Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Egypt unnerves investors by unexpectedly imposing new tax on bank takeover

By Ulf Laessing and Nadia El-Gowely

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt rattled investors on the Cairo stock market on Tuesday by unexpectedly announcing that a takeover of its second biggest private bank would be subject to a new capital markets tax.

Shares in the bank, National Societe Generale Bank, which is being taken over by Qatar National Bank, tumbled by their legal limit of 10 percent and helped pushed Cairo's benchmark index down to its lowest level since December.

Cairo announced plans in December to introduce a 10 percent tax on major transactions on the stock market, including IPOs and takeovers - one of a number of new taxes to boost depleted government revenues - but had given no indication of when it would take effect.

On Tuesday the tax authority issued a statement saying shareholders and investment funds that make capital gains from Qatar National Bank's (QNB) bid for National Societe Generale Bank (NSGB) would face a 10 percent levy.

The announcement caught investors off guard as Egypt's regulator had only approved the takeover last month. Analysts said introducing the tax without warning risked scaring off foreign investors just as Egypt is trying to restore investor confidence shattered by two years of political and economic turmoil.

"It (the tax) was the wrong decision at the wrong time," said Nader Ibrahim, managing director at Acher Consulting in Cairo. "It will scare off foreign investors. We badly need foreign investment."

The plunge in National Societe Generale Bank's shares helped drag the Cairo stock market's benchmark index down 1.9 percent on Tuesday to its lowest level since December 11.

"This is like robbing investors," Cairo-based economist Osama Mourad said of the decision to impose the tax.

The Cairo stock market is down 6.1 percent this year, the worst performer in the Middle east due to political turmoil and policy uncertainty.

SHATTERED CONFIDENCE

Egypt's regulator approved QNB's offer for NSGB in February after insisting that the Qatari lender buy 100 percent of Egypt's second-largest private sector bank by market value.

QNB had said in December it planned to buy only the 77 percent stake in NSGB held by its French parent Societe Generale.

The sharp drop in the Egyptian bank's shares on Tuesday may make QNB question whether it had overpaid. QNB, 50 percent owned by Qatar's sovereign wealth fund that has led the bulk of the gas-rich Gulf state's international acquisitions in recent years, had offered 38.65 Egyptian pounds per share for NSGB, which at the time was a small premium to NSGB's share price.

After Tuesday's battering NSGB is worth only 34.65 pounds.

Hani Helmy, chairman of El Shorouq Brokerage in Cairo, said the decision to apply the tax was "very, very bad and undermines confidence (in the market)".

Struggling to contain a soaring budget deficit, a weakening currency and political turmoil which are battering the economy, President Mohamed Mursi's government needs to raise revenues.

Helmy, however, said it was unfair to impose a tax on investors after they had already decided whether to accept the bid.

"No investor will believe anyone anything after that," he said.

(Additional reporting by Marwa Rashad in Riyadh; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-unnerves-investors-unexpectedly-imposing-tax-bank-takeover-182930574--finance.html

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This Lost Underwater Camera Was Incredibly Reunited with Its Owner After Six Years

Back in 2007, Lindy Scallan went to Hawaii for a vacation and took her camera along. After putting the camera in its underwater housing, she went scuba diving but unfortunately lost her camera. Thinking it was gone forever, the camera was incredibly found thousands of mile away in Taiwan six years later. The pictures she took from that 2007 vacation are still on the camera. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/DaUn8VEkrmM/this-lost-underwater-camera-was-incredibly-reunited-with-its-owner-after-six-years

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Monday, March 25, 2013

The Komodo Dead: What Really Kills in The Walking Dead

You don?t need a gun. You don?t need a knife or a machete or an axe. If you find yourself in a post-apocalyptic world filled with shambling swallowers of human flesh, what you really need is good hygiene.

The resurgence of zombies into pop culture has tickled our morbid curiosity, but has also sparked many nerdy debates about viruses and disease. Arguably the most popular zombie narrative today, The Walking Dead takes place in the wake of an airborne virus or pathogen that has enabled the dead to walk among the living. The show doesn?t dabble in the supernatural, so many have taken the opportunity to explore zombies literally, that is to say, the science behind the gruesome pandemic.

[Note: Mild SPOILERS for the show are below.]

A fan of the show myself, I wanted to figure out how you exactly become a zombie. Is it the bite? Is it death? What I found suggests that most viewers are likely mistaken about how zombification in The Walking Dead works.

It turns out that becoming a zombie is fairly straightforward. According to a quote from the creator of the original comic series, Robert Kirkman:

The rule is: WHATEVER it is that causes the zombies, is something everyone already has. If you stub your toe, get an infection and die, you turn into a zombie, UNLESS your brain is damaged. If someone shoots you in the head and you die, you?re dead. A zombie bite kills you because of infection, or blood loss, not because of the zombie ?virus.?

The Walking Dead (TWD) then substitutes the conventional zombie trope of ?you get bit, you turn,? with, ?you die, you turn.? Unlike getting bitten by another fictional creature like a vampire or a werewolf, the gnawing teeth of the walkers in TWD don?t carry an infecting ?zombie virus.? If we go by the rules of the creator, true zombification follows another route.

This of course brings us to Komodo Dragons.

Do You Know Where That Mouth Has Been?!

At the end of season one of TWD, protagonist Rick Grimes discovers that everyone carries a virus which ?reboots the brain? upon death, resulting in a ghastly transformation. But if it is merely death that turns you, why do all of the characters regard a zombie bite as a death sentence? Why is it one of the first questions they ask strangers, and why did Herschel need to lose a leg?

There is a way to square this with Kirkman?s quote, and more interestingly, with science. Dead bodies can be dangerous in and of themselves, so humans have always taken precaution with them. In fact, in a case where we have to handle corpses, such as after a natural disaster, there are a number of steps responders have to take to avoid infection and disease. For example, a rotting body can still transfer gastrointestinal pathogens, tuberculosis, and hepatitis [PDF] to the living. So, one can imagine that a biting mouth of a rotting corpse, continuously chomping down on humans, isn?t the most hygienic place.

A diseased body is bad enough, but it doesn?t fully explain the extreme aversion to being bit by a zombie. Beyond the disorders and detritus that come along with death, perhaps the walkers in TWD employ the same deadly cocktail of disease that Komodo Dragons do.

The largest lizards in the world, Komodo Dragons are fierce predators. They can weigh-in much heavier than the average human, and can eat 80% of their body weight in 20 minutes. Multiplying the danger, Komodo Dragon mouths are famously so filthy that their bites give additional killing power, as if the intensely powerful bodies and jaws weren?t enough. Their mouths are host to up to 80 different kinds of harmful bacteria that serve to infect unfortunate prey and speed along their demise. (Scientists have recently discovered that the dragons also have a venomous bite; a scary addition to an already formidable foe.)

The mouth of a flesh-hungry corpse, as dirty as a Komodo Dragon?s and harboring the diseases that can accompany death, is definitely something to avoid. A bite of this kind would be nearly impossible to treat the in the resource-strapped world of TWD. Not even Herschel?s handful of scavenged antibiotics and veterinary skill could save you from a serious blood infection.

A ?Komodo Dead? approach to explaining zombification not only has scientific support, it?s supported by the show. Whether TWD is written so that the characters know this information, they know enough to realize that they can?t treat a bite (or even a scratch) from a walker. Trying to mend a diseased bite is hopeless in a world without working hospitals. This explains why T-Dog or Rick can survive a stabbing but not a walker bite. Rudimentary first aid might be able to handle a gunshot wound, but not tuberculosis.

Though the show routinely portrays the aftermath of a zombie bite as a terrible, unknown kind of fever, this too is consistent with a Komodo-style bite. There is no reason to believe that anyone without medical training would recognize the symptoms of a serious systemic infection. The Walking Dead then cleverly plays with the audience?s conceptions of how zombification works: even the characters assume that there is something special to a zombie bite, when in reality they are simply misidentifying a blend of bacteria.

A scientific understanding of a zombie bite still makes it rational to fear (and possibly mercy-kill) a bitten survivor. An untreatable infection brings on the transformation quicker, and the only way to stop that is with a bludgeon to the brain. Without medical training and supplies, you should avoid the mouth of a walker like, well, grim death.

Who Would You Believe In An Apocalypse?

There are problems with this twist in zombie canon. Like most other zombie tales, nearly everything in TWD suggests that a zombie bite is what changes you, as though it carries a zombifiying virus itself. Everyone in the show treats a zombie bite as a special case of bodily harm. ?Have you been bit?!? is a conversation starter.

Furthermore, the ?Komodo Dead? is inconsistent with certain episodes. When the Center for Disease Control (CDC) enters the show, we see medical tests being performed on ?turning? subjects. You would think that the CDC could figure out that these poor souls were dying from dysentery or hepatitis or a gastrointestinal pathogen, and not some ?unknown? malady.

Lastly, if diseased bodies and mouths are really the problem here, Rick and the rest of the group don?t seem to be too concerned with getting entirely covered in human entrails and blood. There is an episode or two where we see an aversion to the guts of walkers, but it is generally inconsistent.

So we have a classic fanboy dilemma: do we trust what the audience sees and what is implied on the show, or do we re-interpret what the audience sees through the creator?s own words? Personally, I prefer the Komodo-style interpretation, as it has some basis in reality, agrees with the creator, and is a clever twist on the often-trite zombie narrative.

All that being said, I?d much rather take on a herd of walkers than a pack of Komodo Dragons.

Images: Screenshot from The Walking Dead (used for educational purposes); Komodo dragon, Varanus komodoensis, by Midori

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=d70d5cd1ff945dcefbd5654f4936bb94

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U.S. Senate Approves Proposed Internet Sales Tax

us-senate-logoAn Internet Sales Tax is inching its way to closer to being the law of the land: the U.S. Senate supported a non-binding vote of approval, 75-to-24, for a law that would allow cities, in some circumstances to collect taxes from Internet retailers. If enacted as is, it would allow states to levy taxes on some online retail purchases from businesses with over $1 million in gross receipts.

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

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

How will climate change affect the Himalayas? Scientists trek to find out.

A group of American scientists have finished expeditions to Himalaya to study how global warming has affected glaciers there.

By Tanya Lewis,?LiveScience / March 22, 2013

Rinchen Zoe plateau, Bhutan Himalaya.

David Putnam

Enlarge

The distribution of water in Asia's highest mountains and driest deserts tells an important story of climate change.

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Almost half the world's population gets its water from glacier melt and rainfall in the Himalayas and other lofty peaks, yet little is understood about how climate change will affect these water sources. Now, using sophisticated technology and old-fashioned fieldwork, scientists are looking into the past to solve this mystery.

"We're trying to understand the relationships between climate and glaciers and Earth's water resources from the perspective of Earth's paleoclimate," geologist Aaron Putnam of the Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory said in a talk at the Columbic Club in New York on March 12. He described his recent expeditions along the Silk Road, from the Tien Shan Mountains to the Taklamakan Desert to the Bhutanese Himalayas.

Tien Shan Mountains

Putnam and colleagues set out in 2010 to the Tarim Basin in Northwest China, right in the center of Asia. Within the Tien Shan Mountains, a range that extends some 1,740 miles (2,800 kilometers), the scientists studied masses of soil and rock debris built up by glaciers, called moraines, which held clues to the past climate. [Stunning Scenes: From the Himalayas to the Taklamakan Desert]

To determine the ages of the moraines, the researchers used a technique known as beryllium-10 exposure dating. Cosmic radiation constantly bombards the Earth's surface, changing the form of some of the elements, like beryllium, in rocks. Based on these changes, the scientists could determine how long the moraines had been there, which allowed researchers to reconstruct the glaciers' past positions. "We can see what the ice looked like and know exactly when the ice was there," Putnam said.

Deep in the desert

Next, Putnam and colleagues ventured to the Taklamakan Desert. New roads have made the desert accessible, "so we were able to access lands people had died trying to visit even a decade ago," Putnam said. He described the area as a parched, desolate landscape with endless expanses of sand dunes.

As the researchers trekked through the desert, they noticed silts, mud cracks, remnants of trees, even shells ? all telltale signs of water. To find out when this wet period took place, the scientists used radiocarbon dating, a technique that measures the ratio of different forms of carbon to find an object's age. The scientists also used dendrochronology, a method of determining trees' ages based on their growth rings. The results suggested the wet period occurred from the mid-1100s to the late 1800s.

Putnam and his team then traveled to the easternmost part of the desert to an enormous dry lakebed called Lop Nor. They did radiocarbon dating of shells on the lake's shoreline, finding the shells' ages matched those of the other samples from formerly wet areas. That span of time, from the 12th century to the 19th century, was a cold period in North Atlantic regions. "When it got cold in the North Atlantic, it got wet in the mid-latitude desert regions," Putnam said.

The onset of wet conditions in the Taklamakan Desert corresponds with the rise of Genghis Khan and the Mongol Empire, the largest contiguous land empire in history. The Mongols relied heavily on horses, which would have needed lots of grass to eat. Putnam and his team think the wetting of the desert allowed grasslands to expand, enabling the Mongols to spread throughout Asia. [10 Surprising Ways Weather Changed History]

Atop the Himalayas

Next, Putnam and his colleagues headed south to the Himalayas of Bhutan, an area swept by the monsoon. "We don't know how the monsoon will affect glacier behavior in the Himalayas," Putnam said, adding, "We just needed to go there and use good old-fashioned fieldwork to figure it out." The team made a six-day trek to their study site, a glacier-laden plateau.

The journey wasn't easy; it took 25 horses and mules to carry all of the supplies from the deep jungles up to the icy peaks. The team hiked over 15,400-foot-high (4,700 meters) mountain passes, home to creatures like the Himalayan blue sheep, or bharal.

Finally, the team crested Bhutan's Rinchen Zoe plateau. They ventured out onto the glaciers and took ice sample to measure the amount of melt. The scientists used the same beryllium dating method as before to determine the age of the glacial deposits, work that is currently in progress. The team had to leave before the snows came with the approaching winter.

Though the scientists haven't finished their analysis yet, it's clear that the glaciers have substantially receded over the last century, Putnam said, and this will have an impact on the many people who depend on the mountains for water.

With the current global warming trend, Putnam expects to see a northward expansion of the deserts. The insights gained on these expeditions were only possible through fieldwork, Putnam said. "In my opinion, there's no substitute for collecting fundamental data from the natural world," he said.

Follow Tanya Lewis @tanyalewis314. Follow us @livescience, Facebook?or Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/4GxoeXAOOEs/How-will-climate-change-affect-the-Himalayas-Scientists-trek-to-find-out

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Saturday, March 23, 2013

Tech Giants Dive Into Music Streaming - Business Insider

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Technology giants Apple, Google and Amazon are furiously maneuvering for position in the online music business and looking at ways to make streaming profitable, despite the fact that pioneer Pandora has never made a profit.

It has been more than a decade since the iPod heralded the revival of Apple and presaged the smartphone revolution, even as music-sharing site Napster was showing the disruptive power of the Internet in the music business.

Now Google, Amazon.com Inc and Apple are among the Silicon Valley powerhouses sounding out top recording industry executives, according to sources with knowledge of talks and media reports. Streaming service Pandora is spending freely and racking up losses to expand globally. Even social media stalwarts Facebook and Twitter are jumping on the bandwagon.

All of them see a viable music streaming and subscription service as crucial to growing their presence in an exploding mobile environment. For Google and Apple, it is critical in ensuring users remain loyal to their mobile products.

Music has been integral to the mobile experience since the early days of iTunes, which upended the old models with its 99-cent per song buying approach. Now, as smartphones and tablets supplant PCs and virtual storage replaces songs on devices, mobile players from handset makers to social networks realize they must stake out a place or risk ceding control of one of the largest components of mobile device usage.

About 48 percent of smartphone users listen to music on their device, making it the fourth most popular media-related activity after social networking, games and news, according to a ComScore survey of mobile behavior released in February. Users ranked a phone's music and video capability at 7.4 on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 being most important purchase consideration factor, according to the study.

"Music is very strategic for the various electronic devices Samsung manufactures," said Daren Tsui, CEO and co-founder of streaming music service mSpot, which Samsung bought last year to create the Music Hub service now available on Galaxy smartphones in the United States and Europe.

"By owning it, we can absolutely customize the music experience and leverage the fact that it's not just a service but there's also a hardware component."

In January, Beats Electronics, the startup co-founded by recording supremo Jimmy Iovine and hip-hop performer-producer Dr. Dre, and backed by Universal and Warner Music, announced a new streaming-subscription service dubbed "Daisy" to take on Pandora and Spotify starting this summer.

Now, industry insiders expect Apple, Google and other technology titans to jump into the fray. Apple is talking with music labels about tacking a subscription service option onto iTunes, sources have said, while Google is said to be planning a YouTube subscription music service, according to media reports.

"There are some content creators that think they would benefit from a subscription revenue stream in addition to ads, so we're looking at that," a YouTube spokesperson said, but declined to comment on any specific negotiations.

Apple declined to comment.

Microsoft is already promoting its Xbox Music service. Their entry promises to catalyze an industry shake-up and propel music streaming further into the mainstream.

"ITunes was great but it needs a step forward," Iovine, chairman of Universal Music's Interscope-Geffen-A&M Records, told the AllThingsD conference in February. "There is an ocean of music out there that people want."

MOBILE MUSIC LOVERS

Music streaming, or playing songs over the Internet, has in recent years begun to come into its own as listeners increasingly choose to stream songs from apps like Pandora via their smartphones, rather than buy and store individual tracks.

The ad-free subscription model, where consumers pay a flat fee for near-unlimited listening time, is relatively new and quickly gaining popularity.

Pandora, one of the pioneers, is now trying to convert users of its free ad-supported radio service into subscribers. It says mobile users account for more than two thirds of its music, up from just 5 percent of listener-hours three years earlier.

Subscription services are expected to have crossed the 10 per cent mark as a share of total digital music revenues in 2012 for the first time, according to a recent report from the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, which represents the recording industry worldwide.

Consumers spent $5.6 billion worldwide for digital music in 2012, an increase of 9 percent, offsetting the decline in CDs and other physical ways to provide music. That gave the industry its best growth since 1998, albeit a miniscule 0.3 percent, according to the IFPI.

Pure buyers "have to spend hundreds of dollars a month on music, which most people can't afford to do," Spotify founder and CEO Daniel Ek told Reuters in an interview last week at South-by-Southwest Interactive. "It's pretty obvious that the access model or the subscription model is a much better proposition for most people."

U.S. consumers will stream an estimated 100 billion tracks this year, says David Bakula, senior vice-president for client development and analytics for Nielsen Entertainment.

"The big question is who has the business model to make it work," said Bakula, a former executive at Universal Music, one of the four major music labels. "The first ones in the market may not be the winners."

Apple CEO Tim Cook recently met with Iovine and other Beats executives to find out more about that business. It is unclear if Apple will join Beats' Project Daisy.

SHOW ME THE MONEY

Making money off music streaming is difficult. Leading players Pandora and Spotify, despite attracting hundreds of millions of dollars in financing and millions of subscribers, have never reported a cent of profit.

No less a personage than Steve Jobs himself was a skeptic.

"Never say never, but customers don't seem to be interested in it," the late Apple co-founder and online music visionary told Reuters in a 2007 interview. Apple's current executives have not publicly stated their views on streaming music.

Pandora, which went public in 2011, now has 67 million monthly listeners worldwide - a 41 percent jump from a year ago - together listening to more than 13 billion hours of music.

But its losses more than doubled to $38.1 million in the year to January 31, 2013, hurt by the high cost of standard streaming licenses that typically have a per-track royalty model. This has forced Pandora, which relies mainly on advertising for revenue, to cap free mobile listening at 40 hours per month.

It and other music services such as Clear Channel Communications' iHeartRadio are now urging lawmakers in the U.S. Congress to pass the "Internet Radio Fairness Act," which would set royalty rates for subscription music services using the same standard that has so far been applied to other forms of radio.

But a group of 125 musicians, including Billy Joel and Rihanna, are speaking up against it, arguing that the bill would cut by 85 percent the amount of money an artist receives when his or her songs are played over the Internet.

The issue of how recording labels and musicians will be paid is one of the biggest roadblocks to growth. Competition will almost certainly force a shakeout, with winners and losers.

That could accelerate once major technology companies like Amazon and Google flex their marketing muscles, not to mention Apple with its ability to leverage its enormous base of online music buyers. The California gadget giant is unlikely to cede its lead in selling music without a fight.

While streaming could undercut sales of music tracks, Apple has always maintained that if there is potential for cannibalization of its products, the gadget maker would rather be in charge than let others in on it.

Finally, Microsoft has a large audience of Windows and Xbox players to whom it can promote Xbox Music Pass, a $9.99 a month service it launched in October. The software giant has declined to talk about its future plans in this area.

Bring it on, says Ek from Spotify.

"It's rare that gigantic companies figure out a new way to do something peripheral," Ek said. "I don't believe the world will only be controlled by a Google or an Apple. It will be companies who are great at games like EA, at films like Netflix, or at music like Spotify."

(Additional reporting by Gerry Shih in San Francisco; Editing by Claudia Parsons)

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/tech-giants-dive-into-music-streaming-2013-3

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Pistorius brothers both have court dates next week

(AP) ? A lawyer for Oscar Pistorius says his appeal against bail conditions will be heard on Thursday, a day after the culpable homicide trial of older brother Carl begins in another South African court.

Advocate Kenny Oldwadge tells The Associated Press that they have confirmation from Pretoria's North Gauteng High Court that the appeal is scheduled for March 28.

The Olympic athlete, charged with murder in the shooting death of Reeva Steenkamp, is challenging travel restrictions and having to report twice a week to a police station, among other conditions.

Oldwadge and prosecutors say Pistorius is not required to appear in court.

Carl Pistorius' trial is set for Wednesday and Thursday at a court south of Johannesburg. He was charged in the death of a woman in a 2008 road collision.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-22-OLY-Pistorius-Shooting/id-5276ba008b8147ee81542fbf7a6385b6

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Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Is climate change really a business opportunity? | GreenBiz.com

When writing anything about climate change???and particularly about climate risk???I often hear back about the need to mention ?opportunities.? The same goes for sustainability. Apparently, the only risks we can hope to manage, and the only things we should consider ?sustainable? from a business perspective, are things that make or save companies money.

This has always struck me as odd, given that many of the environmental problems we?re grappling with are generally recognized as attributable to the existence of economic externalities. Broadly speaking, the whole topic of sustainability (and climate change) has evolved from the recognition that we need to deal with nonmonetized externalities. That being the case, how can it be true that everything we do to solve those problems has to make sense without having monetized those very externalities?

The scientific community characterizes climate change as ?the? risk of our time. The potential global and societal consequences of climate change over time are clearly game-changing (and not in a good way, even if there may be localized ?positive? climate impacts). Over the past 10,000 years, human civilization has developed within a 1 degree Celsius temperature band, along with all of our agricultural systems and ecosystem services, so the idea that we?re now likely to stray several degrees or more outside that band without fully understanding the consequences is the very epitome of societal risk.

Of course, societal risk is not the same thing as individual risk or business risk. One person?s misfortune is often another person?s opportunity, and corporate time horizons are much shorter than societal time horizons. But we don?t generally characterize a global disease pandemic as an ?opportunity? just because vaccinemakers will see higher revenues. I don?t see references in the press to the business opportunities awaiting us from major earthquakes or other natural disasters. Moreover, I don?t see earthquake preparedness premised on pursuing only structural and other preparedness measures that are economically justified in their own right. That?s because we recognize earthquakes to be a risk, not an opportunity. The fact that some people will benefit economically as that risk plays out is neither here nor there.

Next page: Communicating risk

Our 2012 e-book, "The Changing Profile of Corporate Climate Change Risk"?(DoSustainability, London, 2012), is not named ?The Changing Nature of Corporate Climate Opportunities????and for good reason. Climate change is a serious societal risk, and that risk will trickle down to companies in many ways. Our forthcoming e-book, "Adapting to Climate Change: 2.0 Enterprise Risk Management,"?focuses on climate-change adaptation as a risk-management response, rather than an opportunity-management response.

Of course, there will be economic opportunities. But the underlying problem doesn?t have to be characterized as an opportunity for that point to be true. Nor do ?risk beneficiaries? need to have a book written specifically about the opportunities of climate change. If they recognize the larger societal risk, most are smart enough to figure their own business opportunities. In other words, the message of ?risk? can communicate the topic across the spectrum of risk and opportunity, without getting into the semantically treacherous arena of confusing risk and opportunity.

We?ve gone down a different path when talking about climate-change risk than we have with other risk topics like earthquakes and pandemics. It reflects the real challenges in perceiving and communicating climate risk to individuals and to businesses, even though the societal risk case is clear. That?s why we focus so much in talking about climate change and sustainability on measures that will make companies money. Otherwise, we fear companies will not be interested.

But what that really reflects is that we?ve failed to communicate risk. We would be well-served to supplement our focus on moneymaking with figuring out how to better communicate risk.

Image of?fresh green vegetable?by?MaxFX?via Shutterstock.

Source: http://www.greenbiz.com/blog/2013/03/04/climate-change-risks-opportunities

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Friday, March 1, 2013

Cop axed for shooting 41 times at suspect, killing him

By Tammy Mutasa, NBCDFW.com

A Texas police officer who fired 41 shots at a chase suspect in August has been fired.

The Garland Police Department confirmed that it fired Officer Patrick Tuter after an internal investigation into the Aug. 12, 2012, shooting.

Michael Allen, 25, was shot and killed after a high-speed chase that began in Garland and ended in Mesquite, Texas. Allen was wanted on suspicion of eluding police in Sasche a few days earlier.

Garland police spokesman Officer Joe Harn said Tuter violated the department's general order of use of force and its pursuit protocol.

The department at first said that Tuter opened fire in fear of his life, but dashboard camera video raised concerns after it showed that Tuter had rammed Allen's truck and fired 41 shots after he cornered Allen. Tuter reloaded twice, police said.

"He did not deserve the death sentence," said Allen's mother, Stephanie Allen. "Patrick Tuter was not judge and jury, and that's what he made himself out to be."

Allen's father, Randy Allen, said he is glad the department finally acted on the matter because he doesn't want any other families to feel what he, his wife and his son's 4-year-old daughter feel every day.

"Maybe the streets are safer now," he said.

More news from NBCDFW.com

The Allens have filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Tuter, seeking damages in their son's death.

The lawsuit says that Michael Allen did not have a weapon and did not pose a threat to officers. The lawsuit also says that Tuter's use of force was excessive.

"That's what tears me up -- that they weren't only just excessive, it was excessive on top of excessive," Randy Allen said.

'Justified'
The Allens said their son should not have run from police but also know that nothing can bring him back.

Tuter's attorney said his client does not agree with the department's decision to fire him and will appeal.

"The indefinite suspension was based upon alleged violations of the Garland Police Department's internal, administrative policies," the attorney said in a statement. "However, Officer Tuter's actions were justified under this state's penal code, and the indefinite suspension will be appealed under state civil service law."

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/01/17143423-texas-cop-fired-for-shooting-41-times-at-suspect-killing-him?lite

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OUYA ships to Kickstarter backers on March 28

OUYA

OUYA -- the $99 Android gaming console that started all kinds of fires on Kickstarter, eventually earning some $8.5 million in pledges -- today announced that consoles will begin shipping to backers on March 28. Production is well under way, the company said, with a full launch scheduled for June, when the console also will be available in stores.

OUYA has already shipped more than 1,200 developer consoles. (That's what you see here -- production units will look a little different.)

The company has also said that it plans to release a new version of the console each year.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/i-V377S8pOg/story01.htm

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Sales Lead Job

Sales Lead-SAL003253

Description

Merck is a global health care leader with a diversified portfolio of prescription medicines, vaccines and consumer health products, as well as animal health products. Today, we are building a new kind of healthcare company ? one that is ready to help create a healthier future for all of us.

Our ability to excel depends on the integrity, knowledge, imagination, skill, diversity and teamwork of people like you. To this end, we strive to create an environment of mutual respect, encouragement and teamwork. As part of our global team, you?ll have the opportunity to collaborate with talented and dedicated colleagues while developing and expanding your career.

Merck is known as MSD outside of the United States and Canada

The Sales Manager represents MSD on an assigned territory in a complex and dynamic professional business environment.

The primary responsibility of the Sales Manager is to communicate effectively, either individually or in groups, with customers in a manner which encourages the use of MSD products where indicated. These communications require the effective selection and use of a variety of support systems to accurately convey technical and economic information so MSD products will be prescribed when indicated.

In addition, the Sales Manager must demonstrate over time a high level of product knowledge, territory knowledge and overall proficiency in carrying out their total responsibilities.

Our employees are the key to our company?s success. We demonstrate our commitment to our employees by offering a competitive and valuable rewards program. Merck?s benefits are designed to support the wide range of goals, needs and lifestyles of our employees, and many of the people that matter the most in their lives.

Merck is an equal opportunity employer, proudly embracing diversity in all of its manifestations.

Qualifications

? With at least 5 years sound sales experience

? High performance-consistently above objective achievements in the last three years in MSD

? Preferably with Sales Management experience or CVS knowledge

? Experience in Kuwait

? Experience in both Private & institutional sectors will be an advantage

Job: Sales

Job Title: Sales Lead

Primary Location: EMEA-Kuwait

Employee Status: Regular

Number of Openings: 1

Source: http://jobs.merck.com/job/Sales-Lead-Job/2454640/?utm_source=J2WRSS&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=J2W_RSS

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