Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Yahoo's 3Q earnings, revenue drop

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Yahoo is regaining its appeal among investors a lot faster than with the online advertisers who generate most of its revenue.


The company's latest quarterly results released Tuesday are the latest to underscore CEO Marissa Mayer's challenges even as Yahoo's stock continues to soar under her leadership.


Yahoo Inc. earned $297 million, or 28 cents per share, in the three months ending in September. That's a 91 percent drop from nearly $3.2 billion, or $2.64 per share, at the same time last year.


It wasn't an apples-to-apples comparison because last year's profit was lifted by a $2.8 billion windfall from Yahoo's sale of part of its stake in Alibaba Group.


Revenue fell 5 percent from last year to $1.1 billion.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/yahoos-3q-earnings-revenue-drop-202642343--finance.html
Tags: columbus day   emily blunt   Cody Rhodes   amc   comic con  

Ford's Theatre in DC to reopen with private funds

WASHINGTON (AP) — Ford's Theatre will reopen its doors and resume performances Wednesday, using private funding, even though the government shutdown has continued into a third week.


Theater officials announced Tuesday that the national historic site and performance space will reopen Wednesday. Theater trustee Ronald O. Perelman, the chairman and CEO of MacAndrews and Forbes Holdings Inc., donated $25,000 in emergency funding to pay for the theater's operations for the next eight days.


Ford's Theatre, where President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated, is a National Park Service site. A private group runs the theater's programming.


On Wednesday, the theater will resume performances of "The Laramie Project," which is part of the theater's Lincoln Legacy Project focusing on diversity and equality. The production marks 15 years since Matthew Shepard, a gay college student, was abducted and killed in Laramie, Wyo. Remaining tickets are $25 each.


The Ford's Theatre Society has been losing about $100,000 in revenue per week since the theater went dark at the start of the highly anticipated "Laramie Project" production due to the government shutdown, said spokeswoman Lauren Beyea. The show will run through Oct. 27, but will not be extended because the actors have other commitments.


An agreement was made to reopen Ford's Theatre after several states agreed to provide funding to reopen national parks in other areas. The National Park Service agreed to a similar arrangement for the theater.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fords-theatre-dc-reopen-private-funds-210722833.html
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Mark Rainery: Full Backcountry Part



Posted by: Evan Litsios / added: 10.15.2013 / Back to What Up


Mark Rainery knows how to ride his snowboard. Check out his full part from last season. It's clean, and full of hairy but fun-looking lines, filmed in Montana and Alaska. Well done, Mark.



Not Another Full Part! - Mark Rainery 12/13 from Mark Rainery on Vimeo.





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Source: http://www.frqncy.com/news/2013/10/15/mark-rainery-full-backcountry-part?utm_campaign=blog_feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_source=feed_reader
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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Obamacare Is a Big, Ugly Hairball


It went downhill from there. How many people had signed up? (She didn’t know.) Why don’t the computers work? Why do big businesses get to delay it for a year when individuals don’t? What about the businesses that are cutting people’s hours to avoid facing the law? What about the people who will have to pay a penalty if they don’t want it? Can people really be smart consumers when the choices they will have to make are so complicated? Can you guys run it okay? Why is all of this so hard? Then he summed up the problem in a nutshell. “So this is a system that has been jerry-rigged to deal with the crazy people.” Obamacare was jerry-rigged in a country where single-payer health care is not an option. It was jerry-rigged to deal not only with the crazy people, but with the doctors’ lobby, the pharma lobby and a thousand other interest groups. It was arguably the best shot Mr. Obama had at bringing decent health care to everyone. But even its supporters admit that it’s a big, ugly hairball. And, as Mr. Stewart said, fighting off the crazy people is frustrating when you have to defend something so flawed.






Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2013/10/14/obamacare_is_a_big_ugly_hairball_317767.html
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Apple Will Announce the New iPads on Oct. 22nd

Apple Will Announce the New iPads on Oct. 22nd

As was foretold by the ancients, Apple will hold its holiday iPad jamboree on October 22nd. We'll see some new tablets, sure. But there also might be a trove of other odds and ends awaiting us next week.

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/apple-will-announce-the-new-ipads-on-oct-22nd-1445584009
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Apple confirms October 22nd event, still has 'a lot to cover'

The rumors, they are true. Apple's ready to take the wraps off of something big next week, just in time to seriously impact our collective holiday spending -- and just a little more than a month after that big iPhone event. In fact, the invite alludes to that recent event by noting that the company ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/0cB3zJ_J4X4/
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Researchers fake sense of touch in monkey brains, hope to build a better prosthetic



Medical prosthetics have come a long way in recent years, but with a few exceptions, artificial limbs still lack the tactility of their fleshy counterparts. Scientists at the University of Chicago are looking to plug those sensory gaps by researching how to simulate touch sensations within the brain, via electrical impulses. By implanting electrodes into the area of the brain that governs the five senses, scientists used electrical stimulation to artificially create feelings of touch and pressure in test monkeys. The Phoenixes posit that this could increase the dexterity of upper-limb neuroprosthetics without extensive patient training and that this is an important step toward restoring touch to those who've lost it, like those with spinal cord injuries. While the scientists realize these operations require incredibly invasive surgery, they believe the procedure's potential could eventually justify the risk for those who don't have other options.


Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/15/university-of-chicago-neuroprosthesis-touch/?ncid=rss_truncated
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A Night At The Rock: Former Alcatraz Inmate Journeys Back





Bill Baker returned to Alcatraz for the first time since he was an inmate there more than 50 years ago.



Laura Sullivan/NPR


Bill Baker returned to Alcatraz for the first time since he was an inmate there more than 50 years ago.


Laura Sullivan/NPR


For 29 years, Alcatraz — the notorious prison off the coast of San Francisco — housed some of the nation's worst criminals: Al Capone, Machine Gun Kelly, Birdman Robert Stroud.


Today, 50 years after it closed, it's a museum. And earlier this year, the National Park Service gave Bill Baker, a former inmate, special permission to stay the night in his old cell. He was 24 when he was transferred to The Rock. Today, he's 80.


Baker, who was born in Kentucky during the Great Depression, has spent a lot of his life in and out of federal prison. Almost always for the same thing — cashing fraudulent checks.





Alcatraz, located in the San Francisco Bay, stopped operating as a prison 50 years ago.



Laura Sullivan/NPR


Alcatraz, located in the San Francisco Bay, stopped operating as a prison 50 years ago.


Laura Sullivan/NPR


By 1957, he was already an accomplished thief serving time in Leavenworth prison. He was never a violent criminal, but he had a penchant for escaping. So the federal Bureau of Prisons transferred him to Alcatraz to finish the last three years of his sentence.


Voyage To The Rock


It was a foggy January morning 56 years ago when he first boarded a boat to a prison built on an island. He never thought he would do it again half a century later — voluntarily, with tourists.


"I wasn't very happy the last time I was on a boat over here," he said as he began his recent journey. "We were all cuffed up and chained and we couldn't see shore from any direction because of the fog. And we didn't know where we were."


Once the boat docked at Alcatraz, he and the tourists funneled inside the prison and into the same dark, damp hallway he walked through as an inmate. Except now, instead of a shower room, the hallway ends in a gift shop.


At the front of the gift shop, Baker saw a former Alcatraz prison guard named Pat Mahoney, signing books at the author's desk with his wife.


He and Mahoney quickly sounded like old friends, chatting about people they remembered from years ago.


Baker then made his way up the stairs to the place he had come to see: the cell block. It has three tiers of faded yellow and green cells with peeling paint and rusting bars. But Baker said, to him, it looks almost the same.


He stood in the middle of a throng of tourists listening to an audio walking tour, while staring up at the cells.


"I don't know if it's hard or not," to be back inside Alcatraz, he said quietly. "I don't really know... I haven't analyzed that part of it yet and I intend to," he said. "One of the reasons I'm staying overnight is so maybe I can figure some things out."





Bill Baker stares up at the rows of empty cells during his visit to the prison.



Laura Sullivan/NPR


Bill Baker stares up at the rows of empty cells during his visit to the prison.


Laura Sullivan/NPR


And just like that, Baker started walking down one corridor to another, like he had been there yesterday.


Remembering His 'Shade Tree'


He walked to the prison rec yard, one of his favorite places while imprisoned here, stopping in front of a small patch of dirt. He said he once planted a tree there, and watered it everyday for weeks and watched it grow.


"I was going to have me a shade tree when it was over," he said.


But one day all that watering caught the eye of a guard.


"He watched me a lot [because] he hated me. And he came over and said 'What are you watering... these weeds for? They don't need watering.' I [said] 'Oh, just something to do, you know'," Baker recalled.


The next day, Baker said, all the weeds and his tree were gone.


"Oh I was mad. I was madder than hell," he said pausing. "It was something that was growing, you know it was life."


As a helicopter carrying tourists buzzed overhead, Baker stood in the prison yard and began to tremble. He cursed out loud about the guard until he fell against the prison wall crying.


He sat out in that concrete yard for a while, watching the boats pass under the Golden Gate Bridge.


Baker was raised mostly by relatives. His mother gave him up with he was three. She told him she could not afford to keep him. By 16, he was one his own.


He was married once; he doesn't have any children. He said he learned all his best tricks about how to cash bad checks here on Alcatraz — and kept at it long after he left.


Nighttime On The Rock


Back inside rangers were ushering the last of the tourists out the door. As darkness fell, there were only a few rangers left, locking the doors.


"It's getting weirder by the minute," Baker said as he stood in the middle of the empty prison. "Reckon there really is ghosts in here?"


Baker headed up to find his old cell. It was just as he remembered: small and cramped, a metal bed, a sink and a desk.


He said he spent most of the time in his cell day dreaming, "taking trips" in his mind to other places.


Being back, he said, was making him a little anxious.


"But see I know I'm leaving here tomorrow. I'm a short timer. I can count the hours down now," he said, sounding like he was trying to reassure himself.





Bill Baker, now 80, arrived at The Rock as an inmate in 1957. He has written about his experiences at the prison in the book Alcatraz-1259.



Laura Sullivan/NPR


Bill Baker, now 80, arrived at The Rock as an inmate in 1957. He has written about his experiences at the prison in the book Alcatraz-1259.


Laura Sullivan/NPR


He wandered around the prison late into the night, walking the deserted tiers and darkened hallways. He browsed the empty gift shop and checked out the warden's office, which Baker had never seen. He never saw any ghosts.


When he returned to his cell – sometime around 1 a.m. — park rangers had left him his prison file that they found in the archives.


"This is funny to read," he said flipping through the file. He read some of the comments: "Not in his cell during count, visiting another inmate's cells, and kicked a bowl or food."


"That is just so funny," Baker laughed.


He read another comment: "He apologized for his behavior."


"I don't think that's true," Baker said. "I don't remember ever apologizing for my behavior."


Sitting in his old cell, he thought about why he wanted to come back here.


"I just wonder if I can confront that crazy kid in this cell," he said. Baker said he would tell his younger self "you stupid son of a bitch what's wrong with you."


He continues: "But it ain't that I don't understand a little bit... I still like a little excitement," he said.


But, Baker said, he wouldn't change his life. He just wishes he knew earlier what he knows now.


"If I could go back and have my same brain as it is right now in the body of a young kid, I would do it entirely different. But I know without a doubt that no one could, if I still had the brain of that kid, you couldn't tell me nothing.," he said.


He tried to go to sleep on the rusty metal beds so many others had slept on 50 years before, but he couldn't.


He had an idea. He realized he had never been outside at night.


He found his way to the front of the prison.


"Look at that," he said as the fog was rolling in over the Bay.


The lights of San Francisco were sparkling in the water.


"Look at that view we missed all those years."


The next morning, at the crack of dawn, thousands of birds woke up. Baker wasn't in his cell. It wasn't hard to guess where an ex-convict would go if he woke up again in prison — outside.


"[I've] been out here since 5:30," he said.


He doesn't remember there being so many birds.


"I guess they figure it's theirs now," he said.


But when he's asked if he's happy to give the island back over to them, he responds:


"You know what? I feel like I own part of this island. I don't know if that's a good thing or not, but I do. I feel like I have squatters rights or something, you know, it's part mine."


Baker then sat down on a bench in the morning fog, on an empty island in the middle of the San Francisco bay.


He's no longer an inmate, but not quite a tourist.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/14/231536397/a-night-at-the-rock-former-alcatraz-inmate-journeys-back?ft=1&f=1003
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Elementary, my dear Watson!




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Elementary, my dear Watson!


A Sherlock Holmes Roleplay, set in the victorian age, open for canon and original characters



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Sunday, October 13, 2013

UTHealth's Cesar Arias earns infectious diseases award

UTHealth's Cesar Arias earns infectious diseases award


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Public release date: 11-Oct-2013
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Contact: Robert Cahill
Robert.Cahill@uth.tmc.edu
713-500-3030
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston






Cesar Arias, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) Medical School, was bestowed the Oswald Avery Award for Early Achievement from the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA).


The presentation was made on Oct. 3 in San Francisco at an annual meeting of the IDSA, the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America, the HIV Medicine Association and the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society. The meeting is called IDWeek 2013.


The award recognizes outstanding achievement in an area of infectious diseases by a member of the IDSA who is 45 years of age or younger.


Arias' research is focused on stemming the spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria known as superbugs, which are considered one of the major health threats of the 21st Century. Arias operates research laboratories in the United States and Colombia.


"Dr. Arias received the top award for early achievement by a clinician scientist in infectious diseases in the United States. Dr. Arias' imaginative research focuses on antibiotic resistance that causes countless suffering and death, and costs our country more than $30 billion each year," said Herbert DuPont, M.D., past president of the IDSA and director of the Center for Infectious Diseases at The University of Texas School of Public Health, part of UTHealth.


"Dr. Arias' research is global and the impressive center he established in Colombia adds to his important contributions to the field and furthers international medical knowledge on antibiotic resistance recognizing the worldwide movement of disease-causing microbes," said DuPont, holder of the Mary W. Kelsey Chair in the Medical Sciences at the UTHealth Medical School


Arias leads the Laboratory for Antimicrobial Research at the UTHealth Medical School in the Texas Medical Center. Receiving support from the National Institutes of Health, this laboratory is studying the clinical and molecular aspects of antibiotic resistance in an effort to better understand the complex mechanisms by which superbugs become resistant to antibiotics. Researchers then design strategies to fight superbugs.


Arias is also founder and scientific director of the Molecular Genetics and Antimicrobial Resistance Unit at Universidad El Bosque in Bogota, Colombia. This research unit, created in 2000 with the support of the British Wellcome Trust, is a major surveillance center for resistance pathogens in South America.


Working together, researchers in these laboratories have identified novel mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance and unusual trends in antibiotic-resistant bacteria. In addition, they have characterized the emergence of certain superbugs.


For his innovative work, Arias has been a recipient of a Wellcome Trust International Fellowship, a NIH Pathway to Independence Award (K99/R00) and the Isidro Zavala Trujillo Medal by the Pan-American Society of Infectious Diseases.


Arias received his medical degree from Universidad El Bosque, Bogota, Colombia in 1992. He obtained his MSc in clinical microbiology from the University of London in 1996. In 2000, he received his Ph.D. in molecular biology and microbiology biochemistry from The University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Arias carried out his internal medicine residency/infectious disease fellowship at the UTHealth Medical School and The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. He is on the medical staff of Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center and Harris Health Lyndon B. Johnson Hospital.


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UTHealth's Cesar Arias earns infectious diseases award


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 11-Oct-2013
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Contact: Robert Cahill
Robert.Cahill@uth.tmc.edu
713-500-3030
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston






Cesar Arias, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) Medical School, was bestowed the Oswald Avery Award for Early Achievement from the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA).


The presentation was made on Oct. 3 in San Francisco at an annual meeting of the IDSA, the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America, the HIV Medicine Association and the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society. The meeting is called IDWeek 2013.


The award recognizes outstanding achievement in an area of infectious diseases by a member of the IDSA who is 45 years of age or younger.


Arias' research is focused on stemming the spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria known as superbugs, which are considered one of the major health threats of the 21st Century. Arias operates research laboratories in the United States and Colombia.


"Dr. Arias received the top award for early achievement by a clinician scientist in infectious diseases in the United States. Dr. Arias' imaginative research focuses on antibiotic resistance that causes countless suffering and death, and costs our country more than $30 billion each year," said Herbert DuPont, M.D., past president of the IDSA and director of the Center for Infectious Diseases at The University of Texas School of Public Health, part of UTHealth.


"Dr. Arias' research is global and the impressive center he established in Colombia adds to his important contributions to the field and furthers international medical knowledge on antibiotic resistance recognizing the worldwide movement of disease-causing microbes," said DuPont, holder of the Mary W. Kelsey Chair in the Medical Sciences at the UTHealth Medical School


Arias leads the Laboratory for Antimicrobial Research at the UTHealth Medical School in the Texas Medical Center. Receiving support from the National Institutes of Health, this laboratory is studying the clinical and molecular aspects of antibiotic resistance in an effort to better understand the complex mechanisms by which superbugs become resistant to antibiotics. Researchers then design strategies to fight superbugs.


Arias is also founder and scientific director of the Molecular Genetics and Antimicrobial Resistance Unit at Universidad El Bosque in Bogota, Colombia. This research unit, created in 2000 with the support of the British Wellcome Trust, is a major surveillance center for resistance pathogens in South America.


Working together, researchers in these laboratories have identified novel mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance and unusual trends in antibiotic-resistant bacteria. In addition, they have characterized the emergence of certain superbugs.


For his innovative work, Arias has been a recipient of a Wellcome Trust International Fellowship, a NIH Pathway to Independence Award (K99/R00) and the Isidro Zavala Trujillo Medal by the Pan-American Society of Infectious Diseases.


Arias received his medical degree from Universidad El Bosque, Bogota, Colombia in 1992. He obtained his MSc in clinical microbiology from the University of London in 1996. In 2000, he received his Ph.D. in molecular biology and microbiology biochemistry from The University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Arias carried out his internal medicine residency/infectious disease fellowship at the UTHealth Medical School and The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. He is on the medical staff of Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center and Harris Health Lyndon B. Johnson Hospital.


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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/uoth-uca101113.php
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Thursday, October 10, 2013

Man fired over religious beard wins court fight

SEATTLE (AP) — A Seattle-area Muslim man who said his former employer fired him because of the beard he wears for religious reason has been awarded more than $66,000, although most of that will go to attorney fees.


Abdulkadir Omar said he doesn't care about the money.


"It's not even about the money," he said. "It's about standing up for something you believe in."


In 2011, Omar filed his federal lawsuit in Seattle against Sacramento, Calif.-based American Patriot Security, seeking back pay and unspecified damages for emotional pain and loss of enjoyment of life, among other reasons.


According to the lawsuit, Omar was hired by a local manager of the security company in May 2009 and earned $9 an hour guarding a FedEx warehouse in Kent, Wash. He said he started the same day he was hired, and was not told about the clean-shaven policy.


In November 2009, a supervisor from headquarters told him he had to shave his beard because of the policy. Omar refused, saying his beard is part of his religious beliefs. He was suspended, and fired the following spring, the lawsuit said.


An email inquiry to the security company on Wednesday was not immediately returned.


"I truly hope that my case shows millions of American Muslims when they stand up whether it's at work or school, that they will win," Omar said. "I stood up and I won. I want my case to serve as an example."


Born in Yemen, Omar said he immigrated to the United States when he was 10.


"I grew up in this country, I've been living here all of my life. Just like everybody else, I'm an American," he said.


The default judgment says that more than $50,000 of the $66,000 award is for attorney fees, while most of the rest goes to Omar, who said he was unemployed for nine months after being dismissed by American Patriot.


Omar sued the security firm with the help of the Washington chapter of the Council for American-Islamic Relations.


"Religious freedom is the law of the land," said Arsalan Bukhari, executive director of the Washington state CAIR office. "I think religious freedom is what makes American unique and we have very clear laws that states employers, schools must accommodate religious observances."


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/man-fired-over-religious-beard-wins-court-fight-171831713.html
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Tuesday, March 5, 2013

New report analyzes potential impact of sequestration on CHCs and underserved communities

New report analyzes potential impact of sequestration on CHCs and underserved communities [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 4-Mar-2013
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Contact: Kathy Fackelmann
kfackelmann@gwu.edu
202-994-8354
George Washington University

Nation's CHCs at risk to lose $120 million in grant funding, reducing visit capacity by 3 million visits

WASHINGTON and NEW YORK A new report by the Geiger Gibson/RCHN Community Health Foundation Research Collaborative at the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services (SPHHS) examines the potential impact of sequestration on community health centers and their patients and communities. "Assessing the Potential Impact of Sequestration on Community Health Centers, Patients, and Medically Underserved Communities" estimates that the nation's 1,200 federally funded health centers will lose $120 million in grant funding, and that this funding drop can be expected to translate into 900,000 fewer patients served and 3 million fewer visits. Furthermore, the authors find that because of its timing, sequestration's impact will be concentrated in the second half of FY 2013, thereby necessitating dramatic and immediate programmatic reductions that in turn will affect the local economies in which health centers operate.

"Given who health centers serve and where they are located, it is not surprising that our findings reveal that the funding reductions will hit the most vulnerable patients the hardest," says lead author Peter Shin, PhD, MPH, an associate professor of health policy at SPHHS.

Sequestration is expected to affect all 8,500 health center service locations. The personnel and service cuts needed to absorb $120 million in grant funding losses can be expected to result in an additional loss of $230 million in third party insurance revenues needed to support operations. The analysis shows that the cuts will disproportionately impact the poorest Americans, children, young families, and members of ethnic and racial minority groups, as well individuals with serious and chronic health care needs. Among the 900,000 patients losing access to health center services:

  • 72% will have family incomes below the federal poverty level (FPL); virtually all will have family incomes below twice the FPL;
  • 32% will be children under 18;
  • 57% will be members of racial/ethnic minority populations;
  • 26% will be residents of the Southeastern and South Central states, where poverty is the deepest and Medicaid coverage of poor adults is the most limited;
  • 52% will have two or more chronic health conditions.

"Our communities rely on health centers to provide care to more than 20 million people each year, and that number was expected to increase dramatically when the Affordable Care Act took full effect, " said Julio Bellber, President and CEO of the RCHN Community Health Foundation. "The funding cuts are a real threat to the health and well-being of our medically disenfranchised communities."

###

The report can be accessed by clicking here: http://sphhs.gwu.edu/departments/healthpolicy/publications/GGRCHN.pdf

About the Geiger Gibson / RCHN Community Health Foundation Research Collaborative:

The Geiger Gibson Program in Community Health Policy, established in 2003 and named after human rights and health center pioneers Drs. H. Jack Geiger and Count Gibson, is part of the School of Public Health and Health Services at The George Washington University. It focuses on the history and contributions of health centers and the major policy issues that affect health centers, their communities, and the patients that they serve. Additional information about the Research Collaborative can be found online at www.gwumc.edu/sphhs/departments/healthpolicy/ggprogram or at rchnfoundation.org.

About the RCHN Community Health Foundation:

The RCHN Community Health Foundation is a not-for-profit operating foundation established to support community health centers through strategic investment, outreach, education, and cutting-edge health policy research. The only foundation in the U.S. dedicated solely to community health centers, RCHN CHF builds on a long-standing commitment to providing accessible, high-quality, community-based healthcare services for underserved and medically vulnerable populations. The Foundation's gift to the Geiger Gibson program supports health center research and scholarship. For more information, visit www.rchnfoundation.org.

About the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services:

Established in July 1997, the School of Public Health and Health Services brought together three longstanding university programs in the schools of medicine, business, and education and is now the only school of public health in the nation's capital. Today, more than 1,100 students from nearly every U.S. state and more than 40 nations pursue undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral-level degrees in public health. http://sphhs.gwu.edu/


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New report analyzes potential impact of sequestration on CHCs and underserved communities [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 4-Mar-2013
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Contact: Kathy Fackelmann
kfackelmann@gwu.edu
202-994-8354
George Washington University

Nation's CHCs at risk to lose $120 million in grant funding, reducing visit capacity by 3 million visits

WASHINGTON and NEW YORK A new report by the Geiger Gibson/RCHN Community Health Foundation Research Collaborative at the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services (SPHHS) examines the potential impact of sequestration on community health centers and their patients and communities. "Assessing the Potential Impact of Sequestration on Community Health Centers, Patients, and Medically Underserved Communities" estimates that the nation's 1,200 federally funded health centers will lose $120 million in grant funding, and that this funding drop can be expected to translate into 900,000 fewer patients served and 3 million fewer visits. Furthermore, the authors find that because of its timing, sequestration's impact will be concentrated in the second half of FY 2013, thereby necessitating dramatic and immediate programmatic reductions that in turn will affect the local economies in which health centers operate.

"Given who health centers serve and where they are located, it is not surprising that our findings reveal that the funding reductions will hit the most vulnerable patients the hardest," says lead author Peter Shin, PhD, MPH, an associate professor of health policy at SPHHS.

Sequestration is expected to affect all 8,500 health center service locations. The personnel and service cuts needed to absorb $120 million in grant funding losses can be expected to result in an additional loss of $230 million in third party insurance revenues needed to support operations. The analysis shows that the cuts will disproportionately impact the poorest Americans, children, young families, and members of ethnic and racial minority groups, as well individuals with serious and chronic health care needs. Among the 900,000 patients losing access to health center services:

  • 72% will have family incomes below the federal poverty level (FPL); virtually all will have family incomes below twice the FPL;
  • 32% will be children under 18;
  • 57% will be members of racial/ethnic minority populations;
  • 26% will be residents of the Southeastern and South Central states, where poverty is the deepest and Medicaid coverage of poor adults is the most limited;
  • 52% will have two or more chronic health conditions.

"Our communities rely on health centers to provide care to more than 20 million people each year, and that number was expected to increase dramatically when the Affordable Care Act took full effect, " said Julio Bellber, President and CEO of the RCHN Community Health Foundation. "The funding cuts are a real threat to the health and well-being of our medically disenfranchised communities."

###

The report can be accessed by clicking here: http://sphhs.gwu.edu/departments/healthpolicy/publications/GGRCHN.pdf

About the Geiger Gibson / RCHN Community Health Foundation Research Collaborative:

The Geiger Gibson Program in Community Health Policy, established in 2003 and named after human rights and health center pioneers Drs. H. Jack Geiger and Count Gibson, is part of the School of Public Health and Health Services at The George Washington University. It focuses on the history and contributions of health centers and the major policy issues that affect health centers, their communities, and the patients that they serve. Additional information about the Research Collaborative can be found online at www.gwumc.edu/sphhs/departments/healthpolicy/ggprogram or at rchnfoundation.org.

About the RCHN Community Health Foundation:

The RCHN Community Health Foundation is a not-for-profit operating foundation established to support community health centers through strategic investment, outreach, education, and cutting-edge health policy research. The only foundation in the U.S. dedicated solely to community health centers, RCHN CHF builds on a long-standing commitment to providing accessible, high-quality, community-based healthcare services for underserved and medically vulnerable populations. The Foundation's gift to the Geiger Gibson program supports health center research and scholarship. For more information, visit www.rchnfoundation.org.

About the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services:

Established in July 1997, the School of Public Health and Health Services brought together three longstanding university programs in the schools of medicine, business, and education and is now the only school of public health in the nation's capital. Today, more than 1,100 students from nearly every U.S. state and more than 40 nations pursue undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral-level degrees in public health. http://sphhs.gwu.edu/


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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/gwu-nra030413.php

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Friday, March 1, 2013

AOL Confirms Susan Lyne As CEO Of Brand Group, Artie Minson Out As COO Role Goes (Memo)

susan lyneAOL today confirmed a couple of big changes at the top of the company, as first reported yesterday by Bloomberg and AllThingsD. Susan Lyne, the exec who had previously been at Gilt Groupe, is the new CEO of AOL's Brand Group (including TechCrunch). Meanwhile, Artie Minson is stepping down as COO as the role gets restructured.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/su0X8C9I3ME/

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Tim Tebow cancels controversial church appearance

Tim Tebow cancels controversial church appearance

Jets quarterback 'needed to avoid controversy at this time'

By REUTERS

New York Jets quarterback Tim Tebow, a devout Christian, has canceled an appearance at the Dallas mega-church led by a prominent pastor who has sparked controversy over remarks he made from the pulpit about gays and other religions.

Tebow, 25, who famously kneels in prayer on the football field in a move that has come to be known as "Tebowing", called off his April 28 appearance in a series of Twitter messages on Thursday.

"While I was looking forward to sharing a message of hope and Christ's unconditional love with the faithful members of the historic First Baptist Church of Dallas in April, due to new information that has been brought to my attention, I have decided to cancel my upcoming appearance," he said.

The First Baptist Church in Dallas, which had invited Tebow to celebrate the opening of its $130 million campus, is led by Robert Jeffress, a TV evangelist who has criticized gays and other faiths, such as Islam and Mormonism.

Tebow, whose parents are missionaries, called Jeffress on Wednesday evening and said he "needed to avoid controversy at this time, but would like to come to First Baptist Dallas to speak at a future date," according to a statement from the church.

The church on Thursday blamed news media for having "grossly misrepresented" Jeffress' opinions and for putting pressure on Tebow.

It said: "The reason for the recent media fire storm is not because the Word of God has changed, but because society has changed."

Jeffress on Thursday softened past statements he has made criticizing the Roman Catholic Church, but defended his position on gays and lesbians.

"I believe that homosexuality is a sin, just like adultery," Jeffress told CNN. "Sex should be between a man and a woman. God created sex. He knows how it works best," Jeffress said.

Tebow was a first-round draft pick in 2010 and the first college sophomore to win the Heisman Trophy, according to his website. Tebow was traded by the Denver Broncos to the Jets, but saw little playing time during the 2012 season.



Source: http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Football/NFL/2013/02/21/20597896.html?cid=rsssportsnfl

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Friday, February 22, 2013

Shoe In Money Is Live! - ShoeMoney Internet Marketing Blog

Since we created the ShoeMoney System in 2009 ago many people have been asking when I was going to release a new product.

As you can imagine since then I have learned a TON and have been taking notes since on what I would do different with a new product.

Today I am happy to announce the launch of the Shoe In Money System.

I am really proud of this and know it will help a lot of people getting started in creating an online revenue stream.

The product has 7 core modules covering all the building blocks to get started PLUS, ?and this is what I feel is a huge bonus is the 30 day action plan. ?This way you are not overwhelmed with content and can get started at your pace. ?Of course you get all of the content right away but this 30 day course will help ensure your success:

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http://shmny.me/shoeinsystem

For this launch I have set the price point to $47 and so far the reviews have been amazing!

?Jeremy holy cow the Shoe In Money system is awesome. I have paid thousands of dollars for other products that were junk. Just the 30 day action plan is priceless for me. Thank you!? ? Anna

?ShoeMoney honestly I first purchased it to get a signed copy of your book but once I logged in I was blown away. Great straight forward content. I love how you teach from your own experiences both failures and successes. Saves guys like me a ton of money and time.? ? Justin

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Go here to get more information now:

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Source: http://www.shoemoney.com/2013/02/21/shoe-in-money-is-live

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Connecticut bill would give animals courtroom advocates

By Bob Connors, NBCConnecticut.com

A Connecticut legislator has proposed a bill that would allow the appointment of an advocate to act on behalf of an animal during court proceedings.

Connecticut State Rep. Diana Urban proposed the bill, known as HB 6310, "An Act Concerning Animal Advocates in Court Proceedings." It would permit a veterinarian with the Department of Agriculture to be appointed as an advocate for an animal whose welfare or custody is the subject of a civil or criminal court proceeding.

"HB 6310 would give the option for an advocate in court for an egregiously injured animal," said Urban, a Democrat from North Stonington, Conn. "This would enable the animal's injury to be identified as a red flag for future violent behavior. We are putting together a public/private partnership with the state Department of Agriculture and nonprofit rescue groups including Connecticut Votes for Animals to be available to speak for the animals in court."


Also on NBCConnecticut.com: New backlash over Conn. state budget

Urban was joined at a news conference Thursday by Asa Palmer, a North Stonington high school student who discovered two of the?cows on his family farm shot in the face in January. One of the cows had to be euthanized.

"If this was in place today, Asa Palmer could request an advocate for his young cow, 'Angel,' who was shot in the face and left with her jaw hanging off," Urban said.

Two men have been charged with shooting Palmer's cows.

The bill, which is awaiting action in the legislature's Judiciary Committee, has the support of other lawmakers.

Also on NBCConnecticut.com: Caregiver charged after elderly woman is found on snow bank

"Much like our children who cannot advocate on behalf of themselves, innocent animals that are abused or worse, killed, deserve that same right," said Rep. Brenda Kupchick, a Republican from Fairfield, Conn. "Violence of any type is unacceptable and we must do whatever we can to give a voice to those who cannot speak for themselves."

It was not clear if or when the Judiciary Committee would take action on Urban's bill.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/22/17058711-animal-attorneys-connecticut-bill-would-allow-advocates-to-speak-for-animals-in-court?lite

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Monday, February 4, 2013

Report: FAA lags on fulfilling airline safety law

FILE - In this Feb. 12, 2009, file photo, the wreckage of Continental flight 3407 lies amid smoke at the scene after crashing into a suburban Buffalo home and erupting into flames, killing all 48 people aboard and at least one person on the ground, according to authorities. Faced with substantial industry opposition, federal regulators are struggling to implement a sweeping aviation safety law enacted in the wake of the last fatal U.S. airline crash nearly four years ago, according to a report by a government watchdog. The Federal Aviation Administration is experiencing lengthy delays in putting in place rules required by the law to increase the amount of experience necessary to be an airline pilot, provide more realistic pilot training and create a program where experienced captains mentor less experienced first officers, according to the report by the Department of Transportation?s Inspector General. (AP Photo/Dave Sherman, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 12, 2009, file photo, the wreckage of Continental flight 3407 lies amid smoke at the scene after crashing into a suburban Buffalo home and erupting into flames, killing all 48 people aboard and at least one person on the ground, according to authorities. Faced with substantial industry opposition, federal regulators are struggling to implement a sweeping aviation safety law enacted in the wake of the last fatal U.S. airline crash nearly four years ago, according to a report by a government watchdog. The Federal Aviation Administration is experiencing lengthy delays in putting in place rules required by the law to increase the amount of experience necessary to be an airline pilot, provide more realistic pilot training and create a program where experienced captains mentor less experienced first officers, according to the report by the Department of Transportation?s Inspector General. (AP Photo/Dave Sherman, File)

(AP) ? Faced with substantial industry opposition, federal regulators are struggling to implement a sweeping aviation safety law enacted after the last fatal U.S. airline crash nearly four years ago, according to a report by a government watchdog.

The Federal Aviation Administration is experiencing lengthy delays in putting in place rules required by the law to increase the amount of experience necessary to be an airline pilot, provide more realistic pilot training and create a program where experienced captains mentor less experienced first officers, according to the report by the Department of Transportation's Inspector General. The report was obtained by The Associated Press.

The FAA is also running into problems creating a new, centralized electronic database that airlines can check prior to hiring pilots, the report said. The database is supposed to include pilots' performance on past tests of flying skills.

In each case, the agency has run into significant opposition from the airline industry, the report said.

"To effectively implement these initiatives in a timely manner, (the) FAA must balance industry concerns with a sustained commitment to oversight," the report said.

Congress passed the law a year and a half after the Feb. 12, 2009, crash of a regional airliner near Buffalo, N.Y., that killed all 49 people aboard and a man on the ground. A National Transportation Safety Board investigation of the accident highlighted weaknesses in pilot training, tiring work schedules, lengthy commutes and relatively low experience levels for pilots at some regional carriers.

The accident was due to an incorrect response by the flight's captain to two key safety systems, causing an aerodynamic stall that sent the plane plummeting into a house below, the NTSB investigation concluded.

"The law is only as strong as the regulations that come from it so this (implementation) process is the true measuring stick of how this law will ultimately be viewed," said Kevin Kuwik, spokesman for a group of family members of victims killed in the crash. The family members lobbied relentlessly for passage of the safety law. Kuwik lost his girlfriend, 30-year-old Lorin Maurer, in the accident.

Driven by the accident and the new safety law, the FAA substantially revised its rules governing pilot work schedules to better ensure pilots are rested when they fly. It was the first modification of the rules since 1985 and "a significant achievement" for the FAA, the report said.

Kuwik said he gives the FAA "a lot of credit" for revising the work schedule rules and for staying in touch with victims' family members. However, he said it's critical that the agency meet deadlines later this year for issuing new regulations on pilot training and qualifications.

"If the foot-dragging continues and missing deadlines..., the potentially significant effects of the safety bill will be lost," Kuwik said.

Responding to the report, the FAA said in a statement that more than 90 percent of air carriers now use voluntary programs in which pilots and others report safety problems with the understanding that there will be no reprisals for their conduct or computer-assisted programs that identify and report safety trends. "This has led to significant training, operational and maintenance program improvements," the statement said.

The agency also noted that it has "delivered seven reports to Congress, initiated five rulemaking projects and continued rulemaking efforts for another four final rules as a result of the" new safety law.

The inspector general's report, however, details how FAA has missed deadlines and run into complications trying to issue regulations necessary to implement key portions of the law.

For example, the FAA is behind schedule on rules to substantially increase the experience required to become an airline pilot from the current 250 flight hours to 1,500 flight hours. The agency currently estimates it will issue the rules in August, a year after the deadline set in the law. Airlines, worried they won't be able to find enough qualified new pilots, oppose the increase, arguing that a pilot's quality and type of flying should be weighed more heavily than the number of flight hours.

The FAA has proposed a compromise that would allow military pilots with 750 hours of flight experience or pilots with 1,000 hours and a four-year aviation degree to qualify to be hired as an airline pilot, but airlines remain opposed. If the FAA doesn't act by the August deadline, the increase to 1,500 hours will take effect without the exceptions offered in FAA's compromise proposals.

Yet the FAA and its inspectors haven't taken steps to ensure regional airlines, which will most affected, will be able to meet the new requirements, the report said. At two regional carriers visited by the inspector general's office, 75 percent of the first officers didn't have an air transport certificate ? the highest level pilot's license issued by the FAA ?which will be required for all airline pilots by the August deadline.

___

Online:

The Federal Aviation Administration: http://www.faa.gov

Department of Transportation Inspector General: https://www.oig.dot.gov/

___

Follow Joan Lowy at http://www.twitter.com/AP_Joan_Lowy

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-02-02-Airline%20Safety%20Law/id-ca6d39c83b784e6bb0d0dc0d782efaef

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Syrian opposition leader to meet Iran Foreign Minister: diplomatic source

MUNICH (Reuters) - The head of the Syrian opposition Moaz Alkhatib will meet Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi on Saturday on the sidelines of a security conference in Munich, a diplomatic source told Reuters.

"The talks about Syria are intensifying and the Iranians have been drawn in. Let's see how it all ends," the source said.

Earlier Alkhatib, president of the Syrian National Coalition, met Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who invited him to visit Moscow, a breakthrough in relations that could help pave the way for a solution to the Syrian crisis.

(Reporting by Khaled Yacoub Oweis; writing by Alexandra Hudson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-opposition-leader-meet-iran-foreign-minister-diplomatic-162525558.html

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Thursday, January 31, 2013

Heffernan: Vine app is wicked easy, charmingly retro

By Virginia Heffernan

If you believe a nubile new video app called Vine is sweeping the nation because Vine is a masterpiece or at least a better mousetrap, think again. Vine?which hit the web last week and lets you share looping, six-second videos on Twitter?is just fine, and plenty fun, but Vine is not suddenly everywhere on the Internet because it?s extra-special. It?s not even everywhere because someone used it to tweet porn early in the game, and Vine accidentally endorsed a xxx vid. No. Vine is everywhere because it belongs to Twitter.

In other words, she?s pretty cool and she?s the boss?s daughter. No wonder she?s the d?butante of the season.

The Twitter story reverses the ?Field of Dreams? vision of ?if you build it, he will come.? Instead, with Twitter, we showed up?some 300 million Twitter users now?for what was initially a fairly thin set of text communications protocols. But we stayed on Twitter because other people did, and then they came because we were all there, learning in unison to compose epigrams with #hashtags and @replies and links.

Simultaneously, Twitter built itself in response to our presence, and our activities.? Having begun in 2006 as a place to circulate verbal chips and salsa, it didn?t become the so-called New Twitter until 2010, when it started letting users see photos and videos without leaving Twitter.

For years, third-party developers turned out Twitter add-ons like Tweetdeck and Twistori . But now Twitter has decided to take charge of developing its own Internet real estate. This is like the oil companies getting friendly with the railroads in the 19th century. Ultimately, people in oil and gas like to be in real estate, too. Similarly, people in social networking get into app development. Synergies are discovered; profits are made; markets are happy, then not; oligopolies are busted up. And repeat. It?s the American way.

So what is Vine, besides Twitter?s first foray into owning not just the rails but the stuff that rides the rails? In short, Vine is a way to rediscover, and pleasingly exploit, the magic of animation. (If you?re not on Twitter or Vine, here?s a good place to watch some Vine videos.)

I?ve made a few Vine videos, or ?Vines? (I guess they?re called?), and I enjoyed it. Remember the time you and your brother hauled out your dad?s brandless movie camera, set up Chewbacca and Princess Leia, and prepared thumb and forefinger for a brutal 40-hour marathon of ?stop-action animation?? It?s like that. Neato.

I mean, I realize that childhoods are different, and a few did not take place in the 1970s, in the Dawn of Industrial Light and Magic. But, whether you were born in 1940 or 1990, there?s gotta be a moment when someone showed you how animation works, with a flipbook or maybe a Muybridge zoopraxiscope, if you happen to be 100.

Let that dawning dawn again. To make a Vine video, you open the app on your phone/movie camera and hold a button down. When you let go, the camera stops rolling. You can then point it elsewhere, or move around what you?re shooting, and start it up again. In this way, you can do rad jumpcuts or just start-and-stop-and-move-and-start-again with the wonderful, tedious patience of a claymation animator.

I went for jumpcuts first, and enjoyed catching a panorama with significant missing parts. My video looked hectic and urban and even disturbing with all its motion and gaps, especially when I shot from inside a Manhattan taxi. I then started to try animation, and started to make a glass of water that looked like it was magically emptying. But I was too lazy even to return the glass to the right spot. So it just looked like a glass jumping around on a table. You couldn?t even really tell that the water level was going down.

Vine videos play on an endless loop so they have a kind of glitchy, broken-record look that is maybe retro. I?m not sure I like it, especially after one by Tyra Banks, lost under a bunch of Chrome windows on my desktop, wouldn?t stop repeating its goofy dialogue.

But I do like the wicked-easy sharing and the intuitive controls. I also like the curation: there?s a lot of Exploring and Discovering and Editor?s Picks. For a week-old app, Vine?boosted by Twitter?s marketing and integrating?already seems flush with users and content. Every new Vine video attracts comments, and you?d think users were commenting on some century-old craft, like needlework, as they get into the nitty-gritty of ?how did you do that?!?

Everybody just saw this app a few days ago, guys. We?re all just figuring it out. Some, I guess, are figuring faster than others. The height of achievement on Vine?aside from the promotion of Vine itself, which is Vine?s actual proudest achievement?is a Lego fantasia, as of this writing. Someone named Hunter Harrison put Lego Batman and Lego Robin on a gray Lego surface and had the caped crusaders scope out and destroy their enemies.

?How did you do this without your hand getting in the way?? one commenter, awestruck, asked. Ah. The magic of stop-motion. It never gets old, even when everything else is new.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/appitude--the-newest-twitter-trend%E2%80%94sharing-six-second-videos-on-vine%E2%80%94is-surprisingly-retro-191910937.html

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Comodo Firewall (2013)


Windows now includes a functional built-in firewall, so consumers expect any third-party firewall to either offer a lot more than Windows does or to come as a freebie. Comodo Firewall (2013) does both. It's completely free, and it includes a wide range of features beyond the expected. Comodo's 2013 edition has gotten a serious makeover, with top-to-bottom streamlining of its user interface.

Like many other products, Comodo Firewall has a main window dominated by a big green security status icon. However, equal emphasis goes to a landing zone for applications to be sandboxed; more about the sandbox feature later on. When you want to dig deeper, you click the Tasks link which visibly "flips" the main window revealing a variety of available security tasks.

New in this edition, Comodo installs a desktop widget that offers a quick view of your security status. Clicking a button on the widget opens the product's main window. It also offers links to launch your browsers in sandboxed (protected) mode, and to follow Comodo on Facebook or Twitter.

Firewall Functions
Like Windows Firewall (and almost every third-party firewall), Comodo had no trouble putting all of my test system's ports in stealth mode. None of my port scans or other Web-based attacks could even detect the test system. A few firewalls, including Outpost Firewall Pro 8, go a step further, actively detecting and blocking port scan attacks.

The flip side of personal firewall protection is what we call program control. The firewall keeps track of what sorts of Internet and network access programs request and allows only appropriate communication. In its default Safe Mode, Comodo automatically configures permission for trusted programs. When an unknown program attempts a connection, it asks the user whether to allow or block the connection.

Like Outpost, Comodo gives the user a choice beyond simply allowing or blocking the program. Predefined rulesets make it easy to configure a program for the type of access appropriate to, for example, a Web browser, or an email client. Other presets relate to the type of access allowed. For example, it's easy to configure a program to allow normal outbound access but block it from receiving inbound connections.

High-end firewalls like what you get in Norton Internet Security (2013) or Kaspersky Internet Security (2013) handle program control internally, with no reliance on user decisions. When a firewall does involve the user in trust decisions, it's important that the firewall catch every attempt at access. Leak test programs try to connect with the Internet "under the radar," undetected by program control.

In its default configuration, a dozen leak tests I tried slipped right past Comodo's protection, making their connections undeterred. However, when I enabled the Behavior Blocker (more about the Behavior Blocker shortly) it detected suspicious activity in every case and offered to run the samples in isolation. Some managed a connection even so, but they didn't get through undetected. ZoneAlarm directly blocked sneaky Internet connection attempts by about three quarters of these samples.

Many modern malware attacks slip into victim systems by exploiting unpatched vulnerabilities in the operating system, the browser, or essential applications. To test Comodo's exploit protection I attacked the test system using 30 exploits generated by the Core IMPACT penetration tool. Like ZoneAlarm Free Firewall 2012, Comodo didn't actively block any of these at the network level and also didn't block their attempts to drop files on the test system. Only the fact that the test system was fully patched prevented it from being compromised. Norton, by contrast, detected every exploit at the network level and identified most by name.

Comodo doesn't expose any significant settings in the Registry; a malicious program couldn't disable it by setting protection to "OFF" in the Registry. However, I had no trouble killing off its processes using Task Manager. That's surprising, because with the previous edition such an attempt yielded "Access Denied." I also managed to set its essential services to be disabled. After reboot it re-enabled some, but not all, of them. This firewall could do with a little toughening up. The same attacks on ZoneAlarm bounced off harmlessly.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/5p7p-FOVncA/0,2817,2414835,00.asp

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