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PlayStation Nation – “Long Live Play” Celebrates YOU

Hello PlayStation Nation, Early last month, with some ambiguity, we announced that we were looking for a few good gamers to assist us with a special assignment related to our freshly launched Long Live Play campaign. Long Live Play honors gamers from all walks of life and recognizes you for making PlayStation who we are today. We asked members of the PlayStation Nation to email us with pictures of… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : PlayStation.Blog Discovery Date : 05/10/2011 14:50 Number of articles : 4

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Nobel Prize in Chemistry for dogged work on ‘impossible’ quasicrystals

Daniel Shechtman, who has won the chemistry Nobel for discovering quasicrystals, was initially lambasted for ‘bringing disgrace’ on his research group A scientist whose work was so controversial he was ridiculed and asked to leave his research group has won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry . Daniel Shechtman , 70, a researcher at Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, received the award for discovering seemingly impossible crystal structures in frozen gobbets of metal that resembled the beautiful patterns seen in Islamic mosaics. Images of the metals showed their atoms were arranged in a way that broke well-establised rules of how crystals formed, a finding that fundamentally altered how chemists view solid matter. In addition to the kudos of the award, Shechtman receives 10 million Swedish kronor (£934,000). Crystallised materials are normally made up of “unit cells” of atoms that repeat over and over to make a single, uniform structure. This kind of crystal structure makes graphite a good lubricant, for example, because it can cleave easily across certain planes of weakness. On the morning of 8 April 1982, Shechtman saw something quite different while gazing at electron microscope images of a rapidly cooled metal alloy. The atoms were packed in a pattern that could not be repeated. Shechtman said to himself in Hebrew, “Eyn chaya kazo,” which means “There can be no such creature.” The bizarre structures are now known as “quasicrystals” and have been seen in a wide variety of materials. Their uneven structure means they do not have obvious cleavage planes, making them particularly hard. “His discovery was extremely controversial. In the course of defending his findings, he was asked to leave his research group,” the Nobel committee at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in a statement. “However, his battle eventually forced scientists to reconsider their conception of the very nature of matter … Scientists are currently experimenting with using quasicrystals in different products such as frying pans and diesel engines.” In an interview this year with the Israeli newspaper, Haaretz, Shechtman said: “People just laughed at me.” He recalled how Linus Pauling, a colossus of science and a double Nobel laureate, mounted a frightening “crusade” against him. After telling Shechtman to go back and read a crystallography textbook, the head of his research group asked him to leave for “bringing disgrace” on the team. “I felt rejected,” Shachtman said. The existence of quasicrystals, though controversial, was anticipated much earlier, but Shechtman was the first to see them in nature. The 16th century astronomer Johannes Kepler drew quasicrystal-like patterns in his book Mysterium Cosmographicum. In the 1970s, Sir Roger Penrose, the Oxford University mathematical physicist, created “aperiodic” tiling patterns that never repeated themselves, work that he suspects was inspired by Kepler’s drawings. “I once asked Shechtman if he knew about my tilings when he saw the things he saw. He said he did, but that he didn’t have them in mind when he was looking at them,” Penrose told the Guardian. “I think it was rather similar to my experience with Kepler’s patterns. Probably he was influenced unconsciously.” Penrose’s own contribution to the field led some scientists to suggest he might himself be a contender for the Nobel prize. “Some people have said that, but I was a bit doubtful that would happen. Shechtman was the first person to see these things and it took a while to come around to the view that the things that were seen were the same kind of patterns I’d produced about 10 years earlier,” he said. While the patterns were beautiful and fundamentally interesting, Penrose said he was not aware of any very successful commercial applications. Though quasicrystal frying pan coatings exist, he said: “I am not sure they are terribly effective. I believe they interact with egg.” Astrid Graslund , professor of biophysics at Stockholm University and secretary for the Nobel Committee for Chemistry, conceded: “The practical applications are, as of now, not so many. But the material has unexpected properties. It is very strong, it has hardly any friction on the surface, it doesn’t want to react with anything, [it] cannot oxidize and become rusty.” David Phillips, president of the Royal Society of Chemistry , said: “Quasicrystals are a fascinating aspect of chemical and material science – crystals that break all the rules of being a crystal at all. You can normally explain in simple terms where in a crystal each atom sits – they are very symmetrical. With quasicrystals, that symmetry is broken: there are regular patterns in the structure, but never repeating.” He added: “They’re quite beautiful, and have potential applications in protective alloys and coatings. The award of the Nobel Prize to Danny Shechtman is a celebration of fundamental research.” Nobel prizes Science prizes People in science Chemistry Israel United States Ian Sample guardian.co.uk

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Syria sanctions: ‘outraged’ US seeks fresh resolution after double veto blow

US envoy says America will not rest until UN security council meets its responsibilities after Russia and China veto draft The UN security council is expected to seek a fresh resolution on Syria after Russia and China on Tuesday night vetoed a draft that threatened sanctions, a security council source said. The veto by Russia, which was supported by China, provoked the biggest verbal explosion from the US at the UN for years, with its ambassador Susan Rice expressing “outrage” over the move by Moscow and Beijing. Rice also walked out of the security council, the first such demonstration in recent years. While walkouts are common at the UN general assembly, they are rare in the security council. The US, France and Britain are planning to bring a new resolution at the first opportunity. The security council source said that similar vetoes in the past had killed off attempts to intervene in crises ranging from Zimbabwe to Georgia, but this time it was different. “It will not go away,” the source said. “It will not be next week. We don’t have a date. But there are a number of ways the security council can get back to this.” Further civil unrest in Syria would offer an opportunity, as would a request by the Arab League for intervention. Diplomats at the UN cannot recall an episode during the Obama administration in which the US has been so markedly critical of Russia. The vote was 9-2 in favour, with four abstentions: South Africa, India, Brazil and the Lebanon. The resolution reflects the shift in US policy, which began with hopes that Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president, might be open to negotiation. But those hopes have gradually been abandoned by all senior figures in the US foreign policy establishment. Rice, who before joining the Obama administration established a reputation as an outspoken critic of the failure of the west to intervene in humanitarian crises round the world, said after the vote: “The United States is outraged that this council has utterly failed to address an urgent moral challenge and a growing threat to regional peace and security.” Without naming Russia and China – but making it clear they were the target of her words – she said: “Let there be no doubt: this is not about military intervention. This is not about Libya. That is a cheap ruse by those who would rather sell arms to the Syrian regime than stand with the Syrian people.” She added: “This is about whether this council, during a time of sweeping change in the Middle East, will stand with peaceful protesters crying out for freedom, or with a regime of thugs with guns that tramples human dignity and human rights. As matters now stand, this council will not even mandate the dispatch of human rights monitors to Syria – a grave failure that may doom the prospects for peaceful protest in the face of a regime that knows no limits.” Rice accused Russia and China of looking the other way as attempts at a peaceful settlement have been spurned by Assad. The international community now had to bring “real consequences” to bear, she said. “In failing to adopt the draft resolution before us, this council has squandered an opportunity to shoulder its responsibilities to the Syrian people. We deeply regret that some members of the council have prevented us from taking a principled stand against the Syrian regime’s brutal oppression of its people.” She said the US will not rest until the council meets its responsibilities. The resolution had been weakened considerably since the original text was circulated to the 15 security council members in early August seeking to impose sanctions. The draft resolution on Tuesday only said the security council would “consider its options” in 30 days’ time if Assad failed to stop the violence, and would seek a peaceful settlement of the crisis. It said the options would include sanctions. To further water down the resolution in an attempt to make it more acceptable to Russia and China, there was no hint of military intervention. As well as expressing outrage over the veto, Rice walked out of the security council when Syria, exercising its right to speak, accused the US of backing genocide against the Palestinians. The Russian ambassador to the UN, Vitaly Churkin, insisted Moscow did not support Assad, and opposed the resolution because it was confrontational, amounting to an ultimatum on sanctions. Russia is still smarting from the way the US, Britain and France used a UN resolution on Libya as cover for intervention on scale that Moscow insists the resolution never envisaged. The British ambassador to the UN, Mark Lyall Grant, said the draft resolution contained nothing any member of the council should have felt a need to oppose. “Yet two members chose to veto. It will be a deep disappointment to the people of Syria and to the wider region,” he said. United Nations Syria United States Russia China US foreign policy Middle East Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

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Europeans Slam UN Failure to Agree on Syria

European countries were criticizing Tuesday night’s failure at the UN to agree on confronting Syrian unrest. Some vowed to press ahead with sanctions against Damascus despite Russia and China blocking a resolution in the Security Council. (Oct. 5)

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Chris Christie 2012 Decision: New Jersey Governor Will Not Run For President (VIDEO)

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie announced on Tuesday that he will not run for the Republican presidential nomination in 2012 at a press conference in his home state. “Now is not my time,” said Christie in explaining his decision. He quipped, “New Jersey, whether you like it or not, you’re stuck with me.” The New Jersey Republican added, “The deciding factor was that it did not feel right in my gut to leave now when the job is not finished.” While Christie has vehemently denied he could launch a campaign for the White House over the last year, speculation swirling over the prospect the big name Republican could jump into the race reached a fever pitch last week. HuffPost’s Jon Ward reported that a speech delivered by Christie at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library almost seemed like an audition for a potential run. On Tuesday, Christie said he felt an “obligation” to consider advice coming from members of the Republican party urging him to get into the race. “Over the last few weeks, I’ve thought long and hard about this decision,” he said. Christie signaled that he’s not prepared to make an endorsement in the GOP primary race at this time. He said, however, that he’ll ultimately stand behind the contender that gives his party the strongest chance at defeating President Barack Obama in 2012. The Republican governor also addressed the prospect he could be tapped as a running mate by one of the candidates vying for his party’s presidential nomination. “I don’t think there’s anybody in America who would think my personality is best suited to be number two,” he said. Below, a video mash-up capturing the build-up of speculation on Christie’s political ambitions. WATCH:

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D.C.-area millionaires who want their taxes raised are “lonely at the top,” a small minority among the nation's millionaires who are worried about economic collapse and literal class warfare if their taxes aren't hiked, insists Washington Post staff writer David Fahrenthold. While you'd expect such a story in the A-section, perhaps among the business pages, Fahrenthold's 31-paragraph feature on the District's “Patriotic Millionaires” made the front page of today's Style section. Limousine liberal guilt about wealth creation is apparently stylish to the Post. “It's the millionaire who's worried,” about financial collapse and proletarian uprising, Fahrenthold explains, citing area millionaires who believe that somehow raising their taxes will stave off an economic collapse and/or massive social unrest that turns violent: The Patriotic Millionaire is standing in his $2.5

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It’s not TV: it’s Nottv, Japan’s new Smartphone-only TV station

Japanese mobile users hankering after short bursts of original video will soon gain access to Nottv, a platform designed to capitalize on the nation’s love of smartphones as well as its now empty analog TV frequencies. The service is different to Japan’s other smartphone-TV network, One-Seg , which just relays terrestrial broadcasts to your mobile device — not least because it lets you share snarky ripostes after watching a clip. It’s backed by the country’s major channels as well as NTT DoCoMo and it just needs the heavy rubber stamp of governmental approval before you can start hunting down condensed editions of Takeshi’s Castle from April 2012. It’s not TV: it’s Nottv, Japan’s new Smartphone-only TV station originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Oct 2011 11:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Omaima Nelson

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Omaima Nelson

black widow Jane_Sanders2 says: Omaima Nelson , Woman Who Killed And Cooked Her Newlywed Husband, Seeks Parole http://t.co/lvbgXH3o

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Kate Winslet 36th Birthday And Divorce

humorfeast says: Humor Feast: Kate Winslet 36th birthday and divorce http://t.co/n1fMcePt via @ humorfeast

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Mitt Romney, speaking at one of Florida’s biggest senior citizen communities yesterday, assured his elderly audience that Social Security is safe—despite Rick Perry. The Texas governor, in a book published last year, called Social Security a “Ponzi scheme” because of its funding problems. “I think Social Security has worked…

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