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In the year 2013, technology knows no bounds. Just when you think that a certain technology is the best it can get, the geniuses calling the shots somehow manage to prove you wrong and deliver better versions frequently. These geniuses are the people calling the shots behind the household names that you hear and read daily through different means. It is common to hear about the success of technology giants like Apple and Samsung, and their rivalries as well. To them, the business might be all about one thing, the dollar. In this article, I?ll let you know about the top 10 richest technology companies in the world based on their net worth and revenue. Check them out.
Apple Inc. has been the ?be all end all? of the tech industry for quite some time now. Being Samsung?s fierce competitor in the smartphone industry, it tops the list. One can argue that their revenue is in part due to high product prices. But one can not deny the unique designs and features of their products. They truly have been the pioneers.
The South Korean company, and Apple Inc?s top adversary, Samsung Electronics, comes second on this list. They are known best for making mobile phones and they have indeed revolutionized the industry with their mobile phones. Besides smartphones and mobile phones, they deal in various other electronics e.g. televisions, washing machines, LCD?s, air conditioners among others.
AT&T Inc is among the largest providers of telephonic communication and is based in the United States. It also provides broadband subscriptions.
Hewlett Packard, better known as HP, is an American multinational IT corporation. It deals in technologies, software and services. It was the largest producer of personal computers till 2012, when Lenovo overtook it.
IBM is another American technology corporation that mainly deals in computer hardware and software. It is one of the oldest?companies?existing in the industry. They also have the distinction of producing the world?s very first personal computer . They still provide hardware and software to large firms around the world.
China Mobile, as the name suggests, is the premier?telecommunications?company in China. It provides mobile voice and multimedia services throughout its nation through its telecom network. It takes the sixth position on the list of the top 10 richest tech companies in the world.
Sony is a Japanese company and a renowned producer of consumer electronics, PCs, gaming consoles and smartphones. Their televisions and LCD screens are among the best selling around the world. Sony Ericsson, their mobile brand, also gained them popularity along with their famous gaming consoles, the Play Station 2 and the Play Station 3. They come in at the seveth spot on this list.
Microsoft needs no introduction. It has been a household name since decades due to the popularity of their OS, the Windows. They started manufacturing surface tablets recently. Before that they were majorly a software company. They still remain the leading software manufacturers around the world.
Dell is an American multinational company that mainly produces computer technology. They are known worldwide for their high quality laptops.
Intel is an American semiconductor chip manufacturer?corporation. They are the world?s leading manufacturers of processors, chips and various other hardware components for computers. They provide these components to world?s largest?manufacturers of PCs and notebook computers.
Source: http://techeclipse.com/10-richest-technology-companies/
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House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., walks to a meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, April 26, 2013, with Secretary of State John Kerry as he and national intelligence advisers came to the Capitol to update members of the House on Syria's alleged use of poisonous gas in its ongoing civil war. U.S. intelligence has concluded with "varying degrees of confidence," that the Syrian government has twice used chemical weapons in its fierce civil war, the White House and other top administration officials said Thursday. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., walks to a meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, April 26, 2013, with Secretary of State John Kerry as he and national intelligence advisers came to the Capitol to update members of the House on Syria's alleged use of poisonous gas in its ongoing civil war. U.S. intelligence has concluded with "varying degrees of confidence," that the Syrian government has twice used chemical weapons in its fierce civil war, the White House and other top administration officials said Thursday. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
WASHINGTON (AP) ? Syria's stockpile of chemical weapons could be a greater threat after that nation's president leaves power and could end up targeting Americans at home, lawmakers warned Sunday as they considered a U.S. response that stops short of sending military forces there.
U.S. officials last week declared that the Syrian government probably had used chemical weapons twice in March, newly provocative acts in the 2-year civil war that has killed more than 70,000 people and displaced hundreds of thousands more. The U.S. assessment followed similar conclusions from Britain, France, Israel and Qatar ? key allies eager for a more aggressive response to the Syrian conflict.
President Barack Obama has said Syria's likely action ? or the transfer of President Bashar Assad's stockpiles to terrorists ? would cross a "red line" that would compel the United States to act.
Lawmakers sought to remind viewers on Sunday news programs of Obama's declaration while discouraging a U.S. foothold on the ground there.
"The president has laid down the line, and it can't be a dotted line. It can't be anything other than a red line," said House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich. "And more than just Syria, Iran is paying attention to this. North Korea is paying attention to this."
Added Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga.: "For America to sit on the sidelines and do nothing is a huge mistake."
Obama has insisted that any use of chemical weapons would change his thinking about the United States' role in Syria but said he didn't have enough information to order aggressive action.
"For the Syrian government to utilize chemical weapons on its people crosses a line that will change my calculus and how the United States approaches these issues," Obama said Friday.
But Rep. Jan Schakowsky, an Illinois Democrat, said Sunday the United States needs to consider those weapons. She said that when Assad leaves power, his opponents could have access to those weapons or they could fall into the hands of U.S. enemies.
"The day after Assad is the day that these chemical weapons could be at risk ... (and) we could be in bigger, even bigger trouble," she said.
Both sides of the civil war already accuse each other of using the chemical weapons.
The deadliest such alleged attack was in the Khan al-Assal village in the Aleppo province in March. The Syrian government called for the United Nations to investigate alleged chemical weapons use by rebels in the attack that killed 31 people.
Syria, however, has not allowed a team of experts into the country because it wants the investigation limited to the single Khan al-Assal incident, while U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has urged "immediate and unfettered access" for an expanded investigation.
One of Obama's chief antagonists on Syria, Sen. John McCain, R- Ariz., said the United States should go to Syria as part of an international force to safeguard the chemical weapons. But McCain added that he is not advocating sending ground troops to the nation.
"The worst thing the United States could do right now is put boots on the ground on Syria. That would turn the people against us," McCain said.
His friend, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., also said the United States could safeguard the weapons without a ground force. But he cautioned the weapons must be protected for fear that Americans could be targeted. Raising the specter of the lethal bomb at the finish line of the Boston Marathon, Graham said the next attack on U.S. soil could employ weapons that were once part of Assad's arsenal.
"Chemical weapons ? enough to kill millions of people ? are going to be compromised and fall into the wrong hands, and the next bomb that goes off in America may not have nails and glass in it," he said.
Rogers and Schakowsky spoke to ABC's "This Week." Chambliss and Graham were interviewed on CBS's "Face the Nation." McCain appeared on NBC's "Meet the Press."
___
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CAIRO (AP) ? Egypt's state news agency says a court has turned down deposed president Hosni Mubarak's request to be released from prison pending an investigation into corruption charges.
The news agency MENA says the Cairo Criminal Court on Sunday ordered Mubarak to remain in jail for 15 days while the charges are probed.
Mubarak can appeal the court's decision.
The long-time autocrat who was ousted during a 2011 public uprising has spent more than two years in detention without a final verdict in the case alleging that he is responsible for the deaths of nearly 900 protesters during the uprising.
He also has been ordered held in prison on other charges.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-court-turns-down-mubaraks-release-request-122231954.html
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Stephen Hawking is right, ?We must continue to go into space for humanity.? But what do we do when confronted with the unimaginable possibilities we find out there?
Director Hasraf HaZ Dulull posits that question in his fantastic short work, Project Kronos. The mocumentary film follows an international team of of researchers describing the massive technological efforts that went into engineering a next-generation deep space probe and the even greater efforts that went into just comprehending what it found.
Source: http://gizmodo.com/what-lies-beyond-this-interstellar-rabbit-hole-484451421
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MAKHACHKALA, Russia (AP) ? The father of the two Boston bombing suspects said Sunday that he has postponed a trip from Russia to the United States because of poor health.
"I am really sick," Anzor Tsarnaev, 46, told The Associated Press. He said his blood pressure had spiked to dangerous levels.
Tsarnaev said at a news conference Thursday that he planned to leave that day or the next for the U.S. with the hope of seeing his younger son, who is under arrest, and burying his elder son, who was killed. His family, however, indicated later Thursday that the trip could be pushed back because he was not feeling well.
Tsarnaev confirmed on Sunday that he is staying in Chechnya, a province in southern Russia, but did not specify whether he was hospitalized. He is an ethnic Chechen and has relatives in Chechnya, although he and his family spent little time in Chechnya or anywhere else in Russia before moving to the U.S. a decade ago.
He and the suspects' mother, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva, returned to Russia last year and settled in Makhachkala, the capital of neighboring Dagestan, where Tsarnaeva's relatives live.
During the past week, they were both questioned extensively by U.S. investigators who had traveled to Makhachkala from Moscow. They also were besieged by journalists who staked out their home.
Tsarnaev's family said last week that he intended to get to the U.S. by flying from Grozny, the Chechen capital, to Moscow. He and Tsarnaeva left Dagestan on Friday, but their whereabouts were unclear.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boston-suspects-father-postpones-trip-us-124041600.html
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By Michael Stott and Samia Nakhoul
DAMASCUS (Reuters) - It might sound absurd to talk about normal life in Syria after two years of civil war which have killed more than 70,000 people and left five million more destitute and homeless.
Yet in the neighborhood of Malki, a tree-lined enclave of central Damascus, a wealthy group of elite, pro-government Syrians still enjoy shopping for imported French cheeses, gourmet hand-made chocolates and iPad minis in the well-stocked, recently built Grand Mall and in nearby boutiques.
Such are the parallel realities of a conflict in which, for all the gains made by rebels and the current chatter about U.S. "red lines" crossed that might ultimately draw in Western might, President Bashar al-Assad is holding his ground in the capital, bulwarked by his own foreign allies and by many Syrians who fear his end could prove fatal for them too. And so life goes on.
In Malki, sprinklers water the manicured lawns outside their blocks of million-dollar apartments. Maids and drivers cater to their every whim and birds sing in the trees. Fuel for their BMWs and electricity for their air-conditioning is plentiful and the well-guarded streets are free of loiterers.
"Look at this display and you feel all is well, life is good and everything is here," said an elegantly dressed Hiyam Jabri, 50, as she placed her order at the delicatessen counter in the mall's main supermarket.
Malki residents continue to enjoy material comforts and abundant supplies of imported goods, even as millions of their compatriots subsist on food handouts.
The United Nations World Food Programme estimates it is feeding 2.5 million people inside Syria - a tenth of the population - and a further million who have fled the country, offering them subsistence rations of flour and rice.
"We are trying to keep up with the enormity of the crisis and the impact of the brutality," the WFP's deputy regional emergency coordinator Matthew Hollingworth said in the capital.
Most of those whom his staff help "haven't been displaced once but sometimes twice, three times". Food is so scarce for those uprooted by the fighting that rations intended to feed a family of five are being shared by three families.
ILLUSIONS
Even in Malki, though, the air of normality is an illusion - as unreal as the oft-repeated assertions of government officials that victory is near and Assad still controls almost all Syria.
Scratch the surface of the illusion and the normality quickly becomes anything but.
Pasted to the lamp-post outside the elegant chocolatier Ghraoui, whose interior boasts award certificates from France, is a wad of black and white fliers. They are printed by families and they mourn sons and husbands killed in the war.
It is a war, however, that seems to be going nowhere fast.
Recent days have shown again the reluctance of the United States and its allies, in the face of evidence Assad's troops may have crossed President Barack Obama's "red line" by using chemical weapons, to intervene militarily against him - not least as some rebels have espoused the cause of al Qaeda.
Among the few independent outsiders seeing at first hand the mosaic of opinion and suffering in Syria, many aid workers lament that international discourse has become a monotone debate on supplying weapons, with little push for a negotiated peace.
"We need a political solution for this conflict," said Marc Lucet, the local emergency coordinator for UNICEF, whose fellow humanitarian workers recount grim tales of hungry refugees found cowering in half-built apartment blocks or idle factories.
The surface serenity of Malki contrasts with what aid groups say is a country splintered by ever shifting frontlines and a fragmenting opposition; many fear violence will spread beyond Syria's borders and are baffled by the debate in the West over how far to arm rebels, saying this will only make matters worse.
Stressing the need for a political settlement, however, unpalatable and, so far, unattainable, UNICEF's Lucet said: "The solution is certainly not to give more weapons to either side."
Attempts to bring Assad down by diplomatic means have failed to break the impasse, even if they do make life less comfortable in Malki.
Inside the Ghraoui chocolate boutique, as everywhere else in Syria, sales are strictly cash only - sanctions have forced international credit card networks to boycott transactions here.
Prices on restaurant menus in local currency, the Syrian pound, have been hastily updated with stickers multiple times - a tell-tale sign of rapid inflation.
At the luxury mall supermarket, Eyad al-Burghol says he is selling fewer imported foodstuffs than before because many wealthy customers have left the country.
FIGHTING TALK
A distant thump of artillery fire serves as a reminder that, just a few kilometers (miles) away, fierce street-to-street battles are being fought between government and rebel forces. Some days, Russian-made MiG fighter jets streak across the sky on their way to bomb insurgent positions.
The abundant security in Malki, residents say, is provided by men who speak the Iranian tongue of Farsi, rather than Syrian Arabic. Tehran has long been Assad's sponsor against his fellow Arab leaders and the word on the street - impossible to verify - is that this heavily guarded area of town may be home to the Syrian president himself and to his immediate family.
Assad is not seen in public these days and officials refuse to comment on his movements or whereabouts.
Senior Syrian officials try hard to show visiting reporters a picture of normality in which the government is firmly in control. But even the cocoon in which they live and work is starting to be punctured by the facts of war.
Syria's central bank governor Adeeb Mayaleh gave Reuters an interview last week at a headquarters building bearing the scars of a car bomb attack earlier in the month. Blinds hung twisted and useless in front of warped window-frames without glass. A palm tree outside had been reduced to a charred skeleton.
The bank chief insisted that the government had plenty of foreign currency available to guarantee imports and enough cash to pay public employees' wages in advance each month. For how long? Iran and Russia, he said, were about to agree fresh funds.
Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad gave an upbeat assessment of the war in an interview - but a Syrian who works nearby told us that the complex housing the ministry had been attacked four times by rebels in the past few months.
UNICEF regional coordinator Youssef Abdul-Jalil estimated that at least three million children inside Syria now needed humanitarian assistance because of the war: "There is a crisis of the children of Syria," he said. "They are paying a terrible price in their lives, in their surroundings, in their health, in their education and in their lack of protection".
REALITY INTRUDES
Cars still choke central Damascus and traffic police still issue tickets for speeding and even clamp badly parked vehicles. But armed checkpoints snarl progress to a snail's pace.
Travel agents still offer flights and holidays. But the road to the city's airport is considered too dangerous by many and flights are available only to a few, friendly, destinations.
Telephones still work and officials still show up for work in neatly ironed shirts and well-pressed suits - but many scuttle off early to be home before nightfall.
One resident spoke of a distant relative, a Christian from a prosperous family of car dealers, who was kidnapped. Accused of supporting Assad, he was beaten while hanging upside down. His captors then they injected fuel into his veins. Released for a ransom worth over $20,000, the man died a few days later.
While the Syrian elite continue to insist that the military campaign against the rebels is succeeding, aid workers in Aleppo say that the area of the country's biggest city that is now controlled by the government is very small.
The main north-south highway which connects Aleppo to Damascus via the major cities of Homs and Hama now features some 38 checkpoints, about nine of which are manned by various groups of rebels, NGO workers who have traveled along it recently say.
In the capital, the government says it guarantees a "Square of Security" in the center; some locals joke that rebel gains have shorn it to a rather smaller "Security Triangle".
Damascus's walled Old City, a UNESCO World Heritage site and home to the 7th-century Umayyad mosque, retains its beauty. But these days it is eerily empty. Tourists have long gone and the souvenir sellers have all but given up hope of selling anything.
Inside the mosque's main prayer hall, featuring a shrine said to contain the head of St. John the Baptist, mournful guides tell of how the imam was recently murdered.
At a jewelry shop in the al-Hamidiyeh bazaar, Anas Hallawi, 25, sat looking bored: "People are selling their gold not buying these days," he said. "Our business thrived on foreign tourists and Syrians buying gold for their brides.
"Now the tourists are gone. And nobody is getting married."
At the Al-Naranj restaurant in the Christian Quarter, one of Damascus's finest eateries, diners discussed the relative risks of car bombings versus random mortar attacks and kidnap. Little wonder that so many with the means have left for Lebanon, as life in the capital becomes a kind of ghoulish Russian roulette.
Across the room, a smartly dressed family group celebrated a betrothal with a lavish spread of traditional Syrian food on a table decorated with red roses.
As the strains of the old songs died away and a festive cake was eaten, a fighter jet roared across the sky. Artillery fire thudded in the distance. The family looked upwards through the restaurant's glass roof, eyes suddenly fearful. (Editing by Alastair Macdonald)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-good-life-goes-syrian-elite-sit-war-154008389.html
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Commercial real estate is a very profitable business for some people. There?s no magical formula for success. Instead, you need to be well informed, experienced, and willing to put in the effort needed. The article will explain in simple terms some strategies to get you started investing in commercial property.
You should negotiate if you are the seller or the buyer. Make sure you have a voice and that you are offered a reasonable amount of money for the property.
If you are new to commercial real estate investing, you should learn how to manage one investment type at a time. Pick out a single property type that you would enjoy starting with and only pay attention to it. It is better to do your best at one type than to be average at many types.
TIP! Negotiate, whether you?re the seller or the buyer. Protect your interests by standing up for yourself regardless of who is on the other side of the table.
If you are financing your commercial properties, you need to ensure that you have the proper financial statements for both yourself and your business. Your bank will need these documents to verify that you are a responsible, creditworthy person.
Find an appropriate lender before beginning your search for investments. Loan products and commercial lenders are different than that of home loans. In some ways, they are better. Larger down payments are required for commercial financing, but you have the safety of avoiding personal liability should things not end well. Banks are also considerably more lenient about letting you borrow down payment funds from associates.
Look for a myriad of financial allies, from family members and friends to professional lenders who can help you come up with the necessary cash to buy commercial real estate. Contract with the parties to either provide part of your property income, or repayment with a fixed inters rate.
TIP! Bugs and rodents are always looking to ruin your property, so factor pest control into your business strategy when renting commercial property. Talk about pest control with your agent if the area is known for rodents and bugs.
Commercial loans differ from the residential loans. For instance, they have a higher percentage down payment. You need to research different lenders so that you can find the best one for you. In addition, seek out information regarding what investment types are the hottest right now.
Clarify how much space is available in square footage. Commercial real estate properties can be measured by usable square feet, which is where the business would actually take place, or total square footage, which usually involves the walls and uninhabitable spaces. Try to obtain both measurements, in order to really understand how much space is under consideration.
TIP! Always assure yourself of any company?s intentions, making sure they take a primary focus on your own needs, rather than an apparent consideration for only their firm?s income. If you don?t do your research and end up in bed with wolves, you will be the one to suffer.
Before you enter into any negotiations for a lease on commercial real estate, attempt to decrease anything that may be thought of as a default event. That will cut down on the likelihood that the tenant defaults on a lease. You want to ensure this doesn?t happen at all costs.
When you are getting a loan for your commercial property, make sure you obtain a good attorney that will explain all details to you. In case you encounter an issue, you will be glad you hired an efficient attorney who will find a solution that corresponds to your best interest.
Feng shui is a great tool that you can use in your office or when decorating your commercial property purchases. Two of the basic insights of this approach, removing clutter and emphasizing open space, are sound design principles that make a property more attractive.
TIP! Do a walk-through and close evaluation of each property you are considering. Think also about having a professional contractor tag along aside you when you look over these properties.
Know exactly what your business needs before shopping locations. Know what type of office space that you need to have. If you have plans for future expansion, it is in your best interest to purchase a larger space that can accommodate future growth. If the market is currently low, this can save you a great deal of money.
When you?re trying to decide which broker you should work with, take their experience in commercial real estate into account. For better results they should specialize in the specific area that you want to buy or sell in. Sign an exclusive agreement once you?ve found a broker you want to work with.
Be sure to have a professional building inspector go through your property before you put it up for sale. If the inspections turn up any problems, remediate them before listing the property for sale.
TIP! It is a far lengthier, and more complicated, process to purchase a commercial property than a residential one. Understand, however, that this additional time and effort often translates into higher returns.
When you are selling a commercial property, always make sure to include all buyers; this includes local and non-local buyers. Many sellers mistakenly assume that their property is only interesting to local buyers. There are many private investors who buy property outside of their area if the price is affordable.
Be aware of the potential tax benefits of investing in commercial property. Depreciation benefits and interest reductions are given to investors in commercial real estate. ?Phantom income? is a taxed income, but not income received as cash. Take this possibility into account when drawing up an investing plan.
TIP! In the beginning, you may find it necessary to spend a great deal of time handling your investment. Hunting for the opportune property will take time and effort, and even after you have purchased it, upgrades and reconditioning might be necessary.
Some factors to consider before making a big investment into real estate are the expanding or contracting of nearby employers, local income levels, and the rate of unemployment. Your house will sell more quickly and at a higher value if it is near a university, hospital or any large employment center.
Location, location, location is important to consider. Think over the community a property is located in. Don?t forget to check out similar areas as well, in order to see how other neighborhoods are growing economically. You?ll want to choose an area that is on the upswing and will continue growing for at least a decade into the future.
If you know how to go about it, you can achieve success in the commercial real estate industry. Take that you?ve learned in this article and use it in your business strategy. Don?t stop learning about the industry, and continue to gain knowledge and methods for improvement. Keep in mind that the more you actually gain experience, the more you can learn from your mistakes, which can, in turn, help you become successful.
TIP! It is prudent to consult a tax specialist before purchasing real estate. Your tax adviser can inform you of all of the potential costs related to your investment, and also tell you what percentage of your profits will have to be paid in taxes.
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Kevin Youkilis is back in the Yankees? lineup this afternoon for the first time in a week, reports Dan Barbarisi of the Wall Street Journal.
Youkilis missed his sixth straight game yesterday due to lower back tightness, which led to a potential stint on the disabled list, but he was cleared to return after he made it through batting practice this afternoon without incident. He?s starting at first base this afternoon against the Blue Jays while Jayson Nix is playing third.
Youkilis is hitting .259 (17-for-61) with two homers, seven RBI and a .796 OPS through 16 games this season. Due to a wide variety of injuries, the 34-year-old has averaged just 120 games played over the past four seasons.
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CANONSBURG, Pa. (AP) ? Pittsburgh Penguins star Sidney Crosby has returned to practice, but his status for next week's playoff opener remains uncertain.
Crosby hasn't played since breaking his jaw last month. He took part in non-contact drills on Friday, wearing a protective facemask that he'll likely keep on for the duration of the postseason.
The NHL's second-leading scorer says he feels good and he's not concerned about the layoff. Crosby has undergone several dental procedures over the last four weeks to help repair some of the damage and admits he can tell something's a little off.
The Penguins have clinched the top seed in the Eastern Conference. Pittsburgh will get back injured defenseman Paul Martin and forward James Neal for the regular-season finale on Saturday against Carolina.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/crosby-practices-return-broken-jaw-uncertain-174605651.html
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>>> late today in lower manhattan we learned of a stunning discovery. what investigators believe to be pieces of one of the commercial jets that brought down the world trade center found wedged between two buildings near ground zero 11 years after the terrorist attack. this discovery is being treated as a crime scene by the nypd tonight. nbc's stephanie gosk is there.
>> reporter: good evening, brian. it's hard to imagine after all this time someone could essentially stumble across a piece of wreckage. especially this big. we are about a quarter or mile from ground zero . that piece was found wedged between these buildings behind me. there were construction workers doing solo inspections. they called police who turned it into a crime scene . they said they will move the piece in a couple of days but they might have to do some demolition. it's wedged in so deeply. they may test for human remains . what people don't realize is scores of victims from 9/11 have never been positively identified. this may be an opportunity to bring closure for families that are waiting. finally, if this building looks familiar, it's because it's the site of a controversy over whether or not to build an islamic cultural center here so close to ground zero . brian?
>> stephanie gosk in lower manhattan . stephanie , thanks.
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LONDON, April 26 (Reuters) - Arsenal will keep with tradition and form a guard of honour for new Premier League champions Manchester United when the sides meet at The Emirates on Sunday. "That is part of the tradition of English football and I want that, of course, to be respected," Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger told a news conference on Friday. "I'm French, I work in England and the English tradition should be respected. When you work somewhere abroad you have to respect the culture of the country," he added. ...
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stock-index-futures-fall-focus-gdp-data-091008483--finance.html
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In this Tuesday, April 16, 2013, photo, Specialist Michael O'Mara, left, and trader Fred Demarco work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. World stock markets fell Friday April 26, 2013 after Japan faced an unwelcome drop in consumer prices. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
In this Tuesday, April 16, 2013, photo, Specialist Michael O'Mara, left, and trader Fred Demarco work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. World stock markets fell Friday April 26, 2013 after Japan faced an unwelcome drop in consumer prices. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
NEW YORK (AP) ? The stock market stalled Friday after the U.S. economy didn't grow as much as hoped and earnings from a handful of big companies failed to rev up investors.
The economy grew at a 2.5 percent annual rate in the first three months of the year, the government said. That was below the 3.1 percent forecast by economists.
The shortfall reinforced the perception that the economy is grinding, rather than charging, ahead. Investors have also been troubled by reports in the last month of weaker hiring, slower manufacturing and a drop in factory orders. Many economists see growth slowing to an annual rate of around 2 percent a year for the rest of the year.
U.S. government bonds, where investors seek safety, rose after the report.
"There are some concerns as we head into the summer," said JJ Kinahan, chief derivatives strategist for TD Ameritrade. "In the last three weeks, we've seen numbers that weren't exactly what you'd love to see."
Corporate earnings this week have also contained worrisome signs. Many companies missed revenue forecasts from financial analysts, even as they reported higher quarterly profits. For example, Goodyear Tire slipped 3.3 percent to $12.51 Friday after revenue fell short of analysts' estimates, hurt by lower global tire sales.
Of the companies that have reported earnings so far, 70 percent have exceeded Wall Street's expectations, compared with a 10-year average of 62 percent, according to S&P Capital IQ. But 43 percent have missed revenue estimates. Just over half of the companies in the S&P 500 have reported quarterly results.
The S&P 500 index dropped 2.92 points, or 0.2 percent, to close at 1,582.24.
The Dow rose 11.75 points, or 0.1 percent, to 14,712.55. The index got a big lift from Chevron. Profit for the U.S. oil company beat expectations of financial analysts in the first quarter, pushing shares up 1.3 percent to $120.04.
Three stocks fell for every two that rose on the New York Stock Exchange.
Both indexes were up for the week and remain slightly below their all-time highs reached April 11. The Dow index rose 1.1 percent this week while the S&P gained 1.7 percent.
The market has been bolstered by the Federal Reserve's easy money policy. The disappointing growth figure for the economy will ensure that the Fed sticks with its stimulus policy, providing support for stocks, said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital.
"The economic data that we've been getting points to no early exit for the Fed's stimulus," Cardillo said.
The Nasdaq composite fell 10.72 points to 3,279.26, a decline of 0.3 percent. The index is 2.3 percent higher this week.
The tech-heavy index has lagged the Dow and the S&P 500 this year, but it led the way higher this week, boosted by Microsoft. The software giant, which makes up 5.3 percent of the Nasdaq, recorded its biggest weekly gain since January of last year ? up 6.8 percent. It reported earnings April 19 that beat Wall Street expectations. The company also began an aggressive push into the computer tablet market.
Apple, the largest stock in the Nasdaq, also had a good week. The stock rose 6.8 percent to $417.20, its best weekly gain since November, despite posting a decline in quarterly profit Tuesday. Apple accounts for 7.6 percent of the Nasdaq composite.
Among other big names investors focused on:
Amazon.com fell 7 percent to $254.81 after the company warned of a possible loss in the current quarter. The online retailer also reported lower income for the first quarter as it continued to spend heavily on rights to digital content.
Expedia fell 10 percent to $58.56 after the online travel company reported a quarterly loss.
Homebuilder D.R. Horton surged 8.7 percent to $26.66 after its income nearly tripled thanks to a continuing recovery the housing market. The results handily beat the forecasts of financial analysts who follow the company.
J.C. Penney jumped 12 percent to $17 after the billionaire financier George Soros disclosed that he had taken a 7.9 percent stake in the struggling company.
In government bond trading, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note slipped to its lowest rate of the year, 1.67 percent, from 1.71 percent the day before. The yield has fallen from 2.06 percent six weeks ago as traders move money into lower-risk investments.
The dollar weakened against the euro.
The European currency bought $1.3029 at the end of day, compared with $1.3002 the day before. The ISE dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency against a group of other world currencies including the Japanese yen and the euro, dropped 0.3 percent, to 82.48.
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We're still getting to grips with an Explorer edition of Google's Glass ourselves, but Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt has noted that Glass may take some getting used to. Talking to an audience on Thursday at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government, he said that alongside the unusual sensation of voice control, people would have to develop new etiquette to deal with the fact that incoming wearables like Google Glass would be able to capture images and access information at whim. "There are obviously places where Google Glasses are inappropriate," he said, while stifling a cheeky wink.
[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
Filed under: Wearables, Google
Source: Reuters
Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/zpSHn_5rr4c/
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CAIRO (AP) ? An alleged romance between an Egyptian Muslim college student and a Coptic Christian man heightened sectarian tension on Friday in a small rural Egyptian town where police fired tear gas to disperse stone-throwing Muslims who surrounded a Coptic church in anger over the inter-faith relationship, a security official and priest said.
The Muslim protesters accuse Saint Girgis Church of helping 21-year-old Rana el-Shazli, who is believed to have converted to Christianity, flee to Turkey with a Coptic Christian man.
Stories of conversions to Christianity or Islam, inter-faith romances and the illegal building and expanding of churches have caused a series of deadly sectarian incidents in recent years. Since Islamists rose to power after Egypt's 2011 uprising that forced out longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak, Christians have grown more fearful of intimidation and violence from fellow Egyptians, especially ultraconservative Salafis.
The alleged romance has been fueling sectarian tension for nearly two months in Wasta, a rural town in Beni Suef province, about 95 kilometers (60 miles) south of Cairo.
Muslims have attacked churches there and forced Christians to close their shops for nearly eight days last month and members of the Christian man's family have been arrested, including his mother and father, after a prosecutor accused them of collaborating in hiding the woman. The woman's family issued an ultimatum for the church to bring her back early this month, but when it didn't, violence erupted anew.
On Friday, ultraconservative Salafis distributed flyers accusing the church of "proselytizing Christianity," according to a copy of the flyer posted on a social networking site. It called on residents to rally inside a mosque located meters (yards) from the church to "rescue a Muslim soul and bring her back from the deviant path."
Father Bishoy Youssef of the church said he heard loudspeakers from the adjacent mosque calling on worshippers to join a march to the church for the sake of the girl. He said churches in Wasta had been forewarned about "threats to attack the churches" and scheduled early morning masses that would be finished before Friday prayers at the mosque.
"God protect us," he said. "We have nothing to do with this whole story,"
Clashes erupted when protesters hurled stones at security forces that had cordoned off streets leading to the church. Police fired tear gas, according to a security official, who added that police arrested five people, including the girl's uncle. According to the security official at the scene, two people were injured by gunshots and others suffered breathing problems from the tear gas.
Last month, another priest from the same church told Coptic Christian Karama TV network that protesters set his car on fire.
Like previous incidents, sessions to foster reconciliation were held with elders from the town, but extremists seemed intent on escalating the tension, Youssef said.
Abu Islam, a well-known extremist cleric who was tried in an Egyptian court for insulting Christianity, appeared last month on his television program, which is broadcast on The Nation TV, calling on Muslims to take action against any church network that seeks to convert Muslim women to Christianity.
"This girl is not coming back," he said. "The Christians mess with our honor and faith."
Also on Friday, a Christian girl disappeared in the southern ancient city of Luxor. A security official said the family of 20-year-old Rania Manqaryous filed a complaint with police accusing a Muslim man, who was a neighbor, of abducting their daughter.
Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
In the past, similar incidents have triggered deadly sectarian violence.
In 2010, the ultraconservative Muslim Salafis claimed that Camilla Shehata, a Coptic Christian wife of a priest, had converted to Islam, but was abducted by the church to force her to return to Christianity. Iraq's branch of al-Qaida used the incident as justification for an attack on a Baghdad church that killed 68 people, and threatened to conduct similar attacks in Egypt until the church released her. On Dec. 31, 2011, a suicide bomber killed at least 21 Christians at a church in the port city of Alexandria ? an attack linked to the Shehata case.
In May 2011, at least 12 people were killed and a Cairo church was burned in clashes after a Christian woman had an affair with a Muslim man. When she disappeared, the man alleged that Christian clergy had snatched her and were holding her prisoner in a local church because she had converted to Islam.
Separately, dozens of mostly masked protesters hurled stones and firebombs in clashes with riot police at Egypt's presidential palace in a Cairo suburb. Protests have become a weekly occurrence in Egypt with unrest continuing since the 2011 uprising.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/muslim-christian-relationship-fuels-row-egypt-200817211.html
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CAIRO (AP) ? An alleged romance between an Egyptian Muslim college student and a Coptic Christian man heightened sectarian tension on Friday in a small rural Egyptian town where police fired tear gas to disperse stone-throwing Muslims who surrounded a Coptic church in anger over the inter-faith relationship, a security official and priest said.
The Muslim protesters accuse Saint Girgis Church of helping 21-year-old Rana el-Shazli, who is believed to have converted to Christianity, flee to Turkey with a Coptic Christian man.
Stories of conversions to Christianity or Islam, inter-faith romances and the illegal building and expanding of churches have caused a series of deadly sectarian incidents in recent years. Since Islamists rose to power after Egypt's 2011 uprising that forced out longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak, Christians have grown more fearful of intimidation and violence from fellow Egyptians, especially ultraconservative Salafis.
The alleged romance has been fueling sectarian tension for nearly two months in Wasta, a rural town in Beni Suef province, about 95 kilometers (60 miles) south of Cairo.
Muslims have attacked churches there and forced Christians to close their shops for nearly eight days last month and members of the Christian man's family have been arrested, including his mother and father, after a prosecutor accused them of collaborating in hiding the woman. The woman's family issued an ultimatum for the church to bring her back early this month, but when it didn't, violence erupted anew.
On Friday, ultraconservative Salafis distributed flyers accusing the church of "proselytizing Christianity," according to a copy of the flyer posted on a social networking site. It called on residents to rally inside a mosque located meters (yards) from the church to "rescue a Muslim soul and bring her back from the deviant path."
Father Bishoy Youssef of the church said he heard loudspeakers from the adjacent mosque calling on worshippers to join a march to the church for the sake of the girl. He said churches in Wasta had been forewarned about "threats to attack the churches" and scheduled early morning masses that would be finished before Friday prayers at the mosque.
"God protect us," he said. "We have nothing to do with this whole story,"
Clashes erupted when protesters hurled stones at security forces that had cordoned off streets leading to the church. Police fired tear gas, according to a security official, who added that police arrested five people, including the girl's uncle. According to the security official at the scene, two people were injured by gunshots and others suffered breathing problems from the tear gas.
Last month, another priest from the same church told Coptic Christian Karama TV network that protesters set his car on fire.
Like previous incidents, sessions to foster reconciliation were held with elders from the town, but extremists seemed intent on escalating the tension, Youssef said.
Abu Islam, a well-known extremist cleric who was tried in an Egyptian court for insulting Christianity, appeared last month on his television program, which is broadcast on The Nation TV, calling on Muslims to take action against any church network that seeks to convert Muslim women to Christianity.
"This girl is not coming back," he said. "The Christians mess with our honor and faith."
Also on Friday, a Christian girl disappeared in the southern ancient city of Luxor. A security official said the family of 20-year-old Rania Manqaryous filed a complaint with police accusing a Muslim man, who was a neighbor, of abducting their daughter.
Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
In the past, similar incidents have triggered deadly sectarian violence.
In 2010, the ultraconservative Muslim Salafis claimed that Camilla Shehata, a Coptic Christian wife of a priest, had converted to Islam, but was abducted by the church to force her to return to Christianity. Iraq's branch of al-Qaida used the incident as justification for an attack on a Baghdad church that killed 68 people, and threatened to conduct similar attacks in Egypt until the church released her. On Dec. 31, 2011, a suicide bomber killed at least 21 Christians at a church in the port city of Alexandria ? an attack linked to the Shehata case.
In May 2011, at least 12 people were killed and a Cairo church was burned in clashes after a Christian woman had an affair with a Muslim man. When she disappeared, the man alleged that Christian clergy had snatched her and were holding her prisoner in a local church because she had converted to Islam.
Separately, dozens of mostly masked protesters hurled stones and firebombs in clashes with riot police at Egypt's presidential palace in a Cairo suburb. Protests have become a weekly occurrence in Egypt with unrest continuing since the 2011 uprising.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/muslim-christian-relationship-fuels-row-egypt-200817211.html
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WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Congressional Black Caucus pressed the Federal Communications Commission on Wednesday to move swiftly to cut the costs that prison inmates and their families are paying for phone calls, an issue that has been tied up with the regulatory panel for a decade.
Caucus members said the rates can be nearly $4 per call, with up to an additional 55 cents a minute for long distance calls. They said the high phone rates disproportionately impact African Americans and Hispanics who make up more than 60 percent of the incarcerated.
"Frequently these kinds of fees force many families to make difficult decisions on whether to forgo contact with their family or loved ones because the cost becomes prohibitive," said Rep. Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio, chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus, at a news conference Wednesday.
The Federal Communications Commission has finished collecting public comment on phone services provided for inmates. It must decide whether the charges to inmates are just and reasonable. It also is reviewing the practice of prisons giving companies exclusive contracts and private prisons limiting inmates to making collect calls.
The comment period on proposed regulations of inmate phone services ended in April. The FCC is reviewing the comments, which will be used to draft new rules, said FCC spokesman Mark Wigfield. Commissioners will discuss, negotiate and edit the rules and eventually vote on them, Wigfield said. He did not know when that vote would happen.
In a proposal published in the Federal Register in January, the FCC said inmate calls are usually limited to collect calls or to calls from pay phones. The cost of those calls are charged to the inmates.
Usually a call comes with two charges that vary widely, the FCC said. The per call charge can range from 50 cents to $3.95, with any additional per minute charges ranging from 5 cents to 89 cents, the FCC said.
Eleanor Holmes Norton, the delegate who represents Washington, D.C., in Congress said the caucus is pressing the FCC to regulate interstate and intrastate calls.
Wigfield said the FCC only regulates interstate calling, but Norton said the caucus believes the law allows it to do both. She said most of the calls would be left unaddressed if intrastate calls are not regulated too.
The caucus also wants the FCC to eliminate per call charges ? a charge for using the phone ? and consider a per-minute rate cap.
"If you cut off communication, most of that would have to be family communication between an inmate and family support. He's going to come out of jail with nothing and with no hope. And we see what happens when that occurs," Norton said.
The FCC's focus on the prison phone rates has drawn the attention of FCC commissioner Mignon Clyburn, who is in her second term on the commission. In a speech last December to a conference on Telecommunications Policy and Regulation, she said the higher phone rates are resulting in "further isolation, fewer outside connections and broken families," according to a written copy of her remarks.
Ulandis Forte, who attended Wednesday's news conference, said his grandmother's phone calls were his lifeline while he served an 18-year sentence in various prisons that ended 10 months ago. He declined to say why he was incarcerated.
"It was everything. That's what I looked forward to. It was my support system. She gave me support. She gave me love," said Forte, 39. He said he found a job nine days after leaving prison and continues to hold a job today, in construction.
Forte said he takes full responsibility for ending up in prison. But he said it was unjust that his grandmother, now 87, had to pay such high phone bills.
"She's the one who had to pick up the phone and fight with, you know, can she afford to talk to me," Forte said, fighting back tears.
Forte's grandmother, Martha Wright, filed a petition in 2003 with the Federal Communications Commission over the phone rates. She filed a second petition in 2007.
"I do wish the people would be able to fix it so Christmas, Valentine and Mother's Days the boys and girls would be able to have a call, a free call because a lot of them don't have money to call their parents," said Wright, who sat in a wheelchair at the news conference. She said when she tried to call her grandson to tell him his mother had died, she couldn't get through to him for several days.
Her two petitions followed a class-action lawsuit she filed in 2000 with inmates and former inmates of Corrections Corporation of America against the private prison company regarding phone services and the charges. The U.S District Court for the District of Columbia dismissed the suit and directed those involved to petition the Federal Communications Commission.
___
Follow Suzanne Gamboa on Twitter: https://twitter.com/APsgamboa .
___
Online:
http://www.fcc.gov/
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/federal-government-reviewing-prison-phone-charges-210916700--politics.html
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MADRID, April 25 (Reuters) - Liverpool goalkeeper Pepe Reina said the 10-match ban given to his team mate Luis Suarez for biting an opponent was 'absurd' and 'excessive'. Uruguay international Suarez was punished on Wednesday by the English Football Association (FA) after he bit the arm of Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovic at the weekend. "He knows he is in the wrong, and that it was a mistake, but the 10-game punishment seems absurd to me, excessive and unfair," Spanish international Reina was quoted as telling radio station Cadena Cope by sports daily AS on Thursday. ...
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/t-mobile-blackberry-q10-available-preorder-beginning-april-222047555.html
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When a team of University of Illinois engineers set out to grow nanowires of a compound semiconductor on top of a sheet of graphene, they did not expect to discover a new paradigm of epitaxy.
The self-assembled wires have a core of one composition and an outer layer of another, a desired trait for many advanced electronics applications. Led by professor Xiuling Li, in collaboration with professors Eric Pop and Joseph Lyding, all professors of electrical and computer engineering, the team published its findings in the journal Nano Letters.
Nanowires, tiny strings of semiconductor material, have great potential for applications in transistors, solar cells, lasers, sensors and more.
"Nanowires are really the major building blocks of future nano-devices," said postdoctoral researcher Parsian Mohseni, first author of the study. "Nanowires are components that can be used, based on what material you grow them out of, for any functional electronics application."
Li's group uses a method called van der Waals epitaxy to grow nanowires from the bottom up on a flat substrate of semiconductor materials, such as silicon. The nanowires are made of a class of materials called III-V (three-five), compound semiconductors that hold particular promise for applications involving light, such as solar cells or lasers.
The group previously reported growing III-V nanowires on silicon. While silicon is the most widely used material in devices, it has a number of shortcomings. Now, the group has grown nanowires of the material indium gallium arsenide (InGaAs) on a sheet of graphene, a 1-atom-thick sheet of carbon with exceptional physical and conductive properties.
Thanks to its thinness, graphene is flexible, while silicon is rigid and brittle. It also conducts like a metal, allowing for direct electrical contact to the nanowires. Furthermore, it is inexpensive, flaked off from a block of graphite or grown from carbon gases.
"One of the reasons we want to grow on graphene is to stay away from thick and expensive substrates," Mohseni said. "About 80 percent of the manufacturing cost of a conventional solar cell comes from the substrate itself. We've done away with that by just using graphene. Not only are there inherent cost benefits, we're also introducing functionality that a typical substrate doesn't have."
The researchers pump gases containing gallium, indium and arsenic into a chamber with a graphene sheet. The nanowires self-assemble, growing by themselves into a dense carpet of vertical wires across the surface of the graphene. Other groups have grown nanowires on graphene with compound semiconductors that only have two elements, but by using three elements, the Illinois group made a unique finding: The InGaAs wires grown on graphene spontaneously segregate into an indium arsenide (InAs) core with an InGaAs shell around the outside of the wire.
"This is unexpected," Li said. "A lot of devices require a core-shell architecture. Normally you grow the core in one growth condition and change conditions to grow the shell on the outside. This is spontaneous, done in one step. The other good thing is that since it's a spontaneous segregation, it produces a perfect interface."
So what causes this spontaneous core-shell structure? By coincidence, the distance between atoms in a crystal of InAs is nearly the same as the distance between whole numbers of carbon atoms in a sheet of graphene. So, when the gases are piped into the chamber and the material begins to crystallize, InAs settles into place on the graphene, a near-perfect fit, while the gallium compound settles on the outside of the wires. This was unexpected, because normally, with van der Waals epitaxy, the respective crystal structures of the material and the substrate are not supposed to matter.
"We didn't expect it, but once we saw it, it made sense," Mohseni said.
In addition, by tuning the ratio of gallium to indium in the semiconductor cocktail, the researchers can tune the optical and conductive properties of the nanowires.
Next, Li's group plans to make solar cells and other optoelectronic devices with their graphene-grown nanowires. Thanks to both the wires' ternary composition and graphene's flexibility and conductivity, Li hopes to integrate the wires in a broad spectrum of applications.
"We basically discovered a new phenomenon that confirms that registry does count in van der Waals epitaxy," Li said.
###
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: http://www.uiuc.edu
Thanks to University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for this article.
This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.
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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127884/Nanowires_grown_on_graphene_have_surprising_structure
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I?d like to share a little something from our latest cookbook, Gluten-Free Girl Every Day, which arrives on store shelves on Monday. (Eep!) This is how the book?opens.
WELCOME TO OUR?KITCHEN
?Come on?in.
We?re making grilled anchovies with avocado and ginger-scallion sauce. See the 5 little kids over there at the table? They?re shaping the sticky rice into little boats. Yep, there?s rice all over the floor. We?ll get that later. Here in the kitchen, Danny and our friends, Tami and Alejandra, are slicing strawberries while I pat the dough for shortcake into a smooth round. Cutting out biscuits is one of my favorite actions. So soothing. We?re laughing and drinking iced tea. Now Lucy is telling Johnny to not play with her toys. Josie and Cisco go outside to unearth the dirt from the pots of herbs. The baby needs feeding. The wailing begins. Hey kids, it?s time to?eat!
They pile into the kitchen and I hand them little packages of sticky rice, bits of anchovy, slices of avocado and drips of ginger-scallion sauce. Everyone goes quiet. Each kid wants another one. Raena eats 4. For a few moments, the sun is shining through the window, the kids are happy and chewing, and all is right with the world. Mayhem will ensue again but this moment is?still.
This is why I love cooking so much. A good meal can change someone?s day. Cooking is the most deeply creative act with the most practical application.
I came to cooking later in life than I did writing. From the time I could clutch a pen, I started forming words and trying to turn them into sentences that made sense. There were so many poor poems and wretched short stories on the way to essays that weren?t too terrible. It?s said that it takes 10,000 hours of doing something to become quite competent at it. Not a genius ? just good. I?ve put in those hours in writing and I?m planning on 10,000 more. And while I love the grateful responses I sometimes get from people who read my books, I love the act of writing even more. It?s hard, slogging work, putting words on the page like laying down bricks and hoping they?re not too lopsided. I love this?work.
But cooking? Cooking?s much more fun. Cooking can be deeply contemplative, if you have an empty house, a clean kitchen, and an entire afternoon to make that complex bread recipe. Does that happen often in my life anymore? Not often. Usually, the counters are covered in vegetables we just brought home from the farmers? market. They all need washing and slicing and putting away. Danny just got an idea to make a soup he hadn?t made since culinary school 20 years ago. And our 3-year-old daughter, Lucy, wants me to play Candyland with her at the same time she?s saying, ?But I?m so very hungry, Mama.? Time for food.?Now.
Real cooking rarely looks like it belongs in the pages of a glossy food magazine. I discover that I?ve run out of onions ? how did we run out of onions? ? when I?m about to make a big pot of tortilla soup. Fishing through the spice cupboard for the onion powder I bought for these kinds of emergencies, I?m reminded again that I really should come up with some sort of system for keeping the spices organized. Oh man, I left the skillet on and it?s smoking. Honey, what did you say? You want to watch the Wiggles? Not right now,?okay?
Like most people, I dream of a spacious white kitchen with an island made of reclaimed wood, open shelves with matching dishes, and countertops that gleam. But you know what?s wrong with those kitchens? Nobody?s cooking in them. If you cook, you make a mess. You clean it up so you can cook again and make another mess. It?s an endless cycle, one that I?ve learned to complete most days. But I?m willing to admit that there are nights I?m too tired to do the dishes again and leave them for the?morning.
I?d rather have dirty dishes than give up?cooking.
For me (and my husband and our friends and probably for you who are reading), cooking is a way of connecting with the people I love. Slicing garlic and ginger releases their scents into the air ? hours later I can still smell them on my hands. I know I?ve done something good. Taking the time to mix together tamari, rice wine vinegar, dry sherry, and sesame oil, then nestling the pieces of chicken breast I chopped up just before, then letting the bowl sit by the stove for awhile, means that our dinner will be full of big flavors. Sometimes cooking is about waiting. Slicing the Napa cabbage and putting a pile of it on the plate, ready for the hot wok, gives an order to my day. This, at least, I can?do.
Mostly, though, cooking is what leads us to the table. Danny and Lucy and I sit at the table, talking, watching the steam rise off our plates of chicken stir-fry. We each say something that has made us grateful for the day. We raise our glasses in the air and clink. (Lucy loves saying CHEERS!) We take a moment to say how happy we are to be there. And then we dive?in.
In the end, cooking is about the?eating.?
That?s a little about how we cook and eat around here. Lucy?s 4 now, almost 5. ?(We started writing this book when she was 2. Goodness!) She?s more involved in the cooking now, very invested in making up her own recipes, and a great eater. We?ve worked hard to encourage her to say please and thank you, to ask to be excused from the table, and to take her plate to the kitchen when she?s done with her meal. She does those things, now. She also leaves a trail of food in her wake. Sometimes she has to get up to dance, forgetting her food. There are nights that dinner is a bit of a struggle. And then there are nights that we play the gratitude game (?Tonight I am grateful for??) and she joins in with gusto. I was particularly happy the night she said: ?I am grateful for Hermione Gingold and k.d.?lang!?
Nothing?s perfect around here. There are still dishes left to be done before we go to bed, sometimes. It?s easier now that Lucy?s older, and Danny works at home with me. Still, there are nights that it just feels like too much. The only thing that really matters to us is that we?re at the table together, gathered, eating and talking. And sometimes reading Curious George books.
But us? You hear about us here all the time. We want to hear about you.
We?re really proud of our latest cookbook, Gluten-Free Girl Every Day. It?s a cookbook full of interesting, approachable weeknight dinners. The line we?re using because it feels so right: it?s a cookbook for busy families who still love to cook. However, we really don?t feel comfortable asking people to say how great our cookbook is. We?d love your help with this instead: we want to spark a national conversation about family dinner.
What?s your family dinner really like? Is it calm and filled with gratitude? Or chaos and food on the floor? What?s your definition of family? Do you have fond memories of dinners with your family as a child, or not so much? What do you hope your kids (or partner or friends) will remember about the family dinners you create? Is food a gathering place or a battleground in your house? Do you enjoy the daily ritual or dread?it?
A few years ago, I inadvertently sparked a pie-baking day by talking about making pie with some of my friends on Twitter. The Pie Party of 2011 became a worldwide event, with hundreds of people baking pie on the same day and sharing their photos of homemade pie in blog posts and on social media. We?d like this to feel like the pie party: inclusive, narrative, and a great deal of?fun.
So, if you want to play along, write a post on your blog on Monday about family dinner in your house. If you would, you could link to our cookbook in your?post.
Here are three places people can buy the book?online:
Amazon ? http://www.amazon.com/Gluten-Free-Every-Shauna-James-Ahern/dp/111811521X
Barnes & Noble ? http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/gluten-free-girl-every-day-shauna-james-ahern/1113611802
Indie Bound ? http://www.indiebound.org/book/9781118115213
And then let us know about your post by leaving a comment here on this post, or putting a link up to it on Twitter, using the hashtag #familydinner. You could also put up a piece on your Facebook page, either a professional page if you have one, or your own personal page. You could put a link to someone else?s post you like on Twitter, Facebook, or Google+. Or post a photo of your family dinner on Monday, maybe even with a copy of our book on your table, on Instagram. There are a lot of ways to play along. We just hope you?do.
Have you ever driven around in the early evening, headed home and looking into the houses of the people you pass? My favorite time is dinner time, watching families sitting down to the table or cooking in the kitchen together. I imagine that the dozens (or hundreds!) of posts we could read on Monday will be like that. Will you invite us into your home on Monday??
To make cooking that dinner easier for you, and to entice you to buy our book, we?re giving you four recipes from?our latest cookbook, Gluten-Free Girl Every Day, here. For?free.
We?ve included:
chickpea stew with brown basmati rice
South African yellow rice with black-eyed peas
roasted chicken salad with apples, golden raisins, and tarragon
grilled salmon with lemon-jalapeno-bok choy?relish
(We wanted to give you the chocolate chip cookies with hazelnuts, but our editor insisted you would have to buy the book for that?one.)
Click on this link below to pull up the PDF with the four recipes and photographs from our latest cookbook, Gluten-Free Girl Every Day.
Four Recipes from Gluten-Free Girl Every?Day
So that?s it. We?d love to hear about your family dinners. (I have a feeling that most of them are imperfect. It might make us feel better to hear that your house is imperfect too.) Post on Monday. Let your people know about our latest cookbook, Gluten-Free Girl Every Day. Let us know about your?dinners.
We can?t wait to see what you?create.
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