Thursday, February 28, 2013

Telus to buy MD Practice Software | FP Tech Desk | Financial Post

MONTREAL ? A division of telecom giant Telus (TSX:T) is buying Ontario?s largest electronic medical record business, increasing the number of paperless files and bringing more than 5,000 more doctors online.

Telus Health says it?s acquiring MD Practice Software, part of a subsidiary of the Canadian Medical Association, for an undisclosed price.

It says the move will bring the total number of doctors who use electronic medical records technology to 9,000 across the country.

Currently, the penetration rate of electronic medical records in Canada sits at roughly 56%, compared with a rate of well over 90% in some European countries, according to Telus Health president Paul Lepage.

He adds that the market potential for electronic records in Canada is at least $150-million to $250-million, plus other services such as wireless.

Lepage says the technology will help doctors see more patients daily and be able to e-prescribe treatment.

?The first thing the doctor is going to be doing is he?ll be converting his paper records to electronic records,? Lepage said in an interview.

?From a physician perspective, what that means is the ability to see more patients during the day. So they will get a productivity gain out of that.?

Over time, doctors will be able to share that information, with consent, with other health-care providers. Patients can give their doctors regular updates through a patient portal on chronic diseases, for example, such as diabetes, Lepage said.

Lepage noted that about 80% of doctors now use a smartphone and more and more interaction with patients will be done on the device, and on tablets.

He said electronic health records help patients take charge and is ?no different than what you?re doing as a consumer where you?re doing your home banking, your booking travel online and? doing your income taxes online.?

Telus Health said the acquisition makes it the largest electronic medical records provider in Canada with physicians online in British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario, Quebec and some smaller markets.

Doctors pay $3,000 to $5,000 for the electronic medical records software and some of it is reimbursed to them through provincial subsidies, Lepage said.

?We are proud of the support we have provided physicians and our involvement in the evolution of EMR (electronic medical records) platforms, assisting in fundamentally changing the nature of health care,? said Mike Gassewitz, president of MD Practice Software.

This is the third such acquisition of an electronic medical records provider by Telus in recent months.

Last fall, Telus bought KinLogix and Wolf Medical Systems, which combined, brought 4,500 doctors online.

Telus has been using its technology in health care for a number of years and created Telus Health after it bought the former Emergis, a Montreal-based e-commerce and technology company that was an early pioneer in electronic health records.

The Vancouver-based telecom company says its secure wireless and broadband networks can be accessed by doctors and patients on personal computers, smartphones or tablets. Currently it provides and supports electronic health record solutions in nearly 60 hospitals and 3,000 pharmacies across the country.

Source: http://business.financialpost.com/2013/02/26/telus-to-buy-medical-records-providers-in-deal-that-will-bring-more-doctors-online/

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Integrating content marketing strategies and mobile design ...

Anyone who?s up on technology has heard of mobile web design and content marketing?two terms used with increasing frequency in the online world.

Can mobile design and a great content marketing strategy be combined without sacrificing either content or design elements? Or does the content of a website suffer because of the restrictions imposed by design for small screens??

The truth is that great content does not have to be sacrificed for mobile design and can even be enhanced by the capabilities of new devices. A properly integrated responsive design and content marketing strategy should produce a phenomenal user experience for visitors to your client?s website.

How can web designers show clients the importance of mobile design and content marketing, and combine them effectively? Chances are that most of your clients are aware of the rapid increase in mobile use. They see their own customers and clients talking, texting and surfing the internet via their mobile devices. They also understand that excellent content is the key to making money directly or indirectly from a website. What many clients don?t understand, though, is that a website that performs well and shows great content on any handheld device can help them gain new customers in the mobile user market. To do this they will need a website that is accessible to all.

Showing clients how their website appears on a variety of handheld devices or Google?s GoMo Meter is a good way to promote the responsive design element. Don?t be surprised, however, if your clients balk when bits of important content are omitted on the tiny screens. This is your chance to explain that you can introduce media queries and responsive design into their existing content strategy, or build a new content marketing strategy using responsive web design techniques to ensure that the most important content appears on every device.

Adhere to the following best practices to show clients that responsive web design that incorporates the unique features of handheld devices and a killer content marketing strategy can work together to create an awesome online experience.

Google?s Mobile Movement infographic presents a strong argument for integrating responsive design into a content marketing strategy.

?

Work as a team

To properly integrate responsive design and a content marketing strategy, accept that you should work as part of a team that includes marketing professionals, or develop your own content marketing skills. Web designers, web developers and marketing strategists must work together. Your goal is to find creative ways to present content that best meets the objectives of a given website while working within the parameters set by responsive design.

Now for the tough stuff: there isn?t any room for web design divas on this team.

The hard truth is that content is the star of the mobile show. When a smartphone user needs to book dinner reservations while running to catch a bus, he doesn?t have time to explore a beautifully rendered menu with glorious graphics. He just wants to click on the phone number and be connected with the reservation desk.?

Expect the marketing professionals to set the content requirements, and design around them. Did you just say you don?t have a marketing department? Never fear. Simply change your hat. Remove the one that says ?Wicked Web Designer? and don the one that says ?Content Marketing Guru Extraordinaire?.

?

Outline your strategy

Research, analyze and anticipate the user?s needs on each device

As a team, identify and create content based on user needs, and then optimize the user experience in a mobile environment. This means answering some critical questions at the outset:

  • Who wants the information on the website? (Who will be looking for it?)
  • What info are they most interested in??
  • What devices do they use? How can you improve their user experience?
  • When do they access the website?

Let?s use a pizza-delivery business as an example. Say a hungry and busy pizza lover uses his smartphone to order a pizza while riding the train home from work. You can make his experience better by using targeted marketing to present him immediately with the content he wants, and responsive design to present the information in an easy and accessible format.?

Identify device capabilities that enhance the user experience

Take advantage of whatever the device offers?GPS, mobile browser, touchscreen, phone and camera features?to build and present your content in a creative, useful, engaging and entertaining way.

Let?s return to our hungry pizza-ordering customer. When he is on the train, his GPS-enabled smartphone shows him the closest location of his favourite pizza franchise as a pop-up on a map. He taps the link, which leads to the mobile website, and he discovers he can order right from his phone. He selects the toppings and size and places the order online. He then realizes he forgot the pineapple (which his pregnant wife craves) and immediately clicks the ?Call Us? button on the touch screen to dial the store?s phone and speak to an employee, who adds the pineapple to his order.? The GPS, mobile browser, touchscreen and phone capabilities were instrumental in making the purchase.

PapaJohn?s responsive design makes it simple to order pizza from your smartphone.

Create content that fulfills user needs on each device

As in traditional web design, the needs of the user dictate content and design. The difference is that when designing websites and choosing content for mobile websites, the user?s needs change based on a variety of factors?in particular, the device they use. According to Google?s 2012 report, ?The New Multi-Screen World,? 67% of subjects used more than one device to shop, and they used these devices sequentially, or in steps, to move from browsing to shopping to making the purchase. ?

Multi-screening occurs sequentially or simultaneously, providing new opportunities for multi-platform content marketing.

To keep your content development and responsive design strategy on track, bear the following in mind:

  • User needs dictate responsive design for content. The user may start their online shopping expedition with the smartphone and only need immediate access to this season?s fashion line, for example.
  • Acknowledge that today?s consumer increasingly uses multiple devices to complete tasks. When the online shopper continues on to their tablet, they want to see a shopping cart and e-commerce options.
  • Extend the content across marketing mediums. Many people multitask, often consuming more than one stream of media simultaneously. They may watch television while using their handheld device to look for more information on whatever it was they just saw advertised.? Here?s a suggestion for television commercial producers: include a URL in the commercial that the user can input into their smartphone to sign up for a monthly newsletter with moneysaving offers that will be delivered by email.?
  • Think of mobile content development as responsive marketing, or creating content that meets the way people use their devices. Use website analytics and data to anticipate the user?s needs.

Work within the responsive design framework set by device limitations

Combining responsive design and a content marketing strategy for optimal benefit forces businesses to throw out unnecessary content and focus on the stuff that is important to customers. If they don?t, users will become frustrated and will simply jump to competitor websites that are easier to navigate.

Mobile design forces designers and content marketers to prioritize and design for the smallest screen on the market. Collaborate with your client and/or other team members to identify the most crucial content on the website, and crosscheck this against data that shows what users of different devices most commonly search for. Pick two or three essential elements, and start there.

?

Instant gratification builds long-term customers

Handheld devices, especially smartphones, promote instant gratification. They feed the growing desire for immediate information access. Businesses can capitalize on this by using handheld device capabilities in conjunction with online and offline marketing activities. Using print media to encourage social media activity is a growing trend with retailers. The mobile web allows businesses to take their online content marketing strategy right into the place of business through QR codes on posters, banners, product labels and brochures and through applications such as Foursquare.

?

Conclusion

The way people access content on the Internet is changing. The way we present content must change as well. Restrictions imposed by mobile design (such as small screens and slow load times for graphics) force efficient and affective content, which requires stripping away the excess that exists on traditional websites. ?

Mobile users are impatient and busy. They don?t want to read novels about widgets on their phones; they want to know where they can buy a novel and what it costs. They need content that is scannable and easy to read in short bursts. They also want the option of accessing more detailed information should they have the time and inclination to read it on their tablets, laptops or desktops.?

The best content marketing strategies use responsive design and the unique capabilities of mobile devices to anticipate and answer the user?s needs based on an analysis of typical users. The phone, GPS, camera, video and web access of smartphones and tablets provides unlimited opportunities for creative marketers to present their products and services in innovative ways. With some careful planning, an integrated approach to design and marketing can result in a cutting-edge campaign that excites and engages users and results in more sales leads?and a happy web design client.

?

Is great content compromised by responsive design? Can the two co-exist happily or will there always be some compromise on mobile devices? Let us know what you think in the comments.

Featured image/thumbnail, mobile image via Shutterstock

Source: http://www.webdesignerdepot.com/2013/02/integrating-content-marketing-strategies-and-mobile-design/

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Comet warms up for its turn in spotlight

Ignacio Diaz Bobillo / Pampaskies.com

Comet PanSTARRS glows with a fanlike tail in this picture from Argentine astrophotographer Ignacio Diaz Bobillo.

By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

The first of two comets expected to make a splash this year is already putting on a good show for Southern Hemisphere skywatchers ? and by the time it makes its appearance in northern skies, Comet PanSTARRS should be visible to the naked eye.

C/2011 L4 PanSTARRS, which was discovered in 2011 by the Pan-STARRS telescope in Hawaii,?isn't expected to be as much of a spectacle as Comet ISON, which could get as bright as the full moon in November. But it's on track to reach a brightness of at least magnitude 2 in early March. That's roughly equivalent to the brightness of Polaris, the North Star.


"This?comet definitely is a dynamically new comet, so we do have the wild-card factor in there," Karl Battams of the Naval Research Laboratory told NBC News in an email. "In an ordinary year, this comet would be grabbing the headlines, but most people are so worked up over ISON that this one is getting short-changed a little. It should be a good one though. ... For us urban dwellers, we might need to dust off the binoculars to get a decent look."

Battams and other astronomers say PanSTARRS is a special case because it's apparently coming in from the Oort Cloud on the solar system's edge to make its first swing through the inner solar system. That's what makes PanSTARRS a wild card: There's a chance that the comet will get brighter than expected, or stay dimmer than expected, when it wheels around the sun.?"Comets do love to surprise us," Battams said.

Right now, the comet is on display only in the Southern Hemisphere, at the edge of naked-eye visibility under optimal conditions (magnitude 5 to 6). Pictures taken through telescopes, such as the shots you see here from Pampaskies.com's Ignacio Diaz Bobillo in Argentina and amateur astronomer Terry Lovejoy in Australia, are already showing a fanlike double tail. One of the tails is a stream of dust illuminated by the sun, while the other is a glowing stream of ionized gas.

Terry Lovejoy via IfA/Hawaii

An image captured by Australian amateur astronomer Terry Lovejoy shows Comet PanSTARRS.

This NASA Science video shows you where to look for Comet PanSTARRS.

PanSTARRS should start showing up in the Northern Hemisphere around March 7. "To see it, you will need an unobstructed, cloudless view of the western horizon," the University of Hawaii's Institute for Astronomy said. "It is best to pick a dark spot, away from streetlights. Look in the direction of the sunset just after the sun has gone down. The comet will be just above the horizon."

It'll be tricky to spot the comet because of the glare of the twilight sky, and even trickier after March 12, when the light of the moon will start interfering. You'll definitely need binoculars to see the tails. Actually, March 12 or 13 might be the best time for your comet-viewing, picture-taking party, because PanSTARRS should be visible alongside a pretty crescent moon in western skies.

"By the end of March, the comet will no longer be visible in the evening sky, but if you get up early, you may be able to see it in the eastern sky just before sunrise," the institute said. "However, by then the comet will be farther from both the sun and Earth, and will therefore be fainter."

When PanSTARR fades, keep your binoculars in a handy place. You'll want to bring them out again for this year's other sky highlights, including the advent of Comet ISON in November.

More about the year of the comets:


Hat tip to Daniel Fischer.

Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page?to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

This story was originally published on

Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/20/17032914-comet-panstarrs-warms-up-for-celestial-double-features-opening-act?lite

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Sunlight yields more efficient carbon dioxide to methanol model

Feb. 20, 2013 ? Researchers from The University of Texas at Arlington are pioneering a new method for using carbon dioxide, or CO2, to make liquid methanol fuel by using copper oxide nanowires and sunlight.

The process is safer, simpler and less expensive than previous methods to convert the greenhouse gas associated with climate change to a useful product, said Krishnan Rajeshwar, interim associate vice president for research at UT Arlington and one of the authors of a paper recently published in the journal Chemical Communications. Researchers began by coating the walls of copper oxide, CuO, nanorods with crystallites made from another form of copper oxide, Cu2O. In the lab, they submerged those rods in a water-based solution rich in CO2. Irradiating the combination with simulated sunlight created a photoelectrochemical reduction of the CO2 and that produced methanol.

In contrast, current methods require the use of a co-catalyst and must be conducted at high operating pressures and temperatures. Many also use toxic elements, such as cadmium, or rare elements, such as tellurium, Rajeshwar said.

"As long as we are using fossil fuels, we'll have the question of what to do with the carbon dioxide," said Rajeshwar, a distinguished professor of chemistry and biochemistry and co-founder of the Center for Renewable Energy, Science & Technology, CREST, at UT Arlington. "An attractive option would be to convert greenhouse gases to liquid fuel. That's the value-added option."

Co-authors on the recently published paper, "Efficient solar photoelectrosynthesis of methanol from carbon dioxide using hybrid CuO-Cu2O semiconductor nanorod arrays," are Ghazaleh Ghadimkhani, Norma Tacconi, Wilaiwan Chanmanee and Csaba Janaky, all of the UT Arlington College of Science's Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and CREST. Janaky also has a permanent appointment at the University of Szeged in Hungary.

Rajeshwar said he hopes that others will build on the research involving copper oxide nanotubes, CO2 and sunlight.

"Addressing tomorrow's energy needs and finding ways to stem the harmful effect of greenhouse gases are areas where UT Arlington scientists can connect their work to real-world problems," said Carolyn Cason, vice president for research at the University. "We hope solutions in the lab are only the beginning."

In addition to the journal, the new work also was featured in a recent edition of Chemical and Engineering News. That piece noted that the experiments generated methanol with 95 percent electrochemical efficiency and avoided the excess energy input, also known as overpotential, of other methods.

Tacconi, a recently retired research associate professor at UT Arlington, said the two types of copper oxide were selected because both are photo active and they have complementary solar light absorption. "And what could be better in Texas than to use the sunlight for methanol generation from carbon dioxide?"

Other than fuel, methanol is used in a wide variety of chemical processes, including the manufacturing of plastics, adhesives and solvents as well as wastewater treatment. In the United States, there are 18 methanol production plants with a cumulative annual capacity of more than 2.6 billion gallons, according to the paper.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Texas at Arlington.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Ghazaleh Ghadimkhani, Norma R. de Tacconi, Wilaiwan Chanmanee, Csaba Janaky, Krishnan Rajeshwar. Efficient solar photoelectrosynthesis of methanol from carbon dioxide using hybrid CuO?Cu2O semiconductor nanorod arrays. Chemical Communications, 2013; 49 (13): 1297 DOI: 10.1039/C2CC38068D

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/most_popular/~3/hM_Fy9cJ5n0/130220153703.htm

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Sunday, February 10, 2013

Oscar contender on Palestinians angers many

BILIN, West Bank (AP) ? An Oscar-nominated documentary about this West Bank hamlet has managed to infuriate people on both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian divide.

In Israel, some are asking why the government helped fund a film so scathing in its criticism of its own policies, while Palestinians are shocked that the film is winning accolades for being "Israeli."

"Five Broken Cameras" is the story of a yearslong struggle by residents of Bilin to wrest their village lands back from Israel's military.

The title refers to the number of cameras that the main protagonist, Palestinian filmmaker Emad Burnat, had broken by Israeli forces as he sought to film weekly demonstrations against the military. Residents were protesting the seizure of about half the village lands to construct a separation barrier running through parts of the West Bank.

The $400,000 documentary was made with contributions from Israeli and French government film funds. It is the latest in a series of well-received movies that are highly critical of Israeli government policies toward the Palestinians, yet also funded with state money.

Another Israeli-funded documentary, "The Gatekeepers," has also been nominated for an Oscar.

That film interviews the former heads of Israel's internal security service about how they suppressed Palestinians over the decades in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Their message is that military force has its limits, and that ultimately Israel must take advantage of its military superiority to seek peace.

The projects expose a contradiction in Israeli society. While the military rules over millions of Palestinians, the government funds a vibrant arts scene that is often scathing in its criticism of official policy. Many here wonder why the government would want to be party to projects that make it look so bad.

Almagor, a right-wing Israeli group that represents families who have lost loved ones to Palestinian violence, described the film as "incitement." It said the documentary demonizes Israeli soldiers and at times is anti-Semitic.

Others, though, say such films are a badge of honor. Danny Danon, a hard-line member of the ruling Likud Party, said funding critical movies underscores the vibrancy of Israel's democracy, even if it provides ammunition for critics.

"I think there will be groups who are against Israel no matter what," Danon said. "This is one example of the price of keeping a strong democracy. We are not interfering in the contents of the movies that are being produced in Israel."

The office of Culture Minister Limor Livnat, which oversees the funds that distribute grants to filmmakers, declined comment. Livnat is also a Likud member.

The documentary's protagonists are dismayed that the film is affiliated with Israel. Even though the Academy does not classify nominees in the documentary feature category by country, Israeli officials have pitched "Five Broken Cameras" as their own at the Oscars.

Palestinians said they did not want Israelis to take credit for a film that documents how they have suffered at the hands of the military.

"They say it's an Israeli film. It is not an Israeli film," said taxi driver Adib Abu-Rahmeh, who is in the documentary. "Are the people in the film Israelis? The people who suffered, who were shot, who were arrested, who were hurt, were they Israelis?"

Davidi, the film's Israeli partner, rejected the criticism. He said the movie should be seen for what it is: A human portrayal of the village residents.

"For me, documentaries have no identities," he said. "Here are the facts: The film is a Palestinian-Israeli-French co-production with a Palestinian and Israeli director," he added.

He said he would like people to stick with the facts and not get into a territorial fight on the identity of the film.

"The film tells the story of Emad and the nonviolent movement in Bilin, and that's what's important" Davidi said.

The struggle is viewed through the eyes of Burnat's wide-eyed son Gibreel, whose first birthday coincides with the start of protests and whose childhood is shaped by demonstrations, soldiers and families fraying under pressure.

"I had an idea of the film, that it should be about my family, about ordinary things, to make the film closer to the people," Burnat told The Associated Press.

In Bilin, far away from the glitz of Hollywood, there is little excitement over the movie. Few residents have seen it and hopes are dim that the sudden attention will help their cause.

"I heard there was a film. I heard it was nominated for a prize. That's important," said resident Rizan Abu-Rahmeh, a 23-year-old housewife, pregnant and clutching her pigtailed-daughter's hand near Bilin's stone-built mosque.

"But we don't want the prize. We want what's behind the prize. We want the land that was taken," she said.

Conversations with the villagers betray a weariness that is reflected in the film.

"What's an Oscar, anyway?" asked an elderly woman, Umm Hazem. Five of her seven sons were imprisoned for throwing rocks during protests over the years, and her family's lands remain behind the barrier.

"We paid a high price, and we didn't get anything in return," she said.

Over eight years of weekly demonstrations, villagers count two slain residents and dozens wounded and detained in clashes with Israel.

Of some 500 acres of confiscated land, villagers wrested back about a third of their rolling, terraced groves, or some 170 acres, after a protracted legal struggle in Israel's Supreme Court. They have exhausted all local legal avenues to claim the remaining 330 acres of land, said lawyer Emily Schaefer, who represents Bilin.

Israel has said it built the separation barrier, which snakes hundreds of miles across the frontier between Israel and the West Bank, to keep suicide bombers out of the country. But Palestinians say barrier, which frequently dips into the West Bank, is an excuse for seizing land.

Israel's Defense Ministry says Bilin residents are still able to access their farmlands through a gate manned by soldiers 24 hours a day.

Activist Kefar Mansour said it was hard to get excited about a documentary that showed their day-to-day life, even if the scenes are shocking to outside viewers. In one scene, for instance, Gibreel asks his father why he can't slay Israeli soldiers with knives after a family friend is killed.

"People outside clap when they see powerful images in the film, but for us that's like normal, day-to-day life," Mansour said.

The 31-year-old Mansour is one of the few people in town who seem excited about the Oscar nomination. "It shows nothing is impossible," he said.

Since the movie was made, Gibreel, now 8, has become a mini-celebrity, said his mother Suraia, 42, who logs into his Facebook account to keep track of her son's fans.

Suraia, a devout Muslim Palestinian born in Brazil who speaks Arabic with a heavy accent, will join her husband at the Oscar ceremony along with Gibreel ? an event few Palestinians from the West Bank ever attend.

"I love watching the Oscars. I never imagined I'd be with those people," she laughed.

"When this movie is shown (after) the Oscars, millions of people will know the story," she added. "They will know about the Palestinian cause. Many people abroad don't even know what Palestine is."

________

Follow Hadid on twitter.com/diaahadid

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/oscar-contender-palestinians-angers-many-184812671.html

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

Keyword Domain - UK Business Forums

I have notice a keyword domain has come on the market, its actually in an auction, there is no website I'm simply looking at the domain and if it would help my seo.

So is it worth buying a domain which is an exact match to my chosen keywords or am I better off concentrating on seo on these keywords on my current website?

Thanks

Source: http://www.ukbusinessforums.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=287059

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35 ancient pyramids unearthed in Sudan

At least 35 small pyramids, along with graves, have been discovered clustered closely together at a site called Sedeinga in Sudan.

Discovered between 2009 and 2012, researchers are surprised at how densely the pyramids are concentrated. In one field season alone, in 2011, the research team discovered 13 pyramids packed into roughly 5,381 square feet (500 square meters), or slightly larger than an NBA basketball court.

They date back around 2,000 years to a time when a kingdom named Kush flourished in Sudan. Kush shared a border with Egypt and, later on, the Roman Empire. The desire of the kingdom's people to build pyramids was apparently influenced by Egyptian funerary architecture.

At Sedeinga, researchers say, pyramid building continued for centuries. "The density of the pyramids is huge," said researcher Vincent Francigny, a research associate with the American Museum of Natural History in New York, in an interview with LiveScience. "Because it lasted for hundreds of years they built more, more, more pyramids and after centuries they started to fill all the spaces that were still available in the necropolis." [ See Photos of the Newly Discovered Pyramids ]

The biggest pyramids they discovered are about 22 feet (7 meters) wide at their bases; the smallest example, likely constructed for the burial of a child, was only 30 inches (750 millimeters) long. The tops of the pyramids are not attached, as the passage of time and the presence of a camel caravan route resulted in damage to the monuments. Francigny said that the tops would have been decorated with a capstone depicting either a bird or a lotus flower on top of a solar orb.

The building continued until, eventually, they ran out of room to build pyramids. "They reached a point where it was so filled with people and graves that they had to reuse the oldest one," Francigny said.

Francigny is excavation director of the French Archaeological Mission to Sedeinga, the team that made the discoveries. He and team leader Claude Rilly published an article detailing the results of their 2011 field season in the most recent edition of the journal Sudan and Nubia.

The inner circle
Among the discoveries were several pyramids designed with an inner cupola (circular structure) connected to the pyramid corners through cross-braces. Rilly and Francigny noted in their paper that the pyramid design resembles a "French Formal Garden."

Only one pyramid, outside of Sedeinga, is known to have been constructed this way, and it's a mystery why the people of Sedeinga were fond of the design. It "did not add either to the solidity or to the external aspect (appearance) of the monument," Rilly and Francigny wrote.

A discovery made in 2012 may provide a clue, Francigny said in the interview. "What we found this year is very intriguing," he said. "A grave of a child and it was covered by only a kind of circle, almost complete, of brick." It's possible, he said, that when pyramid building came into fashion at Sedeinga it was combined with a local circle-building tradition called tumulus construction, resulting in pyramids with circles within them.

An offering for grandma?
The graves beside the pyramids had largely been plundered, possibly in antiquity, by the time archaeologists excavated them. Researchers did find skeletal remains and, in some cases, artifacts.??

One of the most interesting new finds was an offering table found by the remains of a pyramid. It appears to depict the goddess Isis and the jackal-headed god Anubis and includes an inscription, written in Meroitic language, dedicated to a woman named "Aba-la," which may be a nickname for "grandmother," Rilly wrote.

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      A new water desalination technology may prove a savior for the oil and natural gas industries confronting growing concerns about the wastewater that flows to the surface in the months and years after a well is fracked.

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It reads in translation:

Oh Isis! Oh Osiris!

It is Aba-la.

Make her drink plentiful water;

Make her eat plentiful bread;

Make her be served a good meal.

The offering table with inscription was a final send-off for a woman, possibly a grandmother, given a pyramid burial nearly 2,000 years ago.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook? and Google+.

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/50719069/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Shuaa launches Saudi shariah-compliant SME credit ... - Zawya

Sunday, Feb 03, 2013

DUBAI (Zawya Dow Jones)--Shuaa Capital, a Dubai-listed financial services firm, Sunday said it has launched an installment and lease finance company in Saudi Arabia.

The company, called Gulf Installments Company, is to offer Shariah-compliant financing and will focus on small and medium-sized enterprises, Shuaa said in an emailed statement. It is to offer financing from one to four years.

The move comes as Shuaa tries to strengthen its foothold as a provider of credit to regional firms. David Hunt, a veteran HSBC banker, was appointed chief executive of the company. Gulf Installments is based in Jeddah, but has plans to expand within the country in the coming years.

Write to Asa Fitch at asa.fitch@dowjones.com

Copyright (c) 2013 Dow Jones & Co.

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

03-02-13 0739GMT


? Copyright Zawya. All Rights Reserved.


Source: http://www.zawya.com/story/Shuaa_launches_Saudi_shariahcompliant_SME_credit_business-ZW20130203000020/

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Monday, February 4, 2013

Half of Scots asked likely referendum question backed ... - News - STV

Almost a third of Scots have signalled their backing for independence in a poll which tested the likely 2014 referendum question.

A total of 32% of those quizzed said they would vote Yes if the referendum were held now, while nearly a half said they would vote No.

One in seven Scots said they believe independence would make them better off financially while 38% thought it would leave them worse off.

The Angus Reid Public Opinion poll of 1003 people was published in the Scottish Mail on Sunday.

The Scottish Government last week agreed to change the question it will put to voters in the independence referendum after concerns were raised that its preferred version could be biased towards a Yes vote.

First Minister Alex Salmond had proposed to ask: "Do you agree that Scotland should be an independent country?"

But the independent elections watchdog, the Electoral Commission, said using the phrase "Do you agree" was commonly felt "to be biased towards a Yes outcome".

The Scottish Government has accepted the commission's recommendation that the question should instead be: "Should Scotland be an independent country? Yes/No."

Subject to the approval of the Scottish Parliament, this is now likely to be the question put to people in the referendum which is due to take place in autumn 2014.

The new poll put the question "Should Scotland be an independent country?" to those it questioned and asked how they would vote if the referendum were held now.

Forty-seven per cent said they would vote No, 32% would vote Yes and 20% said they were undecided. One per cent indicated they would not vote.

Respondents were also asked: "Thinking of your own financial position, do you think independence will leave you better off, make no difference, or leave you worse off?"

In response, 14% said they would be better off, 38% worse off, 27% said it would make no difference and 21% said they were not sure.

The poll emerged on the same day as two leading businessmen gave their latest views on Scotland's future and the Yes and No campaigns.

Jim McColl, chairman and chief executive of Clyde Blowers, said Scottish independence would be tantamount to a "management buy-out" from the UK.

Writing in the Scotland on Sunday, Mr McColl, who has previously indicated his support for independence, wrote: "While Westminster policies may work for London, they are not working for Scotland, for our economy or our society.

"A different approach is needed if we are to make Scotland the kind of country we all know it can and should be."

He continued: "We have a Government responsible for economic policy whose focus is not growth in Scotland but rather London and the south-east of England. That tells me Scotland is a nation in desperate need of a well-planned and thought-through management buy-out...

"There is so much opportunity in Scotland's future if we choose to claim it.

"A Yes vote in 2014 will give us the flexibility to choose the policies suited to Scotland regardless of who is elected to government at Westminster in 2015."

Meanwhile, entrepreneur Sir Tom Hunter said Scotland is facing a choice between a "leap in the dark or staying with a moribund status quo".

"Never, in my view, has such a factual void filled such an important debate," he said.

Writing in the Sunday Times Scotland, he went on: "No campaigners are digging themselves one enormous hole if they believe that a dual 'status quo' and 'scare them to death about independence message' will work.

"As Labour found to its cost in the last Scottish election, trying to scare Scots into submission is a recipe for getting what you never thought was possible: an SNP majority in the Scottish Parliament. Is it next step independence?

"Surely the No campaigners will have the intelligence to bring forward an agenda for Scotland that says tomorrow's going to be better than today for you in the United Kingdom?

"They need to spell out their agenda for Scotland's growth and prosperity to show just how much better it's going to be.

"Likewise, Salmond, one of the most talented politicians of his generation, and his cabinet must also move away from obfuscating the issues, the costs, the EU membership, and on to a clearly defined and costed programme for independence in 2014. So come on Alex, what's the vision? Where are the facts? Let's hear about the costs?"

SNP Westminster leader Angus Robertson MP said: "The fact is that with the powers of an independent Scotland we will gain the tools we need to make Scotland a more prosperous, fairer country, and no amount of negativity from the No campaign will change that fact.

"It is becoming increasingly clear that the anti-independence side is losing the economic argument as more and more people recognise the opportunities that a Yes vote in next year's referendum offers Scotland.

"On the economy as on a host of other issues, it is people in Scotland who are best-placed to make decisions over the direction Scotland takes and only a Yes vote will give us the opportunity to shape policies that always put the needs of people living here first."

Yes Scotland, the pro-independence group, welcomed the results of the poll.

A spokesman said: "This poll is a further indication that there is solid and sustained support for a Yes vote in 2014 and with around a fifth of voters yet to make up their minds there is everything to play for.

"On these figures, a swing of just over 7.5% would put 'Yes' ahead.

"It is also significant that the number of people who think they would be better off or no worse off in an independent Scotland is higher than those who think they would be worse off.

"We do not underestimate the hard work ahead to secure a majority Yes vote in 2014. We have to persuade those who had favoured devo-max that independence is now the best option for building the kind of Scotland they want for themselves and future generations and there is already evidence that this is happening.

Scottish Conservative chief whip John Lamont said: "Given the wording of the question, in many ways this is the most reliable poll yet.

"But it tells us the same story ? that the vast majority of people in Scotland do not share Alex Salmond's desire to break up Britain."

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Source: http://news.stv.tv/politics/212491-half-of-scots-asked-likely-referendum-question-backed-staying-in-uk/

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