Sunday, November 11, 2012

Software converts your speech into Chinese -- Science ...

Translator

? Microsoft Research
Microsoft's Chief Research Officer, Rick Rashid, recently demonstrated software under development that translated his English remarks into spoken Mandarin Chinese.

Ever wondered what you'd sound like if you were fluent in Chinese, French or another language you don't know? New software that's in development might give you an idea. Microsoft has created a program designed to provide on-the-fly, spoken translations, in the user's own voice.

"We may not have to wait until the 22nd century for a usable equivalent of Star Trek's universal translator," Rick Rashid, Microsoft's chief research officer, wrote in a blog post Nov. 8. Microsoft's translator still makes errors at a noticeable rate, but significantly improves on previous speech translators, Rashid said.

"The results can sometimes be humorous," he said. "Still, the technology has developed to be quite useful."

Rashid presented the software on Oct. 25, getting some of his remarks translated into Mandarin Chinese during a conference held in Tianjin, China.

In a video Microsoft posted online, the software's Chinese voice doesn't sound exactly like Rashid, but it does have the same general tone:


One of the biggest challenges in making the software came in getting it to recognize what users say, Rashid said. Computer scientists have been working on this problem virtually since computers were invented, and the fruits of a generation of research include the automated systems that U.S. banks use for call-in customer service ("Please enter or say your account number now"). In those systems, the speech recognizer only has to understand digits and perhaps some menu options, such as "make a transfer" or "bank hours."

It's more difficult for computers to understand freewheeling conversation, however. Until recently, speech-recognizing programs could only understand 75 to 80 percent of the words a person might say during a conversation, Rashid said. Microsoft Research has been working on improving that rate, he said, by using Deep Neural Networks, which are connected networks of computer processors that act a little like the connections between cells in human and animal brains. Google used the same technique this summer to build a computer that taught itself to recognize cat pictures on the Internet.

Microsoft's speech recognizer can correctly identify 86 to 88 percent of the words in arbitrary speech, Rashid said. "While still far from perfect, this is the most dramatic change in accuracy since the introduction of hidden Markov modeling in 1979," he said, referring to a landmark moment in the history of speech-recognition research. Hidden Markov modeling, a statistical technique, allowed researchers to incorporate recordings from several people into their speech models, Rashid explained.

After identifying what the user is saying in English, Microsoft's translator then finds matching words in Chinese and rearranges the words to the grammatically correct order in Chinese, Rashid said.

To train the translator to match his voice, Rashid had to record an hour of himself speaking in English, he said. The software also required a recording of a few hours of a native Chinese speaker.

"There is still much work to be done, but the technology is very promising, and we hope that in a few years we will have systems that can completely break down language barriers," Rashid said.

Source: http://www.sott.net/article/253329-Software-converts-your-speech-into-Chinese

B H c mitt romney mark zuckerberg mark zuckerberg maurice jones drew

Medical devices powered by the ear

Friday, November 9, 2012

Deep in the inner ear of mammals is a natural battery ? a chamber filled with ions that produces an electrical potential to drive neural signals. In today's issue of the journal Nature Biotechnology, a team of researchers from MIT, the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary (MEEI) and the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology (HST) demonstrate for the first time that this battery could power implantable electronic devices without impairing hearing.

The devices could monitor biological activity in the ears of people with hearing or balance impairments, or responses to therapies. Eventually, they might even deliver therapies themselves.

In experiments, Konstantina Stankovic, an otologic surgeon at MEEI, and HST graduate student Andrew Lysaght implanted electrodes in the biological batteries in guinea pigs' ears. Attached to the electrodes were low-power electronic devices developed by MIT's Microsystems Technology Laboratories (MTL). After the implantation, the guinea pigs responded normally to hearing tests, and the devices were able to wirelessly transmit data about the chemical conditions of the ear to an external receiver.

"In the past, people have thought that the space where the high potential is located is inaccessible for implantable devices, because potentially it's very dangerous if you encroach on it," Stankovic says. "We have known for 60 years that this battery exists and that it's really important for normal hearing, but nobody has attempted to use this battery to power useful electronics."

The ear converts a mechanical force ? the vibration of the eardrum ? into an electrochemical signal that can be processed by the brain; the biological battery is the source of that signal's current. Located in the part of the ear called the cochlea, the battery chamber is divided by a membrane, some of whose cells are specialized to pump ions. An imbalance of potassium and sodium ions on opposite sides of the membrane, together with the particular arrangement of the pumps, creates an electrical voltage.

Although the voltage is the highest in the body (outside of individual cells, at least), it's still very low. Moreover, in order not to disrupt hearing, a device powered by the biological battery can harvest only a small fraction of its power. Low-power chips, however, are precisely the area of expertise of Anantha Chandrakasan's group at MTL.

The MTL researchers ? Chandrakasan, who heads MIT's Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; his former graduate student Patrick Mercier, who's now an assistant professor at the University of California at San Diego; and Saurav Bandyopadhyay, a graduate student in Chandrakasan's group ? equipped their chip with an ultralow-power radio transmitter: After all, an implantable medical monitor wouldn't be much use if there were no way to retrieve its measurements.

But while the radio is much more efficient than those found in cellphones, it still couldn't run directly on the biological battery. So the MTL chip also includes power-conversion circuitry ? like that in the boxy converters at the ends of many electronic devices' power cables ? that gradually builds up charge in a capacitor. The voltage of the biological battery fluctuates, but it would take the control circuit somewhere between 40 seconds and four minutes to amass enough charge to power the radio. The frequency of the signal was thus itself an indication of the electrochemical properties of the inner ear.

To reduce its power consumption, the control circuit had to be drastically simplified, but like the radio, it still required a higher voltage than the biological battery could provide. Once the control circuit was up and running, it could drive itself; the problem was getting it up and running.

The MTL researchers solve that problem with a one-time burst of radio waves. "In the very beginning, we need to kick-start it," Chandrakasan says. "Once we do that, we can be self-sustaining. The control runs off the output."

Stankovic, who still maintains an affiliation with HST, and Lysaght implanted electrodes attached to the MTL chip on both sides of the membrane in the biological battery of each guinea pig's ear. In the experiments, the chip itself remained outside the guinea pig's body, but it's small enough to nestle in the cavity of the middle ear.

###

Massachusetts Institute of Technology: http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice

Thanks to Massachusetts Institute of 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.

This press release has been viewed 46 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/125194/Medical_devices_powered_by_the_ear_

matilda cab calloway melissa gilbert deadliest catch dwts sean hannity bobby petrino fired

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Report Obama Delayed Petraeus Resignation ... - Business Insider

AP

General David Petraeus was the director of the CIA.

In case you thought there was a chance that the startling resignation of General David Petraeus might not "go political," it already has.

Citing an FBI source, conservative site Newsmax is reporting that the Obama administration delayed the resignation of General Petraeus until after the election to avoid embarrassment.

FBI agents on the case expected that Petraeus would be asked to resign immediately rather than risk the possibility that he could be blackmailed to give intelligence secrets to foreign intelligence agencies or criminals...

[T]he FBI, Justice Department, and the White House held off on asking for Petraeus? resignation until after the election... FBI agents on the case were aware that such a decision had been made to hold off on forcing him out until after the election and were outraged.

?The decision was made to delay the resignation apparently to avoid potential embarrassment to the president before the election,? an FBI source says. ?To leave him in such a sensitive position where he was vulnerable to potential blackmail for months compromised our security and is inexcusable.?

This report is directly refuted by Jake Tapper of ABC, who reports that the White House was informed of the FBI investigation and affair on Wednesday this week, and President Obama learned about it on Thursday (yesterday).

The latter report presumably won't stop the chatter.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/report-obama-delayed-petraeus-resignation-until-after-election-2012-11

solar storms uganda the parent trap invisible children kony 2012 space weather sunspots pac 12 tournament

Technical Writer

?
Date ? Nov 08
?
Listing No. ? ADM166046
?
Sector ? Technical Writing & Marcom
?
Region ? Center
?
Tenure Type ? Full Time
?
Language(s) ? Bilingual - English/Hebrew
?
?

Technical Writer

?
Company is looking to fill a part-time, long-term, technical writer position.

Freelance preferable, but possibility for employee
60-70 hours per month (probably more hours the first month or two), long term

Requirements:
At least 2 years technical writing experience, including hardware documentation
Proficient in both Word and FrameMaker 10
Proficient in PowerPoint, specifically with use of images, animations, transitions, and other such features
Mother tongue English and high level Hebrew

Nice-to-have:
Experience with documenting hardware for remote monitoring and management of servers and other network equipment.

?
?
To view the full details of this and many other job opportunities Register Now. If you are already a member Login.

?I am currently working p/t as a secretary in a tax consultancy firm. I found the job through Israemploy.? (Tali, Tel Aviv)

Source: http://www.israemploy.net/jobs/Technical_Writer_166046/

chesapeake energy dick clark death yom hashoah yolo liquidmetal gsa scandal kelis

Bahraini lawyers, activists face lost citizenship

MUHARRAQ, Bahrain (AP) ? Off a road guarded by three police checkpoints, Bahraini lawyer Taimoor Karimi wonders about his future in a country that no longer considers him a citizen.

He and 30 other Shiites were stripped of their nationalities this week in the Gulf nation's latest attempt to crush a 21-month-old uprising against the Sunni leadership. Karimi ponders the possible loss of rights and benefits as a stateless outcast.

"I have no place to go, nowhere to go," he told The Associated Press during an interview at his home after learning of Wednesday's decision.

The kingdom revoked the citizenship of Karimi and other Shiite activists and lawyers as battles appear to be escalating on all sides in the Gulf's main Arab Spring flashpoint.

A series of five bomb blasts on Monday killed an Indian and a Bangladeshi worker and authorities claimed the attacks carried the hallmarks of the Iranian-backed Islamic militant group Hezbollah. Just days earlier, authorities banned all protest rallies under a "zero tolerance" policy that brought an unusually harsh rebuke from the U.S., which is normally wary about pushing too hard against Bahrain's leaders who host the strategically important U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet.

The sense of hardening positions in Bahrain has implications far outside the kingdom, which is no bigger in area than New York City.

Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Arab states are deeply committed to saving Bahrain's Sunni dynasty as a firewall against possible future challenges to the ruling sheiks and monarchs in the region. Washington, meanwhile, faces a difficult balancing act between unease over Bahrain's increasing harsh tactics and the need to preserve critical military and political alliances with the Gulf states as front-line partners against Iran.

The Bahrain-based 5th Fleet is the Pentagon's main naval counterbalance to Iran's expanded military bluster in the Gulf, including threats to close oil shipping lanes and a reported firing at U.S. surveillance drone in international airspace on Nov. 1. Pentagon press secretary George Little said the drone was not hit and returned to base.

In Bahrain, the majority Shiites seek a greater political voice in the country's affairs. Near nonstop unrest since February 2011 has claimed more than 55 lives and brought some changes from the Sunni leadership, including giving more oversight powers to the elected parliament. But authorities also increasingly portray the opposition as traitors and influenced by Shiite giant Iran.

On Friday, security forces set up blockades and fired tear gas in an apparent attempt to disrupt weekly prayers by the country's most senior Shiite cleric, Sheik Isa Qassim, who has often criticized the government's crackdowns. A teenager was killed in a car accident connected to the protests, the opposition said.

Sixteen-year-old Ali Abbas Radhi was "martyred" after being struck by a car when security forces "attacked citizens" west of the capital Manama to prevent them from reaching Friday prayers, the largest Shiite political bloc, Al-Wefaq, said in a statement. The Ministry of Interior confirmed that a teenager was killed, without providing further details.

"The revoking of citizenship from honorable people is aimed at punishing those who have opposition views," Qassim told worshippers who managed to reach his mosque.

The decision to void the citizenship for 31 prominent Shiite figures ? including some political activists in self-exile and former opposition lawmakers ? was the latest blow against perceived threats to "state security," according to the official Bahrain News Agency.

Officials did not respond to requests for additional details on the allegations. They appeared, however, similar to claims against dozens of opposition leaders who have been sentenced to prison, including several life terms. The group stripped of citizenship, including 30 men and one woman, can appeal, the state news agency added.

U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said Washington was "greatly concerned" by the move.

"We have continually called on the government of Bahrain to create a climate that is conducive to reconciliation, to meaningful dialogue, to reform, to bring peaceful change," she said on Wednesday.

At about the same time, the lawyer Karimi gathered with his family in the old section of Muharraq island, about 10 kilometers (six miles) northeast of Manama, and under near round-the-clock security watch as are many Shiite districts.

Karimi spent six months in detention after protests broke out last year and claims his missing teeth and marks on his hands are evidence of the alleged torture he suffered behind bars. Among those also losing their citizenship were several neighbors and activists living in self-exile in London.

"There is no due process," said Karimi, 55, a well-known lawyer who was born in Bahrain and studied in Egypt. "It is against human rights ... and an intimidation against the Shiite community in Bahrain."

He said he does not expect to be deported ? "No documents, no passport," he shrugged ? but to now fall under the category of a stateless resident, known in Arabic as Bidoun and common in some areas of the Middle East. The stateless sometimes go back generations in some countries, but are often denied access to state benefits such as pensions and subsidized health care.

"I am Bahraini and I won't leave my country," he said.

Targeting citizenship has been used elsewhere in the Gulf as rulers try to muzzle opposition emboldened by the Arab Spring wave of revolutions that led to the ouster of leaders in Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and Yemen.

In the United Arab Emirates, at least six activists were stripped of citizenship for criticizing the country's leaders, and at least one person was deported to Thailand under a Comoros Islands passport arranged by UAE authorities.

Bahrain has used the punishment as far back as 1954 when Sunni leader Abdul Rahman al-Baker lost his citizenship because of his political activities. He and two other activists were later deported to St. Helena in the South Atlantic in the same prison where Napoleon Bonaparte was jailed.

In the 1960s and 70s, many dissidents studying outside Bahrain were not allowed to return and their passports were not renewed. And hundreds of Bahrainis with Persian origin were forcibly exiled to Iran in the 1980s after their citizenship was revoked. Many had to wait until political reforms in 2001 to have their citizenship restored.

International rights groups have condemned Bahrain's latest decision, with Amnesty International saying it "appears to have been taken on the basis of the victims' political views."

"We urgently call on the Bahraini authorities to rescind this frightening and chilling decision," said Philip Luther, Amnesty's director for the Middle East and North Africa.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bahraini-lawyers-activists-face-lost-citizenship-183959526.html

gunner kiel gunner kiel groundhog soulja boy did the groundhog see his shadow punxsutawney phil groundhog day

Friday, November 2, 2012

Exactly How Can Accountants In Leeds Help You | Travel

Searching for the best payroll services in Leeds can certainly help your business if you want some good recommendations on how to enhance the staff?s payroll. You will find numerous companies having a lineup of accountants in Leeds eager to help you enhance your business? payroll.

The payroll can be damaging to your company mainly because it greatly affects net income. You need to get the perfect balance of payroll services and team output to increase the earnings of your business. By doing this, you?d be able to have the results you want to improve your company?s operations.

You can hire an accountant in Leeds to handle several other services as well. You can hire one for self assessments in Leeds and also VAT returns in Leeds. To know all your tax returns and also to receive tax benefits, you should have self assessments.

Tax returns are fantastic ways for you to regain a few of your losses you acquired from settling tax bills. Self assessments are mandated by HM Revenue and Customs for all corporations as well as self-employed individuals. In the United Kingdom, ministers are also asked to submit their tax return, which helps keep British politics corruption-free.

Company directors who are not part of any kind of non-profit or charity organisation are mandated by the HMRC to submit a tax return form. For fast processing, you must hire an accountant.

This entry was posted in Accounting by admin. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://nicoleevaemery.com/accounting/exactly-how-can-accountants-in-leeds-help-you/

firelight world peace elbow kevin love think like a man world peace world peace lakers colorectal cancer

Well Designed 2 Bedroom Apartment | Business Bay, Dubai ...

Home
> Apartments for Sale, Business Bay, Dubai > Well Designed 2 Bedroom Apartment | Business Bay, Dubai | Apartments for Sale






EXECUTIVE TOWER J BUSINESS BAY APARTMENT 2 BEDROOMS VIEWS OF SHEIKH ZAYED ROAD 1,580 SQ FT 1,659,000 AED TENANTS UNTIL FEB 2013 RENT 80.000 STEP UP AND GET THE CHANCE TO GRAB THIS AMAZING 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT IN THE EXECUTIVE TOWERS, BE AMAZED WITH THE VIEWS THIS APARTMENT HAS TO OFFER AND THE LOCATION IS A HUB FOR MAJOR BUSINESSES AND OFFICES. INVESTORS!!! IF INTERESTED THEN DO NOT WAIT, CALL AGENT Zain NOW 0562633462. Here is a unique opportunity for professionals and families to buy into stylish downtown living at the heart of Dubai?s business hub. Freehold apartments are now available at The Executive Towers, an innovative mixed-use development in Business Bay. Distinguished by its exciting contemporary architecture, the development consists of 11 residential towers and one commercial tower, as well as the up market Business Bay Hotel and a unique outdoor retail promenade, Bay Avenue. Residents will also have their own health clubs. The Executive Towers offers an exceptional choice of freehold studios, loft apartments, terraces or garden apartments and 1,2,3 and 4 bedroom apartments, all combining stunning modern design with exclusive amenities. Agent: Group 1 Soraya Homes RefNo: AP648.

Related posts:

  1. Furnished 1 Bedroom Apartment | Business Bay, Dubai | Apartments for Sale
  2. Luxury 2 Bedroom Apartment + Maid Room | Business Bay, Dubai | Apartments for Sale
  3. Very Attractive 2 Bedroom Apartment | Business Bay, Dubai | Apartments for Sale
  4. Fully Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment | Business Bay, Dubai | Apartments for Rent
  5. Well Designed 2 Bedroom Apartment | Business Bay, Dubai | Apartments for Sale

Source: http://www.dubaiinternetmarketing.com/well-designed-2-bedroom-apartment-business-bay-dubai-apartments-for-sale-2-2012-10-31.php

nfl draft 2012 whitney mercilus 2012 nfl draft picks andrew luck andrew luck trent richardson robert griffin iii

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Iron Nazi space Buddha may be fake, definitely from space

In a report released online, a Buddhism expert writes that the features of the statue are 'pseudo-Tibetan' and are more likely to be a European reproduction

By Stephanie Pappas,?LiveScience Senior Writer / October 25, 2012

A Buddha statue dating back to the 8th to 10th centuries is carved from a rare iron meteorite.

Elmar Buchner

Enlarge

Researchers who reported that a potentially ancient Buddha statue is carved from a meteorite said they are not surprised that an expert in Buddhist history believes the statue to be a fake.

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

"Honestly, that is what we expected," said Elmar Buchner, who along with his colleague?reported on the statue in September?in the journal Meteoritics & Planetary Science. "We heard so many opinions from so many experts in art history and experts for Buddhism on the origins and the age of the statue prior to and after the publication."

The most public of these consultations is a new report from Achim Bayer, a Buddhism expert at Dongguk University in South Korea. In a report released online, Bayer writes that the features of the statue are "pseudo-Tibetan" and are?more likely to be a European reproduction?dating from 1910 to 1970 than a true ancient carving dating back 1,000 years, as Buchner and his colleagues had estimated.

Bayer did not contest that the statue is a made of meteorite

"The non-Asian features of the 'lama wearing trousers' should be immediately obvious to any scholar in the field," Bayer wrote, referring to the statue as a "lama" or guru. The shoes, pants and sleeves of the man's garments are all wrong for ancient Tibet, he wrote. The statue's hands, eyes and ears are also shaped unusually for Tibetan art, he said.

The statue was said to have come to Germany in the possession of a pre-World War II scientific expedition commissioned by the?Nazi party. Bayer called that into question, too, saying there is no documentation of the statue's transfer and arguing that it is more likely a fake created in the 20th century for the antique or Nazi-memorabilia market.

"For us, Bayer's hypothesis is just one opinion," Buchner wrote in an email to LiveScience. "However, we cannot decide whether this hypothesis is valid or not because we are not the experts in art history, and we told the press that our assumptions are speculative, accordingly," wrote Buchner, who is a geologist.

The geochemical analysis of the meteorite is still sound, Buchner said. The team found that the material used to make the statue is a rare type of iron- and nickel-rich meteorite from a meteorite fall along the Siberian-Tibetan border. [Top 5 Weirdest Meteorites]

That cosmic origin brings up one more mystery in the tale of the controversial space Buddha.

"I think it is not convincing that anybody took a very precious meteorite to produce a reproduction for the local antique market!?" Buchner wrote.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter?@sipappas?or LiveScience?@livescience. We're also on?Facebook?&?Google+.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/PUlwSpVZhE4/Iron-Nazi-space-Buddha-may-be-fake-definitely-from-space

where have you been rihanna world trade center mothers day kirk cousins ovechkin one world trade center bks

FEMA may not have enough money for disaster aid following Sandy ...

WASHINGTON (CNNMoney) ? The Federal Emergency Management Agency, also known as FEMA, has said it has enough funds for disaster aid from Superstorm Sandy.

But the key question is does it have enough for flood damage?

Sandy has flooded thousands of homes in its devastating path, and estimates are that damages will in the billions of dollars. FEMA, which runs the federal flood insurance program, has to pick up the tab.

But FEMA already owes $18 billion to the Treasury Department, thanks to Hurricane Katrina. Currently, insurance experts say FEMA?s flood insurance program has access to funds totaling $3.8 billion, much of it in loans.

If flood claims exhaust the fund, Congress may have to step in with additional taxpayer money. That will add to the already bloated national deficit, and anger fiscally-conservative members of Congress.

Private insurers don?t cover flooding. Sandy?s storm surge pushed water from the Atlantic Ocean into basements and first floors in coastal Virginia, New Jersey, Connecticut and New York, where subway tunnels remain flooded.

By Wednesday, FEMA was still concentrating its efforts on coordinating search and rescues and aid to those without power.

It hasn?t released an estimate on flood damages, but experts are raising serious doubts on whether FEMA?s funds will be enough to cover the costs for its National Flood Insurance Program.

In 2011, the federal flood insurance program paid out $1.8 billion in claims, after Hurricane Irene flooded parts of the Northeast. Sandy?s devastation is expected to be worse.

?The key issue will be how many people actually purchased the product, and what kind of demand that?s going to put on the program?s cash and borrowing authority,? said Donald L. Griffin, vice president of personal lines for Property Casualty Insurers Association of America, an insurance trade group.

The costs could be kept in check if fewer people bought federal flood insurance.

In general, residents in Northeastern states buy fewer flood insurance policies than hurricane-prone states like Florida and Texas.

But last year?s Hurricane Irene scared Northeasterners to buying flood insurance. A market survey by the Insurance Information Institute reported that some 14% of homeowners living in the Northeast said they bought flood insurance in 2012, up from 5% in 2011. Compared to that, 21% of Southern homeowners said they bought a flood insurance policy in 2012.

How did we get here?

Nationwide, homeowners have taken out more than 5.6 million flood insurance policies covering $1.2 trillion in property, according to the Congressional Research Service. Premiums collected in 2011 were $3.35 billion.

The program was self sufficient until 2004, and able to cover claims from the pool of premiums collected over the years. That ended with Hurricane Katrina.

Even though less than half of homeowners flooded by Katrina had insurance policies, the program still paid out claims totaling $17.7 billion in 2005, according to the Congressional Research Service.

To bridge the gap, Congress gave the flood insurance program a line of credit from the U.S. Treasury.

The debt limit on that line today stands at $20.8 billion.

The National Flood Insurance Program tapped the credit line to pay out Irene claims last year. Now it has $2.9 billion it can borrow and $900 million in cash.

Lawmakers passed a law in July allowing the flood insurance program to raise rates on its policies. The new rates are only just starting to take effect.

FEMA didn?t immediately respond to questions about the solvency of its flood insurance program.

In a conference call with reporters on Monday, FEMA Director Craig Fugate said the agency is still in disaster response mode and hasn?t begun to look at flood insurance claims. He said he doesn?t know yet whether the agency will need a bigger loan.

CLICK HERE for additional Sandy coverage via FOX6Now.com.

Source: http://fox6now.com/2012/10/31/fema-may-not-have-enough-money-for-disaster-aid-following-sandy/

jaco san jose sharks humber perfect game ufc 145 fight card ufc145 chimpanzee chimpanzee

Antarctic Ozone Hole 2nd Smallest in 20 Years

On the Earth's surface, ozone is a pollutant, but in the stratosphere, it reflects ultraviolet radiation back into space, protecting us from skin cancer-causing UV rays.

By Live Science Staff / October 25, 2012

The hole in the protective ozone layer above Antarctica in September 2012.

NOAA

Enlarge

The ozone hole above the Antarctic has hit its maximum extent for the year. Due to warm temperatures, the opening in the protective atmospheric layer was the second smallest it has been for 20 years, scientists said Wednesday (Oct. 24).

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

Stretching to 8.2 million square miles (21.2 million square kilometers), an area roughly the size of all of North America,the ozone hole?reached its peak on Sept. 22. The largest one recorded to date spanned 11.5 million square miles (29.9 million square km) in 2000.

On the Earth's surface, ozone is a pollutant, but in the stratosphere, it reflects ultraviolet radiation back into space, protecting us from skin cancer-causing UV rays.

Scientists say the hole in this protective ozone layer mainly is caused by chlorine from man-made chemicals called chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), which were created in the early 20th century and used in products like spray cans. CFCs, which destroy ozone, are believed to linger in the stratosphere for decades.

Air temperature can affect the rate at which these CFCs break apart ozone molecules. Years with large ozone holes are generally associated with very cold winters over Antarctica and high polar winds, the scientists say.

Researchers with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said the gouge, which forms in September and October, was smaller this year because of warmer air temperatures high above?the South Pole.

"It happened to be a bit warmer this year high in the atmosphere above Antarctica, and that meant we didn't see quite as much ozone depletion as we saw last year, when it was colder," said Jim Butler with NOAA's Earth System Research Laboratory in Boulder, Colo.

The Antarctic ozone hole was first discovered in the late 1970s. The gash continued to grow steadily during the 1980s and 90s, though since early 2000 the growth reportedly leveled off. Scientists, however, have seen?large variability in its size?from year to year.

Although the production of ozone-depleting chemicals has been regulated for the past 25 years, scientists say it could be another decade before we start seeing early signs of Antarctic?ozone layer recovery. NASA atmospheric chemist Paul Newman has estimated that the ozone layer above Antarctica likely will not return to its early 1980s state until about 2060.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter?@livescience. We're also on?Facebook?&?Google+.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/LlGVmb8IFgY/Antarctic-Ozone-Hole-2nd-Smallest-in-20-Years

ny jets ny jets the situation tim tebow jets katy perry part of me video photoshop cs6 beta cate blanchett