Saturday, December 31, 2011

NKorea calls Kim Jong Un 'supreme leader' (AP)

PYONGYANG, North Korea ? North Korea declared Kim Jong Il's son and successor "supreme leader" of the ruling party, military and the people during a memorial Thursday for his father in the government's first public endorsement of his leadership.

Kim Jong Un ? head bowed and somber in a dark overcoat ? stood watching from a balcony at the Grand People's Study House overlooking Kim Il Sung Square, flanked by the top party and military officials. Also on the balcony was Kim Jong Il's younger sister, Kim Kyong Hui, who is expected to play a guardian role for her young nephew.

Given Kim Jong Un's inexperience and age ? he is in his late 20s ? there are questions outside North Korea about whether he is equipped to lead a nation engaged in sensitive negotiations over its nuclear program and grappling with decades of economic hardship and chronic food shortages.

But support among North Korea's power brokers was unequivocal at the memorial service, attended by hundreds of thousands of people filling Kim Il Sung Square and other plazas in central Pyongyang.

"The fact that he completely resolved the succession matter is Great Comrade Kim Jong Il's most noble achievement," Kim Yong Nam, president of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly, told the massive audience at the Kim Il Sung Square.

"Respected Comrade Kim Jong Un is our party, military and country's supreme leader who inherits great comrade Kim Jong Il's ideology, leadership, character, virtues, grit and courage," said Kim, considered North Korea's ceremonial head of state.

Life in Pyongyang came to a standstill as mourners packed the plaza from the Grand People's Study to the Taedong River for the second day of funeral ceremonies for the late leader.

Kim Jong Il, who led his 24 million people with absolute power for 17 years, died of a heart attack Dec. 17 at age 69, according to state media. He inherited power from his father, North Korea founder Kim Il Sung, who died of a heart attack in 1994, in what was the communist world's first hereditary succession.

Attention turned to Kim Jong Un after he was revealed last year as his father's choice among three sons to carry the Kim dynasty into a third generation.

The process to groom him was rushed compared to the 20 years Kim Jong Il had to prepare to take over from his father, and relied heavily on Kim family legacy as guerrilla fighters and the nation's founders.

Kim Jong Un was made a four-star general last year and appointed a vice chairman of the Central Military Commission of the ruling Workers' Party. Since his father's death, state media have bestowed on him a series of new titles signifying that his succession campaign was gaining momentum: Great Successor, Supreme Leader and Sagacious Leader.

Kim Jong Un's leadership is not expected to become formal until top party, parliamentary and government representatives convene to confirm his ascension.

He is expected to formally assume command of the 1.2 million-strong military, and become general secretary of the Workers' Party and chairman of the party's Central Military Commission, said Yoo Ho-yeol, a professor at Korea University in South Korea.

In a speech during the memorial, Gen. Kim Jong Gak, a top political officer in the Korean People's Army, said the military will dedicate itself to protecting Kim Jong Un, calling him the "supreme leader of our revolutionary armed forces."

This week's events have been watched closely for clues to who in the military and Workers' Party will form Kim's inner circle of trusted aides during the sensitive transition to leadership.

During the mourning period, Kim made at least five visits to his father's begonia-bedecked bier when the late leader was lying in state at the Kumsusan Memorial Palace, accompanied at times by the old guard that is expected to support him.

At Wednesday's funeral procession, he was accompanied by Jang Song Thaek, Kim Jong Il's brother-in-law and a vice chairman of the powerful National Defense Commission, who has family ties to the military and is expected to be crucial in giving his nephew guidance.

On Thursday, North Koreans packed the main square as well as the plaza in front of a Workers' Party monument of a hammer, sickle and writing brush.

They bowed their heads as eight artillery guns fired; military officers removed their hats while the booms resonated across the square.

North Korea's senior officials, including Kim Jong Il's sister, Kim Kyong Hui, stood in silence on the platform during the gun salute.

Workers, citizens, children and soldiers across the country then bowed for three minutes of tribute to Kim Jong Il as trains and boats blew their sirens.

State TV showed people lined up neatly in rows, or outside their places of work, on sidewalks, in squares, beneath giant portraits of Kim Jong Il.

His two other sons, Kim Jong Nam and Kim Jong Chol, were not spotted at either the funeral or memorial.

___

Associated Press Korea bureau chief Jean H. Lee and writers Hyung-jin Kim, Foster Klug and Sam Kim in Seoul, South Korea, contributed to this report. Follow AP's North Korea coverage at twitter.com/newsjean, twitter.com/APKlug and twitter.com/samkim_ap.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/nkorea/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_re_as/as_kim_jong_il_the_funeral

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NY Rangers postgame transcript from Washington D.C. with quotes from John Tortorella, Martin Biron, Ryan McDonagh, Brian Boyle

WASHINGTON - The Rangers applied pressure in the third period Wednesday night while trailing the Capitals, 3-1, but when Ryan Callahan appeared to have narrowed the deficit, replays showed he had kicked in the rebound of a Brad Richards shot from the point, and the goal was disallowed.

It was the right call, but it also pushed the Blueshirts power play to one-for-its last 16, and 0-for-8 in two games since the Christmas break.

Richards, one of the captains of that lifeless power play, registered four shots on goal in 19:32 of ice time, but he was a minus-three and committed that crucial turnover that led to Alexander Semin's goal to make it 3-1 in the second period. Not only that, but check out this stat: since Richards' fluky backhanded goal in the final second of a 3-2 win in Phoenix on Dec. 17, Richards has zero points. Five games, zero points.

Before John Tortorella gave his morning skate interview at the Verizon Center on Wednesday, he stopped in the hallway to talk to Richards, who was standing near one of the workout bikes with Ryan Callahan. Tortorella spoke to Richards for about 30 to 45 seconds, appearing to instruct him on strategy for the night's game. It was a constructive, back-and-forth conversation between a few of the team's leaders and veterans. But clearly, whatever message was delivered then did not sink in at game time.

The Blueshirts also have fallen into second place in the Eastern Conference, after Boston defeated Phoenix, 2-1, in a 9 p.m. start. The Bruins now have 49 points, one more than the Rangers.

The Blueshirts will practice at the Kettler Capitals Iceplex in Arlington, Va. on Thursday afternoon before flying to Fort Lauderdale for Friday's game in Sunrise, Fla. against the Panthers. In the meantime, here are the postgame quotes from Wednesday's 4-1 loss to the Caps:

RANGERS POSTGAME TRANSCRIPT ? JOHN TORTORELLA, RYAN McDONAGH, MARTIN BIRON, BRIAN BOYLE
?
JOHN TORTORELLA
On whether he was disappointed with the defensive effort: ?I wouldn?t say it?s defensive. I?d say it?s some brain-dead plays at our blue line as far as turnovers. It?s unfortunate with Del Z, he loses the puck there on the first one. But a turnover by Mitch and turnover by Richie, not against their third or fourth line, against their top line. It kills us. That?s what?s frustrating. I thought we beat ourselves a little bit there in those situations. They?re an opportunistic team. They don?t want to defend. They want nothing to do with it. So what do we do. We don?t allow them to defend on those plays and they go score goals and they get rolling. That?s where they gained their momentum. So that?s what?s frustrating.
?
RYAN McDONAGH
On what turned the momentum, whether it was lack of puck discipline: ?Yeah I think we definitely wanted some plays back in the second period there. They were coming with good speed. A couple times they catch us and they made us pay for it. We?ve had great goaltending and they can only do so much when you keep giving them breakaways and odd-man rushes, especially with this team they?re gonna score. We didn?t protect the puck as well as we wanted to, but I thought we kept with it in the third period and gave it a good effort there.?
?
On whether allowing Caps get out on rush was the difference between this loss and the win in November: ?Yeah, that?s the thing. That team?s got a lot of talent and speed and they thrive on transition game. Tonight we didn?t get pucks in when we needed to or were trying to look for something prettier, caught out there in shifts, especially on the second it was a long chance. We got pinned in our zone a couple times, and they made us pay.?
?
BRIAN BOYLE
On whether Rangers got away from their trademark forecheck/dump and chase: ?You want to be able to make plays. We want to grind them down, that?s what?s made us successful. We?ve done a pretty good job of that, but sometimes you make mistakes. This was a good team. They countered on us pretty good. But our main focus is we don?t want to give the puck away. You want to make them take it from us, putting it in good areas so we can get it back. It?s not like we didn?t do it at all tonight. We had some really good shifts. In the first period we did a pretty good job of that. But if you let them bring it like that, if it ends up turnovers and they score, we?ve got to come back and score, and we obviously didn?t. We had our chances. It?s frustrating.
?
On not scoring on McDonagh?s rebound midway through the third period with a bouncing puck: ?Well sure it?s bouncing but I?ve got to put that in. We?re supposed to be NHL players and I should handle that. It?s tough. When I got back to the bench, I was pissed. Tried to come back and we got a couple more chances after that, but ??
?
On earning time on the power play: ?Yeah, we?re just trying to play the same way. If we take care of the puck, we had a big responsibility tonight trying to stop that (Ovechkin) line. I turned one over in the D zone, we had a little mishap in the neutral zone, stuff like that. One mistake will kill you. But like I said, I had a chance to make a big play and it?s hard not to get frustrated. You want to stay positive. It?s been a while. It?s tough. I accept that. That?s a lot of responsibility and if I?m going to play these minutes, I want to score. I feel like I?m going to though. We kept coming and kept having shifts. I?m not saying my confidence is sky-high right now offensively, but I?m just trying to keep it positive and I should have buried that.?
?
On earning more minutes even though he?s not scoring: ?When they?re not going in, you can?t give ?em up.?
?
MARTIN BIRON
On what shifted the momentum: ?Obviously little things in the game will make a difference. We all know as a team what those little things were tonight. I?m sure the coaching staff knows. We?ve just got to have the attitude that the little bit of room that we gave their top line, we?ve just got to be careful in the next games, because those are big points and big guys that you?re playing against. You?ve got to be able to control the play against a line like that. So they were able to come back and get a couple good goals and that really made the difference in the second, when we couldn?t sustain the pressure that we had in the first period.?
?
On his own performance: ?Right now, it?s extremely disappointing, knowing that we come in here and this was a big opportunity for us to get a couple points and we just needed to ? I don?t know. It?s just disappointing when you?re gonna chew on that for a little bit here. But tomorrow you?ve got to forget about it. And that?s probably the attitude you?ve got to have.?
?
Have a question about the Blueshirts or a comment? Find Pat on Twitter at @NYDNRangers.

&nbsp?

Source: http://www.nydailynews.com/blogs/rangers/2011/12/ny-rangers-postgame-transcript-from-washington-dc-with-quotes-from-john-tortorella-m

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Friday, December 30, 2011

On the Radio Tonight!


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I was invited to do a short interview on ?Why Do We Say ?I?m Not Sick? When We?re Really Sick? with 1013 Main Street, a broadcast in Seoul, Korea. The program is hosted by?Ahn Junghyun, who was the former presenter for the Pyeongchang Olympic Bidding Committee and the main host for the B20 Seoul Summit held last year. My segment will air tonight! If you?d like to listen, you can do so here at 10:00 9:00 PM EST (21:00:00 EST). Just click on the orange radio in the upper left hand corner. (I?ll also try to post the mp3 file if possible or point you toward the podcast once it?s available).

Stay well!

Krystal D'CostaAbout the Author: Krystal D'Costa is an anthropologist working in digital media in New York City. You can follow AiP on Facebook. Follow on Twitter @krystaldcosta.

The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=69f86527caeca1042a4628d24c3feb0f

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JeaneCoakleySNY: Just found this picture of me interviewing Oscar Robertson...I was so nervous! #nba legend! http://t.co/nDHyuYZt

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Engadget HD Podcast 280 - 12.27.2011

This is the last EHD podcast of the year and the last until we're on the ground at CES, so next week will be one of our rare misses -- we'll make it up to you, we promise. Until then, there's plenty of news to tide us over as LG, Sony and Samsung have all been busy with pre-CES teases of their latest technology. Also seeing a lot of action is the mobile remote apps segment, while newcomer RUWT?! has our attention, Roku, DirecTV, Western Digital, Logitech and Control4 all also had something to contribute. Verizon also has a new media server DVR replacement to talk about, while HBO Go has extended its reach to all major cable providers and the Super Bowl will be streaming online for the first time. We'll check in again from Vegas in a few days, until then press play and have a happy New Year!

Get the podcast
[iTunes] Subscribe to the Podcast directly in iTunes (MP3).
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[MP3] Download the show (MP3).

Hosts: Ben Drawbaugh (@bjdraw), Richard Lawler (@rjcc)

Producer: Trent Wolbe

00:16:57 - So, what'd you get?
00:20:17 - DirecTV HDUI is rolling out across the land, iPad app adds 12 more live streaming channels
00:22:28 - Verizon FiOS TV's new media server scheduled for late 2012
00:27:06 - It's not TV, it's HBO Go, and it's finally coming to Cablevision
00:29:15 - Super Bowl to be streamed online and to Verizon phones for the first time
00:35:00 - Boxee 1.5 nears release, will be final desktop version
00:36:45 - Roku brings v3.1 software update to first-gen boxes, Amazon Instant Video channel gets refaced
00:38:00 - WD TV Live, Live Hub get an official iOS remote app, Vudu streaming and more
00:40:45 - Logitech Harmony Link app gets customization-focused iPhone, Android update
00:41:30 - Control4 MyHome app takes up residence on Android while Android@Home is out of town
00:42:33 - Are You Watching This?! sports tracker for Android adds remote control for DirecTV, TiVo, Google TV
00:47:25 - Sony divisions to elope in Vegas, celebrate the marriage of Television and Internet at CES 2012
00:48:57 - LG's Magic Remote enables voice control for its smart TVs
00:52:30 - LG's 55-inch 'world's largest' OLED HDTV panel is official, coming to CES 2012
00:54:13 - Sony sells its stake in Samsung LCD team-up for $939 million
00:55:15 - Samsung releases CES 2012 teaser, hints at upcoming Smart TV products (video)
00:57:42 - Engadget Primed: ports, connectors and the future of your TV's backside
00:59:50 - Must See HDTV (December 26th - January 1st)

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Engadget HD Podcast 280 - 12.27.2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Dec 2011 18:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Lawyer says soldier shooting client was attacked (AP)

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. ? The lawyer for the 19-year-old California man charged with the attempted murder of an Afghanistan war veteran said his client was under attack when gunfire rang out.

Ruben Ray Jurado was charged Tuesday with attempted murder and multiple sentencing enhancements for using a firearm in the shooting that critically wounded Christopher Sullivan, 22, a Purple Heart recipient. He's expected to be arraigned this week.

Sullivan was home for the holidays at a homecoming party when authorities say a fight began over football. When Sullivan moved to break it up, police say, gunfire broke out.

Defense attorney Michael J. Holmes said Tuesday that he wanted to talk to his client and the district attorney before commenting further on the case.

"It appears that he was being attacked and he was on the ground and was being kicked in the back, stomach, the head, and that is consistent with the injuries that I observed," Holmes said. "It is alleged at that point that Mr. Sullivan was shot."

Authorities said Jurado, who had played football with Sullivan in high school, began arguing with Sullivan's brother over football teams at the party Friday night and then punched him. Sullivan intervened and Jurado pulled a gun and fired multiple shots, hitting Sullivan in the neck, police said.

Sullivan remains in critical condition. His relatives say the gunfire shattered his spine and left him paralyzed from the neck down.

"He's opening his eyes more," his 20-year-old brother Brandon Sullivan told The Associated Press. "We're just waiting day by day."

Sullivan was wounded in a suicide bombing attack last year while serving with the military in Afghanistan. He suffered a cracked collarbone and brain damage in the attack and had been recovering in Kentucky, where he is stationed, before coming home for the holidays.

Sullivan was a wrestler and football player in high school in San Bernardino, about 60 miles east of Los Angeles. He had nine months to go in the military and then planned to become a firefighter or police officer. He always liked to help people, his brother said.

"Say there was a person at school who never had friends or nothing ? Chris would be the person who would go up to him and try to be his friend. He didn't like people to feel alone," Brandon Sullivan said. "He always had a smile on his face."

___

Associated Press writer Kristin M. Hall in Nashville, Tenn., contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_re_us/us_soldier_shot

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It Ain?t No ?Dalliance?, They Like the Crazy Ones (Balloon Juice)

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Google in Shambles over Android Patents War

The company is accused of denying Java licensing royalties to Oracle, for having copied their code in the design and development of the Android operating system. It is believed the decision to deny a patent claim was the decision of Andy Rubin, the current Head of Google's Mobile Divison, according to a report by allthingsd.com. In addition, Google's Chief Legal Officer, David Drummond, dismissed the patent system as "bogus" and called for its restructuring, when talking about the ongoing patents war.

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The maker of the Android software has a portfolio of about 10,000 mobile patents but finds itself under attack from rivals Microsoft, as well as Apple. The former's involvement in the patent wars dates back to when it prevailed over Motorola for a patent on scheduling meetings over mobile phones.

Apple Inc. has its own grudge against Google - probably since the time the former Steve Jobs, Apple's co-founder and former Chief Executive Officer labeled Android a "stolen product". The Cupertino-based company has several patent infringement complaints, including one relating to an option that allows users to switch apps between calls.

Meanwhile, mobile makers HTC face a court-imposed import ban for software patent violations with Apple.

Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/272554/20111225/google-shambles-over-android-patents-war.htm

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John Legend engaged to model Chrissy Teigen (AP)

NEW YORK ? John Legend will no longer be a bachelor: He's engaged.

The singer's publicist said Tuesday that Legend proposed to his girlfriend, model Chrissy Teigen, recently in the Maldives.

No more details are being provided.

Legend has won nine Grammys and released four albums. Teigen was named "rookie of the year" in the Sports Illustrated's annual swimsuit issue last year. She also has a food blog.

Legend turns 33 Wednesday.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_en_ce/us_people_john_legend

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AliseWrite: Took the kids to spend their Christmas money. Oldest used hers to buy Monster energy drinks.

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Prostate Cancer Active Surveillance Conference: Two Perspectives

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{MedPageToday Blogs via BioPortfolio} By Gary Schwitzer

Here are two perspectives on the recent National Institutes of Health State-of-the-Science Conference: Role of Active Surveillance in the Management of Men With Localized Prostate Cancer.

The first is from one of our HealthNewsReview.org medical editors, Richard M. Hoffman, M.D., M.P.H., Professor of Medicine at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine and Staff Physician at the New Mexico Veterans Affairs Health Care System.? Hoffman spoke at the conference on ?Improving the Communication of the Benefits and Harms of Treatment Strategies.? He writes these after-thoughts:

?I just returned from attending an NIH State-of-the-Science conference on active surveillance (AS).? AS is a strategy for monitoring men with low-risk prostate cancers using PSA tests, digital rectal examinations, and prostate biopsies in order to avoid or delay undergoing active treatment with surgery or radiation.? The rationale for AS is that many men with low-risk cancers are unlikely to ever suffer any clinical problems.? Therefore, aggressively treating these men, which can adversely affect urinary, sexual, and bowel function, is unnecessary.? However, identifying patients who are truly low-risk is challenging.? In contrast to the often unwelcome approach of watchful waiting, which provides only palliative treatment for symptomatic cancer progression, active surveillance allows men with low-risk cancers to initially avoid treatment and still be able to subsequently undergo attempted curative therapy if there are signs of cancer progression or they change their mind.

Active surveillance is being evaluated in an ongoing randomized trial in the United Kingdom, but data from observational studies and randomized comparisons of surgery with watchful waiting suggest that AS can be a safe and effective strategy.? The NIH convened a panel to evaluate the evidence.? Their final draft report, issued on December 7, is a thoughtful document that generally supports AS with the caveats that more research is needed to identify optimal patient selection criteria, monitoring strategies, and triggers for active treatment while also measuring the benefits and harms of active surveillance that matter most to patients.

This rigorous scrutiny of an innovative treatment strategy is laudable.? Ironically, I?m not aware of any similarly stringent review being conducted ? or expected ? when urologists began performing robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy or radiation oncologists began offering CyberKnife and proton-beam radiotherapy ? expensive technologies which offered uncertain additional benefits and harms compared to standard treatments.? Meanwhile, a conservative strategy designed to minimize the harms of unnecessary treatment receives a cautious endorsement.

If our society is committed to improving patient-centered health outcomes and controlling health care costs, we cannot afford this double standard.? We must address the unbridled dissemination of new technologies.? Such a daunting effort may require regulatory changes for introducing new technologies, reconsidering how care is reimbursed, creating expectations for documenting clinical effectiveness, and providing counter detailing for the public and patients -- who all too often are seduced by the marketing hype that innovation and high-technology equals effective, safe, and necessary care.? The second perspective comes from journalist Laura Newman, who wrote, ?Let?s Not Call it ?Prostate Cancer.? ? Excerpts:

?The Panel said that terminology matters and that men who have PSA screening results that read 10 ngs or less with a Gleason Score of 6 or less should no longer be told that they have ?cancer.? ?The word ?cancer? sets off an emotional response,? said Barry A. Kogan, MD, part of the Consensus Development Panel, and chair of urology, Albany Medical Center, Albany, NY, during the briefing. According to the Panel?s preliminary report, more than 100,000 men fit within the thresholds above, and are candidates for active monitoring.

If active surveillance gained visibility and credibility, it would be a sea change in practice. The Panel declined to say what term should replace ?cancer,? instead leaving it to expert pathologists and urologists? to sort out the science and meaningful language?.

Some doctors are simply too entrenched in treatment for a variety of reasons so that active surveillance is anathema. Further, many physicians claim that they have active surveillance protocols, but the exact thresholds beyond which they would advise treatment and whether they are based in science or opinion are not easy for patients to pinpoint. For example, many doctors may be uncomfortable with cutpoints as high as 10 ng PSA and Gleason Score of 6 less for ?cancer.?

I asked Ashutosh Tewari, MD, Director of the Robotic Cancer Institute, Cornell University Medical Center, N.Y., to clarify his position on active surveillance. He has gone on record at urology meetings as supporting active surveillance and has invited leading researchers who back it to speak with residents. He emailed me back: ?Active surveillance?is the right treatment and we do it here all the time.? Later, he called me to tell me that he has ?hundreds of men on active surveillance.?? Tewari is a leading robotic prostatectomy physician internationally. Robotics is an extremely lucrative field. Many people might wonder whether people invested in robotics could be totally objective. One physician who asked not to be named, remarked: ?There is too much money to be made to really push it [active surveillance].?

Perhaps one day, volume of procedures will not be so inextricably linked to physician income. Health care reform with incentives for value and good outcomes would be a start.? The bold emphasis in each person?s comments was mine, pointing out how a physician and a journalist came to the same topic of expensive technologies and questions of evidence and outcomes.

Original Article: Prostate Cancer Active Surveillance Conference: Two Perspectives

MedPageToday Blogs

  • Prostate Cancer

    Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men in the UK; affecting 250,000 men. Risk factors for prostate cancer include age (average age at diagnosis is 70), a family history and a Caribbean or...

  • Prostate Cancer

    Prostate cancer is a form of cancer that develops in the prostate, a gland in the male reproductive system. Most prostate cancers are slow growing; however, there are cases of aggressive prostate ca...

  • Prostate Cancer Cellular Vaccine rDNA
  • Prostate specific membrane antigen PSMA

    Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is a transmembrane protein commonly found on the surface of late-stage and metastatic prostate cancer and a well-known imaging biomarker for staging and monit...

  • Surveillance
  • Posttreatment surveillance
  • Prostate Mab
  • Tumor markers

    Tumor markers are substances produced by tumor cells or by other cells of the body in response to cancer or certain benign (noncancerous) conditions. These substances can be found in the blood, in t...

  • Prostate Abscess
  • Prostate biopsy

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Noisehush NX26 HD Stereo Headphones Review

The NX26 HD Stereo Headphones from NoiseHush boasts to deliver deeper bass, lower distortion, and wider?dynamic?range with advanced engineering and featuring neodymium magnet drivers. ?NX26 can be used for home hi-fi systems and mobile sources. ?It has an in-line microphone that is built to insure filtering out of external noise and ensure that callers hear [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2011/12/24/noisehush-nx26-hd-stereo-headphones-review/

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Lions rout Chargers 38-10 to clinch playoff spot (AP)

DETROIT ? After a decade of losing, the Detroit Lions are in the playoffs.

And they made sure the San Diego Chargers are out.

With their fans chanting "PLAYOFFS" for the final minutes, Detroit got there for the first time since 1999 after Matthew Stafford threw three touchdown passes in the first half to beat the Chargers 38-10 Saturday.

The Lions (10-5) have won three straight after a seven-game slump to earn a wild-card spot in the playoffs, turning around their franchise after the NFL's only 0-16 season just three years ago.

Following the game, coach Jim Schwartz and his players did a victory lap at Ford Field, high-fiving fans in the front row.

"There's going to be a time that we don't celebrate getting to the playoffs, but it's not going to be tonight," Schwartz said. "It's been a long time coming."

No one has been waiting longer than owner William Clay Ford.

Ford, whose first season leading the franchise was in 1964, was handed a keepsake in the jubilant locker room.

"We gave him the game ball," said center Dominic Raiola, who endured a string of miserable seasons after Detroit drafted him in 2001.

After Raiola's postgame news conference, he gave Stafford a bear hug.

"I'm excited for them, more than for myself and some of the other young guys," the 22-year-old Stafford said.

According to the Chargers (7-8), they will not be in the postseason for a second straight year after making it five times in a six-season stretch. And that might cost coach Norv Turner his job.

"I've been concentrating every week as well as I can on getting this team ready to play and doing the things we need to do," Turner said. "We all know that's something that's discussed at the end of the year."

Knowing they could move into the postseason simply by winning, the Lions held San Diego scoreless until midway through the third quarter, when Philip Rivers threw an 11-yard pass to Malcom Floyd to make it 24-7.

Detroit, though, closed strong to restore the rout.

The Lions and the Buffalo Bills started the season with the league's longest playoff droughts at 11 seasons. Detroit hasn't been in the playoffs since Barry Sanders was its star running back and its drought is over because a decades-long search for a franchise quarterback ended with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2009 NFL draft. Coming off the league's only 0-16 season, Detroit selected Stafford and kept him healthy for the first time this season.

Stafford was almost perfect in the first half against San Diego, completing 21 of 26 passes for 260 yards with three TDs. He capped the first drive with a 7-yard pass to Brandon Pettigrew, threw a 3-yarder to Kevin Smith in the second quarter and connected with Calvin Johnson from 14 yards just before halftime to give the Lions a 24-0 lead.

Stafford finished with 373 yards passing to give him 4,518 this year, breaking Scott Mitchell's single-season team record from 1995. Perhaps not coincidently, that season marked the last time the Lions had double digits in wins.

The Lions will go for their 11th victory and to improve their playoff positioning, perhaps to draw the NFC East winner, on Jan. 1 against Green Bay, who they haven't beaten on the road since 1991.

The Chargers needed to extend their winning streak to four games to keep their postseason hopes alive, but the loss and Cincinnati's victory dashed them.

Eric Weddle recovered an onside kick after San Diego finally scored in the third quarter, but the Chargers stalled inside the Lions 5. Cornerback Chris Houston broke up a pass in the end zone and the Chargers had to settle for Nick Novak's field goal and a 14-point deficit.

Detroit's potent offense got the ball for the first time in the second half with 4:53 left in the third quarter and quickly gained 48 yards on passes to Nate Burleson and Johnson. Smith had a 4-yard run for a 6-yard TD and a 31-10 lead.

The Chargers then drove to the Detroit 2 and turned over the ball on downs, firing up its sideline and the fans who have been waiting a long time for a season like this one. It's the first time the Lions made the playoffs since Ford Field opened in 2002.

Rivers was 28 of 53 for 299 yards with a too-late TD and two interceptions, the second of which defensive end Cliff Avril snagged with his right hand and returned 4 yards to make it 38-10 late in the game.

Antonio Gates had four receptions to give him 588 in his career, breaking the Chargers record of 586 set by Hall of Famer Charlie Joiner.

Detroit got off to a good start, lobbing a pass into double coverage to Johnson for a 46-yard gain on the first snap and converting a third down for a TD.

Stafford found Pettigrew open in the end zone for a 7-yard throw, taking advantage of the Chargers assigning two defensive backs to Johnson on the same side of the field.

San Diego, meanwhile, didn't score on its opening possession for the first time in eight games and finished with just 10 points ? not nearly enough to keep up with the Stafford-led Lions.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_sp_fo_ga_su/fbn_chargers_lions

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NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 vs. Colgate 59

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    The Hofstra cheerleaders lead the team onto the court. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    David Imes #5 is introduced before the game. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Hofstra star Mike Moore #23 goes for the layup. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    #24 pulls down a rebound. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Hofstra's Dwan McMillan #11 tries to disrupt the three point of Colgate's Mike Venezia #12. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Hofstra's David Imes #5 puts up a three point shot over the guard of Colgate's Mitch Rolls #2. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Mike More #23 was on fire the first half, putting up 19 points and going 4 for 6 from behind the arc. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Hofstra's Moussa Kone #31 takes the charge from Colgate's Pat Moore #5. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Colgate's Sterling Melville #21 drives to the basket. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    John Bradenburg #3. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Yaw Gyawu #33. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    A Hofstra Dancer gives the crowd a big smile. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Matt Grogan #4. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Sterling Melville #21. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Nick Pascale #1 looks to put the ball up. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Colgate's Nick Pascale #1 swats down Hofstra's Dwan McMillan's #11 shot, but would also be called for a foul. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Hofstra was playing with a thin bench as it had several players out due to injury or transfer rules. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    The Hofstra Dance Team performs their hip hop routine during halftime. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Nathaniel Lester #1 puts up a jumper. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Hofstra's Moussa Kone #31 and Colgate's Luke Roh #14 collide in mid-air. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Mike Moore #23. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Brandon James #22 grabs a rebound. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Yaw Gyawu #33 advances the ball up the court. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Colgate's Yaw Gyawu #33 puts up a shot over the hand of Hofstra's David Imes #5. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    The Hofstra cheerleaders were full of Holiday cheer. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Mike Venezia #12 makes a three point attempt. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Colgate head coach Matt Langel shouts instructions to his players. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Luke Roh #14. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    A Hofstra Dancer performs a textbook pirouette. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Chad Johnson #0. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

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    Mike Moore #23 looks for an opening in the Colgate defense. (NCAA Men's Basketball: Hofstra 82 v. Colgate 59, Mack Sports Complex, Hempstead, NY., December 22, 2011)

  • Source: http://www.sportspagemagazine.com/content/bb/mc-bb/gal-mc-bb/ncaa-mens-basketball-hofstra-82-vs-colgate-59.shtml?50475

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