Saturday, December 31, 2011

A Comparison of Recent Presidential Vacation Time (ContributorNetwork)

Presidential vacations are typically a working retreat and often draw a lot of attention from the press. The location, length and cost of traveling American presidents commonly garner even more headlines during an election year. This week, President Barack Obama spent the afternoon with his family on the beach in Hawaii released green sea turtles into the ocean with Sea Life Park staffers, according to ABC News. Before returning to Washington next week the president is expected to request Congress to increase the debt ceiling by $16 trillion, according to ABC News.

Obama

President Obama opted not to stay at his Winter White House in Hawaii during this visit. He and his family are renting a beachfront home on Kailua. President Obama's staff and the White House Press Corps are staying nearby at the Westin Moana Surfrider hotel, according to the Huffington Post. The president's vacation cost the taxpayers $4 million, approximately $2.5 million more than the first family's trip to Hawaii last year, according to the Huffington Post.

Prior to the Christmas trip to Hawaii, President Obama had spent 61 days during his first 31 months in office. The cost of the president's 11-day vacation to Martha's Vineyard required rental homes for secret service agents, armored SUVs were flown to the area to transport the Obama's, a motorcade of approximately 20 cars and security coverage by the U.S. Coast Guard, according to CBS News.

George W. Bush

President Bush spent 180 days on his Crawford Ranch and at Camp David during his first 31 months in office, according to CBS News. The cost of flying Air Force One to the Texas ranch cost approximately $56,800 per trip, according to Media Matters. President Bush spent each Christmas at the White House so his staff and secret service could spend the holiday with their family, according to Conservative Byte.

Bill Clinton

President Clinton spent 28 days on vacation during his first 31 months in office according to CBS News. Clinton typically vacationed at Martha's Vineyard and the Hamptons, but also took two summer trips to Jackson Hole, Wyo., according to History News Network. President Clinton spent 233 abroad during 55 trips, according to Truth Quake. A Clinton excursion in 2000 is pegged as the most expense presidential trip ever, with a price tag of $50 million, according to the Free Republic.

Ronald Reagan

President Reagan spent 112 days on vacation during his first 31 months in office according to CBS News. He spent most of his vacation time on his California ranch near Santa Barbara, according to NBC Bay Area News. The White House communications team and national security staff accompanied President Reagan during trips home to his ranch. President Reagan issued the order to fire striking air force controllers during a vacation at his ranch in 1981, according to NBC Bay Area News. Taxpayers covered the cost of approximately $8 million for presidential travel during the Reagan's first 6 years in office, according to the LA Times.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111229/pl_ac/10759877_a_comparison_of_recent_presidential_vacation_time

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Source: http://twitter.com/dsgndefined/statuses/152896198372630528

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Science & the Public: Bt: The lesson not learned

Science News reported 60-plus years ago how indiscriminate use of DDT ruined that chemical's value: Now history seems to be repeating itself with Bt

Web edition : Thursday, December 29th, 2011

The more things change, the more they stay the same, as a Dec. 29 Associated Press report on genetically engineered corn notes.? Like d?j? vu,?this news story on emerging?resistance to Bt toxin ? a fabulously effective and popular insecticide to protect corn?? brings to mind articles I encountered over the weekend while flipping through historic issues of Science News.

More than a half-century ago, our magazine chronicled, real time, the emergence of resistance to DDT, the golden child of pest controllers worldwide. Now much the same thing is happening again with Bt, its contemporary agricultural counterpart. Will we never learn?

The new AP story cites rather vague references to the fact that corn genetically engineered to produce the insect-targeting Bt toxin no longer knocks out a major scourge ? the Western corn rootworm ? as it recently had. These beetle larvae are developing resistance to the toxin (named for its initial source, the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis). And the worst part: Early evidence of resistance occurs in secret as the voracious larvae again chomp away at roots buried beneath a masking layer of soil.

Although the AP report doesn?t cite research establishing rootworm resistance, it does exist. As I noted back in early August, Iowa State scientists published a report in PLoS ONE about rootworms able to feast on supposedly protected crops. ?This is the first report of field-evolved resistance to a Bt toxin by the western corn rootworm and by any species of Coleoptera [i.e. beetles and weevils],? Aaron Gassmann and his colleagues noted. ?Insufficient planting of refuges and [genetic] inheritance of resistance may have contributed,? they said.

A few weeks later, Mike Gray of the University of Illinois reported in the Aug. 26 issue of The Bulletin that he recently had been called in to ?verify severe corn rootworm pruning on some Bt hybrids.? The concerned farmer had relied exclusively on genetically engineered Bt to protect his corn. When Gray arrived, ?[rootworm] adults were numerous and easy to collect. It was also easy to find plants with two to three nodes of roots completely destroyed. A shovel was not required for removing the plants from the soil.?

This brutal pest lops off anchoring roots, after which corn stalks fall over like just so many trunks of felled timber.

Gray advocates tackling rootworms using ?a long-term, integrated approach that includes multiple tactics, such as adult suppression programs, use of soil insecticides at planting, rotation of Bt hybrids that express different [toxins], and rotation to nonhost crops.?

In fact, he and other extension agents warn farmers that they must do this if Bt corn is to prove reliable into the future. And there are a range of complements to Bt that can be employed. (I reported more than a decade ago on a particularly innovative one the feds were developing, based on bitter melons.) But growers often go for expediency over long-term investments in multi-pronged and labor intensive crop protection. As Gray observes, ?Many producers have relied on a single tactic for too many years, and unfortunate consequences are beginning to emerge.?

The irony: Bt toxin has been part of the agricultural arsenal for nearly a century. Farmers first began employing it ? by seeding crops with spores of the parent bacterium ? around 1920, according to a website run by Raffi Aroian?s lab at the University of California San Diego. But as spore-based products could wash away or be degraded by sunlight, biochemists sought a more effective way to ensure the toxin stayed with plants. And they found it:?incorporation of the gene responsible for making the toxin directly into high value crops.

?The first genetically engineered plant, corn, was registered with the EPA in 1995,? the Aroian lab notes. Already, however, concerns about the invincibility of Bt were emerging in lab studies (see SN: 9/12/92, p. 166). And precisely because Bt toxin had proven such an effective insecticide for so long, crop-protection specialists warned that to safeguard Bt?s potency, growers would have to resist the temptation to overuse it.

That gets back to how we now appear doomed to repeat that history we failed to learn.

While perusing old issues of Science News, I encountered hosts of stories describing heavy and apparently indiscriminate use of DDT.

One January 1946 piece observed that dog shampoos laced with DDT can eliminate fleas for months. An August 1947 article described wallpaper manufacturers adding the chemical to their product so that it would kill flies on contact. And federal scientists had begun evaluating DDT?s safety in the paper used by stores to wrap groceries.?A 1949 story described the insecticide?s utility as a treatment for rivers: Just two quarts were needed to deal with fly- and mosquito-infested regions up to 25 miles downstream. Our magazine also prophesied that thanks to DDT (and good sanitation), families could plan on soon kissing their flyswatters goodbye: ?We are within sight of a flyless age.?

Five years later, pest control operators were singing a very different tune. Early claims of DDT resistance, initially shrugged off, eventually were shown to be prescient hints that a useful chemical had been overused to the point of abuse. Once a means to kill bedbugs and the lice that carried typhus ? a major killer ? DDT was quickly losing its potency. Malaria mosquitoes were all but laughing at the insecticide and Agriculture Department entomologists had bred a line of houseflies that could live in a jar coated with DDT (SN: 4/28/56, p. 266).

In 1957, Ralph Heal, executive secretary of the National Pest Control Association, all but conceded defeat. Along with wild houseflies, the German cockroach, bedbug, dog flea and brown tick were all exhibiting extensive resistance to DDT. Where this chemical failed to knock out pests, the newer malathion?was proving effective. But Heal added that scientists already feared insects would soon develop resistance to these alternatives as well.

We?d like to think we learn from our mistakes, but collectively society can prove pretty stupid. Or selfish. Or oblivious. In the end, the bottom line is little changed: We still make way too many of the same mistakes.


Found in: Agriculture, Biology, Botany, Environment and Science & Society

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/337240/title/Bt_The_lesson_not_learned

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Energy Stocks: Petrobras kicks off year-end energy stocks rally

By Jim Jelter, MarketWatch

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) ? Brazilian state oil company Petrobras kicked off a modest year-end rally by energy stocks Friday, injecting a little last-minute pizzazz into what was an unremarkable year for the sector.

It didn?t take much to stand out. Petrobras /quotes/zigman/265276/quotes/nls/pbr PBR +1.14% ? shares rose just over 1% to $24.98 in opening trades on news the company, together with BG Group /quotes/zigman/249967 UK:BG +0.44% ?, declared the giant Guara oil field off Brazil?s coast commercially viable. Petrobras and its partners plan to initiate development of the field.

Petrobras shares quickly relinquished the lead Hess Corp. /quotes/zigman/417764/quotes/nls/hes HES +0.72% , which at last glance also managed to break through the low 1% threshold, trading at $57.08.

The gains were enough to lift the NYSE Arca Oil Index /quotes/zigman/6015539 XX:XOI +0.15% ?nearly 0.25 to 1,231 points. If they hold, the index will finish the year 1.5% higher than where it started it.

The NYSE Arca Natural Gas Index /quotes/zigman/6015474 XX:XNG -0.26% ?was also up about 0.2% in early trades, putting it on course for a 5.7% advance for the year.

The Philadelphia Oil Service Sector Index /quotes/zigman/1470028 OSX +0.30% ?, the sector?s third key benchmark, was up 0.6% Friday at 217 points, with Weatherford International /quotes/zigman/504342/quotes/nls/wft WFT +3.10% ?leading percentage gainers in the group, up 1.7% at $14.43 a share.

Oil service stocks lagged the rest of the sector in 2011, with the index down 11% from where it started the year.

Measuring its performance within the parameters of the S&P 500, the energy sector rose 3% for the year.

The utilities sector, one the other hand, posted a commanding 15.5% gain in the 2011, making it the top performer within the S&P 500 /quotes/zigman/3870025 SPX -0.32% ?in a year that rewarded those investors seeking safety.

/quotes/zigman/265276/quotes/nls/pbr

Volume: 5.99M

Dec. 30, 2011 3:57p

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Volume: 1.94M

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Volume: 1.48M

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Jim Jelter is Industrials Editor for MarketWatch in San Francisco.

Source: http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story.asp?guid=%7BB963DCC0-32F8-11E1-80DF-002128040CF6%7D&siteid=rss&rss=1

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Griffin, Baylor win record-breaking Alamo Bowl (AP)

SAN ANTONIO ? A thrilling, back-and-forth, record-shattering Alamo Bowl had barely ended when Heisman Trophy winner Robert Griffin III already started hearing the chants.

"One more year! One more year!"

One more year? There's still the craziness of what happened Thursday night to get through first.

Griffin wasn't dazzling in possibly his last college game ? and didn't need to be ? yet No. 15 Baylor still pulled out an incredible Alamo Bowl victory in the highest-scoring regulation bowl game in history, beating Washington 67-56 in the wildest shootout of this bowl season or any other in memory.

If this was RG3's final showcase before jumping to the NFL, it was a gripping goodbye to watch. One of the nation's most electrifying players was upstaged by an even more exciting nail-biter that shattered the previous record for points in regulation set in the 2001 GMAC Bowl.

"We went out in style!" Griffin shouted to his teammates. He paraded the Alamo Bowl trophy around the field before taking it to the front row of the stands and his mother, who's already been looking at her son's NFL draft prospects.

Griffin said he was still catching his breath after this one.

"I want Baylor nation to enjoy this," Griffin said. "It's not about me. I've got about two weeks. I'll enjoy this the next day, and then the next day, and then I'll make it."

The previous bowl record for a regulation game was 102 total points set in the 2001 GMAC Bowl between Marshall and East Carolina. That game went to double overtime and ended with a combined 125 points ? which still stands as the overall bowl record.

Baylor, which won its first bowl game since 1992, and Washington (7-6) also set a bowl record for total offense in a game with 1,397 yards.

Griffin had an unremarkable night, throwing just one touchdown pass and running for another. But Terrance Ganaway starred ably in his place, rushing for 200 yards and five touchdowns. His last was a 43-yard run with 2:28 left to seal Baylor's first 10-win season since 1980.

Washington quarterback Keith Price outplayed his Heisman counterpart, going 23 for 27 with 438 yards and four touchdowns. He also ran for another three scores.

"I think we'll have a hard time this bowl season to see a quarterback play as well as he did," Washington coach Steve Sarkisian.

Griffin was 24 of 33 for 295 yards ? and his only touchdown throw came on the game's opening drive.

Blown out in four other games against ranked opponents this season, the Huskies finally made one interesting. Not that it started that way after Baylor ran up 245 yards of offense alone in the first quarter ? awful even by the standards of Washington's defense, which is among the nation's worst.

Then the most award-winning QB in the country suddenly stopped looking like even the best one in the Alamodome.

Price, a sophomore who threw a school-record 29 touchdowns in his first year as the starter, began cutting into a 21-7 deficit with a 12-yard scoring strike to James Johnson. Seven minutes later he tied the game when Devin Aguilar somersaulted over the goal line after catching a 1-yard lob.

The overwhelming crowd of Baylor fans ? decked in green-and-gold Heisman shirts and armed with signs such as "Superman wears RG3 socks" ? stood in stunned silenced. That gave way to disbelieving gasps on the next series, when the typically sure-handed Griffin fumbled after getting popped by Andrew Hudson.

After that, it was practically a free-for-all of big plays.

A 56-yard touchdown dash by Chris Polk. An 80-yard touchdown catch by Washington's Jermaine Kearse two plays into the second half. An 89-yard scoring rumble by Baylor's Terrance Ganaway. Kearse again, catching and darting for 60 yards before getting dragged down, setting up Price's fourth touchdown toss the next play.

Back and forth, back and forth. One after another. In all, five plays covered 50 or more yards, three of them for scores.

"That was crazy," Baylor coach Art Briles said.

For an Alamo Bowl short on drama and light on matchups in recent years, it was a thrilling scoring spree that overshadowed the mere novelty of featuring the Heisman winner. And that in itself was a rarity for a bowl of this stature: Not since Ty Detmer took BYU to the Holiday Bowl in 1990 had a Heisman winner played in a bowl before New Year's Day.

Plenty came to see this one.

Anticipating a surge of Heisman gawkers, Alamo Bowl officials added 800 temporary seats and opened up others with obstructed views that required ticket-buyers to sign a form acknowledging the poor sightlines. Those seats sold, anyway, and the announced attendance of 65,256 was the fifth-largest in the bowl's history.

Others had better seats.

That includes Miami Dolphins general manager Jeff Ireland, who kicked for Baylor in the late 1980s but was here on business scouting Griffin in case the fourth-year junior enters the draft. Griffin's parents, two sisters and fiancee watched the nail-biter with front-row seats.

Griffin acknowledged this week his parents are looking at his draft prospects but denies having any substantial talks with them.

Win or lose, it was an impressive finale for Washington after stumbling into the postseason losing four of its last six. Particularly against a ranked team after then-Top 25 opponents Nebraska, Stanford, Oregon and USC all crushed the Huskies by an average of 24 points.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_sp_co_ga_su/fbc_t25_alamo_bowl

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Nelson retirement opens Neb.'s Senate seat to GOP (AP)

OMAHA, Neb. ? Democratic Sen. Ben Nelson survived nearly two decades representing heavily Republican Nebraska by carving a path down the political center. But faced with navigating that road in an increasingly polarizing climate, Nelson is stepping away ? and swinging the door wide open for the GOP.

Nelson, the lone Democrat in Nebraska's five-member congressional delegation, announced Tuesday that he wouldn't seek a third term. He was facing a tough campaign against several Republicans who've spent the past several months attacking his support for President Barack Obama's health care overhaul and federal stimulus legislation.

"Who can blame him given the current political mood of the country?" said former state Democratic Party Chairman Steve Achelpohl.

Other Democrats lamented Nelson's decision to retire, fearing it sets up the GOP for an easy victory next year. Republicans need to net just four seats to reclaim control of the Senate, and Nebraska looks to be an easy pickup.

There are no Democrats in line to take Nelson's place in the increasingly conservative state. He joins several other Democrats to retire from the Senate, including Virginia's Jim Webb and North Dakota's Kent Conrad.

After months of speculation that he would leave office, the 70-year-old conservative Democrat told supporters in an emailed statement that he felt it was time he "step away from elective office, spend more time with my family, and look for new ways to serve our state and nation."

"Therefore, I am announcing today that I will not seek re-election," he said. "Simply put: It is time to move on."

The former two-term governor thrived in Nebraska politics partly because he was willing to support Republican ideas when he believed they were in the state's best interests, Achelpohl said.

"Nebraskans are generally independent thinkers, and he was certainly an independent thinker," Achelpohl said. "He just had his finger right on the pulse of the predominant political thinking right in our state and nationally."

Democrats banking on Nelson's ability to leverage those centrist stances and capture statewide races were left scrambling, and many state activists acknowledged being taken by surprise.

While some floated the names of state Sen. Steve Lathrop of Omaha and Nelson's former lieutenant governor, Kim Robak, as possible contenders, many said it was too early to know who might run. Messages seeking comment were left for Lathrop and Robak.

A dream candidate for Democrats: former Nebraska Sen. Bob Kerrey. Traveling in India on Tuesday, Kerrey told The Washington Post, "Ben's retirement is a huge loss for Nebraska. I am very sad he's leaving. That is as far as I am going (right now)."

Democrats acknowledged the party will face a steep uphill fight to hold on to Nelson's seat, but pointed to a crowded GOP primary field with no obvious front-runner. The ticket includes Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning, state Treasurer Don Stenberg, state Sen. Deb Fischer, and investment adviser Pat Flynn.

"This virtually guarantees a Republican victory in 2012," said University of Nebraska Lincoln political scientist Mike Wagner. "There's almost no scenario in which a Democrat can win ? especially at this late stage."

National Republican party leaders also have encouraged Gov. Dave Heineman to join the race, but Heineman has said it would take a lot to persuade him.

The Senate's Democratic campaign chairman, Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, said she expected that Republicans would "have their hands full with a very divisive primary in the state, which will provide an opportunity for Democrats to remain competitive."

State Sen. Heath Mello, an Omaha Democrat who worked as an aide to Nelson, said he feared Nelson's retirement would inject more partisan politics into an already heated race.

"That is not the way Nebraskans have chosen their senators in the past," Mello said. "We've always elected independent-minded people to represent Nebraska's interests, ahead of the political parties."

Nelson has recently expressed dismay about a divided Congress' inability to pass meaningful legislation, frustration that echoed in his statement Tuesday.

"I encourage those who will follow in my footsteps to look for common ground and to work together in bipartisan ways to do what's best for the country, not just one political party," he said.

Even as Nelson wavered about a re-election bid, he piled up campaign cash, hired a campaign manager and watched his party spend more than $1 million on ads supporting him. The preparation left him with more than $3 million campaign cash on hand last month, about twice his nearest competitor.

The Democrats' Majority PAC alone spent more than $406,000 on media buys and production costs for Nelson's expected re-election campaign in seven separate expenditures between Sept. 9 and Dec. 9.

"I'm absolutely stunned," Kathleen Fahey, a Democratic super-delegate in 2008, said of Nelson's announcement. "Ben has been such a great senator for everybody. I'm not liking this."

Nelson first was elected to the Senate in 2000, defeating Stenberg, a Republican and currently the state treasurer, to replace the retired Kerrey. Nelson positioned himself as a centrist supporting both Democratic and Republican legislation.

He was among only two Senate Democrats to support a failed GOP bid to block new federal controls on power plant pollution that blows downwind into other states earlier this year, and he took great pride in his membership in the 2005 "Gang of 14," made up of Republicans and Democrats who brokered a deal to avoid a filibuster showdown over President George W. Bush's judicial nominees.

However, Nelson's vote in favor of Obama's signature health reform legislation left the GOP confident that they could beat him next year. The health reforms are strongly opposed by many Nebraska conservatives, and after the vote Nebraska Republicans immediately kicked off a "Give Ben the Boot" campaign.

Nelson also was one of five Democratic senators targeted by a national conservative group with ties to GOP strategist Karl Rove. The group, Crossroads GPS, spent $1.6 million on ads attacking Nelson as well as Sens. Bill Nelson of Florida, Clair McCaskill of Missouri, Jon Tester of Montana and Sherrod Brown of Ohio ? all considered top targets by national Republicans in 2012.

"For once Senator Nelson has listened to Nebraskans," Nebraska Republican Party Chairman Mark Fahleson said Tuesday. "The Nebraska Republican Party is more focused than ever on electing another conservative Republican to join Sen. Mike Johanns and recapturing the U.S. Senate so that we can reverse the damage done by Ben Nelson, Washington Democrats and the Obama Administration."

Nelson upset incumbent Nebraska Gov. Kay Orr in 1990 to earn his first statewide office and was re-elected governor in 1994 by a landslide. In 1996, he reneged on a campaign pledge that he wouldn't seek higher office while governor and announced his candidacy for the Senate seat vacated by the retiring Sen. Jim Exon.

Omaha millionaire businessman Chuck Hagel soundly defeated Nelson in that Senate race, but the two later served as colleagues when Nelson was elected in 2000.

Bruning on Tuesday wished Nelson well and praised him as "a dedicated public servant of the state of Nebraska for over two decades," while Fischer expressed confidence the GOP would now claim the seat.

"I think we have a strong group of Republicans, and I happen to believe the seat will go to a Republican," she said.

Stenberg thanked Nelson for his service, but said Nebraskans need "a genuine, lifelong conservative."

___

Associated Press writer Larry Margasak in Washington and Grant Schulte in Lincoln, Neb., contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/democrats/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_el_se/us_senate_nelson

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George?s most-used iPhone and iPad apps of 2011

My most used apps of 2011 include an endless list of Twitter apps, ?video streaming apps?, and of course, the default apps like Safari, Mail, Messages and YouTube....


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/mYoAqD00TeY/story01.htm

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Windows 7 Manager

  • 2.0 stars

    "ok but slows computer down"

    June 1, 2011??|?? By brianbe

    Version: Windows 7 Manager 2.1.2

    Pros

    does thorough job

    Cons

    feel like its takeing over my computer

    Reply to this review

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  • 3.0 stars

    "Many functions"

    May 10, 2011??|?? By Danne_Mannen

    Version: Windows 7 Manager 2.1.1

    Pros

    Can really speed things up if you use it right

    Cons

    Be careful and backup your registery..and ignore 1-Click Cleaner

    Reply to this review

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  • 5.0 stars

    "great really great"

    April 8, 2011??|?? By ronw318

    Version: Windows 7 Manager 2.1

    Pros

    easy to use

    Cons

    none really an great product

    Summary

    recommend for all windows 7 users

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  • 4.0 stars

    "makes a lot of things accessible in one place"

    February 26, 2011??|?? By JohnnyMiri

    Version: Windows 7 Manager 2.0.7

    Pros

    this app is really darn handy and time-saving: although it does many things you can already do in Windows 7 (if you're handy), this just makes it easier/quicker to find tweaks you need. I've used it for a year already.

    Cons

    But as with any or all of these types of utilities, a word of caution is necessary. Make sure you know what you're doing when you make any changes. You could end up with a messed up computer, like one guy in previous comments.

    Summary

    it works well

    Reply to this review

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  • 4.0 stars

    "a lot of fixes and optimizes"

    February 23, 2011??|?? By Bob1019

    Version: Windows 7 Manager 2.0.7

    Pros

    If you have the time and a little understanding it really helps your computer

    Cons

    Would like to be a little more anutomatic..

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  • 5.0 stars

    "It's one of the BEST ! !"

    January 30, 2011??|?? By shodan816

    Version: Windows 7 Manager 2.0.6

    Pros

    I repair computers and I have used this program for a couple of years now. It contains many useful utilities to help you keep your PC in top working condition. Give it a try and I am sure you will agree.

    Cons

    I honestly cannot think of any...

    Summary

    You have nothing to lose by trying it. Be sure to look at all of the different settings you can change to improve your system's performance and appearance.

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  • 5.0 stars

    "Best Tweaking Tool...."

    December 1, 2010??|?? By tayOthman

    Version: Windows 7 Manager 2.0.3

    Pros

    A Regedit Alternative for PC users...+ Junk and Registry Cleaner...+ Repair + File Splitter + Full windows management interface...

    Cons

    Hope to see a Wndows Native interface

    Summary

    I'm a User for this Package since Windows XP.... then Vista Manager & Finally Win 7 Manager...
    It is the Best Tweaking tool.... Simple & No Running Hidden Processes...
    Five Stars

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  • 1.0 stars

    "Messed up my new computer"

    August 11, 2010??|?? By teddy858

    Version: Windows 7 Manager 1.2.7

    Pros

    Nothing at all

    Cons

    After I ran this, it 'bluescreened' my new computer, and it won't start up anymore.

    Summary

    Very dangerous program, do not use.

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  • 2.0 stars

    "A somewhat unnecessary program"

    June 26, 2010??|?? By jammersz

    Version: Windows 7 Manager 1.2.5

    Pros

    All tweaking and optimizing options all in one program

    Cons

    If you don't know what you're doing you can severely damage your computer, everything that this program offers is accessible via Windows 7

    Summary

    It didn't take me long to realize that the majority of it's utilities are basically just shortcuts to Windows 7 operations.
    If you're not experienced with computers chances are all you will find is a lot of frustration using this software, as it does not do a sufficient job of explaining anything. This can leave you with a ruined Windows 7 if you start meddling in the registry and deleting crucial things. I was pretty disappointed with this software, it wasn't at all what I expected.

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  • 5.0 stars

    "Best Win7 Utilitiy"

    June 2, 2010??|?? By vsnaeini

    Version: Windows 7 Manager 1.2.4

    Pros

    All thing which a Win7 user needs, is in this software

    Cons

    Noting only othing

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  • Source: http://download.cnet.com/Windows-7-Manager/3000-18512_4-10964649.html?tag=feed&subj=newreleases&part=rss

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    Thursday, December 29, 2011

    Health Tip: Discuss Weight With Your Child (HealthDay)

    (HealthDay News) -- Talking about weight with your child can be difficult, but it's important to foster a healthy attitude toward weight and eating.

    The American Dietetic Association offers these suggestions for having this discussion:

    • If your son or daughter is overweight, encourage the child to take action to lose weight. Take steps toward this end as a family, so your child doesn't feel isolated.
    • Never bribe or punish your child to lose weight.
    • Make sure both parents and other family members agree on how to best handle weight issues, so the message to the child is clear and consistent.
    • Talk to your child's doctor about weight.
    • Seek help from local programs or professionals who can help your child deal with weight issues.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111227/hl_hsn/healthtipdiscussweightwithyourchild

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    Wednesday, December 28, 2011

    Insurance markets in everything ? Marginal Revolution

    Afghan shopkeeper Nasratullah Niazai has developed a brisk new business over the past year. For about $2 a pop, he uploads into customers? cellphones a collection of Taliban songs and ringtones.

    A skinny 22-year-old who operates a one-room computer store on the outskirts of the Afghan capital, Mr. Niazai is no Taliban. Neither are most of his customers.

    Instead, the songs and ringtones romanticizing the insurgents? jihad against the infidel invaders serve as potentially lifesaving travel insurance for Kabulis who brave increasingly perilous countryside roads.

    Sentries at improvised Taliban checkpoints, some only an hour?s drive away from central Kabul, routinely check travelers? cellphones. As a result, government officials, police, soldiers, security guards, university students, translators for Western companies, construction workers and scores of others go to extraordinary lengths to scrub their phones of any evidence of links to the coalition and the Afghan government?and to masquerade as Taliban sympathizers.

    Business has boomed in the past year, Mr. Niazai said. The songs that buyers like best, he said, are ?the emotional ones sung by children with beautiful voices.?

    The story is here and the pointer is from @nickschifrin.

    Source: http://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2011/12/insurance-markets-in-everything-2.html

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    Israel says no to Hamas at peace talks

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday he would refuse to hold peace talks with the Palestinian Authority if it included Hamas representatives, according to Israeli public radio.

    Hamas chief Khaled Meshaal met Palestinian president and Fatah chief Mahmud Abbas in Cairo last week to discuss the reorganisation of Palestinian decision-making bodies to include Hamas.

    "Netanyahu said that if Hamas joins the Palestinian government, he would refuse to conduct peace negotiations with the Palestinian Authority," Israeli radio said.

    Israel condemns Hamas as a terrorist organisation.

    Netanyahu spokesman Mark Regev, asked to confirm the comments, said Netanyahu had been speaking to Israeli ambassadors behind closed doors.

    Hamas and Fatah, which respectively control Gaza and the West Bank, have long been political rivals.

    Tensions spilled over into deadly violence in 2007 when Hamas forced Fatah out of Gaza and took control of the strip.

    In April, Hamas and Fatah signed a reconciliation agreement, but it has been largely unenforced.

    Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5663168981

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    Tuesday, December 27, 2011

    Sony, Samsung dissolve panel joint venture

    TOKYO (AP) -- Japan's Sony and South Korean rival Samsung are dissolving their joint venture in liquid crystal display panels as Sony tries to stanch years of losses in its TV business.

    Sony Corp. said Monday that Samsung Electronics Co. will buy all of Sony's shares in the joint venture for about 1.08 trillion Korean won ($935 million) subject to a final agreement.

    The joint venture called S-LCD was set up in 2004. Sony, which fell behind in flat panel TVs, invested in a Samsung panel factory to ensure a steady supply of panels for its LCD TVs.

    Sony's TV operation has lost money for seven straight years and the company is straining to return that key business to profit.

    The prices of TVs as well as panels have been dropping so it makes more sense to buy panels at the market rate than to invest in production.

    Sony, which makes Bravia TV sets, does not make its own LCD panels.

    It said it will enter a new partnership with Samsung to buy panels, and will also continue buying panels from other manufacturers.

    Sony said it will suffer a loss of 66 billion yen ($846 million) for the third quarter of this fiscal year, which ends later this month, because of the declining value of investment in S-LCD.

    Getting out the production venture will produce substantial savings after January 2012, when the deal is completed, according to Sony.

    It was still unclear how Sony's profit forecast for the fiscal year through March 2012 will be affected, said company spokesman Takashi Uehara.

    ---

    Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at http://twitter.com/yurikageyama

    Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/A/AS_JAPAN_SONY_SAMSUNG?SITE=FLSTU&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

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    Justin Bieber - Mistletoe & Santa Clause is Coming to Town - Disney World Christmas Parade ...

    Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

    Source: http://howto.tweetmeme.com/story/7717822243/justin-bieber-mistletoe-and-santa-clause-is-coming-to-town-disney-world-christmas-parade-youtube

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    Monday, December 26, 2011

    Christmas Day bomb hits church in Nigeria, agency says

    Smoke rises from the scene of bombing Sunday at a Catholic church in Madala, west of the Nigerian capital.

    STORY HIGHLIGHTS

    • NEW: People are killed in a Catholic church bombing, a local priest says
    • NEW: Police exchange gunfire with attackers who bomb a second church
    • NEW: Locals blame the attacks on Boko Haram but no one claims responsibility
    • The blasts follow attacks on five churches in Nigeria during last year's Christmas season

    (CNN) -- Bomb blasts struck two churches in Nigeria on Sunday as worshippers were attending Christmas Day services, stirring memories of strikes against Nigerian churches during last year's Christmas season.

    The first explosion struck near a Catholic church in Madala, west of Abuja, Nigeria's capital, the National Emergency Management Agency said.

    A second attack struck the Mountain of Fire Ministries church in the city of Jos, northeast of the capital, said journalist Hassan John, who witnessed the aftermath of the two blasts that targeted the church.

    The emergency agency did not immediately provide details about the bombings, including the number of dead or wounded.

    "Lives have been lost but we do not have the details," said the Rev. Michael Ekpenyong, speaking about the first bombing. "The area has been cordoned off. I tried to call the priest but I couldn't get through."

    Ekpenyong, the secretary general of the country's Catholic Secretariat, said the church that was bombed was "not a big church, but lots of people attend."

    Photos from the scene showed burned-out cars and at least three bodies lying on the ground, one covered with a blanket, at the rural church.

    Usman Abdallah Baba, who witnessed the bombing, said there were at least 15 or 16 casualties and that authorities were still counting the toll.

    He said local people were already blaming the violent extremist Muslim Boko Haram sect, which has targeted Christians as well as Muslims its members consider insufficiently Islamic.

    The second church, in Jos, was hit by two explosions when young men threw bombs, said John, the journalist at the scene.

    Police responded quickly and exchanged gunfire with the attackers, who injured at least one of the police officers, he said.

    The injured officer has been rushed to the Jos University teaching hospital for medical attention.

    There were about five attackers, one with an AK-47. They fled into the crowd and disappeared after the attack, John said.

    Sunday's attacks follow bombings at five churches in Jos last year that occurred while residents were celebrating Christmas Eve. The blasts killed dozens in Jos, which lies on a faith-based fault line between the Muslim-dominated north and the mainly Christian south.

    Nigeria is Africa's most populous nation. It has the world's sixth largest Christian population -- about 80.5 million people as of 2010, according to a report published this month by the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life in Washington. That makes the country just over 50% Christian, according to the Pew figures.

    The latest attacks follow two days of clashes between militants and security forces in northern Nigeria, an army commander said.

    Chief of Army Staff Azubuike Ihejirika said the clashes left three soldiers dead and several more wounded.

    The fighting began Thursday between Boko Haram militants and the military in the Yobe state town of Damaturu, Ihejirika said.

    "There was a major encounter with the Boko Haram in Damaturu," Ihejirika said Friday. "We lost three of our soldiers, seven were wounded. But we killed over 50 of their members."

    Boko Haram translates from the local Hausa as "Western education is outlawed." The group has morphed into an insurgency responsible for dozens of attacks in Nigeria in the last two years.

    Boko Haram's targets include police outposts and churches as well as places associated with "Western influence."

    CNN's Esprit Smith and Hamdi Alkhshali contributed to this report.

    Source: http://www.cnn.com/2011/12/25/world/africa/nigeria-church-bombing/index.html?eref=rss_world

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    Mexico, Guatemala collaborate to strengthen border security

    backgroundblue line Monday 26th December, 2011

    Mexico, Guatemala collaborate to strengthen border security ??



    ?????Monday 26th December, 2011??Source: People's Daily ??
    Mexican President Felipe Calderon (L) and his Guatemalan counterpart Alvaro Colom arrive at a joint press conference at the official residence Los Pinos, in Mexico City, capital of Mexico, on July 27, 2011.
    (Xinhua/David de la Paz)

    Breaking News
    Monday 26th December, 2011


    Our network flyer service provides a medium for putting your important news into a flyer on the web.
    Whether it be a new product launch, announcing a community event, promoting a Web site, or advertising your business, then our Network Flyers service is for you.
    Click here for more details

    Source: http://feeds.bignewsnetwork.com/?rid=202145831&cat=4b980140662cfc90

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    Sunday, December 25, 2011

    Video: Congress OKs temporary payroll tax deal

    House Republicans and Speaker John Boehner finally pass the payroll tax extension that includes a tax cut as well as a two-month extension of benefits for the unemployed. NBC?s Kelly O?Donnell reports.

    Related Links:

    TODAY.com home page

    Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/45775332/

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    Twitter / Josh Gates: Amazing giveaway today. Wa ... Loader Amazing giveaway today. Want a slick pair of Sony noise canceling headphones? RT/Follow to win!

    Source: http://twitter.com/christine_9774/statuses/150661069017317376

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    Hungary police remove MPs from protest, laws passed (Reuters)

    BUDAPEST (Reuters) ? Hungarian police briefly detained former Socialist Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany and several other lawmakers during a protest outside the parliament building where the government passed laws the opposition sees as a blow to democracy.

    Parliament, where the ruling Fidesz party has a two thirds majority, passed a key financial stability law despite objections by the European Union, which could jeopardize talks about a new financing deal with international lenders.

    Hungary is trying to secure the deal with the International Monetary Fund and the EU to retain access to market funding next year, but informal talks have collapsed, leading to a downgrade in Hungary's debt rating to "junk" by Standard and Poor's.

    Parliament also passed an electoral law, which critics say will change the electoral system in favour of Fidesz, and several other disputed bills, prompting opposition MPs to chain themselves to a barrier outside parliament in protest.

    Gyurcsany, who headed two previous Socialist governments and is now a member of parliament, was forcibly removed from the protest along with several lawmakers from the green liberal opposition LMP party.

    Police later detained the head of the Socialist party and several other Socialist lawmakers who tried to prevent LMP activists being taken away from outside parliament. Those detained were later released.

    "(Prime Minister Viktor) Orban's autocracy can no longer tolerate even peaceful opposition and protest," Gyurcsany told Reuters after he was released.

    MP Gabor Scheiring told Reuters: "I have come here as it's a shame for the governing majority that people have to defend parliamentary democracy with their own bodies."

    "They want to cement the flat tax, under which the majority of people end up worse off ... and the ruling majority of Fidesz wants to approve an electoral law today, with which they will take away the people's right to replace this government."

    The financial stability law cements a flat personal income tax, which the opposition says would tie the hands of any future government.

    A vice chairman of Fidesz said the protests were a "political parody."

    Police said in a statement that by chaining themselves to the barriers, protesters blocked the entry of MPs to parliament, and did not obey police requests to leave.

    "When due to the behavior of the demonstrators, Parliament became inaccessible at all entries, police intervened and detained 26 individuals," the statement said.

    Peter Kreko, political analyst at think tank Political Capital said the police action was unacceptable. "These pictures which show police removing opposition lawmakers, well, we see such photos in undemocratic countries."

    "What the government can achieve with this is that its isolation from the West can become much stronger both economically and politically, and if the government goes ahead on this road, then there is no other outcome but failure."

    Since it swept to power in 2010, Orban's government has tightened its grip on the media, curbed the rights of the top Constitutional Court, renationalized private pension assets and dismantled an independent budget oversight body.

    EU OPPOSES TWO LAWS

    On Thursday Orban rejected a European Commission request to withdraw two disputed laws in a move which could derail talks with lenders about the new financial deal, and which analysts say could trigger a full-blown market crisis.

    European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso had asked Orban to scrap two laws - the financial stability law and one on the central bank which the European Central Bank says infringes on the central bank's independence.

    The Commission was assessing Hungary's response, the EU's executive said on Friday.

    "Given the importance of the matters at stake, these replies require an in-depth assessment, which is under way and which will be concluded as soon as possible. The Commission will decide on its next steps in the light of this analysis," spokesman Dennis Abbott said in comments emailed to Reuters.

    Economy Minister Gyorgy Matolcsy told parliament the financial stability law was key to having stable budgets and debt reduction.

    Parliament also on Friday passed several amendments to the central bank bill to bring the legislation into line with the European Central Bank's requests, but left some contentious parts such as the expansion of the Monetary Council.

    It is due to vote on the central bank bill next week.

    The bill is the latest in a series of conflicts with Brussels. The United States has urged Orban's administration to respect democratic freedoms.

    After the S&P downgrade, which followed a similar move by Moody's in late November, it is only Fitch which has not yet moved to cut Hungary's debt rating to below investment grade.

    Analysts have said it could take a market crisis for the government to reach a deal with lenders.

    "They (the government) will only become serious (about a financing backstop) after a crisis has developed and that is only the point at which they will accept conditionality," Peter Attard Montalto at Nomura said on Thursday.

    (Reporting by Krisztina Than; Editing by Diana Abdallah)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111223/wl_nm/us_hungary_protest

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    Saturday, December 24, 2011

    As Christmas arrives, crisis for Mideast Christians

    While Christians in Iraq have long faced the threat of growing Islamism and violence, now Christians in Egypt ? and Syria ? are facing new pressures as a year of dramatic change wraps up.

    This fall, a group of Iraqi-American Christians ramped up pressure on the Obama administration, warning that their ancient community in Iraq ? already hobbled by eight years of war ? could be pushed over the brink entirely after US forces withdraw by year's end.

    Skip to next paragraph

    Recently, Vice President Joe Biden responded.

    "Basically, we got a letter back saying: Iraq is undergoing a great democratic process and we should take advantage of that," says Robert Dekeileta, a lawyer who volunteers with the Chaldean Assyrian Syriac Council of America. "It doesn't take into account that democracy for us is a little bit frightening because a lot of forces in society are opposed to non-Islamic entities like ours."

    This year of dramatic political change in the Arab world ? with dictators falling in Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya; a violent uprising threatening Bashar al-Assad's grip on Syria; and popular agitation for democracy in Yemen and elsewhere ? has opened up the real possibility that entrenched autocracy and despotism will be replaced by governments more responsive to their people.

    But the experience of political change for Iraq's Christians is a reminder that democracy is one thing, but protecting against the tyranny of the majority is something else again.

    Now, the largest Christian community in the region ? the Copts of Egypt ? fear that their position, status, and ultimate security in a country where they are in many ways already second-class citizens is about to erode further due to democratic change.

    In Syria, too, where Christians make up about 8 percent of the population, there is fear the uprising will lead to an Islamist government more hostile to Christians than Mr. Assad's regime was. They're well aware of the risks of sectarian conflict and persecution, having witnessed Lebanon's 1975-90 civil war and, more recently, the Iraq war, which spurred tens of thousands of Christians to flee to Syria.

    At least half a million Iraqi Christians have fled Iraq since the US-led invasion in 2003, diminishing their community ? estimated at 1 million to 1.4 million before the war ? to a mere 500,000 under the pressure of sectarian killings, church attacks, and an increasingly Islamist political culture.

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/NDzXy8gBSu4/As-Christmas-arrives-crisis-for-Mideast-Christians

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    Occupy hecklers drown out Bachmann at Iowa diner

    (AP) ? The Hamburg Inn in Iowa City has long been a popular stop for presidential candidates, but it probably won't be high on Rep. Michele Bachmann's list anymore.

    About two dozen activists with Occupy Iowa City packed the diner before Bachmann arrived there Thursday, then loudly chanted in unison as she tried to mingle with supporters. Their chant blasted the Minnesota congresswoman's position on gay rights, health care and taxes and ended with: "You're not wanted here. So go, just go."

    The restaurant blared Christmas songs over the loudspeaker to drown out the protesters. Police arrived as tensions rose, but no one was arrested.

    Bachmann seemed undeterred. Before leaving, she thanked the owner, praised the food and said it was great to be in Iowa City.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-22-Bachmann-Occupy/id-915fe121ea924cff9e051fac84ec6ecc

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