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Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Sleeping Baby....














Your baby's sleep

Wondering if your baby will ever sleep through the night? We've got tips and advice to help your baby go to sleep – and stay asleep. We also answer your questions on how to make sure your baby is sleeping safely. Feeling sleep-starved yourself? We can help you cope.

Barack Obama's vision of a scientific America

In modern times, America has led the world in scientific discovery. But since 2000, the country has seen what might be termed a scientific recession.

For five consecutive years, federal investment in science has fallen, stalling endeavour and leading to despondency among America's scientists.

Within the administration of George W Bush, scientific advice has been sidelined and subjected to sustained political manipulation.

Expert advisers on vital issues such as global warming, stem-cell research and the teaching of evolution have been marginalised, ignored and even removed from office.

The Republican approach during the election campaign was no better.

Despite John McCain's acceptance of global warming, his running mate, Sarah Palin, was widely thought to be hostile to scientific opinion, given her promotion of creationism in schools, her ridiculing of scientific research (for example on polar bears' endangered status) and her claims both that climate change wasn't man-made, and that it "kinda didn't matter" what had caused it.

It is no wonder, then, that 76 American Nobel laureates publicly supported Barack Obama – nor that there has been a dramatic lightening in mood among my colleagues in New York over the past week.

Obama understands – at least, according to his campaign literature and rhetoric – that science has the power to improve lives profoundly.

He also realises that the nations that succeed in the highly competitive world economy are those that foster technological advances and nurture intellectual strength.

What are Obama's specific pledges? First, to increase federal funding for science and engineering, which has halved as a share of GDP since 1970. He has promised to double the research budgets of the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and the other key agencies over the next decade, supporting high-risk, high-reward research in computing, biotech, nanotechnology and other fields.

Second, Obama has promised to invest in education, guaranteeing students access to a strong science curriculum and increasing the importance of maths and physics in schools.

Third, there is his plan for a green economy: a promised investment of $150 billion over 10 years to create five million new jobs.

There will be a cap-and-trade system for carbon emissions and renewed engagement with international climate groups, including the UN's; investment in nuclear energy, clean coal technology and energy efficiency; and a requirement that
10 per cent of America's energy comes from renewable sources by 2012.

Fourth, there will be more investment in America's space programme, and in long-term research by the Pentagon's Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency.

And finally, there will also be a new willingness to engage with genetic research: the head of Obama's "transition team" has already signified that they will look again at stem-cell research, which President Bush rejected.

So there is a feeling of hope that the new president will be much better for American science, and as a result for science across the globe.

There is no doubt that the President-elect sees an increased investment in science and technology as a way to introduce greener policies and help his country fight its way out of its economic turmoil.

But it is one thing to pledge an increase of funding during an election campaign, and another to double the budget during a global recession.

This will be one of Obama's foremost tests: can he deliver a sizable slice of a pie that every other sector and lobby group also wants?

The biggest challenge is to find a way to deliver the increase in funding for biomedical research, and the much-needed doubling of funding for research in the physical and engineering sciences, which was set out in the America Competes Act of 2007.

As the National Academy of Sciences warned in its report of the same year, Rising Above the Gathering Storm, America's advantages in the marketplace and in science and technology will be eroded without it.

Obama also needs to bring science back to the centre of government. In the UK, the science minister, Lord Drayson, attends Cabinet and has a PhD in robotics.

Gordon Brown has a track record of support for science, and there is cross-party agreement on its importance.

The Prime Minister recently supported and funded plans for a world-class research centre to tackle some of the biggest biomedical challenges of the 21st century: a public-private UK Centre for Medical Research and Innovation that will bring together four of the world's leading biomedical research organisations – the Medical Research Council, Cancer Research UK, Wellcome Trust and University College London – in secure, high-quality laboratories in the heart of London.

So, without delay, President-elect Obama should appoint an influential, independent science adviser who can play an active role in establishing scientific priorities for the administration.

President Bush failed to confirm his chief science adviser, Dr John Marburger, until 10 months into his first term, killing any chance science had of having a true voice within his administration.

Obama must ensure that good, objective science is important at all levels of government, and that political prejudice is never allowed to cloud it.

He cannot behave like his predecessor, who removed Dr Elizabeth Blackburn from a scientific advisory position simply because she disagreed with his policies on stem-cell research.

Putting good science advisers in place – as he did with his campaign – could enable the new president to create sensible and sustainable policies, strengthening the world's ability to respond to the complex challenges posed by some of the biggest issues of our time: climate change, feeding humanity, improving global health, driving the economy forward.

He could ensure advances in knowledge by supporting research in areas ranging from stem cells to particle physics, and restore the faith of the scientific community by allowing good impartial science to be seen for what it is, without political manipulation.

This is an opportunity for a fresh start. America is a nation that has stagnated scientifically during the first years of the
21st century, but this can be reversed if actions follow the strong rhetoric we have seen during the campaign.

If Obama delivers, the whole world will benefit.

Coming Soon To Chrome: Google Bookmarks?


Is Google finally going to do something with their bookmarking tool, Google Bookmarks? It's possible. In the latest builds of the Chromium project, the open source implementation of the Google Chrome web browser which is the testing ground for new features, a new and improved bookmark manager has been spotted which allows you to import your bookmarks from the Google Bookmarks service.

The new bookmark manager in the Chromium builds looks a lot more like what you would expect to see in a web browser today. Instead of the simplified interface currently found in Chrome, the Chromium bookmark manager lets you search for bookmarks, drag-and-drop them into folders, and even import and export them to and from HTML files.




However, the most interesting feature of the upcoming bookmarks manager is the new option to import bookmarks from Google Bookmarks. Although at the present time the browser presents this as an option to import from "Google Toolbar," that's somewhat misleading because the Google Toolbar doesn't even need to be installed in order to import your saved bookmarks from the service. Unfortunately, the new bookmark manager in Chromium doesn't sync up with the Google Bookmarks service automatically.


Google Bookmarks' Potential

It seems to us that Google is sitting on a untapped goldmine with their Google Bookmarks service. This half-hearted attempt at organizing your favorites sites looks like a project that was stopped mid-way through its implementation. In order to save bookmarks using the service today, you can star items from the Google Toolbar (if installed), you can use a browser bookmarklet, you can manually add a link from the bookmarks homepage or through the iGoogle Gadget, or you can click the star next to items in your Web History. What you can't do, however, is import bookmarks from an HTML file or browser, tag them, or share them with others.

But now that Google has a browser of their own, it only makes sense to tie together browser bookmarks and their bookmarking service. And surely they must realize that in order to get people to use Google Bookmarks instead of their current preferred service, Google must offer some compelling reasons to do so. By integrating Google Bookmarks deep within their browser itself and making them searchable through the familiar Google interface, they could offer a great reason to switch over to both their bookmarking service and their browser. If Google went the extra step and made their bookmarks sync between all the implementations of the Chrome browser, including the one they are preparing for Android, they could knock out competition from Opera, too, whose bookmark sync option is one of the browser's killer features for mobile users.

Even better would be an option to sign in to the Chrome browser using a Google profile in order to access the bookmarks along with other the services from Google like Gmail, Reader, or their personalized homepage.

Perhaps we're getting ahead of ourselves since nothing of the sort has been announced or implemented yet, but we hope that we're not the only ones thinking of all the possibilities that Chrome presents here.

The Colorful Moon





Earth's Moon is normally seen in subtle shades of grey or yellow. But small color differences have been greatly exaggerated to make this dramatic mosaic image of the Moon's gibbous phase. The familiar Sea of Tranquility (Mare Tranquillitatis) is the blue area right of center. White lines radiate from the crater Tycho at bottom left, while purplish tones mottle the crater Copernicus left of center. Though exaggerated, the different colors are recognized to correspond to real differences in the chemical makeup of the lunar surface - blue hues reveal titanium rich areas while orange and purple colors show regions relatively poor in titanium and iron. Calibrated by rock samples from the Apollo missions, similar multicolor images from spacecraft have been used to explore the Moon's global surface composition.

You can't see me here!

The Mysterious Coral Castle of Homestead, Florida

In the city of Homestead, Florida sits a strange stone structure created by eccentric Edward Leedskalnin. No one really knows why it was built or how, but considering each of the megalithic coral stones weigh more than most men could move alone, the emergence of the Coral Castle remains an impressive mystery.

Edward never allowed anyone to witness the building of Coral Castle. A suspicious and private man, he worked at night by lantern, behind large walls he constructed. Reports from neighbors claim he levitated the blocks, some weighing 30 tons, twice the weight of the largest blocks in the Great Pyramid of Giza.


Teenagers living in the area claimed they saw him one night, “singing to the massive stone, and it moved like it was a hydrogen balloon, easily settling into place.” By his own account, Edward claimed, “I have discovered the secrets of the pyramids, and have found out how the Egyptians and the ancient builders of Peru, Yucatan, and Asia, with only primitive tools, raised and set in place blocks of stone weighing many tons.”


Coral Castle was moved to Homestead, Florida in 1936 by Edward, again on his own. According to one theory, Edward moved the castle because he had made a mathematical error in the position and wasn’t able to harness enough magnetic energy
in the original site to complete the structure. These theorists believe he was successful in decoding the Earth’s magnetic energies, and thus was able to magnetize the stone making it possible for a lone person to lift and move tons of weight with only a tripod and pulleys.

Edward believed, “all matter consists of individual magnets, and it is the movement of these magnets within material and through space that produce measurable phenomena, magnetism, and electricity, and these concepts involve the relationship of the Earth to celestial alignments.” He claimed to see beads of light which he believed to be the physical presence of nature’s magnetism and life force, what we today term as ‘chi’. Tourists to the area report, “energy sensitive people walking through the archway of the 9-ton gate are stricken with headaches,” thought to be built directly over a vortex.


Armed with only a fourth grade education, Edward Leedskalnin possessed a unique understanding of the laws of weight and leverage, and with that built a castle of immense proportions, singlehandedly. For twenty-eight years he quarried, cut, shaped, transported, and constructed the entire structure, with only primitive tools he fashioned from junk yard auto parts and cast away lumber. This feat would have been amazing by today’s standards with a crew and modern equipment, but by the hand of a 5 ft, 100lb man, it defies explanation.



According to the website Coral Castle Code, its creator Jon Depew, believes Edward Leedskalnin unlocked the code that is the base to all atomic structure, and that he left behind a blueprint for nature and a secret knowledge of the ancients. “What Ed’s code is leaving us with, is that this ancient science sacred geometry is really representing an advanced knowledge of two magnetic currents and the neutral particles of matter, they orbit as a common core,” says Depew.

Magnetic Currents

Which theory is true remains a question for all who see Coral Castle, whom upon entering must draw their own conclusions. However, the importance of such a feat is nonetheless awe-inspiring. Whether he was an intuitive possessing mystical power, a genius before his time, or had actually unlocked the mystery to creation and life itself, we must be forever grateful for this new wonder of the world.

Vodafone plans £1bn of cost cuts



Mobile phone group Vodafone has announced £1bn ($1.56bn) of cost cuts because of rising raw material prices and increasing competition.

Vodafone also cut its full-year revenue forecast for the second time this year - to between £38.8bn and £39.7bn.

Its revenue for the six months to 30 September rose 17% to £19.9bn, helped by changing currency exchange rates.

However, half-yearly pre-tax profits fell 27% to £3.3bn - because of £1.7bn of write-offs in Turkey.

On an adjusted basis, pre-tax profits for the six months were up 12.5% to £5.2bn. The results were slightly ahead of market expectations.

Emerging markets

Chief executive, Vittorio Colao, who took over from Arun Sarin in the summer, said Vodafone would shift its focus from "revenue stimulation" towards offering more value to customers.

Efficiency would be a key part of the strategy, Mr Colao said, with the group expected to reduce its operating costs by £1bn a year by 2011.

"The first half results reflect a solid overall performance in a challenging operating and a weaker macro-economic environment," he said.

Vodafone, which is the world's largest mobile phone company by income, said it had put in place "appropriate actions" to improve trading in the UK, where it said it had "underperformed recently".

European revenues were down 1.1%, on a like-for-like basis, amid price pressure on its voice and messaging services and continued strong data growth.

However, Vodafone said the outlook outside Europe was healthier.

In a statement, the company said: "We are already represented in most of the key emerging markets, where significant growth is expected in the coming years."

Vodafone said its principal focus would now be in mobile phone markets in India, Turkey and in Africa.

Richard Hunter, of Hargreaves Lansdown stockbrokers, said: "There remain challenges around the wider economic picture, but the company nevertheless remains well-placed to benefit from any up-tick in economic fortunes."