Thursday

Chocolate fashion, design show dazzles in Paris


Dazzling chocolate sculptures are dominating the 20th annual Salon du Chocolat show in Paris, held at the Chateau de Versailles.

A four-meter-high chocolate King Kong made by French chocolate company JeanPaul Hevin stole the show, thanks to its true-to-life appearance.

"It originated from the King Kong movie. It took dozens of sculptors about two months to accomplish this sculpture," said sculptor Richard Orlinski.

Orlinski said it is a challenge for him and his team to finish the giant chocolate gorilla due to the unstable temperature.

At the other side of the exhibition hall, a design called "chocolate waltz" with vibrating liquid chocolate highlighted the show.

"Actually, the movement of this design is showed in two aspects. First, the vibration creates different shapes of chocolate; second, the chocolate colors in different zones are not the same, thus showing various of pattens and able to change constantly," said designer Romain Duclos.

Not only chocolate, pastry, sweets and other confectionery food are being showcased at the salon.

The exhibition is expected to be attended by almost 13,000 participants, according to the organizers. It opened on Wednesday and will run until Sunday. — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Wednesday

Google seeks way to search bodies for disease


SAN FRANCISCO - Google is exploring a way to search inside people's bodies for early signs of deadly illnesses such as cancer or heart disease.

A Life Sciences team at the special projects Google X Lab are experimenting with having "nanoparticles" hunt for signs of medical trouble in bloodstreams and then essentially report findings to sensors people could wear.

"This is still early-stage research, but we've done a number of promising experiments, so we're going to keep going," Google said in a description of the project made public Tuesday.

Imagined applications include a test for enzymes given off by arterial plaques that are about to rupture and cause a heart attack or stroke, or a way to watch for cancer cells after surgery or chemo treatments.

Early detection is known to dramatically increase chances of successfully treating a number of life-threatening diseases.

Batches of specially crafted nanoparticles, each microscopic in size, could be swallowed in pills and then absorbed into bloodstreams where they would stick to targeted cells such as cancer.

Magnetic qualities designed into nanoparticles allow them to be drawn to worn devices and counted using non-invasive detection methods such as light or radio waves, according to Google.

If successful, the technology could "help physicians detect a disease that's starting to develop in the body," the California-based technology titan said.

Google said that it would license the technology to companies interested in using it for medically approved diagnostics.

Google Life Sciences team innovations include contact lenses that measure glucose levels in tears to allow people with diabetes to track blood sugar, and eating utensils that cancel out trembling hands caused by diseases such as Parkinsons.

Google also last year formed a company called Calico with a mission to address problems of health and aging by harnessing advanced technologies.  — Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

Sunday

New commander takes over US Ebola mission in West Africa


WASHINGTON — A new commander on Saturday took over the US military mission to combat Ebola in West Africa, the Pentagon said.

In Monrovia, Major General Gary Volesky of the US Army 101st Division took command of troops that are part of Washington's effort to counter the deadly outbreak, a Defense Department statement said.

West Africa is the epicenter of the outbreak that has killed nearly 5,000 people.

"Just 38 days ago, Major General Darryl Williams arrived in Liberia to form an advance detachment in his capacity as commanding general, US Army Africa prior to the formal establishment of this Joint Forces Command," the statement said.

"In this short period, our service members, under his leadership, have made great advances in establishing command and control capabilities for this effort including lines of communication over very rough terrain."

The mission has helped expand lab work, and a 25-bed hospital is due to be operational in early November according to the statement.

"In addition, construction of the first Ebola Treatment Unit (ETU) at Tubmanburg is nearing completion," it said, adding that two more were to follow.

Meanwhile in Senegal an intermediate staging base and transport hub is being set up in Dakar, and the contracted vessel M/V Vega arrived in the area this week with around 700 containers of support equipment.

Some 700 US service members are now deployed to West Africa, including nearly 600 in Liberia and 100 in Senegal. In coming weeks, that could grow to more than 3,900. — Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

Having problems with Bitly? You’re not alone


Having problems accessing some sites using the bit.ly URL shortener? You're not alone.

For several hours Saturday, sites or pages referred by bit.ly were blocked by Google and even on Mozilla's Firefox browser, though Bitly said the issue has been resolved.

"We are aware of some intermittent issues with Chrome + Firefox. Our team is investigating the issue to solve ASAP!" Bitly said on its Twitter account Saturday night, PHL time.

It said it was "incorrectly listed" in Google Safebrowsing, which caused users to receive a malware warning.

But it maintained the issue "has been resolved."

It added no data or Bitlinks had been compromised.

Google's diagnostic page for bit.ly indicated the site "is not currently listed as suspicious."

But it said part of the site was listed for suspicious activity 31 times over the past 90 days.

"Of the 91856 pages we tested on the site over the past 90 days, 721 page(s) resulted in malicious software being downloaded and installed without user consent. The last time Google visited this site was on (Oct. 25), and the last time suspicious content was found on this site was on 2014-10-25," it said.

It said the malicious software includes 200 Trojan(s), 187 exploit(s), 151 scripting exploit(s). "Successful infection resulted in an average of three new process(es) on the target machine," it said.

Tech site The Next Web said the fact that Google was not alone in blocking the links, "this suggests that there could be something a little more malicious going on from Bitly’s side, with a higher-than-usual number of miscreant sites using Bit.ly links to trick internet users." — Joel Locsin /LBG, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Thursday

Yosemite is watching your online habits and sending them to Apple


Privacy-conscious users of Apple desktops and laptops, beware. The latest version of OS X may send your user location and Safari search results to none other than Apple.

A report on The Hacker News said OS X 10.10 (Yosemite) sends such data to Apple's remote servers by default, when the user sends queries via the Spotlight desktop search tool.

"The same data Apple collects from the users' searched term on Spotlight will also be forwarded to Microsoft's Bing search engine as Apple freely admits in its terms of service," it said.

But it also noted Apple itself had disclosed this on its "About Spotlight and Privacy" document.

It also said that if Location Services is turned on, search queries to Spotlight will send the location of a user's device at that time to Apple.

But The Hacker News said Apple has advised users who don't want their data collected to turn off Spotlight Suggestions and Bing Web searches in System Preferences.

On the other hand, THN said Spotlight does not use a persistent identifier, "so a user's search history can't be created by Apple or anyone else."

It added Apple devices only use a temporary anonymous session ID for a 15-minute period "before the ID is discarded." — Joel Locsin/TJD, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Tuesday

Microsoft makes next XBox One Twitter-friendly


The next iteration of Microsoft's Xbox One gaming console will play nice with Twitter.

In a November update, Microsoft's Major Nelson said this is one of the new features rolled out for the Xbox One preview program.

"You can now share your favorite Xbox One game clips with your followers on Twitter. Use the Share button on any game clip you have created and select Twitter to compose the Tweet," he said.

With the new Live TV and Twitter integration, Microsoft said users can "discover new shows to love and see what people are saying on Twitter about shows in real-time."

Microsoft is also bringing to the Xbox One a most-requested feature - the ability to customize one's Xbox One background.

Another feature is the ability to share some favorite achievements and game clips.

"For the first time, each account on your Xbox One can have a customized background.  You can choose a custom color or achievement art as your background on Xbox One, with more customization options coming down the road," Major Nelson said.

Gamers can also share location and bio as part of their profile, while using Xbox One SmartGlass to browse to other people’s profiles and check their showcase items.

They can also select showcase items displayed when other gamers look at their profiles on an Xbox One console.

Live TV trending

For preview members in the US, Canada and the UK, there will be a new tab in OneGuide showing the top 20 most watched TV shows.

"The Live TV Trending list is updated by the minute, so you can easily discover shows that are popular with other viewers. The Trending tab in OneGuide is updated to display Twitter - Live TV trending first and Xbox – Live TV Trending second. You can tune to a specific show by pressing the A button," Microsoft said.

But that's not all with Twitter integration: another new feature allows users to see what Live TV is trending based on shows with the most conversations taking place on Twitter. The feature is initially available in the US.

On the other hand, the Trending tab in OneGuide can also display Live TV Trending.

Tweets will also be available in MiniGuide along with Recents and Favorites.

Store, smartglass updates
 

Improvements have been made to the Store pages on Xbox One to quickly browse and find content and game add-ons.

Store categories have also been standardized "so you can easily see the top items in each query at a glance," Microsoft said.

Also on SmartGlass, users can see friends’ game activity.

Gamers with an Xbox Live Gold subscription can browse “Free Games with Gold” and discounted content with Gold, and download the content to their Xbox One consoles from their mobile devices.

Meanwhile, a new section for Apps will make it easier to find and download apps for the Xbox One.

IE updates

Updates are also coming to the Internet Explorer browser, including snapping from a full screen experience and moving IE into snap mode.

Also updated is the Preview dashboard app, which now adds a user's stats and leaderboard. — Joel Locsin/VC, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Monday

Medication mistakes common among young children – US study


NEW YORK - Roughly every eight minutes from 2002 through 2012, a child in the US experienced a medication mistake, according to a new study of calls to poison control hotlines.

The number and rate of reported medication mistakes rose during the 11-year study, except for cough and cold medicines, the researchers report in the journal Pediatrics.

The reduction in mistakes with cough and cold medicines follows a multipronged campaign to decrease the use of these products among young children, which suggests education is helpful in reducing errors, Henry Spiller, one of the study’s authors, told Reuters Health.

“We think that multipronged effort had an effect,” said Spiller, director of the Central Ohio Poison Center at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus. “We can see a drop associated with these efforts.”

Medication errors can cause injury, increased healthcare spending and even death, the researchers write.

Most studies have focused on medication mistakes in healthcare facilities like hospitals. Less is known about mistakes that happen with children’s medicine at home.

For the new study, the researchers used data on medication errors reported among children younger than six years between 2002 through 2012. The data were obtained from the National Poison Database System, which records information on calls made to the 55 US poison control hotlines.

On average, 63,358 children experienced medication errors during each year of the study. Put another way, among every 10,000 young children in the US, there were 27 medication errors each year.

While the vast majority of the cases did not require additional medical attention, 25 children died during the 11 years as a result of medication mistakes.

Over a quarter of the mistakes involved children being given the same medication twice.

The most common mistakes involved pain medications like aspirin. Next most common were mistakes with cough and cold medicines and allergy medicines.

Medication errors became less common as children got older, the researchers found. About a quarter of the mistakes occurred in infants under age one year.

Pause before giving medication 


Spiller said in a phone interview that parents and caregivers should pause for a moment before they administer medications to their children.

“This is when a lot of these medication errors occur—during these distracted periods,” he said, adding that parents should make sure they’re giving the correct medication, the appropriate dose, and not giving a second dose.

“If you just take a moment, you can kind of save that mistake,” he said.

Dr. Huiyun Xiang, the study’s senior author, said there is also a lesson in the reduced number of mistakes among cough and cold medicines following an education campaign.

“A similar case can be made against the routine use in young children of other medications that are frequently associated with errors, like analgesics,” he wrote in an email to Reuters Health.

“Parents and caregivers can do their parts by using smart phone apps to schedule and track medication doses and by using measuring cups provided with liquid medications to give accurate doses,” wrote Xiang, of Nationwide Children’s Hospital, where he directs the Center for Pediatric Trauma Research.

When medication mistakes do occur, Spiller said parents and guardians should call their poison center.

“You’re going to get an expert immediately,” he said. — Reuters

Sunday

iOS 8 messes up AirPrint for iPhones and iPads?


It appears Apple's latest operating system for its mobile devices remains a long way from being polished to perfection.

Some users of iPhones and iPads have complained of problems using iOS 8 to print over WiFi, a tech site reported over the weekend.

Mashable cited discussion threads on Apple forums showing the latest issue involves the AirPrint tool, where print jobs are stalled or simply do not work.

"A commonly reported problem is an error message (URF error) that halts printing. Many users pointed out that AirPrint works with devices still running iOS 7," it said.

It also cited claims that some of the printers listed on Apple's list of accepted models are no longer compatible with AirPrint after the device updated to iOS 8.

Mashable said an Apple representative suggested that users contact AppleCare or set up an appointment with an Apple Genius.

On the other hand, it quoted a comment on a discussion board indicating Apple could fix the problem with its upcoming iOS 8.1. — Joel Locsin /LBG, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Donaire suffers KO loss against Walters


The world featherweight showdown between Nonito Donaire and Nicholas Walters lived up to the hype.

Unfortunately for the Filipino Flash, he was on the wrong end of a career-defining moment, losing a sixth round technical knockout against the hard-hitting Jamaican.

It was the first knockout defeat in the career of Donaire, whose record fell to 33-3.

The win earned Nicholas Walters the WBA world featherweight title after improving his record to 25-0 with 21 knockouts.

After a cautious first round, Donaire started to let his hands go in round two. Walters would stick to his jab but would get clipped and wobbled by a patented Donaire left hook in the last ten seconds.

Donaire had his first real taste of Walters' power in round three. Donaire would rally most of the round but got caught with a right uppercut to the chin that dropped him.

Donaire became passive as blood dripped from a cut on top of his right eye in round four.

The two fighters traded bombs in round five.

But a well-timed right hand to the side of the head of Donaire dropped him face first to the canvass. Referee Raul Caiz Jr. waved the fight at the 2:59 mark of round six.

Compubox numbers saw Walters as the busier and more accurate fighter, landing 85 of his 284 power shots. Donaire on the other hand landed 40 of 169 power shots. — JST, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

NBA modifies instant replay rules


The NBA Board of Governors approved on Thursday (Friday, PHL time) five modifications to the instant replay rules currently in place and three changes on the court.

The alterations take effect starting with Friday's preseason games.

Replay was expanded to include situations where officials are not sure a team had an improper number of players on the court during game action.

Current rules also were modified to allow instant replay review during the final two minutes of overtime rather than the entire overtime period. Replay will continue to be permissible during the final two minutes of the fourth quarter.

Replay now will be used when officials are not certain which team should get possession after the ball goes out of bounds. In the past, officials could only use replay to determine which player caused to ball to go out of bounds. - Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

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source:  moneysavingmadness.com

Friday

Obama open to appointing Ebola ‘czar,’ opposes travel ban


WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama said on Thursday that he was considering appointing an Ebola "czar" to coordinate the fight against the virus in the United States but he remained opposed to a ban on travel from West Africa.

Obama's administration is under growing criticism from lawmakers over its efforts to contain the disease at home. Obama authorized calling up military reservists for the US fight against Ebola in West Africa on Thursday.

US concerns have intensified after two Texas nurses who cared for Liberian patient Thomas Eric Duncan, who died, contracted the virus.

"It may be appropriate for me to appoint an additional person" to oversee efforts to contain Ebola, Obama told reporters after meeting aides involved in the fight against the disease.

Lawmakers have called for a czar and a ban on travel from West Africa. Obama said experts tell him that "a flat-out travel ban is not the way to go" because current screening measures at airports are working.

He said he had no philosophical objection to a travel ban but that some travelers might attempt to enter the United States by avoiding screening measures, which could lead to more Ebola cases, not less, Obama said.

Many House of Representatives members have joined calls for a ban on travel from the hardest-hit West African countries: Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.

Federal Aviation Administration chief Michael Huerta told reporters separately that the government was assessing whether to issue a travel ban "on a day-to-day basis." — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Scarlett Johansson may lead 'Ghost in the Shell' live-action movie

 
From the film adaptation of the Avengers' Black Widow, American actress Scarlett Johanssen is reportedly being eyed to play the heroine in another film adaptation, this time for the Japanese work "Ghost in the Shell."
 
A report on Deadline.com said DreamWorks, which is producing the "Ghost in the Shell" film, is looking at Johansson after talks with original choice Margot Robbie fizzled.
 
"It looked like (Robbie) was going to star in Ghost In The Shell for DreamWorks, but those talks fizzled. I’ve heard DreamWorks has instead made a $10M offer to Scarlett Johansson, whose action price has risen to that level after Lucy and her work as Black Widow," it said.
 
Robbie is reportedly more likely to appear in the film adaptation of "Suicide Squad," it added.
 
A separate article on IGN.com noted the live-action adaptation of "Ghost in the Shell" involves Snow White and the Huntsman's Rupert Sanders as director and Avi Arad (Spider-Man), Steven Paul (Ghost Rider), and Mark Sourian (Need for Speed) as producers.
 
The script is to be from Bill Wheeler.


source: gmanetwork.com

Thursday

Oil prices tumble in Asia


SINGAPORE – Oil prices resumed their downward spiral in Asian trade Thursday following another massive sell-off in equities as traders grow increasingly concerned about the global economic outlook, analysts said.

US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for November delivery fell 90 cents to a two-year low of $80.88 a barrel in late-morning trade. Brent crude for November retreated 43 cents to $83.35, levels last seen four years ago.

Both contracts have lost more than a fifth of their value since hitting 2014 highs in June.

Markets across Asia sank on Thursday, led by Tokyo, as a disappointing set of US data fanned worries that the effects of a slowdown in China, Europe and Japan are being felt in the world's top economy.

Traders took their lead from New York and Europe, where stocks and the dollar sank.

"WTI and Brent continued to open in red," Phillip Futures said in a market commentary. "With the current bearish conditions for crude oil, we expect this to continue," it said.

A rebound in Asian trade Wednesday failed to gain traction as it was overwhelmed by negative sentiment in the face of waning demand in China, the world's biggest energy consumer, and the eurozone.

Adding to the pain is a supply glut caused by strong US production of shale gas and a return of Libyan oil on to the market after facilities that were closed due to civil unrest resumed operations.

Members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) are also maintaining output levels, while slashing prices to gain market share, analysts said.

Investors are awaiting the release later Thursday of weekly US crude inventories -- a closely watched barometer of demand and supply in the world's top oil consuming nation.

Phillip Futures said it expects prices for the US-centric WTI contract to remain supported at $80 for the rest of the day, but it was harder to plot a floor for Brent, which is more linked to the international market. – Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

Last-resort leukemia treatment produces dramatic remission rate


NEW YORK - Ninety percent of people facing death because conventional treatments had failed to destroy their leukemia have responded to an experimental therapy that trains their cells to kill out-of-control blood cells, doctors in Philadelphia report.

Twenty seven of the 25 children and 5 adults initially responded to the new therapy. Nineteen - including a 9-year-old treated two and a half years ago - have remained cancer-free and 15 of those 19 have not receive any subsequent therapy.

"We're astonished how well it turned out," senior author Dr. Stephan Grupp of Children's Hospital of Philadelphia told Reuters Health. Doctors are often happy if a treatment can improve the remission rate by 3 percent to 5 percent. "In our wildest dreams, we didn't think it would work as well as it did for the patients we've treated so far," Grupp said.

"It's equally impressive in both the adult and pediatric population," said Dr. Noelle Frey of the University of Pennsylvania, who directed the adult portion of the study.

"These are patients where the chances of cure are close to zero, if not zero," she said. "This is a therapy that not only gives hope, but is also correlated with tremendous success."

The treatment results, reported in the New England Journal of Medicine, are part of a broader effort to reprogram the cells of cancer patients so they reproduce rapidly and attack the rogue cells responsible for tumors.

"If this has curative potential - which we don't know yet, but seems to be the case - it's a game changer," said Dr. Michael Sadelain of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, part of a separate team that previously used the technique to produce complete remissions in 14 out of 16 adults who had acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) of a stage "where nobody would go into complete remission."

"The good news is, this therapy can work just as well in children as it was reported to do in adults," he told Reuters Health.

In the Philadelphia study, other treatments - as many as four - had failed in the 30 patients. Conventional therapy typically cures 80 percent to 85 percent of children with ALL and those children "don't need this," said Grupp. "The other 15 percent or so are candidates for this."

Adults with ALL are tougher to treat, "so 50 percent or more might need this," he said.

In July, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration gave the treatment, known as CTL019, a Breakthrough Therapy designation designed to expedite its development for ALL.

The Philadelphia researchers have also been experimenting with CTL019 for chronic lymphocytic leukemia and Hodgkin's lymphoma,. The remission rates in those tests have been high, but not nearly as high as with ALL, Frey told Reuters Health. Those findings have not been published.

The ALL treatment involves training disease-fighting blood cells known as T-cells. Once removed from a patient's body, they are programmed to hunt cancer cells that have a telltale protein on their surface. The specially-trained cells are then re-injected into the patient. The re-engineering process currently costs about $25,000.

Of the initial 30 patients, 27 were in complete remission by the one-month mark, but seven relapsed over a period ranging from 6 weeks to 8.5 months after treatment. Twenty three were alive at the six-month mark. Five of the 23 left the study to receive other treatments, including stem cell transplantation.

The treatment is not without serious risks. The most common is cytokine release syndrome, where the body appears to react to the mass killing of tumor cells.

Patients "become tired, achy and nauseous," said Frey. "You can also get low blood pressure and breathing difficulties. Unfortunately, it can be life-threatening. But we have, in most cases, been able to reverse it. Yet in most situations it’s very manageable."

“For our patients who have already relapsed after stem cell transplants, or don’t have any options for donors," she said, "this option has provided new hope.”

In eight of the 27 cases where there was a response, cytokine release syndrome was judged to be severe and the patients ended up in intensive care.

At least part of the technique involved in the Philadelphia study has been licensed to Novartis. Sloan Kettering has teamed up with a start-up company, Juno Therapeutics, which will conduct a multicenter study of adults with ALL, Sadelain said.

"That's a sea change in the field because, until now, this realm of cell therapy was almost exclusively in the hands of academic centers," he said. "Now you see a whole host of companies moving into this space. Investors have been impressed by these results and will take them far beyond what academic centers will do." — Reuters

Wednesday

Asia edgy on lingering growth worries, dollar up


TOKYO - Lingering concerns over global growth kept Asian stocks on a tentative footing on Wednesday, with more signs of gloom in the euro zone economy helping underpin the dollar.

The dollar extended gains after disappointing data out of Germany and Britain checked the euro's recent bounce.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was up 0.08 percent, but still not too far off a seven-month low hit at the start of the week.

Tokyo's Nikkei climbed 0.4 percent after touching a two-month trough on Tuesday.

Concerns over faltering global growth triggered a bruising selloff in global equity markets in the past week, and investors remain reluctant to buy into riskier assets as the drumbeat of weak data showed no signs of abating.

Overnight, a closely watched ZEW survey showed German analyst and investor morale fell below zero for the first time in nearly two years in October.

Adding to the gloom, the German government cut its growth forecasts, euro zone industrial production fell, British inflation slowed sharply in September and Fitch warned it may cut France's credit rating.

"Risk-off tone continues to dominate the markets as US equities pared most of the gains while Treasuries remain in demand," Credit Argricole said in a note to clients.

US Treasuries and German Bunds have rallied this week, with the yields on the latter hitting record lows on Tuesday after data reinforced fears the euro zone may be slipping into recession.

Wall Street put up a mixed performance overnight, reflecting the cautious mood in markets. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq booked modest gains to break a three-day string of sharp declines, but the Dow finished down for a fourth day.

The focus in markets is now on Chinese inflation-related data due at 0130 GMT with weaker-than-expected numbers potentially souring still fragile sentiment towards risk assets.

The dollar index, a gauge of the greenback's strength against a basket of major currencies, was up 0.1 percent at 85.941 as the downbeat data took a toll on the euro.

The dollar was up 0.3 percent at 107.33 yen, having pulled back from a one-month low of 106.68 hit the previous day.

The euro traded little changed at $1.2644

In commodities, US crude bounced slightly after posting its biggest percentage loss in about two years overnight on a downgrade in global oil consumption forecasts, projections for another big boost in shale oil and reluctance by OPEC members to cut output.

US crude was up 44 cents at $82.28 a barrel, although mounting evidence of slackening demand and unrelenting US shale output are expected to keep applying downward pressure on the commodity in the mid- to long-term. —Reuters

Google holds 'auditions' for Android L


With the release of the next version of its Android mobile operating system due soon, Google teased the name of the upcoming new Android version.

The YouTube video hinted at lemon meringue pie, lava cake, lady finger, and lemon drop.

"There can only be one L. Coming soon," it said.

Until then, version 5.0 of Android will still be temporarily known simply as "Android L."

 


Google has been known for naming major versions of Android after desserts - and with an alphabetical twist. — Joel Locsin/TJD, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Penelope Cruz named ‘sexiest woman alive’ by Esquire magazine


LOS ANGELES - Spanish actress Penelope Cruz has been named this year's "sexiest woman alive" by Esquire, the men's lifestyle magazine said on Monday.

The 40-year-old follows last year's winner, American actress Scarlett Johansson, to earn the honor chosen by Esquire editors.

Cruz, whose last film was director Ridley Scott's 2013 thriller "The Counselor," alongside husband Javier Bardem, will star in the upcoming Spanish-language drama "Ma Ma," and is currently in production on the Sacha Baron Cohen comedy "Grimsby."

The Madrid-born actress, who won a supporting actress Oscar for her performance as an emotionally volatile artist in Woody Allen's "Vicky Cristina Barcelona," told the magazine that she is no longer as attracted to dramatic roles as before.

"I had an attraction to drama," Cruz said in the magazine's upcoming issue. "Most of us have that, especially if you are an artist—you feel like you are tempted to explore the darkness. I could not be less interested now."

Cruz and Bardem, 45, have two young children together.

She rose to international prominence in 2001 with roles in Hollywood films "Vanilla Sky," and "Blow." She also frequently collaborates with acclaimed Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar, who has called Cruz a muse while the actress told Esquire that the "Talk to Her" director is her "biggest source of inspiration." 



American actress Mila Kunis, Barbados-born pop star Rihanna and South African actress Charlize Theron have all recently been given the distinction by Esquire. —Reuters

Chef Anne-Sophie Pic sets out to conquer New York


NEW YORK - Anne-Sophie Pic, one of top five women chefs in the world, is gearing up to take the fickle, competitive world of New York gastronomy by storm in opening a new restaurant next year.

Named best female chef in 2011 at the World's 50 Best Restaurants awards run by British magazine Restaurant and the only three-star woman chef in France, Pic spoke exclusively to AFP in an interview during a busy stay in New York overseeing her new project.

On the ground floor of a gleaming glass tower at 510 Madison Avenue she will open a MetCafe and on the second floor, a New York branch of "Dame de Pic" which opened in Paris two years ago.

"It will be a gastronomic restaurant with 50 covers, between a chic bistro and a three-star restaurant," the 45-year-old told AFP in the empty space, bathed in light with high ceilings.

"It pleases me a lot. It's new, everything has to be built, it's the magnificent side of the project," she said in jeans, sneakers and a white shirt, her hair swept back in a neat little bun.

Rents for this kind of space in this neighborhood start at around $50,000 a month and the venture is not without risk in a city, with thousands of restaurants where fashions come and go.

Some great French chefs have come a cropper. Only last week was celebrity French chef Daniel Boulud downgraded, losing the third star he won in 2010 from the prestigious Michelin guide.

Polite, modest and respectful, Pic lets out a laugh.

"I am not coming into conquered territory! I'm aware that New York is a magical place, but difficult. My approach in coming here is to be humble," she said.

She speaks English, she knows the city and stayed several months when she was a student. She likes the pace, the "good energy" and likes to visit with her husband, Davis Sinapian, Pic CEO.

They are a couple who complement each other well: she does the food and he runs the business, which includes five restaurants, and employs 200 people.

Another 100 staff will be added in New York.

The crown jewels in their empire is Maison Pic, the family-run restaurant that Pic inherited after her father died, a three-star triumph in the southeastern French town of Valence.

There is the one-star Dame de Pic in Paris and a two-star restaurant in Lausanne.

Sincere approach

"I find that the trends in New York are very close to French trends," Pic says, talking about passion for all things organic and growing interest in vegetables in America's largest city.

"It corresponds to the evolution of my cuisine, I don't feel like it's a complete shift, even if I have a lot of things to learn."

"What's important for me is to do things that I love, bring pleasure to people, to be in this sincerely," she said.

She says her life is in Valence, where she is investing three million euros ($3.8 million) in a new, totally glass kitchen and a 60-square-meter (646-square-foot) laboratory kitchen.

A team will take care of the day to day running of the New York restaurant and she will stick to creating the menu.

She will come "as often as necessary to ensure that the standard is consistent, as I do in the three other restaurants."

She comes from a family of celebrated chefs. Grandfather Andre won three Michelin stars for Maison Pic in 1934 and father Jacques was made a three-star chef in 1973.

She took over Maison Pic in 1998 after it was downgraded to two stars and won back the third star in 2007.

With no formal training, she was nevertheless schooled in flavor by her father but only worked with him a few months before he died.

"The hardest thing is to build something yourself, to find your own path," she told AFP.

Today she says she is more comfortable than when she was 30 even if she still frets over the process of creation.

A self-taught perfectionist, she uses a lot of Japanese techniques and claims "the spirit of French cuisine is her DNA."

In a very male-dominated world, she also stays true to herself.

"I am very demanding in the kitchen, a little 'maternalist' but I try to stay who I am. I think it's important to tell women that when it comes to cuisine, stay women."

She is famous, a chef and a mother. But in what order, she doesn't hesitate for a second.

"I am a woman and a mother before being a chef," she says. — Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

Sunday

Mayweather slowing down, can be beaten by Pacquiao, says Golovkin trainer


Abel Sanchez, the trainer of world middleweight champion Gennady Golovkin thinks that father time is starting to catch up with pound-for-pound king Floyd Mayweather.

Mayweather toppled Marcos Maidana with ease in his last fight but showed signs of decline according to Sanchez.

"I thought Floyd won easily, but Floyd is slowing down," told Sanchez in an interview with fighthype.com. "He's getting old like everybody that is at that level for such a long time."

Sanchez thinks that Pacquiao is on the right track since suffering a brutal knockout loss to Juan Manuel Marquez in 2012.

He even gave Pacquiao a better chance of beating Mayweather now should the much-awaited showdown finally come to fruition.

"In the past I thought that Mayweather would win the fight easily. I think the knockout by Marquez on Pacquiao kind of rejuvenated his career, his mentality, his efforts, his commitment to the gym," said Sanchez.

"Sometimes a loss like that could be a blessing. Now I see it more as an even fight." — JST, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Multimedia information drive for hepatitis B launched


The World Health Organization, in tandem with the Hepatological Society of the Philippines, launched an awareness campaign to spread information about hepatitis B on Oct. 2.

Present at the launch of the B-Aware Campaign were a panel of four experts and professionals: Dr. Nick Walsh of the WHO's Western Pacific Region Office; Maricel de Quiroz-Castro, technical officer of WHO Philippines; Hepatological Society president Dr. Eternity Labio and Chris Muñoz of the Yellow Warriors Society of the Philippines.

Muñoz said that the information drive hopes not only to prevent the rise of hepatitis B cases in the Philippines but also to alleviate the discrimination a person with the disease may experience at the workplace, or even before entering one.

“Discrimination at the workplace is due to a lack of knowledge on the part of the employer,” Muñoz explained. “Better understanding of hepatitis B is not only cost-effective, but it will help save a life.”

He also said that their gauge for campaign effectivity is its ability to trend on social media.

Labio said, “We are launching a multimedia campaign. We have a Facebook page, but we also want the campaign broadcast in print, radio, TV, and social media. We are pooling efforts—the more partners we have, the better.”

Castro noted that the Department of Health’s hepatitis B program, for example, saw the need to partner with the maternal health program “because mother’s education is very important for baby’s health.”

According to WHO, hepatitis B is "a potentially life-threatening liver infection caused by the hepatitis B virus. It is a major global health problem. It can cause chronic liver disease and chronic infection and puts people at high risk of death from cirrhosis of the liver and liver cancer."

Problems and possible solutions

Walsh explained that the number of Hepatits B patients in the Western Pacific region—home to 25 percent of the world's population—is disproportionate to that of the rest of the world, with the Philippines particularly affected.

Majority of chronic carriers contract the disease at birth, with 90 percent of all newborns being at risk for Hepatitis B. However, cheap and affordable vaccines are available and administered to all newborns for free, as mandated by Republic Act 10152, or the Immunization Act of 1992.

“We have the tools to prevent these deaths. There have been significant gains over the years, but the number of immunizations still leave a lot to be done,” said Walsh.

Castro cited the findings of the 2012 Hepatitis Birth Dose Assessment as the reasons for why the Philippines is still behind with regard to immunizing individuals against the disease:

  • Home deliveries affect the timely delivery of the birth dose, which must be within the first seven days of life.
  • There were funding difficulties before the government put the Republic Act in place.
  • The participation of the private sector is a bit wanting; the government requests that companies and private physicians submit reports with regard to immunization, but this is not done with regularity.

“The WHO is trying to engage member countries into making a comprehensive Heptatitis B regional strategy, and the Philippines will be a key country,” explained Castro.

Walsh added, “We think all countries can learn from each other. In the next six months, we will have more data and we will see how countries will move forward in addressing this problem.”

It was also noted that a multisectoral coalition is being looked into, as part of the local solution to the disease’s prevalence. With regard to treatment beyond childhood immunizations, pharmaceutical companies and pediatricians are interested in partnering with WHO Philippines and the HSP for this campaign.

Another of the campaign’s goals is for hepatitis B treatment to be included in PhilHealth coverage.

Be aware, be tested

Casting light on Castro’s statement are the facts Labio and Castro presented: 16.7 percent of all Pinoy adults have been infected with Hepatitis B—that's 1 out of 6 adults, or 8 million Filipinos. Twenty to 30 percent of these people will develop chronic liver complications, with 9,000 people dying yearly of them.

Vaccination is also the treatment for adults, although those are quite expensive. Labio noted that many adults do not even know they are infected until they are diagnosed with liver cirrhosis.

Immunization at birth and throughout infancy (6 weeks, 10 weeks, and 14 weeks) is still the best weapon against hepatitis B. The WHO's goal, then, is to lessen hepatitis B prevalence in children to 1 percent by 2017.

“The hepatitis vaccine has been given to over a billion infants around the world,” said Walsh. “It’s one of the most effective vaccines we have; it is uncommon to not be vaccinated in other countries. It comes down to education and preference and we need mechanisms—this campaign is one of those.”

Castro noted that a lot of progress has been observed since the introduction of the hepatitis B vaccine in the Philippines. However, with regard to government handling of the situation, Labio said, “We need to see more in terms of implementation.”

“Sharing information is a very powerful tool for influencing government, helping Filipinos find gainful employment, and most importantly, saving a life,” she added.

Castro closed the conference by reiterating the campaign’s slogan, “We invite everyone to be aware, be tested, and be an advocate against hepatitis B.” — BM, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com



Hackers who hit JPMorgan attacked some 9 other firms – report


About nine other banks and brokerages were infiltrated by the same group of hackers who recently attacked computer systems at JPMorgan Chase & Co, the New York Times reported late on Friday, citing unnamed people briefed on the matter.

The report, which could not be independently verified and did not identify any of the victims beyond JPMorgan, said it was not clear how serious the attacks had been.

JPMorgan said on Thursday that names and contact information for some 83 million household and small business customers were stolen, making it one of the biggest data breaches in history.

The New York Times said the breadth of the attacks and uncertainty about the motives of the hackers are troubling US policymakers and intelligence officials.

Representatives with the US Secret Service could not be reached for comment on Saturday morning. The Secret Service is investigating the attack on JPMorgan. — Reuters

Friday

Indonesians snap up 'luxury' cows for Muslim Eid festival


DEPOK – Every year ahead of the Muslim feast of sacrifice, a showroom in Indonesia swaps cars for hulking cows costing up to $25,000 each, seeking to lure a wealthy elite increasingly keen on ploughing money into celebrating their religion.

Salesgirls in tight outfits and heavy make-up accompany customers as they view the prime livestock that will be slaughtered at the Eid al-Adha festival, which falls on Sunday in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim-majority country.

"They are the Lexus and Mercedes of the cattle world," said salesgirl Desnia Yoshie, clutching a Samsung tablet displaying an online catalogue with details of the animals for sale.

The emergence of places like the "Mall of Sacrificial Animals", as the showroom in Depok city on the outskirts of the capital Jakarta is known, comes against the backdrop of a sustained economic boom coupled with increasing piety among many of the country's Muslims in recent years.

Far from eschewing religion as they get richer, the rapidly emerging middle class and increasingly wealthy elite are seeking to outdo each other with spending on their faith – from pricey religious offerings at major festivals to designer headscarves for women, observers say.

The Depok showroom stops selling its mostly second-hand cars for about a month before Eid al-Adha every year to make way for cattle.

At the festival, Muslims with the financial means are obliged to buy an animal to be ritually sacrificed in honor of the Prophet Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son on the order of God.

- Top-of-the-range beasts -

Most of the cows on offer cost from $1,000 to $1,600, but the top-of-the range beasts – the Santa Gertrudis and Brahman cross breeds – sell for as much as $25,000.

The cows are from Australian stock – Australian cattle is sought after in Indonesia – and weigh up to 1.7 tons, about the same as a Ferrari 550 sports car.

The showroom attracts the elite, from government ministers to wealthy Indonesians who come back from overseas for Eid, according to owner Ramdoni Hussainor. He said that this year he has so far sold 5,000 cows, up from 4,750 in 2013.

For wealthy Indonesians used to shopping in the comfort of glitzy malls, the showroom also offers a clean, organized environment to buy cattle, a contrast to the many sellers who set up shop on roadsides ahead of Eid.

In Jakarta, cows and goats appear on street corners, sidewalks and in parks in the weeks leading up to the festival.

David Wiryanto, a manager at Samsung Electronics, who was shopping at the Depok showroom for a cow on behalf of his company, praised the set-up: "They have health certificates from the government, we can pay by credit card so we don't have to carry a lot of cash."

Observers say that increased spending on expressions of faith shows that many Muslims in Indonesia, who make up more than 90 percent of the country's 250 million population, want to match their improved economic fortunes with a stronger commitment to Islam.

"Their economic status improves but at the same time they do not want to let go of their religious identity," Noorhaidi Hasan, a lecturer on Islam and politics at the Islamic University of Sunan Kalidjaga in Yogyakarta on Java island, told AFP.

"If others buy a two-million rupiah ($165) goat, it's not a problem for them to buy one costing three to four million."

As for the showroom's staff, switching from selling cars to cows for a month each year is a unique experience – but not one that is always pleasant.

"I smell like cow and have to shampoo my hair three times every day. I have told my boss that he owes us all a visit to the spa after Eid," joked salesgirl Yoshie. – Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

Messi tips 'fabulous' Neymar as future Ballon d'Or winner


MADRID - Four-time world player of the year Lionel Messi on Thursday hailed his "fabulous" Barcelona team-mate Neymar as a future Ballon d'Or winner.

A year after 22-year-old Neymar's arrival at Barcelona, the two South American stars are becoming increasingly at ease with each other on the pitch.

Their partnership has been one of the keys to La Liga leaders Barcelona's success so far this season with Neymar scoring four of his six goals from Messi passes.

Argentine Messi said his partnership with Neymar was becoming increasingly efficient as he hailed the Brazilian as "a great player".

"It's the second season that we're playing together and we're starting to know each other better," said Messi.

"As well this season the (Barca) strikers play more in the middle of the pitch so we can pick each other out more and find connections. It's a pleasure to play with him ... We've a very good relationship, he's a fabulous boy."

Messi added that their partnership was helped by "the freedom" that coach Luis Enrique gives the Argentine on the pitch.

"The coach told me I could go where I wanted. Sometimes I move back a little to try to make the final pass and to create," explained Messi.

Messi won the Ballon d'Or title four times between 2009 and 2012, but lost his crown last year to Real Madrid's Portuguese star Cristiano Ronaldo.

But he insisted that thoughts of reclaiming the title were far from his mind.

"I've repeated it several times, I'm not in competition with Cristiano. I play my game, I do my work and I'm not interested in rivalry with him or anyone else.

"Individual awards are those that matter least to me, I want to have a great year and make sure my team achieve their goals."

The Argentine added that he expected Neymar to win the title at some stage in the future.

"He's going to get it, through his qualities, the way he is, I've no doubt that he can at some time win it," said 27-year-old Messi.

"He has great potential, he's a player who has a lot of qualities and he can go as far as he wants. I'm lucky enough to rub shoulders with terrific players on the pitch and he's among them."  — Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com