Friday, August 31, 2012

Japan: Nikkei hits 4-wk closing low; Sharp sags

Saturday, 1 September, 2012

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From smart to genius: will design define the future of gadgets?

4 hrs.

In a pre-iPhone age, mobile phones came in all shapes and sizes. Remember the clamshell, candy bar, swivel, backflip, slider, dual-slider, lipstick, and, of course, the taco? Nowadays, most phones have a touch screen, rows of icons and are rectangular.

In short, they all look a lot like the iPhone.

Now, in the wake of the Apple Inc vs Samsung Electronics trial, where the U.S. firm won what the South Koreans scathingly called a "monopoly over rectangles with rounded corners," the fear is that an era of rapid and exciting innovation in mobile design is over. The iPhone has won the day and all those whose handsets use Google's Android operating system, the argument goes, will either give up or tread carefully for fear of litigation.

But others argue the opposite.

Paul Pugh, creative vice president at frog, a San Francisco-based design company owned by India's Aricent Group, believes companies may now unshackle their designers to come up with genre-busting form factors and user interfaces that breathe fresh life into the industry.

"We don't know yet how far the impacts are going to go from here," says Pugh. "I do hope it's an inspiration moment for the Android platform and the manufacturers to put their bets on innovation ... to come with great user experience based on users' needs, and not stagnate based on the patents crippling them."

Smartpad
Frog knows how hard this is to bring to market. Take the SmartPad; a prototype Android phone the company unveiled last year that at first glance looked, in the words of one reviewer on the technology website Engadget, like "yet another plain smartphone - dark, nondescript, and maybe a little like an iPhone 4 that's had its right-most extent sliced off."

Flip open the two layers, however, and you had a phone with twice the normal screen size. "Suddenly it's a little tablet, two screens forming a 6-inch slate," the Engadget reviewer wrote.

The prototype, which belonged to Imerj, part of Singapore-listed contract manufacturer Flextronics International, intrigued: The Engadget article attracted more than 400 comments. It wasn't a wholly new concept, but the design was impressive, including the software, which included apps that made the most of the extra screen. Imerj promised a kit for software developers, and a team worked on a slew of apps that made use of the innovative dual screen. They dreamed big: to take on Research in Motion's BlackBerry.

"We had an idea that the smartphone was going to be the primary computing platform for most people going forward," recalled Brett Faulk, then Imerj's vice president of marketing. "However, it has two challenges: small screen and small keyboard. So the concept was to create a product that scales as my productivity needs increase."

After a few months, however, everything went quiet. Imerj's Twitter account went dead, as did its website. Both are now offline. Faulk and others left the company. Flextronics declined to comment, as did frog's Pugh.

A former member of the Imerj team said the project was deliberately aimed at a niche far from Apple's consumer-driven world, but that was part of the reason for its demise.

Building a device and the suite of office applications to go with it required at least five years gestation, an investment the parent company in the end couldn't make. "We were very ahead," said the person, who was not authorized to speak about the project and declined to be identified. "We were very sad to see innovation being pushed aside."

Limited room
At issue now is whether the Apple vs. Samsung verdict might upend such conservative calculations.

It may already be happening: The latest addition to Samsung's Galaxy range of devices - at the centre of the court case - is a camera with a display that looks, feels and acts like an Android smartphone, including WiFi and 3G connections. And Samsung itself has a patent on a dual screen device, according to patent blog patentbolt.com, that looks a lot like the SmartPad.

But there are limits to what can be done with hardware.

"There was a lot of ingenuity about the mechanical configuration of designing buttons and cameras and exposing these particular features," said Horace Dediu, a former Nokia engineer who now runs a consultancy and influential blog called Asymco. With the rise of the iPhone "all that went away when you have a clean glass display with touch interface."

The problem he says, is that the operating systems available to device makers - Android and, to a lesser extent, Microsoft's Windows Phone - are designed for that shape.

So, if there is going to be a change in what a phone looks like, Google needs to be the one to change. "Theoretically, if Google thinks that this isn't a winning game for them they may go to the manufacturers and say OK, we're going to allow you to have mechanical differentiation," said Dediu.

Until that happens, manufacturers have limited room to move. They can toy with the specifications and proportions of the device - Samsung has had a surprise hit with its outsized Galaxy Note, the second version of which was unveiled on Thursday - or by tweaking the Android operating system itself.

Indeed, frog's most visible success in smartphone design has been a user interface that Sharp Corp recently launched for its Android phones in Japan. Sharp, said Pugh, was looking to maintain its market lead as Japan shifts from older feature phones to smartphones, and gave frog a broad remit to come up with something to make their Android devices stand out.

The so-called 'Fresh UI' software adds an extra layer, or skin, to Google's basic operating system, which Pugh says improves access to the most used features on a device.

Skins and forks
Indeed, such skins are an increasingly popular way for handset makers to differentiate their devices from those of competitors. Huawei on Thursday unveiled its own 'Emotion UI' skin which it said will give consumers "one more reason to choose a Huawei smartphone over another brand's." It's not just for the big boys: Meizu, a small Chinese smartphone maker, has gained a cult following with its quirky customization of Android that once earned the ire of Steve Jobs, but is now fending off its own copycats.

But taking this route is not without its problems.

For one thing, skins are usually just that: a surface layer that users either love or hate, and which quickly peels away to the standard Android interface that is little different whether the device costs $500 or $50. And while the goal is to differentiate, they can end up pushing the Android interface into more closely resembling Apple's own iOS. Indeed, Apple presented slides at the trial alleging that Samsung's tweaks to the home screen on 13 devices made it mimic that of the iPhone. The jury agreed.

Some makers have already taken note. Meizu, the Chinese manufacturer, was happy when the home screen of one of its models was cited in court by Apple as an example of not infringing on its design patents, but the Chinese firm has nevertheless "modified some aspects of our user experience" for future products, according to the Zhuhai-based company's product director Yang Yan.

Still, in the longer run innovation needs to go beyond mere tweaking, argues Brandon Edwards, Shanghai-based colleague of Pugh. He believes more manufacturers will follow Amazon's path of taking Android in their own direction with the Kindle Fire, effectively parting company with Google.

Such so-called forks are likely to appeal to device makers beyond phones, Edwards says. Clients have been talking to frog about embedding technology into smart systems, cars and healthcare, and those devices could well be running Android.

Design value
Innovation in smartphones, meanwhile, is likely to move beyond form factor and apps to how they interact with their surroundings, says Pugh. Expect to see smartphones better controlled by voice and gesture, moving beyond the restriction of the device's shape and touchscreen in the next year or so.

The most significant outcome of the Apple Samsung spat, however, may be that design is no longer merely an afterthought.

There may have been a lot of different shaped devices in the pre-iPhone world, but that doesn't mean they offered consumers a better user experience, says Pugh. "All this confirms that there is a monetary value to design," he says.

"In the past, they were competing on speed and the technology base itself. Those things are now relatively normalized and design is really defining the device and the device experience."

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012. Check for restrictions at: http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/smart-genius-will-design-define-future-gadgets-973974

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Friday, August 10, 2012

Neuroscientists find brain stem cells that may be responsible for higher functions, bigger brains

ScienceDaily (Aug. 7, 2012) ? Scientists from The Scripps Research Institute have identified a new stem cell population that may be responsible for giving birth to the neurons responsible for higher thinking. The finding also paves the way for scientists to produce these neurons in culture -- a first step in developing better treatments for cognitive disorders, such as schizophrenia and autism, which result from disrupted connections among these brain cells.

Published in the August 10, 2012 issue of the journal Science, the new research reveals how neurons in the uppermost layers of the cerebral cortex form during embryonic brain development.

"The cerebral cortex is the seat of higher brain function, where information gets integrated and where we form memories and consciousness," said the study's senior author Ulrich Mueller, a professor and director of the Dorris Neuroscience Center at Scripps Research. "If we want to understand who we are, we need to understand this area where everything comes together and forms our impression of the world."

In the new study, Mueller's team identified a neural stem cell in mice that specifically gives rise to the neurons that make up the upper layers of the cerebral cortex. Previously, it was thought that all cortical neurons -- those making up both the lower and upper layers -- came from the same type of stem cell, called a radial glial cell, or RGC. A neuron's fate was thought to be determined by the timing of its birth date. The Scripps Research team, however, showed that there is a distinct stem cell progenitor that gives rise to upper layer neurons, regardless of birth date or place.

"Advanced functions like consciousness, thought, and creativity require a lot of different neuronal cell types and a central question has been how all this diversity is produced in the cortex," said Santos Franco, a senior research associate in Mueller's laboratory and first author of the paper. "Our study shows this diversity already exists in the progenitor cells."

Peeling Back the Onion Layers

In mammals, the cortex is made up of six distinct anatomic layers holding different types of excitatory neurons. They are not the uniform layers of a cake, but rather, they are more like the layers wrapped around an onion. The smaller lower layers, on the inside, host neurons that connect to the brain stem and spinal cord to help regulate essential functions such as breathing and movement. The larger upper layers, closer to the outer surface of the brain, contain neurons that integrate information coming in from the senses and connect across the two halves of the brain.

The upper layers are a "relatively young invention," evolutionarily speaking, having been greatly expanded during primate evolution, said Mueller. They give humans in particular the unique abilities to think abstractly, plan for the future and problem-solve.

For the last two decades, scientists have believed that the fate of cerebral cortex neurons was determined by their birth date because each layer is formed in a time-dependent manner. The lower layer neurons form in the center of the "ball" first, and then the cells that will become the upper layers form last, migrating through the lower layers.

"So the model was that there is a stem cell in the center of the ball that generates the different types of neurons in successive waves," said Mueller. "What we now show is that there are at least two different populations of RGCs and potentially more."

Following Fate

Franco first created a line of mice in which he could track upper-layer neurons as they were born and migrated. The team followed a marker gene called Cux2, which was previously reported to be expressed only by upper-layer neurons. By linking a gene for an enzyme called Cre to the Cux2 gene, the scientists could watch any cell expressing Cux2 under the microscope, because the Cre enzyme flips on another gene that glows fluorescent red.

Surprisingly, the team observed Cux2 already turned on in some of the RGCs, even at the earliest points in brain development -- embryonic day nine or ten -- before any upper-layer neurons exist. Following this population of glowing stem cells through development, the team showed that the cells almost exclusively generated upper-layer neurons. In contrast, the subgroup of RGCs not expressing Cux2 became lower-layer neurons.

Next, the team removed these Cux2-positive precursor cells from their niche in the embryonic brain to see how they would develop in a lab dish. When they cultured both types of RGCs, again only Cux2-expressing RGCs developed into upper-layer neurons.

In developing brains, these Cux2-positive stem cells first self-renew and proliferate before differentiating later into neurons. So, the team wanted to know if a neuron's birth date determined its fate. To test this, the researchers delivered a TCF4 molecule in utero that forced the Cux2-positive RGCs to prematurely differentiate. Even though it was too early in normal development, the Cux2-positive RGCs still produced upper-layer neurons.

In other words, regardless of position or timing, the Cux2-positive RGCs are destined to become upper-layer neurons. Mueller and colleagues concluded that these stem cells have some intrinsic property that determines their fate from the start.

The work also shows that this RGC subset is responsible for the huge proliferation of cells necessary to create the larger upper-layer cortex found in primate brains. "If we want to understand how the human brain evolved, how we are different from an amphibian, then this one precursor cell may have been important," said Mueller.

But, bigger brains came with a risk, making humans more prone to disorders when upper-layer neurons don't form connections properly. Up until now, researchers trying to reproduce human cortical neurons in the lab from stem cells have only generated lower-layer-type neurons. "This opens a door now to try to make the upper-layer neurons, which are frequently affected in psychiatric disorders," said Mueller.

In addition to Mueller and Franco, authors of the paper, "Fate-restricted neural progenitors in the mammalian cerebral cortex," were Cristina Gil-Sanz, Isabel Martinez-Garay, Ana Espinosa, Sarah R. Harkins-Perry, and Cynthia Ramos of Scripps Research. Martinez-Garay is now at the University of Oxford.

This research was supported by the Dorris Neuroscience Center, US National Institutes of Health (grant award numbers NS060355, NS046456, MH078833), and California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, and conducted in affiliation with the NIH Blueprint-funded Cre Driver Network.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by The Scripps Research Institute.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Santos J. Franco, Cristina Gil-Sanz, Isabel Martinez-Garay, Ana Espinosa, Sarah R. Harkins-Perry, Cynthia Ramos, and Ulrich M?ller. Fate-Restricted Neural Progenitors in the Mammalian Cerebral Cortex. Science, 10 August 2012: 746-749 DOI: 10.1126/science.1223616

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/arCEVDjaY1Y/120809141505.htm

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Video: April Ross: ?We?re really happy? with silver

Shawn Johnson takes on Apolo, gives Bruce Jenner dish

I've had a lot of awesome experiences in London, from live-blogging the women's gymnastics final to joining TODAY.com as a special Olympic correspondent. I've also gotten to hang with some really cool people along the way.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46952788/vp/48585913#48585913

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Family Fun: Five Great Board Games - NAS Key West Homes

As our world becomes more digital, family game nights are also coming back into style. Finding time to get together with friends and family for some. Classic board games, like Monopoly, are tried and true, but if you're looking for something new, why not check out these new, addictive board games:

-????????? Settlers of Catan. This game of trade strategy is one of the most popular and takes place on a board that's created anew every time. This gives each player different access to resources every time the game is played. It?s cerebral but fast-moving!

-????????? Carcassonne. This German board game is a great introduction to strategic gaming. With sessions less than an hour long, this?game of conquest and defense is incredibly simple to pick up and play but has a remarkable amount of strategic depth.

-????????? Puerto Rico. An interesting historical game, this game casts each player as a colonial governor on the island of Puerto Rico. The objective is to win fame and wealth in the export business. It?s exciting and fast-paced with lots of twists of fortune.

-????????? Power Grid. This game puts each player in control of a utility company looking to supply electricity to an ever-growing network of customers in this game of economic power. Players compete in auctions to buy new power plants and then seek to power the most cities on the map.

-????????? Agricola. The premise of this game might sound boring, but it surprisingly engaging and fun. It casts each player as a humble subsistence farmer trying to grow their agricultural outpost with limited resources.

Source: http://blog.naskeywesthomes.com/2012/08/09/family-fun-five-great-board-games/

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Thursday, August 9, 2012

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Canadian Natural profit falls on lower oil, gas prices

(Reuters) - Canadian Natural Resources Ltd reported a 19 percent fall in second-quarter net profit on lower oil and gas prices, and further cut spending on natural gas.

"Targeted capital expenditures for 2012 are being re-allocated from natural gas to higher return primary heavy crude oil projects," the company said in a statement, reducing its capital budget by about C$680 million.

Natural gas prices have fallen 46 percent during April-June from last year while U.S. crude oil prices fell 9 percent.

The company expect to produce between 1,220 million cubic feet per day (MMcf/d) and 1,235 MMcf/d of natural gas, and between 454,000 barrels per day of (bpd) and 474,000 bpd of crude oil in 2012, before royalties.

For the second quarter, the company produced 679,607 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boe/d), up from 556,539 boe/d a year earlier.

Net income fell to C$753 million ($756.8 million), or 68 Canadian cents per share, from C$929 million, or 84 Canadian cents per share, a year earlier.

Adjusted earnings from operations were 55 Canadian cents per share.

Revenue rose 15 percent to C$3.83 billion.

Shares of the company, which has a market value of $32.54 billion, closed at C$29.57 on Wednesday on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

(Reporting by Bhaswati Mukhopadhyay and Shounak Dasgupta in Bangalore; Editing by Roshni Menon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/canadian-natural-profit-falls-lower-oil-gas-prices-105031310--finance.html

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Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Governors aside, feds building health care markets

FILE - In this April 13, 2012 file photo, Texas Governor Rick Perry speaks in St. Louis. Republican governors who?ve balked at creating new consumer health insurance markets under President Barack Obama?s health care law may end up getting stuck. Instead of their state officials retaining some control over insurance issues that states traditionally manage, Washington could be calling the shots. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File)

FILE - In this April 13, 2012 file photo, Texas Governor Rick Perry speaks in St. Louis. Republican governors who?ve balked at creating new consumer health insurance markets under President Barack Obama?s health care law may end up getting stuck. Instead of their state officials retaining some control over insurance issues that states traditionally manage, Washington could be calling the shots. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File)

FILE - In this Dec. 23, 2009 file photo, Michael Hash of HHS, left, and White House health reform director Nancy-Ann DeParle, are seen on Capitol Hill in Washington. Republican governors who?ve balked at creating new consumer health insurance markets under President Barack Obama?s health care law may end up getting stuck . Instead of their state officials retaining some control over insurance issues that states traditionally manage, Washington could be calling the shots. (AP Photo/Harry Hamburg, File)

FILE - In this May 16, 2012 file photo, Florida Gov. Rick Scott speaks in Fort Lauderdale. Republican governors who?ve balked at creating new consumer health insurance markets under President Barack Obama?s health care law may end up getting stuck. Instead of their state officials retaining some control over insurance issues that states traditionally manage, Washington could be calling the shots. (AP Photo/J Pat Carter, File)

FILE - In this July 27, 2012 file photo, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal speaks in Hot Springs, Ark. Republican governors who?ve balked at creating new consumer health insurance markets under President Barack Obama?s health care law may end up getting stuck. Instead of their state officials retaining some control over insurance issues that states traditionally manage, Washington could be calling the shots. (AP Photo/Danny Johnston, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 18, 2012 file photo, South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley arrives at The Statehouse in Columbia, S.C. Republican governors who?ve balked at creating new consumer health insurance markets under President Barack Obama?s health care law may end up getting stuck. Instead of their state officials retaining some control over insurance issues that states traditionally manage, Washington could be calling the shots. (AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Republican governors who've balked at creating new private insurance markets under President Barack Obama's health care overhaul may end up getting stuck with the very thing they're trying to avoid.

Unless Mitt Romney wins in November, states that haven't set up the required markets could find Washington calling the shots on some insurance issues the states traditionally manage, from handling consumer complaints to regulating plans that will serve many citizens.

It could turn into a political debacle for those who dug in to fight what they decry as "Obamacare."

"You're kind of rolling the dice if you think (Obama's health care law) will go away," said Kansas Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger, a Republican. If Romney can't make good on his vow to repeal the overhaul, "you are just giving up a lot of authority."

The law envisioned that states would run the new markets, called exchanges, with federal control as a fallback only. But the fallback now looks as if it will become the standard option in about half the states ? at least initially.

It would happen through something called the federal exchange, humming along largely under the radar on a tight development schedule overseen by the Health and Human Services Department in Washington.

Exchanges are new online markets in which individual consumers and small businesses will shop for health insurance among competing private plans. The Supreme Court's health care decision left both state exchanges and the federal option in place.

The exchanges are supposed to demystify the process of buying health insurance, allowing consumers to make apples-to-apples comparisons. Consumers will also be able to find out if they're eligible for new federal subsidies to help pay premiums, or if they qualify for expanded Medicaid.

It's all supposed to work in real time, or close to it, like online travel services. Open enrollment would start a little over a year from now, on Oct. 1, 2013, with coverage kicking in the following Jan. 1.

Eventually more than 25 million people are expected to get coverage through exchanges, including many who were previously uninsured. As exchanges get more customers, competition among insurance plans could help keep costs in check.

But only 14 states and Washington, D.C., have adopted plans for their own exchanges: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont, Washington and West Virginia. Some could still backtrack.

Kentucky and Minnesota are pushing forward with their own exchanges, and others may be able to partner with the federal government. States face a Jan. 1, 2013 deadline for Washington to sign off on their plans.

Meanwhile, the federal exchange is advancing.

HHS contractors are working feverishly to design and test computer systems that would make the federal exchange come alive. It's a top priority for the administration, which is guarding the details closely. Estimated price tag: at least $860 million.

The government is "on track in moving aggressively to set up this market structure," Mike Hash, the HHS official overseeing the effort, told industry representatives, state officials and public policy experts at a recent Bipartisan Policy Center conference. "We're on track ... to go live in the fall of 2013."

"I think the pressure is on them to deliver, and I fully expect they will," said Jon Kingsdale, who was the founding director of the nation's first health insurance exchange, created under then-Gov. Romney's health care overhaul in Massachusetts.

Now a consultant to states, Kingsdale says he expects the federal exchange to look very much like the one already operating in his home state.

There will be a website, and you'll be able to put in your ZIP code and get a list of available health plans. There will be a section where you can find out if you qualify for subsidies, or whether you might need to look at Medicaid. There will be cost calculators to allow you to compare different levels of coverage: platinum, gold, silver and bronze. There will be tools that allow you to see if your doctor or hospital is with a particular plan.

In an interview, HHS official Hash said the government is undaunted by the prospect of running exchanges in half the states or more.

"What we are talking about building here is a system that is really using 21st century technology, and it's not dependent like in the past on bricks and mortar or how many (federal employees) you have," said Hash. "Information technology produces the opportunity for efficiency. It's much more easily scalable if you need to do it for a larger number of individuals."

Paper applications also will be accepted. And Hash expects people will have plenty of help to navigate the system, from volunteers to insurers advertising to reach new customers.

The government has awarded two big technology contracts for exchanges. Virginia-based CGI Federal Inc. is building the federal exchange. Maryland-based Quality Software Services Inc. is building what's called the federal data services hub, an electronic back office that will be used by the federal exchange and state exchanges to verify identity, income, citizenship and legal residence.

Running the data hub will involve securely checking sensitive personal information held by agencies such as the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service and Homeland Security Department. Technology experts say that's a challenge but not insurmountable. HHS rejected an Associated Press request to interview the contractors.

The administration says consumers should not notice any difference between the federal exchange and marketplaces run by the states. But state regulators disagree.

"I think we would be giving up something," said Praeger, the Kansas insurance commissioner. "It would have much more of a federal flavor than a Kansas flavor."

Praeger wants Kansas to have a state-run exchange, but GOP Gov. Sam Brownback and Republican state legislators are opposed. If opponents prevail, the state will have a federal exchange.

But conservatives are raising yet another argument in hopes of shutting down federal exchanges.

Led by Cato Institute economist Michael Cannon, several opponents say the letter of the complex law precludes the government from subsidizing coverage through the federal exchange. They say the law allows only tax credits to help consumers pay premiums in state exchanges, not the federal exchange, and that's the way Congress intended it. If states don't set up exchanges, that would starve the health care overhaul of money and cause it to unravel, they contend.

But the IRS and two nonpartisan congressional units ? the Congressional Budget Office and the Joint Committee on Taxation ? conducted their own analyses and concluded that subsidies are available in both types of exchanges, federal and state-run. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., one of the law's principal authors, says that's exactly how Congress intended it.

At the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, spokesman Scott Holeman says, "At this time, we don't have any reason to question the federal government's interpretation of the statute."

The dispute may wind up in court but probably wouldn't get resolved until after the exchanges were up and running.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2012-08-06-US-Building-Obamacare/id-89524d34b0fb4b4c80cc66443b812d5d

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Frontier Airlines to begin passenger service at Phoenix-Mesa Gateway

Frontier Airlines will begin daily non-stop service between Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport and Denver International Airport Nov. 15. Frontier will be the third airline to service Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport and the first to carry daily daytime service to a major metropolitan airport and international hub.?

Scott Smith, Mesa Mayor and Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport Authority Board Chair said Frontier?s announcement of service to its Denver hub makes Gateway Airport a literal gateway to the world. ?It means east valley travelers can go to destinations across the country and internationally with a single plane change, which is especially important for business.??

?

The new passenger service will benefit both business and leisure travel to and from Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport. ?Since commercial service began at Gateway in October, 2007, the airport has served more than 3.4 million passengers. (Photo by Shahn Sederberg)

?The non-stop connection between Denver and the Gateway region is a smart one and will expose Frontier passengers to a vibrant new visitor experience east of Phoenix,? Mesa Convention & Visitors Bureau President and CEO Marc Garcia said. ?Denver has long been identified as a top producing feeder market for Arizona and business travel is gaining momentum according to the latest Arizona data.?

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Frontier Airlines is in its 19th year of operation. ?With Denver International Airport serving as its primary hub, Frontier offers service to more than 70 destinations in the United States, Mexico, Costa Rica, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic,. ?The tail of each Frontier airplane is painted with a unique ?spokesanimal.?

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?Seeing that Denver is the top air travel destination from Phoenix, this expansion into the Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport allows us to further differentiate our product offering, providing greater convenience and access to customers living and working in the east valley community,? Frontier Vice President, Network and Revenue, Greg Aretakis said. ??We have received tremendous community support and look forward to bringing our high value, low fare service to east valley travelers who currently have few customer friendly options.??

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Tickets are now on sale for flights to and from Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport. Frontier is offering fares as low as $69 each way available for purchase through Saturday, Aug. 11 only at www.frontierairlines.com. ?

Source: http://www.stateaviationjournal.com/index.php?q=content/frontier-airlines-begin-passenger-service-phoenix-mesa-gateway-airport

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$50K bail for Vt. man accused of crushing cop cars

In this Thursday, Aug. 2, 2012 photo, a crushed cruiser sits at the Orleans County Sheriff's Department in Newport, Vt. Authorities say 34-year old Vermont farmer Roger Pion, angry over a recent arrest last month on charges of resisting arrest and marijuana possession, used a large tractor like a monster truck, destroying seven police cruisers. (AP Photo/The Caledonian-Record, Taylor Reed)

In this Thursday, Aug. 2, 2012 photo, a crushed cruiser sits at the Orleans County Sheriff's Department in Newport, Vt. Authorities say 34-year old Vermont farmer Roger Pion, angry over a recent arrest last month on charges of resisting arrest and marijuana possession, used a large tractor like a monster truck, destroying seven police cruisers. (AP Photo/The Caledonian-Record, Taylor Reed)

Roger Pion, right, sits in court with his attorney, David Sleigh in Newport, Vt., Friday, Aug. 3, 2010. Orleans County sheriffs said Pion of Newport was angry over a recent arrest for resisting arrest and marijuana possession when he drove the tractor into the parking lot of the sheriff?s department and rolled it multiple times across cruisers and a transport van parked in the lot. No one was injured in Thursday?s incident. (AP Photo/Caledonian Record)

In this Thursday, Aug. 2, 2012 photo, a crushed cruiser sits at the Orleans County Sheriff's Department in Newport, Vt. Authorities say 34-year old Vermont farmer Roger Pion, angry over a recent arrest last month on charges of resisting arrest and marijuana possession, used a large tractor like a monster truck, destroying seven police cruisers. (AP Photo/The Caledonian-Record, Taylor Reed)

(AP) ? A Vermont man who authorities said used a large farm tractor like a monster truck and drove over seven police vehicles, then tried to run over two officers who pursued him, was ordered held on $50,000 bail Friday.

Orleans County sheriffs said Roger Pion, 34, of Newport, was angry over a recent arrest for resisting arrest and marijuana possession when he drove the tractor into the parking lot of the sheriff's department and rolled it multiple times across cruisers and a transport van parked in the lot. No one was injured in Thursday's incident.

Sworn police statements filed at the court said Pion would face 14 charges. The most serious one, felony aggravated assault on a police officer, carries a penalty of up to 16 years in prison.

Sheriffs said that after Pion left their lot, they were unable to pursue him because they had no intact vehicles. When two Newport City officers chased him, he suddenly started backing the tractor toward them.

"I backed up in fear of our safety about ten to fifteen feet before bumping into another vehicle," wrote Newport Officer Tanner Jacobs, adding that "at this point the tractor was still backing up." He said he and his partner then left their vehicle to avoid getting run over.

Converging city and state police and county sheriffs then surrounded Pion and ordered him from the tractor at gunpoint. He was found to be carrying a loaded pistol, authorities said. Sheriff's deputies got there in a borrowed civilian vehicle.

Defense attorney David Sleigh said he would seek to have the aggravated assault charge dismissed.

"There was no actual contact. He never came into threatening proximity of anyone," Sleigh said. "I understand if these deputies were annoyed, and there may be a personal measure of retribution" reflected in the aggravated assault charge. "But that does not equate to proof."

After Pion's court appearance Friday, sheriff's deputies and fire and rescue crews in neighboring Derby, where the sheriff's department is located, were trying to salvage what they could from the crushed cruisers. They were using tools usually used to extract crash victims from crushed vehicles to pry open the cruisers' trunks.

Chief Deputy Philip Brooks marveled that the rifle, shotgun and other items stored in his cruiser's trunk were unharmed. "Even my hat held its shape," he said.

Brooks said the department moved into the former bank building in December. There was no video surveillance of the ungated parking lot. "I'm certain the security issues will be revisited," he said.

Several other sheriffs' departments around Vermont offered to lend cruisers to Orleans County. State police offered cars they were preparing for auction.

Sheriff Kirk Martin said in an interview at the county courthouse that he was in Boston, preparing to attend a Red Sox game on Law Enforcement Appreciation Day at Fenway Park, when he got word of the vehicular carnage back home. He hurried back north, with New Hampshire and Vermont State Police escorting him.

Martin missed the game, in which Boston lost to the Minnesota Twins, 5-0. "Even watching them lose yesterday would have been better" than what he came home to, he said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2012-08-03-Cruisers%20Crushed/id-95d9eb985105472e9b5036d74d19a11e

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Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg Drops Out As One Of Top 10 Tech Billionaires, Making A Bad Week Worse

On Wednesday, multiple media outlets reported that Zuckerberg's sister, Arielle Zuckerberg, would be working for one of his largest competitors, Google Inc. (Nasdaq: GOOG), because the giant online-search company had acquired Wildfire Interactive Inc., where she is a junior product manager.

On Thursday, Facebook's share price closed at a new all-time low, as it fell 4 percent to $20.04, continuing a slide that began after the company delivered a weak second-quarter earnings report on July 26. The same day, there were reports that Facebook's social-media platform (its primary intellectual property and the beating heart of the company) might have more than 83 million fake users, which could cost the firm dearly in lost advertising revenue in the near future.

And then, on Friday, Zuckerberg reportedly lost his place among the 10 richest technology billionaires, at least temporarily, according to Bloomberg News.

Zuckerberg lost $423 million of his personal fortune on Thursday, Bloomberg reported. Of course, the vast majority of his wealth is in the form of 503.6 million shares of Facebook and 60 million options on the stock with an exercise price of 6 cents a share. Also of course, he gained all the money lost on Thursday back on Friday, as the company's share price rose 5.24 percent to $21.09.

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How exactly this gyration will affect Zuckerberg himself is unclear.

"From an emotional standpoint, he might care," Ron Florance, managing director of investment strategy for the Wells Fargo Private Bank, told Bloomberg. "He's much more worried about maintaining Facebook's market share in the social-media space than the day-to-day valuation swings of his company stock. He's not worried about going broke."

As Matt Lynley of Business Insider put it, "It's going to take a massive decline in Facebook's stock value to really hurt him."

Still, all the news last week was far from encouraging for an outfit that had a rocky beginning in its first quarter of public trading, especially with one of its closest partners shedding even more profits while publicly disavowing Facebook itself, in addition to facing a lawsuit for allegedly dubious business practices. ?

Of course, the core problems with Zynga Inc. (Nasdaq: ZNGA) are low-quality products and diminished confidence in virtual property, which has few historical norms or developed practices.

In any case, the same day that Facebook's share price hit its all-time low level, the company also unveiled promising and innovative new IP in the form of Facebook Stories. To continue improving upon the Facebook platform itself, the company would do well to focus on this kind of product in the coming months, rather than, as Benzinga and others have suggested, simply trying to save FarmVille.

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Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/370585/20120806/facebook-ceo-drops-out-top-ten-billionaires.htm

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How Internet Marketing Can Help You Grow Your Handmade ...

Info and affiliate products are not the only things that can be sold via internet marketing. It can be utilized for any kind of business. This can be even businesses that are based in the brick and mortar world. This is true. Even crafters can use Internet Marketing techniques to increase the amount of art they sell online.

Quite frankly, internet marketing could make or break your ability to be profitable on the internet. With that in mind, here are some ways to use Internet Marketing to help you sell handmade items online. visit site

Why not submit your products to some of the online communities that support your particular craft or art? Some places are looking for new artisans continuously such as Comfort Creatures, Frolic Blog and Scoutie Girl. Whatever you?re making or selling, websites like this should be happy to know about your products and you as a person. What you do, and who you are, will become widely known when you are able to get a write up from one of these websites. There are many of these websites online. Just search for them in Google and you are bound to find many that you can work with.

Why not teach a class online? Video chatting, creating and posting videos ? all of this will help you create an online class that people will want to take. Teaching many people at once as possible with Google Plus and its Google Hangouts. Just so people who sign up what they need to do and what you are going to teach them. This will get a lot of new people to see your stuff. Charging for the class, and admissions fee, will help you make some more money quite quickly. You need to be always looking for ways to improve your reputation in doing this is one way to accomplish this goal. buy WORX WG308

Next, start a blog. Anybody can start a blog and add it on to their primary website. In fact, a blog is a great way to help improve your search engine rankings and bring in more business to your products. It gives you a great platform to discuss the products and art that you have on your site. Related topics such as what is going on in your niche related industry. Most people of friends that are tired of hearing about what they love. I?m sure you have those! The blog is for this exact purpose. Plus, you?ll be able to sell more products and create a name for yourself, all the while building an audience.

Popular opinion seems to believe that Internet Marketing is limited to online businesses only. It really is not limited in this way. He can be very helpful when running a business of any sort to use Internet Marketing to either promote yourself, or your products, in this online medium. In regard to handmade goods, you can see that Internet Marketing techniques will work very well to promote your business and help you make money. As for other types of businesses, these techniques also work just fine.

Really, if you think about it, the only limits you really have are the limits to your own creativity. find out more

Source: http://brotherjuniperonline.com/how-internet-marketing-can-help-you-grow-your-handmade-business/

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Romney promises 12 million jobs in 4 years

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -

Mitt Romney's economic advisers issued a rosy set of projections that predict 12 million new jobs and a sharp economic expansion if the Republican candidate were to capture the White House.

The paper, authored by four conservative economists, projects that the Romney plan would add between 0.5% and 1% per year in gross domestic product growth over the next decade.

The estimates, the economists write, are "conservative." Growth could be even stronger if hard-to-model gains from more effective regulation and decreased policy uncertainty could be captured.

Yet 12 million new jobs over just four years would be one of the strongest periods of employment growth in recent history, and require the economy to consistently add 250,000 jobs every 30 days for 48 straight months.

According to the position paper, the quick turnaround would be spurred by the lower tax rates and drastic spending cuts that are the hallmark of Romney's plan.

The implementation of Romney's plan will of course require the cooperation of Congress, and it should be noted that presidential campaigns often make promises that fail to materialize.

The paper's authors -- Glenn Hubbard of Columbia, Greg Mankiw of Harvard, John Taylor of Stanford and Kevin Hassett of the American Enterprise Institute -- also include a boilerplate critique of the Obama administration's policies.

"America took a wrong turn in economic policy in the past three years," the authors write. "The United States underperformed the historical norm shown in the administration's own forecasts, and its policies are to blame."

Much of the critique is focused on what the authors characterize as a pursuit of short-term patches -- such as the stimulus -- that failed to address deep-seated structural problems like an overly complicated tax code.

The paper criticizes Obama's housing policies, for example, saying the administration "ignored" the weak market. But Romney has not offered a detailed alternative -- and the paper does not shed any light on the candidate's plan for the housing market.

Source: http://www.wmur.com/news/money/Romney-promises-12-million-jobs-in-4-years/-/9857662/15948644/-/rkbmokz/-/index.html?absolute=true

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Top energy firms announce major UK investments at London 2012 summit

Chancellor George Osborne and Business Secretary Vince Cable will today welcome substantial new investment in the UK as international delegates from the world?s oil and gas companies meet at the British Business Embassy in London.

Up to 4,000 UK jobs will be supported by the GDF SUEZ- operated Cygnus project - the extraction of shallow water gas from an 18 billion cubic metre field under the Southern North Sea ? in partnership with Centrica and Bayerngas. And an International Centre for Advanced Materials created by BP with universities including the University of Manchester will build on the UK?s world leading status in research and development.

The Chancellor, George Osborne, said:

?The Global Business Summit is a demonstration of how the UK can lead the world in the energy sector: securing investment, creating jobs and building a more prosperous future. The Government is committed to creating an environment in which innovation can thrive and businesses can grow: that?s why top businesses such as BP are investing in the UK and supporting our world-leading universities in delivering cutting edge research.?

Business Secretary Vince Cable said:

?The oil and gas industry?s immense contribution to our skills base, industrial capacity and strength as an exporter are pivotal as we rebalance our economy. Today?s summit underlines the Government?s commitment to making the UK a great place for energy firms to do business, develop new technologies and recruit the best technicians and engineers.

?Collaboration between business and higher education institutions is boosting the status of the UK as a driver of innovation, and giving our firms a competitive edge. I?m pleased that BP has chosen to partner with a number of our world class universities to find new and more efficient ways of using and generating power.?

UK Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change Edward Davey, said:

?The North Sea remains a vital source of the nation?s energy security and our expertise is renowned the world over. The Government is determined to maintain the best possible investment environment to ensure we capitalise fully on this national asset.

?There continues to be significant interest in the annual licensing rounds, with interest in established and the new frontier West of Shetland. The go-ahead for the Cygnus field is terrific news, and will contribute substantially to the UK?s gas needs and support thousands of high skilled jobs.?

Bob Dudley, BP?s Group Chief Executive, said:

?Advanced materials and coatings will be vital in finding, producing and processing energy safely and efficiently in the years ahead. Energy producers will work at unprecedented depths, pressures and temperatures; as refineries, plants and pipeline operators seek ever better ways to combat corrosion. Manchester has world-leading capabilities and facilities in materials and it was chosen after a global search to act as the ?hub? of the centre, with ?spokes? in other university departments worldwide. We look forward to building a very productive partnership between our professionals and the academic team at Manchester.?

Today?s summit, one of 18 organised by UK Trade & Investment (UKTI) to promote British business during the Olympic and Paralympic Games, highlights the UK?s capabilities in energy and the opportunities for collaboration with overseas companies. Key themes include technology-specific issues related to regulatory and market reforms, financing needs, deployment challenges and the scaling up of industrial capacity.

UK-international business

International business announced today includes:

GDF SUEZ as operator, together with Centrica and Bayerngas, partners in the Cygnus project - the largest gas discovery in the Southern North Sea for 25 years ? signed a Field Development Plan (FDP) at a ceremony hosted by Ed Davey at the British Business Embassy yesterday (6 August). The FDP authorises new oil and gas fields and ensures no adverse environmental consequences. Operator GDF SUEZ and its partners Centrica and Bayerngas decided to proceed with this ?1.4 billion project following the Government?s 25 July announcement of a ?500 million field allowance for large shallow water gas fields. They are announcing initial contracts for the development of the Cygnus field worth a total of ?375 million, of which ?337 million will be invested in the UK, directly creating more than 1200 local jobs. The Cygnus reservoirs hold estimated reserves of 18 billion cubic metres of gas and, once in production, should supply around 5% of the UK?s gas production, with the first gas being produced in 2015. Around 80% of the project value is expected to be invested in the UK, and the total development is expected to be a significant economic boost and create around 4,000 UK jobs.

BP is creating an International Centre for Advanced Materials (BP-ICAM) in the UK to support fundamental science and the engineering application of advanced materials - those with superior qualities such as toughness, hardness, durability and elasticity - in the energy sector. The University of Manchester will act as the ?hub? of the centre, with ?spokes? in other universities around the world that have specific areas of expertise. At the launch these are: Cambridge University, Imperial College, London and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The BP-ICAM is a strategic, long term investment, with BP committing $100 million (?60 million) over 10 years to the network of universities. It will create 25 new academic posts, at least 100 PhDs and 80 post-Docs, and help maintain the world-leading status of the UK in the research of advanced materials.

Versalis, Italy's largest chemical producer, owned entirely by ENI SpA, will be investing between ?50 and ?60 million in the development and expansion of elastomer production capacity at its Grangemouth site in Scotland in order to service technical developments in the automotive tyre manufacture market. Polimeri Europa UK Ltd, Versalis? UK subsidiary, has been successful in its application for a ?600,000 Regional Selective Assistance grant awarded on the basis of creating 20 new jobs. A further seven jobs will be created within contracting companies who supply services for the site.

Neftex, an Oxfordshire-based geosciences consultancy business that supports the activities of global oil, gas and mineral exploration companies, has won several international contracts over recent months, including a UKTI-supported contract with JOGMEC (Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation) worth several hundred thousand pounds. As a result of its thriving business, Neftex, which already has over 80 staff and is one of the biggest annual employers of geology graduates in the UK, expects to recruit up to 50 new graduate staff as part of its near-term plans.

Tangent Technologies Limited has been awarded a series of Australian contracts totalling around ?105,000 and helping to create two new jobs in Plymouth, Devon, commencing in September 2012. TTL's contracts include over ?65,000 worth of contracts for BHP Billiton awarded last year, a contract to assist Rio Tinto with a drill rig reliability investigation, a new A$20,000 (?13,250) contract for the St Ives Gold Mining Company in Western Australia to survey hot oil pipes that will commence in mid-August, and a newly announced contract for Energy Developments Ltd (EDL) Australia, worth over A$40,000 (?26,500).

Melrose Resources plc has been granted a six-year concession for natural gas extraction at the Kavarna East field in the Bulgarian Black Sea. The company has been operating in Bulgaria for 14 years, has invested over ?250 million and is already extracting natural gas from the Kaliakra and Kavarna fields, the production covering around 15% of the country's natural gas consumption. The new concession will help to consolidate Melrose?s position in the Bulgarian gas market, from which it generated 60% of its $189 million gas production revenues in 2011.

Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, Vice Chancellor of Manchester University, said:

?We are very pleased that BP has chosen The University of Manchester to be the Hub for the ICAM, utilising our world-leading breadth of research expertise in advanced materials and their applications to address the current and future challenges facing industry. We also look forward to working closely with the University of Cambridge, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign and Imperial College London as the founding spokes of the ICAM. This is an excellent announcement for UK science and recognises the excellence of our universities, our research and our willingness and ability to work with global industry.?

Notes to editors

1. The programme for all British Business Embassy events is at www.ukti.gov.uk Watch all British Business Embassy sessions live http://www.youtube.com/user/UKTIWeb. Follow events live on Twitter @BritBizClub and join the conversation using hashtag #BritBizEmbassy.

2. Visit www.flickr.com/photos/ukti/ to download photographs of the signing of the Field Development Plan at the British Business Embassy on 6 August.

3. UK Trade & Investment (UKTI) is the Government Department that helps UK-based companies succeed in the global economy. We also help overseas companies bring their high quality investment to the UK?s economy ? acknowledged as Europe?s best place from which to succeed in global business. UKTI offers expertise and contacts through its extensive network of specialists in the UK, and in British embassies and other diplomatic offices around the world. We provide companies with the tools they require to be competitive on the world stage. For more information on UKTI, visit www.ukti.gov.uk or visit the online newsroom at www.ukti.gov.uk/media.

4. Gas is the single biggest source of energy in the UK and, as a lower carbon fuel than current electricity generation, it is expected to continue to play an important part in the UK?s energy mix well until 2030 and beyond. As part of wider announcements on renewables and gas infrastructure, on 25 July the Government announced a new category of field allowance that will encourage investment in marginal gas fields by protecting the first ?500 million of income from qualifying fields from the 32% Supplementary Charge (SC) tax rate. Further information about this tax relief can be found on: http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/press_66_12.htm, and details of the full 25 July announcement by DECC on http://www.decc.gov.uk/en/content/cms/news/pn12_086/pn12_086.aspx.

Factfile

  • The energy industry contributes 3.9% of the UK?s GDP and employs about 173,000 people (7% of industrial employment) . It accounts for 9.9 per cent of total investment in the UK.
  • The UK?s notable strengths across the energy industries ? oil and gas, renewables, nuclear and thermal power generation ? include project management, major contracting, design engineering, asset and operational management, design and manufacturing of advanced equipment, research and development, training and education, professional and financial services. All of these are delivered with a total commitment to health, safety and the environment.
  • The UK oil and gas supply chain exports around US$9 billion worth of goods and services each year in value, representing about one-quarter of the UK?s total energy sector exports.
  • The UK?s oil production capacity is the largest in the European Union, and the second largest in the European Economic Area (EEA) after Norway. It is within the top 20 of oil producers worldwide.
  • The UK is the world?s 15th largest producer of oil and gas overall with daily production of around 2.2 million barrels of oil equivalent (BOE).

The UK Continental Shelf has given up just over 40 billion BOE over its production history, but still has a further 14-24 billion BOE of potentially recoverable resources. The UK intends to develop these resources in the cleanest, most sustainable ways possible.

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Notes to Editors

Source: http://rnn.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/Press-Releases/Top-energy-firms-announce-major-UK-investments-at-London-2012-summit-67e4e.aspx

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Cuba Still Trying to Figure It Out ? Miami International Business ...

Posted on by The Victoria Law Group

All these years on, Cuba is still trying to tweak their economic model, as if it has any chance of succeeding under the current regime, and as if those suggesting the fixes can even begin to get it right.? At an annual conference on Cuba?s economy, experts discussed the current state of reforms, future prospects and looked for similarities in other countries.? The formula is simply:? Some democracy, some transparency, some free enterprise, and some real freedom of expression.? How ?bout trying those?

Read Juan O. Tamayo?s? Miami Herald article here:

http://hrld.us/QzHZGJ

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Brought to you by The Victoria Law Group.

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Source: http://miamiinternationalbusinessattorneys.com/2012/08/05/cuba-still-trying-to-figure-it-out/

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