miércoles, 23 de noviembre de 2011

Power Balance Bracelet "hoax"


Misleading advertising in the United States, the popular Power Balance knob, which supposedly create balance in the body, proved to be a hoax. The firm will pay $ 57.4 million for not complying with the benefits promoted.

In the United States sold for $ 30 and has became a popular accessory that gets into the main shopping centers.

Via:globovision

Transporting drugs using a remote control plane


Spain's Civil Guard discovered a drone loaded with more than two kilograms of cannabis resin, which presumably came from Morocco.

Civil guards on the border between Spain and Morocco found the plane floating in the water. Accepting the drone found containing 2200 grams of drugs hidden.

They have not got a suspect who was behind the remote control which would guide the plane. The aircraft have a flight range of an hour, but according to experts consulted by the model airplane Civil Guard, the unit was not enough gas to get to Cadiz.

This raised the theory that the plane could have been guided by GPS to which he would set the coordinates to which he was to come.

Via:elpais

Kilimanjaro climb without hands or feet

An American-armed and without feet is preparing to climb Kilimanjaro without even rely on the help of prosthesis.

Kyle Maynard,
Maynard used bicycle tires to strengthen the grip of his arms and legs.

Kyle Maynard, 25, suffers what is called congenital amputation, that is, born with short arms and legs.

However, despite his handicap has made a career in the world of martial arts, wrestling, and besides that it is a lecturer and writer.

A story of overcoming

The next January, plans to spend 16 days climbing the 5895 meters high Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, considered the highest point in Africa.

If successful, it will be the first person to get a quadruple amputation and without help from others.

But with shorter arms and legs, Maynard practically have to crawl to the top of the mountain.

Over the years, the U.S. has improvised different types of equipment, from spare bicycle tire in the ends of his arms and legs, reinforced sleeves on shirts, special packing tape or clothing.

Your challenge here is to increase the grip on the rise.

"There is no obstacle big enough"

To achieve its objective Maynard has spent years climbing mountains in Colorado and Georgia in the United States.

Maynard on his expedition will be accompanied by nine others, including a cameraman, a guide and three veterans who suffered physical and psychological trauma during the war.

The group began raising funds for the expedition through a website at: www.missionkilimanjaro.com. 

The end of the mission is to show people and veterans with disabilities in the world that no obstacle is big enough, because you can accomplish if you have a certain lifestyle, an active mind and without borders, sums up the site the Internet.

"Kilimanjaro is the biggest challenge we have faced," Maynard said in a television interview in the United States. 

"I just want to send a message to the people, stand up and do something. Instead of complaining about things that happened to us, it's better to realize that there is a life to live," he said.

Via:bbc

lunes, 21 de noviembre de 2011

India caught in a leopard had eaten three children


A leopard had eaten three children and wounded at least six people were captured alive today in the vicinity of an ecological reserve in the northern region of Uttar Pradesh India, a source forest.

"The trap was laid by Bhupendra Singh Rana, who offered to perform the operation after local authorities will ask for help to end the threat of the cat," said chief naturalist of the region, BK Patnaik, a local agency IANS.

Rana Singh captured the animal with a camouflaged iron cage in which he placed inside a goat as bait, said the conservation authority.

Patnaik, who described the operation of hunting as a "big catch", said "the leopard had terrified the inhabitants of several villages over the past two months."

Forest chief has ruled out releasing the leopard in its natural habitat.

"Given that killed three people and seriously wounded at least half a dozen, we have no choice but to send him to a zoo," said Patnaik.

Experts attribute the increase to the leopards attack humans in India in the building around national parks of new towns, where there are pets, they are pieces of hunting for cats.

New residents and some businesses have invaded the grounds of the nature reserves, which have forced predators to change their eating habits.
Via:globovision

viernes, 18 de noviembre de 2011

See homosexuality after stroke

Chris Birch, heterosexual, rugby player and a bank worker in Wales, suffered a stroke while trying a stunt in training and breaking his neck. When he awoke he felt like a different person and no interest for women, so he left his bride, the rugby team, dyed his hair, quit his job, he trained as a stylist and now lives with her boyfriend in a apartment above the beauty salon where she works.


Experts say that after a stroke, the brain creates new connections that can cause different effects, as the case of a man who woke with incredible abilities for drawing without having had previous training.

Via:globovision

Eggs in piss, manjar typical China


In Dongyang Province of China, by spring the aroma of a dish begins to spread through the air. Cooks liters of urine collected virgin child, add hundreds of eggs cooked mixture. As if this were not enough, they are about to burst, take them out, peel them and put back into the urine to concentrate the flavor.

Apparently, residents of Dongyang love: "It is so delicious that I can eat 10 eggs a day," says a woman who moved to Dongyang several years ago.

miércoles, 16 de noviembre de 2011

The light at the end of the tunnel, the last enigma of the human mind

'La muerte de Casagemas', de Pablo Picasso. | El Mundo

-They propose several explanations for the near-death experiences.
-Could be due to a complex mixture of chemical effects on the brain.
-Other hypotheses point to the psychology or the mysteries of quantum physics.

Throughout life, the mind can play tricks on us or to see things that are not there, from the feeling of paralysis that accompanies some nightmares to the perception of leaving the body. It is relatively common recall experiences that have traditionally been regarded as paranormal, but may actually be due to deep states of sleep, the action of certain drugs or traumatic experiences that induce changes in the brain.

The near-death experiences, as the concern some people who have suffered a cardiac arrest or have been close to death, could be defined as a collection of all these anomalies: the patients perceive their consciousness away from his own body, envision a black tunnel with a light on the other hand, they feel surrounded by presences identified as spirits, angels or ghosts, and often accompanies them a feeling of fullness or state of euphoria.

These memories, which have been observed and collected in hospitals around the world have usually been interpreted from a mystical point of view, religious or paranormal, but many experts believe that groups should be incorporated into academic study. Some scientists believe, in fact, that the current neurology and psychiatry already have enough tools to explain the phenomenon, which is the sum of a series of experiments with extreme brain's own approaching death.

The British researchers Dean Mobbs, the Medical Research Council in Cambridge, and Caroline Watt, a psychologist at the University of Edinburgh, produced a study that reviewed a number of symptoms more common in the near-death experiences and offered a possible biological explanation for each one of them. The perception of being in a tunnel, for example, may be due to failure of peripheral vision, caused by lack of oxygen to the brain that occurs after suffering a cardiac arrest.

Via: elmundo

martes, 15 de noviembre de 2011

Kangaroo trapped in wire and left to suffer

injured kangaroo

THESE shocking photos show a kangaroo in agony, tangled in metres of wire and unable to stand up.
The distressed kangaroo was discovered this morning by a Department of Environment and Conservation wildlife carer, who feared the animal had been tied up in case of animal cruelty.
Kim Walpole was walking through bushland at the back of her Chittering property when she found the kangaroo lying down, with fencing wire wrapped around its foot, chest and neck.
It wasn't until she sedated the distressed animal that she realised the wire had also been tied to two trees.
"I thought he had a broken back and he tried to leap up," Ms Walpole said.
"When we saw that it was actually wire, I had a scenario in the back of my mind but I didn't want to think about people being so cruel. I felt sick."
These images sent to PerthNow show the wire wound tightly around the animal's feet and chest, and the marks left after wildlife carers were able to cut it free.
Ms Walpole, who has lived on the property for seven years, said she did not have any fencing to keep wildlife out and did not know how the wire ended up on her block.
She said it was possible the kangaroo had picked up the wire from a nearby building site and got caught in the bushes.
But the fact it was wrapped around the animal's foot 10 times "raised a lot of questions."
"It obviously panicked and tried to get away because it had worn into the two trees and debarked the trees," she said.
The adult roo suffered burns from the wire but is expected to make a full recovery.
Via:perthnow


lunes, 14 de noviembre de 2011

Orphaned bat babies get a cosy new home

orphaned foxes

SNUG as bugs in bunny rugs, Melbourne's baby bats are filling the grey-headed flying fox nursery set up each year to care for orphaned bat bubs.
And while night-time feeds drive most mums batty, Wildlife Victoria volunteers refill formula bottles and rotate dummies around the clock.
The babies are often rescued after their mums have been electrocuted on powerlines, fatally entangled in dark-coloured fruit tree netting or ripped apart on barbed wire.
The orphans are swaddled in blankets to help them feel secure and put in a bat nursery where they thrive in the company of their little flying fox cousins.
"Coming from colonies we have found they do much better in company than on their own," WV development manager Amy Amato said.
The flying foxes remain in care until ready for a "soft release" into a special enclosure at the colony's home at Yarra Bend.
Wildlife volunteers often meet the costs of animals in their care from their own pockets.
Via:perthnow

The South African black rhino flying

Operación de traslado de los rinocerontes. | Michael Raimondo ( Green Renaissance WWF)

Flying rhinos in South Africa. Or, at least 19 of them have flown for more than 10 minutes, anesthetized and suspended by his ankles from a helicopter. An operation as spectacular as effective to transport these animals, weighing between 800 and 1,400 kilos, an area inaccessible by road in the province of Eastern Cape, on the southern tip of South Africa, the Northern Limpopo, just across the tip of the country.

 Following the aerial tour animals were placed on trucks and taken to their new home, an area established by the World Wildlife Fund in which the owners of farms and farmland agree to have rhinos.

The idea of ​​airlifting hung by the legs of these animals sounds spectacular, but according to those responsible for the operation, is actually less harmful to the rhinos trucked infamous roads or put them in networks that are hanging from helicopters. The project has also received tremendous publicity thanks to the spectacular images and videos posted on the Internet by the South African media production firm defense of the environment Green Rennaisance.

South Africa has about 9,500 rhinos, ie about 80% of those who remain in Africa. Of these, about 7,000 are white rhinos, about twice as large as the black people who protragonistas of this 'air bridge'. So far this year 341 have been poached animals in both species in that country. That means that already surpassed the 2010 (333 animals).
Via:elmundo

domingo, 13 de noviembre de 2011

10 year old girl gives birth


He was born in Puebla, Mexico. She weighed six pounds and is recovering from pneumonia in the intensive care unit of a hospital in Puebla. At the time carried out an investigation to find out who was the person responsible for the girl pregnant.

The pregnancy lasted 33 weeks. Mexican law prohibits abortion unless it is proven to be a victim of rape. The minimum age for an abortion is 12 years, and those who do it illegally, go to jail.

sábado, 12 de noviembre de 2011

Shark spotted near Rottnest scuba divers

A THREE-METRE shark has been spotted within 150m of scuba divers off Rottnest Island today.

Shark

A Water Police spokeswoman said the shark was first spotted 600m offshore from Bathurst Point shortly before 2.30pm.

It was then spotted within 150m of scuba divers about 15 minutes later. The divers were informed and got out of the water.

The sighting comes just three weeks after Texan George Wainwright, 32, was killed by a 3m white pointer while diving alone about 500m off Little Armstrong Bay on the island's north-west coast.

His death was the third fatal shark attack in WA waters in less than two months.

On October 10, Bryn Martin was believed to have been taken by a great white shark after he was last seen about 350m from the shore as headed out on his daily swim at Cottesloe.

On September 4, Kyle James Burden was killed while bodyboarding with friends at Bunker Bay, near Dunsborough.

In August last year, Nick Edwards died after a shark attacked him while he was surfing near Gracetown.

Via:penthnow





jueves, 10 de noviembre de 2011

Weighs less than an anorexic mother daughter 7 years

http://cdn.globovision.com/uploads/55/20/5520359b3ef7b068f11fd8f50c8cbca4/jones.wide.jpg

Rebecca Jones weighs under 32 pounds and measures just over five feet tall. Lives based on a toast, soup and energy drinks while ensuring that their 7 year old daughter has enough to eat cake and pizza and is proud of being able to share clothes with her daughter.

After suffering from anorexia since age 11, the mother who is now 26 believe your condition will help you get rid of another pregnancy, then stop having menstrual periods a year ago.

Rebecca now faces the possibility of a cardiac arrest due to the long period of famine which has been submitted. Doctors warn that unless some weight gain may not live long enough to see his daughter grow.


Via:globovision

Great Pyramid shut to avoid 11/11/11 rituals

EGYPT will close the Great Pyramid of Giza later today to avoid any rituals by a group rumoured to have plans to mark the date of 11/11/11 at the site, an official said.
The decision came "after much pressure" from Egyptian Internet users saying strange rituals were going to be held "within the walls of the pyramid on November 11, 2011", said Atef Abu Zahab, head of the Department of Pharaonic Archaeology.
The Supreme Council of Antiquities confirmed the closure of the tourist site in a statement that only referred to the need for maintenance following a busy period during Muslim holidays.
The Pyramid of Cheops is the biggest and most famous of the three Giza pyramids. It houses the tomb of Pharaoh Khufu, and is one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.
Numerologists are anxiously awaiting today, when the digital alignment of ones occurs at 11.11 am, which some believe will lead to unusual events.
Thousands of people plan to meet at the time around the world for ceremonial dances, and several pages devoted to the date have appeared on social networking website Facebook.
Via: penthnow

Mexico's exotic Prisons

In Mexican prisons more than prisoners and guards. In recent months the authorities have found in several prisons, from exotic animals, weapons, liqueurs or satellite phones, to pool tables or air conditioning system.

Prisión en México
Specialists say that Mexican prisons are a security problem for the country.

The most recent case occurred in the prison of Acapulco in the south, where the inmates were fighting cocks, peacocks, bags of marijuana and lived with 19 women offering sexual services.

Prisons are one of the most serious security problems in the country, say analysts and civil organizations. 

The Public Security Ministry acknowledges that from inside some prisons are organized kidnappings and extortion, and have even been cases where drug cartel leaders are hiding in prisons to evade rival groups.

The independent Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has said that prisoners rule 100 of the 429 prisons in the country. "The country's prison system has collapsed, dragging vices for many years," he tells the BBC Ana Laura Magaloni, Center for Economic Research and Teaching (CIDE).

"Prisons are nests of corruption, abuse, arbitrary. Not even serve to implement exemplary punishment," he adds.

Via:bbc


miércoles, 9 de noviembre de 2011

'Air car'

Could become the 'air car' of the future


-80 kg machine can take off vertically like a jump jet.
-Powered by Lithium.
-Inventor claims that the machine rotor 16 helicopters will obsolete.
-Could be used for "outdoor sports" - or even a flying car.

It might seem like space surrounded hopper helicopter models, but the rotor 16 E-Volo is a totally new type of helicopter - which can float motionless in the air without involving the daring pilot.

 The engineer, Thomas Senkel, took the team in its first manned flight this week - a period of 1 minute and 30 seconds.

Not the first electric helicopter flight - but this is a new type of machine, intended only for joystick, with the pilot sitting above the rotors. Senkel says could revolutionize transportation.

Thomas Senkel, que construyó la máquina con dos amigos, piloto de la aeronave en su viaje inaugural 1min 30sec
Senkel Thomas, who built the machine with two friends, pilot of the aircraft on its maiden voyage 1min 30sec.

Eco-friendly Sr. Senkel de artefacto tiene 16 discos, en cada vuelo que dura unos 20 minutos antes de las baterías necesitan una recarga
Mr. Senkel Eco-friendly artifact has 16 discs on each flight which takes about 20 minutes before the batteries need recharging.

The three inventors claim their flying machine could be used for pipeline inspection, as an air ambulance or for aerial photography - and just for fun.

 Once you have solved the problem of how to keep in the air longer - and support more people - Senkel expected to replace the equipment for good.

It is much easier to fly than normal helicopters - is led by the speed of the rotor, which is controlled by computer, so that the pilot only has to use a joystick as if playing a game, instead of managing multiple complex contorols at a time.

 Senkel describes the ease of using the machine as "affable" and the potential of replacing the helicopter in many situations.

He added: "Without any steering movement just floating there on the spot." 

The multicopter currently only able to fly for about 20 minutes, battery-powered lithium-ion batteries.

However, I hope E-flew rapidly developing technology means you can complete one-hour flights in the near future.

 A hybrid drive, in which a conventional internal combustion engine generates electric power, since they show a flight time of one hour.

Thomas Senkel (centro) con los dos amigos que le ayudaron a desarrollar el "multicopter '
Senkel Thomas (center) with two friends who helped him develop "multicopter"

A one-hour flight would cost around six euros into electricity. The machine has few parts, which could be carried out, which means that the aircraft needs little maintenance.

 E-flew his plane say is special because of the "simplicity of its construction, mechanical engineering, without complex and redundant engines.

In an emergency, you can land, although four of the 16 discs. And since the blades sit below the pilot's parachute security can also be implemented. 

 Controls can be integrated with GPS software, the claim of three friends, and the machine could even automatically avoid obstacles and go to predetermined locations. E-Volo have already successfully completed several 'drones' flights with the remotely controlled vehicle from the ground.


Via:dailymail

That's a long walk!

Gateways 2000 miles across Australia to get home after the owners moved

This brave cat is believed to have traveled nearly 2,000 miles across Australia to return home. 

Jessie the cat moved with their owners from South Australia to a new home in the Northern Territory in March last year.

But shortly after moving to the family, Jessie missing and believed to have appeared in his old house during a year later.

Gato en una misión: Jessie el gato (en la foto) se cree que han recorrido 2.000 millas por el desierto australiano
Cat on a mission: Jessie the cat (pictured) is believed to have traveled 2,000 miles for the Australian desert.

"She was here for a couple of weeks and we had installed, but soon after Jessie disappeared, the owner Sheree Gale, 31, told the Northern Territory News. 

But Sheree is convinced of his left determined brindle Berry Springs, a suburb of Darwin, and walked the distance back to his former home in Ungarra in the Eyre Peninsula.

"I can not explain. She hates to get into the car, so I think you have walked," said Mrs. Gale.

 Over a year later, the new residents of the former home of Gale Ungarra, South Australia, which is a strange cat running around.

Walkabout ido: Jessie el gato se cree que han caminado a través de Australia, de Darwin a Ungarra
Walkabout gone: Jessie the cat is believed to have walked across Australia, from Darwin to Ungarra.

"I took a picture and sent it to Sheree, and she said it was definitely Jessie," said Jenn Humby, which for now is taking care of Jessie.

If the cat is Jessie, have endured harsh desert either in Australia or has traveled through the coastal route, which would have taken much longer.

When Mrs. Gale and her husband, Andre, flew to Berry Springs, along with Jessie, had left their cats behind with two other owners of your old home.

The gales believe that cats are all together now and we are happy to Jessie to stay in their old home.
Via:dailymail

He amputated the leg and grows again

http://cdn.globovision.com/uploads/d0/09/d009a6bee675db46e6d7067d355ccfce/Piernacrece660.jpg

Mandy Sellars suffers from a disease that causes your legs grow. The doctors told him he had to amputate the leg because it could cause death. But 22 months after surgery, his leg was growing at a rapid pace.

 Doctors diagnosed severe sepsis in the limb and warned that "was she or her leg."

"I expected that with the amputation my condition stabilized, but I think deep down I knew it would start to grow again," he said. "Almost immediately started increasing stump diameter and it was more difficult to fit into my artificial leg. "The stump was so heavy that it broke his prosthetic leg," he added.

Similar to Proteus syndrome, which is a congenital disease that causes skin overgrowth and abnormal bone development, often accompanied by tumors over half the body. 

Mandy 36 years old and a native of England is hoping that a cure for their disease can be found.


martes, 8 de noviembre de 2011

Pay $ 30,000 for a bad tooth of John Lennon

A Canadian dentist bought at auction a yellow tooth that was extracted from the former Beatle John Lennon for forty years.


Michael Zuk paid more than U.S. $ 30,000 for the molar, which the connoisseurs must have caused great pain to the artist, given the immense cavity exhibiting. 

 Zuk has written a book on the teeth of celebrities, while recognizing that some piece of memorabilia that may seem strange.

However, to add to the rarity of the moment, the Canadian dentist will ensure that your new purchase "on tour" by dental schools.

Via:bbc

See the cell phone of the future: transparent and flexible

Through the eyes of Thomas Parker, a professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT, for its acronym in English), the future is very clear: electronics will be flexible, transparent and ubiquitous.


Tomás Palacios. Imagen: cortesía Tomás Palacios
Palacios received the PECASE (Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers), which gives the U.S. president young scientists.

"The electronic devices that we have today are quite conventional: they are solid blocks that can be folded and not let in light. The electronics of the future will totally change your appearance, it will be ubiquitous, it will be in all parties, "the teacher told the BBC, from his office in the American university.

Palacios was born in the province of Jaen in southern Spain. He studied Telecommunications Engineering at the Polytechnic University of Madrid, did his doctorate at the University of California and, since 2006, is Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT.

"I have a group of 20 students and doctors working in advanced electronics. We are trying to figure out how we can make faster computers and cell phones that connect to the Internet faster," said the professor.

In order to fabricate transparent and flexible mobile phone, you need to get materials that are very cheap and consume little power.

Graphene

Sensor químico de grafeno hecho sobre una película transparente y flexible. Imagen: cortesía Tomás Palacios
Graphene is made of graphite. Here is a graphene chemical sensor on a film.

With that in mind, Palacios and his team are testing a new material called graphene, which consists of a single atom thick. That makes it thinner material that exists.

 Another quality of graphene is that it is one of the best materials for electronics, graphene transistors operating up to one hundred times faster than silicon transistors.

It is, according to Palacios, the strongest material known, is five times harder than steel, and the best thermal and electrical conductor.

It also has a very important property: it is transparent and flexible.

"We're using for the manufacture of new electronic devices and circuits. One of what we have in mind is a phone that is flexible, it can be folded and when we want to use it, we extend it on the table or around the clothes" said the professor.

 Palacios says his team is not the only one who is trying to develop the revolutionary technology. Leading companies in mobile phones are on the list.

However, according to the researcher, there is no perfect material, including graphene has disadvantages.

Via:bbc

Paradise found for a shipload of cash

turtle island
ON THE MARKET: Turtle Island is a private island near Rockhampton, which actress Julia Roberts almost bought in 1998. Source: The Daily Telegraph


FOR SALE - your own tropical paradise, with water views.
Queensland is in the midst of an island sell-off, with a swath of exclusive retreats available.
A dozen private islands are for sale along Queensland's coast - some heavily discounted after up to 18 months on the market.
The cheapest is the 8.5ha Temple Island, southeast of Mackay at $850,000. It includes a private airstrip and a four-bedroom, highset home.
Just to the south is the most expensive buy of the lot, the massive 8sq km Marble Island, going for a cool $15 million.
Property agent Richard Vanhoff of Coldwell Banker says it is not unusual to have this many islands on the market at once as ownership usually changes hands every five years.
Mr Vanhoff reported strong interest despite the overall market slump, recently placing two under contract. One of these was Turtle Island near Rockhampton, which was nearly bought in 1998 by film star Julia Roberts.
"Interest right now is better than it's been all year,'' he said. "I've had more inquiries in the last three weeks than I've had in a long time.
"The last couple of weeks there has been a lot of Asian inquiries on our islands.''
Mr Vanhoff said he had also attracted significant recent interest in the resort on Hinchinbrook Island, off Port Hinchinbrook, south of Cairns.
The resort is on the market for $4.5 million, $2 million less than the asking price when first listed last year.
Farther north, the exclusive celebrity playground of Double Island was eyed last month by entrepreneur Geoffrey Edelsten and wife Brynne.
But they decided against bidding for the $8 million retreat, opting to spend their millions on a Dominican Republic resort and casino instead.
Listing agent Jay Beattie of Colliers International is confident he can sell Double Island, owned by multimillionaire Sydney businessman Sean Howard.
"We've carried out a number of inspections while it has been on the market and we've got another three booked in for next week,'' Mr Beattie said.
The most recent island to hit the market is a 23ha unnamed island off Toogoom, near Hervey Bay.
It is back on the market after a $4.1 million contract between titleholder Brett Gunderson and Fraser Coast identity "Aussie Rob'' Wilson fell through.
Listing agent Scott Wagner from Ray White Mermaid Beach will auction the island next month as a freehold residence - and he has already had a bizarre offer for it.
"I've had some guys from the Philippines asking the vendor to give them the island and they would pay them 50 million out of their own currency when they nationalised it into their own country,'' he said.
Via:penthnow

U.S. confirms that aliens have not been in contact with Earthlings

"Neither has evidence that life exists beyond our planet '


Sombra del presidente Obama al pasar por el jardín de la Casa Blanca. | AP

The White House has no hard evidence that extraterrestrial life exists, or that alien beings have visited earth, but still looking. 

The Obama administration has responded to popular demand sent to Washington with over 17,000 signatures from citizens concerned about the assumptions neighbors in the universe.

The Government replies because you have committed to responding to any claim that meets enough signatories in less than 30 days within the program 'We The People'. 

And in this case, there were two claims: one calling for "immediate release" of "government communications with extraterrestrial" and another to recognize "formally the extraterrestrial presence and its relations with human beings."

A space policy expert answers, diligent, "The U.S. government has no evidence that life exists beyond our planet or an entity that has contacted alien or has been related to any member of the human race, in addition, no information credible to suggest that the public have withheld evidence.

 " To the relief of universal mystery lovers, there is still hope because scientists are still searching. "This does not mean that life outside our planet is not being discussed or explored. In fact, there are several projects to understand whether there is life beyond Earth," writes Phil Larson, Office of Science Policy and Technology White House. Now they work at least three programs seeking life outside the planet.

The ETI program, funded by NASA and is now in private hands, pointing telescopes to the sky for any sign or sound of another world. Within NASA, the Kepler spacecraft in orbit tries to detect other planets in the Milky Way. And the Mars Science Laboratory, about to launch, studying rocks and other debris that could indicate a living past. 

Larson argues that it is possible that extraterrestrial life exists, but almost impossible for Earthlings to find. "Chances are that somewhere among the billions and billions of stars in the universe exists another planet besides our own where there is life," he writes. "However, the chances of any being contacted, especially intelligent, they are extremely small because of the distances involved."

The White House receives hundreds of requests each day. Among the firms that support right now is one of the 'outraged' that occur throughout the country and claiming their right to form a General Assembly on July 4, 2012 in Philadelphia to refound the country and make "a more perfect Union ". 

So far, this demand has gotten about 200 signatures, missing 24,000 for which he is entitled to receive a reply, the same as another request for the U.S. to recognize the role of Flanders (Belgium) in the founding of America. There are many who attack the system, as the application "stop lying" or "give me a condescending and meaningless response to this request."

The most popular so far has been on the legalization of marijuana, more than 150,000 signatures. The Administration says it will not. The expert points out that answering this drug "is associated with addiction, respiratory disease and cognitive impairment."

Via:elmundo

lunes, 7 de noviembre de 2011

The Sarcos Ivian Venezuela, Miss World 2011

Ivian Sarcos es coronada como Miss Mundo. | Efe


The Venezuelan beauty has prevailed over the rest of the planet. London has proclaimed Sarcos Lunasol Ivian Colmenares Miss World 2011 compared to 119 other applicants for a hundred countries. Behind her, the contestant from the Philippines, Gwendoline Ruais, and Puerto Rico, Amanda Perez. 

The young Venezuelan-brunette 21 years and that is 1 meter and 79 centimeters, has a degree in human resources and comes from a family of 12 children.

The event, in which young people paraded in different costumes, took place at the Exhibition Centre and Earl's Court is the sixtieth edition of Miss World. The winner will spend a year visiting various charitable projects worldwide. 

The three girls were chosen from seven finalists, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Philippines, South Korea, South Africa, Scotland and England that were in the final after the parade Of the hundreds who participated in the contest.

According to organizers, this event is followed by more than one billion viewers in over 168 countries and the next edition will take place in China. Despite the popularity of the event, it has received criticism from feminist organizations, which consider that the competition is demeaning to women and is a setback for equality between women and men. 

In a joint statement released today, several of these groups, including London Feminist Network, Object and the Feminist UK, said they were "furious" with the show. "Let us know the organizers and all those who profit from this event that we are all angry that such an event was held in London again," the note.

"This is an appalling offense to the equality of women. Let us know loud and clear that this event does not occur in London," he adds.

 However, the director of Miss England, Angie Beasley, said the contest has changed over the years and is no longer look good in a bathing suit, believing that girls have talent and participate in events for charity.

"Yes, they must be fantastic to win, but is much more than a beauty contest," said Beasley. "We live in a free society in which women have the right to choose. These participants of Miss World are able to make the decision whether to participate or not," he stressed.

Via:elmundo

CHINA | Donations Ai Weiwei's supporters cast 570,000 euros to your garden

Anonymous citizens help the artist dissident to pay your fine

Thousands of people donate money these days spontaneously Ai Weiwei, in order to help the well-known Chinese dissident artist and pay the heavy fines imposed on the tax authorities for alleged tax evasion.

 Some fans throw him folded bills in the form of paper airplanes above the gate of his studio in Beijing, told the dpa agency Ai Weiwei. To date, more than 20,000 people had been arriving more than five million yuan (790,000 euros dólares/570.000).

Treasury demanded the artist of 53 years over 15 billion yuan last week for alleged unpaid taxes and fines. Ai Weiwei received mid-month deadline to pay its debts. The artist, who was arrested some months ago for several weeks, believes that this is another attempt to intimidate him. 

Ai Weiwei emphasized, however, that return the money received, as no one can receive donations in China without official authorization. His assistants register lists each amount received, he said.

"I see the emergence of civil society in China. I see hope," the artist also welcomed the wave of solidarity.


Via:elmundo

domingo, 6 de noviembre de 2011

Perth-born orang-utan swings into new life

Semeru the orangutan in the rainforest of Bukit Tigapuluh
First pictures of Perth-born orang-utan Semeru in the rainforest of Bukit Tigapuluh, Sumatra. Picture credit: Perth Zoo Source:PerthNow

FOR the first time in his life, Semeru is free.
Despite being thousands of kilometres from home and scared of thunder, the Perth-born Sumatran orang-utan took just minutes to venture from his enclosure into the Indonesian jungle on Tuesday morning.
The release made history. After six years as a member of Perth Zoo's orang-utan colony and two weeks in quarantine in Indonesia, Semeru became the first zoo-born male orang-utan in the world released into the wild.
His keeper, Perth Zoo orang-utan supervisor Kylie Bullo, was there every step of the way.
In her field report, Ms Bullo describes the orang-utan's trepidation at entering the rainforest for the first time and the moment he made the canopy of Bukit Tigapuluh in Sumatra his home.
Perth orangutan to be released in wild
Semeru and keeper Kylie Bullo farewell at Perth Zoo.  Picture credit: Kerris Berrington Source: PerthNow
"A young female orang-utan named Violet was released at the same time. She is about the same age as Semeru," Ms Bullo wrote.
"Violet quickly made her way up the rubber rope from her enclosure and into the forest. Semeru looked out of his enclosure, but decided to stay put and assess the situation. Violet waited for him on the vine, watching.
"Semeru came out of his enclosure after about three minutes, but seemed quite overwhelmed and couldn't figure out how to get to Violet. Violet came back down the rubber rope. Semeru was still on the ground, but when Violet returned once again to the tree Semeru made a dash along the ground and quickly ascended the vine to join Violet."
Semeru is already eating forest fruits, drinking water off leaves and swinging through the trees with his new friend. At night, he sleeps high up in the canopy.
For the next two years, Semeru will be monitored by two trackers.
Environment Minister Bill Marmion said he was pleased everything had gone as planned.
Semeru's release into a protected rainforest is part of a reintroduction program.
It is estimated that as few as 6300 Sumatran orang-utans are left in the wild, threatened by habitat destruction and poaching.
Semeru will add vital genetic diversity to the existing orang-utan population.

Semeru follows Temara, who in November 2006 became the first zoo-born orangutan to be released into the wild.  She was also born and bred at Perth Zoo and was released in the same area.

The region is guarded by anti-logging and anti-poaching wildlife protection units.

If Semeru doesn't adapt to his new surroundings he will be looked after in the forest or at the nearby Bukit Tigapuluh orangutan sanctuary, which cares for orphaned primates and those rescued from the illegal pet trade. 


The sanctuary was built by Perth Zoo.  

Since 1970, 27 orangutans have been born at Perth Zoo with eight females and three males.

You can show your support by visiting Perth Zoo and making a hand print as part of a giant artwork of an orang-utan.

Via:perthnow






Doctor trials laser treatment to change eye colour

A US doctor is trying to pioneer a laser treatment that changes patients' eye colour.
Close-up of human eye
After the brief laser procedure, the colour change is said to take a few weeks to take effect

Dr Gregg Homer claims 20 seconds of laser light can remove pigment in brown eyes so they gradually turn blue.
He is now seeking up to $750,000 (£468,000) of investment to continue clinical trials.
However, other eye experts urge caution because destroying eye pigment can cause sight problems if too much light is allowed to enter the pupil.
Stroma Medical, the company set up to commercialise the process, estimates it will take at least 18 months to finish the safety tests.
'Irreversible'
The process involves a computerised scanning system that takes a picture of the iris and works out which areas to treat.
The laser is then fired, using a proprietary pattern, hitting one spot of the iris at a time.
When it has hit every spot it then starts again, repeating the process several times.
However the treatment only takes 20 seconds.
"The laser agitates the pigment on the surface of the iris," Dr Homer - the firm's chairman and chief scientific officer - told the BBC.
"We use two frequencies that are absorbed by dark pigment, and it is fully absorbed so there is no danger of damage to the rest of the eye.
"It heats it up and changes the structure of the pigment cells. The body recognises they are damaged tissue and sends out a protein. This recruits another feature that is like little pac-men that digest the tissue at a molecular level."
After the first week of treatment, the eye colour turns darker as the tissue changes its characteristics.
Then the digestion process starts, and after a further one to three weeks the blueness appears.
Since the pigment - called melanin - does not regenerate the treatment is irreversible.
Lasers are already used to remove the substance in skin to help treat brown spots and freckles.
Safety concerns
Other eye experts have expressed reservations.
"The pigment is there for a reason. If the pigment is lost you can get problems such as glare or double vision," said Larry Benjamin, a consultant eye surgeon at Stoke Mandeville Hospital, in the UK.
"Having no eye pigment would be like having a camera aperture with a transparent blade. You wouldn't be able to control the light getting in."
Dr Homer said that he only removes the pigment from the eye's surface.
"This is only around one third to one half as thick as the pigment at the back of the iris and has no medical significance," he said.
He also claimed patients would be less sensitive to light than those born with blue eyes. He reasoned that brown-eyed people have more pigment in the other areas of their eyeballs, and most of it will be left untouched.
"We run tests for 15 different safety examination procedures. We run the tests before and after the treatment, and the following day, and the following weeks, and the following months and the following three months.
"Thus far we have no evidence of any injury."
Testing in Mexico
Dr Homer originally worked as an entertainment lawyer in Los Angeles, but gave up full-time practice in the mid-1990s to study biology at Stanford University in California.
He said he filed his first patent for the laser treatment in 2001. But it was not until 2004 that he began carrying out experiments on animals at a hospital facility.
To fund his research he used his own savings, attracted investments from venture capital funds and secured a government grant. Dr Homer said he has raised $2.5m to date.
Artwork of a section through a healthy human eyeball
Dr Homer said his treatment only removes pigment from the eyeball's surface
Tests on humans initially involved cadavers, and then moved on to live patients in Mexico in August 2010.
"From a regulatory perspective it is easier," Dr Homer said, "and I can speak Spanish fluently so I can closely monitor how everyone is doing."
Seventeen people have been treated so far. All are very short-sighted. They have been offered lens transplants in return for taking part.
Dr Homer said the work is checked by a board of ophthalmology experts to ensure it is up to standard.
The new funds will be used to complete safety trials with a further three people.
Stroma Medical then intends to raise a further $15m to manufacture hundreds of lasers and launch overseas - ideally within 18 months.
A US launch is planned in three years' time, because it takes longer to get regulatory approval there.
Stroma Medical believes the treatment will be popular; its survey of 2,500 people suggested 17% of Americans would want it if they knew it was completely safe. A further 35% would seriously consider it.
There is also evidence of a growing desire to alter eye colour overseas - a recent study in Singapore reported growing demand for cosmetic contact lenses.


Via:bbc