Friday, June 28, 2013

New Orleans Extended Stay Hotel - Researchers: Newly Found Planets Might Support Life

Source - http://edition.cnn.com/
By - Elizabeth Landau
Category - New Orleans Extended Stay Hotel
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

New Orleans Extended Stay Hotel
Our everyday concerns -- what's for dinner, what to update on Facebook -- seem small when we consider that there's a whole universe out there where other life may exist.

Astronomers now are upping that likelihood, announcing that they've identified a star system with up to seven planets -- three of which could potentially host life -- 22 light-years away.

The likelihood that conditions could support life on at least one of those planets, given that there are three terrestrial-mass planets in the habitable zone of one system, is "tremendous," according to at least one scientist. The "habitable zone" is the area near a star in which a planet can theoretically hold liquid water. In our own solar system, Venus is close to the inner edge of potential habitability, while Mars is closer to the outer edge.

The discovery is the largest number of "habitable zone" planets ever found within a single system, said Guillem Anglada-Escude of the University of Gottingen, Germany, who led the team of astronomers.

The findings were published Wednesday in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

The findings are only the latest in a recent string of identifications of planets that may host life.

"As soon as our telescopes and data analysis tools have become sophisticated enough to find them, habitable planets are popping up everywhere," said Sara Seager, professor of planetary science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who was not involved in the study. "It's simply exhilarating to know that potentially habitable planets are ubiquitous."

What are these planets like?

The three planets orbit a star called Gliese 667C, part of the triple-star system Gliese 667. They are between four and eight times the mass of the Earth, making them "super-Earths."

If you were standing on any of the potentially habitable planets in this system, that sun would appear as a bright red star. The other two stars in the system "would look like a very bright pair of stars providing as much illumination as the full moon on Earth," Anglada-Escude said.

The planets are likely either rocky or water worlds, meaning they're entirely covered in water. These particular planets also appear to be "tidally locked," meaning the same side of a planet is always facing a star. That means one side of the planet always gets light and the other hemisphere is always in darkness.

"With three terrestrial-mass planets in the habitable zone, the likelihood of one of them actually being habitable is tremendous," Seager said.

The system also likely consists of two hot planets further in and two cooler planets orbiting further out, although scientists are less certain that the seventh planet exists.

Scientists determined these characteristics of the star system using new observations gathered from the W. M. Keck Observatory and the Magellan Telescope, with existing data from the European Southern Observatory's HARPS instrument in Chile.

Before, scientists had determined that the star Gliese 667C had three planets with one that could be a candidate for life.

The Gliese 667C star is about one-third the mass of our sun with about 2% of its luminosity, meaning it is much fainter. But all three of the potentially habitable planets, and their neighbors in their solar system, lie within the equivalent of the orbit of Mercury, meaning they are much closer to the host star than planets in our solar system.

If they orbited our sun, the Gliese 667C planets' surfaces evaporate and burn. But they may be habitable because their sun is so much smaller and dimmer.

"It's an extreme scaled down version of the solar system," Anglada-Escude said.

Another Earth called a certainty

Scientists said the findings suggest that stars with low mass such as Gliese 667C are the best targets for looking for planets that could host life. About 80% of the stars in the Milky Way are in this category of low mass. It's possible that there are many more of these systems that are packed with potentially habitable planets.

How they compare to other habitable planets

The Gliese 667C trio represents candidates for life that are about as good as three announced in April by scientists working with NASA's Kepler satellite. Kepler-62e and Kepler-62f both orbit the same star, Kepler-62, which is slightly cooler and smaller than our sun. The Kepler-62 star, however, is 1,200 light-years away.

These two planets are closer to the size of Earth than the third habitable candidate, Kepler 69c. It's less clearly in the habitable zone than the other two, and its sun is 2,700 light-years away from us.

That makes Gliese 667C seem like a stone's throw away by comparison, at 22 light years -- but that's still about 129 trillion miles. In the night sky, the system can be found in the Scorpius constellation.

The Kepler satellite has been keeping an eye on more than 150,000 stars much further away, but on May 15, NASA announced that a reaction wheel -- a part that helps aim the spacecraft -- stopped working. The most recent update, from June 7, says the spacecraft is in Point Rest State, after a second wheel was unable to preserve fuel for an eventual recovery effort. Immediate safety is not as issue, and a team is going to manage the wheel recovery efforts.

The Kepler space telescope, launched in 2009, allows scientists to measure changes in brightness of individual stars over time; these dimming events signal that a planet is nearby. Scientists undertake sophisticated calculations to verify that such signals are planets and not passing rocks.

"Scientists undertake sophisticated calculations to verify that such signals are planets and not astrophysical phenomena mimicking the signature of a planet," Anglada-Escude said.

By contrast, scientists who worked on the Gliese 667C system used the radial velocity method. With this, scientists look for wobbles in the motion of a star, which happens in response to the gravity of nearby planets.

How about all of those other planets that have been found previously to be in the habitable zone?

You may recall planet Kepler-22b, which was announced in December 2011 and also was hailed as a potential candidate for hosting life. That planet had a radius 2.4 times that of Earth and is 600 light-years away.

There is also a planet called Gliese-581g, discovered in September 2010, which is thought to be even more like Earth than Kepler-22b in terms of its suitability for plants and animals. It's only 20 light years from Earth, though there has been some controversy about its existence. In its solar system there is another planet, Gliese-581d, that is also of interest in the search for life, according to the Planetary Habitability Laboratory at the University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo. The group's catalog lists a few other candidates.

But do they really have life?

Because they are so far away, the composition of the atmospheres of all of these planets outside our solar system remains unknown. Whether life truly roams or swims out there is still to be seen.

"Whether the planets are actually habitable would be pure speculation," Seager said. "There's currently no way to observe surface liquid water (our habitability requirement) or even infer the presence of surface liquid water."

Still, Anglada-Escude says the existence of star systems packed with potentially habitable planets, and the diversity of planets that Kepler has found, suggest there are more exciting discoveries yet to come.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Attractions In New Orleans - Zombie Films Like Brad Pitt-Starring 'World War Z' Are Delicious Summer Treats

Source - http://www.latimes.com/
By - CRITIC'S PICK
Category - Attractions In New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Attractions In New Orleans
For sheer summer escape, it's hard to beat a good zombie flick. Good, bad, always ugly, the undead are a highly amusing genre as a whole. "Zombieland" from 2009, with Jesse Eisenberg and Emma Stone riding shotgun and Woody Harrelson wielding one, remains my favorite. "Warm Bodies," a clever hipster twist on the old trope starring Nicholas Hoult and Teresa Palmer out earlier this year, comes close. But for now, consider indulging in the campy, eco-eccentric fun of Brad Pitt's battle with the undead, their teeth-chattering and bad hygiene giving "World War Z" its bite. And don't let the environmental message scare you either. Director Marc Forster understands it's the absurdities and the oddities that bring zombie movies to life. Something — virus, plague, aliens, a studio exec in need of a horror film in his portfolio — is causing the undead to rise in "WWZ." They have a swarming tendency, making giant hills of undead bodies with their undead buddies. So cool. The best is when they hit a wall. Ah, zombies, always a message for the living in the undead.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Extended Stay In New Orleans - Run-Up In Mortgage Rates Raises Questions About Housing Recovery

Source - http://www.latimes.com/
By - E. Scott Reckard and Andrew Tangel
Category - Extended Stay In New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Extended Stay In New Orleans
Mortgage rates have zoomed a full percentage point above their recent record lows, raising costs for borrowers and questions about the housing recovery.

A standard 30-year fixed-rate home loan hit an average of 4.63% on Monday before backing off just slightly Tuesday, according to HSH Associates. That's up from 3.49% on May 3 and an all-time average low of 3.44% during a week in December.

Although still low by historic standards, the increased rates have put a damper on a home refinancing boom and will make buying a home noticeably more expensive for borrowers. What's more, some experts say, the rapid run-up could pose a threat to consumer confidence, delivering a blow to the recovering housing markets and even beyond.

"This stuff does feed back into the real economy," said Russ Koesterich, global chief investment strategist at money management giant BlackRock Inc.

Mortgage rates already had been rising gradually before last week, when Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke signaled the Fed could begin tapering its massive purchases of Treasury bonds and mortgage securities this year.

The bond purchases — which benefit businesses and borrowers by keeping interest rates low — could end by the middle of next year, Bernanke said, rattling markets that also are skittish about a credit crunch in China, the world's second-biggest economy. The reaction included a sell-off in stocks as well as a sharp jump in the interest rates demanded by bond investors.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note, generally a benchmark for fixed mortgage rates, rose for the seventh straight trading session Tuesday to close at 2.59%. It was 1.66% on May 2.

Should the yield on the 10-year reach 3%, and mortgage rates rise to 5%, that could cool the housing market and maintain downward pressure on stocks, Koesterich said. The combination of lower stocks and slowing appreciation in home prices could stifle consumer spending.

"This is going to undermine that wealth effect that the Fed has been trying to create," Koesterich said.

The immediate effect of record low rates was to stimulate home refinancing, a trend that hit high gear in September 2011, when the 30-year fixed rate dropped below 4% for the first time on record.

The pace of refinancing had dropped 40% even in the month before the recent jump in rates, a Mortgage Bankers Assn. financial commentary noted Friday. Regardless of whether the jump in rates reflects a new reality or just volatility in a skittish market, refinance volume "is likely to fall further," the trade group said. Home purchases have been on the upswing, but not enough to make up for the decline in refinancing.

Higher rates have an instant effect on family budgets. At 3.5%, a borrower who bought a Southern California home for May's median price of $368,000 would have a principal-and-interest payment of $1,322, assuming a 20% down payment.

At 4.5%, that payment rises to $1,492.

At 6%, still a decent rate by historical standards, the payment goes up to $1,765.

Mortgage rates also have contributed to a recent sell-off in home builder stocks. Shares of Los Angeles' KB Home are down about 20% from recent highs in May, with Lennar Corp. and Toll Brothers Inc. off by nearly that much.

Despite the run-up in rates, homes remain affordable in most markets across the nation, said Rick Sharga, executive vice president of Carrington Mortgage Holdings. Prices remain about 25% off their peak during the housing bubble.

"And interest rates are lower than any time in history — other than the past 12 months," he said.

Homes in Southern California are less affordable, not surprisingly, but that has more to do with skyrocketing home prices than interest rates, Sharga said. Doug Duncan, Fannie Mae's chief economist, said rapid run-ups in mortgage rates in 1994, and again in late 1999 and early 2000, caused home sales to fall sharply — but didn't depress prices.

Those increases in mortgage costs were caused by the Fed's raising short-term interest rates dramatically, Duncan said. The central bank has shown no signs of taking similar action now, he said.

The Fed's current bond-buying program has no precedent, Duncan said, making it difficult to make comparisons with the current situation.

Duncan said the higher rates would have the immediate effect of pricing certain stretched borrowers out of the market. But he said he thought it would take rates rising to 6% over the next 12 months to depress home purchases and prices.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Suites In New Orleans - Why Samsung’s New Galaxy Tab 3 Series Is Mimicking Galaxy Smartphones

Source - http://www.firstpost.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Suites In New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Suites In New Orleans
Samsung is making its tablet computers look more like its hit Galaxy phones in the hope that the success of the smartphones can boost tablet sales.

Samsung Electronics Co, the second-largest maker of tablets after Apple, is putting three new tablets in the Galaxy Tab 3 series on sale in the US on July 7. The cheapest, $199 device will have a screen that measures 7 inches (18 centimeters) diagonally. An 8-inch (20-centimeter) model will go for $299 and a 10-inch one for $399.

“Our goal is to attract Galaxy smartphone users, and to make it the ultimate smartphone accessory,” said Shoneel Kolhatkar, director of product planning at Samsung Mobile.

The “Tab” line is Samsung’s value brand, undercutting the price of similar Apple models. Samsung’s premium tablets are in the “Note” line, which include styluses.

The new tablets have the same three buttons on the front as the Galaxy smartphones. Last year’s Tab 2 had no physical buttons on the front, as encouraged by Google, which supplies the Android software.

The 10-inch (25-centimeter) model is the first Android-powered Samsung tablet to use an Intel processor. That’s a significant win for the Santa Clara, California, chipmaker, which has been trying to break into the market for cellphone and tablet chips now that PC sales are slumping. Other smartphones and tablets run chips made by a variety of companies, all based on designs from ARM Holdings PLC, a British company.

Samsung had 18 percent of the global tablet market in the first quarter this year, according to research firm IDC. Apple had 40 percent. In smartphones, the figures are nearly reversed, with Samsung dominating, largely because of its Galaxy line. Apple came in second with a 17 percent market share for the iPhone.

Even though the tablets have bigger screens than Samsung’s flagship Galaxy S4 smartphone, their screen resolution is lower. The 10-inch (25-centimetre) tablet has a resolution of 1280 by 800 pixels, compared with 1920 by 1080 for the phone. The smartphone packs in three times more detail in a square inch than the tablet does. Competitors Google and Apple have similarly-sized tablets with higher-resolution screens.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Suites Near New Orleans Sports Venues - Now It Is #facebook

Source - http://www.guardian.co.uk/
By - Tim Anderson
Category - Suites Near New Orleans Sports Venues 
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Suites Near New Orleans Sports Venues
Twitter hashtags began in 2007, invented by open-standards evangelist Chris Messina, who was inspired by similar tags on Flickr and, before that ,channels on IRC (internet relay chat). Messina called them tag channels and the idea was to improve "contextualisation, content filtering and exploratory serendipity", for which purposes they have been a remarkable success. Hashtags have many uses, but come into their own when there is breaking news, enabling Twitter users to see live updates from people on the ground.

Earlier this month, Facebook announced its own implementation, which is already live. "When you click on a hashtag in Facebook, you'll see a feed of what other people and pages are saying about that event or topic," says the announcement.
Is this futile Twitter envy or a significant move?

Adding hashtags will not make Facebook a destination for breaking news, any more than it has done for Google+, which already supports them. The culture is different. Some, such as Digg's Jake Levine, argue that Twitter is becoming a broadcast medium with diminishing interactivity. The case is overstated, but Twitter is particularly well suited for hashtags that let you follow a topic. Facebook, by contrast, is the place where you interact with friends.

Hashtags on Facebook are still significant though. In marketing, they are perfect for linking ads – whether online or offline – to online social-media campaigns and, in this context, Facebook's move makes sense. Facebook has more than a billion active users according to its own statements, whereas Twitter is estimated to have around 200 million active users per month. That translates to a large increase in the number of social-media participants who can easily search or click your hashtag and engage by repeating it in their posts.

The bottom line: hashtags are a powerful tool for social-media marketing and too important to ignore, despite the risks. The case for a hashtag tucked into the corner of your ad is stronger than ever.

Friday, June 21, 2013

Aquariums In New Orleans - Home Resales Rose 4% In May, But Economic Growth Is Uncertain

Source - http://www.nytimes.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Aquariums In New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Aquariums In New Orleans
Sales of previously occupied homes in May surpassed the five million mark. The monthly gain, an indication that the housing market is strengthening, had not been that high in three and a half years.

 The National Association of Realtors said Thursday that home resales rose 4.2 percent in May to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.18 million, an increase from April’s pace of 4.97 million.

Sales last exceeded five million in November 2009. During that month and October 2009, a home-buying tax credit briefly inflated the sales pace. Before that, sales had not been above five million since July 2007.

While the sales pace is still below the 5.5 million that is consistent with healthy markets, it has risen nearly 13 percent in the last 12 months.

And with a tight supply of homes on the market, the median sales price rose to $208,000 — the highest since July 2008.

“Housing is now the strongest part of the economy in growth terms,” said Jim O’Sullivan, chief United States economist at High Frequency Economics.

In other economic news on Thursday, the Conference Board said a measure of the American economy’s future health improved only slightly. But the modest gain for May followed a jump in April that suggested economic growth could pick up later this year.

The Conference Board said its index of leading indicators increased 0.1 percent last month to a reading of 95.2, helped by stock prices. That came after a stronger 0.8 percent rise in April.

The index is intended to signal economic conditions three to six months out. It has been posting steady gains since December, one of many favorable signs for a stronger second half of the year.

Ken Goldstein, Conference Board economist, said growth would depend on the strength of housing and consumers, which have helped offset government spending cuts and weak exports.

In China, the world’s second-largest economy, manufacturing slowed at a faster pace in June as demand weakened, according to a report from HSBC on Thursday. A monthly purchasing managers index from HSBC fell to a nine-month low of 48.3 in June. Numbers below 50 indicate a contraction.

And in the United States, applications for unemployment benefits rose by 18,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 354,000. Despite the gain, the level remains consistent with moderate job growth.

The Labor Department said on Thursday that the less volatile four-week average increased by 2,500, to 348,250.

Applications are a proxy for layoffs. Since January, they have fallen 6 percent. That suggests companies are cutting fewer jobs.

At the same time, hiring has been steady, despite an increase in taxes on Jan. 1 and steep federal spending cuts that began in March.

Jennifer Lee, an economist at BMO Capital Markets, said that the increase in applications made it less likely that hiring would accelerate this month but that job growth remained moderate.

“The overall U.S. labor market is improving,” Ms. Lee said.

Employers added 175,000 jobs in May, nearly matching the average monthly gain for the past year. The unemployment rate ticked up to 7.6 percent, from 7.5 percent, but for a good reason: more Americans were confident they could find work and began searching for a job.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Hotel Reservations New Orleans - What To Do When There's Cancer In Your Family

Source - http://healthyliving.msn.com/
By - Melanie Haiken
Category - Hotel Reservations New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Hotel Reservations New Orleans
I was reading some of the recent and moving messages accompanying Caring Candles today, and it struck me how many were about cancer, and how many mentioned having several family members die of cancer.

When this happens, it can be scary. Are you afraid your family has a higher than normal incidence of cancer? Many people, faced with multiple cases of cancer in their family, conclude that cancer's likely to be in their future as well.

But hold on -- that's not necessarily true. Just because several people in your family have had cancer doesn't mean you actually have a hereditary risk.

Consider this situation: Your father died of lung cancer, and your sister just discovered she has cervical cancer. That sounds like a lot of cancer, doesn't it? But if your father was a smoker, that could be the real culprit in his case. And if your sister was exposed to the HPV virus, her cancer could have started that way. Grandfather had skin cancer? Perhaps fishing was his favorite weekend pastime -- and he didn't wear sunscreen. So you see, even two or more cases of cancer in your immediate family doesn't mean you actually have a hereditary risk.

The reason this is so confusing is that all cancer is technically genetic in origin. All cancers are caused by changes to our genes, which are basically units of information that control our cells. Some genes tell our bodies how to repair damage from environmental toxins, sun exposure, dietary factors, hormones, and other influences, or tell our cells when to stop growing.

When changes called mutations occur in the genes, certain cells can grow out of control and cause cancer. Gene mutations that can lead to cancer usually happen later in life, caused by lifetime exposure to things such as smoke, hormones, certain viruses, certain chemicals in the environment or in our diets. But not all cell damage leads to cancer, because our bodies have ways to repair the damage.

And cancer doesn't happen all at once but slowly, usually involving damage to multiple genes, over a period of several years.

Yes,there are hereditary cancer syndromes caused by inherited gene mutations that run in some families. The two most common are the BRCA mutations, which cause breast and ovarian cancer, and a hereditary colon cancer syndrome known as HNPCC (Hereditary Nonpolyposis Colorectal Cancer) that also raises the risk of ovarian and uterine cancer. If family members have developed breast, colon, or ovarian cancer at unusually young ages, your doctor may recommend genetic testing.

But here's the bottom line: Because cancer is a common disease, most families will have several people who develop cancer, -- but the cause isn't an inherited gene mutation. At least 90 percent of cancers are not caused by these inherited syndromes.

So don't assume that cancer in your family means a genetic blueprint for cancer; but do take steps to protect yourself from the things that lead to cancer-causing mutations. There are cancer-prevention strategies that really work.

A few key mutation-prevention tips: 1. Don't smoke; quit if you do. 2. Stay out of the midday sun or wear high-SPF sunscreen. 3. Get the Gardasil HPV vaccine if you're under the age of 27 and get regular pap smears. The Gardasil recommendation may soon change to include women ages 27 to 45. 3. Don't drink more than one (women) to two (men) drinks a day or eat smoked or preserved meats.

Copyright © 2013 Caring.com. All rights reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended to be, or to serve as a substitute for, professional medical advice, examination, diagnosis or treatment. Caring.com does not provide medical advice; diagnosis or treatment; or legal, financial, or other professional services advice and disclaims any liability for the decisions you make based on this information. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Suites In Downtown New Orleans - Maker Of 'Candy Crush Saga' Plans IPO

Source - http://online.wsj.com/
By - TELIS DEMOS and MATT JARZEMSKY
Category - Suites In Downtown New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans


Suites In Downtown New Orleans
"Candy Crush Saga" is lining up something besides jelly beans: bankers.

Midasplayer International Holding Co., the publisher of online and mobile games including the popular "Candy Crush Saga"—which involves matching up columns and rows of candy items—has hired banks to pursue a U.S. initial public offering, according to people familiar with the move.

The London company, better known as King, has tapped banks including J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., Credit Suisse Group AG, and Bank of America Corp., BAC +0.45% to handle a potential offering, these people said. They cautioned that the pricing and timing of any deal hadn't yet been completed.

A spokesman for the company said: "King's success and growth presents numerous opportunities for the business to develop further, and one option would be to take the company public. However, while it's an option for the future, we would not comment on when we could consider making such a decision."

If the deal comes to market, it will be a major test of appetite for online gaming companies in the wake of the poor performance of Zynga Inc. ZNGA +0.70% shares since its IPO in 2011.

Zynga's shares have fallen about 70% since their debut in December 2011, as it has struggled to translate the success of games like "FarmVille," which was a big hit on social network Facebook Inc., FB +0.78% to mobile platforms.

But the opportunity is there for mobile game makers who can strike the right cord with their audience. Mobile game sales are expected to ring in at more than $9.9 billion this year, up 13.5% from the $8.8 billion spent in 2012, according to market researcher PwC.

By comparison, PwC said, the more mature console and online games markets are expected to grow much slower, though both their sales tallies are more than twice the size.

King traces its roots to 2003, when its founders started a gaming website called Midasplayer.com, which featured games such as 8-Ball Pool that were primarily played on its website and other Web portals.

Private-equity firm Apax Partners and venture-capital firm Index Ventures invested about $50 million in the company in 2005. Since then, the emergence of Facebook and smartphones has given King and other videogame makers a vastly wider audience.

Last year, King chief executive and co-founder Riccardo Zacconi told reporters at multiple publications that the company was preparing for a possible IPO in 2013. Mr. Zacconi said "we have the option," according to VentureWire, a publication that, like The Wall Street Journal, is owned by News Corp NWSA +0.90% . He also said that King had been profitable since 2005.

The company's leading game, "Candy Crush Saga," was launched on Facebook in April 2012. It is the most popular app on Facebook, with an estimated 15.4 million average daily users as of the most recent figures, according to AppData, an independent firm that tracks online activity.

"Candy Crush Saga" has also been one of the most frequently downloaded free apps via the iPhone and Google GOOG +1.62% Play, according to App Annie, which tracks app store purchases.

It is also among the highest grossing apps on iPhone and Google Play when users' in-game purchases are considered, App Annie figures show.

King said last month it had more than 70 million daily players across all its games, which also include titles such as "Pet Rescue Saga" and "Farm Heroes Saga."

Zynga had 52 million daily active users in the three months ended March 31, down from 65 million a year earlier, according to company reports.

Despite Zynga's troubles, several other videogame companies may be eyeing public offerings. Kabam Inc., which makes "Kingdoms of Camelot" and the movie tie-in racing game "Fast And Furious 6," last year signaled its plans to go public by 2014. The company has stayed quiet on that front since then, however.

Rovio Entertainment Ltd., the Finnish game maker of the "Angry Birds" series, made more than $200 million in revenue last year with nearly half of those sales from licensing and merchandise. Executives have expressed interest in an IPO but haven't detailed any specific plans.

In March, another Finnish company, Supercell Oy, said it was profitable and grossing more than $500,000 in revenue per day from its two games, the medieval-strategy title "Clash of Clans" and the farming app "Hay Day."

More established videogame companies are feeling the pressure. Last month, Japanese game maker GungHo Online Entertainment Inc., 3765.JA -3.60% which offers the popular mobile title "Puzzle and Dragons," saw its market capitalization surpass that of Nintendo Co. 7974.OK +5.26% The game was the world's top revenue-grossing game app in March, according to industry research firm App Annie.

Stocks of others in the videogame field—even venerable names like Electronic Arts Inc. EA +2.67% —have bounced upward lately. A key reason: investors are betting that consumer spending on games, which has slid lately, will rebound with the release of Microsoft Corp.'s MSFT -0.06% Xbox One and Sony Corp.'s 6758.TO -1.03% PlayStation 4 later this year.

Monday, June 17, 2013

Family Friendly Attractions New Orleans - How Apple Shook Up The Electronic Book Market

Source - http://www.computerworld.com/
By - Joab Jackson
Category - Family Friendly Attractions New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Family Friendly Attractions New Orleans
Apple didn't try to fix or raise the prices of electronic books when it entered into the market in 2010, according to Apple Senior Vice President Eddy Cue. Rather, he says, the company was only working to ensure a profit for itself.

"We're not willing to lose money in any business," Cue told the court, referring to Amazon's practice of 2009 to sell electronic books for less than what it paid for them.

But in doing so, the U.S. Justice Department contends, Apple violated antitrust laws by colluding with the five largest book publishers -- HarperCollins, the Penguin Group, the Hatchett Group, MacMillan, and Simon & Schuster -- to fix the prices of electronic books. As a result of their actions, the prices of electronic books rose in 2010, the DOJ contended.

While the five publishers have since settled with the DOJ out of court, Apple is defending its practices in a DOJ antitrust trial now under way at the U.S. District Court for the Southern District Court of New York, with District Judge Denise Cote presiding.

In its arguments, the DOJ portrayed Cue as the mastermind of the operation, the one who coordinated the actions of the publisher CEOs while keeping Apple's then-CEO, Steve Jobs, informed of the progress he was making. Last week, Cue took the stand to explain the reasoning that led Apple and the publishers to set up an entirely new pricing model for electronic books, called the agency model.

The agency model works differently from the wholesale model that publishers have been using for centuries. In the wholesale model, the book publisher sells the books to the retailer, and then the retailer can resell the book at whatever price it sees fit, usually at a profit. In the agency model, such as the one Apple uses for its App Store, the manufacturer sets the retail price and the retailer gets a certain percentage of the sale. In Apple's case, it would take 30 percent of whatever publishers intended to charge.

Does the DOJ have a case against Apple? While a move to the agency model may be legal, the work of coordinating competitors in a single market to agree on prices is not, said Keith Hylton, a professor at the Boston University School of Law. The complexity in this case is that the two issues are confounded, he said.

Agency pricing is similar to another mechanism, "resale price maintenance," in which the manufacturer sets the prices of its goods, Hylton said. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2007, in a case concerning the pricing of leather apparel, that resale price maintenance was legal unless the practice was shown to be harmful to consumers.

The agency model, on its own, "doesn't even raise an antitrust issue, because the seller never owns the book," Hylton said.

But while a manufacturer and reseller can work together to determine a price, multiple manufacturers cannot collude together to set prices. The plaintiff, in this case the DOJ, has to make a compelling case that this conspiracy actually took place, Hylton said.

When questioned by DOJ attorney Lawrence Buterman, Cue said he was unaware that publishers were discussing the proposed Apple deals among themselves. He had been unaware, he said, that the CEOs of the largest book publishers had been holding talks among themselves for at least a year prior to meeting with Cue.

What the publishing CEOs were discussing was the issue of how Amazon was selling electronic books for its Kindle book reader, which they called the "$9.99 problem." According to the DOJ, the publishers were frustrated that Amazon was selling their best-selling titles at US$9.99 each, which was, in many cases, less than what Amazon was paying for those electronic books.

The publishing companies feared that if Amazon continued to offer bestsellers at such a reduced rate, the public would come to assume that would be the natural price for a book. They also worried that Amazon was moving to disintermediate publishers, or to cut them out of the publishing cycle and deal directly with authors.

Enter Apple. In December 2009, Apple was preparing to launch its iPad, which Cue thought would make for a terrific electronic book reader. It was Cue's idea for Apple to enter the market for electronic books. Apple CEO Steve Jobs thought the format wouldn't work for either the iPhone or Mac laptops or desktop computers. But the iPad would make a fine reader for electronic books, offering features such as enhanced color and video, Cue thought. Cue felt personally close to Jobs; he had worked closely with him for about 16 years and was aware Jobs was dying. (Jobs died in 2011.) The project to set up the iBookstore "had extra meaning to me," he told the court.A

Cue had to work fast, though. Jobs was planning to introduce the iPad to the world in little more than a month, on Jan. 27, 2010. Cue would need to have preliminary agreements from all the major publishers in place by then for Jobs to include iBookstore in his presentation.A

According to Cue's testimony, he initially approached publishers individually in December 2009 about reselling their books in a typical wholesale model.A In Cue's first meeting with a publisher, with HarperCollins, an executive floated the idea of working with Apple under an agency model. Cue took the idea back to Jobs, who approved the basic concept. The company was already using that model for both its App Store and its iTunes music and video service. So over the next few weeks, Cue and his team worked up an agency plan, one that guaranteed Apple a 30 percent cut of each sale.A

Cue proposed different pricing tiers that publishers had to adhere to.A Electronic versions of best-selling hardcover books, for example, could be sold at $12.99 or $14.99. At the publishers' insistence, he added $16.99 and $19.99 as well. The contracts also prohibited the publishers from "windowing," or delaying the electronic release of popular books on Apple's store. "If you run a store, you can't have windowing at all," Cue explained before the court. "Even though some prices would go up, in exchange, [there would be] no more windowing."

Cue quickly realized that, in order for the agency model to work, the same deal must be struck with all electronic book vendors, lest Apple's prices be undercut by other retailers. The problem, Cue recalled Apple's legal counsel telling him, was that Apple couldn't force publishers to change their contracts with other retailers.

Instead, Cue introduced what he called a "Most Favored Nation" clause, in which the book publishers would guarantee that they would offer their books to Apple at 30 percent less than any other e-book retailer's price. In this way, Cue explained, publishers would not have to sign over the rest of their clients to the agency selling model. "In a legal agreement, I couldn't force Amazon and Barnes & Noble to move to the agency model," he said. The DOJ has maintained that the MFN clause in effect forced book sellers to move to an agency model.

With the public launch of the iPad coming up on Jan. 27, Cue rushed to get all the publishers to sign contracts by a week before then. Book publisher Hatchett signed an agency-model deal on Jan. 24, and the other four publishers signed similar deals within the following two days. In the following months, the publishers struck agency deals with other electronic book retailers. The Apple contract took effect on April 3, and the prices of the best sellers quickly rose to the top $16.99 tier in the weeks after. (As part of their 2011 settlements with the DOJ, the book publishers ended all their agency-model contracts).

In antitrust cases, "Once there is a proof of conspiracy, it is up to the defendant to prove that the consumer wasn't harmed," Hylton said. In this case, the DOJ focused its questioning on the increase in book prices right after the new agreements were in place.

When Buterman asked if he knew book prices would jump after the agreement, Cue refused to acknowledge that electronic book prices increased overall. He replied that while some book prices increased, the prices for other books would be priced more "flexibly," and still other books were introduced to the market that previously weren't available in electronic form, thanks to Apple's insistence on not windowing or withholding book releases.

"I expected higher prices for some books, but [there would be] flexibility for other books," Cue said. He also noted that not all the prices for electronic books increased. Most of the price increases were for new, best-selling books.

Accommodation In New Orleans - Billionaire’s Money Woes Irk Business Owners

Source - http://www.news-register.net/
By - DYLAN LOVAN
Category - Accommodation In New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Accommodation In New Orleans
West Virginia billionaire Jim Justice made his fortune in coal and agriculture, and he is revered in his home state as the man who rescued the historic Greenbrier resort from bankruptcy.

Worth an estimated $1.7 billion, Justice is a prominent member of the tiny West Virginia community of Lewisburg, keeping a modest home and finding time to coach basketball at the local high school. He ranks No. 292 on a list of wealthiest Americans by Forbes magazine, which estimates that his personal wealth has grown by $500 million in the last year.

But his coal operations in Appalachia are struggling as business owners have filed at least nine lawsuits since late 2011 claiming they are not being paid for work at Justice mines. Still others say they are owed money but haven't yet sued.

"There are some angry, angry people," said Mark Miracle, the owner of Dynatech Electronics in Harlan, Ky. Miracle says he is owed about $150,000 for electrical mining supplies provided to three Justice mining companies more than a year ago. "They owe a lot of people a lot of money."

In an interview with The Associated Press, Justice acknowledged his companies have some debts but said they are emblematic of the coal industry's wider struggles.

"The coal business is terrible, it's just terrible and we're doing everything in our power to stay open and keep people working," Justice said. "We're one of the few (companies) that are even still working, trying to employ people and pay taxes."

Coal production in central Appalachia where Justice operates dozens of mines is expected to tumble from 235 million tons mined in 2008 to about 139 million tons by 2015, a decline of more than 40 percent, according to government numbers.

The hard times have led to sluggish business in Harlan and nearby counties, where Justice is being sued by electric, repair and maintenance companies that specialize in mine work.

An Associated Press review of court records found that since the beginning of 2012, there have been at least five lawsuits - one in federal court - that seek unpaid bills in the three Kentucky counties where Justice has mining operations. Two more actions in Tennessee federal court and two in Wise County, Va., filed since August of 2011 also sought unpaid bills or debts owed as part of a contract. Four of those nine legal claims, which in total exceed $1 million in alleged debts, have been settled for undisclosed amounts.

Aside from those debt claims, a handful of other pending lawsuits seek to settle disputes over Justice's acquisition of mining lands in Kentucky and elsewhere.

Miracle and other business owners in southeastern Kentucky said when they made efforts to collect what they were owed by contacting the Justice company's home office in Roanoke, Va., they were repeatedly delayed. Miracle, who sells specialized mining equipment and employs five people, said the debts prevented him from replenishing his inventory, harming future sales. He said his attorney is in the process of filing a lawsuit.

"When you do business with a billionaire, you think you are going to get paid," said Lee Kersey, owner of M&D Electrical Supply in Hazard. Kersey said Justice's companies owe him about $240,000 for work dating back to January 2012, but he has not filed a suit. Kersey, who has about eight employees, said he received a check for $28,000 in February.

Timothy Bates, a lawyer in Hindman, Ky., sued Justice subsidiary Kentucky Fuel Corporation last year for about $16,000. His client, who did some excavating work, received payment after the suit was filed.

Referring to the other lawsuits, Bates said: "There's definitely a pattern, I'll say that."

Justice said he isn't deeply involved in the day-to-day operations of his coal companies, and complaints about debts have reached him "on a limited basis." But he said he can "absolutely promise" that outstanding debts will be paid.

"Everybody should be really confident they're going to get paid," he said.

Justice offered a dire outlook on the future of coal, as demand in the U.S. slumps and cheap natural gas entices electric utilities.

"You're in a time when the world economies are really struggling, our economy is really struggling, utilities are converting to natural gas, and you may be witnessing the death of the coal industry," Justice said.

Friday, June 14, 2013

Budget Hotel In New Orleans - Apple Senior Executive Defends Company At e-Book Price-Fixing Trial

Source - http://www.washingtonpost.com/
By - Cecilia Kang
Category - Budget Hotel In New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

 
Budget Hotel In New Orleans

Apple senior executive Eddy Cue said in federal court Thursday that some popular e-book titles may have gotten more expensive after his company got into the business but that Apple was not to blame for those price hikes.

Cue, the head of Apple’s iTunes business, has been portrayed by the government as the “chief ringleader of the conspiracy” between Apple and major publishers to force all retailers to increase e-book prices.

To provide evidence of that collusion, federal prosecutors noted the dozens of e-mail exchanges and records of more than 100 phone calls and handwritten notes sent between Cue, other Apple executives and the publishers.

In response, Cue admitted that he simultaneously negotiated deals with five major publishers — Penguin, Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins, Hatchette and Macmillan. He even shared with publishers the progress of negotiations with rivals in general terms.

But he stressed that he was solely focused on winning contracts for Apple to enter the digital books market, not to unfairly hamper rivals such as Amazon.

“I didn’t raise prices,” Cue said.

In a rare emotional moment, Cue said he had been working “24/7” because he wanted to complete arrangements with publishers so the e-books store could launch with the introduction of the iPad. It was something he wanted to do for late Apple founder Steve Jobs, who was growing increasingly sick at the time.

“Steve was nearing the end of life when we launched the iPad. . . . I wanted be able to get that done in time for that because it was important to him,” Cue said.

As chief negotiator for Apple in all its content deals with record labels, book publishers and movie studios, Cue is a central witness in the Justice Department’s antitrust lawsuit.

The government contends that Apple in late 2009 and early 2010 pushed publishers to go with a so-called agency model. That structure allowed publishers, rather than retailers, to set the price of e-books, while Apple would receive a 30 percent commission from the sales.

The publishers then pushed Amazon, which held 90 percent of the e-books market, to adopt a similar model, with Apple’s backing, the government has said. Meanwhile, prices rose by as much as $2 to $4 for popular titles, U.S. attorneys said.

During Thursday’s testimony, prosecutors introduced a Feb 10, 2010, e-mail from Jobs to Cue to prove that Jobs knew of the scheme to fix prices and force Amazon to hike its e-book prices.

In response to a proposal from Cue to embrace the agency model, Jobs wrote: “I can live with this, as long as they move Amazon to the agent model too for new releases for the first year. If they don’t, I’m not sure we can be competitive.”

Cue said he never received the e-mail, which defense attorneys said was a draft.

In more than five hours of testimony in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, Cue vigorously defended his negotiations as typical in the business world, similar to the deals he has struck for music and videos sold through the iTunes store.

Apple customers got “great prices, great selection, at a better bookstore,” Cue said.

Cue offered mostly measured and brief responses to prosecutors’ questions. His appearance in the packed courtroom was sharply different from the glitzy presentation he held for developers in San Francisco earlier this week. Breaking from the Apple custom of denims and dark shirts, he wore an ordinary gray suit and red tie.

Cue is scheduled to return to the courtroom for further testimony Monday.
 

Thursday, June 13, 2013

New Orleans Extended Stay Hotel - China Shares Hit 6-Month Low After Holiday, Hong Kong Sinks Too

Source - http://www.reuters.com/
By - Press Release
Category - New Orleans Extended Stay Hotel
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

New Orleans Extended Stay Hotel
* HSI -2.7 pct, H-shares -3.7 pct, CSI300 -3.5 pct

* China indexes break below chart support in rising volumes

* Beijing unlikely to waver from policy positions: official media

* Merchants Bank set for worst A-share daily loss since Nov 2008

By Clement Tan

HONG KONG, June 13 (Reuters) - China shares tumbled to six-month lows on Thursday, weighing on Hong Kong stocks, rocked by soft economic data and a sell-off in global markets triggered by worries central banks will taper stimulus.

Official Chinese media reported on Thursday that Beijing was likely to maintain its policy position despite lackluster growth, hitting the market across various sectors from banks to technology, standout outperformers this year.

By midday, the CSI300 of the leading Shanghai and Shenzhen A-share listings was down 3.5 percent, while the Shanghai Composite Index slid 3.1 percent. Both were languishing at their respective lowest levels since December.

Losses on Thursday led both onshore Chinese benchmarks to break through chart support at previous 2013 lows in April and May, suggesting more losses may be imminent in the short term. China markets reopened on Thursday after the three-day Dragon Boat Festival holiday.

The Hang Seng Index was down 2.7 percent at 20,782.2 points, its lowest since September. The China Enterprises Index of the top Chinese listings skidded 3.7 percent, set for an eleventh-straight daily loss.

Hong Kong markets were also shut on Wednesday for the Dragon Boat Festival. Over the week, global investors had readjusted their positions in anticipation of a tapering of U.S. monetary stimulus.

Losses in Hong Kong on Thursday came as turnover spiked, but midday volumes in Shanghai were well off highs despite improving from last week's anemic levels.

The Chinese central bank injected funds after money rates jumped last week amid tight money conditions, leading mainland stock markets to their first weekly loss in six.

"It's not looking too good in the Chinese stock markets, but the volumes look a bit weak, suggesting this is not quite a panic-induced sell-off," said Zhang Qi, a Shanghai-based analyst with Haitong Securities.

"There are several negative triggers on the day, including weak economic data, reports that the A-share IPO approvals could resume as soon as July and of course, the money market situation," Zhang added.

China had published draft rules late last Friday to improve the transparency and pricing of initial public offerings in domestic stock markets, a move that could signal a resumption in new listing approvals after a seven-month hiatus.

Shenzhen shares of China Vanke, the mainland's largest property developer by sales, are set for their worst day in three months after sliding 3.8 percent. The Economic Information Daily reported on Thursday that home sales in major Chinese cities unexpectedly declined during the three-day holiday.

Prada dived 6.8 percent to a one-month low in Hong Kong after the Italian luxury brand posted pedestrian quarterly earnings that saw growth in its smaller brands lag the performance of its eponymous fashion label.

DATA SINKS CHINA BANKS

Chinese banks were hit by data that showed weaker new loans were extended in May than expected. Mid-sized bank China Merchants Bank dived 4.4 percent in Shanghai, headed for its worst daily loss since November 2008. Its Hong Kong listing shed a more modest 2.4 percent.

M2 money supply rose 15.8 percent in May from a year earlier, slightly below a median forecast of 15.9 percent, while total social financing, a broad measure of cash in the economy, was 1.19 trillion yuan versus 1.75 trillion yuan in April.

China's National Audit Office, responsible for overseeing state finances, warned of rising local government debt. In a report on Monday, total debt at 36 local governments had risen 13 percent to stand at 3.85 trillion yuan ($627.70 billion) at the end of 2012 from two years before.

On the year, the Hang Seng Index is now down more than 8 percent, while the China Enterprises Index has tumbled 16 percent. The CSI300 has shed a more modest 5 percent, and the Shanghai Composite Index is down almost 6 percent.

MSCI index managers said on Wednesday that shares listed in onshore China markets could rise to 30 percent on MSCI emerging equity indexes, double current levels, a move that could attract more institutional interest, further supporting the A-share market.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Suites In New Orleans - A Standing O For Apple's New Mac Pro

Source - http://www.pcmag.com/
By - John C. Dvorak
Category - Suites In New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Suites In New Orleans
Ever wonder why there has been a massive slowdown in PC growth? Don't blame Windows 8, blame Apple!

Apple has been the leader in tech and there is no indication that anything has changed. Dell is no leader, nor is Microsoft, Lenovo, or IBM. It's Apple. And Apple went too long without showing something new, thus the desktop market slowed down.

So it finally rolls out what appears to be a spectacular desktop machine capable of delivering a whopping seven teraflops of processing power. This is obviously the future king of all multimedia work, especially video editing, which needs all the help it can get. I would also assume that sort of power would make any Adobe application pop. No waiting!

The machine maxes out with 12 cores of Xeon E5 power and a souped-up RAM subsystem that will peak at 60 gigabytes per second bandwidth. It's a total butt-kicker that has no peer today.

Tomorrow is another story because within 30 days, the PC competition will roll out all sorts of machines that will attempt to match the Mac and undercut the price. Then again, maybe the competition won't do anything.

And even if they do something, it will pale in comparison to the Mac Pro's radical design. It's a 6.6-by-9.9-inch tube. It's not a box and it's not the old Apple cheese grater. Its unique design will surely win a lot of awards.

More importantly, you now have to wonder how the competition will counter this. Will someone else make a tubular computer? I doubt it since the competition can barely manage a cube, let alone a tube like this.

Apple left the PC designers in the dust with the old cheese grater and then blew up the market for laptops with the MacBooks and their unique solid aluminum cases. Now this. All the while, the PC desktoppers were still making big funky boxes filled with mostly air (and still overheating). Even the iMac was hard to copy. A few makers tried but got zero traction.

In this column, I've chided the PC makers for being duds for years. Most recently, I said that these folks should be promoting high-performance and three-monitor setups.

Of course nothing came of the idea. Now Apple rolls this gem out bragging about teraflops and multiple monitors—and not just three monitors but three 4K monitors!

The brain-dead PC folks are flat-footed once more. I can hear the counter argument already: "Well, this is all well and good but at the end of the day, people will be buying our cheap junk anyway because, well, it's cheap."

The PC makers should be ever so proud.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Affordable Hotels In New Orleans - PS4 Online Multiplayer Requires PS+ Subscription

Source - http://www.escapistmagazine.com/
By - Steven Bogos
Category - Affordable Hotels In New Orleans 
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Affordable Hotels In New Orleans
Similar to how Xbox Live Gold currently works, users will require a PlayStation Plus subscription (around $5 a month) to play PS4 games online.

Nestled among all the kicking-ass and taking-names of Sony's E3 press conference was a tiny little of bad news that was shown and brushed aside so quickly, you would be forgiven for missing it entirely. It appears that Sony will be following competitor Microsoft and forcing a PlayStation Plus subscription on gamers who want to play PS4 games online. PlayStation Plus currently costs around $5 a month, which is roughly the same as an Xbox Live Gold subscription.

The little nugget of disappointment was literally buried in the fine-print of the hilarious used game instructional video. If you squint at 0:12 in, you'll see the following statement:

It's worth noting that you will not require PlayStation Plus to watch Netflix, and it will continue to offer the current PlayStation Plus benefits such as free games. If you're already a PlayStation Plus subscriber, your membership will carry over from the PS3 and PSVita to the PS4.

It is a little harsh to be calling this "bad news", considering that Sony's main rival Microsoft has been doing this for years, but it is the one little scratch that tarnishes Sony's otherwise flawless press conference. Also, the benefits of PlayStation Plus are nothing to scoff at. Sony isn't offering the bottom of the bargain bin for its free game catalog, but new releases and best sellers like XCOM and Uncharted 3.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Hotels In Downtown New Orleans - Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom Images Leak Online

Source - http://gadgets.ndtv.com/
By - Gurman Bhatia
Category - Hotels In Downtown New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Hotels In Downtown New Orleans
The Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom has officially made an online appearance. The device whose specifications and details have been out since a long time, finally was seen in its press shots.
While SamMobile published a press photograph of the device, TechTastic uploaded a couple of live shots.
According to previous rumours, the Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom will feature a 4.3-inch Super AMOLED display with a resolution of 540x960 pixels. It will be powered by a 1.6GHz dual-core processor and offer 8GB of internal storage expandable via microSD card. The phone's USP will be its 16-megapixel rear camera with 10x optical zoom. The device will also come with a 1.9-megapixel front facing camera. The phone is said to come with Bluetooth 4.0LE, Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n, A-GPS connectivity options and a 1900mAh battery.
It can be seen in the images that the camera based smartphone comes with a dedicated camera button, the power button and the volume rocker on the right. Just like the entire Galaxy S4 family, the Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom is expected to run Android 4.2.2 and Samsung's TouchWiz UI.
The smartphone camera hybrid will be Samsung's first camera-focussed Android smartphone, to go with its Android-based camera Samsung Galaxy Camera. Samsung had recently announced the Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini, a mid-range version of the Galaxy S4. The device has specifications similar to Galaxy S4 Zoom. The South-Korean manufacturer had also announced the Galaxy S4 Active, a rugged water and dust resistant version of the Galaxy S4.
While the rest of the Samsung Galaxy S4 range comprising of the Galaxy S4, Galaxy S4 Mini and Galaxy S4 Active have either been launched or announced, it is only the Galaxy S4 Zoom that is still under the wraps. The device is expected to be launched at the Samsung press event in London on June 20th. 

Friday, June 7, 2013

Attractions In West Miami - Yoga Improved Brain Function Better Than Aerobic Exercise

Source -  http://www.upi.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Attractions In West Miami
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami

Attractions In West Miami
A single 20-minute session of Hatha yoga improved brain function better than moderate to vigorous aerobic exercise, U.S. researchers say.
Edward McAuley, a professor and director of the Exercise Psychology Laboratory at the University of Illinois, said the study involved 30 subjects who were young, female, undergraduate students.
"Yoga is an ancient Indian science and way of life that includes not only physical movements and postures but also regulated breathing and meditation," Neha Gothe, who led the study while a graduate student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, said in a statement. 
Gothe, a professor of kinesiology, health and sport studies at Wayne State University in Detroit, said the practice involves an active attentional or mindfulness component but its potential benefits have not been thoroughly explored.
The yoga intervention involved a 20-minute progression of seated, standing and supine yoga postures that included isometric contraction and relaxation of different muscle groups and regulated breathing. The session concluded with a meditative posture and deep breathing.
The participants also completed an aerobic exercise session where they walked or jogged on a treadmill for 20 minutes. 
Gothe and colleagues said they were surprised to see participants showed improvement in their reaction times and accuracy on cognitive tasks after yoga, while the aerobic exercise session showed no significant improvements on the working memory and inhibitory control scores.
The findings appear in the Journal of Physical Activity and Health.

Suites Near New Orleans Sports Venues - Yoga Improved Brain Function Better Than Aerobic Exercise

Source - http://www.upi.com/
By - Press Release
Category - Suites Near New Orleans Sports Venues 
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Suites Near New Orleans Sports Venues
A single 20-minute session of Hatha yoga improved brain function better than moderate to vigorous aerobic exercise, U.S. researchers say.

Edward McAuley, a professor and director of the Exercise Psychology Laboratory at the University of Illinois, said the study involved 30 subjects who were young, female, undergraduate students.

"Yoga is an ancient Indian science and way of life that includes not only physical movements and postures but also regulated breathing and meditation," Neha Gothe, who led the study while a graduate student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, said in a statement. 

Gothe, a professor of kinesiology, health and sport studies at Wayne State University in Detroit, said the practice involves an active attentional or mindfulness component but its potential benefits have not been thoroughly explored.

The yoga intervention involved a 20-minute progression of seated, standing and supine yoga postures that included isometric contraction and relaxation of different muscle groups and regulated breathing. The session concluded with a meditative posture and deep breathing.

The participants also completed an aerobic exercise session where they walked or jogged on a treadmill for 20 minutes. 

Gothe and colleagues said they were surprised to see participants showed improvement in their reaction times and accuracy on cognitive tasks after yoga, while the aerobic exercise session showed no significant improvements on the working memory and inhibitory control scores.

The findings appear in the Journal of Physical Activity and Health.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Suites In Downtown New Orleans - Microsoft Said To Cut Windows For Tablet Prices

Source - http://www.bloomberg.com/
By - Dina Bass, Ian King & Tim Culpan
Category - Suites In Downtown New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans

Suites In Downtown New Orleans
Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) is cutting the price of its Windows software for small tablets, seeking to shore up foundering efforts to combat Apple Inc. (AAPL) (AAPL) in the mobile-computing market, people with knowledge of the matter said.

Microsoft is using the changes to try and get more manufacturers to adopt Windows RT, a version of its flagship software for tablets, said the people, who asked not to be identified because pricing is confidential. The price cuts affect Windows RT for small-sized tablets.

A year after unveiling the first Windows RT machines aimed at eroding Apple and Google Inc. (GOOG) (GOOG)’s lead in the $64 billion tablet market, Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft is struggling. Global device makers such as Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ) (HPQ) and HTC Corp. (2498) (2498) are shunning the system, leaving a dearth of RT machines in stores and giving Windows RT less than a percentage point of market share in the first quarter, compared with 40 percent for Apple, according to IDC.

“You need more breadth of equipment manufacturers making the devices, you need lower prices, you need a better selection of devices,” said Wes Miller, an analyst at Kirkland, Washington-based Directions on Microsoft. That’s calling into question “the long-term viability” of Microsoft’s Windows RT strategy, he said.

Microsoft will take pains to drum up interest in Windows RT, the variant of Windows 8 for machines with chips based on ARM Holdings Plc (ARM)’s technology, at Computex, the largest PC-industry conference, which begins tomorrow in Taipei. Nick Parker, who oversees Microsoft’s relationships with computer makers, will tell partners the software maker remains committed to RT in a speech at the show.
HP, Samsung

While Microsoft hasn’t disclosed the prices computer makers are charged to preinstall the software on tablets, a cut would enable the manufacturers to charge consumers less.

HTC scrapped plans to introduce a full-sized tablet computer featuring RT on concern it will meet with lackluster demand, people familiar with the matter said last week. The device maker also balked at the price of making the machines, these people said. Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), the biggest PC manufacturer, has no plans for an RT device, while Samsung Electronics Co. (005930), which developed an earlier RT tablet before opting not to sell it in many markets, has said it hasn’t decided whether to introduce a successor.
Dell, HTC

Acer Inc. (2353), which has posted two straight annual losses amid a slumping PC market, today announced a tablet using Windows 8 and another with Android while continuing to stay clear of RT.

“We have some R&D projects, but we will be very, very cautious in deciding whether we will do the launch and mass production,” Chairman J.T. Wang told Bloomberg News today, describing the platform as “very immature.”

Some manufacturers are on board. Dell Inc. (DELL) is working on a Windows RT tablet and HTC is moving forward with plans for a 7-inch device with the operating system, which would benefit from a price cut on Windows for small machines. The only widely available RT machine right now is Microsoft’s Surface.

One year ago at Computex, Asustek Computer Inc. (2357) unveiled a Windows RT device and Toshiba Corp. (6502) showed two prototypes. Toshiba’s products hit hurdles almost immediately, with the Japanese manufacturer canceling its devices in August, citing unspecified component delays.
Volume Sales

Asustek didn’t feature the platform in any of the products it released today. Instead, the Taipei-based company showed tablets using Android and PCs using Windows 8, with one device having both.

Four other RT machines have been released aside from the Surface since sales began in October, though the others aren’t in stores “in volume,” Microsoft Windows Chief Financial Officer Tami Reller said in an interview last month. Reller said computer makers continue to look at releasing ARM-based Windows devices.

“They want to hear we’re committed to the ARM platform, which we absolutely are, and they want us to respond to their feedback,” she said. “We are having ongoing good conversations with partners.”
Second Chance

Microsoft wanted to use Windows RT to propel its software into an ARM-based tablet market dominated by Apple’s iPad and devices with Google (GOOG)’s Android mobile operating system. With few models and few sales, Microsoft has been ill-equipped to deal with continued interest in tablets and plummeting demand for Windows personal computers.

Now Microsoft is looking for a second chance for RT.

Dell plans to update its Windows RT tablet, the XPS 10, this year, two people said. The current version has had its price cut to $300 from $450. Neil Hand, vice president and general manager of Dell’s tablet and performance PC business, said the company is working on future products, though he declined to elaborate.

“We’ve found that customers using it are really, really happy,” he said. “There just aren’t enough of them knowing what it is, and why they should use it.”

Microsoft is also using upgrades to goose demand for Windows RT. These include enabling the operating system to work on smaller devices that can compete with Apple’s iPad mini, Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN)’s Kindle Fire and Google’s Nexus 7. Microsoft has also taken steps to improve Windows RT features, including the e-mail tools it used to replace the popular Outlook, after users complained that it was basic and lacked features.