Thursday, January 3, 2013

Insert Coin: Leikr GPS sports watch has 2-inch screen, ex-Nokia engineers on its side

In Insert Coin, we look at an exciting new tech project that requires funding before it can hit production. If you'd like to pitch a project, please send us a tip with "Insert Coin" as the subject line.

Insert Coin Leikr GPS sports watch has 2inch screen, exNokia engineers on its side

Granted, the Garmin Fenix already does decent GPS from your wrist, but there's a limit to what it can accomplish on its basic little LCD. Enter Leikr: a Gorilla Glass beast with a 2-inch, 320 x 240 display that can throw out a wide range of endurance stats simultaneously or switch to a color navigation mode using up to 8GB-worth of onboard OpenStreetMap data. It's designed by former Nokia engineers who claim they've used their mobile skills to make the Leikr catch a quicker GPS signal, connect directly to a cloud-based, Endomondo-integrated exercise portal using WiFi and Linux-based software, and at the same time stick to a smartphone-like 10mm thickness.

The project's Kickstarter page has just gone live, with early bird deals still available -- at the time of writing, a minimum $229 buy-in is required to lock down a final production Leikr by the summer. That's hardly cheap, but it's not at $400 Fenix proportions either, so take a look at the video after the break and the funding link below (scroll to the bottom of that page for full specs) and then, you know, dwell on it.

Continue reading Insert Coin: Leikr GPS sports watch has 2-inch screen, ex-Nokia engineers on its side

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Source: Leikr (Kickstarter)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/03/insert-coin-leikr-gps-sports-watch/

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Current in Noblesville ? Showing your home in its best light

IO-Decker

Functional, beautiful lighting can?t be created from a single light source. To achieve optimum lighting for your home, consider using layers of light in each room. To help you visualize this, try thinking of each light source as a layer in a cake. Each layer brings a different flavor to the cake, but they come together to make a single delicious dessert. Layering lighting works in the same way, by blending together multiple light sources to create a rich and ambient atmosphere.

The bottom layer of the lighting cake is called the ?overall? layer or ?ambient? layer. This is the foundation of the room?s lighting design. Chandeliers, ceiling fixtures and wall sconces fall into this category, and are intended to create soft illumination for everyday use. The ambient layer will determine the general brightness of the room.?Choose to lower the lights?in bedrooms and dining rooms to generate a romantic atmosphere. Or use brighter ones in the kitchen to make the room feel vibrant and energetic.

The next layer of lighting is the ?task? lighting. This bright layer illuminates specific areas or surfaces to help with activities like cooking or reading. Because task lighting is more direct,?using more of these lights?instead of ambient lighting can help you save on energy bills.

Accent lighting refers to the top layer of our lighting system. This lighting helps enhance the room and create visual interest. You can use accent lighting to illuminate art or architectural elements. Accent lights are usually adjustable so they can be used to produce a variety of styles for the room. Put the icing on the cake by implementing decorative lights. This layer doesn?t necessarily add functional light to the room; it?s mainly there to complete the look of the room. Make sure these lights are on the dim side so they don?t overpower the rest of your d?cor.

Light layering techniques are especially relevant now around the holidays. String lights and candles are the perfect third or fourth layer for your home lighting scheme. Dim the ambient lights to make your Christmas tree and decorations really shine. A fireplace can also act as a cozy lighting source. Have fun decorating and happy holidays to you all!

David Decker is president of The Affordable Companies, which provide affordable luxury in kitchens, bathrooms and flooring. They are based in Carmel (575-9540, www.the-affordablecompanies.com). Email home improvement questions to david.decker@the-affordablecompanies.com.

Source: http://currentnoblesville.com/showing-your-home-in-its-best-light

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Wednesday, January 2, 2013

How to Buy & Sell Real Estate Tax Free! | Team Pritchard Real Estate

Self Directed Real Estate IRA?

Re-published with permission of Russell Gullo.

A self directed IRA (Individual Retirement Account) or real estate IRA gives you the freedom to invest in non-traditional assets, such as multifamily investment properties, single families, co-ops, condominiums, improved or unimproved land (leveraged or unleveraged), commercial property, and more.

Over time, real estate investments have afforded many people with the powerful combination of appreciation and income. The purchase of real estate through a self directed IRA is a popular investor choice for this and other reasons.

You may finance or leverage any property you purchase for your retirement plan. The property is the collateral for the loan. As the property is an asset of the retirement plan, repayment of the underlying debt must come from contributions to or income from the property or other assets in the retirement plan. This type of loan is referred to as a non-recourse loan because the IRA holder cannot extend credit to an IRA.

Your entire transaction must flow through the tax-free or tax-deferred retirement account. The escrow must be opened by the account, not in the name of the beneficial owner. Vesting is always in the name of the account. The funds in your IRA may be used as good faith deposits, down payments, or purchase money.

When purchased, these properties become assets of your retirement plan or account. In addition: You may not personally own property that you intend to purchase with plan funds and you must ensure that your intended purchase is not a prohibited transaction. Neither you your spouse, nor your family members (other than siblings) may have owned the property prior to its purchase by your plan. Neither you nor your family members (other than siblings) may live in or lease the property while it?s in your plan. Your business may not lease or be located in or on any part of the property while it?s in your plan. You may receive any property as a distribution from your plan as a retirement benefit.

Managing assets does not include property management conducted by the beneficial owner of an IRA or a company owned by more than 50% by the beneficial owner of real or personal property in the IRA. Management fees may be paid out of your retirement account. A 1099 will be issued by you representing the individual retirement account to you or any other designated asset manager for the year in which such invoices are paid. This includes all property rental or lease income, taxes, property management and repairs. Invoices are paid on client approval by the IRA.

Russell J. Gullo, CCIM, CMIA, CEA, is a certified multifamily investment advisor, certified exchange advisor, president of R. J. GULLO & CO., INC., which is a national ?qualified intermediary? for real estate exchanges, chief executive officer of the R. J. GULLO COMPANIES of Multifamily Investment Property Services, the founder of the AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF REAL ESTATE EXCHANGORS and the director of operations for the RUSSELL J. GULLO School Of Real Estate Investment Studies. Mr. Gullo, can be reached at (866) 754-8556 (R J GULLO)

When you are ready to buy or sell a home, please feel free to contact us. Call Cathy at 716-983-4234 or Melanie at 716-480-8409. The ERA Team VP Real Estate office is located at 12 Washington Street in Ellicottville, NY.

Source: http://www.teampritchard.com/2013/01/home-sweet-home/

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Canadian manufacturing PMI growth stuck at two-year low

TORONTO (Reuters) - Canadian manufacturing growth was little changed in December, hovering at a more than two-year low, according to data released on Wednesday, adding to recent evidence of a disappointing economic performance for the fourth quarter.

The RBC Canadian Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index was 50.4 last month after adjusting for seasonal variation, compared with roughly the same figure in November, when the index marked its the weakest reading since data collection began in October 2010.

The PMI average for the fourth quarter as a whole was 50.7, down from 52.8 in the previous quarter, and was also the lowest quarterly reading in more than two years.

The index was precariously close to contraction but still remained above the 50 mark that separates expansion from deterioration.

"A weak global economy and a strong loonie have weighed somewhat on the broader sector and contributed to a flat PMI reading compared to November," Craig Wright, chief economist at Royal Bank of Canada, said in a statement, echoing policymakers' concerns that the persistent strength of the Canadian dollar is hurting the country's export-driven economy.

"That said, as the cloak of uncertainty is removed from the global economy in the coming months related to fiscal policy in the U.S. and elsewhere, we expect that demand for Canadian exports will rise, as will investment and hiring across the economy."

Although new orders were up, partly reflecting greater demand and new product launches, output levels were mostly unchanged from November. Meanwhile, employment continued to rise, but the pace of job creation was at an 11-month low, and input prices rose at the slowest pace since July.

Companies reported passing on greater costs to clients by raising their output charges modestly.

Q4 GDP OFF TO SLOW START

The manufacturing data came after a government report last month that showed the Canadian economy grew by just 0.1 percent in October from September, indicating a very slow start to the fourth quarter amid foreign and domestic economic woes.

Canada fared better than most of its rich industrialized peers in the aftermath of the 2007-09 global financial crisis, prompting the Bank of Canada in 2010 to become the first central bank in the Group of Seven to tighten monetary policy after the recession.

(Editing by Nick Zieminski)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/canadian-manufacturing-pmi-growth-stuck-two-low-143116797--business.html

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U.S. House aims to split Sandy aid bill into two parts (reuters)

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Did Lucy walk on the ground or stay in the trees?

Dec. 31, 2012 ? Much has been made of our ancestors "coming down out of the trees," and many researchers view terrestrial bipedalism as the hallmark of "humanness." After all, most of our living primate relatives -- the great apes, specifically -- still spend their time in the trees. Humans are the only member of the family devoted to the ground, living terrestrial rather than arboreal lives, but that wasn't always the case.

The fossil record shows that our predecessors were arboreal habitu?s, that is, until Lucy arrived on the scene. About 3.5 million years ago in Africa, this new creature, Australopithecus afarensis, appeared; Lucy was the first specimen discovered. Anthropologists agree that A. afarensis was bipedal, but had Lucy and her legions totally forsaken the trees? The question is at the root of a controversy that still rages.

"Australopithecus afarensis possessed a rigid ankle and an arched, nongrasping foot," write Nathaniel Dominy and his co-authors in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). "These traits are widely interpreted as being functionally incompatible with climbing and thus definitive markers of terrestriality," says Dominy, an associate professor of anthropology at Dartmouth.

But not so fast; this interpretation may be a rush to judgment in light of new evidence brought to light by Dominy and his colleagues. They did what anthropologists do. They went out and looked at modern humans who, like Lucy, have feet adapted to terrestrial bipedalism, and found these people can still function as effective treeclimbers.

Co-authors Vivek Venkataraman and Thomas Kraft collaborated with Dominy on field studies in the Philippines and Africa that inform their PNAS paper. Venkataraman and Kraft are Dartmouth graduate students in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology PhD program in the Department of Biological Sciences, and are supported by National Science Foundation graduate research fellowships.

The studies in Uganda compared Twa hunter-gatherers to their agriculturalist neighbors, the Bakiga. In the Philippines, the researchers studied Agta hunter-gatherers and Manobo agriculturalists. Both the Twa and the Agta habitually climb trees in pursuit of honey, a highly nutritious component of their diets. They climb in a fashion that has been described as "walking" up small-diameter trees. The climbers apply the soles of their feet directly to the trunk and "walk" upward, with their arms and legs advancing alternately.

Among the climbers, Dominy and his team documented extreme dorsiflexion -- bending the foot upward toward the shin to an extraordinary degree -- beyond the range of modern "industrialized" humans. Assuming their leg bones and ankle joints were normal, "we hypothesized that a soft-tissue mechanism might enable such extreme dorsiflexion," the authors write.

They tested their hypothesis using ultrasound imaging to measure and compare the lengths of gastrocnemius muscle fibers -- the large calf muscles -- in all four groups -- the Agta, Manobo, Twa and Bakiga. The climbing Agta and Twa were found to have significantly longer muscle fibers.

"These results suggest that habitual climbing by Twa and Agta men changes the muscle architecture associated with ankle dorsiflexion," write the scientists, demonstrating that a terrestrially adapted foot and ankle do not exclude climbing from the behavioral repertoire of human hunter- gatherers, or Lucy.

In their conclusions, the Dartmouth team highlights the value of modern humans as models for studying the anatomical correlates of behavior, both in the present and in the dim past of our fossil ancestors.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Dartmouth College. The original article was written by Joseph Blumberg.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Vivek V. Venkataraman, Thomas S. Kraft, and Nathaniel J. Dominy. Tree climbing and human evolution. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1208717110

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/Nj87vBz84zw/121231161043.htm

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Tuesday, January 1, 2013

'Parenthood': Cancer Leads Kristina To Shaves Her Head And More ...

When "Parenthood" returns (January 1 at 10 p.m. EST on NBC), Kristina's battle with cancer is far from over.

The first of the NBC drama's final four episodes of Season 4, titled "Keep On Rowing," sees Kristina make the bold choice to shave her head before chemotherapy causes her to lose her hair. Monica Potter, who plays Kristina, told HuffPost TV that the New Year's Day episode is her favorite, partly because Dax Sherpard, who plays Crosby on the series, directed it. "You see her going out with the girls, getting out of the house and trying to have fun with Julia [Erika Christensen] and Jasmine [Joy Bryant] and Sarah [Lauren Graham] and wanting to feel like she's normal again," Potter said. "It's sort of heartbreaking to see what happens when she does try to act normal and go out ... There's not one flat line of emotion; it's everywhere."

See a preview of Kristina's emotional decision in the first promo below of "Keep On Rowing." ?It's about how the world is now seeing her. It's one thing [for you] to know that you have something, but it's another to walk around and have everybody in the world know," "Parenthood" showrunner Jason Katims told TVLine of the episode. ?It actually becomes a very uplifting and moving story between Adam [Peter Krause] and Kristina. There?s a lot of humor in it.?

Read the full episode description and find out why Jasmine is "buttering up" Crosby and why Julia isn't as thrilled as one would imagine after Victor gets an A in two more sneak peeks below:

Jasmine and Crosby contemplate the future of their family as they welcome a new roommate. Kristina and Adam go on a much needed date night after she makes a drastic change to her appearance. Jasmine (Joy Bryant) and Crosby (Dax Shepard) help a family member who is experiencing money problems. Kristina (Monica Potter) surprises Adam (Peter Krause) with a new look and a spontaneous night on the town. Sarah (Lauren Graham) and Hank (Ray Romano) experience an interesting evening together. Meanwhile, Victor (Xolo Mariduena) is disappointed after Julia (Erika Christensen) gives him news about his mother.

"Parenthood" returns on Tuesday, January 1 at 10 p.m. EST on NBC.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/01/parenthood-cancer-kristina-shaves-head_n_2392566.html

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