Thursday, September 27, 2012

Reese Witherspoon welcomes 3rd baby to the world

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Reese Witherspoon has given birth to her third child, naming him after a place close to her heart.

Meredith O'Sullivan Wasson, Witherspoon's publicist, said Thursday that "Witherspoon and husband Jim Toth welcomed Tennessee James into their family today. Both mom and baby are healthy and the entire family is thrilled."

The 36-year-old "Legally Blonde" and "Walk the Line" star lived in Tennessee when she was young.

Witherspoon is already a mom to Ava, 13, and Deacon, 8, from her prior marriage to Ryan Phillippe. Toth is an agent for Creative Artists Agency.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/reese-witherspoon-welcomes-3rd-baby-world-161549218.html

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New Housing Market Policies Put Transferees in Good Position to Buy

Working for a relocation company, I?m privy to real estate trends in a variety of markets across the country, as well as the country as a whole. Surely, housing numbers are constantly fluctuating, but if you look at patterns over longer periods of time, they can tell you something important. Real estate has been my business for the past 25 years, so I?ve sailed through the ups, weathered the downs and managed through everything in between. That?s why I try to put housing numbers, and policies, into a broader perspective. Essentially, what is good for today may not be good for tomorrow ? and if it?s not good for tomorrow, are we really any better off in the long run? And is it important if we are?

In an effort to stir the economy, the FED recently announced that it will buy 40 billion dollars a month in mortgage bonds.? The theory is that cheaper funds will improve the sluggish housing market.? Although interest rates have remained at, or near, record lows for quite some time, this decision is an attempt to make more money available, and housing more affordable, for ?more people.? Does this sound familiar?

Politics aside, there is a problem with this scenario.? And, yes, we?ve seen it before. This set up will create similar problems to those that arose from sub-prime lending.? As more money becomes available at a lower interest rate, purchase power for home buyers will go up across the board.? For the same monthly payment, people will be able to buy a more expensive home.? But, so can everyone else.? The net effect is that home prices will start to creep up due to supply and demand.

In an election year, this looks great because the housing market is appearing to grow.? As home values increase, property taxes will also go up which will help prop state and local coffers. This would all be great ? if it was genuine. But, once again, this is a non-market driven artificial stimulus.? What happens when the FED stops pouring money into the mortgage bond market?? We can hope the recovery will pick up steam by that point, but there are no guarantees. The greater possibility is that, much similar to the Cash for Clunkers stimulus, housing sales will fall flat again in the following months as home prices have been inflated and cheap loans will have dried up.

As a result, now is a good time to buy and here is why:

  • The bond buying has just begun.? Interest rates are the lowest they have been, and the home prices are just beginning to climb. Today, you will be able to purchase a home closer to its real market value which will help you down the road when it is time to sell.
  • This is the off season.?? The busy spring and summer seasons have come to an end and there is still a significant inventory on the market. ?With fewer buyers actively looking, sellers are eager to unload their properties.
  • The rental market is tight.? Even with low interest rates, lenders are hesitant to loan money to anyone with debt loads and credit scores previously quite acceptable.? Therefore, the rental vacancy rate has dropped, forcing remaining options? to go up in price. This always makes home ownership, with its deductible mortgage interest, more attractive.
  • If you are upsizing, it is still a good move. The value you loose on a lower priced home should be offset by the value gained in a higher valued home that has lost the same percentage value.

Lenders are still cautious, so financing a home may still be a challenge.? If you have transferees who are moving, the first thing they will need to do is discuss their creditworthiness with at least one, if not two, reputable lenders.? Not only will this help them to focus on the right range, but they will also receive counsel on the right moves to make to maintain or achieve an acceptable credit score.

Further, ensure that your transferees have access to experts so that they can make informed decisions about buying and selling their homes with these new policies on deck.

Photo credit

Do you have anything to add? Please share below.

Source: http://blog.xonex.com/1645/relocation-issues-and-trends/new-housing-market-policies-put-transferees-in-good-position-to-buy

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NYC auction offers 125 meteorites for sale

NEW YORK (AP) ? A New York City auction will offer 125 meteorites for sale, including a large chunk of the moon and a 179-pound iron cosmic rock that evokes Edvard Munch's iconic painting "The Scream."

The sale, one of the largest of its kind, is being held by the Dallas-based Heritage Auctions on Oct. 14.

The sale also includes a large piece of the Peekskill meteorite, famous for puncturing a Chevy Malibu in 1992 about 50 miles north of Manhattan, and the largest complete slice of the most famous meteorite in the world, the Willamette, a huge specimen that is housed at the American Museum of Natural History in New York.

The moon rock has the highest pre-sale estimate of $340,000 to $380,000; less than 0.1 percent of all meteorites recovered are lunar in origin. The18-inch-tall meteorite dubbed "The Scream" is estimated at $175,000 to $225,000.

"When I first saw this meteorite (The Scream) I saw the resemblance in a heartbeat," said Darryl Pitt, who has consigned the piece to the auction. "It is sculpted in part by atmospheric entry and most significantly by its exposure to the elements on earth over millennia."

Three of the concave hallows are evocative of Munch's image of a man holding his head and screaming under a streaked sky. It is classified a Gibeon and was discovered in the Kalahari Desert in southern Africa.

More than half of the meteorites in the sale come from the Macovich collection, the world's largest grouping of iron meteorites. Specimens from the collection are found at the natural history museums in London, New York and Paris and The Smithsonian in Washington, D.C., among others. Its principal owner is Pitt, who said that 20 years ago all meteorites were selling for the same price irrespective of their aesthetic attributes.

"That has radically changed with the introduction of the first natural history auction in the mid-1990s," he said in an interview. "I was on a mission to popularize meteorites. I knew that the only way I would be able to attract interest on the part of the public was to offer objects that were more visually captivating."

"The overwhelming majority of meteorites are not aesthetic," he said.

The cover lot in the sale is of an iron meteorite with naturally-formed holes that resemble a mask. The catalog says it is "arguably the most exotically aesthetic" and was discovered by indigenous tribesmen in Namibia with a metal detector. It is estimated to bring $140,000 to $180,000.

The Peekskill piece has a pre-sale estimate of $47,500 to $55,000.

There are others that have lower estimates but come with interesting stories, like a small portion of a meteorite estimated at about $4,000 that fell from the sky in 1492. It was later chained up in a church so it couldn't fly back into orbit.

Meteorite prices today depend on many variables. But there are two main markets: one of aesthetic iron meteorites and the other is of samples whose value is predicated on attributes other than aesthetics, like a piece of the planet Mars.

About two dozen of the meteorites in the sale have museum provenance and have no reserve.

"The point is I wanted to create a sale that had something for everyone," Pitt said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nyc-auction-offers-125-meteorites-sale-162811320.html

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Snapjoy Prepares For Full Launch, Adds Brilliant ?Copy? Feature To Its Photo Offering

Snapshot 9:26:12 4:40 PMI'm a huge fan of taking photos. Let's just get that out of the way. The problem that I've always had is that I don't have one central place to put those photos. Sure, there's Flickr and iPhoto, but I haven't found a great solution that lets me host photos and share them in a useful way.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/9GP-CmIE994/

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Vanishing Electronics: Safer Medical Implants, Less Trash

Biodegradable electronics could one day be used in temporary implants that fight surgical infections or stimulate bone growth and then get absorbed by the body, researchers say.

Such vanishing devices could also be deployed en masse during emergencies such as oil spills and then fade away when no longer needed, scientists added. They also suggest these short-lived circuits might one day find use in disposable consumer products to help reduce the environmental impact posed by discarded electronics.

The idea suggests a very different philosophy from today's business as usual. The microchips or integrated circuits that make up the heart of modern electronics are typically designed to last as long as possible.

"If you look at the history of integrated circuits, one of their key appealing attributes is how they have no moving parts, so you can make devices without the wear and tear you'd get from having moving parts that'd have virtually infinite lifetimes," said researcher John Rogers, a materials scientist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

"Our thought was that maybe it'd be interesting to have integrated circuits that offer the performance of today's integrated circuits but have the opposite lifetime characteristic," Rogers told TechNewsDaily. "They'd offer stable performance, then vanish in water or bio-fluids at programmed times, engineered rates of dissolution."

The inspiration for transient electronics came from Rogers and his colleagues' work on biomedical implants such as electronics that help treat problems in the body or monitor life signs that include? temperature, heart rate, blood sugar levels and muscle, heart or brain activity. One of the most daunting challenges they face is biocompatibility ? making sure any implants they put in do not irritate the body, or invite rejection. [9 Cyborg Enhancements Available Right Now]

"One way to avoid the problem entirely is to just develop materials that disappear completely," Rogers said.

Over the course of three years, Rogers and his colleagues have created transient versions of all the components found in normal microchips. These include thin sheets of porous silicon; electrodes made of magnesium, an element normally found in the body; and encapsulation layers of magnesium oxide covered by a silk overcoat made from silkworm cocoons. These encapsulation layers are the first to dissolve, and the number of them can help dictate how long these electronics last ? days, weeks, months, perhaps even years.

To test these materials, the researchers devised a biomedical implant that used heat to fight bacterial infections in surgical wounds in mice. After three weeks, the researchers saw reduced levels of infection at the wound site and only faint residues of the implant. They also developed a fully transient 64-pixel digital camera.

Researchers envision vast opportunities for transient electronics. "You can imagine biomedical devices that get implanted in the body, monitor or affect a healing process, and after that healing is completed, they simply disappear, eliminating the need to fish them out again," Rogers said.

"You can imagine distributing them in the environment to monitor large-scale chemical spills," he said. "In those cases, you might want wireless sensors that transmit what's going on, but not forever ? only until the spill is cleaned up, after which the devices ideally just dissolve in a benign way, eliminating the need for recovery and disposal."

"A third area that's a bit more challenging but equally interesting is consumer electronics," Rogers added. "In some ways, it's great that normal integrated circuits last forever, but that might not necessarily be a good thing in a world where people today upgrade their smartphones every couple of years. We're inundated with discarded electronics, and it might be appealing to make new devices that just disappear in landfills, eliminating a huge waste stream we're increasingly having to deal with."

In the future, in addition to coming up with new applications for transient electronics, "we'd like to figure out how to manufacture these things at low cost, high volume and with sophisticated functions," Rogers said. "We want to leverage the manufacturing structures that already exist out there in the electronics industry."

The scientists detail their findings in tomorrow's (Sept. 28) issue of the journal Science.

This story was provided by TechNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow TechNewsDaily on Twitter @TechNewsDaily, or on Facebook.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/vanishing-electronics-safer-medical-implants-less-trash-182342707.html

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5 Ways to Celebrate National Dog Week | Pawcurious: With Pet ...

by Dr. V | Thursday | September 27, 2012 |

Well what do you know, it?s National Dog Week. I know August 26th is National Dog Day, that little factoid is emblazoned in my memory, but I didn?t realize that the fourth week of September is Dog Week and has been for 84 years. In a funny little coincidence, the mother is born on Dog Day and the daughter is born during Dog Week. Clearly this is in our blood. :)

I am so pleased that I will be spending the next two days in the company of animal lovers from around the world at the ACES International Conference in San Diego. I hope I bring back some fantastic stories. And in honor of the occasion, here?s 5 awesome ways you can celebrate this most auspicious of weeks.

1. Teach Your Dog a New Trick

No, it doesn?t have to be THIS fancy. Brody still doesn?t know ?shake?.

2. Take some toys/blankets/food to your local shelter

They always need them! Happy pups are more adoptable, and giving them appropriate stimulation is a big part of that.

3. Foster a pup in need

This is a great way to help a pet without making the lifelong commitment to taking them into the fold (although many people do!) Many dogs that do poorly in a shelter environment blossom under the one on one advantages of living in a home, and foster parents can proudly know they have helped make a special pet that much more adoptable. Petfinder has a great article about fostering pets.

4. Make your dog a special treat

I made EIGHT special treats yesterday, not because I suddenly felt the need to spend seven hours in the kitchen but because I was filming a series of Pawcurious favorites for Pet World Insider. Brody and Koa reaped the benefits and will for the rest of the week. Bronuts and cupcakes and jerky and turbacons and oh, how they were happy.

Dr. V and Robert Semrow from Pet World Insider whip up a Dog Week Celebration Buffet.

5. Take your dog for a walk.

Isn?t it great that this one simple act is enough for your dog to be happy? But if you want to go extra fancy, you can celebrate National Dog Week and National Rollerskating Week (it?s that too!) at the same time and go rollerjoring. Oh, yeah. Seriously, you need to watch this person fly:

On second thought, helmetless = closed head injury waiting to happen. Maybe canicross would be a better choice.

What?s your favorite way to celebrate canines?

Source: http://pawcurious.com/2012/09/5-ways-to-celebrate-national-dog-week/

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