Friday, February 22, 2013

Siberian Caves Reveal Advancing Permafrost Thaw

Melting of significant portions of Arctic permafrost could accelerate climate change into a catastrophe


frost-crystals-at-cave-entrance PERMAFROST CAVE: The frost crystals at the entrance to the Ledyanaya Lenskaya cave in Russia denote the region's permafrost, which has been in place for roughly 400,000 years, according to the cave's speleothems. Image: Vladimir V Alexioglo

Permafrost is not so permanent. Across the Arctic, swathes of once-frozen-solid ground have begun to thaw. If the records preserved in Siberian caves are accurate, much more of the region could melt if temperatures continue to warm.

Geoscientist Anton Vaks of the University of Oxford led an international team of experts?including the Arabica Caving Club in Irkutsk?in sampling the spindly cave growths known as stalagmites and stalactites across Siberia and down into the Gobi Desert of China. Taking samples of such speleothems from six caves, the researchers then reconstructed the last roughly 500,000 years of climate via the decay of radioactive particles in the stone. When the ground is frozen above a cave no water seeps into it, making such formations "relicts from warmer periods before permafrost formed," the researchers wrote in a study published online in Science on 21 February.

The details of the study reveal that conditions were warm enough even in Siberia for these mineral deposits to form roughly 400,000 years ago, when the global average temperature was 1.5 degrees Celsius higher than present. It also suggests that there was no permafrost in the Lena River region at that time, because enough water seeped into the northernmost cave to enable roughly eight centimeters of growth in the formations.

That was, in fact, the last time the formations in the Ledyanaya Lenskaya Cave grew, although other caves further south showed multiple periods of growth coinciding with other warmer periods. "That boundary area of continuous permafrost starts to degrade when the mean global temperature is 1.5 degrees C higher than present," Vaks explains. "Such a warming is a threshold after which continuous permafrost zone starts to be vulnerable to global warming."

Since Vaks's present is the "preindustrial late Holocene," that means the planet is already more than halfway there, having experienced 0.8 degree C warming to date. Such a thaw is no small matter, given that permafrost covers nearly a quarter of the land in the Northern Hemisphere and holds roughly 1,700 gigatonnes of carbon?or roughly twice as much carbon as is currently trapping heat in the atmosphere. Much of that carbon would end up in the atmosphere if the permafrost was to thaw further.

That may not have occurred during the warm period 400,000 years ago, known as Marine Isotope Stage 11 to scientists, which featured elements such as boreal forest on Greenland and higher sea levels. "The thawing was probably very brief because the layer deposited in the northernmost cave stalactite was relatively thin," Vaks says?too thin in fact to determine how long the warm period lasted. "We don't see any extraordinary increase in atmospheric CO2 or methane during MIS-11." And the Gobi Desert might benefit, enjoying wetter conditions in the future if the record in these caves is accurate.

It's not clear how far north such thawing might extend if global average temperatures continue to warm until they match those from long ago. "Now we are looking for caves with speleothems in northern Siberia to answer this question," Vaks notes, adding that the northernmost cave is already much warmer than in the late 18th century based on historical reports. Further research could be done by taking sediment cores from Arctic river deltas or lakes, though this remains an epic task given the vastness and remoteness of the region. But, already, it is clear that global climates not much warmer than present are enough to thaw even more permafrost?as far north as 60 degrees latitude.

"The potential impact of these results extends to global policy: these results indicate the potential release of large amounts of carbon from thawed permafrost even if we attain the 2 degree [C] warming target under negotiation," says Kevin Schaefer, a scientist at the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center, who has also studied permafrost but was not involved in this, in his words, "great science" effort. "Permafrost thaws slowly and the carbon will be released into the atmosphere over two to three centuries."

Already, such thawing Arctic ice?whether underground or at sea?has further opened up the territory to exploration for resources, particularly oil. At the same time, the big thaw will make getting the oil out more expensive?billions of dollars in infrastructure investments in pipelines, roads and the like will be damaged as the ground shifts beneath them.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=36834cd46cb4494860702371769087bd

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David Gregory re-ups as 'Meet the Press' host

NEW YORK (AP) ? David Gregory has re-upped as host of "Meet the Press."

NBC News shared no details, but described the new deal as "a long-term commitment."

"What a great vote of confidence from NBC," a pleased-looking Gregory said Thursday. He said his first four years in the moderator's chair have passed quickly.

"In some ways, it feels like we're just getting started," he said.

The 42-year-old Gregory began as host of the Sunday morning public-affairs program in December 2008, succeeding the late Tim Russert.

Before that, he was Chief White House correspondent during the presidency of George W. Bush. He joined NBC News in 1995.

Gregory is only the 10th permanent host of "Meet the Press," which premiered in 1947 and continues as the longest-running program on network television.

Looking beyond the new contract, Gregory said he planned to be hosting the program "for as long as they'll let me."

"I can't think of a better platform to have for doing what I love to do ? the interviews ? and as an outlet for my curiosity," he said. "I think this is an impactful, influential program, and I love being associated with it."

__

Online:

http://www.nbcnews.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/david-gregory-ups-meet-press-host-192700937.html

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PFT: Cowboys reportedly begin talks with Romo

350x-1Getty Images

The Dallas Cowboys have been interested for months in extending the contract of franchise quarterback Tony Romo.? And after months of dragging their feet, it appears that Romo?s camp at least is willing to listen.

Cowboys executive V.P. Stephen Jones tells 105.3 The Fan in Dallas that talks aimed at adding years to Romo?s deal ? and in turn reducing his $16.8 million cap number for 2013 ? have commenced.

?We have a great quarterback and he deserves to be paid,?? Jones said.? ?We have a good quarterback and we want to reward him.? He?s in the last year of a contract and our goal is to not let the quarterback run out of contract.??

For now, Jones characterizes the talks as ?informal.?? And in the hopes of making them more formal, Jones appears to be trying to lay the salary-cap guilt trip on Romo.

?I think on this particular situation with Tony is we think we have a great quarterback and we want him to be our quarterback here for the next four to five years,? Jones said.? ?When you have a good one and you?re fortunate enough to have a good one, then he?s going to take up the biggest part of your cap space, so you have to be partners with one another and you have to do things.? No one wants to win more, no one wants to have success more than Tony.? He knows in order to do that we have to manage our cap and he plays a big part in that because the percentage of the cap that he takes.??

Romo?s current deal can?t be ?restructured? because there?s only one year left on it.? The cap number will drop only if the parties extend the deal to cover future years.? But Romo has no reason to extend the contract without receiving a large chunk of cash.

When the Cowboys wanted to talk contract during the 2012 season, Romo?s reps resisted, sensing that the team simply wanted to buy low.? And the Cowboys may still try to low ball Romo, whose leverage increases with the jump in his cap number.

If Romo is willing to shoulder the risk of injury, he can ride out the final year of his deal, forcing the Cowboys to use the franchise tag in 2014.? Based on his 2013 cap number, it would cost the Cowboys $20.16 million to keep him next season.

For that reason, Romo should be seeking a minimum guaranteed payment of $36.96 million, which is the sum of what he?ll make over the next two seasons.

Adding a third season to that package, and Romo?s pay for 2015 under the franchise tag would be $24.192 million.? That pushes his three-year haul to more than $61 million.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/21/report-cowboys-launch-romo-negotiations/related/

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Diane Sawyer Gives a 'World News' Shoutout to Her Youngest Fan ...

Diane Sawyer took a minute out of ?World News? Monday evening to give a special shoutout to one of her youngest viewers, two-year-old Malena.

?Tonight on this holiday, I?d love the chance to say hello to a friend who says hello to me every night, even though she is only two years old,? Sawyer said at the end of the broadcast. ?That is Malena from Illinois ? my favorite new star of YouTube. So Malena, hello to you, and goodnight.?

Sawyer found out about Malena after the child?s father Tweeted video of her watching ?World News.? Watch:

Source: http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/diane-sawyer-gives-a-world-news-shoutout-to-her-youngest-fan_b167611

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Air India says Boeing hopeful of getting Dreamliners back in service by April

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Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/node/1095280

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Satechi Aluminum External Hard Disk Enclosure

By Ahmer Kazi While portable hard drives and flash drives are ubiquitous because of their convenience, it's not hard to imagine that some folks might still have a few internal 2.5-inch drives sitting around the office. The Satechi Aluminum External Hard Disk Enclosure ($39.99) is a quick and affordable way to access those drives without having to install it into a desktop. It also boasts versatility since it can accommodate both 9.5mm and 12.5mm 2.5-inch SATA HDDs and SSDs, respectively.

Design and Features
Measuring 0.6 by 3.5 by 5.3 inches (HWD), the Aluminum External Hard Disk Enclosure can easily be confused for an ordinary external hard drive thanks to its rectangular shape and curved edges. That is, until you pick it up and realize that it only weighs 6.8 ounces and has an oddly hollow feeling to it. At any rate, it's tough to deny the aesthetic appeal of its aluminum alloy case and brushed metallic finish. Regardless of which color you choose, the end result is a handsome drive enclosure (my review unit was silver). More importantly, the aluminum alloy casing is thick enough to protect your drive, and it accordingly feels reassuringly sturdy in the hand.

Three sides of the Satechi Aluminum External Hard Disk Enclosure's four rounded edges are ringed by black plastic. The bottom of the enclosure sports a USB 3.0 port (also backward-compatible with USB 2.0) and an eSATA output. A pink light is emitted from an LED activity light between these ports, and it flashes blue whenever the drive is in use. The top, meanwhile, has a push button that opens a swivel arm on the enclosure's right side. Swinging the swivel arm open lets the user insert a drive in the enclosure. Since pulling out the swivel arm automatically pushes the inserted drive upward toward the user, removing it is just as easy. The only issue I encountered here concerns the closing mechanism. Instead of simply snapping shut, the mechanism forces the user to hold the open button down while simultaneously moving the arm inward. It's a minor annoyance that doesn't preclude one-handed operation, though, and it's easily outweighed by the simplicity of the devices's tool-free design.

The Aluminum External Hard Disk Enclosure is compatible with Windows (98/ME/2000/XP/Vista/7/8) and Mac (OS 10.2 and above). It's covered by a one-year warranty.

Performance
Testing the External Hard Disk Enclosure revealed that it functions exactly as one would expect. I popped in a 750GB Seagate Momentus XT HDD and a 240GB Intel 520 Series SSD, and encountered no problems with either USB 3.0 or eSATA connections. It's also backwards-compatible, so it can also function via USB 2.0. That said, the USB connection entails using an included Y-cable. I'm not a proponent of Y-cables because they're not as easily replaceable as standard USB cables and needlessly occupy precious USB ports. Moreover, the Aluminum External Hard Disk Enclosure's included Y-cable features disproportionate strand lengths that don't work well for systems whose USB ports aren't in close proximity with one another. Still, I was able to get the drive installed into the External Hard Disk Enclosure to read and write data with just one strand plugged in, so I can't quite envision a scenario where both are necessary.

Since the Aluminum External Hard Disk Enclosure is bus-powered, it doesn't require an external power supply. Once plugged into your system, drives are swappable, so there's no need to disconnect each time a new drive is inserted.

When one thinks of external hard drive enclosures, they typically envision a complicated setup process that requires the use of tools. The Satechi Aluminum Hard Disk Enclosure turns that notion on its head by offering an easy and highly versatile way to put all those spare 2.5-inch drives to use in a safe manner. While it's got a few drawbacks?namely a finicky open/close button and the use of a USB Y-cable?its appeal is nevertheless difficult to deny.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/cCwQl0LjnQg/0,2817,2415625,00.asp

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Thinnest iPhone 5 case that doesn't cover the logo?

Forum Jump

Source: http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1545026&goto=newpost

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These apps make jailbreaking your iPhone or iPad worthwhile

(AP Photo/Eric Risberg) Two weeks ago, a group of hackers named ?evad3rs? released software to jailbreak the iPhone 5 and the latest version of its operating system, iOS 6.1. In the first four days, iPhone owners used the software ?evasi0n" to jailbreak 7 million iOS devices.

Analysis ? Operations that Apple doesn?t want you to have help devices reach full potential.

The iPhone is one of the most advanced smartphones in the world, but it?s still being held back from its true potential.

That?s because Apple is strict about regulating what apps can and cannot be sold for its mobile phone. There are severe restrictions against running certain apps, including those with nudity, those that change the operations of the phone, even apps that criticize a public figure.

So that?s why millions of iPhone owners "jailbreak" their phones. "Jailbreaking" is the process of hacking an iPhone or iPad so it can run unauthorized third-party apps that Apple doesn?t allow. (There?s also a form of hacking for Android phones called "rooting," but there?s less of a need to do that because Android phones have a more open system for app development.)

Two weeks ago, a cunning group of hackers named "evad3rs" finally released software to jailbreak the iPhone 5 and the latest version of its operating system, iOS 6.1. In the first four days, iPhone owners used the software "evasi0n" to jailbreak 7 million iOS devices, including iPhones, iPads and iPad minis. These users can now download and run third-party apps that perform functions Apple and the carriers otherwise won?t allow.

Jailbreaking is easy, but I won?t go into the step-by-step instructions here. Those you can find on Google and specifically by going to iPhone-specific blogs such as RedmondPie.com, which has detailed instructions. Once you jailbreak your phone, it creates an icon called "Cydia" that is the app store for jailbroken apps. Launch the store, and you have access to tens of thousands of apps that will greatly improve your phone.

But be warned: There is a slim chance that jailbreaking your iPhone or iPad can render it inoperable. The U.S. Copyright Office ruled last year that jailbreaking is legal, but jailbreaking a device probably will void Apple?s warranty and could violate your contract with your carrier. So proceed with caution.

If you do it, however, here are the first apps to get that will make the effort worthwhile.

MyWi ? Used to be that turning your iPhone into a Wi-Fi hotspot cost an extra $20 per month, an unreasonable add-on fee if there ever was one. Carriers have eased up on that, but AT&T users who have unlimited data plans still cannot get this feature without moving to a data plan that is not unlimited. MyWi easily turns your phone into a Wi-Fi hotspot without any added fees.

3G Unrestrictor/My3G ? Apple and some carriers often restrict certain apps from using 3G connections or 4G connections, such as the iTunes App store (apps larger than 50 megabytes cannot be downloaded with a 3G connection or 4G connection) or the FaceTime video conferencing feature (in some cases, you can use FaceTime only with a Wi-Fi connection). My3G and 3G Unrestrictor are two apps that trick those restricted apps into thinking they?re using a Wi-Fi connection when in fact they?re using 3G or 4G. Now you?ll be able to FaceTime with someone without using Wi-Fi.

Springtomize ? One of the big advantages to jailbreaking is the ability to change the look of the iPhone or iPad?s interface. With Springtomize, users can perform a boatload of changes in the way the phone looks and operates, including the notification screen or how many app icons can fit in a folder. Users can even make the icons semi-transparent so more of the wallpaper can be seen.

story continues below

Winterboard/Dreamboard ? These apps allow users to completely change the wallpaper and the look of the icons, as well as the folders. Many developers have created "themes" that make the phone?s interface one coherent design. They also can change the sound effects the device makes.

Auxo ? When you close an app on an iPhone or iPad, it doesn?t really close the app but puts it into a "freeze" state. To re-access it quickly, you can call up the the phone?s auto-switcher by double-pressing the "Home" button. That brings up the list of recently-used apps. Auxo is a great jailbreak app that not only calls up past apps, but shows the screenshot of the app?s last state before it was closed. Also, if you swipe the app switcher to the left, it instantly accesses phone features that can be turned on and off, including the Wi-Fi antenna, the Bluetooth function and the screen?s orientation lock.

MapsOpener ? We all know how bad Apple?s Maps application is. So when Google finally put out its own native maps app, many users installed it. Problem is that when users click on an address in Safari or another app, Apple Maps comes up by default. MapsOpener changes that default to Google Maps.

PandoraSkip ? Do you love Pandora, the online music station, but hate the ads and the fact that you can?t skip more than six songs per hour? This wonderful app tweaks Pandora so it eliminates the annoying ads and the skip restriction.

vince@sltrib.com

Google+: +Vincent Horiuchi

Copyright 2013 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/money/55839699-79/iphone-apps-jailbreak-app.html.csp

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Report: Chrysler to add Ind. jobs

KOKOMO, Ind. (AP) - A report says the Chrysler Group will announce investments and jobs to boost transmission manufacturing in the Kokomo area next week.

The Kokomo Tribune reports Chrysler Chairman and CEO Sergio Marchionne will join Gov. Mike Pence for the Feb. 28 announcement.

Chrysler officials announced last year they intend to produce more efficient eight- and nine-speed transmissions at its three Kokomo transmission plants. Local officials approved tax abatements on what's expected to be a $1.3 billion investment in new transmission manufacturing lines that would create as many as 400 new jobs.

Chrysler officials announced plans in December to invest $162 million in equipment in the former Getrag Transmission plant in nearby Tipton. The company said it would create 850 jobs at the facility with an annual payroll of $39 million.

Source: http://www.wishtv.com/dpp/news/local/north_central/report-chrysler-to-make-kokomo-jobs-announcement

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Monday, February 18, 2013

Porn Star Demographics, Visualized

Jon Millward deosn't watch porn like the average man: instead, he sees it as a heaving data set to analyze and graph. No, really. That's why he's visualized porn star demographics to work out what the typical, ahem, actress look like. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/-_v1g2p-rvc/porn-star-demographics-visualized

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How to Customize the "Send To" Menu in Windows 8

How to Customize the "Send To" Menu in Windows 8Windows' "Send To" menu can be a great time saver when working with files, but it doesn't work quite the same way in Windows 8 as it did in Windows 7. The experts at SuperUser show us how to customize the entries in that list.

If you want to add your own app or folder to the Send to menu, it's very simple: Just open the Run dialog box by pressing Win+R, then paste this command into the text box:

 shell:sendto 

This will open the folder where all those shortcuts live. Alternatively, you can navigate to >%UserProfile%\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\SendTo. Create a shortcut in the folder for the item you want in the Send To menu, and you're ready to go.

How to add an item to my "Send To" context menu in Windows 8 | SuperUser via How-To Geek

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/3-qYIJsYgqE/how-to-customize-the-send-to-menu-in-windows-8

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French dad in custody fight on 4-day crane protest

PARIS (AP) ? A French father demanding visiting rights with his son climbed down Monday from his protest perch atop a crane, but said it will be a long time before divorced dads are seen as credible single parents and get the same rights in France as mothers.

Serge Charnay halted his four-day protest on the crane in the western city of Nantes after Justice Minister Christiane Taubira met with SOS Papa, an activist group for divorced fathers.

"It's a start ... There's lots of work to do," he told TV cameras after reaching the ground. "These little ladies still think we can't change the diapers of a kid and take care of him ... This must stop."

Another father with a similar grievance briefly occupied a crane in the eastern city of Strasbourg over the weekend before police persuaded him to come down.

Charnay wants France to strengthen its law on shared custody. He was convicted of taking his son on an unauthorized vacation for two months in 2011 but says he did not regret that because "if I hadn't I wouldn't have seen him."

He said he does not expect to see his young son on his next birthday but insisted that his unusual protest was "absolutely not" aimed at improving his own lot.

"I went up for the cause of fathers," he said.

The head of SOS Papa, Fabrice Mejias, said the meeting with the justice minister did not appear to advance the fathers' cause.

However, Family Minister Dominique Bertinotti, who was also at the meeting, said later it's clear France needs to promote mediation between separating parents rather than systematically putting divorce cases before a judge.

She rejected Charnay's claim that fathers are seen as lacking in credibility.

"I don't think it's in a pseudo-war of the sexes that things will progress," she said on BFM TV.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/french-dad-custody-fight-4-day-crane-protest-132735484.html

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Jump in oil exports a bright spot for port in 2012

Crude oil exports through Port Metro Vancouver climbed 35 per cent last year ??one of the few areas of hefty growth for port shipments in 2012.

The port says 50 oil tankers loaded at the Burnaby terminus of the Kinder Morgan pipeline, up from 34 the year before.

The record in a single year was 69 tankers in 2010, but that's expected to be shattered if a proposal to twin the Trans Mountain pipeline is approved, bringing up to 400 tankers a year through Vancouver harbour as soon as 2017.

Total cargo shipments through Port Metro Vancouver were up just one per cent.

Coal exports totalled 32.7 million tonnes, about 70 per cent of it for steel-making, not power production.

That was still up 0.5 per cent but less than expected because Westshore Terminals' main coal berth was knocked out of service after a ship crashed into it Dec. 6.

Potash shipments were also down because China was refusing to buy during price negotiations with Canadian exporters.

"Those two things took our growth down a little bit," Port Metro Vancouver president and CEO Robin Silvester. "Overall it was a pretty solid year."

Container traffic through the port grew eight per cent, setting a new record of 2.7 million containers shipped.

More containers destined for the U.S. were also handled and Silvester said that's a credit to ongoing efforts to make handling containers and hauling them through the Lower Mainland more efficient.

Several road and overpass projects were underway in 2012 and continue this year.Robin Silvester, president and CEO of Port Metro Vancouver

Silvester said 300 container-hauling trucks now have GPS units installed and the port aims to increase that to about 1,000, or half the fleet.

The resulting data is expected to help terminals and truckers connect more efficiently, hopefully reducing the long waits truckers often spend in lineups at container terminals.

Silvester said the GPS units will also show which trucks are using roads that aren't designated truck routes so that can be stopped.

Planning continues on the proposed Terminal 2 at Deltaport that would double container-handling capacity there.

Silvester predicts environmental permitting applications will be filed within 12 months.

He said the new container terminal will add 18,000 permanent jobs.

"It's a critically important project for the port and for the Lower Mainland and for Canada."

As for controversial plans to add coal export capacity in the region, Silvester said he's not sure when the port will decide on whether to okay a proposed new coal terminal at Fraser Surrey Docks.

"There really isn't a timeline," he said. "We'll make a decision when all the questions are answered that need to be answered."

He said there are no grounds that he sees to "rewind" the recent approval of a project to expand the export capacity of Neptune Terminals' coal facility in North Vancouver.

Environmental groups that oppose coal exports have argued the approval process was flawed.

The port's two automobile import terminals on the Fraser River brought in 380,000 new vehicles last year, a 29 per cent rebound from 2011, when Japanese car exports plunged due to that year's earthquake and tsunami.

Virtually all Asian vehicles destined for Canada arrive here.

"If you're driving an Asian-built car anywhere in Canada, right across to Newfoundland, it came in through the Fraser River," Silvester said.

While much of the oil expected to flow through the Lower Mainland in future years would be bound for Asia, 80 per cent of the crude exports last year went to the U.S., mainly California.

'; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } google_ad_client = 'pub-9774721429222771'; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_ad_channel ='3389691084'; google_max_num_ads = '4'; google_feedback = 'on'; google_ad_type = 'text'; google_adtest = 'on'; google_image_size = '300x250'; google_skip = '3'; // -->

Source: http://www.cloverdalereporter.com/business/191436451.html

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Florida's 2001 recruiting class of David Lee, James White, and Kwame Brown still matters

Before the Oh-Fours, there was Florida's 2001 class. More than a decade later, we look at the fates of David Lee, James White, and Kwame Brown.

Once upon a time, Florida didn't have two back-to-back national titles. Billy Donovan was still Billy the Kid, not Billy the King. The Gators were an upstart program that pestered Kentucky in the SEC and made a stunning run to the NCAA Tournament final in 2000.

But, off the success of that 2000 season, Donovan put together the best recruiting class in Florida's history, the class that earned some insane hype as the best in college basketball in a decade, one that promised to allow the Gators to step up to the pinnacle of the sport.

Joe Schad, then at the Orlando Sentinel, wrote the definitive story on that class in November 2000 ? it was published on November 5, the Sunday before a little election became the only story in Florida anyone cared about. It portrayed the Gators' three-man class, of Kwame Brown, David Lee, and James White as a collection of stars destined to take Florida to glory.

It didn't quite work out like that.

Star-divide

Even in high school there were legitimate questions about which of the three players was the best ? and arguments for each of them.

Brown, from Brunswick, Georgia, stood 6'11", had could dribble effectively, and possessed a post game any college coach would have loved to refine. In a class that included Eddy Curry and Tyson Chandler, Brown was some recruiters' No. 1 pick, given his athleticism and seemingly limitless potential, and it was Donovan's greatest recruiting coup to have secured his commitment to come south to Gainesville.

A product of St. Louis' Chaminade Prep, Lee was the best white player anyone had seen in years. It was damning faith praise from an industry that compared him to Larry Bird despite his athleticism, relentlessness, and hunger for contact under the hoop looking like the makings of a low-post presence. He was told he could be the first white player to leap from high school to the NBA Draft ? in 2004, Robert Swift would become the first and only white player to do so ? and framed as the latest Great White Hope in a sport that has a new one every few years or so.

White was the best athlete in the whole class, an electrifying dunker who drew deserved Vince Carter comparisons. He was also the "troubled" recruit, the one taking a circuitous path to college that has become more common in recent years, having hopped to three schools in four years and ended up at Hargrave Military Academy. Even then, his feats were legend, a touch beyond what reality had deemed: Schad relays a story from one of White's coach that had him taking off from between the free throw line and the three-point line and throwing down a dunk. His nickname was also perfect: Simply, he was "Flight."

Individually, they were better talents than virtually anyone Donovan had been able to bring to Florida; Jason Williams, Mike Miller, and Donnell Harvey all had arguments to the contrary, but not great ones. Together, they were the future.

Star-divide

Brown was the first to shatter that future. In November, he told the Sentinel in no uncertain terms that he was coming to Florida, not going to the NBA.

"I know I'm not really ready for the NBA. I'm not ready for that lifestyle, to have someone constantly in my business. Many pro athletes fail because they're not prepared properly. I don't think I'm physically or mentally ready for the rigors of an 80-game schedule."

By April, Brown was reconsidering; in May, a day before his senior prom, he declared for the NBA Draft. Brown's talents proved as alluring to NBA executives as they were to recruiting analysts and Donovan, and he was drafted by the Washington Wizards with the No. 1 pick in the 2001 NBA Draft, becoming the first high school player to ever go No. 1. He signed a four-year, $18 million deal.

And as the Wizards were then run by Michael Jordan, serving as their President of Basketball Operations, the sky was seen less as Brown's limit and more as his floor.

Star-divide

Brown had told the Sentinel that White might choose to follow him to the pros if he leapt, but the dunker made it to Gainesville despite his good friend's suspicions. And he and Lee kept plenty of the hype for themselves, thanks in part to what many still regard as the finest non-NBA dunk contest ever.

At the 2001 Sprite Slam Dunk, part of the 2001 McDonald's All-American Game, White and Lee dueled into the finals, throwing down mind-bending dunks that had every Florida fan who knew where to find a high school slam dunk contest on television salivating over their potential and that would have broken Twitter several times over if it had existed. Lee prevailed in the end by tossing the ball in the air, removing his jersey, and throwing down, but the spectacle didn't diminish White's star, it just burnished Lee's: The best white baller in recent memory had bested the best dunker outside the NBA.

And both would attend the same college. One just wouldn't stay for long.

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Neither White nor Lee were more than super subs in the 2001-02 season, nor were they expected to. Lee was blocked by senior Udonis Haslem and junior Matt Bonner down low; White was behind guards Brett Nelson and Justin Hamilton, and behind better shooters Bonnell Colas and Orien Greene. He would have been behind Teddy Dupay had Florida's pint-sized scorer not been kicked off the team in September 2001. The Gators had plenty of offense without their touted freshmen, regardless: With Nelson, Colas, and Bonner helping fuel the three-point parade, Florida averaged 80.5 points per game, still the seventh-best mark in school history, and topped 100 points four times. (Dupay's absence was felt, if only barely: Florida's scoring was actually down in 2001-02, having neared the school record at 83.8 points per contest in 1999-2000 and fallen only to 80.9 in 2000-01.)

Lee averaged 7.0 points and 4.7 rebounds per game; White put in 6.1 points and grabbed 2.9 boards per game. He also threw down against Kentucky.

It would be among his final highlights as a Gator, and a high point in a disappointing year, as Florida failed to defend SEC titles it had won in 2000 and 2001 and suffered a shocking first round loss to Creigton in the 2002 NCAA Tournament. In November 2002, Florida announced that White would transfer, with Schad reporting for the Sentinel that he had dealt with a knee injury and off-the-court troubles, and fallen behind his Gators teammates.

Two years and a week after Schad's first feature on the Gators' vaunted 2001 recruiting class, only Lee remained at Florida.

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With Haslem gone, Lee would get more playing time and develop significantly in his sophomore year, raising his scoring average to 11.2 points per game and snaring 6.8 rebounds per night. He wasn't Florida's go-to player ? that was Bonner, who played wonderfully as Florida's fulcrum. But he also wasn't the most exciting player Florida had, and maybe not even the most exciting white player Florida had: Such was the power of the freshman seasons Matt Walsh and Anthony Roberson had. Walsh and Roberson, both perimeter players perfectly suited to Donovan's three-happy offense, each averaged more than 12 points per game in 2002-03. Florida would deal with another March disappointment in the 2003 NCAA Tournament, bowing out to Michigan State in the second round despite earning a No. 2 seed, the program's best seed ever.

Lee's next and final two years at Florida found him as the core of Florida's post game, and still third in scoring to Walsh and Roberson. Roberson averaged more than 17 points per game as a sophomore and junior; Walsh topped 15 per outing in his sophomore year, and still scored more than 14 per game despite doing more distributing and getting hurt as a junior. Lee did nearly average a double-double in 2004-05, adding nine rebounds per game to his 13.3 points, but Florida kept failing to get over the hump in March: 2004 saw the Gators get wiped out by Manhattan as a No. 5 seed, and 2005 ended without a Sweet Sixteen berth, too, as Florida lost a second round game to Villanova.

David Lee came to Florida as part of the school's best recruiting class ever, and left without ever playing in a Sweet Sixteen game or winning an SEC title. And still, his four years from 2001 to 2005 beat those lived by Brown and White.

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Brown was expected to help Wizards return to prominence, but a funny thing happened on the way to his future: Michael Jordan decided it was his future, too. After the September 11th attacks, Jordan made his second return to basketball; he would lead the Wizards in scoring in 2001-02, and average more than 20 points per game in 2002-03, but he also stunted the growth of a young team that needed to grow more than it needed to play with the greatest player in NBA history.

And he probably ruined Brown's career.

One of the funniest-in-retrospect stories in Sports Illustrated history is Ian Thomsen's 2001 piece on Brown, one teased with the tagline "In 19-year-old Kwame Brown, Wizards boss Michael Jordan may have drafted a player whose competitive fire rivals his own." It cites Brown turning fury at having his name misspelled into fuel that allowed him to beat Tyson Chandler in a pre-draft workout, but it also calls him "levelheaded": One of these things is Jordanesque, and the other is decidedly not.

Jordan rode Brown and the rest of his Wizards teammates mercilessly, much as he did his Bulls teammates in the 1990s. But Jordan's Wizards teammates were not the veterans that helped him to six titles; they were more like Toni Kukoc, softer and more malleable. Brown was putty; Jordan reduced him to paste, tagging him repeatedly with a gay slur and challenging his manhood.

Presumably, Jordan had done this before; this was lion-in-winter stuff. Brown responded like a lamb at the slaughter, playing timidly and poorly in his first and Jordan's last two seasons, getting outrebounded by Jordan in both. He improved with Jordan removed from the Washington rotation in 2003-04, but that was after a DUI arrest, and he didn't improve that much, merely getting 10.9 points and 7.4 rebounds per game. Take away his shining moment ? a 30-point, 19-rebound explosion that helped deny the Sacramento Kings their 50th win ? and he would have averaged almost a half-point less per game on the year.

After 2004, Brown could have signed a five-year, $30 million extension to stay with the Wizards. He declined to do so, got hurt, and regressed in 2004-05. (His 2003-04 averages remain his career bests in scoring and rebounding.) When he was traded to the Los Angeles Lakers in August 2005, it was clear: Kwame Brown experiment in Washington was over. And it was a failure.

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Lee failing to take Florida to the promised land and Brown failing to become a star with the Wizards seemed actors being thwarted by their environments more than his their efforts. James White could sympathize ? to a point.

White landed at Cincinnati after transferring from Florida, heading to a program known for national contention and Conference USA dominance, having won C-USA for seven straight seasons under Bob Huggins. While White was there, that reputation changed. Cincinnati couldn't match the highs of the Kenyon Martin era after Martin left for the NBA, and ebbed to 17-12 in 2002-03 as White watched after earning a No. 1 seed in 2001-02 while while was at Florida.

White became eligible in 2003-04, and contributed throughout his three years in Cincy. He was still a talented scorer, putting in over 1,000 points in his three years with the Bearcats. And he didn't forget how to dunk than shooter, and he led the Bearcats in assists in both his junior seasons less because of his skill than because of the program's lack of a point guard. It also lacked postseason success: Cincinnati made the NCAA Tournament and lost in the second round in 2004 and 2005, then missed it and made the NIT Elite Eight in 2006.

After 2006, five years after his athleticism made him a tantalizing prospect, White's NBA stock had diminished considerably. He would have been a first-round pick in 2001, and perhaps a lottery pick, given that season's run on high schoolers, with four, Brown included, going in the top 10. White chose to go to Florida, then chose to leave it instead of sticking it out. He delayed his NBA entry, depressing his draft stock, likely lowered the ceiling on his development by picking Bob Huggins over Billy Donovan.

Decisions White made before he was able to legally drink probably cost him millions of dollars.

But he did participate in college basketball's 2006 slam dunk contest ... and finished second to North Carolina's David Noel.

After finishing his college career, White was taken with the 31st pick in 2006, and was immediately swapped from the Portland Trail Blazers to the Indiana Pacers. The Pacers, who were looking to contend for a title after the suspensions handed out for their involvement in The Malice at the Palace, wanted veterans more than rookies, and cut White after their training camp, with Rick Carlisle lamenting the cut as the most difficult of his coaching career. Orien Greene, who had been one year behind White in both arriving at and transferring from Florida, made the team.

White ended up with the San Antonio Spurs, but they, like the Pacers, needed their roster space. He was sent to the Austin Toros of the NBA D-League, then brought up for his fresh legs during the Spurs' stretch run. White scored 17 points in San Antonio's meaningless 81st game of the year, then played in none of the Spurs' 20 playoff games. He got a championship ring, but also got waived in the summer. Without another NBA suitor, White took off for Europe, his career seemingly short-circuited before it began.

Star-divide

While White and Brown found themselves in exile and on the bench, Lee's career was taking off. He was a first-round pick in 2005, but only barely: He was taken by the New York Knicks with the 30th and final pick of the first round. He scored a modest 5.4 points per game in his first year, but flashed the skills to succeed in spot starts, and recorded four double-doubles despite making just 14 starts.

In 2006, he got both good and bad luck. An injury to Channing Frye freed up playing time for Lee early on, and he averaged 10.7 points and 10.4 rebounds per game, and he won the MVP award of the Rookie-Sophomore Challenge. But injury limited Lee to just 58 games.

In 2007, he reprised a glorified sixth man role, with similar production; in 2008, giving a starting role, he blossomed, scoring 16.0 points and pulling down 11.7 rebounds per game.

But 2009 saw Lee's scoring numbers rise again, to 20.2 points per game, and 2009 produced his first All-Star appearance. 2009 allowed him to get a massive six-year, $79.5 million deal as part of a sign-and-trade between the Knicks and Golden State Warriors. 2009 paved Lee's road to financial security for the rest of his life, and a position in that same conversation about the best white American basketball players that he seemed poised to dominate.

On Sunday, Lee will play in his second All-Star Game. He is the Warriors' first All-Star this millennium. It took almost a full decade, but David Lee arrived. Of Florida's first Big Three, he's the one who unquestionably made it.

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Of Florida's Big Three, Brown is the one who never never quite panned out.

After being traded to the Lakers, Brown became a punchline. He was booed lustily in his first return trip to Washington, and faced the same frustrations in Los Angeles that he did in the nation's capital when it came to demanding, relentless teammates, a passenger on Kobe Bryant's trip to the Shaquille O'Neal-less wilderness. A woman alleged that Brown sexually assaulted her in 2006, after a Lakers playoff game, but prosecutors declined to press charges. A man alleged that Brown stole his birthday cake and threw it at him in 2007, but he did not face charges; later that year, Brown was charged with disorderly conduct as a part of a police stop.

He became a throw-in in the deal that brought Pau Gasol to L.A., then became a Piston for two years, then became a Bobcat, then joined Lee with the Warriors, then was a throw-in in the deal that brought Andrew Bogut to the Bay, then, before the 2012-13 season, joined the 76ers.

Brown has played in 21 games this season, recording season highs of six points and eight rebounds in a 100-98 win over the Dallas Mavericks in November. Basketball-Reference suggests Brown has made nearly $60 million playing basketball in his 12 years in the NBA, less than Lee will make over the course of his deal with the Warriors.

Brown is tall, and a decent defender, and no more a character risk than dozens of other players despite his run-ins with the law. He will continue getting his shots to earn paychecks for being a tall, decent defender in the NBA for as long as he remains in shape, even if his story will always seem incomplete.

Kwame Brown is not on Twitter. There are at least seven Kwame Brown parody Twitter accounts.

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James White is playing his redemption song.

White spent a year in Turkey playing for Fenerbahce in 2007-08. He came back to the United States and played for the NBA D-League's Anaheim Arsenal in their final year in Anaheim in 2008-09. But a funny thing happened on the way to irrelevance: White made it back to the NBA. Twice.

In 2008-09, White caught on with the Houston Rockets, earning a 10-day contract. He played in four regular season and five playoff games with Houston. But he missed all six of his shots in one six-minute appearance in the Rockets' first round loss to the Lakers, and would be shipped off to the Denver Nuggets in September 2009. He spent the preseason with Denver, but would be waived again in October 2009.

Some players would give up after two failed NBA shots. White went to Russia's Spartak St. Petersburg in 2009-10, and to Italy's Dinamo Sassari in 2010-11, and to Italy's Scavolino Pesaro in 2011-12. But he came back again, joining the New York Knicks in 2012. And he made the Knicks, breaking camp with an NBA team for the first time at the age of 30.

White has scored in double figures just once this season, with 11 points against Joakim Noah's Chicago Bulls in a January loss. He's played more than 20 minutes just once, against Chandler Parsons' Houston Rockets. But he's finally going to get to do the thing everyone on Earth knows he can still do in just a few minutes, when he participates in the NBA Slam Dunk Contest.

White is the oldest participant, and is going up against fellow freakish dunker Gerald Green, defending champion Jeremy Evans, and a trio of young and athletic dunkers in Eric Bledsoe, Kenneth Faried, and Terrence Ross. As a result, White is everyone's sentimental favorite, and the guy most likely to stun the world.

All he has to do is fly.

Star-divide

This is a strange and wonderful time for Florida basketball, as Billy Donovan's team looks like a national championship contender on an All-Star Weekend with Gators everywhere. Parsons and Bradley Beal ? the Wizards' second draft pick who was once committed to Florida, and a player who came to Florida from Chaminade High, Lee's alma mater ? both played in Friday's Rising Stars Challenge. Matt Bonner rode his affability and social media to a spot in the Three-Point Contest. White has his long-awaited chance to dunk on the NBA's stage. Lee and Noah will face off in the All-Star Game. And a week spent celebrating Michael Jordan's 50th birthday had me thinking about, of course, Brown, his most spectacular basketball failure.

When players leave Florida (or, in Brown's case, choose not to come), they don't leave Gator Nation; players who aren't at Florida still affect what happens at Florida. College basketball is a zero-sum game, in a certain sense. Brown, Lee, and White were all Gators at one point, and all had a hand in Florida's rise as a basketball power. If Lee doesn't come to Florida, neither does Beal; if Lee doesn't stay for his senior season, who knows if Noah and Horford get his master class in rebounding in their freshman years? If White doesn't leave Florida, Walsh and Roberson probably don't get quite as many minutes and step into their massive roles as freshmen. If Brown doesn't eschew college, Lee probably doesn't get as many minutes as a freshman; if Brown doesn't leap to the pros in 2001, his career probably ends up radically different.

If Billy Donovan doesn't learn from the issues of that fabled 2001 recruiting class, he doesn't bring in the Oh-Fours, or win Florida's two titles. If Florida hadn't had its Big Three dwindle to Just David Lee, Donovan probably wouldn't have adjusted his recruiting to go after just the Big Two of Kasey Hill and Chris Walker that will comprise the Gators' most ballyhooed class since.

As you watch the All-Star festivities from Houston, and marvel at Gator after Gator being part of them, we can be proud that Florida has become a basketball power, and that Donovan and his many wonderful Gators made good on the promise of that 2001 recruiting class.

It just didn't work out quite like it was supposed to, is all.

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Source: http://www.alligatorarmy.com/2013/2/16/3996634/florida-gators-basketball-2001-recruiting-class-kwame-brown-david-lee-james-white

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Premier Jobs UK: MORTGAGE ADVISER - SELF EMPLOYED

MORTGAGE ADVISER ? SELF EMPLOYED

LOCATION: SLEAFORD, LINCOLNSHIRE

OTE: ?50,000+

Our Client Company are award winning mortgage brokers based in Sleaford who have been successfully operating for over ten years.? They are looking to expand their company, and are seeking experienced and dynamic advisers.

You will be self motivated and be a good team player.? You will take pride in your work, pay attention to detail, and have a proven track record of achieving sales targets.?

You will be based in the company?s well equipped offices.? The company has a robust CRM system, and three experienced support staff who complete suitability letters, process the applications and liaise with client companies.? The company have a large client bank and have excellent lead sources which will provide a plentiful supply of leads to the successful candidate (no client bank is required).? Excellent commission splits are paid.

Expectation will be that you will complete a minimum of two cases per week resulting in on target earnings of in excess of ?50,000 per annum.

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Source: http://www.retailfinancialcareers.com/job/64704/mortgage-adviser-self-employed/?TrackID=1

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Utes gymnastics team ties Washington

SEATTLE (ABC 4 Sports) -?The #6-ranked Ute gymnasts dug themselves out of a huge hole after botching their first event, but only enough to finish in a tie with #23 Washington 195.975-195.975. The Utes, who have never lost to the Huskies in 46 meetings, have now tied them twice. Reminiscent of 2001, when the final Husky gymnast needed a 10.0 on floor to tie the meet and got it, UW?s Aliza Vaccher needed a 9.925 this time around for the tie. She got it.

Utah coach Greg Marsden expressed concern over another poor start on the bars on the road. ?We just can?t start meets like that (Utah counted a 9.30 after a fall and a costly balk). That?s two out of three road meets we?ve done that. For being halfway through the season, we shouldn?t be making these kinds of mistakes.?

The balk on bars by Kassandra Lopez was one of the stranger mistakes. Tory Wilson had already fallen off the bars, leaving the Utes no room for error, when Lopez ran up, bounced on the board and turned back. She never touched the bars, but to avoid a half point deduction, she needed to avoid the board, which is considered a part of the apparatus, according to Marsden.

?I don?t think Kass knew she couldn?t jump on the board,? said Marsden. ?That was a coaching mistake. I don?t think we?ve ever told the (gymnasts) that the bar routine starts when they touch the board.?

Lopez did a fine job once she took to the bars and would have scored at least a 9.80 had she not been docked for the false start. Georgia Dabritz won the event with a 9.825, but the damage was done and Utah trailed by a hefty .650 margin (49.075-48.425) after one event.

?We weren?t very good tonight,? said Marsden. ?You can?t give away the first event of the night. We did come back and make a meet of it, but it just wasn?t enough.?

The Utes made up all that ground in round two by scoring a 49.325 on vault to UW?s 48.675 on bars. Wilson, the nation?s top-ranked vaulter, stayed undefeated on her specialty, winning her sixth-straight title with a 9.95. She popped the big score right after Georgia Dabritz landed a 9.925.

Utah took its first of the night on the floor?barely?and would enter the final event leading by a whisker, 146.950-146.875. Becky Tutka scored a 9.90 on the floor and Nansy Damianova a 9.875 in a 49.20 team set, but the Huskies performed nearly as well on the beam, scoring a 49.125.

It was toe-to-toe from then to the finish with the Utes performing well under pressure on the beam, but not well enough to put away the Huskies.

?It was good that we showed we could go to that event (beam) in a pressure situation, but we need to do better there, too,? said Marsden. ?We weren?t aggressive enough on some routines.?

Case in point was, Dabritz, who scored a 9.60 after missing a connection. Wilson, on the other hand, attacked the beam and won the event with a career-high 9.875, giving her two event titles on the night. ?I?ll give Tory some slack,? said Marsden, referring to her fall on bars and the way she bounced back (Wilson scored a 9.80 on floor). Her bar routine is brand new and she did a really good job the rest of the way.?

Source: http://www.abc4.com/sports/story/Utes-gymnastics-team-ties-Washington/A_gSBaac7EC80_uqYap52w.cspx?rss=24

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Amazon Takes Redshift, Its Cloud-Based Data Warehouse Killer, Global

amazon redshiftAmazon’s onslaught in disrupting enterprise IT services continues. The company today announced that it would be making Redshift — its cloud-based data warehousing service — widely available, after first launching the product on a limited release at the end of November. The product, part of Amazon Web Services, is aimed both at startups who are looking for cost-effective ways of storing data for their new services, as well as larger or more established enterprises that want to cut operational costs, and possibly capex as well. Amazon also announced a number of third parties — including SAP, Cognizant,?IBM,?Informatica, Tableau,?Attunity, Actuate, Pentaho, Talend, Birst, Roambi and Pervasive — are also linking up with Redshift?to help integrate the product into companies’ wider IT services, by also offering analytics and other services on top of it. MicroStrategy?and Jaspersoft were the two early partners Amazon announced for IT integration. These partners are an essential component in Amazon’s “big data” play — made at a time when businesses are not only amassing and storing more data, but using it regularly as part of their business processes. It will be interesting to see whether Amazon itself eventually begins to move further into this service layer itself, going beyond more basic storage solutions. Amazon is offering the service at a sliding scale depending on usage. Amazon says that pricing for an on-demand, XL Node, 2 terabyte storage starting at $0.85 per hour per Node, and a reserved instance, one-year contract for the same service at $0.215. The second class of service, the?8XL Node, 16TB storage, is priced between $0.912 for a three-year, reserved instance deal and $6.80 per Node for the on-demand option. That works out, it says to?a terabyte of data coming in at less than $1,000. That represents a massive discount for those who have traditionally used physical data warehouses for this service.?When Redshift was first announced in November 2012, Andy Jassy, the SVP and president of AWS, said that the typical cost of an equivalent data warehousing solution was $19,000-$25,000 per terabyte. “When we set out to build Amazon Redshift, we wanted to leverage the massive scale of AWS to deliver ten times the performance at 1/10 the cost of on-premise data warehouses in use today,” said?Raju Gulabani, VP of database services, AWS, in a statement. “With order of magnitude improvements in price/performance, Amazon Redshift makes big data analytics accessible to more people, allowing large

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/ZZKQqRb7ioQ/

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

Sequoia?s Bryan Schreier Says It?s Time For The Ivy Leagues To Embrace Startups

bryan schreierSometimes, I feel like every single person in their 20s is hoping to either create or work at the next big startup. But Bryan Schreier, a partner at Sequoia Capital, said that's largely a West Coast phenomenon. For example, according to Sequoia's research, 41 percent of Stanford's computer science majors go to work for a startup after graduation, while that number is only 13 percent for Harvard, with similar results at other top East Coast schools. So Sequoia is hoping to bring those numbers up, in part through a conference at Princeton this weekend (co-hosted ?by student publication Business Today) called Start @ A Startup.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/QEerfJtJoJw/

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