Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Boston Fans Buried Their Stanley Cup Sorrows in a Porn Avalanche

Boston Fans Buried Their Stanley Cup Sorrows in a Porn Avalanche

After the Boston Bruins lost the NHL championship to the Chicago Blackhawks Monday night, fans consoled themselves with porn, according to stats from PornHub. You might not have a Stanley Cup win, but you always have amateur adult films!

PornHub monitored traffic during the final game, from the hours of 8-11pm EST Monday night. Surprise, surprise, it was down from normal levels because bros were out watching the big game. Then at 11, traffic in Chicago stayed down because the whole town was celebrating. But in Boston? Not so much. Incoming PornHub traffic from Beantown skyrocketed by nearly a quarter. If you're not feeling up to rioting for your hockey team, well, at least there's always PorunHub. [CBS Sports via Digg]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/boston-fans-buried-their-stanley-cup-sorrows-in-a-porn-589308804

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Sunday, June 23, 2013

Marine cops will saturate state waters looking for impaired boaters ...

A heads-up for anyone out and about in a boat next weekend.

Marine deputy sheriffs from 32 counties, Oregon State Police troopers and the U.S. Coast Guard will saturate state waters looking for drunken boat operators.

It's called "Operation Dry Water" and any reckless behavior will qualify.

Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/sports/oregonian/bill_monroe/index.ssf/2013/06/cops.html

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Soft matter offers new ways to study how materials arrange

May 21, 2013 ? A fried breakfast food popular in Spain provided the inspiration for the development of doughnut-shaped droplets that may provide scientists with a new approach for studying fundamental issues in physics, mathematics and materials.

The doughnut-shaped droplets, a shape known as toroidal, are formed from two dissimilar liquids using a simple rotating stage and an injection needle. About a millimeter in overall size, the droplets are produced individually, their shapes maintained by a surrounding springy material made of polymers. Droplets in this toroidal shape made of a liquid crystal -- the same type of material used in laptop displays -- may have properties very different from those of spherical droplets made from the same material.

While researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology don't have a specific application for the doughnut-shaped droplets yet, they believe the novel structures offer opportunities to study many interesting problems, from looking at the properties of ordered materials within these confined spaces to studying how geometry affects how cells behave.

"Our experiments provide a fresh approach to the way that people have been looking at these kinds of problems, which is mainly theoretical. We are doing experiments with toroids whose geometry can be precisely controlled in the lab," said Alberto Fernandez-Nieves, an assistant professor in the Georgia Tech School of Physics. "This work opens up a new way to experimentally look at problems that nobody has been able to study before. The properties of toroidal surfaces are very different, from a general point of view, from those of spherical surfaces."

Development of these "stable nematic droplets with handles" was described May 20 in the early edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). The research has been sponsored by the National Science Foundation (NSF), and also involves researchers at the Lorentz Institute for Theoretical Physics at Leiden University in The Netherlands and at York University in the United Kingdom.

Droplets normally form spherical shapes to minimize the surface area required to contain a given volume of liquid. Though they appear to be simple, when an ordered material like a crystal or a liquid crystal lives on the surface of a sphere, it provides interesting challenges to mathematicians and theoretical physicists.

A physicist who focuses on soft condensed matter, Fernandez-Nieves had long been interested in the theoretical aspects of curved surfaces. Working with graduate research assistant Ekapop Pairam and postdoctoral fellow Jayalakshmi Vallamkondu, he wanted to extend the theoretical studies into the experimental world for a system of toroidal shapes.

But could doughnut-shaped droplets be made in the lab?

The partial answer came from churros Fernandez-Nieves ate as a child growing up in Spain. These "Spanish doughnuts" -- actually spirals -- are made by injecting dough into hot oil while the dough is spun and fried.

In the lab at a much smaller size scale, the researchers found they could use a similar process with two immiscible liquids such as glycerine or water and oil, a needle and a magnetically-controlled rotating stage. A droplet of glycerine is injected into the rotating stage containing the oil. In certain conditions, a jet forms at the needle, which closes up into a torus because of the imposed rotation.

"You can control the two relevant curvatures of the torus," explained Fernandez-Nieves. "You can control how large it is because you can move the needle with respect to the rotation axis. You can also infuse more volume to make the torus thicker."

If the stage is then turned off, however, the drop of glycerine quickly loses its doughnut shape as surface tension forces it to become a traditional spherical droplet. To maintain the toroidal shape, Fernandez-Nieves and his collaborators replace the surrounding oil with a springy polymeric material; the springy character of this material provides a force that can overcome surface tension forces.

"When you are making the toroid, the forces on the needle are large enough that the surrounding material behaves as a fluid," he explained. "Once you stop, the elasticity of the outside fluid overcomes surface tension and that freezes the structure in place."

The researchers have been using the doughnut shapes to study how liquid crystal materials, which are well known for their applications in laptop displays, organize inside the torus. These materials have degrees of order beyond those of simple liquids such as water. For these materials, the toroidal shape provides a new set of study opportunities from both theoretical and experimental perspectives.

"This changes how you think about a liquid inside a container," said Fernandez-Nieves. "The materials will still adopt the shape of the container, but its energy will be different depending on the shape. The materials feel distortions and will try to minimize them. In a given shape, the molecules in these materials will rearrange themselves to minimize these distortions."

Among the surprises is that the nematic droplets created with toroidal shapes become chiral, that is, they adopt a certain twisting direction and break their mirror symmetry.

"In our case, the materials we are using are not chiral under normal circumstances," he noted. "This was a surprise to us, and it has to do with how we are confining the molecules."

Beyond looking at the dynamics of creating the droplets and how ordered materials behave when the torus transforms into a sphere, Fernandez-Nieves and colleagues are also exploring potential biological applications, applying electrical fields to the droplets, and sharing the unique structures with scientists at other institutions.

"This is the first time that stable nematic droplets have been generated with handles, and we have exploited that to look at the nematic organization inside those spaces," said Fernandez-Nieves. "Our experiments open up a versatile new approach for generating handled droplets made of an ordered material that can self-assemble into interesting and unexpected structures when confined to these non-spherical spaces. Now that theoreticians realize we can generate and study these systems, there may be much more development in this area."

In addition to those already mentioned, the paper's authors included V. Koning, B.C. van Zuiden and V. Vitelli from Leiden University, M.A. Bates from the University of York in the United Kingdom, and P.W. Ellis from Georgia Tech.

The research described here has been sponsored by the National Science Foundation under CAREER award DMR-0847304. The findings and conclusions are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the National Science Foundation.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/JCZS3dsL8Q4/130521105258.htm

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'American Idol' Runner-Up Kree Harrison: 'It Doesn't Matter Where You Place'

Harrison opens up to MTV News her post-'Idol' plans and why she'll never ever Google herself.
By Jocelyn Vena

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1707691/american-idol-kree-harrison-future.jhtml

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A 6,000-Mile Panorama Of The Earth Is Pretty Beast

In April NASA's Landsat Data Continuity Mission took a huge panorama. From 438 miles above the Earth, the satellite shot a 6,000-mile-long, 120-mile-wide strip of planet from Russia to South Africa. It is aptly named ?The Long Swath.? Oh and it's 19.06 gigapixels.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/5koJuuA9kDo/a-6-000-mile-panorama-of-the-earth-is-pretty-beast-508748481

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Art, Music & Dance Can Help Ease Anxiety, Depression in Cancer ...

By Traci Pedersen Associate News Editor
Reviewed by John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on May 18, 2013

Art, Music & Dance Help Ease Anxiety, Depression in Cancer Patients For patients with cancer, participating in art, music and dance therapy may help relieve depression and anxiety, according to new research.

?People with cancer very often feel like their body has been taken over by the cancer. They feel overwhelmed,? said Dr. Joke Bradt, a music therapist from Drexel University in Philadelphia.

?To be able to engage in a creative process? that stands in a very stark contrast to sort of passively submitting oneself to cancer treatments,? said Bradt.

Researchers analyzed 27 past studies of nearly 1,600 people who were randomly assigned to receive some form of creative arts therapy or not, during or after cancer treatment. Most of the patients had breast cancer or a type of blood cancer?such as leukemia and lymphoma.

Music, art and dance therapy programs varied in how often the sessions were held and over what time span. Over half of the programs did not involve counseling with trained therapists.

Overall, patients with cancer who were assigned to creative arts treatments reported less depression, anxiety and pain and a better quality of life during the programs than those who were put on a wait list or continued receiving typical care.

For example, in one 2010 study, listening to half an hour of familiar music dropped pain levels in half for 42 percent of hospitalized patients, while just eight percent of those in a comparison group experienced relief.

Those in creative arts therapy did not report being any less tired than patients assigned to a control group. And most of the other benefits discontinued once therapy ended, the researchers reported in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine.

Researchers noted that the benefits tied to creative arts therapies were small, but similar to those of other complementary techniques such as yoga and acupuncture.

Lead author Timothy Puetz, Ph.D.,?from the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md., said researchers have believed music and art therapy may help cancer patients ?for a long time,? although rigorous studies have been lacking.

?People have really broadened their perspectives on what is health and have moved beyond just the physical,? said Puetz.

?More and more clinicians and certified creative arts therapists? they?re actually reaching out to each other now, and discussions are on the table to try to bring this type of therapy to cancer patients.?

Bradt said that, for some patients, working directly with an arts therapist may be most helpful, but it isn?t essential. For example, anyone looking to refocus away from the anxiety of a cancer diagnosis and treatment can join a choir or an art class.

?We all know that music or art or just aesthetic beauty in general makes us feel better,? she said. ?I do not want to underestimate the power of just the arts by themselves.?

Source:?JAMA Internal Medicine

Abstract of cancer and music photo by shutterstock.

APA Reference
Pedersen, T. (2013). Art, Music & Dance Can Help Ease Anxiety, Depression in Cancer Patients. Psych Central. Retrieved on May 20, 2013, from http://psychcentral.com/news/2013/05/19/art-music-dance-can-help-ease-anxiety-depression-in-cancer-patients/54976.html

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Source: http://psychcentral.com/news/2013/05/19/art-music-dance-can-help-ease-anxiety-depression-in-cancer-patients/54976.html

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Seamless and GrubHub are merging to form a giant food delivery service

Seamless and GrubHub are merging to form a giant food delivery service

Seamless and GrubHub, two of the biggest food delivery services in the US, have just announced they'll be merging into a combined company, with the name of the new operation to be decided at a later date. (SeamHub? Grubless?) Unlike some other transactions we cover around here, this does seem to be a merger in the truest sense of the word, with GrubHub founder Matt Maloney stepping up to the role of president, and Seamless CEO Jonathan Zabusky staying on as president. Though we don't yet know what the new service will be called, the companies are already saying it will serve 500 US cities, with around 20,000 restaurants taking orders. Also, as hinted in that press release below, the merger will give the new mega-company more financial flexibility when it comes to further growth opportunities. Next up: Delivery.com?

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Via: The Next Web

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/20/seamless-grubhub-merger/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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