Wednesday, November 30, 2011

'Fool's gold' aids discovery of new options for cheap, benign solar energy

ScienceDaily (Nov. 28, 2011) ? Pyrite, better known as "fool's gold," was familiar to the ancient Romans and has fooled prospectors for centuries -- but has now helped researchers at Oregon State University discover related compounds that offer new, cheap and promising options for solar energy.

These new compounds, unlike some solar cell materials made from rare, expensive or toxic elements, would be benign and could be processed from some of the most abundant elements on Earth. Findings on them have been published in Advanced Energy Materials, a professional journal.

Iron pyrite itself has little value as a future solar energy compound, the scientists say, just as the brassy, yellow-toned mineral holds no value compared to the precious metal it resembles. But for more than 25 years it was known to have some desirable qualities that made it of interest for solar energy, and that spurred the recent research.

The results have been anything but foolish.

"We've known for a long time that pyrite was interesting for its solar properties, but that it didn't actually work," said Douglas Keszler, a distinguished professor of chemistry at OSU. "We didn't really know why, so we decided to take another look at it. In this process we've discovered some different materials that are similar to pyrite, with most of the advantages but none of the problems.

"There's still work to do in integrating these materials into actual solar cells," Keszler said. "But fundamentally, it's very promising. This is a completely new insight we got from studying fool's gold."

Pyrite was of interest early in the solar energy era because it had an enormous capacity to absorb solar energy, was abundant, and could be used in layers 2,000 times thinner than some of its competitors, such as silicon. However, it didn't effectively convert the solar energy into electricity.

In the new study, the researchers found out why. In the process of creating solar cells, which takes a substantial amount of heat, pyrite starts to decompose and forms products that prevent the creation of electricity.

Based on their new understanding of exactly what the problem was, the research team then sought and found compounds that had the same capabilities of pyrite but didn't decompose. One of them was iron silicon sulfide.

"Iron is about the cheapest element in the world to extract from nature, silicon is second, and sulfur is virtually free," Keszler said. "These compounds would be stable, safe, and would not decompose. There's nothing here that looks like a show-stopper in the creation of a new class of solar energy materials."

Work to continue the development of the materials and find even better ones in the same class will continue at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Colorado, which collaborated on this research.

The work was done at the Center for Inverse Design, a collaborative initiative of the College of Science and College of Engineering at OSU, formed two years ago with a $3 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy. It was one of the new Energy Frontier Research Centers set up through a national, $777 million federal program to identify energy solutions for the future.

The OSU program is different from traditional science, in which the process often is to discover something and then look for a possible application. In this center, researchers start with an idea of what they want and then try to find the kind of materials, atomic structure or even construction methods it would take to achieve it.

Finding cheap, environmentally benign and more efficient materials for solar energy is necessary for the future growth of the industry, researchers said.

"The beauty of a material such as this is that it is abundant, would not cost much and might be able to produce high-efficiency solar cells," Keszler said. "That's just what we need for more broad use of solar energy."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Oregon State University.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Liping Yu, Stephan Lany, Robert Kykyneshi, Vorranutch Jieratum, Ram Ravichandran, Brian Pelatt, Emmeline Altschul, Heather A. S. Platt, John F. Wager, Douglas A. Keszler, Alex Zunger. Iron Chalcogenide Photovoltaic Absorbers. Advanced Energy Materials, 2011; 1 (5): 748 DOI: 10.1002/aenm.201100351

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/11/111128115643.htm

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NPR loses 2nd news executive as BBC hires Meyer (AP)

WASHINGTON ? NPR Executive Editor Dick Meyer is leaving the public radio network to lead BBC News America.

Meyer's appointment at BBC was announced Wednesday. Since 2009, he has been NPR's executive editor, managing all news operations. His resignation follows the departure of NPR's top news executive Ellen Weiss in January. She left following an internal investigation on how the firing of commentator Juan Williams was handled.

NPR's search for a news leader has been on hold until new CEO Gary Knell starts work on Thursday. NPR's board pushed for the resignation of former CEO Vivian Schiller in March in an effort to limit damage after hidden camera video footage showed a fellow executive deriding the tea party movement as "racist."

Meyer's last day at NPR will be Dec. 9, spokeswoman Anna Christopher said. Margaret Low Smith continues to serve as senior vice president of news until a replacement is hired. NPR will wait until its top news post is filled before deciding how to fill the executive editor role, Christopher said.

Before public radio, Meyer was editorial director of CBSNews.com and was a producer for "The CBS Evening News with Dan Rather."

Beginning in February 2012, Meyer will lead the BBC's U.S. newscast "BBC World News America" and its American website. In a statement, he says the BBC has "real opportunity for growth" in the U.S. as American news organizations struggle.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111130/ap_en_ot/us_npr_executive_editor

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Trial in Chile for 6 accused of setting off bombs (AP)

SANTIAGO, Chile ? A trial has begun in Chile for six people accused of setting off small bombs outside various buildings.

If convicted, the six could face sentences of 10 to 15 years in prison.

Chilean authorities allege the group was made up of anarchists who set off explosives outside banks and other buildings between 2006 and 2010. The only person who died was a young man whose bomb exploded in his backpack.

The six were initially part of a group of 14 prosecuted under an anti-terrorism law. An appeals court dismissed the terrorism counts, but other charges remain.

Four of the defendants are charged with placing the bombs, and two are accused of financing the attacks.

The trial began Monday and is expected to last several months.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/terrorism/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111129/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_chile_terror_bombs

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Kesha Ni'cole Nichols and Kenya Bell: Cast on Basketball Wives!


The producers of Basketball Wives are doing more than re-signing Evelyn Lozada to up the ante for Season Four. There will be new cast members in the mix, as well.

Controversial ones at that.

Kenya Bell (below, right) will be joining the show this coming season, and has already "assumed the role of the villain" and gotten into a few fights with the girls.

Kesha Ni'cole Nichols and Kenya Bell

Bell is a former Miss Michigan USA who was arrested for allegedly trying to effing stab her husband, former Michigan State star Charlie Bell, with a box cutter.

Standard Basketball Wives procedure, really.

Interestingly, not only was Kenya with Charlie before he went pro, but she also has a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering and an MBA. So she's not a gold digger?

Weird. The other new cast member is Kesha Ni'cole Nichols (above, left). She planned to wed NBA All-Star Richard Jefferson back in 2009, but he bailed last minute.

Almost literally. They were set to tie the knot in $2 million wedding, but Jefferson called a 20-second time out, breaking up with Kesha Ni'Cole via email.

Nichols talks openly about the wedding that wasn't on the show and has, at least thus far, been well-liked by the rest of the cast. But just give it time.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/11/kesha-nicole-nichols-and-kenya-bell-cast-on-basketball-wives/

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Biden swoops into Iraq as U.S. troop pullout nears (Reuters)

BAGHDAD (Reuters) ? Vice President Joe Biden arrived in Baghdad on Tuesday in a visit to mark the end of the U.S. war in Iraq as troops complete withdrawal by year-end.

Biden's trip spotlights the fulfillment of a key pledge by President Barack Obama as he campaigns for re-election in 2012, winding down an unpopular war at a time when most Americans are preoccupied with the weak economy back home.

Marking the end of the drawdown, Biden will address U.S. forces in a ceremony to "commemorate the sacrifices and accomplishments of U.S. and Iraqi troops," a White House official said. He will also meet with Iraqi leaders during the visit before traveling to Turkey and Greece later this week.

"It is good to be back for this purpose," Biden told reporters while meeting with Ambassador James Jeffrey and General Lloyd Austin at the U.S. Embassy, whose grounds were brightly lit by Christmas decorations.

It was Biden's 16th visit to Iraq as either a senator or vice president.

Almost 4,500 U.S. troops have died since President George W. Bush ordered the invasion more than 8 1/2 years ago, based on claims of weapons of mass destruction that turned out not to exist.

From a peak above 170,000 troops in the 2007 surge, some 14,500 remain and nearly all will be gone by December 31. Obama decided to pull them out on schedule after failing to agree terms with Baghdad to leave several thousand in place.

Violence in Iraq has dropped dramatically compared to the darkest days of its civil war in 2006 and 2007, but the country remains unstable.

There have been a spate of deadly attacks in recent days and Obama has been criticized for not pushing harder to get agreement for many more U.S. troops to stay.

ENDING U.S. INVOLVEMENT

Sectarian and ethnic conflicts between Shi'ite and Sunni Muslims and Kurds have impeded political progress and economic growth, and U.S. conservatives fear the troop pullout will also allow Iran to extend influence over Iraq's Shi'ite leaders.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, heading a coalition including politicians vehemently opposed to foreign troops, backed a U.S. training presence but rejected any legal immunity for American forces, terms deemed unacceptable in Washington.

Maliki will visit Obama at the White House on December 12.

U.S. voters are paying little attention to foreign affairs amid a tough economy back home and next November's U.S. election will be primarily fought over the ability of Obama to spur growth and bring down painfully high unemployment.

The savings from ending the war in Iraq, as well as from drawing down troops in Afghanistan, will help Obama with the U.S. deficit in the face of severe budget constraints, as the president tries to persuade Congress to spend on jobs.

The cost to the U.S. taxpayer for the Iraq war in military spending alone is over $700 billion.

Fewer than 200 U.S. soldiers are expected to remain in Iraq after December 31, part of a State Department task force responsible for military sales and, to some extent, advising Iraq's security forces.

About 700 U.S. mostly civilian trainers will also stay, far fewer than the several thousand troops and contractors once under discussion.

The White House wants to underscore Obama's national security track record, defending the Democratic president from Republican criticism by pointing to the U.S. killing of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, Washington's help in overthrowing Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, and the withdrawal of U.S. troops from costly foreign wars.

Security experts, meanwhile, warn against thinking al Qaeda has been permanently dismantled in Iraq, or in Afghanistan, where U.S. troops are to leave by the end of 2014. They say the group may seek to recruit new supporters by proclaiming that it forced the United States out of both countries.

(Editing by Mary Milliken and Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111129/ts_nm/us_usa_iraq_biden

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Italy's bond rates spike as Monti fills government (AP)

ROME ? Italy's borrowing rates skyrocketed in a big auction of bonds Tuesday as Premier Mario Monti put the finishing touches on his new lean government of technocrats that is tasked with getting the country's enormous debt under control to avoid a catastrophic default.

Though Italy easily raised euro7.49 billion ($10 billion), it had to pay more to investors to get them to open their wallets.

The yield on Italy's 3-year bonds surged to 7.89 percent in Tuesday's auction, a full 2.96 percentage points higher than last month, while yields on 10-year bonds spiked to 7.56 percent, up 1.5 percentage points from October. Both rates are unsustainable for the long-term, on par with levels that forced other eurozone governments to seek bailouts.

"Italian bond auctions are become more nerve-wracking by the week," said Nicholas Spiro of Spiro Sovereign Strategies. "Today's is another confirmation, if it were needed, that things are going from bad to worse."

Part of the reason for the high yields has been uncertainty over Monti's government.

Monti named ministers nearly two weeks ago but appointed 28 vice-ministers and undersecretaries only Tuesday, acknowledging that it has taken him more time than planned to complete his government.

He said he has been too busy, as he has had to spend time consulting with European partners about how to deal with the crisis that's threatening the future of the euro as well as the global economy. And the process also required consultation with politicians, an indication of the kind of difficult negotiations ahead when Monti brings real reform to the table.

But the higher yields also reflect a wider failure of eurozone leaders to come up with a coordinated response to the burgeoning crisis.

"This is an externally driven deterioration in Italy's creditworthiness, and the way to contain this crisis is to gradually restore confidence, and shore up the eurozone sovereign debt," Spiro said.

In Italy, the new government is charged with coming up with additional austerity measures followed by deeper reforms.

"If we do good work, we will help Italy get out of a very difficult situation, and perhaps we'll also help the political forces that have given us their trust to re-establish a more serene climate among themselves, and reconciliation with public opinion," Monti said.

Italy has debts amounting to euro1.9 trillion ($2.5 trillion), or some 120 percent of its national income. The country, which is the eurozone's third-largest economy, is considered to be too big to be bailed out under current rescue arrangements.

An Italian default would create devastating consequences for the eurozone, and send shockwaves throughout the global economy.

Monti called the new team "lean and strong," noting that the Cabinet is smaller than the previous administration of Silvio Berlusconi, who resigned after proving unable to get his fractious coalition to back necessary reforms.

Monti said part of the delay in naming the government was due to the fact that a number of recruits had to be persuaded to leave career tracks and more lucrative jobs to join a government tasked with reforming nearly every aspect of public life.

In one sign of progress, Italy's lower house of parliament was preparing Tuesday to introduce an EU-backed measure to amend the constitution to require a balanced budget.

The move is a first step in a long process. The amendment must be approved twice in both houses, the second time after a six-month interval.

Monti, who is also finance minister, was headed to Brussels for a eurozone finance ministers meeting Tuesday evening aimed at devising convincing measures to save the 17-nation euro.

___

Barry reported from Milan, Italy.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111129/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_italy_financial_crisis

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Saboteurs blow up Egypt gas pipeline to Jordan, Israel (Reuters)

CAIRO (Reuters) ? Saboteurs blew up Egypt's gas pipeline to Jordan and Israel on Monday, witnesses and security sources said, a few hours before the country holds its first free election since President Hosni Mubarak was toppled in February.

The explosion struck the pipeline west of al-Arish in Sinai, witnesses said. There was a second consecutive blast, about 100 meters away, sources said.

State news agency MENA said the explosion was in al-Sabeel area. Security forces and fire trucks raced to the scene.

Security sources said the explosions were detonated from a distance and that tracks from two vehicles were found in the area. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

The pipeline, which supplies gas to Jordan and Israel, was last attacked on November 25. It is the eighth such attack since Mubarak stepped down on February 11. It is the ninth this year, with the first attack a few days before Mubarak was toppled.

Egypt's 20-year gas deal with Israel, signed in the Mubarak era, is unpopular with the Egyptian public, with critics arguing that the Jewish state does not pay enough for the gas.

An executive of the East Mediterranean Gas Co (EMG), which exports Egyptian gas to Israel, said in July that international shareholders in the firm were pursuing legal claims against Egypt for $8 billion in damages from contract violations in gas supplies, following disruptions caused by pipeline attacks.

Egypt doubled the price of gas exported to Jordan last month. Petroleum Minister Abdullah Ghorab said the new price was just above $5 per million BTU, up from $2.15 to $2.30.

The government said this month it would tighten security measures along the pipeline by installing alarm devices and recruiting security patrols from Bedouin tribesmen.

(Reporting by Yusri Mohamed, Dina Zayed and Ahmed El-Sheemy; Editing by Elizabeth Piper)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111128/wl_nm/us_egypt_gas_explosion

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US, Europe risk another recession, report says

The United States and others must "be prepared to face the worst" as Europe slides toward another recession, according to a gloomy warning from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Failure by EU leaders to stem the debt crisis that has spread from Greece to much-bigger Italy "could massively escalate economic disruption" and end in "highly devastating outcomes," the Paris-based OECD said in its latest bi-annual economic forecast on Monday.

Improved global prospects would also depend on the enactment of a credible medium-term fiscal program in the United States, it said.

"The global economy is not out of the woods," the report said.

It added that even the U.S. was at risk of returning to recession if "no action [was] agreed to offset the large degree of fiscal tightening implied by current law."

"This could tip the economy into a recession that monetary policy could do little to counter," it said.

It predicted Britain will slip back into a modest recession early next year, threatening to derail deep austerity measures there.

Story: Timothy Geithner, Barack Obama ramp up pressure on Europe over economic crisis

It also recommended an urgent boost top the EU bailout fund and called on Europe's central bank to do more to stem the crisis.

Global gloom
The OECD report was the latest in a series of increasingly gloomy forecasts, and comes as China's economy is slowing and Japan's exports are tumbling.

Eastern European countries are wobbling as credit dries up from a pullback in lending by eurozone banks.

In the United States, the improving economic picture has clouded somewhat after a mixed batch of economic data and downward revision to third-quarter growth to 2.0 percent doused some of the optimism for a strong fourth quarter. Consumer spending slowed in October and business investment weakened, showing a recovery that remains weak and vulnerable to shocks.

Against this uncertain backdrop, financial markets are volatile as European leaders fail to deliver any credible solutions to the sovereign debt crisis and U.S. lawmakers hit gridlock on slashing the budget deficit, further eroding business and consumer confidence and damaging growth prospects.

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The U.S. labor market epitomizes these problems.

Two years into a recovery in which corporate profits are robust, hiring should be rebounding sharply. But U.S. employment numbers due on Friday are expected to show an economy treading water, with 120,000 new hires in November, up from 80,000 the prior month but way below the level needed to improve the outlook.

"The trend has been fairly stable over the last five months, stuck at a level just about strong enough to absorb new entrants into the labor force, but not to reduce the unemployment rate significantly," said Jeoff Hall, economist at IFR Markets, a Thomson Reuters company.

In fact, large U.S. companies are showing new caution.

Boeing Co announced plans last week to shutter a Kansas factory that employs 2,100 as it prepares for U.S. federal budget cuts that will hit defense spending hard. Bank of America began sending lay-off notices last week to technology staff as part of plans to cut 30,000 positions over the next few years, and Wells Fargo & Co also began job cuts.

Whirlpool Corp, the world's largest maker of household appliances, reports softening demand worldwide, including fast-growing emerging Asia and Latin America, and is cutting about 5,000 jobs in North America and Europe.

Srinivas Thiruvadanthai, director of research at the Jerome Levy Forecasting Center, also is concerned that fiscal tightening in the United States ? from the roll-off of 2009 stimulus projects, cutbacks to city and state budgets and possible expiration of the payroll tax cut ? will further weaken the U.S. consumer, who accounts for the bulk of growth.

"Clearly Europe is in bad shape, and the global economic conditions are worsening too. If the U.S. consumer tires, the chances for recession are met," he said.

Since late September, the Levy Center has forecast that Europe's debt crisis will hit the United States through financial markets, its banks, weakened exports, lowered corporate profits and drag the United States into recession in 2012. Thiruvadanthai sees nothing to alter that picture.

European mess
European finance ministers meet again on Tuesday to review strengthening the region's bailout fund, seen only a month ago as the centerpiece for halting its debt crisis. But the sharp deterioration in eurozone debt prices, which sucked in Germany last week in a failed bund auction, has undercut how much the fund can be leveraged, leaving investors highly skeptical that politicians can use it to stem contagion.

Italy issues 8 billion euros in longer term debt on Tuesday. Two-year Italian paper already is priced a 8 percent, one full point above the yield considered affordable by a nation with a stalled economy. Belgium, downgraded from AA-plus to AA by S&P on Friday, raises cash a day earlier, with the cost of insuring its debt having hit a record level.

Goldman Sachs warned on Friday that the public sector funding problems, which are hurting bank profits, are restricting household and corporate credit in Europe. This "could turn the moderate recession we are forecasting into something more akin to the 2008/09 experience."

Ripples from the slowdown are felt as far away as Brazil. Its central bank is expected to lower interest rates on Wednesday for third time since August, by a hefty 50 basis points, to 11 percent.

For the United States, recession remains a minority view, though forecasts are being revised downward for 2012. The Institute of International Finance, for instance, noted near-term resilience in its latest forecast but storm clouds ahead.

As long as European leaders delay in delivering a fiscal union that can rescue the common currency, financial markets will remain in the driving seat and the growth picture shaky.

"The world is struggling along, with downside risks from a bust-up of the eurozone, or Greece, Italy and Spain leaving. It might be that Europe just runs out of time to fix its problems," said Paul Ashworth, economist at Capital Economics.

Reuters and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45459405/ns/business-stocks_and_economy/

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Adjunct Law Prof Blog: Legal Education Reform

? Education Law Jobs | Main

November 27, 2011

Legal Education Reform

On Nov. 25, 2011, the NY Times wrote an important editional about Legal Education. They explain that legal education is in crisis because of the focus on the case book method. However, legal education is in crisis because the professors who teach cannot practice law. I am serious. Most of the students do not realize that you can count on one hand the number of professors who have 5 years of practice or more. Many are not even admitted to the bar where they teach. Why? Because law schools focus on legal theory, and hiring people with fancy degrees. Practice is a hinderance.?

As many of you know, I also write law review articles. Professors have criticized some of what I have written because it is practice orientated. Isn't that what students are paying us to do?? Nothing is going to change until law schools hire professors with practical experience. Until then the old saying is very true. "Those who can't do teach"

Mitchell H. Rubinstein

November 27, 2011 in Law Schools | Permalink

Comments

Mitchell - New maxim: "Those who CAN do and teach are adjunct profs." Thanks for your observations here. Ron

Posted by: Ron Clark | Nov 27, 2011 6:07:01 PM

Post a comment

Source: http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/adjunctprofs/2011/11/legal-education-reform.html

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Editor who won Pulitzer for Estes scandal dies (AP)

LUBBOCK, Texas ? Oscar Griffin Jr., whose investigation of swindler Billie Sol Estes won a 1963 Pulitzer Prize for the small Texas newspaper where he worked, has died. He was 78.

Griffin was the editor and main writer at the Pecos Independent and Enterprise in West Texas when he chronicled how Estes, a one-time associate of then-Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, borrowed money to build fertilizer tanks that were never constructed.

A dozen major finance companies lost about $24 million in the scam. The fraud investigation and Estes' prosecution garnered national attention.

The Houston Chronicle hired Griffin after Estes' arrest. He later worked for the U.S. Department of Transportation under Elizabeth Dole.

Sam Houston Memorial Funeral Home-Willis spokeswoman Edith Kreger said Monday that Griffin died Nov. 23 in New Waverly.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obits/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111128/ap_on_re_us/us_obit_oscar_griffin

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T-Boz from TLC has filed for bankruptcy

The TLC group member, whose name is Tionne Watkins, owes creditors $768,643, reports TMZ. According to documents filed last month in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, most of the singer?s debt comes from mortgages on her $1.2 million house. The singer, 41, has reportedly not been managing her money well. Documents indicate T-Boz pulls in $11,700 a [...]

Source: http://www.celebritymound.com/t-boz-from-tlc-has-filed-for-bankruptcy/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=t-boz-from-tlc-has-filed-for-bankruptcy

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Patents case lost, S3 less appealing to HTC

Patents behind HTC's interest in S3 Graphics? Taiwan's HTC reevaluating its purchase of S3 after it lost its patents suit against Apple.

This isn?t a good week for?S3 Graphics. After S3 had its patent dispute against Apple dismissed by the U.S. International Trade Commission earlier this week, the company?s suitor HTC is now having second thoughts about its union.

Skip to next paragraph

HTC said that it will ?reevaluate? the $300 million S3 purchase,Bloomberg reports?? a move that makes clear what the Taiwanese phone maker?s main interest in the company was, and shows just how quickly fortunes can shift in the dirty business of patent litigation.

S3 won a patent ruling against Apple back in July, which centered on the use of image compression technology in Mac OSX. Shortly after that, HTC, which itself is in the midst of battles over patent battles with Apple,?announced its intention to purchase the company. But on Monday,?the ITC reversed S3?s July ruling and dismissed the case, which means HTC can no longer be certain about the superiority of S3?s patents over Apple.

S3 could still appeal the decision, and it also has another ITC case against Apple in the works, but right now it?s clearly not a very appealing purchase for HTC.

Also of interest:

Dylan?s Desk: The time to start a company is?now?
Review: Sonic Generations reminds us that Sonic used to be?cool

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/mP_Aael0zTo/Patents-case-lost-S3-less-appealing-to-HTC

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Monday, November 28, 2011

IRS Barks at Bow Wow to Cough Up $90K


Bow Wow may not be Lil Bow Wow anymore, but he's in a Lil trouble with the federal government over some back taxes. Like more than 90 grand worth.

A tax lien filed in Florida by the U.S. government says the rapper owes Uncle Sam $91,105.61 to be exact for unpaid taxes dating back to the year 2006.

Bow Wow took to his blog to dispute the report of his financial troubles, calling it “not true,” and advising his fans not to believe celebrity gossip outlets.

Bow Chicka Bow Wow

“We all know not to believe anything that the media writes or blogs,” Bow Wow wrote. “It’s their job to entertain the minds of the simple minded.” Deep.

He urged fans to ignore the report and turn their attention to the release of his now delayed album Underrated. Gotta pay down those debts somehow!

“Stay away from them damn blogs its bad for your health,” he then wrote.

“Remember Ima always keep it 100 with yall and let yall know the real on anything I got going on even if its bad if it’s the truth I'll own up to it.”

It's true. He proved it when he admitted fatherhood and suicidal thoughts.

[Photo: WENN.com]

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/11/irs-barks-at-bow-wow-to-cough-up-90k/

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

About the Advantages of Investing in Hoboken Real Estate | ironbde ...

There are a lot of things that you need to consider while investing in real estate. One of the major things that you would have to understand is the fact this is by far one of the most important investments that you will ever make in your lives and that is the reason why you should consider all the options before actually investing in anything specific. However if you are looking for something unique as well as beautiful and which also gives you access to the necessary facilities while giving you an excellent living experience you should consider looking at the options in hoboken real estate. This is a great place to invest in real estate for a lot of reasons. You have a lot of great communities out there and more importantly there are excellent housing options that can cater to all your needs efficiently hence making it an ideal place to buy your home.

Source: http://www.ironbde.com/about-the-advantages-of-investing-in-hoboken-real-estate/135/

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