Wednesday, January 18, 2012

PFT: Eli muses about Manhattan Mannings

Divisional Playoffs - Houston Texans v Baltimore RavensGetty Images

Joe Flacco joked last week that he?d get no credit from the media if the Ravens beat the Texans.

He definitely is getting no credit from one of the team?s leaders on defense.

Safety Ed Reed visited with Adam Schein and Rich Gannon of SiriusXM NFL Radio on Monday, and Reed pointed a finger at Flacco for the struggles of the offense.

?I think Joe was kind of rattled a little bit by that defense,? Reed said.? ?They had a lot of guys in the box on him.? And, I mean, they were getting to him.? I think a couple times he needed to get rid of the ball.? I don?t know how much of the play calling, he could have made audibles or anything like that, checks or whatnot, man, but it just didn?t look like he had a hold on the offense, you know, of times past.? You know, it was just kind of like they was telling him to do, throw the ball or get it here, you know, get it to certain guys.? And he can?t play like that.

?You know, one particular play that sticks out to me is when Ray Rice came out of the backfield, he got pushed down and [Flacco] still threw him the ball and you got one-on-one with Torrey Smith on the outside.? But it?s hearsay for me.? I can say that sitting on the sidelines, you know, or sitting in the stands.? You just never know what somebody else is seeing.?

Reed also called out the line, a little.

?[T]he offensive line gotta block better,? Reed said.? ?You know, they gotta communicate better, gotta pick up blocks, Joe?s gotta get the ball out of his hand.? We gotta do a good job of using our weapons.? I think Ricky Williams should have had the ball a little bit more yesterday.? You know, I mean, Ray Rice was running it, too, but you gotta be able to mix those guys in back and forth.? It?s a lot of things that we all need to correct going into New England because they do such a great job of making adjustments, you know, in-game adjustments.? It?s not just coming up with a scheme and playing the game.? You gotta be able to make adjustments while the game is in the flow.?

That?s not what the Ravens need as they get ready to face the Patriots.? Unless, of course, a little tough love coaxes the offense to perform up to the standard that the defense has set.

Either way, coach John Harbaugh may need to spend a little extra time this week getting his guys on the same page.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/01/17/eli-muses-about-a-manhattan-manning-reunion/related/

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Oil rises above $101 on positive China, US data (AP)

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia ? Oil advanced above $101 a barrel Wednesday in Asia, buoyed by positive economic data from the world's top two crude consumers, China and the U.S.

Benchmark crude for February delivery was up 57 cents at $101.28 a barrel at late afternoon Kuala Lumpur time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract jumped $2.01 to finish at $100.71 on Tuesday.

China, the world's second largest economy, reported 8.9 percent growth in the fourth quarter, slower than the previous quarter but robust enough to indicate it would avoid an abrupt slowdown. Retail and factory production improved while oil demand was up 6.4 percent in 2011 from 2010, according to data cited by Barclays Capital.

In the U.S., government data showed manufacturing in New York expanded at the fastest pace in nine months.

"The positive economic news out of China and the U.S. have increased optimism about global economic conditions and helped ease concern of a slowdown in oil demand," said Victor Shum, an energy analyst with Purvin & Gertz in Singapore.

Tension between Iran and Saudi Arabia, as well as a move by France to accelerate the EU's implementation of an embargo on Iranian oil export also supported prices, he said.

Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi has said Saudi Arabia wants to stabilize prices at $100 a barrel this year and was ready to pump more oil if needed. That came as Iran warned Gulf nations not to make up any shortfall and that it may shut the Strait of Hormuz which is used to transport about a fifth of the world's oil.

In other energy trading, heating oil rose 0.8 cent to $3.05 per gallon and gasoline futures rose 1.4 cents to $2.79 per gallon. Natural gas fell 0.8 cent to $2.48 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120118/ap_on_bi_ge/oil_prices

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UK, Scottish leaders to meet on independence vote (AP)

LONDON ? Britain's prime minister will meet with the leader of Scotland on plans for an independence vote.

But David Cameron's office said Alex Salmond should first attend talks scheduled for Thursday with Scottish Secretary Michael Moore, a member of Cameron's Cabinet.

Salmond has said a vote on whether Scotland should sever its ties from Britain and become an independent state should take place in 2014.

Cameron's government has said Scotland's semiautonomous Parliament doesn't have necessary legal powers to hold a binding referendum.

It has offered the Scottish administration powers to hold the vote, but indicated it should take place within 18 months and ask only whether Scotland should quit the United Kingdom or not.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/britain/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120115/ap_on_re_eu/eu_britain_scotland

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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Paula Deen teams with Novo Nordisk on diabetes (AP)

Celebrity chef and Food Network star Paula Deen is teaming with drug maker Novo Nordisk to launch a program that aims to help people live with Type 2 diabetes and promote a Novo diabetes drug.

The program is called Diabetes in a New Light and offers tips on food preparation, stress management and working with doctors on a treatment plan. Recipes and tips can be found at http://www.Diabetesinanewlight.com.

Deen, a paid spokeswoman for Novo Nordisk, says she was diagnosed three years ago, but kept quiet about her condition until she had advice to offer the public.

"I wanted to bring something to the table when I came forward," she said Tuesday during an appearance on NBC's "Today" show. "I've always been one to think that I bring hope."

When asked if the high-fat, high-caloric recipes she champions can lead to diabetes, she hedged.

"That is part of the puzzle," she said, but mentioned other factors: genetics, lifestyle, stress and age.

"On my show I share with you all these yummy, fattening recipes, but I tell people, `in moderation,'" she added. "I've always eaten in moderation."

Deen has Type 2 diabetes and takes Victoza, a once-daily noninsulin injection. The website links to promotional materials for the drug.

Type 2 is the most common form of diabetes. In Type 2 diabetes, the body either does not produce enough insulin or does not use it efficiently, allowing excess sugar, or glucose, to accumulate in the blood.

The 64-year-old Deen, known as "the Queen of Southern cuisine," appears on Food Network.

___

NBC is owned by NBC Universal.

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Online:

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/

http://www.foodnetwork.com/

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120117/ap_en_ot/us_novo_nordisk_paula_deen

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Monday, January 16, 2012

Kazakh vote tests stability after oil town unrest (Reuters)

ZHANAOZEN, Kazakhstan (Reuters) ? Kazakhstan began voting on Sunday in an election designed to put a second party in parliament and ease growing discontent after deadly riots shook the image of stability prized by the veteran leader of Central Asia's largest economy and oil producer.

No one doubts President Nursultan Nazarbayev's Nur Otan party will win by a landslide. The second-placed party will also be guaranteed a presence in the 107-seat chamber, whether or not it clears the 7 percent entry threshold.

But Nazarbayev's most critical opponents have been barred from standing, and the party that is expected to come second is a pro-business group led by a former ruling party member.

Nazarbayev, 71, in power since independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, remains overwhelmingly popular throughout most of his mainly Muslim country of 16.7 million people. Its relative wealth has ensured Kazakhstan was long spared the sort of unrest seen in other former Soviet republics in Central Asia.

But complaints have grown that many have remained poor while an elite few grew rich. Anger erupted last month in the remote western region of Mangistau, where oilmen sacked by their state-owned employers had been protesting for seven months.

Officials say 17 people were killed in clashes during which police fired live rounds. Some residents of Zhanaozen, a dusty oil town 150 km (95 miles) from the Caspian Sea, believe the death toll was higher. A state of emergency remains in place.

Black-clad security forces patrolled the town of 90,000 as polls opened in a blizzard. The first voter at a local school, a middle-aged woman, was presented with a vase. An unclaimed set of crystal glasses awaited the first 18-year-old voter.

"I have just voted for our children to have a better future, to have good jobs so that their lives become better than ours," said Kumlyumkos Nurgazinov, 63, an oilfield machinery operator.

One of the first to vote, he cast his ballot for Nur Otan. "The events that took place here should never be repeated, God forbid," he said. Cars drove slowly on slush-covered roads, snaking around concrete roadblocks placed throughout the town.

Another man in his late 50s, who declined to identify himself, said he voted for the Party of Patriots of Kazakhstan, one of seven parties on the ballot paper. "I have no hope. I don't expect any changes for the better," he said.

Kazakhstan, four times the size of Texas, holds 3 percent of global oil reserves and has attracted more than $120 billion in foreign investment in two decades of independence. It boasts per capita GDP on a par with that of Turkey or Mexico.

But with discontent growing about the distribution of wealth and an economic crisis looming, Kazakhstan called the election seven months early. Presidential adviser Yermukhamet Yertysbayev said on December 12 Kazakhstan was at a time of "social reckoning."

Politicians are wary of the mass protests that greeted a disputed election in Russia, still Kazakhstan's biggest trading partner and a cultural reference point for its millions of Russian-speaking citizens.

"This is a big examination for us," Nazarbayev said after voting in the national library in Astana, his futuristic capital on the windswept steppe. "I'm sure Kazakhstanis will make the right choice for their future and for our peaceful development."

He cast his ballot shortly after his eldest daughter, Dariga Nazarbayeva, a 48-year-old opera enthusiast and former media executive who is expected to return to frontline politics after being included on the Nur Otan party list.

"Most important is the fact we will no longer have a one-party parliament," Nazarbayeva said.

OPPOSITION SIDELINED

The party widely expected to claim second place and a spot in parliament is the pro-business Ak Zhol, membership of which has swollen rapidly since its founder left Nur Otan last year to build it into the country's second-largest political force.

Its presence in parliament would assure a managed democracy but would not placate Nazarbayev's most vehement critics, most of whom have been barred from the election on technicalities. Western monitors have never judged a Kazakh vote free and fair.

The critical Communist Party has been suspended while outspoken opposition candidates from the Social-Democratic Party, which is standing, were removed from their party list for allegedly making inaccurate declarations of income and property.

"This election will be another missed opportunity to bring political debate into the Kazakh parliament," said Lilit Gevorgyan, analyst at IHS Global Insight.

A crowd of around 30 peaceful demonstrators gathered briefly on Saturday in Almaty, the commercial capital and largest city, and urged people to boycott the ballot.

Saule Batyrbekova, a pensioner living on $160 a month, said her apartment was being repossessed. "They don't care about ordinary people and the way these people survive," she said.

Kazakhstan's economy grew by 7.5 percent last year and the country has accumulated nearly $75 billion in foreign currency reserves and a National Fund for windfall oil revenues.

"These funds will be needed in the event of new crises, cataclysms, from which nobody in the modern world is immune," Nazarbayev said in a pre-election address to the nation.

(Additional reporting by Raushan Nurshayeva in Astana, Robin Paxton, Mariya Gordeyeva and Olga Orininskaya in Almaty; Writing by Robin Paxton; Editing by Ralph Gowling)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120115/wl_nm/us_kazakhstan_election

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Keith Harrington: Offshore Wind Activists an Unmatched Force at Maryland General Assembly Opener

If measured by the turnout at the rally at the Annapolis state house yesterday, of all the issues confronting the Maryland General Assembly as it reconvenes this week, offshore wind power enjoys the most energetic public support.

Maintaining the grassroots momentum from a statewide series of packed "Wind Works" town hall forums, over 100 citizen clean energy advocates from across Maryland descended on Lawyers' Mall on Wednesday morning to greet returning state lawmakers with an unequivocal message: "Get it done in 2012! Wind works for Marylanders' health, jobs, climate and energy costs!"

Decked out in blue campaign T-shirts, wind advocates were the most visible activist presence on the opening morning of the 2012 legislative session. The impressive show of support for a cold weekday morning jibed with recent statewide poll results which showed that nearly two-thirds of Marylanders support developing the state's robust offshore wind energy resources, even if it means a small initial bump in energy costs.

Speaking to the rally crowd, state Senate Majority Leader Rob Garagiola scoffed at charges from critics that Marylanders can't afford to invest in offshore wind: "The price of coal goes up; the price of gas goes up. Does the price of wind ever go up?"

The crowd responded with a resounding, "No!"

"That's right," Garagiola continued, "It doesn't go up. This is going to save ratepayers money."

Other speakers included the state House Majority Leader Kumar Barve, climate justice and health advocate Vernice Miller Travis, Chesapeake Climate Action Network Director Mike Tidwell, MD Delegate Tom Hucker, business innovator Joe Gaskins, Johns Hopkins student Tippy Patrinos and state Senator Paul Pinsky.

After the rally, the sea of blue shirts shifted from the mall to the inside of the state house and the legislative office buildings where activists took the wind works message to legislators and other dignitaries.

On his way to address the opening session, Governor Martin O'Malley stopped to greet wind activists distributing fliers on the mall, and reiterated his support for passing the bill through the Assembly this year. The Governor's new offshore-wind energy bill is expected to drop in the next few weeks along with the rest of his ambitious legislative package. With other big ticket issues like same-sex marriage, a proposed sales or gas tax increase on the agenda, clean energy advocates certainly have their work cut out for them in keeping wind at the top of the priority list. But if advocates keep bringing the same grassroots energy they brought to Annapolis on Wednesday, that shouldn't be a problem.

Learn more about the "Wind Works for Maryland" campaign and get involved at www.marylandoffshorewind.org.

Crossposted from the Chesapeake Climate Action Network blog.

Photo Credit: Abhik Saha

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Follow Keith Harrington on Twitter: www.twitter.com/kharring

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/keith-harrington/offshore-wind-power_b_1202446.html

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Sunday, January 15, 2012

Acer Aspire S5 hands-on, revisited (now with video)

The last time we reported on the Aspire S5, Acer's sophomore Ultrabook, your favorite reviews editor was throwing elbows to get a first look. The company's press conference here at CES was packed to the gills with journalists and industry analysts, dozens of whom were jostling for some hands-on time after the event wrapped. It didn't help that there were two S5s on display, and that the demo area was tricked out with green mood lighting.

So when we had a chance to play with the S5 again, this time in a quiet, sunny room, we knew a second look was in order. For the most part, our early impressions haven't changed. Its all-metal chassis still feels solid, and we continue to be wary of that shallow keyboard. That 15mm-thick chassis is as impressive as ever -- maybe even more so, now that we know half of this year's Ultrabooks are likely to be larger. But man, is this thing even more beautiful in the light. We already concluded it had a more uniformly premium design than the older Aspire S3, but in a brightly lit room it's easier to appreciate the slightly brushed texture on the lid and palm rest, the seamless, spartan design and how well that black paint job complements the thin chassis. Below, find a few extra hands-on shots added in with the old, and continue on past the break for a video tour, complete with a demo of that motorized drop-down port cover -- something we didn't get to show you the first time around.

Billy Steele contributed to this report.

Continue reading Acer Aspire S5 hands-on, revisited (now with video)

Acer Aspire S5 hands-on, revisited (now with video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Jan 2012 18:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/12/acer-aspire-s5-hands-on-revisited-now-with-video/

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