Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Scopely Boosts New Zealand Studio Rocket Jump's Mini Golf Matchup To Over 10M Downloads In A Month

Mini Golf Matchup splash screenGame developer Rocket Jump had already proved its mettle with the hit Major Mayhem. But the company's location in Wellington, New Zealand meant its team often felt isolated from the resources they needed to build an even bigger hit. Enter Scopely, the Los Angeles-based mobile gaming platform founded by social gaming entrepreneur Walter Driver and AdSense co-creator Eytan Elbaz. The two companies' partnership produced the hit Mini Golf Matchup. Launched the beginning of March, the game reached 10 million downloads in its first month and took the number one spot on the App Store in 28 countries eight hours after its launch.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/kIIoRzluXUo/

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3 Mindbending Ways Apple Dodged $13.8B In Taxes

irish leprechaunKudos to Apple's finance lawyers, who are the Cirque Du Soleil of legal contortionism. On the eve of live testimony from CEO Tim Cook, CFO Peter Oppenheimer and Phillip Bullock, head of Apple's tax operations, a scathing congressional investigation of Apple's tax dodging strategy reveals how the computer giant avoided $13.8 billion in taxes through a clever labyrinth of offshore tax havens, shell corporations, and paper shuffling.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/6vgeTuQa_mE/

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

New method for tailoring optical processors

May 21, 2013 ? Rice University scientists have unveiled a robust new method for arranging metal nanoparticles in geometric patterns that can act as optical processors that transform incoming light signals into output of a different color. The breakthrough by a team of theoretical and applied physicists and engineers at Rice's Laboratory for Nanophotonics (LANP) is described this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Rice's team used the method to create an optical device in which incoming light could be directly controlled with light via a process known as "four-wave mixing." Four-wave mixing has been widely studied, but Rice's disc-patterning method is the first that can produce materials that are tailored to perform four-wave mixing with a wide range of colored inputs and outputs.

"Versatility is one of the advantages of this process," said study co-author Naomi Halas, director of LANP and Rice's Stanley C. Moore Professor in Electrical and Computer Engineering and a professor of biomedical engineering, chemistry, physics and astronomy. "It allows us to mix colors in a very general way. That means not only can we send in beams of two different colors and get out a third color, but we can fine-tune the arrangements to create devices that are tailored to accept or produce a broad spectrum of colors."

The information processing that takes place inside today's computers, smartphones and tablets is electronic. Each of the billions of transistors in a computer chip uses electrical inputs to act upon and modify the electrical signals passing through it. Processing information with light instead of electricity could allow for computers that are both faster and more energy-efficient, but building an optical computer is complicated by the quantum rules that light obeys.

"In most circumstances, one beam of light won't interact with another," said LANP theoretical physicist Peter Nordlander, a co-author of the new study. "For instance, if you shine a flashlight at a wall and you cross that beam with the beam from a second flashlight, it won't matter. The light that comes out of the first flashlight will pass through, independent of the light from the second.

"This changes if the light is traveling in a 'nonlinear medium,'" he said. "The electromagnetic properties of a nonlinear medium are such that the light from one beam will interact with another. So, if you shine the two flashlights through a nonlinear medium, the intensity of the beam from the first flashlight will be reduced proportionally to the intensity of the second beam."

The patterns of metal discs LANP scientists created for the PNAS study are a type of nonlinear media. The team used electron-beam lithography to etch puck-shaped gold discs that were placed on a transparent surface for optical testing. The diameter of each disc was about one-thousandth the width of a human hair. Each was designed to harvest the energy from a particular frequency of light; by arranging a dozen of the discs in a closely spaced pattern, the team was able to enhance the nonlinear properties of the system by creating intense electrical fields.

"Our system exploits a particular plasmonic effect called a Fano resonance to boost the efficiency of the relatively weak nonlinear effect that underlies four-wave mixing," Nordlander said. "The result is a boost in the intensity of the third color of light that the device produces."

Graduate student and co-author Yu-Rong Zhen calculated the precise arrangement of 12 discs that would be required to produce two coherent Fano resonances in a single device, and graduate student and lead co-author Yu Zhang created the device that produced the four-wave mixing -- the first such material ever created.

"The device Zhang created for four-wave mixing is the most efficient yet produced for that purpose, but the value of this research goes beyond the design for this particular device," said Halas, who was recently named a member of the National Academy of Sciences for her pioneering research in nanophotonics. "The methods used to create this device can be applied to the production of a wide range of nonlinear media, each with tailored optical properties."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/NXwTwOcHafs/130521121603.htm

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Childhood ADHD linked to obesity

May 20, 2013 ? A new study conducted by researchers at the Child Study Center at NYU Langone Medical Center found men diagnosed as children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) were twice as likely to be obese in a 33-year follow-up study compared to men who were not diagnosed with the condition.

The study appears in the May 20 online edition of Pediatrics.

"Few studies have focused on long-term outcomes for patients diagnosed with ADHD in childhood. In this study, we wanted to assess the health outcomes of children diagnosed with ADHD, focusing on obesity rates and Body Mass Index," said lead author Francisco Xavier Castellanos, MD, Brooke and Daniel Neidich Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Child Study Center at NYU Langone. "Our results found that even when you control for other factors often associated with increased obesity rates such as socioeconomic status, men diagnosed with ADHD were at a significantly higher risk to suffer from high BMI and obesity as adults."

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, ADHD is one of the most common neurobehavioral disorders, often diagnosed in childhood and lasting into adulthood. People with ADHD typically have trouble paying attention, controlling impulsive behaviors and tend to be overly active. ADHD has an estimated worldwide prevalence of five percent, with men more likely to be diagnosed than women.

The prospective study included 207 white men diagnosed with ADHD at an average age of 8 and a comparison group of 178 men not diagnosed with childhood ADHD, who were matched for race, age, residence and social class. The average age at follow up was 41 years old. The study was designed to compare Body Mass Index (BMI) and obesity rates in grown men with and without childhood ADHD.

Results showed that, on average, men with childhood ADHD had significantly higher BMI (30.1 vs. 27.6) and obesity rates (41.1 percent vs. 21.6 percent) than men without childhood ADHD.

"The results of the study are concerning but not surprising to those who treat patients with ADHD. Lack of impulse control and poor planning skills are symptoms often associated with the condition and can lead to poor food choices and irregular eating habits," noted Dr. Castellanos. "This study emphasizes that children diagnosed with ADHD need to be monitored for long-term risk of obesity and taught healthy eating habits as they become teenagers and adults."

The research was supported by grants MH-18579 and T32 MH-067763 from the National Institute of Mental Health, grant DA-16979 from the National Institute on Drug Abuse and grant PIOF-253103 from the European Commission.

Co-authors of the study include Salvatore Mannuzza, PhD (retired); Samuele Cortese, MD, PhD, of the Phyllis Green and Randolph Cowen Institute for Pediatric Neuroscience and Verona University, Italy; Erika Proal, PhD, of the Phyllis Green and Randolph Cowen Institute for Pediatric Neuroscience and Neuroingenia, Mexico; Rachel G. Klein, PhD, and Maria A. Ramos Olazagasti, PhD, of the Child Study Center at NYU Langone Medical Center.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/mental_health/~3/F-Y48m4kXdo/130520113925.htm

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Did Mathematician Shinichi Mochizuki Invent Bitcoin?

It's hard not to be curious about the true identity of Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto, since he or she basically just stuck around on the internet long enough to introduce Bitcoin/get everyone all riled up and then disappeared. But Ted Nelson, the sociologist who invented the term "hypertext," thinks he knows who Nakamoto really is, and in the video below he calls out Japanese mathematician Shinichi Mochizuki.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/HGz8-62mEBI/did-mathematician-shinichi-mochizuki-invent-bitcoin-508715535

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Illinois Library Embraces Crowdfunding To Bring Its Patrons A 3D Printer (And A Giant Hulk Statue)

teen1Retooling the traditional public library for a more technically savvy populace is no small feat, especially when library budgets across the U.S. have been gutted these past few years. That sad state of events has forced some libraries to take matters into their own hands. Consider the case of the Northlake Public Library in Northlake, Illinois -- it wants to give its communinity (and especially the town's children) access to a slew of new digital creation tools to help inspire the next generation of makers and artists, and it's decided to turn to Indiegogo in hopes of making it happen.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/-eE571SoWQA/

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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Cranmer: The failures of Committee Stage of Marriage (Same Sex ...


The CARE Public Policy Team have produced a helpful document summarising the shortcomings of the Committee Stage of the Government's 'Marriage (Same-Sex Couples) Bill':

Key Facts:
? Report Stage of the Marriage Bill is now only days away
? Considerable problems with the Bill remain
? Committee stage achieved very little
? Not one word of the Bill was amended despite the fact that numerous amendments were put down
? Of the 19 MPs on the committee only four were against the Bill
? There were no dissenters in the Labour ranks

Commenting on the Committee stage Mark D?Arcy, BBC Parliamentary Correspondent said, ?In short, it's all a bit of a ritual. The dissenters dissent and the supporters support, and the whole thing is as mannered as a minuet danced at the court of Louis XVI.?

A range of concerns were not properly addressed by the Government. Here are four:

1) Failure to put same sex relationships into same legal framework as opposite sex marriage

The Government?s Position

? The Government Minister, Hugh Robertson MP, supported the Bill?s position that adultery is only a ground for divorce in a marriage between two people of the opposite sex.
? The Minister noted that introducing homosexual adultery would bring ?significant uncertainty for couples. It could lead to divorce applications failing, and adultery would be difficult to prove.?
Critique by MPs
? Tim Loughton asked: ?Why should a same-sex couple who want to get married not be subject to the same obligations and rules as an opposite-sex couple who want to get married??
? He added: ?One could logically make the case for legal recognition of same-sex relationships, but if the standards of commitment required are different from those required in a marriage, it would be completely wrong to categorise such relationships as marriage.?
? David Burrowes remarked that debate on this issue exposed ?the flawed notion of equal marriage as a concept.?
VERDICT: The notion of equal marriage is a flawed concept.

2) Failure to address inequality

The Government?s Position

? The Minister made clear, in accordance with the Bill, that couples already in a civil partnership who wish to marry will not be required to have a same sex marriage ceremony, unlike every other couple.
? He said: ?a couple in a civil partnership will have already gone through a civil partnership registration, demonstrating a level of commitment not unlike-different, but not unlike-that required for a marriage ceremony.?
? He added that the conversion from a civil partnership to a marriage ?will simply involve a straightforward administrative process for those who prefer that, while those who want a more public ceremony will be able to hold that at a place of their choosing.?
Critique by MPs
? David Burrowes responded: ?How can I set out the Government?s case that the Bill is all about equality for same-sex couples to be married like opposite-sex couples, when only same-sex couples can be civil partners and have this conversion - perhaps this paper upgrade - to marriage, so skipping the other formal requirements of the Marriage Act??
VERDICT: The Minister failed to address the fundamental subject of inequality.

3) Failure to address religious freedom for registrars

The Government?s Position

? The Minister argued, in accordance with the Bill, that registrars should be compelled to perform same sex marriages even if it is against their conscience or religious belief.
? The Minister responded to Tim Loughton?s question about freedom of conscience by saying: ?They are different functions. One is an abortion; the other is a same-sex marriage.?
Critique by MPs
? David Burrowes and Tim Loughton pointed out that the law has long accommodated atheist teachers who do not wish to teach religion in schools and pro-life doctors who do not want to perform abortions. There is no reason why this principle should not be extended to registrars who do not wish to conduct marriage between two people of the same sex.
? The Minister was asked by Tim Loughton: ?Why is it the principle that a surgeon who has strong Catholic views is allowed to pick and choose whether to perform abortions or other surgery, if the same principle cannot be applied to a Catholic registrar with strong views, allowing them to pick and choose whether to perform that other public service? What is so essentially different that we protect one but not the other??
VERDICT: There is inconsistency in the Government?s position. In both cases public servants perform a public function for which the public pay. Merely saying that they are different functions is not justification for treating them differently.

4) Failure to address protection for schools

The Government?s Position

? The Minister asserted that ?no teacher is under any duty to promote or endorse a particular view of marriage, and neither would they as a result of any revised guidance in the future.? However, he was unprepared to allow this to be written into the Bill.
? He further commented ?teachers are entirely free to express their views in any reasonable way that they wish, but not in an offensive or discriminatory fashion.? But what constitutes an ?offensive or discriminatory fashion? was not clarified.
Critique by MPs
? Tim Loughton quoted John Bowers QC ? Employment Silk of the Year 2010 ? who, in his legal opinion, says that teaching that one form of marriage is ?better than another? would likely ?amount to unlawful direct or indirect discrimination.?
VERDICT: The Minister was unable to address the major concern of protection for teachers who do not feel able to endorse the new definition of marriage.

Source: http://archbishop-cranmer.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-failures-of-committee-stage-of.html

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Facebook IPO: a bittersweet one-year anniversary

One year after the disastrous Facebook IPO, the company is making strides in mobile ad revenue, but its stock price is still far below its original IPO price. Also this week: Consumer sentiment hits six-year high; retail sales rise unexpectedly; and the world has a new (old) richest person.?

By Schuyler Velasco,?Staff writer / May 18, 2013

On May 18 one year ago, Facebook founder and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg, center, rang the opening bell of the Nasdaq stock market from Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif., to announce Facebook's initial public offering. The IPO floundered badly, but Mr. Zuckerberg has staged something of a comeback by pushing into mobile ad revenue.

Zef Nikolla/Nasdaq via Facebook/AP/File

Enlarge

Facebook IPO one year later: The initial public offering that was supposed to signal a new era for social media turned instead into one of the most botched IPOs in US history. The stock fell by more than half its opening price in a matter of months. Investors weren't convinced Facebook could translate all its online activity into a big revenue stream.

Skip to next paragraph Schuyler Velasco

Staff writer/editor

Schuyler Velasco is a writer and editor for the Monitor's business desk.? She writes about consumer issues, sports, and the occasional sandwich.

Recent posts

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In the past year, the social media giant has staged a comeback. Chief executive Mark Zuckerberg has made a big effort in improving Facebook's mobile experience and generating ad revenue from it. The company reported that in less than a year, about 30 percent of its total ad revenue ? some $375 million in the first three months of 2013 ? came from mobile ads. The mobile ad industry is expected to skyrocket in the next several years, so Facebook can expect strong growth, analysts say.

But investors don't seem convinced. On Friday, Facebook stock closed at $26.25, still 31 percent below the $38 per share price it opened at one year ago.

Consumer sentiment soars:?The University of Michigan?s index of consumer sentiment rose to 83.7 in its initial May reading. If it holds, that would be the highest level for the index since 2007, before the Great Recession took hold. Both consumers? economic expectations and current conditions improved, outpacing analysts? expectations.

Showtimes and Movie Reviews for Star Trek: Into Darkness, At Any ...

Are you a movie buff? Or maybe you just enjoy the occasional dinner and a movie date? Either way, Patch would be thrilled to have you on board as a movie blogger! All you have to do is shoot a quick email to Ryan Martin at ryan.martin@patch.com.

Star Trek: Into Darkness??

Patch Blogger Mark Glass:?**** It?s time again to boldly go...where tons of TV and movie cameras have gone before. Space. The final frontier. For context, this is the second feature film showing the original crew of the Enterprise in the beginning of their careers, in an alternate time line, allowing both overlaps and variations from the stories and characters that started the whole? franchise. That allows Benedict Cumberbatch (best known as a contemporary Sherlock Holmes on British TV and our PBS) to play a version of Ricardo Montalban?s Khan, who was arguably the best villain that group ever faced on either scale of screens.?Full Review

---

Kon-Tiki??

Patch Blogger Mark Glass:?*** I assume every school kid still learns about the daring adventure of Norwegian Thor Heyerdahl, who set sail from Peru to Polynesia in 1947 on a raft like the pre-Inca Peruvians might have built 1500 years earlier, to prove his radical theory that those Pacific islands were settled by explorers from South America, rather than Asia. The film covers his backstory, including his bold scientific motives, and difficulties in getting the trip financed. Everyone thought they knew he was wrong, and that his 5,000 mile trip would be suicidal. He who laughs last...?Full Review

---

At Any Price

Patch Blogger Mark Glass:?*? How can so many things go wrong when one starts with a solid cast, timely main premise, promising character conflicts and strong opening? After thirty minutes, or so, of?what seems to be an examination of the current plight of family farms coping with the economic threats of agribusiness, and the usually viable exploration of father-son dynamics, the script soon descends into a turgid, shallow melodrama, that delivers nothing on the substance or emotional depth it dangles at the beginning.?Full Review

---

In The House?

Patch Blogger Mark Glass:?*** This subtitled French drama is a fine film if you?re in the mood for a psychological suspense tale that borders between fascinating and creepy. A young student from a poor family situation works his way into the home of a more affluent, happier family, pretending to befriend and tutor their son. Meanwhile, he?s writing an ongoing story about them, which alternately intrigues and worries the teacher who is mentoring him. Has the old prof found a prodigy, or a pervert? A young Norman Mailer, or a Norman Bates?Full Review

---

The Iceman

Patch Blogger Mark Glass:?*** Here?s a fascinating film if you?re one of the few people likely to find the gruesome, somewhat fact-based story of a cold-blooded mob hit man worthy of your attention. Michael Shannon is quite compelling as sociopath Richard Kuklinski, who supposedly whacked about 100 targets in and around New Jersey in the 1970s-80s before his arrest in 1986. He apparently lacked anything resembling human emotions except for his wife (Winona Ryder) and daughters, who knew nothing of his career until the end. Even self-preservation seemed relatively unimportant, other than as it related to fulfilling his roles as husband and father. Full Review

---

More Movie Reviews From Patch blogger Mark Glass

Source: http://townandcountry-manchester.patch.com/articles/showtimes-and-movie-reviews-for-star-trek-into-darkness-at-any-price-in-the-house-the-iceman-kon-tiki-06cee071

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Most Popular Posts Last 30 Days - Family Home and Life: Say It ...

Welcome bloggy friends! Do you know that this is my favorite post of the week? It sure is, I really enjoy y'all! It is wonderful to have friends stop by and share. Be sure and check out all the comments from last weeks SIS to see if there is any info you can use.?

Have you tried the trick I shared with you last week? How is it working for you??



I needed to make new buttons for my bog last week and found a free code generator that I wanted to share with you all. Made it a little easier for me. ?Here is the link for it. Do you have a blog button for your blog? Check it now and then to make sure it is working properly.?

A great tip from last weeks comments below....I just don't know how to do it! Do any of you? Grandma Kc also sent me this link about Google Authorship and SEO?importance. It helped me out; thanks Kc!

What questions do you have today? Need help with something blogging related? Ask away in the comments and we'll see if someone can help you out.?


Family Home and Life

By the way! If you have an old Say It Saturday button (or any of my other buttons click here) please take a new one. The old ones won't work sometimes anymore due to a change that Google made in blogger. Thanks to Joyce for alerting me there was a problem!

**On occasion someone will accidentally link up something they didn't mean to or spell something wrong or whatever. If this happens to you when you are?linking, you should see a very small?red X?by your new link. If you click on the red X, your link will be deleted. Thanks!?

I'm so glad you stopped by today!?
  • This is a?link up for older bloggers; but you don't need to be a grandparent to link up.?
  • Link up to three post, not to your home page, and link that back to Family Home and Life.?
  • While you are here I hope you will visit the other linkers and come back to see who links up later. We all love comments!?
  • No Etsy shops please. This link closes on Monday night.?
Be sure to visit Lisa at?Grandma's Briefs?to join her linky, GRAND Social, on Mondays. Thank you for linking up with me!

If you are reading this post anywhere else but at www.FamilyHomeandLife.com then it was used without permission! Please report it! Copyright ? Family Home and Life 2010-2013 All Rights Reserved

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Thursday, May 9, 2013

Jim Wallis of Sojourners stabs gays in back on immigration reform (Americablog)

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ITV Player for Android exclusive to Samsung devices until Aug. 31

ITV Player

Samsung announces deal to bring the UK TV streaming app exclusively to its devices

Samsung has announced that it's scored exclusive rights to the ITV Player app for Android until Aug. 31, giving users of its phones and tablets access to the British broadcaster's streaming content. The ITV Player app allows Brits to stream the past 30 days of TV content from ITV, ITV 2, ITV 3, ITV 4 and CITV, and so until September the only way to do that on Android will be on a Samsung device.

The strangest part of the deal is that the ITV Player app itself isn't new at all. The app debuted back in mid-2011 for all devices running Android 2.2 and up, though the Samsung deal seems to have put an end to that. A quick glance over its Play Store listing reveals that as of the latest update on May 7 it's "incompatible" with non-Samsung phones and tablets. 

Samsung says the new app is optimized for the Galaxy S4, Galaxy Mega, Galaxy S III, Galaxy SII, Galaxy Note II, OG Note and Galaxy Note 10.1. The Google Play Store listing shows compatibility for a wide range of other Samsung devices, including the Galaxy Nexus, Galaxy Tab 7 Plu,s and even the Galaxy Camera.

ITV Player for Android is available from Google Play (linked above) and Samsung Apps on supported devices.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/hDUF1lzvEgU/story01.htm

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Macedon woman gets black belt in perseverance (Rochester Democrat and Chronicle)

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Yahoo Wants To Touch People's Lives ?Every Day?, And Is Developing For Google Glass

Mayer On StageWhat is Yahoo? Marissa Mayer just laid out the company's identity and future at Wired Business Conference. The key words she repeated over and over was "Every Day". That's when Yahoo wants you to use it, and it's why it's now developing for Google Glass, acquiring apps like Astrid, and relaunching products like Yahoo Weather she's sees as part of your "daily dozen" activities on mobile.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/zvr9P3P_3-M/

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General Motors Follows Ford Into Debt Markets

General Motors' finance arm is selling $2.5 billion of bonds on Tuesday, amid an uptick in auto sales and on the heels of a similar deal from rival Ford Motor Co. (F)

General Motors Financial Co. will use proceeds of the sale to fund a portion of the acquisition of Ally Financial Inc.'s automotive financing operations in Europe, Latin America and China. It will also use proceeds to repay certain debt to parent General Motors Co. (GM), as well as for working capital purposes, according to a regulatory filing.

GM Financial is offering three-, five- and 10-year debt to yield 2.75%, 3.25% and 4.25%, respectively. Demand was high enough that the deal was upsized from its original $2 billion.

Unlike Ford, which regained its investment-grade ratings from Moody's Investors Service and Fitch Ratings last spring, GM Financial is still rated in junk territory: Ba3 by Moody's and double-B by Fitch. As a result, Ford--which unlike GM and Chrysler did not file for bankruptcy as a result of the financial crisis--was able to get lower rates on its debt. Ford Motor Credit Co. priced three-year debt Monday to yield 1.733%, with a spread, or extra yield, of 1.40 percentage points more than comparable Treasurys, according to a term sheet.

"Auto companies go through cyclicality," said Jody Lurie, corporate credit analyst at Janney Capital Markets. "The summertime is when they start really focusing on building out their newer models for the coming year, and you see a pick up usually in sales as the year goes on. So in terms of financing needs, they want to prepare for that."

Despite the lower rating, GM Financial is coming to market at a time when yields on junk-rated debt are at record lows, saving the company on borrowing costs. The yield on the Barclays U.S. Corporate High Yield index ended Monday at 5.02%. At the end of 2008, yields were above 20%. With overall interest rates still low, investors hunting for yield have headed for riskier assets, pushing up prices.

In addition, the automakers' improving business since the financial crisis has attracted some bond investors. For April, Ford said its U.S. sales were up 18% that month over last year, while Chrysler and GM said their sales were both up 11%. The companies said it was the best April since the recession.

"We think there is a good fundamental story about the healing of an industry that has been beaten up pretty substantially," said Matt Toms, head of U.S. public fixed income at ING Investment Management, which oversees about $130 billion in fixed-income assets and owns some auto company bonds. "These are relatively attractive ways to earn some extra spread in this low-yield environment with some positive credit momentum."

Write to Mike Cherney at mike.cherney@dowjones.com

Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires

Copyright ? 2013 Dow Jones Newswires

Source: http://www.foxbusiness.com/news/2013/05/07/general-motors-follows-ford-into-debt-markets/

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Sunday, May 5, 2013

Stocks Leap Early And Then Hold Most Of Gains - Investors.com

Source: http://news.investors.com/investing-big-picture/050313-654800-stocks-leap-early-and-then-hold-most-of-gains.htm

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Space Mountain reopens at Disneyland

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) ? One of Disneyland's most popular rides has reopened after the company declined to appeal a workplace safety case.

The Orange County Register reports (http://bit.ly/YtNgUy ) Space Mountain reopened Friday evening.

The attraction was closed in April after state officials said safety rules were violated when a contractor fell and suffered broken bones while cleaning Space Mountain's slanted roof.

The contract company was fined nearly $61,000 for the safety violations. The California Division of Occupational Safety and Health proposed a nearly $235,000 penalty against Disney in connection with the contractor's injury.

Disney did not appeal by Friday's deadline, but the company said it continues to meet with the state agency about the citations.

Disney closed two other rides ? the Matterhorn Bobsleds in Disneyland and Soarin' Over California in Disney California Adventure ? to evaluate the safety of employees who maintain them.

Both attractions have reopened.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/space-mountain-reopens-disneyland-042122229.html

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Harvard Professor apologizes for Keynes comments

NEW YORK (AP) ? Niall Ferguson, a Harvard history professor and author, apologized on Saturday for saying economist John Maynard Keynes was less invested in the future because he was gay and had no children.

Ferguson said his remarks at an earlier conference were "as stupid as they were insensitive."

During a question-and-answer session after a prepared speech at the Altegris Strategic Investment conference in Carlsbad, Calif. on Thursday, Ferguson was asked to comment about Keynes, an influential 20thcentury British economist who advocated government spending as a way to make up for lagging demand in a down economy.

Ferguson suggested that Keynes philosophy was shaped by his homosexuality. Keynes, therefore, had no children so he wasn't as invested in future generations as others might be, Ferguson said.

The remarks were reported by the website of Financial Advisor magazine and other online publications.

On Saturday Ferguson acknowledged the remarks and said he "deeply and unreservedly" apologized.

"I should not have suggested - in an off-the-cuff response that was not part of my presentation - that Keynes was indifferent to the long run because he had no children, nor that he had no children because he was gay," he said in a statement in response to an e-mailed query.

"It is obvious that people who do not have children also care about future generations," he added.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/harvard-professor-apologizes-keynes-comments-183558872.html

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