Sunday, November 25, 2012

Air raid kills 10 children near Damascus: activists

AMMAN (Reuters) - A Syrian government air strike on a rebel-held village near Damascus killed 10 children on Sunday as they played outdoors, opposition activists said, and video footage showed residents collecting young bodies torn by shrapnel.

The children went out after a lull in fighting in Deir al-Asafir, a village 12 km (8 miles) east of Damascus, when fighter jets struck, activists and residents said.

Video footage taken by activists showed the bodies of two young girls, one wearing purple, the other red, on the street in the village, with wounds to their neck and head. A sobbing woman picked up one of the girls up and hugged her lifeless body.

Another two dead boys, hit in the head and face, were shown on the backseat of a car. Men picked up the bodies of two other children while a larger body lay next to the front wheel of a vehicle.

"None of those killed were older than 15 years old. There are two women among 15 people wounded, mostly hit as they were inside the courtyards of their houses," said Abu Kassem, an activist in the village told Reuters.

"There were no fighters inside Deir al-Asafir when the bombing occurred. They operate on the outskirts. This was indiscriminate bombing," he said.

Abu Kassem said the munitions dropped by the fighter jets were cluster bombs. Other footage showed a row of what appeared to be unexploded small bombs.

"We collected 70 of these so far," one man said.

Syria has barred most reporters from the country making it hard to verify the report.

Syrian authorities made no comment on the report, but official media have said the army has been on the offensive to "cleanse" the area of what the government calles as terrorists.

Earlier this month, the U.N. political affairs chief told the Security Council of credible reports that the Syrian military has used cluster bombs in fighting the 20-month revolt against President Bashar al-Assad's autocratic rule.

The Syrian army has denied a Human Rights Watch report issued in October that Assad's forces have used cluster bombs, saying it did not possess such weapons.

Cluster bombs are banned under a 2010 U.N. treaty, though Syria, like Israel, Russia and the United States have not signed the pact.

(Reporting by Khaled Yacoub Oweis, Amman newsroom; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/air-raid-kills-10-children-near-damascus-activists-214708546.html

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Saturday, November 24, 2012

Teen sentenced to 10 years of church for manslaughter

By NBC News staff

"I hope and pray that church will give him his lord and savior, and make a difference in his life," said Oklahoma judge Mike Norman, who sentenced a teen to 10 years of church as part of his probation for a conviction of manslaughter. NBC's Thanh Truong reports.

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/24/15411770-teen-sentenced-to-10-years-of-church-for-manslaughter?lite

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Low-cost, finger-nail sized radar

ScienceDaily (Nov. 23, 2012) ? EU-funded researchers have squeezed radar technology into a low-cost fingernail-sized chip package that promises to lead to a new range of distance and motion sensing applications. The novel device could have important uses in the automotive industry, as well as mobile devices, robotics and other applications.

Developed in the 'Silicon-based ultra-compact cost-efficient system design for mm-wave sensors' (Success) project, the device is the most complete silicon-based 'system-on-chip' (SoC) package for radar operating at high frequencies beyond 100 GHz.

'As far as I know, this is the smallest complete radar system in the world,' says Prof. Christoph Scheytt, who is coordinating the project on behalf of IHP in Frankfurt, Germany. 'There are other chips working at frequencies beyond 100 GHz addressing radar sensing, but this is the highest level of integration that has ever been achieved in silicon.'

Measuring just 8 mm by 8 mm, the chip package is the culmination of three years of research by nine academic and industrial partners across Europe, supported by EUR 3 million in funding from the European Commission. The team drew on expertise from every part of the microelectronic development chain to develop the groundbreaking technology, which is expected to be put to use in commercial applications in the near future.

Operating at 120 GHz -- corresponding to a wavelength of about 2.5 mm -- the chip uses the run time of the waves to calculate the distance of an object up to around three metres away with an accuracy of less than one millimetre. It can also detect moving objects and calculate their velocity using the Doppler effect.

From a commercial perspective, the technology is also extremely cheap: manufactured on an industrial scale, each complete miniature radar would cost around one euro, the project partners estimate.

That gives it the potential to replace ultrasonic sensors for object and pedestrian detection in vehicles, to be used for automatic door control systems, to measure vibration or distance inside machines, for robotics applications and a wide range of other uses. It could even find its way into cell phones.

To develop the miniaturised radar system, the team had to overcome a range of technical challenges, not least integrating and ensuring the reliability of the tiny antenna.

'In this area, size matters a lot,' Prof. Scheytt notes. 'The main motivation for using high frequencies rather than lower ones is that the antennas can be smaller.'

While an FM radio has an antenna that's about one metre long and a WiFi router's antennas are about 10 cm in length, at mm-Wave frequencies (between 30 GHz and 300 GHz) the antennas can also be at the millimetre scale. Given the increasing miniaturisation of modern devices -- from cell phones to robotics components -- working in the millimetre range is therefore a significant advantage.

A novel substrate to solve attenuation

However, at high frequencies unwanted electromagnetic radiation and high attenuation are serious problems. 'The higher you go in frequency the more the wiring radiates: modelling this interface was a big challenge,' the project coordinator says.

The Success team addressed the issue through precise modelling, a novel technique for antenna integration, and using a polyamide substrate for the antenna.

'The project partners researched and tested a lot of different substrates for the antenna to find one that was the least lossy. Then they used a technique to print the antenna on it and connect it through solder bumps,' Prof. Scheytt explains. 'The antenna itself is planar, meaning it is mounted flat on top of the chip. This is completely different to the packaging technology of other millimetre-wave systems, which usually have bulky antennas with tube-like conductors. The advantage is that the whole "system-in-package" is a lot smaller.'

Another issue with high frequency devices is testing that they work as they are designed to. Current testing techniques are expensive and ill-suited to the high-volume testing necessary if the device is to be manufactured commercially. To address this, the Success team took the unusual step of including self-testing features built in to the chip package.

'Built-in self-testing is quite common for cell-phone chips that work at much lower frequencies, but it is something quite novel for millimetre-wave chips,' Prof. Scheytt says. 'Our industrial partners put a lot of emphasis on including this as it makes no sense to have a chip that can be manufactured for a euro and then have to spend 30 or 40 euro to test each one.'

The built-in test features enable technicians to easily and cheaply test if the antenna is connected correctly, the transmit power of the device and if it is operating in the right frequency range. And, because there is no radio frequency interface to deal with, integration onto a printed circuit board is similarly cheap and easy.

'Since all the high-frequency circuitry is in the package you have only low-frequency interfaces to work with,' Prof. Scheytt notes.

He points out that an application engineer can handle the chip, because it is a standard surface-mount package, in much the same way they would fit an ultrasonic sensor or microcontroller.

'Users can solder the chip onto their standard circuit boards and receive low-frequency signals that can be processed without difficulty,' says Prof. Thomas Zwick, head of IHE at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), a project partner.

The different partners in the Success consortium are now looking to use the technology commercially. Bosch, for example, is investigating deployment possibilities, seeing major potential for low-cost radar operating at high frequencies, while other partners, such as Silicon Radar in Germany, Selmic in Finland and Hightec in Switzerland are also expected to incorporate the work carried out in Success into their industrial processes.

Success received research funding under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/50AvX8OHN6c/121123092738.htm

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Thread: Craglist buy - Family Woodworking

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Small Business Saturday Los Angeles: Our Favorite Gift Shops ...

Small Business Saturday Los Angeles: Our Favorite Gift Shops (PHOTOS)
Small Business Saturday Los Angeles

Small Business Saturday in Los Angeles means lots of boutiques for holiday gifts.

After you're done stampeding the big box stores for Black Friday, consider showing some love to LA's mom-and-pops on Small Business Saturday -- American Express' push for folks to "shop small" and support local businesses during the holiday season.

In support of Small Business Saturday (and your gift list), we're highlighting our favorite boutiques around town. These stores cover everyone from on-trend fashionistas to gourmands to globetrotters, so finish eating those leftovers and pound the pavement in search of the perfect present!

  • For Trendy Friends

    Clare Vivier's minimalist leather clutches and totes are the essence of Los Angeles style. Pick up a clutch for your bestie and a matching one for yourself. <a href="http://www.clarevivier.com/stores.htm">Clare Vivier</a> 3339 Sunset Boulevard Los Angeles, California 90026 <strong>Hours</strong>: Monday - Saturday, 11 a.m. - 6 p.m.

  • For Gourmands

    Stuff yourself with cheese, bread and olive oil samples before deciding on some gourmet goods for your most discerning foodie friends. <a href="http://store.cheesestoresl.com/">Silverlake Cheese Store</a> 3926 West Sunset Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90029 <strong>Hours</strong>: Mon - Sat (10 a.m. - 6 p.m.), Sun (11 a.m. - 5 p.m.)

  • For Globe Trotters

    For traveling essentials you didn't even know you needed (hello, <a href="http://www.flight001.com/all-products/spacepak.html">Spacepaks</a>!) Flight 001 is the perfect place to stock up for your friends-only trip next year. <a href="http://www.flight001.com/locations">Flight 001</a> 8321 W. 3rd Street Los Angeles, CA 90048 <strong>Hours</strong>: Mon ? Sat (11a.m. ? 6 p.m.), Sun (11 a.m. ? 5 p.m.)

  • For The Host

    Parties will love you if you stop by at Short Cake beforehand. Little cakes (Chocolate Cardamom Cream is our pick!) are perfectly sized for dinner parties, and you'll never go wrong with a box of mini pies. <a href="http://www.shortcakela.com/">Short Cake</a> 6333 W. 3rd St. Stall #316 Los Angeles, CA 90036 <strong>Hours</strong>: Mon - Sat (8 a.m. - 9 p.m.), Sun (8 a.m. - 7:30 p.m.)

  • For Style Mavens

    You don't have to be in the market for a major purchase when you come to the Jonathan Adler furniture store. Big spenders can choose from tufted velvet couches and head boards, but smaller budgets will love stylish and modern menorahs, animal sculptures and quirky match strikers. <a href="http://www.jonathanadler.com/locations.php">Jonathan Adler</a> 8125 Melrose Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90046 <strong>Hours</strong>: Mon ? Fri (10 a.m. ? 7 p.m.), Sat (10 a.m. ? 6 p.m.) and Sun (Noon - 5 p.m.)

  • For Dapper Gents

    Ugh, gifts for guys. Amirite, folks? This old-fashioned gentlemen's store takes all guessing work out of it with luxe grooming products and stylish accessories on display. Angeleno die-hards will love the <a href="http://www.brightwell-shop.com/cartography">neighborhood cartography art</a> for sale, too. <a href="http://www.brightwell-shop.com/">Brightwell</a> 2876 Rowena Ave Los Angeles, CA 90039 <strong>Hours</strong>: Weds - Sun (11 a.m. - 6 p.m.)

  • For The Whole Family

    Shower little ones with love in the form of feather headdresses, owl masks and tear-drop mobiles from Lost + Found. <a href="http://lostandfoundshop.com/wp/info/contact">Lost + Found</a> 6320 Yucca Street Los Angeles, CA 90028 <strong>Hours</strong>: Mon - Sat (10 a.m. ? 6 p.m.)

  • For Bohemians

    Shop handmade, unique jewelry, textiles and ceramics at Baltic Crossroads. Perfect for all grown-up hippies. <a href="http://www.baltic-crossroads.com/">Baltic Crossroads</a> 3929 Fountain Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90029 <strong>Hours:</strong> Mon - Sun (11 a.m. - 7 p.m.)

  • For Home Makers

    LA-based designer D.L. Rhein boasts accessories for home owners that pride themselves on unique wares. <a href="http://www.dlrhein.com/category/vintage-treasures/">D.L. Rhein</a> 3303 Motor Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90034 <strong>Hours:</strong> Mon - Fri (10 a.m. - 6 p.m.), Sat (11 a.m. - 6 p.m.)

  • For Paper Plane Makers

    Make a <a href="http://www.urbanicdesigns.com/bridal.html">bridal appointment</a> for young lovers planning a wedding or make custom notecard sets for friends. Great for people who don't like using email for everything. <a href="http://www.urbanicdesigns.com/">Urbanic Paper </a> 1644 Abbot Kinney Blvd. Venice, CA 90291 <strong>Hours:</strong> Mon - Sat (10 a.m. - 7p.m.), Sun (10 a.m. - 6 p.m.)

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/23/small-business-saturday-los-angeles_n_2177742.html

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Friday, November 23, 2012

Technology has provided the web designing facility ? Designsmag ...

How Technology can change the future of the world

It was a time in old ages when people had no idea about the progress of the world which had to be made with the technology. They had not in mind on that time that it would be one thing which will come in the later stages of the life and will change the life style of the people of that time and the name of that thing would be technology. Technology is really very important for the future of the world, it is not only vital for the future of the world but it also has changed the present lives of people. The wonders of the technology are in progress to modernize this world those include internet, smart phones, satellite and much more these type of incredible wonder and it is expected the introduction of more which will change the whole life style of people.

?What is Web designing

It is a good idea to introduce new techniques in the business world to produce lots of customers after regular intervals. People use different techniques to boost business and to encourage the sale of their businesses but web designing is something phenomenal for the business growth of them. It is a special formula to attract the customers towards the business websites with use of new designs of the websites while removing old ones.

Attraction of customers through web designing

It should have to be noted that a business man has to make lots of efforts to attract customers towards his business, people do not attract towards a business easily due to lots of fraud which is being committed in the sale of different products. They do not know about what is the actually relied company that can provide them desired products with lots of quality. This situation is often solved with some incredible methods and web designing is amongst one of those. It actually attracts people while providing them information about the business products but with a changed style. It is the quality of this method that people compel to purchase products after watching a beautiful promotion of these through business website.

Procedure of web designing

It is the method of this modern world that people do sale their products on online as well other than face to face selling because of lots of benefits of online selling. For the purpose of online selling, people have maintained the business websites of their businesses on which they frequently upload their business products on the websites on them. The problem is that people do not attract toward the business websites those have same appearance from long time, so it is really very important to change the theme of business website and for this there is a need to contact to the web designing experts. The website designing experts will choose a wonderful style of the website for a business and then will change that style with the old one and that?s it.

Benefits of web designing for a businessman

It has been noted that the nature of the people of the world is to attract toward beautiful and attractive things, so when a businessman changes the them of his website with the help of a web designer, then customers start to flow toward the website of it and thus he earns lots of profits and appreciations amongst business world.?

Author BIO:

The article is exclusively written for www.designsmag.com by Test4prep. Are you seeking for this 70-243 exam question assistance? Let?s get the advantage of 70-416 exam question and pass your IT certification exam on first attempt with 100% money back guaranty.

 Technology has provided the web designing facility

Naaz

Source: http://www.designsmag.com/2012/11/technology-has-provided-the-web-designing-facility/

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Hamas emerges with gains from Israeli offensive

A Palestinian baby wears a Hamas bandana during a rally to celebrate the Israel-Hamas cease-fire in the Jebaliya refugee camp, north Gaza Strip, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012. Gaza residents cleared rubble and claimed victory on Thursday, just hours after an Egyptian-brokered truce between Israel and Gaza's Hamas rulers ended the worst cross-border fighting in four years. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

A Palestinian baby wears a Hamas bandana during a rally to celebrate the Israel-Hamas cease-fire in the Jebaliya refugee camp, north Gaza Strip, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012. Gaza residents cleared rubble and claimed victory on Thursday, just hours after an Egyptian-brokered truce between Israel and Gaza's Hamas rulers ended the worst cross-border fighting in four years. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

Hamas militants stand during a Hamas press conference in Gaza City, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012. Gazans are celebrating a cease-fire agreement reached with Israel to end eight days of the fiercest fighting in nearly four years constricting the Gaza Strip. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)

A Palestinian boy and militants of the Izzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, attend funerals of five Hamas militants in Mugharka village, central Gaza Strip, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012. Five Hamas militants were killed in an Israeli air strike yesterday, Palestinian health officials said. (AP Photo/Adel Hana)

Palestinian militants of the Izzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, attend funerals of five Hamas militants in Mugharka village, central Gaza Strip, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012. Five Hamas militants were killed in an Israeli air strike yesterday, Palestinian health officials said. (AP Photo/Adel Hana)

Palestinian militants of the Izzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, attend funerals of five Hamas militants in Mugharka village, central Gaza Strip, Thursday, Nov. 22, 2012. Five Hamas militants were killed in an Israeli air strike yesterday, Palestinian health officials said. (AP Photo/Adel Hana)

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) ? Hamas has emerged from battle with the triumphal sense of a hard-won game change: By stopping its offensive when it did, Israel's hard-line government seems to have grudgingly accepted that the Islamic militant group cannot soon be dislodged from power in Gaza.

Hamas dared rocket the Tel Aviv and Jerusalem areas, then stared down threats of a ground invasion to wipe out the group ? emerging with its rule intact, world figures rushing to the region to put out the fire and key Muslim countries openly on its side. In the rush of diplomacy, Hamas also succeeded in overshadowing its main Western-backed Palestinian rival.

Still unclear is whether the Egyptian-brokered truce can deliver the promised end to Gaza's stifling blockade.

On Thursday, the first full day of calm after eight days of fighting, the contrast in mood couldn't be sharper.

Gazans celebrated the cease-fire with fireworks, Hamas militants flaunted their weapons in the streets and a Hamas political leader, Khalil al-Haya, taunted Israel at a victory rally, saying "you can't invade us."

Israel's mood was subdued, with some glad a costly ground invasion had been averted, but others disappointed by the inconclusive end of the offensive. Unlike in previous military campaigns against Hamas, Israel had set the bar low from the start, saying it only wanted to end to Gaza rocket fire, not topple the Islamists in charge of the Palestinian territory since they seized it from their rival Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in 2007.

The offensive had started seemingly unexpectedly, with the assassination of the Hamas military chief with a missile strike on his moving car on Nov. 14.

Over eight days, Israel's military struck some 1,500 Hamas-linked targets in Gaza and amassed troops on the border, while Israel's leaders threatened a bruising Gaza invasion, just like the one Israel staged four years earlier.

But Israel did not send in troops, even after Hamas barraged the Jewish state with hundreds of rockets, including several falling close to the heartland cities of Tel Aviv and Jerusalem ? something many had believed would surely trigger an invasion.

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak, pushing back Thursday against those clamoring for a decisive blow against Hamas, said he was not willing to embark on a military adventure and risk antagonizing the international community.

"Hamas won't be toppled unless Israel retakes Gaza, but I'm not sure that would be wise," Barak, one of Israel's most experienced military strategists, acknowledged on Israel Army Radio.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel could always reconsider if Hamas breaks the cease-fire, but that seemed unlikely considering warnings from the U.S. and the West of the high cost of sending ground troops.

Israel underestimated Hamas and "fell into a trap," claimed a leading Hamas hard-liner in Gaza, Mahmoud Zahar.

Other Hamas leaders bragged that their improved arsenal, including longer-range rockets and anti-tank missiles smuggled from Iran via tunnels under the Gaza-Egypt border, helped deter Israel's military.

But a bigger factor may have been the change of leadership in Egypt.

Four years ago, Egypt was ruled by pro-Western Hosni Mubarak, who helped keep Hamas isolated. This time around, Hamas had an effective ally in Mubarak's successor, Mohammed Morsi, like the Gaza Islamists a member of the region-wide Muslim Brotherhood. Morsi quickly emerged as an effective mediator, since he already had the trust of Hamas and Israel did not want to risk hurting its ties with the Arab world's most populous nation.

Israel's deputy prime minister, Dan Meridor, underscored Egypt's importance to Israel, suggesting they share security concerns, including making sure that "Gaza does not become a source of eruption endangering the stability of the region."

Egypt's sway over Hamas meant that the Islamists scaled back their demand to negotiate a detailed border deal with Israel before halting fire. In the end, Hamas agreed that a 24-hour period of calm would lead to negotiations on the new arrangements.

On Thursday evening, a senior Israeli official arrived in Cairo for follow-up talks with Egyptian intelligence. Earlier in the day, the Egyptian intelligence chief had met with the top Hamas leader in exile, Khaled Mashaal, and the head of the smaller sister group Islamic Jihad, Ramadan Shalah, according to Shalah's deputy Ziad Nakhaleh.

The apparent formula on the table is that Hamas halts weapons smuggling into Gaza in exchange for an easing of the Gaza border restrictions imposed by Israel and Mubarak after the Hamas takeover of Gaza more than five years ago. Morsi has eased restrictions on the main Egyptian crossing but not completely thrown it open as Hamas would like.

Hamas demands complete freedom of movement in and out of Gaza, while balking at the idea of demilitarizing the territory. However, an Israeli security official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss internal deliberations with reporters, said Israel would link the two.

Israel's military, which also deals with Gaza's border crossings, has presented possible plans for easing restrictions to Israel's political leaders, the official said.

This includes allowing badly needed building materials for reconstruction into Gaza for the first time since 2007 and permitting trade between Gaza and the West Bank, the two territories that flank Israel and that Palestinians hope will one day make up the bulk of their state. Eventually, Gaza-West Bank travel could also be considered, he said.

Such border changes, if approved by Israel's political leadership, could help reboot Gaza's battered economy, shore up Hamas' popularity and extend the Islamists' rule. In exchange, Hamas would have to stop arming itself and essentially give up what is now a main pillar of its power.

Hamas' main gains have been in the political arena. Foreign ministers from the region rushed to Gaza over the past week to show support for Hamas, while the U.S. and Israel grudgingly acknowledged Hamas' central role by conducting indirect talks.

Hamas also managed to show up Abbas, its main Western-backed political rival who ? rendered largely irrelevant ? watched events unfold from the sidelines.

Netanyahu's willingness to negotiate a truce deal with Hamas, while refusing to engage Abbas on the same terms as previous Israeli prime ministers, reinforced many Palestinians' belief that Israel only responds to force. If Hamas extracts border concessions from Israel, this would further discredit Abbas, the most prominent Palestinian proponent of non-violence and of negotiating the terms of a Palestinian state alongside Israel.

Faced with Hamas' rising popularity, Abbas' security forces ? who for years had clamped down on the Islamists in the West Bank ? were forced to stand back this week when demonstrators raised green Hamas banners for the first time in years.

With Hamas doing the fighting and the negotiating, Abbas and prospects for a two-state solution to the Mideast conflict "are on the losing end," said the International Crisis Group think tank.

The Israeli offensive, added Washington-based analyst Jonathan Alterman, may have "provoked one of the more profound shifts in Palestinian politics."

___

Associated Press writer Lauren E. Bohn in Jerusalem contributed reporting. Associated Press writer Mohammed Daraghmeh in Cairo contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-11-22-Emboldened%20Hamas/id-b3fa6e5ead7d46a98777007887dcb453

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