Friday, December 30, 2011

How to get More Battery Life out of your Galaxy Nexus

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We all know our beloved Android phones are not battery friendly, and we try our best to conserve the battery to at least get us through the dreaded work day. Extended batteries, toggles, and battery saver apps can also help with the life of your battery. Even though Ice Cream Sandwich has impressive battery life with all the features it has, there is still a simple method you can use to make it even better.

For those of you that were lucky to get a Samsung Galaxy Nexus, here is a simple little thing you can do to help increase your battery?s life.?TURNING?OFF YOUR 4G. Easy right? Lets face?facts. It is going to take a while for the 4G LTE to get into every nook and cranny of the Earth?s plain, and if you live in a city that does not have 4G or sometimes gets 4G, your phone is wasting power scanning for that 4G signal. So lets turn that scanning off. It is as simple as, Settings>More?>Mobile Networks>and?turning it from LTE/CDMA to just CDMA.?You will now remain with constant 3G and your phone will save that power it was using trying to find 4G.

Why would you want to turn off that awesome 4G though? I am not saying just remain on 3G the whole day, just for those times where you are not really using your phone. You can also look in the market to see if there is a special toggle for this?method, so instead of going through your settings you can place the toggle on your home screen and tap it once for it to bring you right to the preferred network window. This will make it easier for you to go back and forth between 3G and 4G.

A lot of you probably already knew this little trick. I use this method with my phone on T-Mobile?s network, where I turn the HSPA+ off when I am not really using my phone for downloading or browsing through apps. It helps the battery ?a ton. This method especially will help your Galaxy Nexus out since Big Red is having constant problems these days, keeping their 4G LTE from cutting out. Silly Verizon and their awesome broadband service that is to powerful for even them to handle. Give it a shot and see if it helps you out.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidspin/feed/~3/6vMWzyhqKTU/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Jessica Chastain takes Palm Springs fest honors (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? The Palm Springs International Film Festival has now stocked its annual Awards Gala with 14 honorees, adding actress Jessica Chastain and composer Howard Shore to its previously announced lineup.

Chastain will receive the festival's Spotlight Award at the January 7 gala, while Shore will get the Frederick Loewe Music Award.

Also receiving awards at the gala are George Clooney, Glenn Close, Stephen Daldry, Michel Hazanavicius, Gary Oldman, Brad Pitt, Octavia Spencer, Michelle Williams and the creative team behind "Young Adult": director Jason Reitman, screenwriter Diablo Cody and stars Charlize Theron and Patton Oswalt.

The two new honorees will complete the lineup.

Chastain had seven movies released in 2011, including "The Tree of Life," "The Help," "Take Shelter," "The Debt" and "Coriolanus."

Shore wrote the music for David Cronenberg's "A Dangerous Method" and Martin Scorsese's "Hugo," though PSIFF says he will be receiving the award for the latter film.

In a press release announcing the awards, festival chairman Howard Matzner called Chastain "one of the cinema's most versatile and most sought after young actresses," and termed Shore "a master composer who has consistently delighted audiences of the more than 80 films he has scored."

The 23rd Palm Springs International Film Festival will begin on January 5 and run through January 16 in the desert resort town east of Los Angeles.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111228/media_nm/us_jessicachastain

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Randolph-Macon College Hires New Executive Director of Annual Giving

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Source: http://news.rmc.edu/news.asp?view=pLink&id=796

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Sony sells all of its S-LCD shares to Samsung

After some talk early last month about shaking up its LCD business unit, Sony has finally reached and signed agreements with Samsung in an effort to save its failing LCD TV branch.

Sony has been in the LCD TV business for eight years, and has had eight years of losses in a row. After realizing that this sinking ship was not producing (and likely will not produce) any annual profits, Sony began negotiating with Samsung on a buyout of its 50 percent manufacturing stake in their LCD joint venture, S-LCD Corporation, which was established in April 2004.

Now, Sony and Samsung have announced that they've signed agreements to change up their current S-LCD business relationship.

Source: http://www.dvhardware.net/article52500.html

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Obama to ask for debt limit hike: Treasury official (reuters)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/179710358?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

India Says Reports Of Patient Deaths Untrue

The head of Rajasthan's health ministry denied reports that more than 40 patients have died in recent days amid an ongoing strike by doctors at public hospitals in the Indian state."The number of deaths being reported doesn't hold true," according to Health Minister Aimaduddin Ahmad Khan, who acknowledged a shortage of doctors and efforts to hire additional physicians. The ministry is working with private hospitals so state hospital patients can be transferred to them, he said.Some 800 doctors have been hired to fill the gap, with another 1,000 being interviewed, Khan said Monday.CNN sister network CNN-IBN reported Sunday that the government had suspended 40 doctors, and 390 others have been arrested for failing to perform their duties.Some 10,000 doctors remained on strike. The doctors, who work at government-run hospitals that cater to the poor, are demanding higher salaries and better promotion opportunities that are on par with their counterparts in federal medical services.But so far, the state government has not budged on their demands.Instead, it made interim arrangements by bringing in 373 military doctors Saturday, said Dr. Lokendra Sharma of SMS Medical College in Jaipur. Another 1,000 doctors will be brought in Monday, he said.The government has also tapped doctors from railway services, brought others out of retirement and has asked some private hospitals to provide care at government rates.Army doctors have also stepped in to help out, and emergency services were restored in some hospitals, CNN-IBN reported Sunday.But the strike has brought about real consequences, some say."Patients, they are dying," said Dr. Ganpat Chandra Gupta, an anesthesiologist.He said the government needs to negotiate with the state's government doctors."They are working in poor conditions," he said. "The government is deaf and dumb and blind."Some questioned whether doctors ought to go on strike, risking the health of those who are sick.But doctors in other Indian states sent letters of support for their peers in Rajasthan condemning the "insensitive and callous attitude" of the state government."The profession of doctors is very noble but when their voice is not heard they are forced to go on the path of agitation," said a letter signed by the heads of thee medical associations in Haryana, Punjab and Himachal Pradesh.

Copyright CNN 2011

Source: http://www.ktxs.com/news/30074421/detail.html

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Analysis: Isolated on tax cut, House GOP blinks

With tea party-backed first-termers calling the shots, House Republicans snatched political defeat from the jaws of victory in a year-end showdown over Social Security payroll tax cuts and jobless benefits.

This time, they pushed the country to the brink ? and wound up blinking.

"In the end House Republicans felt like they were re-enacting the Alamo, with no reinforcements and our friends shooting at us," said veteran Republican Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas.

Precisely.

By spurning a deal that Senate Republicans had embraced, for a two-month extension of tax cuts for 160 million Americans and jobless benefits for millions more, the House wing of the party isolated itself politically and by some calculations improved President Barack Obama's re-election prospects.

Friday brought a humbling surrender, the only realistic alternative despite grumbling from scattered holdouts and Newt Gingrich, courting tea party support in the race for the presidential nomination.

By then, even allies said Republicans had become vulnerable to Obama's accusation that they, alone, were threatening a fragile economic recovery and the well-being of the employed and unemployed alike. "Right now, the bipartisan compromise that was reached on Saturday is the only viable way to prevent a tax hike on Jan. 1," Obama said Tuesday after the House rejected the two-month measure that had sailed through the Senate on a vote of 89-10.

The reliably conservative editorial page of The Wall Street Journal piled on, referring to a circular Republican firing squad. The GOP has "achieved the small miracle of letting Mr. Obama position himself as an election-year tax cutter. ... This should be impossible," it wrote on Wednesday.

One poll said Obama ran ahead of Republicans when it came to handling taxes, an issue that has generally favored the GOP since Ronald Reagan sat in the White House three decades ago.

No less critical were Senate Republicans, fearing the impact on their own political prospects, both individually and as a group eager to gain a majority in the 2012 elections. A gain of four seats would give them control, and several close races are likely. Losses suddenly seemed possible instead. There was in even talk that the hardline stance by House Republicans was putting the GOP's big majority in that chamber in danger.

Most importantly, for the first time all year, Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell wasn't in a position to help as House Speaker John Boehner sought to carry out the wishes of his rank and file, the Kentucky senator having voted for the bill that House Republicans insisted was a loser.

At its core, the dispute was a simple one.

Talks between the two parties in the Senate on a full-year extension faltered when negotiators could not agree on the cuts needed to make sure the measure did not increase deficits. The two-month stopgap bill was designed to keep the tax cuts and jobless benefits going until the negotiations could resume again after the first of the year.

To the tea party types, that smacked of government as usual, precisely what they came to Washington to change.

"We're as unified as we've been all year," said Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, on the night before the House Republicans rejected the Senate bill, demanded negotiations on a compromise and drove themselves into a political dead end.

This time, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Democrats had no incentive to negotiate, unlike earlier when brinkmanship pushed the government to the edge of a partial shutdown or an unprecedented default.

They and the White House had already caved to Republican demands that any extension be paid for, and that Obama decide within 60 days whether to allow construction of an oil pipeline from Canada to Texas.

The president had threatened to veto any measure that linked tax cuts and the pipeline, hoping to postpone a decision on the project until after the election. Late last week, he did an about-face and demanded Congress send him a bill that did precisely that.

The reversal gave Republicans the political victory some had sought if they were going to approve an extension of the tax cuts and jobless benefits at the core of Obama's jobless program.

Boehner told House Republicans as much in a conference call on Saturday, according to several officials who listened. They added he recommended no specific course of action and sought the all views.

Some lawmakers suspected Boehner had acquiesced in the two-month extension that McConnell worked out, and he was challenged on it 48 hours later in a closed-door meeting. He bristled at the accusation, according to several participants, and denied it flatly.

There were hints of infighting. Behind closed doors, one Republican lawmaker raised a concern about a memo ? inaccurate, he said ? from an unidentified staff aide who wrote that Boehner favored a more conciliatory approach than Majority Leader Eric Cantor and other members of the leadership.

"We're here and ready to work," Boehner told reporters on Wednesday morning. He spoke at a made-for-television event with Cantor and the eight Republicans, including three first-termers, appointed to conduct non-existent negotiations with Democrats.

Little more than 24 hours later, the charade ended when Boehner informed his own rank and file, no consultations permitted.

By then, even two newcomers to the House had issued public statements calling for an end to the standoff.

"I don't think that my constituents should have a tax increase because of Washington's dysfunction," said freshman Rep. Sean Duffy, R-Wis., now a voting member of the government he was criticizing.

The struggle over, Reid said he hoped the episode had been "a very good learning experience, especially to those who are newer" to Congress.

"Everything we do around here does not have to wind up in a fight."

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? David Espo covers Congress for The Associated Press.

Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.wral.com/news/political/story/10532685/

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Olympus offices, homes raided in accounting probe

Dozens of black-suited investigators, marching double-file, raided the office building of three small Olympus Corp subsidiaries on Wednesday, one of 20 sites searched in a probe of a $1.7 billion accounting scandal that threatens the once-proud Japanese medical device maker's survival.

Other teams were seen waiting patiently to be buzzed inside a luxury condominium - the home of a former company president - and piling from a van in an underground car park at Olympus' high-rise headquarters.

The raids, telegraphed in advance to the media, are part of a rare joint probe by Tokyo prosecutors, police and financial regulators targeting the 92-year-old company, which has admitted to concealing investment losses via questionable M&A deals and other accounting tricks stretching back over two decades.

Investigators moved into high gear after a panel of experts appointed by Olympus to probe the scandal said early this month that two senior former executives masterminded the scheme with the help of investment bankers.

It also found that three ex-presidents, including Tsuyoshi Kikukawa who resigned in October over the scandal and whose condo home was raided on Wednesday, knew about the cover-up.

Olympus acknowledged the raids in a statement.

"We will continue to cooperate fully with investigative authorities in order to bring the facts to light," it said.

"We would again like to apologise deeply for causing great trouble and worry for our shareholders, investors and those we do business with."

Moving on
Olympus last week filed five years of corrected accounts, plus overdue first-half results, meeting a Tokyo Stock Exchange deadline to avoid a humiliating delisting, but revealing a much-depleted balance sheet as it tries to put the scandal behind it.

The company could still face delisting if the exchange deems that the company's accounting deceit was sufficiently grave.

Ex-CEO Michael Woodford, who blew the whistle on the scandal after being fired in October, is campaigning to get his job back, but faces long odds in his battle with current management, which is expected to get backing from its bankers for a plan to bring in outside investors to bolster the company's finances.

"I'm tremendously sad that it's come to this, especially when it could have been avoided depending on the actions of upper management," Olympus employee Masaharu Hamada said outside the company's headquarters as it was being raided.

Hamada has taken legal action against the company in a case unrelated to the accounting scandal, charging that he was subjected to harassment by management after reporting a compliance breach by his supervisor. A Tokyo court has ruled in his favour and the case is now going to the high court.

Several dozen reporters and TV crews waited near the entrance to Olympus' headquarters after word leaked that raids were likely during the day, although the investigators chose to make their entrance via the underground garage. Local media said prosecutors also visited the homes of other former executives.

Media are often tipped off ahead of prosecutors' raids so that TV cameras can film them.

Future prospects
Olympus' shares closed 1.4 percent lower at 1,050 yen, giving up early gains that extended Tuesday's 16 percent jump.

The shares had been under pressure as expectations of a capital raising by the company to shore up its finances stoked fears that existing shareholdings would be diluted, but the market's attention has shifted to the company's finances and future prospects.

"It's becoming likely that Olympus will stay listed and there's already talk of a capital injection," said Tetsuro Ii, the president of Commons Asset Management, adding he didn't think the prosecutors' raids or any subsequent arrests would have a major impact on the stock.

The market took a favourable view of a media report on Tuesday that Olympus plans to issue about 100 billion yen ($1.3 billion) in new shares.

Olympus has selected SMBC Nikko Securities, Citigroup Global Markets Japan and Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities as financial advisers in its capital raising plans, sources familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.

Japanese high-tech blue-chips such as Sony and Fujifilm are seen among possible buyers of new Olympus shares, the sources said.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45748755/ns/business-world_business/

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Friday, December 16, 2011

2 men sue Syracuse, Boeheim for defamation (AP)

NEW YORK ? Jim Boeheim initially insisted two former Syracuse ball boys were lying when they accused his longtime assistant of molesting them.

Now they're suing the Orange men's basketball coach and the university for defamation, saying he was the one making false statements.

Stepbrothers Bobby Davis and Mike Lang have alleged they were molested by Bernie Fine, who has since been fired and has denied the allegations. A third man also has accused the 65-year-old Fine, who had been Boeheim's top assistant since 1976.

Boeheim "has seriously hurt my reputation but I want people to know the truth," Davis said, reading from a statement at a news conference after the lawsuit was filed in New York State Supreme Court on Tuesday.

When the allegations surfaced Nov. 17, Boeheim staunchly supported Fine, saying the accusations were lies to capitalize on the Penn State child sex abuse case.

"The Penn State thing came out, and the kid behind this is trying to get money," Boeheim told the Syracuse Post-Standard. "If he gets this, he's going to sue the university and Bernie. What do you think is going to happen at Penn State? You know how much money is going to be involved in civil suits? I'd say about $50 million. That's what this is about. Money."

And in an interview with ESPN, which broke the story, Boeheim said: "It is a bunch of a thousand lies that (Davis) has told. You don't think it is a little funny that his cousin is coming forward?"

Lang said that when Boeheim suggested "my little brother and I were lying," he "felt sick to my stomach."

University spokesman Kevin Quinn declined to comment. The U.S. attorney's office is investigating for potential criminal charges.

"Boeheim's statements were even worse given his 35 years of opportunity to observe Fine at close quarters, and at least seven years of opportunity to see Fine with Bobby Davis on trips, at practices, in Manley Field House and at games," the suit says.

Victim advocates reacted angrily to Boeheim's initial comments and called for him to resign or be fired. He later said he was wrong to question the motives of the accusers.

That's not enough, said the two men's attorney, Gloria Allred, whose recent clients include a woman who accused presidential candidate Herman Cain of making unwelcome sexual advances.

"Although Boeheim eventually acknowledged that he `misspoke,' those words came too little too late," Allred said. "One of Syracuse's most respected individuals had already told the world repeatedly that Bobby Davis and Mike Lang were nothing but liars and out for money and nothing else.

"Boeheim has not suffered any consequences in his employment for using his position of power within the university to make these false, inflammatory and injurious statements about Bobby and Mike."

On Nov. 27, Zach Tomaselli, of Lewiston, Maine, also accused Fine, and ESPN aired a tape in which a woman the network identified as Fine's wife tells Davis she knew "everything" that was going on. After Fine was fired that night, Boeheim released a statement saying he regretted any statements he made that "might have been insensitive to victims of abuse."

On Nov. 29, Boeheim apologized, but said again he didn't regret defending his old friend based on the information he had at the time, adding that he never worried about his job status in 36 years.

By Dec. 2, he was far more contrite.

"I believe I misspoke very badly in my response to the allegations that have been made," said Boeheim, who spoke slowly and paused frequently during a postgame news conference. "I shouldn't have questioned what the accusers expressed or their motives. I am really sorry that I did that, and I regret any harm that I caused."

Davis, now 39, said in the lawsuit that Fine started molesting him when he was about 11 years old and that the sexual contact continued for almost two decades. A ball boy for six years, Davis said the abuse occurred at Fine's home, at Syracuse basketball facilities and on team road trips, including the 1987 Final Four.

Lang, 45, has told ESPN that Fine began molesting him while he was in fifth or sixth grade.

During an interview with CNN's Piers Morgan on Tuesday night, Lang was asked whether Boeheim should lose his job.

"That's not for me to say," he said. "I certainly hope not, but he did a lot of damage by calling us liars without knowing the facts."

The suit said Boeheim's office was always near Fine's ? and next door at times ? and that Fine's door was generally open, except when Davis was inside with the assistant coach. The lawsuit contradicts Boeheim's assertion to the Post-Standard that Davis went on road trips only if he was baby-sitting Fine's kids; the suit said he traveled with the team before Fine had children and at times when the assistant didn't bring along his family.

The suit includes Davis' assertion that Boeheim saw Davis lying on the bed in Fine's hotel room in his shorts during the 1987 Final Four. In a Nov. 17 telephone interview with The Associated Press, Boeheim denied ever going to the assistant's room, much less seeing Davis there.

"This kid came forward, and there was no one to corroborate his story. Not one. Not one," Boeheim told the AP. "... They said I walked into Bernie's room on the road and saw this. I have never walked into Bernie's room on the road. This isn't true. This just isn't true."

The suit said Boeheim "made each of these statements knowing they were false or recklessly disregarding their truth or falsity."

The suit requests special, compensatory and punitive damages in an amount to be determined at trial. Allred said the university was included because she believed it was legally liable for Boeheim's statements as an employee who often spoke to the media on Syracuse's behalf.

Onondaga County District Attorney William Fitzpatrick said last week that Davis was credible, but he couldn't investigate under state law because the statute of limitations had expired.

The statute of limitations in New York to bring a civil suit for child sexual abuse is five years after the victim turns 18, though there have been several legislative attempts recently to open a one-year window for older incidents.

Allred said she would work with state lawmakers to change the rules.

"That's not the reason we are filing," she said of the lack of options for Davis and Lang to pursue the charges. "The reason we are filing is we have reason to believe our clients were defamed."

Under New York case law, defamation is "making a false statement which tends to expose a person to public contempt, ridicule, aversion or disgrace." Accusing someone of a crime they didn't commit is by nature defamatory, which in this case could mean accusing the two men of lying to authorities.

Albany lawyer Kevin Luibrand, who has two pending defamation cases, said it always comes down to the exact words someone used. Luibrand, who was unfamiliar with Boeheim's precise quotes, said the coach could argue that he made the statements based on what he thought was true.

However, acknowledging later he was ? or may have been ? wrong, as Boeheim did, doesn't undo the initial false statement.

"The truth is always a defense," Luibrand said. "The statements don't necessarily have to be truthful but based on a belief they are truthful."

Davis said he was suing so victims of abuse would not be afraid to come forward.

"We're grateful any time a child sex abuse victim finds the courage to take action against a child predator," David Clohessy, executive director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said in a statement. "That's an enormous benefit of civil litigation ? it can help uncover evidence of complicity by a predator's colleagues and supervisors, and thus deter others from keeping secret about possible child sex crimes in the future."

___

Associated Press Writer Michael Virtanen in Albany and AP Sports Writer John Kekis in Syracuse contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111214/ap_on_re_us/us_syracuse_fine_investigation

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Freeloading at the hotel breakfast buffet

By Tanya Mohn, msnbc.com contributor

Most people have heard the adage ?there?s no such thing as a free lunch.? But apparently it is not true for breakfast ? at some hotels at least.

Vijay Dandapani is president of Apple Core Hotels, a company that owns five New York City hotels, all of which serve free breakfast and have for more than a decade.

?The mid '90s, like today, was a time of economic contraction,? he said. ?[Free breakfast] built tremendous customer goodwill as not only did it save guests money, but it helped start the day off on the right note.?

What started out as a simple complimentary cup of coffee and a doughnut has transformed into a kind of one-upmanship, said Chris Quilty, director of hotel operations for Hersha Hospitality Management, which owns and operates about 80 properties nationwide, representing all the major U.S. brands. About 70 of them offer free breakfast.

There's anecdotal evidence to suggest that it's not just paying guests who enjoy this perk; it's not uncommon, say hotel experts and staff, to see people walk in from the street and serve themselves at the buffet.

?If you are savvy and need something to eat, it?s an easy thing to do,? said Bobby Bowers, senior vice president of operations for STR, a hotel research company.

STR does not track how many non-guests take advantage of free breakfasts, but ?I don?t doubt that it occurs,? Bowers said. ?I would say it?s probably more of a problem now because economic times are tough.? But nine out of 10 times staff won?t say anything unless the person is a regular offender or ?looks tough and dirty,? he said.

The concept of free hotel breakfasts began in the early 1980s. Research at the time showed that many people did not want to pay for a full service breakfast, wanted something fast and convenient, and ?it was a good way for the brand to offer added value,? Bowers said.

About 55 percent of hotels offer complimentary breakfast, according to the most recent data available from the 2010 Lodging Survey from the American Hotel & Lodging Association. The survey was conducted by STR.

?The Breakfast Wars,? have escalated in the last 5 years, Quilty said. Hotels now offer everything from custom omelets and fresh oatmeal to make-your-own waffles. Some offer special items every day, said Quilty, who has seen everyone from savvy travelers to cab drivers drop in at Hersha Hospitality properties for a quick free cup of coffee and a bite.

?I?ve seen people pull up in their cars, get out, wearing blazers and carrying briefcases, walk into the hotel, say ?Hi,? sit down and eat breakfast, read their newspaper, walk out and say, ?Have a nice day,? Quilty said. ?If you can carry yourself like you belong, no one will ever question you. If a person seems out of place, often we will ask them to leave.? Staff will also remind them that the free breakfast is for guests. But Quilty said he generally didn?t mind if they grabbed a coffee as they could be former customers or future ones.

In addition, it is tough to determine who is a guest and who is not. At the company?s Hampton Inn & Suites property in Hershey, Pa., in the middle of summer there are sometimes 400 guests. ?Our complimentary breakfast is like Grand Central Station for three hours every morning,? Quilty said. ?You can?t monitor that. We don?t have the staff to do that.?

Quilty does not believe the buffet freeloading is widespread, nor is it the result of a bad economy. ?It may occur more in cities than other places,? he said. But is there a large influx of people utilizing free breakfasts as a soup kitchen? I haven?t seen or heard that.?

?Like wedding crashers, freeloaders are few and far between,? said Joseph A. McInerney, president and chief executive of the American Hotel & Lodging Association, a hotel industry trade group. ?It?s not a big deal. We don?t even track it,? he said. ?The cost to track it would be much more than the savings.? Costs to the hotels from people eating free food are ?miniscule,? said McInerney.

Not all experts concur that the problem is minor.

Bjorn Hanson, divisional dean of the Preston Robert Tisch Center for Hospitality, Tourism and Sports Management at New York University, said buffets set up outside of hotel meeting rooms are even more of a draw than breakfast buffets.

There is often limited security as the buffets are in public areas. ?Some hotels are very strict about this and look for name badges,? Hanson said. "If people do not have them, hotel staff will often ask people to present them or ask that they go back to the hotel room and get them. ?This is an increasing problem for hotels,? he said.

Dandapani, of Apple Core Hotels, said that an equally important concern was the impact that non-guests can have, ?including sometimes denying seating to the guests.?

In that case, Dandapani will remove the individuals ?as discreetly as possible ... but almost never mid-way through the meal.?? The hotel staff ?let them finish what they are eating.?

Related stories:

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Source: http://overheadbin.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/05/9223207-freeloading-at-the-hotel-breakfast-buffet

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Eye-Fi Connect X2

The Eye-Fi Connect X2 ($49.99 direct) is a 4GB memory card for digital cameras. It features a Wi-Fi modem, compatible with 802.11n networks, that makes it possible to wirelessly offload photos from your camera to your computer, Android, or iOS device. You can also configure the Eye-Fi card to upload photos to photo sharing sites, including Flickr, Picasa, and Facebook.

Most current cameras are compatible with Eye-Fi cards, but if you have an older model you'll want to check on its compatibility. Using the card eliminates the hassle of connecting your camera to your computer via an often-proprietary cable, or removing the SD card for use in your PC's card reader. Eye-Fi also markets the Mobile X2 ($79.99, 4 stars) and Pro X2 ($149.99, 4 stars) memory cards, both of which hold up to 8GB of photos. Save the difference in capacity, the Mobile X2 offers the same feature set as the Connect X2. The Pro X2 adds support for Raw images, automatic geotagging, and Wi-Fi hotspot access.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/N2NtLL0SwM8/0,2817,2397052,00.asp

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Video: One mystery solved in Gacy case



LESTER HOLT, anchor: We're back now with new developments in a story we first told you about a few weeks ago, the new effort to identify victims of infamous serial killer John Wayne Gacy . Tonight there's resolution for a family left wondering for decades what happened to their son and brother after he walked out the door one night and never returned. More now from NBC 's Kevin Tibbles .

KEVIN TIBBLES reporting: After more than 30 long years, a break in the case involving one of America 's most notorious mass murderers.

Mr. TOM DART (Cook County, Illinois, Sheriff): Victim number 19 is never going to be known by a number anymore.

TIBBLES: When Chicago police uncovered the horrors hidden in the crawl space of John Wayne Gacy , eight of the brutal killer's 33 victims remained unidentified, until now. Thanks to advancements in DNA technology, investigators have determined one of them, victim number 19 , was a 19-year-old young man who disappeared in the fall of 1976 by the name of William Bundy .

Ms. LAURA O'LEARY: All my girlfriends wanted to date him. They didn't ever come over for me, only for him.

TIBBLES: Laura O'Leary is Bundy 's sister.

Ms. O'LEARY: I remember him leaving that one night saying he was going to go to a party and that was the last time I saw him .

TIBBLES: Gacy lured his victims, young men between the ages of 14 and 22, to his home where they were sexually assaulted and murdered. Authorities in Chicago sent the remains of those still unidentified to this lab in Texas in hopes that they could be named.

Mr. DART: Back in the 80s, everything was dental. That was about it. With DNA now, we have so much more that we can do.

TIBBLES: There is also a hotline families of the missing can call. They are being asked to give samples of their DNA to assist in the investigation. For the sister of William Bundy , who heard of the investigation and gave her DNA , the discovery has brought closure.

Ms. O'LEARY: I know that the sorrow will eventually go away and I'll have a place to visit him.

TIBBLES: Ironically, other family members are buried in the same cemetery as Bundy . The family has visited several times over the years, not knowing their brother was just a short distance away. Kevin Tibbles, NBC News, Chicago .

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45536717/

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Tim McGraw wins ruling over recording career

(AP) ? Country music star Tim McGraw has won a court ruling in Nashville allowing him to keep recording while a lawsuit against him by Curb Records continues.

Chancellor Russell Perkins ruled Wednesday after a four-hour hearing that McGraw can sign with another record label.

Curb Records sought to prevent McGraw from recording or signing with another label until he fulfilled what Curb believed was his obligation for a fifth album.

McGraw is accused of breach of contract, and that trial is scheduled for July.

The performer and his wife, singer Faith Hill, were in court Wednesday. McGraw did not testify.

His attorneys argued that Curb is trying to put his career on hold. He's been under contract with Curb since 1997.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-11-30-US-Music-Tim-McGraw/id-1cad275345c04eacb08e8c031a5b60ff

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Thursday, December 1, 2011

Kris Humphries to seek legal separation from Kim Kardashian ...

By Elizabeth Kwiatkowski, 11/30/2011?


While Kris Humphries initially opposed Kim Kardashian's decision to end their marriage and?file for divorce, he now apparently just hopes to make it as so their brief union never?officially existed. The 26-year-old New Jersey Nets star's representative told Us Weekly that Humphries will?seek a legal separation from his wife of 72 days, a move that is the first step toward receiving an annulment of their marriage.

According to Us, if Humphries' request is granted, the pair won't have to deal with any divorce proceedings as an annulment would deem the marriage to have been legally invalid.


Humphries and Kardashian got engaged in May after six months of dating and then wed in late August in front of 450 guests at a private estate in Montecito, CA. The Keeping Up with the Kardashians and Kourtney and Kim Take New York star subsequently filed for divorce on October 31 citing irreconcilable differences.

"I'm committed to this marriage and everything this covenant represents," Humphries told TMZ earlier this month.

"I love my wife and am devastated to learn she filed for divorce... I'm willing to do whatever it takes to make it work."

(Photo credit E!)

Get more Reality TV World! Follow us on Twitter, friend us on Facebook or subscribe to our RSS feed.


Source: http://www.realitytvworld.com/news/kris-humphries-seek-legal-separation-from-kim-kardashian-12922.php

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Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Abstinence-only education does not lead to abstinent behavior, UGA researchers find

Abstinence-only education does not lead to abstinent behavior, UGA researchers find [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Kathrin Stanger-Hall
lamyrids@gmail.com
706-542-1689
University of Georgia

States that prescribe abstinence-only sex education programs in public schools have significantly higher teenage pregnancy and birth rates than states with more comprehensive sex education programs, researchers from the University of Georgia have determined.

The researchers looked at teen pregnancy and birth data from 48 U.S. states to evaluate the effectiveness of those states' approaches to sex education, as prescribed by local laws and policies.

"Our analysis adds to the overwhelming evidence indicating that abstinence-only education does not reduce teen pregnancy rates," said Kathrin Stanger-Hall, assistant professor of plant biology and biological sciences in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences.

Hall is first author on the resulting paper, which has been published online in the journal PLoS ONE.

The study is the first large-scale evidence that the type of sex education provided in public schools has a significant effect on teen pregnancy rates, Hall said.

"This clearly shows that prescribed abstinence-only education in public schools does not lead to abstinent behavior," said David Hall, second author and assistant professor of genetics in the Franklin College. "It may even contribute to the high teen pregnancy rates in the U.S. compared to other industrialized countries."

Along with teen pregnancy rates and sex education methods, Hall and Stanger-Hall looked at the influence of socioeconomic status, education level, access to Medicaid waivers and ethnicity of each state's teen population.

Even when accounting for these factors, which could potentially impact teen pregnancy rates, the significant relationship between sex education methods and teen pregnancy remained: the more strongly abstinence education is emphasized in state laws and policies, the higher the average teenage pregnancy and birth rates.

"Because correlation does not imply causation, our analysis cannot demonstrate that emphasizing abstinence causes increased teen pregnancy. However, if abstinence education reduced teen pregnancy as proponents claim, the correlation would be in the opposite direction," said Stanger-Hall.

The paper indicates that states with the lowest teen pregnancy rates were those that prescribed comprehensive sex and/or HIV education, covering abstinence alongside proper contraception and condom use. States whose laws stressed the teaching of abstinence until marriage were significantly less successful in preventing teen pregnancies.

These results come at an important time for legislators. A new evidence-based Teen Pregnancy Prevention Initiative was signed into federal law in December 2009 and awarded $114 million for implementation. However, federal abstinence-only funding was renewed for 2010 and beyond by including $250 million of mandatory abstinence-only funding as part of an amendment to the Senate Finance Committee's health-reform legislation.

With two types of federal funding programs available, legislators of individual states now have the opportunity to decide which type of sex education -- and which funding option -- to choose for their state and possibly reconsider their state's sex education policies for public schools, while pursuing the ultimate goal of reducing teen pregnancy rates.

Stanger-Hall and Hall conducted this large-scale analysis to provide scientific evidence to inform this decision.

"Advocates for continued abstinence-only education need to ask themselves: If teens don't learn about human reproduction, including safe sexual health practices to prevent unintended pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases, as well as how to plan their reproductive adult life in school, then when should they learn it and from whom?" said Stanger-Hall.

###

The full article is available online at http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0024658;jsessionid=7E5D4CFA54B7D9BD98BC2432D43AD046.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Abstinence-only education does not lead to abstinent behavior, UGA researchers find [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Kathrin Stanger-Hall
lamyrids@gmail.com
706-542-1689
University of Georgia

States that prescribe abstinence-only sex education programs in public schools have significantly higher teenage pregnancy and birth rates than states with more comprehensive sex education programs, researchers from the University of Georgia have determined.

The researchers looked at teen pregnancy and birth data from 48 U.S. states to evaluate the effectiveness of those states' approaches to sex education, as prescribed by local laws and policies.

"Our analysis adds to the overwhelming evidence indicating that abstinence-only education does not reduce teen pregnancy rates," said Kathrin Stanger-Hall, assistant professor of plant biology and biological sciences in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences.

Hall is first author on the resulting paper, which has been published online in the journal PLoS ONE.

The study is the first large-scale evidence that the type of sex education provided in public schools has a significant effect on teen pregnancy rates, Hall said.

"This clearly shows that prescribed abstinence-only education in public schools does not lead to abstinent behavior," said David Hall, second author and assistant professor of genetics in the Franklin College. "It may even contribute to the high teen pregnancy rates in the U.S. compared to other industrialized countries."

Along with teen pregnancy rates and sex education methods, Hall and Stanger-Hall looked at the influence of socioeconomic status, education level, access to Medicaid waivers and ethnicity of each state's teen population.

Even when accounting for these factors, which could potentially impact teen pregnancy rates, the significant relationship between sex education methods and teen pregnancy remained: the more strongly abstinence education is emphasized in state laws and policies, the higher the average teenage pregnancy and birth rates.

"Because correlation does not imply causation, our analysis cannot demonstrate that emphasizing abstinence causes increased teen pregnancy. However, if abstinence education reduced teen pregnancy as proponents claim, the correlation would be in the opposite direction," said Stanger-Hall.

The paper indicates that states with the lowest teen pregnancy rates were those that prescribed comprehensive sex and/or HIV education, covering abstinence alongside proper contraception and condom use. States whose laws stressed the teaching of abstinence until marriage were significantly less successful in preventing teen pregnancies.

These results come at an important time for legislators. A new evidence-based Teen Pregnancy Prevention Initiative was signed into federal law in December 2009 and awarded $114 million for implementation. However, federal abstinence-only funding was renewed for 2010 and beyond by including $250 million of mandatory abstinence-only funding as part of an amendment to the Senate Finance Committee's health-reform legislation.

With two types of federal funding programs available, legislators of individual states now have the opportunity to decide which type of sex education -- and which funding option -- to choose for their state and possibly reconsider their state's sex education policies for public schools, while pursuing the ultimate goal of reducing teen pregnancy rates.

Stanger-Hall and Hall conducted this large-scale analysis to provide scientific evidence to inform this decision.

"Advocates for continued abstinence-only education need to ask themselves: If teens don't learn about human reproduction, including safe sexual health practices to prevent unintended pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases, as well as how to plan their reproductive adult life in school, then when should they learn it and from whom?" said Stanger-Hall.

###

The full article is available online at http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0024658;jsessionid=7E5D4CFA54B7D9BD98BC2432D43AD046.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-11/uog-aed112911.php

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Monday, November 28, 2011

PFT: Jets unimpressed by Johnson mocking Burress

Houston Texans v Jacksonville JaguarsGetty Images

This was a depressing day for the Texans in many ways, with Matt Leinart possibly lost for the season.

Viewed in another light, Houston?s 20-13 win in Jacksonville was proof of how far this franchise has come. The Texans are now good enough to win on the road with their No. 3 quarterback, rookie T.J. Yates.

The Texans have had a lot of trouble beating the Jaguars in recent years. Things have changed. ?Here?s what else we learned:

1. Jaguars quarterback Blaine Gabbert was pulled in the fourth quarter for Luke McCown, who immediately started to move the ball for Jacksonville. If anything, the change came too late.

Gabbert completed 13-of-29 passes for 136 yards and a pick. His play was worse than the numbers indicate.

The rookie has zero pocket presence. He feels pressure when it?s not there and takes too long to make decisions. The talent around Gabbert isn?t great and there were drops Sunday, but you can isolate Gabbert from that. He?s looked poor.

2. If the Jaguars want to win games, McCown is the better option. ?At 3-8, however, we expect them to continue to give the ball to the rookie.

3. The Texans offense couldn?t operate with Yates at quarterback. Don?t be surprised if recent veteran pickup Kellen Clemens starts next week. ?Yates finished 8-of-15 for 70 yards. ? Another veteran pickup is possible.

4. The Texans offense had 17 drives Sunday. That?s an insanely high amount. Of those 17 drives, only two went longer than four plays. ?Jacksonville did a nice job on Houston?s running game, holding them to 88 yards.

5. Houston has come a long way because their defense can carry them. The Jaguars? only touchdown came on a fumble returned for a score. ?Connor Barwin had four sacks in the game. J.J. Watt had two more. Wade Phillips has done a great job developing his young guys.

6. Where can the Texans go with Yates? ?The playoffs, at the least.

Houston is 8-3. ?The Titans are 6-5. ?We aren?t sure the Titans even get to eight wins.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/11/27/jets-and-bills-react-to-stevie-johnsons-celebration/related

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Netflix Login Problems - Business Insider

Summary

Netflix offers an online flat rate DVD and Blu-ray rental by mail, as well as video streaming in the US. It is headquartered in Los Gatos, California. In 2009, Netflix offered a collection of 100,000 titles on DVD and had... More ?

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/netflix-login-problems-2011-11

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Endless Cuteness: Kids and Pets (16 pics) - Izismile.com

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Current Developments: Innovative Ideas on How to Make Electric Cars Cost-Efficient Take Shape

News | Technology

Expensive batteries and limited recharging stations are the big impediments to making EVs cost-competitive with non-hybrid internal combustion vehicles, but new electricity pricing and distribution models may help break the logjam


electric, charge, vehicleWHICH WAY TO CHARGE?: One model for recharging has private companies installing and owning individual battery recharging stations. Drivers could be charged on a per-use basis or via a monthly fee for access to the recharging network. Here a Reva i/G-Wiz is charged on a street in London. Image: Courtesy of Frankh, via Flickr

It's easy to knock electric vehicles (EVs): It takes too long to recharge the batteries and there are too few places to do it. And besides, who will pay for all the new recharging stations that would be needed if the cars catch on? The International Energy Agency?s most optimistic scenario puts (pdf) plug-in hybrids or EVs at 15 percent of all cars on the road by 2020; other projections predict a mere 3 percent.

The dubious outlook for EVs has much do to with uncertainty over what role utility companies should play in providing the electricity needed for large fleets of these vehicles. At a recent conference, however, industry analysts put several options on the table.

Utilizing utilities
One idea is for private companies to install and own individual battery recharging stations and charge drivers on a per-use basis, said Brett Perlman, president of utility industry management consulting firm Vector Solutions. Perlman, who served as commissioner of the Public Utility Commission of Texas from 1999 to 2003, was one of several speakers November 15 at the "Electric Vehicles, Fact or Fiction?" forum in New York City, hosted by PA Consulting Group. Another approach would be for these vendors to create a network of recharging stations and charge drivers a monthly service fee for access (much like the mobile phone industry).

Perlman thinks utility companies should play a more active role, however. "We need a private utility infrastructure and a public charging infrastructure, something that regulators are starting to look at, starting with those in California," he said.

Texas is also experimenting with this model. NRG Energy's eVgo Complete charging program in Houston includes unlimited fueling services both from a home charging dock and across the NRG-owned eVgo public network for a fixed monthly price of $89. A progressive move on NRG's part, but one that could backfire if regulators decide down the road to limit the role of utilities in establishing a universal recharging scheme. "One of the greatest impediments to EVs is that much of the legislation defining how drivers and their vehicles interact with the grid will be decided on a state level," Perlman said. This means each state could develop its own approach to recharging, which could make life difficult for interstate drivers.

Better battery
The battery is at the heart of the issue, Hugh McDermott, global vice president of Better Place, said during the forum. The firm is building drive-through battery exchange stations that use robots to swap out depleted batteries for newly charged ones within minutes. The stations are not meant to serve as the primary source of recharging?that should be done at home overnight, McDermott said. Instead, these stations provide a way to recharge when a driver is unable to charge at home. Whereas today's high cost for batteries will come down over time, the price of oil will only grow more expensive, he added.

McDermott said that Better Place has gotten traction for its model in several countries, including China, Denmark and Israel. The firm will have 40 stations installed in Israel by the end of 2012, carrying a total inventory of 500 batteries. "In Israel a policy of oil independence is a national security imperative providing incentive to seek out alternatives to combustion automobiles," McDermott said. "The challenge in the U.S. is, it's like dealing with 50 different countries."

Comparing cost
The costs of owning an EV cannot yet compete with non-hybrid combustion-powered cars. Earlier this year a team of researchers led by Wally Tyner, a Purdue University agricultural economics professor, compared the economics of driving a Chevrolet Volt, a Toyota Prius and a Chevy Cobalt. The researchers determined that the Volt, a plug-in hybrid, would be less economical than the Toyota Prius, a hybrid that does not charge its battery through a plug, or the Chevrolet Cobalt, which has only an internal combustion engine.

When oil prices are high, the Prius would be the most economical, with the advantage going to the Cobalt when oil prices are low. Tyner said to make the Volt more economical than either the Prius or the Cobalt, oil prices would have to rise to between $171 and $254 per barrel, depending on the electricity pricing system used. This disparity is because the Volt has a higher purchase price and will cost more in electricity than gasoline over the life of the vehicle.

There was a bit of encouraging news for EVs at PA Consulting's forum. During the question-and-answer session, Michael Niggli, president and chief operating officer of San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E), reported that San Diego's EV and plug-in hybrid pilot program was progressing well. In fact, of the 850 cars involved, pure plug-in EVs like the Nissan Leaf outnumbered plug-in hybrids by a ratio of six to one, he said. This was likely due in part because San Diego was also one of the pilot cities where Nissan first released its all-electric Leaf. Niggli also pointed out that 85 percent of his SDG&E's EV and plug-in customers were recharging their vehicles during "super off-peak" hours (midnight to 6 A.M.), when rates are lowest.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=3d48482c180ac1685dbb7552db92560a

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Monday, November 21, 2011

Life-saving AIDS drugs push HIV numbers to new high (Reuters)

LONDON (Reuters) ? More people than ever are living with the AIDS virus but this is largely due to better access to drugs that keep HIV patients alive and well for many years, the United Nations AIDS programme (UNAIDS) said on Monday.

In its annual report on the pandemic, UNAIDS said the number of people dying of the disease fell to 1.8 million in 2010, down from a peak of 2.2 million in the mid-2000s.

UNAIDS director Michel Sidibe said the past 12 months had been a "game-changing year" in the global AIDS fight.

Some 2.5 million deaths have been averted in poor and middle-income countries since 1995 due to AIDS drugs being introduced and access to them improving, according to UNAIDS.

Much of that success has come in the past two years as the numbers of people getting treatment has increased rapidly.

"We've never had a year when there has been so much science, so much leadership and such results in one year," Sidibe said in a telephone interview from UNAIDS headquarters in Geneva.

"Even in this time of public finance crises and uncertainty about funding, we're seeing results. We are seeing more countries than ever before (achieving) significant reductions in new infections and stabilizing their epidemics."

Since the beginning of the AIDS pandemic in the 1980s, more than 60 million people have been infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes AIDS. HIV can be controlled for many years with cocktails of drugs, but there is as yet no cure.

TREATMENT FOR PREVENTION

The UNAIDS report said 34 million people around the world had HIV in 2010, up from 33.3 million in 2009.

Among the most dramatic changes was the leap in the number of people getting treatment with AIDS drugs when they need it.

Of the 14.2 million people eligible for treatment in low- and middle-income countries, around 6.6 million, or 47 percent, are now receiving it, UNAIDS said, and 11 poor- and mid-income countries now have universal access to HIV treatment, with coverage of 80 percent or more.

This compares with 36 percent of the 15 million people needing treatment in 2009 who got AIDS drugs.

Major producers of HIV drugs include Gilead, Bristol Myers Squibb, Merck, Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline. Improved access to drugs from these and other manufacturers means not only that fewer people are dying of AIDS each year, UNAIDS said, but also that the risk of new HIV infections is reduced.

A series of scientific studies have shown that getting timely treatment to those with HIV can substantially cut the number of people who become newly infected with the virus.

Sidibe said this was starting to show in new case numbers.

There were 2.7 million new HIV infections worldwide in 2010, 15 percent fewer than in 2001, and 21 percent below the number of new infections at the peak of the epidemic in 1997.

"The big point for us is the number of new infections --that's where you win against the epidemic," Sidibe said.

Medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said the growing number of averted AIDS deaths was important progress, but said the number of people on treatment needed to increase dramatically to reap the benefits of science showing treatment saves lives and prevents new infections.

"Never, in more than a decade of treating people living with HIV/AIDS, have we been at such a promising moment to really turn this epidemic around," said MSF's Tido von Schoen-Angerer.

"Governments in some of the hardest hit countries want to act on the science, seize this moment and reverse the AIDS epidemic. But this means nothing if there is no money to make it happen."

Despite progress on HIV treatment and prevention, sub-Saharan Africa is still by far the worst hit, accounting for 68 percent of all those living with HIV in 2010 despite its population accounting for only 12 percent of the global total.

Around 70 percent of new HIV infections in 2010, and almost half of all AIDS-related deaths, were in sub-Saharan Africa.

Sidibe said with many international donor countries struggling with slow economic growth and high debt, the global AIDS fight had to become even more focused on high impact interventions to deliver progress in the places worst hit.

"We need to maintain our investment, but ... in a smarter way. "Then we'll see a serious decline in the epidemic," he said.

(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/diseases/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111121/hl_nm/us_aids_global_unaids

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