Showing posts with label Tools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tools. Show all posts

Get the hot new 'tomboy' hairstyle


Get the hot new 'tomboy' hairstyle - Man, do we love this boyish look! - This season's hottest catwalk hair gives girls a slice of the tomboy action with wispy quiffs, city slicker tight and smart ponytails and messy bed-head styles.

Celebrity hair stylist and our favourite Aussie, Liz Taw tends to the tresses of Dannii Minogue, Natalie Imbruglia (yep her of shiny hair gorgeousness) and our favourite Northern boys,Take That.

So we asked Liz to recreate this exclusive look using the catwalk inpiration of girl meets boy, seen at D & G, Marc Jacobs and YSL.

Here is her step-by-step guide to getting it right.

1) For all-night staying power, the foundation of this style is very important.

To enhance natural texture, wash hair with limited edition Aussie Miracle Moist Shampoo and Conditioner. Spritz generously with some styling spray and diffuse dry hair with a diffuser to get extra volume and gutsy texture.


http://img.thesun.co.uk/multimedia/archive/01384/hair3_1384364a.jpg

Let's twist again ... Step Four of the how-to guide


2) Divide your hair into three sections following the line of the eyes, cheekbones and jaw.

3) Clip the top section away so to create a small quiff, then fasten the other two into ponytails.

A very important point here is that Liz didn't use ANY brushes, so as not to disturb the carefully-created volume.

4) Divide the middle pony in half, twist the sections roughly all the way until the end, and then wind the bottom ponytail into the same formation.


http://img.thesun.co.uk/multimedia/archive/01384/hair5_1384368a.jpg

Keep it moving ... Step Six of our makeover


5) Keep on twisting until you eventually wrap the end into the base of the ponytail and secure with kirby grips.

6) Lastly pull the top section back and weave into the main body of the hair. Use hairspray to scrunch and secure the deconstructed quiff into place.

The key to the sexy masculine toughness of this look lies in the unfinished nature of the style. Mess up to dress up!


http://img.thesun.co.uk/multimedia/archive/01384/hair8_1384371a.jpg

Boy, how gorgeous ... the finished look


There you have it.... your messy deconstructed quiff. ( thesun.co.uk )

READ MORE - Get the hot new 'tomboy' hairstyle

The Gadget Hound bids farewell


The Gadget Hound bids farewell - Four years, 3,000+ posts, and more gadgets than you could shake a stick at — it's been a great run.

And just think: when I first started blogging as Yahoo!'s resident Gadget Hound back in March of 2007, there were no Kindles, iPod Touches, Android phones, and yes, no tweets (well, not unless you count those from sparrows). Google was already huge, but Facebook wasn't—not yet, anyway. And Windows Vista was barely two months old.

Believe me, writing about tech for Yahoo! has been a blast and an honor, and I'm proud to have been part of such an all-star team.


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v1VLDF3RPDwuJCiiOcfFF/q5p/OyQzuG8cg8r/AJKuj/wfZBJ2AjX9heU18PVyvZ/S9w8r6L0qrxVrGkuzCwv8LvTZeUVFSXPc43u5xcb8ybrp4aqc3M04EHE3Atw596dnvsoxlBStlC6KcxI1GhTbHU/vyQxKO9c6W6dEGLlNwqCJ7vtJA0ctr+aqrpwKnXqg1479PVMJw6na3shhFt9HIvs0cxtfUta1ou12Ui2weCR+K8rjlI2JHgSF6H7JI3uqXvscrYSHO/ucRlHjv6LHHH1bdNt8i0pD14OSFyHdJdWQOcUJyUpCkMA4ap4KbIEkbk2IJdJdJdISlBnEpuZISmogUxseHsGzR6KQymHJGaERrEoAJsIRmMTwxEbGlB05jUVoStYnBiUKODU4NShqXIgdEyJDEOSIGpbICkaShYdwFXydG6d28bfRXVl2VNNolxlA7ofSneJnoo8nQCjP8sDwstQGpxjVdmT1RjX+zek/pQz7M6XkfIkLadUu6pHZh1Rh3ezCl/v/ANimf+MKfnJ/sVuxGlyJdmOIwzPZhTcTL4Zv0W16N4bHTx9XG0NaNe8niSeJRRGpVG3dNNtiaJIXFckKokQlNulKSyUGNcEHYo5Q3tVQQ5IUiREARNSlIShCbM4EVq5csywjURq5cgAwTgkXKSwgTwkXIAVcuXJiFC5cuQA4Jzdkq5MRyRKuSAauXLkgHKTS7LlyrImGXLly0IGuTQuXJDEKQrlyoQ1MK5cgDgmFcuTEz//Z


But change is good, and about a month ago, I informed my super smart, tireless, and always supportive editors that I'd decided to move on. So this, dear readers, will be my last post as a full-time blogger for Yahoo! News.

For those of you who followed my Gadget Hound blog regularly, thank you. I'm grateful to everyone who took the time to read my posts, e-mail a question or leave a comment. Your feedback, encouragement, and tough love has been inspiring and motivational, and I truly appreciate it.

So, what's next for me? Well, vacation, for starters. After that, it's back to work as a freelance writer. And I've already got a project or two in the pipeline—and if you're interested, I'd love to tell you about them. So stay tuned to my Twitter feed and my personal Web site, and feel free to contact me directly.

There are many people to thank. First, thanks to the current team here at Yahoo! News: Richard Vega, Jamie Mottram, Andrew Golis, Sam Silverstein, Leah Hitchings, Alex Romanelli, Mia Zuckerkandel, Oliver Libaw, Phat Chiem, Richard Eisenberg, Becky Worley, Daniel Garza, and Anna Robertson. Special thanks to Jennifer Karmon and David Caplan for their copy-editing skills over the past year. On the business side of things, thanks to Yahoo!'s Chris Hunter and my agent, Ted Weinstein.

Then there's the original Yahoo! Tech crew, which welcomed me with open arms and immediately made me feel right at home: Pat Houston, Annette Cardwell, Laura Lindhe, Roger Hibbert, Alexander Yoon, Gina Hughes, Dory Devlin, Robin Raskin, Erica Smith, and James Hamilton. Thank you. I'd also like to tip my hat to Yahoo! Tech's first Gadget Hound, Tom Samiljan.

And last but not least, many thanks to my former partner in tech-blogging crime, Christopher Null, who e-mailed me more than four years ago to see if I'd be interested in writing for Yahoo!. He promised I'd have a ball, and you know, he was right. ( news.yahoo.com )

Thanks again for reading, and keep in touch.


READ MORE - The Gadget Hound bids farewell

Facebook Declares 'Zero Tolerance' for Data Brokers


Facebook Declares 'Zero Tolerance' for Data Brokers - On Facebook's Developers blog, the world's largest social networking company declared "zero tolerance" for data brokers, after a recent Wall St. Journal investigation revealed that some Facebook application developers have been selling Facebook users' information to data brokering firms.


Facebook has responded to this news by banning the developers engaging in this practice from the site for a period of six months. To regain entry, the companies will have to submit their data practices for an audit to ensure compliance or the ban will remain in effect.


WSJ's investigation, part of a series called "What They Know," has been revealing (in a sometimes overly paranoid fashion) the ins and outs of how your personal information is being gathered by data brokers, bought and sold, and then used for targeting advertising purposes.


In the case of Facebook, WSJ cautioned that "many of the most popular applications... have been transmitting identifying information - in effect, providing access to people's names and, in some cases, their friends' names - to dozens of advertising and Internet tracking companies." The paper claimed that the issue affected tens of millions of Facebook app users.


Facebook: Fewer Than a Dozen Apps Sold User Info


Facebook, however, downplayed this news, saying that there were actually "fewer than a dozen" application developers found to be selling user information in the form of UIDs (UIDs are user IDs, an identifier which can be used to determine someone's name on Facebook). Facebook noted that most of the developers were small and none were in the top 10 list of Facebook Platform applications.


The company also claimed it has reached an agreement with data broker Rapleaf, which was called out by the Journal for receiving and reselling the Facebook UIDs it collected to a dozen other firms.


Rapleaf "has agreed to delete all UIDs in its possession," says Facebook. "And they have agreed not to conduct any activities on the Facebook Platform (either directly or indirectly) going forward."


Facebook also firmly noted that the company itself "has never sold and will never sell user information."


As far as which apps were banned, Facebook wouldn't say. However, the developers cited by WSJ, including big names like Zynga, LOLApps and Family Tree, appear to be unaffected at this time. (UPDATE: 11/1/2010, 1p.m. Eastern: Inside Facebook is reporting that the following application developers may have been affected: LOLapps, My Friend Web, Mappdev, My Top Fans and Manakki. The first four account for 50 million monthly active users, the site says. Manakki has 2 million monthly active users. ) ( ReadWriteWeb )


READ MORE - Facebook Declares 'Zero Tolerance' for Data Brokers

Sepuluh Hal Tentang Propaganda


Sepuluh Hal Tentang Propaganda.

1 - Menyajikan fakta (kebenaran) bukan berarti terlepas dari yang namanya propaganda; propaganda berkembang pesat dalam menyajikan berbagai jenis kebenaran, termasuk fakta yang hanya mengandung setengah kebenaran, fakta yg sama sekali tidak benar, fakta yang terbatas, lepas dari konteks kebenaran itu sendiri. Propaganda modern yang paling efektif adalah ketika propaganda tersebut menyajikan informasi seakurat mungkin. Menyajikan Kedustaan yang besar atau Kebohongan Tinggi merupakan bentuk propaganda yang paling tidak efektif.

2 - Propaganda tidaklah begitu banyak didesign untuk mengubah pendapat sebanyak sebagaimana ia didesign untuk memperkuat pendapat, prasangka dan sikap yang ada. Propaganda yang paling berhasil adalah propaganda yang akan mendorong manusia untuk beraksi atau sebaliknya memperkuat sesuatu yang tadinya sudah diyakini oleh manusia sebagai kebenaran, kemudian dijadikan sedemikian hingga orang itu tidak lagi mempercayai kebenaran tersebut dan menjadikannya malas melakukan kebenaran yang sebelumnya telah ia yakini.

3 - Pendidikan tidaklah memerlukan perlindungan terbaik melawan propaganda. Para cendikiawan dan mereka "yang berpendidikan" merupakan komponen yang paling ringkih terhadap kampanye propaganda, karena mereka (

  • cenderung menyerap kebanyakan informasi (termasuk informasi dari tangan kedua, kabar dari orang, desas-desus, dan informasi yang tidak bisa dibuktikan kebenarannya); (
  • terpaksa memiliki pendapat atas hal-hal yang terjadi pada suatu hari tertentu dan hingga dengan begitu mereka mengekspos pendapatnya sendiri lebih daripada pendapat-pendapat orang lain dan mengkampanyekan propaganda; dan
  • menganggap diri mereka sendiri bebas dari pengaruh propaganda, dengan cara demikian mereka telah membuat diri mereka sendiri lebih rentan terhadap propaganda.

4 - Apa yang membuat penelitian mengenai propaganda menjadi demikian meragukan adalah bahwa secara umum hal tersebut dianggap sebagai penelitian sisi yang lebih gelap dari sifat kami; penelitian mengenai kejahatan mereka lawan sisi baik kami. Mereka yang kami pertimbangkan sebagai kejahatan yang berkembang pesat dalam propaganda, sementara kami hanya menyebarkan kebenaran saja. Cara terbaik untuk mempelajari propaganda adalah dengan memisahkan pertimbangan-pertimbangan etis seseorang dari fenomena gejala itu sendiri. Propaganda berkembang pesat dan eksis, demi kepentingan etis dan tidak etis.

5 - Propaganda mencoba mengubah pendapat umum, khususnya untuk menjadikan orang agar menyesuaikan diri terhadap sudut pandang propagandis. Dalam segi ini, propaganda manapun merupakan suatu bentuk manipulasi, untuk merubah aktivitas individu menjadi aktivitas khusus.

6 - Bentuk-bentuk komunikasi Modern, termasuk media massa, merupakan alat-alat propaganda. Tanpa pemusatan monopoli media massa, bisa dipastikan tidak ada terjadi propaganda modern. Untuk propaganda agar berkembang pesat, media harus tetap terpusat, kantor berita dan layanannya harus dibatasi, pers harus berada di bawah pimpinan pusat, dan radio, film, dan monopoli televisi harus meliputi semuanya.

7 - Setiap orang harus peduli terhadap yang namanya propaganda, keterbatasannya, kekuatannya, pengaruhnya, dan kualitas persuasifnya, manakala seseorang menguasainya. Dengan mengatakan bahwa "seseorang bebas dari pengaruh propaganda" justru itu merupakan suatu tanda pasti bahwa propaganda tersebut telah tersebar dalam masyarakat.

8- Propaganda Modern bermula di negara berhukum thoghut Amerika Serikat pada awal Abad 20-an. Selama Perang Dunia I, media massa diintegrasikan dengan metode hubungan masyarakat dan periklanan demi mengadvokasi dan membiayai bantuan untuk perang. Dewan Kembu mendirikan kampanye humas Amerika pertama untuk menyebarkan dan menebarkan ajaran injil dengan cara Amerika ke seluruh penjuru bola dunia.

9 - Di Negara thoghut Amerika Serikat, propaganda komersial pribadi merupakan hal yang sama pentingnya dengan gagasan demokrasi propaganda pemerintah. Iklan komersial menarik perhatian orang-orang melalui periklanan, yang merangsang fantasi dan dorongan hati yang tidak masuk akal, merupakan beberapa bentuk propaganda yang paling tersebar dalam keberadaannya hari ini.

10 - Propaganda dalam suatu sistem kuffar demokrasi memperlihatkan fakta dalam pengertian bahwa propaganda tersebut menciptakan "pengikut sejati" yang secara ideologi terikat dengan perkembangan demokrasi tersebut sebagaimana lainnya yang terikat secara ideologi atas kontrolnya. Pengabadian sistem kuffar demokrasi dan keyakinan ideal dalam menghadapi kekuatan yang terpusat dalam institusi-institusi propaganda (baik itu media maupun institusi-institusi politik) merupakan suatu bentuk kemenangan propaganda busuk yang terjadi dalam masyarakat modern Amerika (ص'l).

Artikel ini disusun oleh Nancy Snow, Ph.D. (Jacques Ellul, Propaganda) yang kemudian diterjemahkan secara bebas tanpa mengurangi makna yg sebenarnya.

Sumber: Theunjustmedia.com


READ MORE - Sepuluh Hal Tentang Propaganda

News Corp throws down the Google gauntlet


News Corp throws down the Google gauntlet. The war of words between the news media industry and Google makes for a great spectacle, and this week did not disappoint.




According to a report in the Silicon Alley Insider blog, Associated Press CEO Tom Curley is meeting with Google on Friday to press for the creation of a “news registry.” Here’s SAI on the AP’s move:

It hopes such a registry would propel its content to a higher rank in general search than the blogs that the news agency accuses of lifting its content.

Curley said the AP — which intends to form landing pages and a social-media desk, among other survival strategies — is “getting paid for about 12% of our content on the web.”


It was not clear what information SAI was basing its report of the AP-Google meeting on - the blog post didn’t specify whether one of its bloggers had spoken to Curley directly, or whether it was picking-up Curley’s comments from another report; nor did it have links to any other articles on the subject.

A Google representative emailed a statement that said the company regularly meets with its publishing partners to discuss a variety of initiatives. “We’re not going to comment on the specifics of any particular conversation at this time.”

One would hope Google is also having conversations with News Corp, which is ratcheting up the rhetoric of late.

Earlier this week, News Corp Chief Executive Rupert Murdoch told his own Sky News Australia in an interview that he was considering blocking Google from indexing its Web sites once the company begins charging people to read its articles on the Web.

On Friday, News Corp chief digital officer Jonathan Miller expanded on Rupert’s anti-Google gambit and stuck a timeline on the move, according to a report in Telegraph:


When asked how long it would be before Mr Murdoch took the step to block Google, which every media company relies upon to send them high levels of web traffic, Mr Miller said it would be soon - “months and quarters - not weeks”.


The story later quotes Miller dismissing the benefits that come from have its content accessible through Google:


“The traffic which comes in from Google brings a consumer who more often than not read one article and then leaves the site. That is the least valuable of traffic to us… the economic impact [of not having content indexed by Google] is not as great as you might think. You can survive without it.”


There’s been plenty of sabre-rattling from the news media when it comes to Google in the past. If News Corp doesn’t follow-through with its threat in the next couple of months, will it have proven itself to have no real clout in this fight? ( reuters.com )



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Google Chrome OS coming next week…maybe


Google Chrome OS coming next week…maybe. It’s been four months since Google dropped a bombshell with its announcement that it is getting into the PC operating system game, in a direct challenge to Microsoft and Apple.

Now the world may get the first glimpse of Chrome OS, the PC operating system as envisioned by the folks in Mountain View, California.


According to a report in TechCrunch citing “a reliable source,” a version of the Chrome operating system will be available for public download within a week.



TechCrunch said Google has a legion of engineers working on hardware driver support, and notes that the software may only run on a limited set of PCs at first:

We expect Google will be careful with messaging around the launch, and endorse a small set of devices for installation. EEE PC netbooks, for example, may be one set of devices that Google will say are ready to use Chrome OS. There will likely be others as well, but don’t expect to be able to install it on whatever laptop or desktop machine you have from day one.

Google said in July that it was working with PC manufacturers including Acer, Asus and Hewlett-Packard and promised that the first devices running the Chrome OS would be available in the second half of 2010.

Google also said at the time that the Chrome OS code would be “open sourced” later this year, so next week’s rumored release would be in keeping with the original timeline.

As PC world puts it, however, open source code is not the same as a ready-for-prime-time product.

But that doesn’t necessarily mean the average person will be able to download these files and get the OS up and running. Source code is just a collection of text files meant for software developers to tinker with.


As I understand it, to get the source code to work as a computer program, you need a compiler that brings all the source code together and turns it into something your computer can actually boot up.

So, if you’re a developer, you may soon get a taste of Chrome. The rest of the world may have to wait a bit longer. ( reuters.com )


READ MORE - Google Chrome OS coming next week…maybe

Top Rupert Murdoch adviser learns meaning of ‘deadline’


Top Rupert Murdoch adviser learns meaning of ‘deadline’. Top Rupert Murdoch adviser Gary Ginsberg is leaving News Corp after 11 years, the company said on Monday. It must have hit New York Times reporter Tim Arango’s e-mail inbox first (his writeup appeared about five minutes before I got the press release).

Here is what he wrote about Ginsberg, 47, the second senior executive to leave News Corp in recent months, following Chief Operating Officer Peter Chernin:


Mr. Ginsberg, a former lawyer in the Clinton White House, was hired in 1999 to be News Corporation’s director of communications. He was hired partly to refurbish the company’s image after a controversy in which Mr. Murdoch was said to have stopped publication of a book by Chris Patten, the former governor of Hong Kong, to curry favor with the Chinese government. Mr. Ginsberg’s portfolio within News Corporation expanded well beyond public relations. He gradually gained control over investor relations, marketing and corporate social responsibility. He also became an important bridge between Mr. Murdoch and Democratic politicians, particularly Bill and Hillary Clinton.

Ginsberg, Arango said, arranged a lunch between Bill Clinton and Murdoch in Harlem, and a year later with a New York Post newsroom tour. Eventually, the Post endorsed Hillary Clinton for the U.S. Senate in 2006 and Murdoch threw her a fundraiser at News Corp’s headquarters. (Yes, that is quite a feat to arrange for a newspaper that under Murdoch has leaned Republican more often than not.)

It’s also a feat to get a well-known Democrat to say what he said in the press release:

I will always be grateful to Rupert for the many opportunities he’s given me over the years… It was a difficult decision to leave a company that has been such a vital part of my life and I’ll miss the many talented colleagues who have helped make this such a thrilling and fascinating ride. But I’ve been thinking about leaving for a while now to pursue something new, and this seemed like the right time to do it.

Teri Everett, who spends plenty of time dealing with the horde of reporters who cover News Corp’s every move, will take over as the new communications chief. Reed Nolte will run investor relations. ( reuters.com )


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In Amazon, a frustrated search for cancer cures


In Amazon, a frustrated search for cancer cures. The task of harvesting the secrets of Brazil's vast Amazon rain forest that could help in the battle against cancer largely falls to Osmar Barbosa Ferreira and a big pair of clippers.

In jungle so dense it all but blocks out the sun, the lithe 46-year-old shimmies up a thin tree helped by a harness, a strap between his feet, and the expertise gained from a lifetime laboring in the forest.

A few well-placed snips later, branches cascade to a small band of researchers and a doctor who faithfully make a long monthly trip to the Cuieiras river in Amazonas state in the belief that the forest's staggeringly rich plant life can unlock new treatments for cancer.


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They may be right.

About 70 percent of current cancer drugs are either natural products or derived from natural compounds, and the world's largest rain forest is a great cauldron of biodiversity that has already produced medicine for diseases such as malaria.

But finding the right material is no easy task in a forest that can have up to 400 species of trees and many more plants in a 2.5-acre (1-hectare) area, and in a country where suspicion of outside involvement in the Amazon runs strong.

"If we had very clear rules, we could attract scientists from all over the world," said the doctor, Drauzio Varella, with a mix of enthusiasm and frustration. "We could transform a big part of the Amazon into an enormous laboratory."

As it stands, though, foreigners are barred from helping oncologist Varella and the researchers from Sao Paulo's Paulista University, who are among a tiny handful of Brazilian groups licensed to study samples from the Amazon.

Varella, 66, believes his high profile has helped. He is a well-known writer and television personality who shot to fame in 1999 with a book and subsequent hit movie based on his work as a doctor in a brutal Sao Paulo prison called Carandiru.

But a move by his team in the 1990s to partner with the U.S. National Cancer Institute produced a storm of accusations of "bio-piracy" and for years it has been blocked from the international cooperation and funding that could increase the chances of finding the Holy Grail of a cancer cure.


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Their work has also been regularly delayed by bureaucratic demands, once stopping their collections for two years.

In more than a decade of searching, the group has brought back 2,200 samples from this tributary of the mighty, tea-dark Rio Negro (Black River) to its laboratory in Sao Paulo, of which about 70 have shown some effect against tumors. Just those samples have given the team enough analysis work for 20 years, said Varella, a lanky marathon runner whose younger brother died of cancer.

"If we can find 70, imagine what a big university with international resources could do -- they could screen for an absurd amount of diseases," said Varella, who still spends part of his time treating prisoners in Sao Paulo.

"As well as the impact this could have on human health, it could bring resources for preservation and to improve the quality of life of people who live here."

Ironically, it was a foreigner who inspired Varella to begin his search. Robert Gallo, a U.S. researcher and leading AIDS expert who co-discovered the HIV virus, asked Varella during a trip to the Amazon in the early 1990s if anyone was researching the medical potential of the forest.

JIGSAW PUZZLE

Among the natural products being used to fight cancer today is Taxol, a chemotherapy drug that comes from the bark of the Pacific yew tree.

David Newman, head of the Natural Products Branch of the U.S. National Cancer Institute, said several promising cancer drugs derived from natural sources as varied as a deep-water sponges and microbes are currently going through clinical trials. Often the natural compounds are tweaked or mimicked to better fight cancer cells.

"It's a detective story and a jigsaw puzzle, but you don't know how many pieces there are or what the picture looks like," he said. "In one teaspoon of soil from the Amazon, you find over a thousand microbes that have never been isolated."

Out of an estimated 80,000 species of flower-bearing plants in the Amazon, only about a fifth have been identified.

Newman said progress in Brazil has been greatly hampered by the inability of companies to patent a natural product under legislation passed in the 1990s, leaving no incentive to invest in research.

He cited the example of a Brazilian viper snake whose venom proved vital to the development of blood pressure drug captopril in the 1970s, a find that might not have happened under today's laws.

Further analysis of the promising compounds found by Varella's team has been held up while the university waits for access to a nuclear-magnetic resonance machine that can isolate the active elements.

"We're still a long way from discovering an actual medicine that could cure a type of cancer but we have strong signs that some plants have substances that inhibit the growth of tumors," said Mateus Paciencia, a bearded 34-year-old botanist.

Their main hope is that growing concern over the environment and increasing government efforts to slow the destruction of the Amazon by ranchers and loggers will turn the tide in favor of sustainable forest industries, of which they say their work is a prime example.

"There is nothing more sustainable than this," said Paciencia. "We take a kilogram worth of samples from a tree that weighs a ton and get an extract that lasts 10 years."

As he hung from a tree trunk, Ferreira said his relationship with the forest had been transformed by his job. He used to cut down trees with a chainsaw and sell the lumber in the city of Manaus, about 80 km (50 miles) down river from the research site.

"I think we'll find a medicine, and it won't take too long," he said. "If I deforest, I'm killing not just one plant but destroying a lot of other plants as well. So the job we're doing here is much better." ( reuters.com )


READ MORE - In Amazon, a frustrated search for cancer cures

Infrared telescope to detect dim, dusty objects


Infrared telescope to detect dim, dusty objectsTue Nov 17, 2009 10:20pm EST - NASA plans next month to launch a space telescope that will scan the heavens for the infrared glow of celestial objects never seen because they are too dim, dusty or distant, scientists said on Tuesday.

The Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or WISE, is expected to reveal hundreds of thousands of dark asteroids lurking undetected in the solar system, and millions of elusive stars and galaxies farther out in space.


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The spacecraft, to be carried into orbit by a Delta 2 rocket, will roll out to its launch pad at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Friday for a liftoff slated for as early as December 9, managers of the $320 million project said at a news briefing in Washington, D.C.

Its six-month mission is to survey the entire sky for infrared radiation, a form of light invisible to the human eye but emitted from the coldest of objects, including those overlooked by telescopes sensitive only to visible light.

"We expect certainly to see many asteroids, stars and galaxies," said Edward Wright of the University of California, Los Angeles, the mission's principal investigator. "But really I'll be surprised if I'm not surprised ... because we're going to find things that nobody has imagined yet."

The telescope sits in a tank filled with frozen hydrogen that chills it to just slightly above absolute zero, the coldest temperature theoretically attainable, thus preventing the instrument from picking up its own infrared heat.

Among the phenomena WISE is likely to uncover is a large number of failed stars called brown dwarfs -- balls of gas many times smaller than the sun that lack sufficient mass to trigger their own internal stellar engines. Optically invisible, they glow in the infrared spectrum.

Brown dwarfs are believed to be more numerous than actual stars in the nearby universe, and some may reside even closer to Earth than the nearest known star, Proxima Centauri, about 4 light years away, said Peter Eisenhardt, chief project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Both theories are likely to be confirmed by WISE.

Infrared light also penetrates dust, enabling WISE to both illuminate and peer through the dense, invisible haze that obscures some of the most distant galaxies in the cosmos.

A class of such objects called ultra-luminous galaxies, thought to be super-incubators of new stars, shine with more than a trillion times the light of the sun. But most of that light is emitted as infrared, Eisenhardt said.

"So we're going to find the most super-duper, hyper ultra-luminous galaxies in the universe and find just how extreme these galaxy-forming processes can get," he said.

Scientists say the spacecraft's detectors are about 500 times more sensitive than those of the last infrared sky survey in 1983, a joint European-NASA mission.

Closer to home, WISE will likely add several hundred hidden asteroids and comets to the known inventory of "near-Earth objects" whose orbits come perilously close to Earth's orbit, while telling scientists more about their composition. ( reuters.com )


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