players who range from teenagers to seniors have suggested solutions for over 4,000 puzzles based on genomic data that has already been gathered. Now these gamers will be put to use helping scientists with a whole new range of research.


Waldisphl and his colleagues are hoping that along with providing solutions to genomic problems, this process will also help to promote a better general understanding of scientific research. "Playing a game helps lower the barriers that sometimes exist between scientists and the population in general," says Waldisphl. "Since we launched Phylo, what I've most enjoyed are the conversations I've had with people who are interested in science and want to know more about the research. Our goal now is to connect thousands of scientists around the globe with hundreds of thousands of gamers."




Waldisphl and his colleagues have already fielded inquiries from scientists working on viral bioinformatics at the University of Victoria. And they hope soon to hear from many others. Phylo is already available in 10 languages, including German, Russian, Chinese and Hebrew, and a future goal is to translate the website into Japanese, Arabic and Italian.


###


To access the game online: http://phylo.cs.mcgill.ca/


To contact the researcher directly: jerome.waldispuhl@mcgill.ca




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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/mu-utp102413.php
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