Monday, August 5, 2013

DSG announce the re-launch of Golf.co.uk as the leading UK golf news site

(PRWEB UK) 4 August 2013

The site has been completely rebuilt on super fast modern frameworks claim its designers, and offers many things existing users have asked for including easy to use live stats, with world rankings and money lists, news, videos and live matches from the main European Tour and US PGA TOUR as well as Asian and amateur matches.

Head of Operations at DSG, Matthew Tait had this to say: ?Golf.co.uk is the first of several re-launches we have planned over the coming few months. We have taken on board feedback and user research to build what we think is the best golf site ever built. Now you may never miss a Tiger Woods putt, Rory McIlroy chip or Justin Rose tee off at any tour match or major. In addition we also have a number of further enhancements planned to take the site to new levels over the coming months. We are delighted with where we are with it and still very excited for the future of the site.?

Simon Boynton, Managing Director of DSG believes that golf.co.uk has broken new ground. ?There are many golf sites out there but this is the first time that such broad and up to date news and data has been available on one site. DSG will continue to break new ground and shine a light as the leading independent sports network in the UK.?

Digital Sports Group are the official partners of the PFA and publish sites such as football.co.uk, sport.co.uk and the Footymad network.


Source: http://uk.prweb.com/releases/2013/8/prweb10988753.htm

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Saturday, August 3, 2013

Ellen DeGeneres to host Oscars for 2nd time

FILE - In this April 29, 2013 file photo, TV host Ellen DeGeneres arrives at the season 4 premiere of "Arrested Development" in Los Angeles. Producers announced Friday, Aug. 2, that DeGeneres will return to host the Oscars on March 2, 2014. (Photo by Katy Winn/Invision/AP, File)

FILE - In this April 29, 2013 file photo, TV host Ellen DeGeneres arrives at the season 4 premiere of "Arrested Development" in Los Angeles. Producers announced Friday, Aug. 2, that DeGeneres will return to host the Oscars on March 2, 2014. (Photo by Katy Winn/Invision/AP, File)

(AP) ? Comic and daytime television host Ellen DeGeneres was picked to host the Academy Awards for the second time.

Show producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron announced DeGeneres' selection Friday. The movie awards show will air on ABC on March 2.

"There are few stars today who have Ellen's gift for comedy, with her great warmth and humanity," the producers said in a statement. "She is beloved everywhere."

DeGeneres quipped: "I am so excited to be hosting the Oscars for the second time. You know what they say ? the third time's the charm."

She also announced the gig on Twitter, posting: "It's official: I'm hosting the #Oscars! I'd like to thank @TheAcademy, my wife Portia and, oh dear, there goes the orchestra."

Last year's host, "Family Guy" creator Seth MacFarlane, drew mixed reviews for an edgy performance that included a song-and-dance number, "We Saw Your Boobs," about actresses who had gone topless on screen. He had already taken himself out of the running for a return engagement next year.

Academy Awards organizers had hoped to attract a younger audience with MacFarlane, and the ratings showed they succeeded.

With DeGeneres, they went for a star that Hollywood and television viewers were familiar and comfortable with.

About her first hosting role in 2007, television critic Frazier Moore of The Associated Press wrote that "like her, the evening was easygoing, comfortable and relatively unsurprising."

DeGeneres was nominated for an Emmy Award for her last gig. Her daytime talk show has won 45 Daytime Emmys during a decade on the air.

The Oscars, with 40.3 million viewers this year, is very often the year's most-watched television event after the Super Bowl.

___

Online:

http://www.oscars.org/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-08-02-Oscars-DeGeneres/id-6e8a6c63378044f891e89a81497e3aa5

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Friday, August 2, 2013

Georgia State student forms White Student Union

"If we are already minorities on campus and are soon to be minorities in this country why wouldn't we have the right to advocate for ourselves and have a club just like every other minority?" Sharp, 18,?said. "Why is it when a white person say he is proud to be white he?s shunned as a racist?"

Read more:?http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/08/01/georgia-state-student-forms-white-student-union/?test=latestnews#ixzz2ajEnGsD1

Source: http://capt-cave-man.newsvine.com/_news/2013/08/01/19817173-georgia-state-student-forms-white-student-union

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Salad-tied outbreak widespread, source not pegged

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) ? Food safety advocates are sounding an alarm at the lack of information being disseminated about an enduring intestinal illness tied to prepackaged salad that has sickened nearly 400 people nationwide.

The outbreak of the rare parasite cyclospora has been reported in at least 15 states, and federal officials warned Wednesday it was too early to say it is over.

But if you're looking to find out exactly where it came from, you may be out of luck.

Health officials in Nebraska and Iowa say they've traced cases there to prepackaged salad. They haven't revealed the company that packaged the salad or where it was sold, explaining only that most if not all of it wasn't grown locally.

The lack of information has fueled concern from consumers and others who argue companies should be held accountable when outbreaks happen and customers need the information about where outbreaks came from to make smart food choices.

"If you want the free market to work properly, then you need to let people have the information they need to make informed decisions," said Bill Marler, a Seattle attorney who specializes in class-action food-safety lawsuits.

Heath authorities in California, which provides much of the nation's leafy green produce, said Wednesday the state had not received any reports of cyclospora cases.

"Based on the most currently available information, the leafy greens being implicated in this outbreak were not grown or processed in California," added spokesman Corey Egel in a statement to the Associated Press.

Mark Hutson, who owns a Save-Mart grocery story in Lincoln, Neb., said the lack of specific brand information threatened to hurt all providers, including the good actors.

"I think there was so little information as to what was causing the problem, that people just weren't sure what to do," he said. "Frankly, we would prefer to have the names out there."

Authorities said they still hadn't determined whether the cases of cyclospora in the different states are connected.

"It's too early to say for sure whether it's over, and thus too early to say there's no risk of still getting sick," said Mar?a-Bel?n Moran, spokeswoman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Only Iowa and Nebraska officials had directly linked the outbreak in their states to a salad mix of iceberg and romaine lettuce, carrots and red cabbage.

Still, grocery shoppers far from known outbreak areas acknowledged it was a factor as they shopped for produce.

"I can't say I really want to go and buy particularly any lettuce right now," said Laura Flanagan, 35, who was shopping at a Whole Foods in Dallas with her two young children. "I'm being pretty cautious about it."

The product was widely distributed in Iowa by wholesalers who could have supplied the bagged salad mix to all types of food establishments, including restaurants and grocery stores, said Iowa Food and Consumer Safety Bureau chief Steven Mandernach.

Mandernach said at least 80 percent of the vegetables were grown and processed outside both Iowa and Nebraska. He said officials haven't confirmed the origins of 20 percent and may never know because victims can't always remember what they ate.

Iowa law allows public health officials to withhold the identities of any person or business affected by an outbreak. However, business names can be released to the public if the state epidemiologist or public health director determines that disclosing the information is needed to protect public safety.

Mandernach said there is no immediate threat, so his office is not required to release information about where the product came from. He said state officials believe the affected salad already has spoiled and is no longer in the supply chain.

Nebraska public health officials said they still hadn't traced the exact origins of the outbreaks.

"I am by no means giving all-clear, green light on the issue," said Dr. Joseph Acierno, the state's chief medical officer and director of public health. "We're encouraging the medical community to stay vigilant."

Food-safety and consumer advocates say the agencies shouldn't withhold the information.

"It's not clear what the policy is, and at the very least they owe it to us to explain why they come down this way," said Sandra Eskin, director of the Pew Charitable Trusts' food safety project. "I think many people wonder if this is all because of possible litigation."

Marler said withholding the information can create general fears that damage the reputation of good actors in food production. He said consumers should be allowed to decide for themselves whether to shop and grocery stores or eat at restaurants where tainted produce was sold.

Some states also are slow to interview infected people, he said, which reduces the chances that they remember where they ate.

The Food and Drug Administration said Wednesday that it didn't have enough information to name a possible source of the outbreak. In the past, the agencies have at times declined to ever name a source of an outbreak, referring to "Restaurant A" or using vague terms.

Caroline Smith DeWaal of the Center for Science in the Public Interest says that the decision to withhold a company's name may not only hurt consumers but the food industry, as well. When an item is generally implicated but officials give few specifics, like with the bagged salad, people may stop buying the product altogether.

"I think consumers need more information to make good buying decisions," she said.

Responsibility for disclosing the names of businesses involved general falls to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration because their authority crosses state lines, said Doug Farquhar, a program director with the National Conference of State Legislatures. Farquhar said most states have laws that prohibit the disclosure of businesses that are affected by a foodborne illness.

"In some cases, states go 'rogue' and release the names without FDA approval, in the name of public safety," Farquhar said. "But for the most part, states prefer to let the FDA release the names and take the heat.

___

Associated Press writers Uriel Garcia in Dallas and Gosia Wozniacka in Fresno, Calif., contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/salad-tied-outbreak-widespread-source-not-pegged-070835989.html

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More than 40 percent of active Android devices now run Jelly Bean, Gingerbread stubbornly holds steady

More than 40 percent of active Android devices now run Jelly Bean, Gingerbread stubbornly holds steady

The last time Google visited Jelly Bean's user saturation numbers, it took the combined efforts of 4.1 and 4.2 to edge out Gingerbread's (v2.3.3 through 2.3.7) hold on the user base. Not anymore; the latest numbers from the Android Dashboard show the base version of Jelly Bean, Android 4.1, representing 34 percent of the active devices -- singlehandedly surpassing the old guard's 33 percent share of the market. When combined with the rest of the Jelly Bean contingent (Android 4.2 and above), Google's latest flavor of Android crushes Gingerbread with a 40.5 percent majority.

Froyo (v2.2), Eclair (v2.1) and Ice Cream Sandwich (v4.0.3 through 4.0.4) all took modest hits as well, though the latter of the trio retained its third-place position with 22.5 percent of active users. The only builds to hold steady? Honeycomb (v3.2) and Donut (v1.6), each retaining a miniscule 0.1 percent of the market. We'll admit, it's cute to see these old versions hang on, but please -- if you're still rocking a handset running Android 1.6, do us all a favor and turn it off.

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Source: Android Developers

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/08/01/more-than-40-percent-of-active-android-devices-run-jelly-bean/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Chesapeake profit tops Street estimate, review underway

By Anna Driver

(Reuters) - Chesapeake Energy Corp's new Chief Executive Doug Lawler on Thursday said a comprehensive review of the company's partnerships and assets is underway as the second largest U.S. natural gas provider seeks to simplify its structure and improve financial discipline.

The company, which experienced a severe liquidity crunch in 2012 after spending heavily for years to acquire drilling acreage, also reported a better-than-expected quarterly profit on Thursday as it produced more crude oil than Wall Street targeted.

Investors, who have for a long-time lobbied the company to streamline its operations, pushed the company's shares up 7 percent in late morning trading. The stock rose the highest level in more than a year.

Mark Hanson, oil analyst with Morningstar said Chesapeake's oil volumes where hiweregher-than-expected on both a year-over-year and sequential basis. He also noted the company reduced its capital spending plans for 2013 and has only spent $100 million on undeveloped land so far this year.

"New Chesapeake wouldn't recognize old Chesapeake if they passed each other on the street," he said.

This is the first quarter that Chesapeake has reported earnings under Lawler, who was named to replace former CEO Aubrey McClendon in May. McClendon left the company he co-founded earlier this year after a series of Reuters investigations triggered civil and criminal probes of the company.

Lawler, a former executive with Anadarko Petroleum Corp , declined to provide many details about the review that he and other senior managers are conducting. But he said that everything will get a comprehensive look.

The general aim is to "reduce the complexity and provide better clarity on where we are getting our best returns," Lawler told analysts on a conference call. He said we would refrain from saying any asset is untouchable.

Shares of Chesapeake rose $1.55 to $24.85 in late morning New York Stock Exchange trading.

Chesapeake, said oil production in the quarter rose 44 percent to 116,000 barrels per day (bpd), with much of the growth coming from its properties in the Eagle Ford Shale in south Texas. It raised its crude output forecast for the full year.

Analysts at Bernstein Research had estimated Chesapeake's oil production at 105,000 bpd in the quarter.

Second-quarter profit at the Oklahoma City-based company fell to $457 million, or 66 cents per share, from $929 million, or $1.29 per share, a year earlier.

But adjusting for one-time items, Chesapeake had a profit of 51 cents per share. Analysts, on average, expected 41 cents per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

(Reporting by Anna Driver; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick, Jeffrey Benkoe and Sofina Mirza-Reid)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chesapeake-profit-tops-street-estimate-review-underway-150645726.html

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

Enormous 33 pound mushroom found in China

By The Christian Science Monitor
Wednesday, July 31, 2013 7:17 EDT

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheRawStory/~3/L_3kOpnMs4I/

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Apple Meets with Head of China Mobile to Discuss Potential Deal

Apple Meets with Head of China Mobile to Discuss Potential Deal

Published on 07-31-2013 02:24 PM

Tim Cook?s trip to China was said to include a visit with the head of the largest carrier in the world, China Mobile, as Apple?s chief executive continues to work toward a potential partnership. The meeting between Cook and China Mobile Chairman Xi Guohua took place in Beijing, and was confirmed by the carrier to Reuters. The two sides met to discuss ?matters of cooperation,? but no other details were provided.

Speculation points towards a potential deal between Apple and China Mobile for some time. Cook most recently met with China Mobile in January but the carrier still has yet to offer the iPhone. Currently the iPhone is available on carriers China Unicom and China Telecom.

China Mobile was said to have 15 million unofficial iPhone users on its network as of March of 2012. It is also said to host roughly 715 million subscribers with only 13% of those being on high-speed 3G networks. The carrier hopes to rectify that by investing $6.7 billion to build out its 4G technology while it?s been speculated that Qualcomm?s latest LTE chips could allow Apple to have true global high-speed data support for carriers like China Mobile with its next iPhone update.

Cook is said to have also met with carrier China Telecom on his current trip to China. With Apple rumored to be planning to release a new entry-level plastic iPhone in the coming months, observers have speculated that device could have been a key point of discussion between the two companies. We?ll have to wait and see what comes out of Cook?s visit to China when more concrete information is revealed.

Source: Reuters (Image courtesy of MIIT)

Source: http://modmyi.com/content/11708-apple-meets-head-china-mobile-discuss-potential-deal.html

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