Sunday, January 27, 2013

Karnow, Vietnam reporter-historian, dies at age 87

Stanley Karnow, the award-winning author and journalist who wrote a definitive book about the Vietnam War, worked on an accompanying documentary and later won a Pulitzer for a history of the Philippines, died Sunday morning. He was 87.

Karnow, who had congestive heart failure, died in his sleep at his home in Potomac, Md., said son Michael Karnow.

A Paris-based correspondent for Time magazine early in his career, Karnow was assigned in 1958 to Hong Kong as bureau chief for Southeast Asia and soon arrived in Vietnam, when the American presence was still confined to a small core of advisers. In 1959, Karnow reported on the first two American deaths in Vietnam, not suspecting that tens of thousands would follow.

Into the 1970s, Karnow would cover the war off and on for Time, The Washington Post and other publications and then draw upon his experience for an epic PBS documentary and for the million-selling "Vietnam: A History," published in 1983 and widely regarded as an essential, even-handed summation.

Karnow's "In Our Image," a companion to a PBS documentary on the Philippines, won the Pulitzer in 1990. His other books included "Mao and China," which in 1973 received a National Book Award nomination, and "Paris in The Fifties," a memoir published in 1997.

A fellow Vietnam reporter, Morley Safer, would describe Karnow as the embodiment of "the wise old Asian hand." Karnow was known for his precision and research ? his Vietnam book reaches back to ancient times ? and his willingness to see past his own beliefs. He was a critic of the Vietnam War (and a name on President Nixon's enemies list) who still found cruelty and incompetence among the North Vietnamese. His friendship with Philippines leader Corazon Aquino did not stop him from criticizing her presidency.

A salesman's son, Karnow was born in New York in 1925 and by high school was writing radio plays and editing the school's paper, a job he also held at the Harvard Crimson. He first lived in Asia during World War II when he served throughout the region in the Army Air Corps. Back in the U.S., he majored in European history and literature at Harvard, from which he graduated in 1947.

Enchanted by French culture, and by the romance of Paris set down by Americans Ernest Hemingway and Henry Miller, Karnow set out for Europe after leaving school not for any particular purpose, but simply because it was there. "I went to Paris, planning to stay for the summer. I stayed for 10 years," he wrote in "Paris in the Fifties."

He began sending dispatches to a Connecticut weekly, where the owner was a friend, and in 1950 was hired as a researcher at Time. Promoted to correspondent, he would cover strikes, race car driving and the beginning of the French conflict with Algeria, but also interviewed Audrey Hepburn ("a memorable if regrettably brief encounter") fashion designer Christian Dior and director John Huston, who smoked cigars, knocked back Irish whiskies and rambled about the meaning of Humphrey Bogart. Friends and acquaintances included Norman Mailer, James Baldwin and John Kenneth Galbraith.

Karnow's first book was the text for "Southeast Asia," an illustrated Life World Library release published in 1962, before the U.S. committed ground troops to Vietnam. It was partly a Cold War time capsule, preoccupied with Communist influence, but was also skeptical enough of official policy to anticipate the fall of a key American ally, South Vietnamese president Ngo Dihn Diem, an event that helped lead to greater American involvement.

Like so many others, Karnow initially supported the war and believed in the "domino theory," which asserted that if South Vietnam were to fall to communism its neighbors would too.

But by war's end, Karnow agreed with the soldier asked by a reporter in 1968 what he thought of the conflict: "It stinks," was the reply.

"Vietnam: A History" was published in 1983 and coincided with a 13-part PBS documentary series. Like much of his work, Karnow's book combined historical research, firsthand observations and thorough reporting, including interviews with top officials on both sides of the war. Decades later, it remained read and taught alongside such classics as David Halberstam's "The Best and the Brightest" and Michael Herr's "Dispatches."

"There are not many carefully delineated judgments in the book. But that is more a comment than the criticism it might be, for Mr. Karnow does not claim to have reached a sweeping verdict on the war," Douglas Pike, a former U.S. government official in Vietnam who became a leading authority on the war, wrote for The New York Times in a 1983 review.

"Because he has a sharp eye for the illustrative moment and a keen ear for the telling quote, his book is first-rate as a popular contribution to understanding the war. And that is what he meant it to be."

The PBS series won six Emmys, a Peabody and a Polk and was the highest-rated documentary at the time for public television, with an average of 9.7 million viewers per episode. Along with much praise came criticism from the left and right. The liberal weekly The Nation faulted Karnow for "little analysis and much waffling." Conservatives were so angered by the documentary that PBS agreed to let the right-wing Accuracy in Media air a rebuttal, "Television's Vietnam: The Real Story," which in turn was criticized as a show of weakness by PBS.

Karnow completed no books after "Paris in the Fifties." He attempted a study of Asians in the U.S., which he abandoned; a history of Jewish humor that never advanced beyond an outline; and a second memoir, with such working titles as "Interesting Times" and "Out of Asia." He also cared for his ailing wife, Annette, who died of cancer in 2009. A previous marriage, to Claude Sarraute (daughter of French novelist Nathalie Sarraute), ended in divorce in 1955. Karnow had three children.

He was often called on for speeches, panel discussions and television appearances and asked for his opinions on current affairs. One query came in 2009, through his old friend Richard Holbrooke, at the time the U.S. special envoy to Afghanistan. Holbrooke wanted advice on U.S. policy in Afghanistan and put Karnow on the phone with Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. commander. Karnow and the general discussed similarities between the wars in Afghanistan and Vietnam.

"What did we learn from Vietnam?" Karnow later told the AP. "We learned that we shouldn't have been there in the first place."

___

Associated Press writer Ben Nuckols in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/karnow-vietnam-reporter-historian-dies-age-87-215252838.html

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Mars rover Curiosity uses arm camera at night

Jan. 24, 2013 ? NASA's Mars rover Curiosity has for the first time used the camera on its arm to take photos at night, illuminated by white lights and ultraviolet lights on the instrument.

Scientists used the rover's Mars Hand Lens Imager (MAHLI) instrument for a close-up nighttime look at a rock target called "Sayunei," in an area where Curiosity's front-left wheel had scuffed the rock to provide fresh, dust-free materials to examine. The site is near where the rover team plans to begin using Curiosity to drill into a rock in coming weeks. The images of the rock Sayunei and of MAHLI's calibration target were taken on Jan. 22 (PST) and received on Earth Jan. 23.

The MAHLI, an adjustable-focus color camera, includes its own LED (light-emitting diode) illumination sources. Images of Sayunei taken with white-LED illumination and with illumination by ultraviolet LEDs are available online at: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/spaceimages/details.php?id=PIA16711 and http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/spaceimages/details.php?id=PIA16712 .

"The purpose of acquiring observations under ultraviolet illumination was to look for fluorescent minerals," said MAHLI Principal Investigator Ken Edgett of Malin Space Science Systems, San Diego. "These data just arrived this morning. The science team is still assessing the observations. If something looked green, yellow, orange or red under the ultraviolet illumination, that'd be a more clear-cut indicator of fluorescence."

NASA's Mars Science Laboratory project is using Curiosity to investigate whether the study area within Gale Crater has offered environmental conditions favorable for microbial life. JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the Mars Science Laboratory mission for the NASA Science Mission Directorate, Washington. For more information about the mission, visit http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/msl , http://www.nasa.gov/msl and http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl .

Follow the mission on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/marscuriosity and on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/marscuriosity .

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/4hYMIzosT4M/130124140600.htm

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

"John Dies at the End" review: Hipster Ghostbusters vs. Flying Mustaches

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - A shaggy-dog story with restless leg syndrome, "John Dies at the End" may not amount to much, but there's no denying its sheer entertainment value. Mixing slacker laughs with inter-dimensional creepy-crawlies, it's a zing-packed horror comedy that coasts by on sheer bravado, twisted wit and endless adrenaline.

Cult writer-director Don Coscarelli ("Bubba Ho-Tep," "The Beastmaster," "Phantasm") drolly adapts the novel by David Wong (a pen name for Jason Pargin), and even if the story's rules and logic seem to be ever-shifting, it never feels like the movie is cheating or pulling the rug out. We're set up for a lunatic funhouse of a plot, and that's exactly what we get.

Dave (Chase Williamson) meets with reporter Arnie Blondestone (Paul Giamatti, who also executive produced) to tell him of his recent extraordinary adventures that saved the universe as we know it. Or something like that. His journey involves a street drug known as "soy sauce," which gives its users superhuman powers of perception and the ability to see the future and to travel between dimensions.

Dave's best friend John (Rob Mayes) takes the drug and then dies (in the middle, actually), only to find other forms in which to exist before manifesting inside a dog and then back into his own corpse, and...

Look, there's no way to really explain this story without note cards and a flow chart; suffice it to say that Dave and John encounter a variety of bizarro occurrences, including a bratwurst that acts as a cell phone, teenagers possessed by what look like fruitflies, a flying mustache, a monster made of frozen meat, an infomercial psychic (played by Clancy Brown) who may hold the keys to the mysteries of existence, and a cop (Glynn Turman of "Gremlins") who wants to set everyone and everything that's been exposed to the drug on fire before they can create any more trouble.

"John Dies at the End" seems to be designed for multiple viewings, as it pretty much dissolves inside your brain the second it's over, but there's no denying the little pops of pleasure it provides along the way. Relative newcomers Williamson and Mayes make charismatic tour guides in this crazy world, and their ability to anchor material this flimsy and seemingly unmanageable speaks well for their futures as actors in more narratively stable films.

Giamatti gets the relatively thankless as-told-to role, but he's clearly having a ball in his ill-fitting schlub costume; if nothing else, he does "And then what happened?" about a hundred times more interestingly than Rafe Spall does in "Life of Pi."

This movie may, in the final analysis, be nothing but stoner silliness with the occasional gross-out. But if you happen to be in the market for stoner silliness with the occasional gross-out, "John Dies at the End" does it particularly well.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/john-dies-end-review-hipster-ghostbusters-vs-flying-011159143.html

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Toyota and BMW make it official, commit to green vehicle technology partnership

Toyota and BMW make it official, commit to green vehicle technology partnership

We're well aware Toyota and BMW are pretty good pals, but details of their ongoing study sessions on green vehicle tech have been vague thus far. The trickle of information continues, and today the companies met to autograph more bits of paper and clasp hands for the camera. New binding agreements were signed to reaffirm deals inked in March and June last year, and their research into next-generation lithium-ion batteries has been expanded to cover the lithium-air kind (hopefully, they are less flammable). Work on making vehicles lighter continues, and they expect to complete development of an inclusive fuel cell system by the distant target of 2020. Expect to see some fruits of BMW and Toyota's labor before then, though, as they intend to "define a joint platform concept for a mid-sized sports vehicle" by the end of the year. Don't get too excited -- we imagine that jargon means we'll be privy to a few bits of artwork and some inspirational words come the deadline. If you'd like to know more about the evolving partnership, check out the source links below.

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Via: Phys.org

Source: BMW (1), (2)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/Ddw3EAyzAz0/

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Alice Eats: Asiana Noodle Shop | Bite Club: Vermont's Food and ...

IMG_515088 Church Street, Burlington, 862-8828

"How can you guys do a 'soup survey' and not hit Asiana Noodle House?" asked reader Bridget O'Connor in a letter to the editor in Seven Days' January 9 issue. "They will out-soup anyone for miles around!"

While Asiana Noodle Shop?? not to be confused with Pearl Street's Asiana House ? didn't fit into our December 19 survey of Burlington caf?s and bakeries that serve soup, it was clear that it was time to pay the Church Street restaurant its due. Especially with a string of weather that will certainly be necessitating a steaming bowl or two of noodle soup.

One of my favorite things about the cozy restaurant is its space. The slightly cramped surroundings that long held Paradise Burrito feel just as a casual noodle shop should.

As a food critic, I find that one of the most deflating things you can put in front of me is a huge menu. Often the term "jack of all trades, master of none" applies to these kinds of establishments. The same goes for any restaurant that tries to be pan-Asian.There are simply too many different flavors to perfect.

But, darn it, the lengthy bill of fare at Asiana Noodle is just so full of appealing choices. In warmer weather, I might have gone for spicy tuna maki with cold noodles in Korean spicy dressing; or one of the quirky duck specials, including a roll that combines mallard with eel.

But last night was the culinary equivalent of putting on a warm coat and snow pants ? it was all about comfort.

IMG_5147I started by assembling my DIY Cargo Noodles bowl.

I was excited that bean thread noodles (called green bean noodles on the menu, though they're actually made of mung beans) were one of the many pasta options. It takes a lot for me to eschew udon or soba, but that did it.

This brought good news and bad news. The good news was that the gleaming, round noodles absorbed the ginger of my tom yum broth beautifully. The bad news was that they were overcooked and tended to fall apart as I grabbed them with my chopsticks.

The soup lacked acid, the key to a good tom yum. Meanwhile, the spice stayed at the tip of my tongue rather than creating the deep, lip-tingling burn I look for. It tasted good, but I would have been disappointed at a Thai restaurant. The vegetables within, including cherry tomatoes, bok choy and a number of different mushrooms, were all cooked to perfection, retaining their natural textures while adding flavor and nutrition. Still, I couldn't help but feel that my pan-Asian prophecy was being fulfilled.

IMG_5149With an extra $3.50, we ordered a palate cleanser of ume-shiso maki. The sweet-sour-salty balance of the plum paste and fresh carrots within was lovely, but I couldn't taste the shiso in the slightly gooey roll.

A key flavor was also lacking in the Five Spice Chicken Noodle Soup. Or rather, five of them. But what I missed most in the comforting chicken broth was the sweet licorice flavor of the anise and fennel seeds. A hint of cinnamon would have made the soup. But I still enjoyed the warm potage.

Tender bone-in chicken thighs were fun to disassemble with my chopsticks. The egg noodles were nicely al dente, and bean sprouts and bok choy lent a pleasant hint of vegetation.

I was certainly warmed by my soups, but I wouldn't agree that they're the best for miles, even compared with other purveyors of Asian noodle bowls. I'll be more likely to hit less expensive and more flavorful Pho Pasteur or Pho Hong for Vietnamese and Sushido or HJ House for Japanese. But if I want it all at once, I might head back to Church Street.

Alice Eats is a weekly blog feature devoted to reviewing restaurants where diners can get a meal for two for less than $35. Got a restaurant you'd love to see featured? Send it to alice@sevendaysvt.com.

Source: http://7d.blogs.com/biteclub/2013/01/alice-eats-asiana-noodle-shop.html

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The Prevention of Hypertension | SpaceCoast Living Magazine

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Source: http://spacecoastliving.com/the-prevention-of-hypertension/

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Good Reads: Thick financial fog, unskilled workers, self-helped Americans, and a forgiveness that heals

This week's good reads includes a look at the billowing fog surrounding bank regulations, the disappearance of unskilled labor jobs, the American tradition of self-help, and a profound act of forgiveness by a victim's family.

By Marshall Ingwerson,?Managing editor / January 14, 2013

A ?skilled worker? in Massachusetts checks the plastic coating on a solar panel.

Alfredo Sosa/Staff

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Here?s the short answer to the question posed on the cover of the latest Atlantic Monthly, ?What?s inside America?s banks??: No one knows. Not the regulators, not sophisticated investors, and not even the bankers themselves.

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?Banks today are bigger and more opaque than ever, and they continue to behave in many of the same ways they did before the crash,? write Frank Partnoy and Jesse Eisinger, authors of the Atlantic piece.

Complexity and opaqueness are the core of the problem, according to the authors. They cite a wide range of former bankers, investors, and regulatory officials who know the banks best and who ?absolutely? don?t trust their accounting. Even the banks with the best reputations, JP Morgan or Wells Fargo, are impenetrable black boxes with annual reports that defy parsing by even the most expert readers.

The fog of financial complexity is matched by a fog of rules ? as regulators parry moves by the bankers ? but always a few moves behind. The famed Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 ran to 37 pages. Dodd-Frank of 2010 was 848 pages and may balloon to 30,000 in the end. By the time the law?s ?Volcker Rule? is finalized, ?only a handful of partners at the world?s biggest law firms will understand it.?

The authors would offer the following version instead: ?Banks are not permitted to engage in proprietary trading. Period.?

That would save a lot of paper.

Maybe the Luddites had a point

Traditionally, technology has raised incomes for each generation by raising worker productivity. But ever smarter technologies are replacing the need for unskilled labor altogether, argue economists Jeffrey Sachs and Laurence Kotlikoff in a paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Think, for example, of the fully automated turnpike tollbooths or checkout stands at Home Depot. Investors are benefiting from these innovations, as are highly skilled programmers and technologists. (And lines are shorter.) But the jobs that are disappearing are the unskilled ones that offer young people a first few steps up the economic ladder. Without them, the authors argue, we don?t really have a ladder, and lifetime well-being slips by a generation. So what to do? For individuals, this sounds like a warning to get some skills.

?Although smart machines substitute for unskilled workers, they are designed and run by skilled workers. So it?s no surprise that the incomes of skilled workers have risen relative to those of unskilled workers.? The authors note that this is one reason the wage premium for college graduates has increased from around 40 percent in 1999 to more than 80 percent today.

Helping ourselves

From Benjamin Franklin to Oprah Winfrey, from ?How to Win Friends & Influence People? to ?The 4-Hour Workweek,? self-help advice is a very American phenomenon ? and getting more so, according to Laura Vanderkam writing in the quarterly City Journal. More than 45,000 self-help book titles are in print, she writes, and the genre?s share of all titles published doubled from 1975 to 2000.

?There is much to mock? in this field, she notes, and she runs through its history and various critiques. But there is much that is useful as well. Socially mobile Americans construct their own notions of the good life, in DIY-style, ?from what we see of the world around us ? and what we find at the bookstore.?

Crime and recovery

In these weeks following the Newtown, Conn., shooting, there is something ? dare we say healing? ? in The New York Times Magazine story by Paul Tullis about the killing of Ann Grosmaire by her fianc?, Conor McBride, in 2010. The crime came in a moment of overwhelming emotion after an argument between the two community college students that had stretched on for 38 hours. It was not premeditated exactly, but it wasn?t an accident either.

As the father of the mortally wounded and unconscious Ann sat with her in a Tallahassee, Fla., hospital, he ?felt? her say ?Forgive him? so clearly that he spoke his refusal aloud. But he kept hearing that message in her voice. A devout Roman Catholic, he was praying in the hospital four days later, shortly before removing her from life support, when he ?realized it was not just Ann asking me to forgive Conor, it was Jesus Christ.?

The journey the family went on then took them through a process called ?restorative justice,? which strives for agreement among everyone involved in and affected by a crime over how to make restitution. This means that victims, offenders, and their families sooner or later end up sitting around a table and talking.

The upshot, in this story as in others, is forgiveness. Says Ann?s mother, Kate: ?I think that when people can?t forgive, they?re stuck. All they can feel is the emotion surrounding that moment.... Forgiveness to me was self-preservation.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/9xbYbWQ04Sw/Good-Reads-Thick-financial-fog-unskilled-workers-self-helped-Americans-and-a-forgiveness-that-heals

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Modular Building Institute Lauds High Rise Groundbreaking as ...

New York, NY ? January 21, 2012 ? (RealEstateRama) ? New York City developer Forest City Ratner Companies ?broke ground? Dec. 18 on the tallest modular building in the world, a 32-story residential tower known as B2, part of the Atlantic Yards development in Brooklyn, N.Y. Taking a new twist on groundbreaking, rather than use shovels, project leaders unveiled a prototype modular chassis for B2 during the ceremony.

As with most modular construction, the B2 tower will consist of individual modules that are built in a controlled factory environment and later transported to site and craned into place. In this case, union workers will build 930 modules in a Brooklyn factory, where they will finish the units to a nearly live-in-ready status. The units will come together to form 363 apartments of various sizes.

?We wanted to maximize what was done in the factory to minimize the amount of work needed onsite,? explained David Farnsworth, Principal with Arup, the engineering firm involved in the extensive research and development for the project.

The modules will come complete with paint, fixtures and structural connections, and will blend in with the building?s fa?ade, Farnsworth said.

While that degree of offsite fabrication is not new to the modular industry, the height of the building is. Until now, most modular buildings have remained under six stories due to developers? perceptions about modular and a lack of investment in engineering for taller modular structures.

Bill Flemming, President and CEO of Skanska USA Building ? the general contractor for the project ? spoke at the groundbreaking and noted that the project represents a ?milestone for the construction industry? because of the substitution of modular in place of the traditional process in a building this high.

Tom Hardiman, Executive Director for the Modular Building Institute, the international trade association that has represented the commercial modular industry for 30 years, agreed that this project is a game changer that could help the industry to grow and venture into new territory.

?Every major industry in the world has advanced in automation, efficiency and productivity. The construction industry has largely been the exception until now,? Hardiman said.

?We are very excited about the prospect of a 32-story modular building,? said Hardiman. ?This project proves what savvy investors, developers and contractors already know ? that modular construction is safer and more resource efficient, and reduces the construction schedule without sacrificing quality or durability. In short, it?s greener, faster and smarter.?

?With more than 10 million square feet of multi-story permanent modular construction projects delivered over the past several years for various federal agencies, as well as the education, multifamily housing, retail and commercial sectors, this tried and tested method is ready for prime time,? Hardiman said.

About MBI
The Modular Building Institute is the international nonprofit trade association that has served the modular construction industry for 30 years. Members are suppliers, manufacturers and contractors involved in all aspects of modular projects ? from complex multistory solutions to temporary accommodations. As the voice of commercial modular construction, MBI expands the use of offsite construction through innovative construction practices, outreach, education to the construction community and customers, and recognition of high-quality modular designs and facilities. For more information on modular construction, visit http://www.modular.org.

Contact:
Tracey Daniels
Modular Building Institute
434-296-3288 x152; E-Mail

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    Arlington, VA - August 3, 2011 - (RealEstateRama) -- As the United States continues to deal with a still-struggling economy, it might be easy to assume that all of the housing industry is part of the same scenario. However, industry leaders such as Thayer Long, president and CEO of the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI), believe manufactured housing is a key...

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Source: http://www.realestaterama.com/2013/01/21/modular-building-institute-lauds-high-rise-groundbreaking-as-industry-game-changer-ID018233.html

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Monday, January 21, 2013

Austria appears to back status quo conscript army

VIENNA (AP) ? Austrians voted overwhelmingly Sunday to retain their conscript army, with exit poll projections showing around 60 percent rejecting the proposed change to a force of professional soldiers.

The wide margin of victory for those backing the status quo came as a surprise, for pre-election surveys had that side ahead by only a few percentage points.

Two polling organizations ? ARGE Wahlen and SORA ? showed only about 40 percent of those who cast ballots looking to change the system. They also showed a relatively high turnout in rural areas ? up to 60 percent in many regions ? compared to Vienna, with 40 percent.

Overall turnout was projected at close to 50 percent.

With conscripts frequently recruited to help prevent natural catastrophes ? or clean up afterward ? rural voters in this Alpine nation were clearly receptive to arguments that a professional army would not be filling sandbags to prevent flooding or shoveling out basements after mudslides.

They also heeded warnings that changing the system would hit Austria's social sector, which depends on conscientious objectors who serve as ambulance drivers, attendants at senior citizens' homes and in other community jobs that are hard to fill because of poor pay.

While formally non-political, the referendum reflected preferences between Austria's two uneasy coalition partners and looked ahead to the national election in September.

Socialists urged voters to follow most nations in the 27-nation European Union, where 21 countries have professional armies. The centrist People's Party backed keeping the present system.

Austria's armed forces now consist of about 35,000 troops ? 14,000 professionals and the rest conscripts who serve for six months ? as well as a 30,000-strong part-time militia. The proposed reform foresaw 8,500 career soldiers, 7,000 who sign up for an average three years, 9,300 militia members and more focus on terrorism and cyber-attacks.

"I voted to keep this status as it is," said Jono Englander, 62. "If this turns into a professional army, where people just go because they want to, then I think we are going to send ... our young people often to wars."

Proponents of change argued it was time to streamline the armed forces.

"I think 80 percent of the countries in Europe have a professional army," said Oliver Bendt, 42. "So I think for young people it's the best way."

Others had even simpler arguments for opposing the present setup.

"I voted against it, because I don't want to go into the army," said 16-year-old Johannes Schmidt.

___

Associated Press video journalist Bela Szandelszky contributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/austria-appears-back-status-quo-conscript-army-163012494.html

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Making sugar from carbon dioxide: The Calvin Cycle

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Berlusconi sex-for-hire verdict likely after vote

MILAN (AP) ? Judges hearing ex-Premier Silvio Berlusconi's sex-for-hire trial are indicating that the verdict could come down after national elections

The court's decision last week not to suspend the trial to allow Berlusconi to campaign put the case on course to wrap up before the Feb. 24-25 vote. But the court Monday set the last hearing for March and asked the prosecutors to make their final arguments after the elections.

Prosecutors replied with a motion to schedule their closing before elections. The court was in recess to decide the request and another by Berlusconi's defense to suspend the trial so the lead lawyer, a parliamentarian, can campaign.

Berlusconi is accused of having paid for sex with an underage teen and then trying to cover it up. Both deny sexual contact.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-01-21-EU-Italy-Berlusconi/id-79a23879834b4f0fbe53232968def9d9

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

94% Barbara

All Critics (47) | Top Critics (13) | Fresh (44) | Rotten (3)

[Leaves] you drained and horrified.

Sometimes, the sun shines and the wind blows fresh and the very elements that make for intense hardship also open a window on intense joy.

Hoss is mesmerizing as a woman who holds it all together to the point of losing herself.

It's one terrific film, as smart, thoughtful and emotionally involving as just about anything that's out there.

It's a quiet film built of careful details.

"Barbara" re-visits the quiet, everyday tragedies of the Iron Curtain era, when paranoia ran deep and for very good reasons.

Feels like total immersion into the sights, stresses, and the subtle solidarity among middle-class professionals living in the workers' paradise that Petzold's parents fled.

[R]esides somewhere in an unsatisfying borderland between drama and thriller, never quite catching fire as either...

A superbly crafted low-boil drama that gets its hooks into you the old-fashioned way, through character, and highlights the difficulties and cost of living by principles.

Subtly intriguing and ambiguous, it's filled with suspicion and subterfuge.

Despite the limited scope of its predictable narrative, "Barbara" remains a compelling character study thanks to Nina Hoss's enigmatic performance in the title role.

Christian Petzold's latest thriller threatens to cross over the line from minimalism to nihilism.

Both insightful and poignant, but not mawkish...an intriguing character study set against the backdrop of a dark time in history.

The plotting, the planning and the deepening relationships don't make for kinetic action, but they are the foundation for a smart, engrossing film.

Hoss' acting is a marvel of subtlety; her body language is precisely calibrated to reveal a great deal about the character's inner feelings by the slightest changes of posture and facial expression.

...a slow building character study where looks and actions speak louder than words because of an oppressive political climate.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/barbara_2012/

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Analysis: China upturn underscores need to rebalance economy

BEIJING (Reuters) - China's recovery from its longest slowdown in growth since the global financial crisis is being driven by the two forces posing the biggest risks to the economy's increasingly urgent need to rebalance - investment and property.

The central government wants to raise consumption's share in the economy as the cornerstone effort to close one of the world's widest gaps between rich and poor and quell the discontent among those Chinese who feel they missed out on the country's blistering expansion of the past three decades.

The economy picked up in the fourth quarter as a spurt of infrastructure spending orchestrated by Beijing broke seven straight quarters of a slowdown. Consumption's contribution to growth fell in the fourth quarter for the third straight quarter even though retail sales were rising in each of the last three months.

Short-term policies to drive the recovery may well explain that because the biggest improvements were real estate-related, casting doubt on whether Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang - President- and Premier-in-waiting, respectively - can really rebalance the economy and lever its giant size to deliver widespread wealth.

"While the recent turn in the economy is real, the true test for China's new leadership is not whether they can manage the cycle, but whether they can put longer-term growth on a stronger footing," Janet Zhang, an analyst at consultancy, GK Dragonomics, wrote in a note to clients.

Dependence on investment spending - now at around 50 percent of GDP - for three decades of development has created huge industrial overcapacity in China, eroding economic efficiency despite some of the world's lowest labor costs and requiring increasing amounts of capital to deliver diminishing returns.

That worries investors and makes the International Monetary Fund fret about the risk of a capacity glut that could have global consequences.

Analysis by HSBC shows investment growth is contributing more to the economy than at any time since 2009 - the year in which China injected the bulk of a 4 trillion yuan ($640 billion) stimulus to counter the impact of the global financial crisis.

Economists at UBS noted meanwhile that growth in December's retail sales may have been stronger-than-expected at an eight-month high of 15.2 percent year-on-year, but the pickup was on household goods, furniture and construction materials tied to rising property transactions.

It serves to emphasize how hard it is for Beijing to shift the economy's underlying growth drivers.

Consumption might have been the biggest single contributor to 2012's full-year GDP growth of 7.8 percent, but its 51.8 percent share remains far below the 70-80 percent typical in developed rich economies.

WEALTH GAP

Spreading the benefits of China's ascent to its position as a global economic powerhouse is seen as the best way of quelling the risk of revolt. Even a newly recalibrated official index last week indicated the wealth gap was so wide that serious social dissatisfaction may be brewing.

Chinese officials are likely to be agonizing anew over the headstrong property market in the wake of GDP data that showed fourth-quarter growth rebounding to a stronger-than-expected 7.9 percent alongside a pronounced upswing in real estate sales, housing starts, investment and home prices.

Real estate is a hot-button topic for the government because many Chinese complain that prices are out of their reach.

House prices in their own central Beijing backyard are zooming towards record highs, despite three years of steady policy action to rein-in rises and stifle speculation.

Apartments in the Champion Court housing estate that is a 15-minute walk from the headquarters of the People's Bank of China are selling at all-time-high prices of between 80,000-100,000 yuan ($12,900-$16,100) per square meter.

Prices have jumped 10 percent in the past year, data from China's largest online real estate firm Soufun Holdings showed, as Champion Court's proximity to China's financial center draw buyers who think they can benefit from its location.

Official data shows monthly rises in the country's top 70 cities for five of the last six months, the latest in December.

"To be honest, I think prices are unthinkable," said a property agent surnamed Jin who declined to give his full name.

Jin's firm specializes in property in Beijing's financial district and around 60 percent of the homes it sells are paid for immediately in cash, he said.

Champion Court's eye-watering prices belie a dreary exterior, suggesting Beijing faces a long slog in curbing property inflation despite limits on home purchases and hefty down payment rules.

An 80-square-metre (860 sq ft), one-bedroom Champion Court flat was on the market last week for 7.2 million yuan ($1.16 million) when Reuters visited. The bathroom had a rusty tub and a hole in the wall.

Built in 2004, the price of Champion Court apartments - which give buyers 61 years of ownership rights - have galloped 10-fold since, said Zeng, a property agent who also declined to give her full name.

URBAN LEGEND

Contrary to urban Chinese legend that blames coal mine bosses for driving up house prices with their newly-minted wealth, Zeng, whose office is near Champion Court, said owners are bankers or civil servants working in the financial district.

"It's supposed to be the lull season in the property market now but we can't feel the lull this year," she said, adding that her firm sold a 4.75 million yuan flat in 3-1/2 hours last week.

And even with Champion Court's record prices that are on par with those in France and Japan, it is not the priciest estate in town. Further west, giant luxury apartments at the Diaoyutai No. 7 compound cost as much as 160,298 yuan per square meter.

China's average annual urban disposable income in 2012 was 24,565 yuan. Home prices meanwhile averaged 20,700 yuan per square meter in Beijing last year.

Accelerating property inflation could put the pressure on Beijing to tighten monetary policy before the year is up, a move that carries risks given China is only just recovering from its worst full-year of growth in 2012 in 13 years.

The upside for now is that the recovery is taking hold and that, by common consensus, China has successfully avoided a so-called economic hard landing that many analysts said would have rippled across the global economy.

Neither can it be ignored that consumption was the biggest component of the economy in 2012, nor, as GK Dragonomics' Zhang observes, that household income growth outpaced GDP for only the third time in the past decade.

The downside is that recovery so far is underpinned by infrastructure projects and the property market. And that remains a concern for many analysts and investors.

"China faces the increasingly urgent task of rebalancing its economy away from investment and towards consumption," Andrew Colquhoun, senior director for sovereigns at ratings agency, Fitch, wrote in a note to clients.

"The data show limited progress so far."

(Editing by Nick Edwards and Neil Fullick)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-china-upturn-underscores-rebalance-economy-212807308--business.html

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Visualizing Silver As An Investment | Zero Hedge

Silver is like gold in many ways; both are precious metals with long histories as currencies. They are malleable, lustrous, ductile, resilient, and rare. However, as Visual Capitalist illustrates in this spectacular infographic, silver investors should be aware of the three main differences between silver and gold. From silver's relative volatility and correlation to industrial demand, track record, diversification benefits, and the three ways to get exposure to silver, this colossal image provides everything you need to know in one place.

Click image for massive (legible version).

?

Source: Visual Capitalist

Your rating: None Average: 4.3 (12 votes)

Source: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-01-19/visualizing-silver-investment

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Drew Barrymore's Family: Actress Says 'You Can't Have It All'

Now that she's a working mother and married woman, Drew Barrymore admitted that you can't have it all -- but one thing she doesn't want to miss out on is her new family.

The actress and entrepreneur told USA Today Tuesday that her life has changed since she married her husband, art consultant Will Kopelman, and gave birth to their daughter, Olive (now almost four months old).

"I'm the biggest workaholic, but I do believe you can't have it all. You can have a few things and prioritize and balance that with real life," Barrymore said. "I'm not the same person I was, saying 'see you later' and I have to go off and do a film. [Kopelman and I] are together every night. I have a much more civilized schedule."

She called Kopelman, whom she married in June 2012 while pregnant with Olive, "excruciatingly honest."

"I know I married someone who's real with me. He challenges me. He doesn't take my stuff. He's a strong, great guy. His intentions are impeccable," she said. "He really believes in working for things, putting in the effort, and being honest. I really root for him and his happiness."

Barrymore launched Barrymore Pinot Grigio in spring 2012, and her new makeup line, Flower, drops this month. She will talk more about marriage and motherhood with Oprah Winfrey on "Oprah's Next Chapter" on January 27.

Click through the slideshow to see who tied the knot while pregnant.

  • Drew Barrymore

    The 37-year-old actress married Will Kopelman on June 2 while <a href="http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20601489,00.html" target="_hplink">pregnant with her first child.</a>

  • Kate Winslet

    "Titanic's" leading lady married Sam Mendes in 2003 while she was <a href="http://www.lovelyish.com/728640187/6-celebrity-women-who-were-pregnant-at-their-weddings/" target="_hplink">eight months pregnant</a>. Winslet and Mendes <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/15/kate-winslet-break-up-spl_n_499474.html" target="_hplink">announced that they were divorcing</a> in 2010.

  • Jennifer Garner

    Garner married Ben Affleck while <a href="http://www.lovelyish.com/728640187/6-celebrity-women-who-were-pregnant-at-their-weddings/" target="_hplink">three months pregnant</a> in 2003. The couple recently celebrated their <a href="http://www.justjared.com/2012/06/30/jennifer-garner-ben-affleck-7th-anniversary/" target="_hplink">seventh wedding anniversary. </a>

  • Jessica Alba

    Jessica Alba and Cash Warren met while working on "Fantastic Four" and married in a <a href="http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20201377,00.html" target="_hplink">small courthouse ceremony on May 19, 2008</a>. Their daughter, Honor, was born that summer.

  • Gwyneth Paltrow

    The <a href="http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,627347,00.html" target="_hplink">actress married Coldplay frontman </a>Chris Martin in December 2003, just after they announced her pregnancy.

  • Alicia Keys

    <a href="http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20406168,00.html" target="_hplink">Alicia Keys married producer Swizz Beatz</a> in 2010 while expecting their first child.

  • Amanda Peet

    Amanda Peet and hubby, screenwriter David Benioff, <a href="http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,1224905,00.html" target="_hplink">married while the actress was expecting in 2006</a>.

  • Lily Allen

    Lily Allen was a bride-to-be as well as a <a href="http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20502105,00.html" target="_hplink">mom-to-be in 2011.</a>

  • Kendra Wilkinson

    Hugh Hefner's ex <a href="http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20288359,00.html" target="_hplink">married Hank Baskett</a> at the Playboy Mansion in 2009 while <a href="http://blogs.babble.com/famecrawler/2012/06/06/wedding-baby-14-celeb-moms-to-be-who-walked-the-aisle-pregnant-photos/?pid=32545#slideshow" target="_hplink">three months along</a> in her pregnancy.

  • Julianna Margulies

    The actress married Keith Lieberthal in 2007 when she was <a href="http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20161285,00.html" target="_hplink">seven months pregnant.</a>

  • Miranda Kerr

    The Australian model married Orlando Bloom in 2010, and walked down the aisle <a href="http://www.gurgle.com/news/celebrity-parents/miranda-kerr-is-pregnant-and-other-celebrities-who-got-married-whilst-pregnant/2292" target="_hplink">disguising her baby bump.</a>

  • Camilla Alves

    Matthew McConaughey and his new wife only tied the knot last month, but recently announced that they're <a href="http://www.yourtango.com/2012156559/camila-alves-shows-her-baby-bump-first-time" target="_hplink">expecting their third child.</a>

  • Bethenny Frankel

    The "Real Housewives of New York City" star said "I do" to boyfriend Jason Hoppy in 2010 while <a href="http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20355331,00.html" target="_hplink">seven months pregnant.</a>

Keep in touch! Check out HuffPost Weddings on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/16/drew-barrymore-family_n_2488927.html

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Tuesday, January 15, 2013

How Many Cushions Would You Need To Build the Ultimate Pillow Fort?

Just because you've grown into a responsible adult doesn't mean you can't occasionally enjoy the simple pleasure of building a pillow fort. But why stop at the crude one-person shacks you built as a kid? With this calculator, and plenty of disposable income, you can assemble a cushion command center on a much grander scale. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/A6wSKgbnlyA/how-many-cushions-would-you-need-to-build-the-ultimate-fort

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Yen plunges as Japan gambles for growth

A weakening of Japan's yen is helping exporters, but at what cost?

HONG KONG (CNNMoney)

The yen has weakened more than 14% against the dollar since the beginning of October, bringing about a boon for the country's manufacturers.

And many economists expect it will fall further this year as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe steps up the pressure for the Bank of Japan to ease monetary policy again, and adds to the country's debt mountain to pump money into the stalled economy.

Abe advocates "unlimited" buying of government bonds and wants to see the central bank raise its inflation target to 2%. It is not yet clear whether Japan's independent central bank will yield to Abe's wishes.

"We strongly expect the BOJ to conduct aggressive monetary easing with a clear price target," Abe's government said last week after announcing a new $117 billion fiscal stimulus package.

Weak currency cheapens the price of a country's exports, making them more attractive to international buyers by undercutting competitors. As a result, even the smallest move in the yen has a big impact on Japan's exporters.

Related: Japan unveils $117 billion stimulus package

Toyota (TM), one of the country's biggest exporters, says a fluctuation of just one yen against the dollar -- or slightly more than 1% -- leads operating profit to rise or fall by $397 million dollars over the course of a year.

For Nissan (NSANF), that figure stands at $227 million. Over the course of a year, a yen at the current level (89.21) instead of the 2012 average (79.82) results in a 34% increase in Nissan's operating profit. The companies would love to see the yen depreciate even more.

"I've been saying for a long time the yen is out of control," Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn told reporters last month. He said the currency remains too strong for exporters to flourish and that he considers "neutral territory" to be around 100 yen to the dollar.

He may not get his wish. Many economists see the yen easing further in the short term, but perhaps settling closer to 90 to the dollar. Citigroup reckons it could fall to 95 by the end of 2013.

Another major factor helping to tame the strong yen is the country's shift from a long-term trade surplus to a deficit, triggered by the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear crisis of March 2011.

The national emergency caused the country's exports to drop at the same time as it began to import significantly more fuel. In a trade-off indicative of the tough choices Japan faces in managing its currency, a weak yen has the potential to hike costs associated with imported fuel ? and smother any broader benefits to economic growth.

Related: Japan's Abe makes economy top priority

"It's difficult to tell what the appropriate level is," says Richard Koo, chief economist at Nomura Research Institute, noting traditional rules don't apply due to Japan's unusual economic circumstances.

Jesper Koll, head of equity research in Tokyo for JPMorgan, sees the dollar around 90 - 95 yen as a fair level. Based on his own observations this shopping season, he believes that range reflects parity in purchasing power.

Yet even as a weaker yen supports exports, Japan faces an uphill battle to stimulate its long dormant economy.

Koo believes no amount of monetary easing will propel the country's debt-averse private sector into the arms of lenders, a problem he sees in the U.S. and eurozone too.

After 15 years of hard work to repay their debt, Japan's corporations "never want to see bankers again," Koo said, adding that investment tax credits and allowances for depreciation are better ways to boost growth.

Koll sees some short term benefit from the current easing, but says you won't see long term growth without structural reform. To attract corporate reinvestment in Japan, Koll said, the government must lower corporate taxes, while reducing energy costs and pursuing deregulation.

"That's where the rubber hits the road." To top of page

First Published: January 13, 2013: 8:47 PM ET

Source: http://money.cnn.com/2013/01/13/news/economy/japan-yen/index.html?section=money_latest

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Business Owners: Why You Need a Social Media Policy | The Next ...

A social media policy can encourage employees to keep their personal social media from damaging your company image Social media is an amazing tool but the potential pitfalls are pretty spectacular too! A social media policy is good way for business owners to protect their company's online reputation. This article by new blogger Laura Scaife is is a great starting point for those unsure about their social media policy.

Social media has become an integral part of many businesses? marketing strategies due to a greater understanding of the potential it offers.? While social media provides opportunities to manage existing relationships, as well as developing new client contacts through its marketing opportunities, the potential pitfalls are substantial. This article will look at the use of social media in the employment context, suggesting that businesses should establish a comprehensive and workable social media strategy for their employees and issues for employers to consider when setting their policies as well as issues that employees need to be alive to when using social media.?

Social Media

The advent of social media has facilitated the ability to initiate and maintain connections in ways which would have been impossible during the early days of networking.? It is possible, even common, to look at the profile of a contact to understand their expertise, connections and background in a few minutes rather than relying upon word of mouth recommendations. Some of its key benefits include:

  • Management of existing relationships
  • Ability to readily engage with your clients ?
  • Develop new client contacts through its marketing opportunities
  • Initiate and maintain connections
  • Develop goodwill (and potentially revenue)
  • Information can be communicated instantaneously
  • It is available at little or no cost?

However, with social media uncertainty remains around who owns what and what is the most successful strategy to implement.?

Social media needs to be handled carefully. The Employment Tribunal case of Whitham v Club 24 Ltd t/a Ventura (2011) highlights the potential pitfalls which may be encountered by employees.

Ms Whitham posted comments on Facebook complaining about her colleagues and she was dismissed for putting the company?s reputation at risk.

However, the Tribunal found that Mrs Whitham?s comments were relatively mild, were not about a major client and did not involve any confidential information. No individuals were identified in her comments and her privacy settings meant that only her friends could see her Facebook page. Moreover, it was highly unlikely that such mild comments by a junior employee could jeopardise the commercial relationship between her company and their major client. However this case raised the important question to the employer of risk management when ensuring that client relationships are adequately protected.?

The case also highlighted the importance of keeping the professional and personal uses of social media separate.?

While to many people this may be a matter of common sense, in practical terms this may not always be possible e.g. a number of professionals will develop friends into clients. As such it is important, as discussed below, to remember that private, may not be completely private and therefore should avoid posting any content you would prefer your or your business not to be associated with. Personal use of social media should be regularly reviewed to ensure that the choice of platform and content is always suitable.?

Best practice?

To establish an effective social media policy, in addition to certain safeguards that must be implemented, the policy must meet the aims and strategy of the business and allow for development as the business?s requirements change.? The task of developing and delivering the policy should not be left up to those in charge of Human Resources and IT. Top Management should also take an active role in ensuring that they filter down the message that the Policy matters and is followed at all levels of the business.?

It is also important to bear in mind that the requirements and demands of your clients may change over time and result in an increased expectation of using social media as a viable, and practical, method of communication with the business.? It is for this reason that a ?one size fits all? policy is unlikely to be as effective as one that is tailored to the specific needs (and opportunities) of the business in question.? Some areas should however always be covered, including:

Anti-harassment and bullying policies;

  • Confidentiality obligations;
  • Data protection policies;
  • Electronic information and communications systems policies;
  • Equal opportunities policies;
  • Ethics and standards of conduct policies or other policies dealing with misconduct; ?
  • Intellectual property aspects (concerning ?ownership? of content and contacts);
  • Monitoring procedures; and
  • Reporting procedures and contacts for queries.?

Employees and Social Media

In terms of businesses considering how to manage their employees and their use of social media, a number of UK Court cases have considered when dismissal will be reasonable for social network-related misconduct and provide useful guidance for employers on how their policy will work in practice should a problem arise. It is important for employees to consider the issue of effective communication and well drafted policies as in Lerwill v Aston Villa Football Club Ltd (unreported ET/1304758/10) an employer was found not to have informed the employee sufficiently of what the implications would be of failure to comply with the social media policy and the dismissal of the employee was therefore found to be unfair. Moreover in Grant & Ross v Mitate Property Services Limited (unreported) employers were reminded of the need to set out clearly the parameters of the policy to avoid confusion. In Grant two sisters won their claim for unfair dismissal for excessive internet usage as the employer?s policy (which permitted access outside ?core working times?), was too vague.? A policy therefore is only as good as its drafting and its consistent implementation.?

However in Preece v JD Wetherspoons Plc ET2104806/10 the employer was found to have acted reasonably in dismissing a manager for posting derogatory comments about a customer on Facebook during her shift.

She thought only a handful of people would see them but in fact hundreds did, including the daughter of the abusive customer.

Wetherspoons relied on its clear social networking policy which prohibited disparaging customers on Facebook, the availability of an employee hotline and that the remarks took place during an ongoing conversation rather than in the heat of the moment. Significantly the Tribunal held that even if the comments were made in the employee?s own time Wetherspoons may still have been able to act in the same way.?

Taking the above into account, as part of a businesses delivered training programme, it is prudent encourage employees to:

  1. Familiarise themselves with the business?s social media policy;
  2. Regularly review the content of their personal social media channels;
  3. Ensure all privacy settings are up to date;
  4. Understand where the line between professional ends and private begins;
  5. Logout of social media platforms when not at the computer; and
  6. Think before uploading content as they may not be able to control who reads it.

In addition to establishing a policy, businesses should train staff on areas such as privacy settings, potential legal consequences of breaching the policy, template formats to be used etc. A good demonstration of why this is important comes from the case of Stephens v Halfords Plc ET/1700796/10, where an employee who was being consulted over a workplace reorganisation put up a Facebook page entitled ?Halfords workers against working 3 out of 4 weekends?. When he read the company?s social networking policy two days later and realised his page might be in breach of the policy, he immediately took it down.

His dismissal was held to be unfair as he had a clean disciplinary record, had removed the page as soon as he realised it was in breach of the company?s policy and he had apologised.?

Monitoring the Policy

Once the policy has been implemented and any teething troubles worked out the business must ensure that the policy is adequately monitored and compliant with legislation such as the Data Protection Act 1998. When formulating the policy employers should be minded that monitoring should be proportionate and involve employees in the process where possible. Prior to the implementation the business?s management, in conjunction with IT, HR and marketing, should undertake an ?impact assessment? to ensure that all legislative requirements are adhered to.? The assessment should be regularly repeated to take account of changes in technology and the law.

Conclusion

Social media is now established as part of everyday life both professionally and personally.? It is therefore prudent for businesses to establish clear policies and strategy for its implementation.? While many may see its implementation as a threat, particularly in light of unwitting damage occurring to a businesses reputation or client relationships, its opportunities far outweigh these threats.?

Businesses should see social media as an opportunity to embrace the potential of new technology to develop themselves in terms of communication with their clients.? By setting out, monitoring and enforcing a well-designed and drafted social media policy the business can ensure that they are complying with all necessary regulations and expected standards of conduct.?

It is crucial to involve the employees at all stages of such a policy from its creation through to its enforcement.? Many potential areas of concern can be eliminated through training and education e.g. danger of blurring the lines between professional and personal.? Each employee should recognise their own importance in ensuring that both they and the business are complying with their obligations and where necessary seek additional training.??

The social media guidance is helpful and provides businesses with a useful map from which they can?begin to establish a strategy and policy to achieve their medium term goals. To many social media is becoming a central part of their business (or marketing),? and it will take time and effort for it to be fully integrated as part of day to day business, as was the case with email.? Each business has its own personality and culture and these should be incorporated into a social media policy as the aim of such a policy is not to curtail the freedoms of the business but to enable it to flourish.??

People buy People. Would the client want to buy you and the services you provide??

Summary?

  • Establish a clear Social Media policy
  • Involve employees in its creation
  • Have an Implementation Strategy
  • Effectively deliver the policy at a business wide level
  • Undertake regular ?impact assessments?
  • Remember that compliance is a ?two way street? between employer and employee

Laura Scaife is a trainee solicitor at Hill Dickinson, you can follower her on Twitter @RegardingLaw to tweet you social media queries as well as regularly receive hints and tips for your business.

Image courtesy of?FreeDigitalPhotos.net.

Source: http://www.thenextwomen.com/2013/01/15/business-owners-why-you-need-social-media-policy

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Monday, January 14, 2013

Article Marketing Service Have a Solution To Your Marketing Woes ...

Number of View: 18

There are various companies in the market that provide you article marketing services, but it is up to you to decide from so many options which ones you will choose. You also have the option to do things on your own. It is ideal to do so especially if you know what you are doing. If you outsource your work, make sure that it is being done by a company that has some success in marketing and promotion on the Internet. You want the best results so you should choose the best. Some people are not good at delegating work, but as a business owner, you don?t have time in the day to do everything. So it is going to be to your benefit to look for good help.

Your article marketing expert can get you a lot of web traffic but some of them can also end up in a disaster where apart from spending a lot of money you do not get the desired results. All the services should include article ghost writing and article distribution services. They services should also give expert advice on deciding your written marketing strategy.

The characteristics that differentiate first class services from the bad ones are as follows. They should be able to send articles to a lot of directories. By lot directories we only mean a lot of directories in number but a lot of them which are relevant to your product and company. A good approach would be if the article marketing services submit your articles to news letter services. This increases the visibility of your article. Publishing article is not the only weapon to win the battle on internet, but a full proof Article marketing strategy has to be planned by high quality services.

To learn more about article marketing services and its various techniques, click here?Article Marketing Services

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Source: http://www.writingspeakingtips.com/article-marketing-service-have-a-solution-to-your-marketing-woes/

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