Saturday, November 5, 2011

Gaming Everything ? Blog Archive ? First 2011 VGA premieres ...

November 3rd, 2011 Posted in 360, News, PS3 Posted By: Valay

Update: PR excerpt:

?This year?s show will once again deliver on its promise of exclusive world premieres and information from the most anticipated games of 2012 and beyond. Guests include legendary game designer Hideo Kojima who will reveal the truth about ?Metal Gear Solid: Rising? with a spectacular world premiere, the announcement of a new project and new studio from BioWare, creators of Most Anticipated Game of the Year nominee ?Mass Effect 3? and the return of XBOX hero ?Alan Wake? in an all-new adventure. Additional information and the first visuals from some of these world premieres can be found exclusively in the December issue of ?Game Informer? magazine.?

As promised, Spike TV has started to pull back the curtain on the 2011 Video Game Awards.

The first reveal may surprise you. It seems that Metal Gear Solid: Rising will be present at the show. This is a bit unusual as new trailers have generally come from western studios.

Geoff Keighley just tweeted:

?The truth about Metal Gear Solid: Rising will finally be revealed at 2011 VGAs by @hideo_kojima_en. 12.10.11, #SEEITFIRST?

Other reveals include a new Alan Wake project and an announcement from BioWare:

?Also at the VGAs: Alan Wake returns and @Bioware unveils a new game from a new studio. Teaser images in December Game Informer mag.?

Source

Source: http://gamingeverything.com/11411/first-2011-vga-premiere-metal-gear-solid-rising-the-truth-will-finally-be-revealed/

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Friday, November 4, 2011

Child mummy keeps its sex under wraps

A 2,000-year-old child mummy visited an Illinois hospital earlier this year so researchers could use imaging technology to look for clues to the child's life and death.

A computed tomography, or CT, scan, conducted in March, revealed a few tantalizing tidbits: a delicate facial structure; the wads of cloth that had been packed around the body; clearly visible internal organs, including the brain; and the severity of the fracture to the back of the child's head, which appears to have occurred after death. Unfortunately, the scan failed to elucidate a basic question about the mummy's identity : its sex.

"The dismaying part is the pelvis is collapsed, which means the physical anthropologists cannot do traditional measurements on the pelvis to determine its sex, so we still don't know if it's a boy or a girl," said Sarah Wisseman, an archaeologist with the Illinois State Archeological Survey, whose book "The Virtual Mummy" (University of Illinois Press, 2003) describes this research.

The cause of the child's death also remains elusive.

Medicine for the long dead
This was not the first time the mummy, acquired by the Spurlock Museum in 1989, received medical attention. The mummy is fragile and in order to preserve it, scientists must find nondestructive ways to study it.

For instance, shortly after acquiring it, investigators had the mummy X-rayed at a veterinary facility, where they discovered it belonged to a child. Based on the adult teeth coming in beneath baby teeth and the development of the bones, they estimated that the body was that of to a 7- to 9-year-old child.

The mummy also went for its first CT scan at the Carle Foundation Hospital in Urbana, Ill. A CT scan creates slicelike images of bone and soft tissue using X-rays; this technique allowed researchers to build three-dimensional reconstructions, including a digital reconstruction that allowed researchers to look through the mummy's interior, in a sort of virtual autopsy, all the way down to a wooden board under the body.

Twenty years later, advances in technology allowed researchers to create much higher-resolution images and better reconstructions, picking up on new details, even though the big questions remain unsolved.

A mysterious mummy
Little information accompanied the mummy when the museum, part of the University of Illinois, acquired it from a private collector. The mummy arrived in the country in the 1920s, when it was still legal for someone to possess a mummy as a souvenir. However, no one knows from which archaeological site it came or how it traveled from Egypt to the United States, Wisseman said.

Tucked into the wrappings of the mummy, the researchers found a male face portrait. These portraits acted as an additional identifier for the dead, but, based on past Egyptian mummy research, it is possible that this portrait was not of the individual wrapped inside, she said.

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Another clue came in the form of images of Egyptian gods painted on the outside of the mummy's wrapping. Both of these findings point to a mummy created around A.D. 100, at a time when Egypt was part of the Roman Empire, Wisseman said.

Three-dimensional facial reconstructions, created by a forensic image specialist with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, indicated that the child likely had West Asian or Mediterranean heritage, and more delicate features than previously thought .?

The red pigment on the wrappings turned out to be lead oxide from Spanish mines. This fact places the Spurlock Museum's mummy with a group of other Roman-era mummies of similar decoration and the same pigment. Since this ingredient would have been expensive, the child most likely belonged to a wealthy family, she said.

A more detailed dental analysis puts the child's age at 9 1/2 years old when he or she died. But an attempt to extract ancient DNA from a foot bone was unsuccessful, Wisseman said.

Future possibilities
While current technology can only offer limited clues to the mummy's story, that may change in the future.

"It could be a decade from now we have new technology for enhancing whatever we have," Wisseman said. "What we have to do is preserve what we have as well as possible."

Members of the research team were to discuss the new imaging results Wednesday at the Spurlock Museum in Urbana, Ill.

You can follow LiveScience senior writer Wynne Parry on Twitter @Wynne_Parry. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience? and on Facebook.

? 2011 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45151644/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Thursday, November 3, 2011

Russia set to end 18-year wait to join WTO (Reuters)

MOSCOW (Reuters) ? Russia is on the verge of ending its 18-year wait to join the World Trade Organization after accepting a trade deal with Georgia, the last big obstacle to membership of a club that will seal its integration into the global economy.

Russia's accession will be the biggest step in world trade liberalization since China joined a decade ago, making its $1.9 trillion economy more attractive to investors 20 years after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

After nearly two decades of tortuous negotiations with the 153-member club, Russia's last challenge was to reach a deal with Georgia to stop its entry being blocked by the former Soviet republic with which it fought a short war in 2008.

President Dmitry Medvedev said Russia had accepted the terms of a compromise deal proposed by Tbilisi via Swiss mediators on monitoring mutual trade, and Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili hailed the deal as a "diplomatic victory."

"We are ready to accept certain compromise ideas that have been recently worked out with the participation of Switzerland," Medvedev told reporters after the G20 summit in Cannes, France.

Medvedev said he hoped to have the "good news" of Russia's WTO membership tied up by the end of the year. Georgia, which does not have diplomatic relations with Moscow, said the agreements for Russia's bid should be all ready by November 10.

This is the date for a meeting of a WTO working group which can then draw up a final document for approval by WTO trade ministers in Geneva on December 15.

Entry also needs the approval of Russian parliament, which is likely before an election next March that is expected to return Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to the presidency.

PUTIN SEES ECONOMIC GAINS

Russia's entry will secure membership of the biggest economy still outside the WTO and send a signal to companies and investors that Russia is starting to move closer to a rule-based system of doing business.

Putin can expect little in the way of electoral gains from an issue that analysts say does not interest voters.

But although he has shown signs of frustration with the long accession process, Putin has made clear he regards WTO entry as vital to fostering economic growth and development by attracting foreign investors and lowering trade barriers.

The World Bank says WTO entry could increase the size of the Russian economy by 3.3 percent in the medium term and 11 percent in the long term.

"WTO membership will have no immediate impact on economic growth, the day-to-day operations of Russia's corporations or on the risk premium investors apply to investment in the country," said Chris Weafer of Troika Dialog investment bank.

"However, membership does establish a powerful catalyst for a more serious approach to creating economic reform and industry efficiency."

Traders say a clear indication of a deal for entry could boost Russian stock markets by more than 5 percent, offering some potentially positive news for investors worried by volatility linked to the euro zone debt crisis.

NEGATIVE IMPACT FOR SOME FIRMS

The WTO, which sets out to supervise and liberalize trade between its members and solve trade disputes between them, was once viewed by Moscow as an instrument of capitalist hegemony.

Opponents in Russia now say international companies will use their clout to stifle domestic producers although Russia says it has fended off attempts to split up gas monopoly Gazprom, the world's largest natural gas company.

Firms in aerospace, the auto industry and local manufacturers of tradable goods could suffer, analysts say.

"Concerns span fears about domestic industries losing against more competitive foreign counterparts, households finding it more challenging to adjust to the new environment, and Russia standing little to gain quantitatively," said Ivan Tchakarov of Renaissance Capital investment bank.

He dismissed the concerns as showing a lack of understanding of the size of the potential gains.

Georgia, which had been under pressure from its Western allies to reach a deal with Russia, offered what it called a final compromise trade agreement last week.

"We are happy that Georgia supported the draft agreement and that finally an agreement has been reached," Russia's WTO accession negotiator Maxim Medvedkov told Reuters by telephone.

Under a proposal worked out with Swiss mediation, Medvedkov said Russia had accepted the use of an independent company to audit data on trade between Russia, two rebel regions backed by Moscow, and Georgia.

"Russia and Georgia, as members of the WTO, would have to pass this data to an integrated database," Medvedkov said.

(Additional reporting by Gleb Bryanksi in Moscow, Margarita Antidze in Tbilisi and Alexei Anishchuk in Cannes; Writing by Timothy Heritage, Amie Ferris-Rotman and Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Sophie Hares)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111103/wl_nm/us_russia_wto_georgia

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Satellites tracking 'unicorns of the sea'

The frigid waters of the Arctic are home to near-mythical creatures, sometimes called the "unicorns of the sea" for the long, ivory tusk that spirals several feet out of the top of their heads.

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Worldwide there are only about 50,000 to 80,000 narwhals, as they are more commonly known, with about two-thirds of these whales summering in the fjords and inlets of Nunavut in northern Canada.

Scientists are hoping to learn more about narwhals through a new effort to track them as they move around the icy waters of northern Canada, as well as more about how declining amounts of sea ice are affecting the creatures.

"Although we've been working on a better understanding of the narwhal in the past seven or eight years, it was only recently that people have figured out how to fit satellite radios to them, so we know where they go and what they're eating,? said Pete Ewins, an Arctic species specialist for the environmental group WWF-Canada.

Narwhal transmitters
A new project tagged nine narwhals in Tremblay Sound off the coast of the northern province of Nunavut in August. The scientists restrained the whales, which can weigh up to 3,500 pounds (1,600 kilograms), and fitted them with a satellite radio that has a transmitter mounted with Teflon rods to the blubber near the whale's dorsal area.

"The whole system is no bigger than a BlackBerry cellphone, with a little transmitter the length of a pencil that sticks up," Ewins told OurAmazingPlanet.

When a narwhal comes to surface, the radio unit contacts with the air and activates the signal transmission. The animal's location is then sent via satellite to the researchers.

Of those nine whales fitted with the device, seven still have trackers that are transmitting information. For the others, the system likely malfunctioned or fell off. Eventually all of the trackers will be slowly expelled by the animals? immune systems.

While seven whales isn't a huge sample size, Ewins said that a lot of information can be gained by watching where the whales go. "Their position tells you depth of water over which they're spending the dark days of winter," he said.

Preserving Arctic waters
In addition to the basic coordinates, digital sensors also record the depth and the duration of each whale's dive. From that information, scientists can infer what the whales are eating during different times of the year, and how the thickness of sea ice in different parts of the Arctic impacts their behavior.

The information can also be used to make a case for keeping these northern waters free from oil and gas exploration. Since narwhals are both protected and acoustically sensitive, knowing their locations could help the government make better decisions to preserve marine environments.

"The local native Inuit, who are our partners, are concerned about the changes in the sea ice but also the prospect of noisy ships and explosions to test for oil and gas," Ewins said.

You can track the whales' movements here.

? 2011 OurAmazingPlanet. All rights reserved. More from OurAmazingPlanet.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45119092/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Tuesday, November 1, 2011

?Cro Cop? loses final fight at UFC 137, Nelson uses belly and power to finish him off

?Cro Cop? loses final fight at UFC 137, Nelson uses belly and power to finish him off

LAS VEGAS - Over the last 10 years, Mirko Filipovic put on dozens of tremendous shows for fans of mixed martials, so the ending at UFC 137 was fitting.

The 37-year-old brought it and tried to slug it out with Roy Nelson, but the younger fighter's well-rounded game took over in the second and he scored a TKO win at the 1:30 mark of third at UFC 137.

"Cro Cop" was one of the most feared fighters in the world during his time with PRIDE fighting in Japan. His run with the UFC was less than stellar, but the fans never lost their love for the Crotian kickboxer. Even tonight, the Las Vegas crowd went nuts anytime Cro Cop landed a punch or kick.

"This is going to be my final fight. I didn't make a goodbye victory," a sad Cro Cop told UFC analyst Joe Rogan. "Roy was just better tonight. I want to thank all you guys, especially the UFC fans."

[Related: UFC 137: Penn, 'Cro Cop' set to retire after losses]

Cro Cop (27-10, 4-6 UFC) was very much in the fight into the middle of the second round. Two minutes in, he rocked Nelson with a left and then got off 20-25 unanswered shots. Nelson covered up and survived, enabling him to score a very important takedown with 2:35 left.

Nelson quickly moved to side control where he worked for the dominant crucifix position. Once he got it with less than 45 seconds left, he pounded away on the helpless Cro Cop. Nelson, who came into this fight about 15-17 pounds less than previous fights, still has a good-sized belly. He used that to his advantage as he smothered the 37-year-0ld. Cro Cop survived the round, but when he rose to his feet his face was all marked up.

?Cro Cop? loses final fight at UFC 137, Nelson uses belly and power to finish him off

In the third, the Croatian's legs weren't there and he got drilled by a straight right. Cro Cop went into retreat mode. A little over minute into the round, he got dropped by a left. Nelson jumped on top, got his hooks in and flattened him out. He threw four or five bigbombs to the side of Cro Cop's head and it was stopped.

"It was awesome to fight with a legend. It's good just to be back in the 'W' column.?Cro Cop can still tear it up," Nelson said. "My game plan was to strike and mix it up so you see a little bit of everything."

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Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/-Cro-Cop-loses-final-fight-at-UFC-137-Nelson-u?urn=mma-wp8735

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Ala. immigration battle recalls civil rights past (AP)

MONTGOMERY, Ala. ? The epicenter of the fight over the nation's patchwork of immigration laws is not Arizona, which shares a border with Mexico and became a common site for boycotts. Nor was it any of the four states that were next to pass their own crackdowns.

No, the case that's likely to be the first sorted out by the U.S. Supreme Court comes from this Deep South state, where the nation's strictest immigration law has resurrected ugly images from Alabama's days as the nation's battleground for civil rights a half-century ago.

And Alabama's jump to the forefront says as much about the country's evolving demographics as it does the nation's collective memory of the state's sometimes violent path to desegregation.

With the failure of Congress in recent years to pass comprehensive federal immigration legislation, Arizona, Georgia, Utah, South Carolina and Indiana have passed their own. But supporters and opponents alike agree none contained provisions as strict as those passed in Alabama, among them one that required schools to check students' immigration status. That provision, which has been temporarily blocked, would allow the Supreme Court to reconsider a decision that said a K-12 education must be provided to illegal immigrants.

Its stature as the strictest in the nation, along with the inevitable comparisons of today's Hispanics with African-Americans of the 1950s and `60s, makes it a near certainty the law will be a test case for the high court.

"It really offers the Supreme Court a broad canvas to reshape what being an immigrant in the United States means," said Foster Maer, an attorney with LatinoJustice in New York, which is challenging the law.

Alabama was well-suited to be the nation's civil rights battleground because of its harsh segregation laws, large black population, and the presence of a charismatic young minister named Martin Luther King Jr., who led a boycott of segregated buses in 1955.

Opponents say the new law's schools provision conjures images of Gov. George Wallace's stand in the schoolhouse door to block integration.

"Today we have a different stand in the schoolhouse door. We have efforts to intimidate children who have a constitutional right to go to school," said Richard Cohen, president of the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Although no solid numbers exist, schools have reported fewer Hispanic students attending school, with some saying as much as 10 percent of their Hispanic students have withdrawn since the law took effect a month ago.

Illegal immigrants interviewed by The Associated Press have said their children were bullied and told to go back to Mexico, while others have described their intense fears of arrest and deportation.

The lawyer leading the state's defense, Alabama Attorney General Luther Strange, faults President Barack Obama's Justice Department for stirring the civil rights comparisons by falsely predicting the law would lead to the kind of widespread discrimination and profiling that marked Alabama's past.

"The idea they seem to have is there's a Bull Connor on every corner here in Alabama, which is so widely out of touch with our state," he said, referring to the public safety commissioner who unleashed police dogs and fire hoses on civil rights marchers in Birmingham in the 1960s.

At first glance, Alabama seems ill-suited to be the nation's immigration battleground. It's not a border state and is home to fewer illegal immigrants than several other Southern states.

"Why are we getting all the publicity? I think it has to do with Alabama's past and the perception that people have of Alabama over the years that don't live in our state and really don't recognize the amount of progress we've made in Alabama over the last 50 to 60 years," said Republican Gov. Robert Bentley, who advocated the law and signed it into effect.

Alabama's law, pushed through by a new Republican super-majority in the Legislature, is being challenged in federal court by the Justice Department, about 30 civil rights organizations and some prominent church leaders. Judges have blocked some provisions, but sections still stand that allow police to check a person's immigration status during traffic stops and make it a felony for illegal immigrants to conduct basic state business, like getting a driver's license.

State Rep. Alvin Holmes, the senior black member of the Legislature, said Republicans can't undo the voting rights gains of Democrat-leaning blacks, so they are going after brown-skinned people in hopes they won't gain a voting foothold. "They feel if these Hispanics come in and get registered to vote, they will team up with black voters to take over Alabama politics," he said.

Proponents say the law had nothing to with race. They say it was the result of frustration with the federal government's inaction and an effort to open up jobs for the nearly 10 percent of legal state residents out of work.

"There are people who try to make racism a cottage industry and profit off it, but I would put the harmony in Alabama up against any place in the country," said Republican Sen. Scott Beason, one of the law's sponsors.

Beason, the powerful chairman of the state Senate's Rules Committee, has prompted some of the comparisons with the civil rights era by telling one group that the Legislature needed to "empty the clip" on the immigration issue. And in tapes played during the federal trial of several lawmakers and lobbyists accused of buying and selling votes on gambling legislation, he referred to customers of a dog track in a predominantly black county as "aborigines."

Opponents of the law have fueled the comparisons by holding rallies at historic civil rights sites and drawing support from civil rights organizations.

No one in the Alabama Legislature was talking about immigration laws a decade ago because the Hispanic population was so small. The Pew Hispanic Center estimates the number of illegal immigrants in Alabama has grown from 25,000 in 2000 to 120,000 in 2010 ? a nearly fivefold increase ? though it's only a fraction of the 11 million or so estimated in the country.

That rapid rise drew complaints from residents who blamed Hispanics for knocking them out of jobs by working for cheaper wages and no benefits.

"They were coming in here like thieves in the night and taking our jobs and tax revenue," said Republican Rep. Micky Hammon, who also sponsored the new law.

To be sure, construction businesses and farms say Hispanic workers they have relied upon have fled the state. So far, they haven't been able to find legal residents willing to take on what is usually backbreaking work.

The governor said lawmakers in other states are eyeing Alabama's law as a blueprint for their own, but some fear that notoriety could come at a steep price: The state's image as an international automotive hub.

In 1993, a few months after state officials quit flying the Confederate battle flag on the Capitol dome, Mercedes selected Alabama for an assembly plant. Then came Honda, Toyota and Hyundai, and many auto suppliers.

The CEO of the state pension system, David Bronner, helped recruit those plants and now fears Alabama has hurt its ability to recruit.

"You are giving the image, whether it's valid or not, that you don't like foreigners, period," he said, adding that state leaders frequently seize on bad publicity to knock other states out of competition for new jobs.

That bad publicity has made its way to Hillsboro, Wis., where information technology businessman Charles Manser and 11 of his buddies have canceled a 10-day golfing vacation to Alabama.

Manser said one friend was born in Puerto Rico and another is a British citizen. They were concerned about being hassled over their legal status.

"Whether it's legitimate or not, that's the message seen by people who might come to Alabama," he said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111029/ap_on_re_us/us_alabama_s_immigration_image

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