Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Transfusions add risk in some heart attacks, finds study of patients with anemia

Dec. 24, 2012 ? When heart attack patients present in the emergency department with some degree of anemia, or anemic patients have a heart attack, physicians have a tendency, but not much guidance, about whether to provide a blood transfusion. The idea is that a transfusion could help more oxygen get to the heart. Recent national guidelines suggested that there simply isn't good evidence to encourage or discourage the common practice, but a new meta-analysis of 10 studies involving more than 203,000 such patients comes down on the side of it increasing the risk of death.

The next step for determining when the practice could be appropriate needs rigorous randomized trials that will generate more decisive, high-quality data, said lead author Dr. Saurav Chatterjee, a cardiology fellow at the Alpert Medical School of Brown University and the Providence VA Medical Center.

For the analysis published Dec. 24 in the Archives of Internal Medicine, Chatterjee and his co-authors combined and analyzed data from studies in which anemia patients with heart attacks either received "liberal" transfusions or received more restricted versions of the treatment or no transfusions at all. Liberal transfusions were defined as cases in which patients either received two units of blood or more or had a transfusion even with a hematocrit reading (a measure of red blood cell concentration) higher than 30 percent (normal is in the low 40s).

What the researchers found, after statistical adjustments to control for important medical factors, was that the risk of death was 12 percent higher for people who received the liberal transfusions than those who did not. Moreover, the group that received liberal transfusions had twice the odds of having another heart attack.

"What we found is that the possibility of real harm exists with transfusion," Chatterjee said. "It is practiced in emergency departments all across the United States. I think it is high time that we need to answer the question definitively with a randomized trial."

Of the 10 papers that Chatterjee and his co-authors reviewed, all but one were observational studies. The only randomized trial was a small pilot experiment.

Searching for an answer

Chatterjee began the study when he was a resident at Maimonides Medical Center in New York. He noticed a paper by the AABB (formerly the American Association of Blood Banks) in which the association said there was not enough clinical evidence for or against transfusions in heart attack patients.

For clinicians, the practice has always been a tough judgment call. Some transfusions are clearly necessary, for example when a patient's troubles include not just a heart attack but also severe ongoing bleeding, Chatterjee said. But transfusions also create health risks, such as an increase in potential clotting because platelets may clump together more, or from an inflammatory immune response to the introduction of blood of a "foreign" source into the body.

Chatterjee and his co-authors decided to comb the literature to determine whether, if properly combined and analyzed, existing data could provide some insight. They found 729 potentially relevant studies, but only 10 that had the right data to help answer the question.

Few as they were, Chatterjee said, the studies all told much the same story.

"One of the things that struck us is that there were very few studies in evidence of transfusion at all," Chatterjee said. "In our case, though, we found that the effect was pretty consistently harmful across the spectrum of studies, spectrum of time, and spectrum of patients that were enrolled in the individual studies."

Chatterjee said the study should not be taken to mean that transfusions should be stopped altogether for anemic heart attack patients. Instead, he said, doctors must continue exercising their clinical judgment, at least until results from a large, well-designed randomized trial can be produced. Mindful of the risk his study found, however, they might just want to shift their thinking about where the border is among borderline cases.

"Before a definitive trial is out there, we should be conservative, especially considering the high risk of harm," he said.

In addition to Chatterjee, the paper's other authors are Jorn Wetterslev of the Centre for Clinical Intervention Research in Copenhagen, Denmark; Abhishek Sharma and Edgar Lichstein of Maimonedes Medical Center; and Debabrata Mukherjee of Texas Tech University.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Brown University.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Chatterjee S, Wetterslev J, Sharma A, Lichstein E, Mukherjee D. Association of Blood Transfusion With Increased Mortality in Myocardial Infarction: A Meta-analysis and Diversity-Adjusted Study Sequential Analysis. Archives of Internal Medicine, 2012; DOI: 10.1001/2013.jamainternmed.1001

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/ZFtbTHlNmQQ/121226080904.htm

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AWS outage brings Netflix down for some devices on Christmas Eve

AWS outage brings Netflix down for some devices on Christmas Eve

Has an evening with National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation become an annual holiday tradition? Or perhaps you enjoy a pre-present thrill, courtesy of Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas. Whatever the flick, there's a good chance you won't be watching it on Netflix Instant Streaming tonight, reportedly due to an outage over at Amazon Web Services. Netflix cloud architect Adrian Cockroft is on the case, explaining on Twitter that the interruption will affect only certain devices -- while we're not quite sure which gadgets are currently down, we have received reports that gaming consoles and connected TVs have gone offline. Netflix, for its part, has also taken to Twitter to apologize for the outage, suggesting that you follow the as-yet-silent @Netflixhelps account for updates.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Via: Gigaom

Source: Netflix (Twitter), Adrian Cockroft (Twitter)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/1plIr7eH3Jg/

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Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Last-second gifts that won't make you look desperate

14 hrs.

Look, we've all had that instant in which we realize we forgot to get a gift for someone, the deadlines for online orders have passed, and all the stores are closed because Christmas is practically here. It's a particularly?miserable moment, but there's help?? so don't sigh and order yet another digital gift card just yet.

While digital gift cards can be what people want, they tend to scream, "I forgot about you, so here's a token that took about as much thought as pouring myself a glass of wine."

So what can you do? Why, you go for the last-second gifts that haven't become as cliche as those things.

If you've got a gamer on your hands, you?top off his or her Xbox Live Gold?subscription. It's a simple, yet thoughtful?gesture. Extra credit if you throw in some Microsoft Points. Does your gamer favor the PlayStation? Not to worry, Amazon sells PSN points with digital download codes.?But if you are not sure what the recipient is into, consider browsing through Steam for some games to gift him or her. The selection is huge and there are plenty of popular titles mere clicks away.

For the music lover in your life, a Spotify?or Rdio?subscription is the way to go. With unlimited Web and mobile?streaming music of most back catalog and?newly released albums for $10 a month, these services have become favorites among the NBC News tech reporters. They're a?great way to avoid buying any music you'll be sick of in two months. The only downside is, you might get your friend so hooked that you will have to keep paying for the subscription, year after year!

If you happen to be dealing with a particularly social media savvy pal, you might get away with sending him or her a Facebook Gift. You can select a real physical gift?? ranging from silly toys to cosmetics to food???for which the recipient will instantly receive a notification. Just practice smiling convincingly and telling your friend that you thought Facebook Gifts are the trendy way to celebrate Christmas and that you absolutely did not put shopping off until the last minute, no siree!

Now, we did slam digital gift cards, but there are a few exceptions. One is Amazon.?We wish there was a way to give someone the gift of an?Amazon Prime membership since?any online shopper would appreciate the year of?free two-day shipping, and would probably enjoy the streaming movies and TV shows, too. As of now, Amazon won't let you give someone Prime, though, so your alternative is a $79 Amazon?digital gift card.

Lucky for you, Amazon has taken digital gift carding to never-before-seen heights. By partnering with JibJab, the company lets you star in a goofy video that plays when the recipient receives the email notification. If you aren't ready for stage and screen, maybe you want to upload a picture of yourself instead. A third non-lame option is suggesting a gift ? it's a little like the Facebook Gifts, where you select a real genuine object, but?recipients?can spend their Amazon credit on something else if they?think your judgment is flawed.

Speaking of Amazon Prime's streaming?flicks and TV shows, there two other services that do?let you gift subscriptions, Netflix and Hulu. Netflix has a huge selection of movies (and older?TV shows) while Hulu's premium Plus lineup gets the latest TV?shows much sooner.

What about last-second gifts that aren't digital in nature?

For those lucky enough to have a local florist who isn't completely slammed for the holidays, a pretty bouquet or center piece may be the way to go. Just be sure to triple-check that the order will be delivered on time?? and maybe throw in some balloons or candy if available.

What if none of these last-second gifts fit your almost-forgotten friends and family? Well, then consider going old-school: Write. Folks are so unaccustomed to receiving touching, handwritten (perhaps even handmade)?holiday cards and letters that they sometimes value them more than random one-size-fits-almost-all gifts. The thought still matters,?so you can use this as an opportunity to remind your loved ones of?how much you care about them ? even if you did almost forget about them during this crazy?holiday season.

Want more tech news?or interesting?links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts,?or circling her?on?Google+.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/last-second-gifts-wont-make-you-look-desperate-1C7660247

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Protection Management, LLC: Security Consultant Offers Business ...


Security Consultant John M. White, CPP, recommends that businesses have firm policies on how employees will deal with aggressive customers.

Violence in the retail sector has increased.? "In the past the most a shoplifter might do was run, or an angry customer might have just yelled a lot.? However, now they are pulling knives or guns, or causing property damage in their fit of rage," said White.? He goes on to say that shoplifters seem to prefer to fight these days, verses getting arrested.

Businesses need to take this into consideration and train their staff on how to handle a situation that escalates quickly, and especially when a weapon is introduced.? Businesses can do little things to reduce their risks, such as train staff, and never put staff between an aggressive person and the exit door.? If someone wants out bad enough, then they will be willing to do harm to an employee to get past them.

Other business tips include;
? Removing all weapons and placing them in secure display cases.
? Insure that employees have a safe distance between them and the customer at the checkout counter.
? Train staff on how to react to a violent incident
? Train staff on how to deal with shoplifters and contacting the police
? Train staff on how to manage aggressive people
? Train staff how to spot danger before it happens
? Consider extra security during peak shopping events

There are numerous actions and training opportunities for businesses and their employees.? If when you have team meetings anyone brings up a concern, take it serious and address it then with everyone.? If one person has a concern, the chances are high that others share that same concern.

Protection Management, LLC is an independent security consulting firm

specializing in Security Management, Healthcare Security, Special Event Security Planning, Security Risk Assessments and Litigation Avoidance and/or Support.?

For more information on business security, or to contact a security consultant at Protection Management call 1.877.686.5460 or visit their website at www.protectionmanagementllc.com Security Consultant Offers Business Security Tipsfor overview of their services, background and expertise.

Source: http://protectionmanagementllc.blogspot.com/2012/12/security-consultant-offers-business.html

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Buyer Tips: Deciding How Much Home You Can Afford

In today?s economy, a growing number of homebuyers are interested in simply purchasing Warner Robins homes they need to suit their lifestyle and future plans rather than viewing the purchase as an investment toward their future. For this reason, most buyers want to know how much home they can afford to purchase without putting themselves in a difficult financial position. ?While the general rule of thumb is that most homebuyers can afford to purchase a home that costs anywhere from two to two-and-a-half times their gross annual income,? explains Bethesda Realtor Kevin Koitz, ?there are many other factors that should be considered when deciding how much home you can afford.

Buyer Tips: Deciding How Much Home You Can AffordLooking at it from the Lender?s Perspective

While you may feel comfortable spending a certain amount of money toward the purchase of a home, you also need to consider whether or not you will actually qualify for a loan. When determining whether or not you qualify, lenders consider two things: the front-end ratio and the back-end ratio.

Also referred to as the housing expense ratio, the front-end ratio is a figure that represents the percentage of your gross monthly income that will go toward repayment of your mortgage loan. In general, lenders want this figure to be less than 28 percent, although some may allow it to be 30 percent or higher. Finding a lender who is willing to accept a ratio of 40 percent or higher in today?s economy can be quite difficult, if not impossible.

The back-end ratio, also known as the debt-to-income ratio, is a figure that represents the percentage of your gross monthly income that will go toward paying all of your debts .This includes your mortgage as well as car loans, student loans, credit cards, child support and other forms of debt. Most lenders will want this figure to be less than 36 percent, though others will allow it to be 40 percent or more.

Exploring Loan Options

When determining how much you can afford for a home, you also need to consider the various loan programs that are available. In the most general terms, there are three options available: conventional, FHA and VA.

Most homebuyers choose to obtain a conventional loan, which generally requires a down payment of at least 10 percent and may require a down payment of up to 20 percent. You will also need to have a solid credit score to obtain this type of loan. FHA loans, which are issued through the Federal Housing Administration, require down payments as low as 3.5 percent and typically offer more flexibility in terms of the credit score. Those who are currently serving or who have previously served in the military may qualify for a VA loan, which is issued through the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. These loans do not require a down payment and you will not be required to obtain private mortgage insurance.

Considering Other Costs

Many potential homebuyers fail to consider the other costs that are associated with home ownership. When obtaining a mortgage loan, for example, you will find that you have to pay costs in addition to the price of the home. These include taxes, insurance and closing costs. Other expenses to consider include maintenance costs, association fees, utilities, furniture and other costs.

About The Author ? Ray Nemec is a real estate agent and blogger.

?

About Anita Clark Realtor

Anita Clark has written 884 posts on this blog.

Anita Clark Realtor+ sells Warner Robins Real Estate and provides community information as a service to the public. You can contact her at (478) 960-8055 or via email at anita@cbssk.com.

Source: http://sellingwarnerrobins.com/2012/12/buyer-tips-deciding-how-much-home-you-can-afford/

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Organize Kids Coloring Supplies in a Dish Rack

Organize Kids Coloring Supplies in a Dish RackKids love leaving crayons and coloring books all over the place. If you're a parent or will just have a lot of kids around for the holidays consider using a cheap dish rack as a coloring supplies organizer.

Personal weblog Heather J's Life shared how she found the idea in an old issue of Real Simple. Just put crayons in the utensil holder and file books in the dish rack itself. Definitely not rocket science, but if you're about to have a household of kids invade for your house for the holidays it might be worth spending $5 at a dollar store so they can be occupied during their visit.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/NY9ip9Os8-M/organize-kids-coloring-supplies-in-a-dish-rack

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Sunday, December 23, 2012

Ho Ho Holy Discount: Vatican tax-free store busy

(AP) ? Anyone left on your Christmas list just aching for a 65-inch Samsung 3D flat-screen television? Just your luck. The Vatican's duty-free department store has one on sale for ?2,899 ($3,840) ? a nifty savings over the ?3,799 ($5,032) it costs at Italy's main electronics chain Euronics.

Or how about some new luggage for the holidays? The Vatican shop stocks a variety of Samsonite Cordoba Duo carry-ons for ?123, a nice markdown from the ?135 on the Samsonite website. But if a last-minute shopping splurge is in order, the Vatican can also oblige: Take this leather-bound travelling trunk from Florence's "The Bridge" leatherworks, with its five drawers, plaid interior, six wooden hangars and shiny brass buckles.

At ?5,900, it comes with a matching leather golf club bag, just what every monsignor needs under his Christmas tree.

There's a little-known open secret in the Vatican gardens, a few paces behind St. Peter's Basilica and tucked inside the Vatican's old train station: a sprawling, three-story tax-free department store that rivals any airport duty free or military PX, stocking everything from Church's custom grade shoes (?483 a pair) to Baume et Mercier watches (ladies ?1,585, men's Capeland ?5,000).

There's a hitch, however. It's not open to the public, only to Vatican citizens, employees and their dependents, diplomats accredited to the Holy See and (unofficially) their lucky friends who, after stocking up on holiday must-haves, proceed to the checkout with their Vatican connection and the ID card that entitles them to shop there.

To be sure, Rome is no stranger to tax-free shopping. Embassies, nearby military bases and the U.N. food agencies all have commissaries for their employees, where imports of everything from American ice cream to French wine can be had minus the 21 percent sales tax included in list prices in Italy.

The Vatican has that and more, given that it's its own sovereign state ? the world's smallest ? operating in central Rome. At 44 hectares (110 acres), the Vatican city state is the physical home of the Holy See: the pope and governing structure and administration of the Catholic Church.

The Vatican Museum, with its main draw the Sistine Chapel, is the main profit-making enterprise of the Vatican city state, bringing in ?91.3 million in revenue last year alone. But other smaller entrepreneurial endeavors boost the Vatican's coffers as well, including the department store, the tax-free gas station, the stamp and coin collecting office, the Vatican pharmacy and its supermarket.

And in these days of austerity, their profits and bottom line are ever more important to the Vatican.

The Vatican is entitled to run such tax-free enterprises inside its walls based on the Lateran Treaty, the 1929 pact that regularized and regulates the Vatican's relations with Italy. But those regulations also limit the Vatican's customer base, lest all of Rome descend on the supermarket to stock up on Gordon's Gin (?8.50 a liter compared to the ?15 it can run in liquor stores) or Montecristo No. 3 Cuban cigars (box of 25 ?84 ($110.95) compared to $164.95 on www.bestcigarprices.com). About 4,700 people are employed by the Holy See and the Vatican city state; the Vatican's diplomatic corps ? the Holy See has relations with 175 countries ? adds another chunk to the customer base.

Few people outside Rome know the department store exists ? there's no evidence of it on any Vatican website, no photos of its wares, no advertising outside the Vatican walls. Those who do know it exists seem to want to pretend it doesn't since the high-end luxury items on sale aren't necessarily in tune with either the sobriety or the salaries of the Vatican rank-and-file.

In fact, on a recent Thursday morning, nary a collar nor religious habit was in sight as ordinary lay folk milled around the spacious store during December's "extraordinary opening hours" ? extended to accommodate bargain-hunting Christmas shoppers who were rewarded with a wine tasting in the central atrium and piles of Brooks Brothers non-iron shirts and Burbury backpacks to choose from.

"More than the prices, it's the material," said Luciano, a bulky Roman who refused to give his last name as he shopped for an overcoat with his wife and an obliging Vatican friend waiting at checkout. "This one I don't like ? I look like a priest," he muttered as he put the navy blue trench coat back on a hangar.

Cardinal Edmund Szoka, the American who sought to bring some order into the Vatican's finances as head of the Vatican city state, is credited with having made the department store what it is today, moving it into the Vatican's underused train station, a miniature version of Washington's Union station with a sweeping double staircase and glass-front window that frames the dome of St. Peter's a few meters (yards) away.

Szoka said he moved it from the basement of the Vatican government building to the train station for more space, since the station wasn't used anymore for passengers and provided the perfect, airy open space that a shop of its kind would require.

"Our principal motivation in changing the train station building into a department store was mainly for the convenience of our employees, as well as for those who could come into the Vatican and shop there," he said in an email from his home in Michigan. "Naturally, we expected a profit, but that was not the primary motivation."

Szoka retired in 2006, well before the global economic crisis hit. The current leadership of the "Governorato" as the city state administration is called, recently asked all department heads to come up with cost-saving or profit-making initiatives to help the Vatican get through the tough times.

"Any good administrator wants to save what can be saved," said Monsignor Giuseppe Sciacca, the governorato's No. 2. "It seems obvious, necessary."

The Philatelic and Numismatic Office, for example, recently started selling a special limited-edition stamp to help pay for the ?14 million restoration of the Bernini colonnade in St. Peter's Square after corporate sponsorship dried up amid the recession.

Vatican Radio announced in July it would be saving "hundreds of thousands of euros" in energy costs by stopping short -and -medium-wave broadcasts to Europe and the Americas, using other technologies instead.

Perhaps even more than the department store, the Vatican supermarket is a much-sought after perk for Vatican employees, and a boost to the Vatican's bottom line. And at Christmastime, it is as jammed as the department store, with lines snaking through the store and cars taking up valuable parking spaces inside Vatican City as shoppers pile their carts high with panettone, the traditional Italian Christmas cake which is the di riguer gift for Italian holiday parties. Panettone can run ?25 a pop at Roman bakeries; in the Vatican supermarket, a high-end brand runs almost half that.

"The Nutella is just better here," said Maria Grazia Mancini, a Rome municipal worker who was doing a major pre-Christmas shop with her father, a Vatican employee. "The products here are for export ? the same brands but for export, so it's better quality."

While Sciacca is only too pleased to see the Vatican saving money where it can be saved and making it where it can be made, he was adamant that there are no plans to expand the customer base of the Vatican's little-known discount stores. Accords with Italy don't allow it.

"We shouldn't. And we can't," he said.

He spoke on the sidelines of the presentation of the Vatican's 2012 nativity scene, being unveiled Monday night and donated for the first time. The Vatican happily accepted the donated creche from the Italian region of Basilicata after its ?550 million Christmas setup in 2009 was exposed earlier this year during the scandal over leaked Vatican documents.

___

Follow Nicole Winfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-12-23-Vatican-Christmas%20Shopping/id-b8e1faa75e604a52a632e8692b9e8dcd

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This Lucky Kid Has The Coolest Spaceship Bed Ever

If you thought racecar beds were cool, well, you're still right. But they aren't the coolest. That trophy's been taken by this righteous homemade spaceship bed, complete with totally awesome control panel. That is one lucky kid. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/HDgVphSoXrw/

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Swedish princess to marry next June

(AP) ? Sweden's royal family says Princess Madeleine's wedding will take place on Saturday, June 8, at the Royal Palace chapel in downtown Stockholm.

King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia's youngest daughter was engaged to U.S.-British boyfriend Christopher O'Neill, a 38-year-old New York banker, in late October. The 30-year-old Madeleine is fourth in line to the Swedish throne.

The royal family's chief spokesman Bertil Tenert said Sunday that wedding organizers will now start planning details of the nuptials. He added that Madeleine's wedding will be smaller than Crown Princess Victoria's wedding two years ago in Stockholm.

The Swedish royal family has only ceremonial duties, such as supporting charities and promoting Swedish businesses.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-12-23-Sweden-Princess%20Madeleine/id-c089bc619553470097721cf52060e6d3

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Xunlei CEO - Web 2.0 Asia Blog

Recalling the past ten years, Zou Shenglong, founder and CEO of Xunlei, concluded that premium subscription is the best consumer-facing business model for internet services, citing advantages it brings on cash flows, pricing power and building the overall platform (source in Chinese).

Founded in January 2003 and becoming?one of the leading download and video streaming services in China, Xunlei introduced the subscription model in 2009.?Till today, it has four million subscribers ? 1% of the user base, paying?RMB9.8 ($1.5) or RMB15 ($2.4) per month, to contribute approaching half of its total revenues.?The company expects to have 10 million subscribers in two to three years.

The revenues generated by subscriptions as a percentage increased from 2.4% in 2009 to 16.9% in 2010 and to 26.4% in the three months ended March?31, 2011, according to its?F-1 filing with SEC?in July 2011.

img:vip.xunlei.com

Different from premium services offered by western products, the package a Chinese service would offer must range way more widely than its core business.?Xunlei?s?includes 30 plus privileges, from premium download offerings to online gaming. Tencent is widely recognized as the creator of the subscription model for monetizing an internet service. From 2000 to now, Tencent?s QQ Membership, with 20-plus combinations of offerings,?has over 20 million subscribers. Contributing the first revenues to the company, the model still generates about 20% of the internet giant?s total revenues.

Xunlei acknowledged it modeled Tencent?s both in?gaming business and the subscription service. Zou Shenglong pointed out that it took six years for Tencent to get one million subscribers, thinking that must be a turning point for such a business. So he didn?t think it?s a coincidence when Xunlei?s subscriber growth accelerated after having gained one million sign-ups.

Zou also counts the membership model as the base for developing other transaction-based paid services, such as gaming his company started operating in 2008. He thinks two preconditions can have more users pay for more services: a powerful platform that can?have impact on?user behaviors and a paying user base.

?Unrealistic to make big money through video advertising?

Besides subscriptions and gaming, the third revenue source of Xunlei?s is online video advertising. But that? s not a good business, according to Zou, given the content costs. The company has spent hundreds of millions yuan each year on licensing copyrighted video content since 2007, trying to scale up an advertising-based business and promising to share revenues with content providers. Unexpectedly, video content prices skyrocketed in the next years when online video streaming services crowded the market. Though prices declined to be comparatively reasonable in this year, Mr. Zou said ?currently it?s unrealistic to make big money through video advertising?.

Its online advertising revenues as a percentage declined from 70.7% in 2008 to 51% as of March 31, 2011, as disclosed by its F-1.

Although most Chinese web services with large user bases, including?Sina Weibo?and?Youku, adopted the subscription model, Xunlei is one of the few that succeeds in making a considerable income there. While it?s proven that users would like to pay several yuan a month to speed up downloading or video streaming, it seems online video sites like Youku have difficulty in charging for accessing premium content ? or there is little to offer since fierce competitions make it really hard not to offer any video for free. As to?Sina Weibo?s subscription offerings, I really think they are just trifle features that should have been for free anyway. It may be too early to judge. Maybe that premium subscription model will still be workable for any web service when premium offerings and timing are right, as Zou Shenglong believes in.

Related posts:

  1. Kuwo Launches YY-style Music Service, for Its Business Model.
  2. The Unique Business Model of YY Music
  3. Sohu's online video business gain market share

Link to full article

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Source: http://web2asia.blognhanh.com/2012/12/xunlei-ceo-premium-subscription-still_22.html

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Can Boehner survive? (CNN)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/272559550?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Eric Ladin Welcomes Son Maxfield David

The former Killing actor and his wife Katy welcomed their first child, son Maxfield David Ladin, on Friday, Dec. 21 in Los Angeles, his rep confirms to PEOPLE exclusively.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/5WHn9dY1OgU/

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Friday, December 21, 2012

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Your name is GABBY, though some people may know you as SILVER, WILL, KARKAT, VRISKA or even JOHN on occasion. You're NINETEEN years old and you love to ROLE PLAY; in fact you do it quite a bit on both TWITTER and TUMBLR. Along with POKEMON, you also seem to enjoy HOMESTUCK a great deal.

You have GREAT FRIENDS in general. It?s really PRETTY RAD.

Your MOIRAIL is a total DICKBUTT, though.

[?][?]
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If you want to know more about me, IM me! Contact info is in the 'Contact' page, yo

Source: http://gymleader.tumblr.com/post/38366598052

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Stuck in traffic? Get select 1 percent of drivers to stay home, says study

3 hrs.

If just one percent of drivers from commuter-heavy neighborhoods stayed off the road during rush hour, traffic congestion for everyone else would drop up to 18 percent, according to a first-of-its-kind analysis of cellphone data.

The finding provides a?convincing incentive for ?people in specific neighborhoods to take the bus, carpool or work from home, according to research leader Marta Gonzalez, a civil and environmental engineer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.?

Simply asking people in general?to take public transit or work remotely is ineffective,?Gonzalez told?NBC News. The study shows that it's best to convince a small number of drivers from a carefully?selected segment of the population to stay off the road during rush hour.

Going forward, the team aims to validate the findings on traffic simulators and then?work with city planners to carry out the one-percent plan ? that is, convince a small number of specific?people to stay home from time to time.

The breakthrough comes thanks to the team's access to cellphone data. Previously, studies like this relied on travel diary surveys, which limited the data to a?tiny fraction of commuters and a single day.?The cellphone data, by contrast, allowed the researchers to analyze trips taken by 100,000 people over the course of several weeks.

?That gives us very good statistics of the flows and, more importantly, if you see a congested street you can have a good estimate of where the drivers are coming from and that connection is what allowed us to design the strategy,? Gonzalez said.

She and colleagues analyzed three-weeks-worth of anonymous cellphone data from Boston and San Francisco to obtain information about drivers? routes, traffic volume, and speed on those routes. They were also able to determine the drivers? neighborhoods.

All of this data was combined with information on population density and the location and capacity of roads in the two cities. This allowed them to determine which neighborhoods are the largest sources of drivers on each road segment, and which roads these drivers use.

By cancelling one percent of trips by select drivers in a handful of neighborhoods in Boston would reduce traffic in the region by 18 percent. In San Francisco, the effect was a 14 percent reduction in congestion.

The data itself was made available to the researchers from mobile carriers, who collect the?information for billing and planning purposes. For example, knowing where most of their users travel in a day helps carriers decide where to build more cellphone towers, Gonzalez explained.

Her team's use of the data was subject approval of a review board that assured?the study did?not invade the privacy of individual users. ?We are not allowed to make a study that can follow individuals,? she noted.

Since the methodology of the study requires only access to anonymous cellphone data, information on population density and a road map, it can be easily replicated around the world, which the researchers are now doing with an aim to reduce traffic in?fast-growing cities.

The findings are reported today in the journal Scientific Reports.?

John Roach is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. To learn more about him, check out his website. For more of our Future of Technology series, watch the featured video below.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/stuck-traffic-get-select-1-percent-drivers-stay-home-says-1C7657737

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Lessons Learned From Instagram?s Ad Policy Fiasco

FRANCE-INTERNET-TECHNOLOGY-LEWEB12Instagram's back-and-forth?on its advertising policy is a case study in tech PR blundering. It demonstrates the need for clear explanations of terms of services changes. It also raises?the question of whether apps should update their terms to cover future monetization strategies as early as they know what these money-makers look like, or if they should notify users right before the ads go live.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/bBBmUFMArhY/

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Thursday, December 20, 2012

IQ 'a Myth,' Study Says

An anonymous reader send this quote from The Star:
"The idea that intelligence can be measured by a single number ? your IQ ? is wrong, according to a recent study led by researchers at the University of Western Ontario (abstract). The study, published in the journal Neuron on Wednesday, involved 100,000 participants around the world taking 12 cognitive tests, with a smaller sample of the group undergoing simultaneous brain-scan testing. 'When we looked at the data, the bottom line is the whole concept of IQ ? or of you having a higher IQ than me ? is a myth,' said Dr. Adrian Owen, the study?s senior investigator... 'There is no such thing as a single measure of IQ or a measure of general intelligence.'"

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/t6u4B03YuqI/story01.htm

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D.C., Maryland, Virginia Will All Be Represented In Inaugural Parade

By: Sharon Rae // December 19, 2012

A Ballou Majestic Marching Knight performs in 2010 at Union Station. The D.C. high school's band will perform in the inaugural parade for President Obama in January.

D.C., Virginia and Maryland will all be represented in next month's inaugural parade. Washington's Ballou Senior High School Majestic Marching Knights will perform, as will The University of Maryland Marching Band and the Virginia Military Institute. VMI is a traditional performer in inaugural parades.

The Presidential Inaugural Committee began sending out invitations Tuesday to participants chosen to march behind President Obama from his swearing in at the Capitol to the White House on Jan. 21, 2013.

Others to be represented in next month's march include Military Spouses of Michigan, the Lesbian and Gay Band Association of St. Louis, Chicago's South Shore Drill Team and marching bands from a high school in Little Rock, Ark. and Miami University of Ohio.

Source: http://feeds.wamu.org/~r/WAMU885LocalNews/~3/Yy-Fc5bqoxg/dc_maryland_virginia_will_all_be_represented_in_inaugural_parade

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Classic Restored Cars Head To Arizona Auction - D & D Classic

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Classic Automobile Restoration

Image Courtesy Of: (Mike Maez / Gooding & Co.)
Source: LA Times

1958 Ferrari 250 GT LWB California Spider

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People restore cars for many different reasons. Some spend the time and money to have a car they loved as a child or remembered when they were young. Some people use them as investments to make a nice buck, but other people just appreciate the craftsmanship, beauty and work that goes into restoring these classic automobiles. For those looking to buy or sell, auctions happen all over the country, and there is a big one hitting Arizona in January.

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The annual auction in Scottsdale, Arizona is a car collectors dreams. There will be plenty of multimillion-dollar cars from different manufacturers, eras and styles. Santa Monica-based Gooding and Co., a classic car auction company who hosts guests every January in Arizona in Scottsdale and Phoenix, hosts the auction. The LA Times wrote an article for their website with further information on who else will be there. ?Other companies include RM Auctions, Bonhams, and Russo and Steele. The largest is Barrett-Jackson, a company whose televised auction could sell 1,000 cars over its six-day run.?

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Gooding is bringing many high profile cars to the auction in an attempt to break some records and sell some highly values cars. ?The car it hopes will do that is a 1958 Ferrari 250 GT LWB California Spider. The long-wheelbase convertible is one of only 50 built and features a 3.0-liter V-12 making at least 250 horsepower. The car has been certified by Ferrari as a matching-numbers example and has been shown at elite car shows including Pebble Beach.?

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Auctions are great for buyers, sellers, and just car enthusiasts all around. We restore cars for auctions regularly for collectors who are trying to make a return on their investment or trying to win awards for their beautiful antique. You can check out our events page for future shows in the Ohio area.

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Source: http://ddclassic.com/blog/classic-restored-cars-head-to-arizona-auction/

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Next year Facebook include video advertising (and plays automatically)

Posted by Scott Gary on Dec 20, 2012 in Social Networks |

In Facebook needs money and a stable business model, for which they have decided to add a new form of Advertising on the website that millions visit every day, through Ads in video to be added to the existing text and image ads, in a controversial decision that will undoubtedly cause itchy multiple users.

Because as reported-not 100% confirmed, but 99% -, the company will launch at the latest during the month of April 2013 avisaje the new platform, which will include 15-second Videos that will play automatically without the intervention of whoever is with them, besides aiming mobile phones, tablets and web-browsing. Needless to say that this will remove fluidity when visiting the site, especially on mobile devices and old PCs, besides being a striking visual distraction and annoying to some people.

Link: Facebook planning to sell ad space in 2013 video (Neowin)

Tags: ad, Ads, Advertising, avisaje, Facebook, video, Videos

Source: http://technewspedia.com/next-year-facebook-include-video-advertising-and-plays-automatically/

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This Couple Announced Their Wedding Via NES-Inspired Video Game

This Couple Announced Their Wedding Via NES-Inspired Video Game There is something about weddings and video games, huh? People proposing through games is something we hear about often. Here's a small twist: announcing your wedding via video game.

That's exactly what Barry Adams and his fiance, Katie, did?they made a small game to celebrate their wedding that anyone can play. It includes small snippets of the couple's history. It's cute.

"The concept for the game came from traditional wedding invitations, which were styled after an 8-Bit game. This eventually evolved into a small game that just had to be fleshed out" Adams says.

You probably won't attend the wedding (I'm guessing), but you can play it here. It's appropriately called Save The Date. Expect to traverse cake, wedding gifts, champagne and other wedding-type items.

I don't know if I'll ever get married but if I do, man, the pressure is on to be creative about it!

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/kotaku/excerpts/~3/uBEs4VJMEvQ/this-couple-announced-their-wedding-via-nes+inspired-video-game

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