Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Sky Garden House by Keiji Ashizawa Design | HomeDSGN, a daily ...

This contemporary, two-family residence was created by Keiji Ashizawa Design in 2010 and is located in Tokyo, Japan.

The house features a glass-enclosed air shaft running through its center to provide natural light while maintaining privacy from the outside.

Sky Garden House by Keiji Ashizawa Design:

?Sky Garden House is a two-family residence in central Tokyo. The main goal in design was to create an environment where two families can interact freely and frequently, while giving each family a high level of privacy from each other as well as from outside.

The peculiar nature of the location and limitations imposed by the building codes (in particular, the building-to-land ratio) presented considerable challenges in meeting this goal.

The house, where Clients and their two children occupy the first two floors and their parents live on the third floor, is built on a steep incline, with about 5 meters in height difference between the low and high points of the land, rendering part of the first floor effectively underground.

The building-to-land ratio required that maximum use of the available space be made to secure open, comfortable living space for two families. We and Clients sought to address these challenges through a series of extended discussions, in a process not unlike trying to piece together a complex puzzle.

In the end, we decided on three design features in meeting these challenges. First, we designed a light well and had each room face it. This had two benefits. One was that this would ensure that each room on the first three floors would receive good amount of sunlight. The other was that it would create an open and spacious feel to the house while allowing for privacy from outside environs.?

Photos by: Daici Ano

Source: http://www.homedsgn.com/2012/10/31/sky-garden-house-by-keiji-ashizawa-design/

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Friday, October 26, 2012

A Snapshot of Early Voting in 7 States

In 2008, about 30 percent of the national vote was cast via early or absentee ballots. This year, the expectation is that about 40 percent of Americans will cast a vote early, observers said.

"The big picture is [that] early voting is up," said Michael McDonald, director of the United States Elections Project. "More Republicans appear to be voting early [than in 2008], and Democrats are also voting early."

More than 7.7 million people nationwide have cast a ballot already, McDonald calculated.

There appear to be two reasons for the increase, he said.

First, the Romney campaign is doing a much better job of mobilizing the early vote than the McCain campaign did. The McCain campaign did very little to mobilize the early vote in 2008 and it was vastly outnumbered by the Obama campaign.

This cycle, the Republican National Committee reports that Republicans are making up a larger share of the early voters than they did last cycle - and they've put a comprehensive program in place with 119,000 volunteers who have made 44.8 million contacts total since the spring.

The other reason for the increase may be that voters find early voting convenient.

Here is a closer snapshot of where things stand in the battleground states where in-person early voting is allowed.

COLORADO

A total of 325,810 votes have been cast so far - 126,539 from registered Republicans and 120,965 from registered Democrats, plus 75,030 from "unaffiliated" voters.

FLORIDA

So far, 925,604 mail-in absentee ballots have been cast - 414,016 from Republicans and 363,881 from Democrats. Early in-person voting has not started yet in Florida. It kicks off on Saturday, Oct. 27.

IOWA

Voters have cast 399,858 ballots in the state - with 183,780 from Democrats and 126,872 from Republicans. Democrats currently have the advantage, but Republicans said they were performing much better than they were in Iowa at this point in 2008. At the same point in 2008, Democrats had about a 24-percentage-point lead in the early vote, Republicans said, whereas this year it's about 8 percentage points.

NEVADA

Democrats boast the advantage over Republicans - 101,935 to 79,058 - among the 218,616 votes cast so far statewide.

OHIO

A total of 808,051 ballots have been cast so far - with 618,861 absentee ballots returned and 189,190 additional in-person votes. Ohio does not register voters by party. Numbers are up in rural and urban counties, which bodes well for both Republicans and Democrats.

VIRGINIA

Virginia allows for in-person ballot casting ahead of Election Day - but state officials call it it in-person absentee voting and voters need an excuse to do it.

In any event, 247,862 votes already have been cast. The state does not register by party, but the Obama campaign reported earlier this week that more ballots have been cast in precincts Obama won than precincts McCain won. However, the Republican National Committee pointed out that absentee and early voter activity is down from 2008 in the Democratic counties of Alexandria, Arlington and Fairfax, and it's up in Republican-leaning Loudoun County.

WISCONSIN

Wisconsin is the great unknown. Every municipality in the state handles its election procedures differently. There are more local election officials in Wisconsin than in the entire rest of the country combined. As a result, the state doesn't report out complete numbers of their early and absentee votes as they come in. To make matters even more vague, voters don't register by party in Wisconsin either.

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/snapshot-early-voting-7-states-100120878--abc-news-politics.html

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Just bought an iPad 3? Check local return policy

14 hrs.

Even journalists and devoted Apple fans were a bit surprised at Tuesday's update of the full-size iPad; generally Apple's products are out at least a year or so before new versions?are announced. But what was merely perplexing for some may be downright infuriating for others, particularly those who just bought an iPad 3 thinking they were safe from obsolescence???for a few more months, anyway.

Some buyers may be in luck, however: As usual, anyone who bought their iPad from Apple in the last two weeks is within the return period, and CNET reports that at least one store is allowing returns for iPads bought as far as a month back as a conciliatory gesture.

This extended return period?hasn't been confirmed by Apple, although one consumer claims to have heard from Apple Care about it. I called an Apple Store in Seattle and they said they weren't doing the extended return period. The manager speculated that larger stores with more inventory might have more freedom to do it. Apple itself?has not responded to our?inquiries, but we will update this article if they get back to us.

There's no risk in calling your local Apple Store and asking, though. Just be sure that your 3rd-gen iPad is in mint condition: no etching, stickers, or wear and tear. Otherwise they won't take it in whether you bought it a month ago or this week.

Were you unlucky enough to you have bought?your iPad 3 just outside the window of return?opportunity? Don't be too put out. The new model got a speed boost and the new Lightning connector, but that's?all. The great screen and form factor are otherwise identical, so be assured you still have a solid tablet in your hands.

Devin Coldewey is a contributing writer for NBC?News Digital. His personal website is?coldewey.cc.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/gadgetbox/just-bought-ipad-3-check-your-local-stores-return-policy-1C6643650

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Spain regulator halts sale of some Novartis flu vaccines

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Soundtrack to history: 1878 Edison audio unveiled

John Schneiter, a trustee at the Museum of Innovation and Science, talks about tinfoil phonographs on Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012, in Schenectady, N.Y. Researchers have digitized what experts say is the oldest recording of a playable American voice and history?s first-ever recorded musical performance, along with the first recorded blooper. Recorded on a sheet of tinfoil on a phonograph invented by Thomas Edison, the recording was made in St. Louis in 1878. It contains a short coronet solo of an unidentified song, followed by the voices of a man reciting popular nursery rhymes. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

John Schneiter, a trustee at the Museum of Innovation and Science, talks about tinfoil phonographs on Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012, in Schenectady, N.Y. Researchers have digitized what experts say is the oldest recording of a playable American voice and history?s first-ever recorded musical performance, along with the first recorded blooper. Recorded on a sheet of tinfoil on a phonograph invented by Thomas Edison, the recording was made in St. Louis in 1878. It contains a short coronet solo of an unidentified song, followed by the voices of a man reciting popular nursery rhymes. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

This photo provided by the Museum of Innovation and Science in Schenectady, N.Y., shows Thomas Edison's 1878 tinfoil phonograph. Researchers have digitized what experts say is the oldest recording of a playable American voice and history?s first-ever recorded musical performance, along with the first recorded blooper. Recorded on a sheet of tinfoil on a phonograph invented by Thomas Edison, the recording was made in St. Louis in 1878. It contains a short coronet solo of an unidentified song, followed by the voices of a man reciting popular nursery rhymes. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

Chris Hunter, curator at the Museum of Innovation and Science, plays a 1878 tinfoil recording on a computer on Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012, in Schenectady, N.Y. Researchers have digitized what experts say is the oldest recording of a playable American voice and history?s first-ever recorded musical performance, along with the first recorded blooper. Recorded on a sheet of tinfoil on a phonograph invented by Thomas Edison, the recording was made in St. Louis in 1878. It contains a short coronet solo of an unidentified song, followed by the voices of a man reciting popular nursery rhymes. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

A tinfoil sheet recording made on a phonograph which was invented by Thomas Edison and recorded in St. Louis in 1878 is displayed at the Museum of Innovation and Science on Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012, in Schenectady, N.Y. Researchers have digitized what experts say is the oldest recording of a playable American voice and history?s first-ever recorded musical performance, along with the first recorded blooper. It contains a short coronet solo of an unidentified song, followed by the voices of a man reciting popular nursery rhymes. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

A tinfoil sheet recording made on a phonograph which was invented by Thomas Edison and recorded in St. Louis in 1878 is displayed at the Museum of Innovation and Science on Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012, in Schenectady, N.Y. Researchers have digitized what experts say is the oldest recording of a playable American voice and history?s first-ever recorded musical performance, along with the first recorded blooper. It contains a short coronet solo of an unidentified song, followed by the voices of a man reciting popular nursery rhymes. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP) ? It's scratchy, lasts only 78 seconds and features the world's first recorded blooper.

The modern masses can now listen to what experts say is the oldest playable recording of an American voice and the first-ever capturing of a musical performance, thanks to digital advances that allowed the sound to be transferred from flimsy tinfoil to computer.

The recording was originally made on a Thomas Edison-invented phonograph in St. Louis in 1878.

At a time when music lovers can carry thousands of digital songs on a player the size of a pack of gum, Edison's tinfoil playback seems prehistoric. But that dinosaur opens a key window into the development of recorded sound.

"In the history of recorded sound that's still playable, this is about as far back as we can go," said John Schneiter, a trustee at the Museum of Innovation and Science, where it will be played Thursday night in the city where Edison helped found the General Electric Co.

The recording opens with a 23-second cornet solo of an unidentified song, followed by a man's voice reciting "Mary Had a Little Lamb" and "Old Mother Hubbard." The man laughs at two spots during the recording, including at the end, when he recites the wrong words in the second nursery rhyme.

"Look at me; I don't know the song," he says.

When the recording is played using modern technology during a presentation Thursday at a nearby theater, it likely will be the first time it has been played at a public event since it was created during an Edison phonograph demonstration held June 22, 1878, in St. Louis, museum officials said.

The recording was made on a sheet of tinfoil, 5 inches wide by 15 inches long, placed on the cylinder of the phonograph Edison invented in 1877 and began selling the following year.

A hand crank turned the cylinder under a stylus that would move up and down over the foil, recording the sound waves created by the operator's voice. The stylus would eventually tear the foil after just a few playbacks, and the person demonstrating the technology would typically tear up the tinfoil and hand the pieces out as souvenirs, according to museum curator Chris Hunter.

Popping noises heard on this recording are likely from scars left from where the foil was folded up for more than a century.

"Realistically, once you played it a couple of times, the stylus would tear through it and destroy it," he said.

Only a handful of the tinfoil recording sheets are known to known to survive, and of those, only two are playable: the Schenectady museum's and an 1880 recording owned by The Henry Ford museum in Michigan.

Hunter said he was able to determine just this week that the man's voice on the museum's 1878 tinfoil recording is believed to be that of Thomas Mason, a St. Louis newspaper political writer who also went by the pen name I.X. Peck.

Edison company records show that one of his newly invented tinfoil phonographs, serial No. 8, was sold to Mason for $95.50 in April 1878, and a search of old newspapers revealed a listing for a public phonograph program being offered by Peck on June 22, 1878, in St. Louis, the curator said.

A woman's voice says the words "Old Mother Hubbard," but her identity remains a mystery, he said. Three weeks after making the recording, Mason died of sunstroke, Hunter said.

A Connecticut woman donated the tinfoil to the Schenectady museum in 1978 for an exhibit on the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Edison company that later merged with another to form GE. The woman's father had been an antiques dealer in the Midwest and counted the item among his favorites, Hunter said.

In July, Hunter brought the Edison tinfoil recording to California's Berkeley Lab, where researchers such as Carl Haber have had success in recent years restoring some of the earliest audio recordings.

Haber's projects include recovering a snippet of a folk song recorded a capella in 1860 on paper by Edouard-Leon Scott de Martinville, a French printer credited with inventing the earliest known sound recording device.

Haber and his team used optical scanning technology to replicate the action of the phonograph's stylus, reading the grooves in the foil and creating a 3D image, which was then analyzed by a computer program that recovered the original recorded sound.

The achievement restores a vital link in the evolution of recorded sound, Haber said. The artifact represents Edison's first step in his efforts to record sound and have the capability to play it back, even if it was just once or twice, he said.

"It really completes a technology story," Haber said. "He was on the right track from the get-go to record and play it back."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-25-Edison-Found%20Sound/id-ba7726f867d74e42b7b54cf9098645c0

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Kingsoft Antivirus 2012 SP5.3 - Neowin

Kingsoft Antivirus 2012 is a completely free solution for detecting and cleaning trojans and viruses, and protect your computer with system defense K+ and boundary defense. Kingsoft Free Antivirus is based on Cloud Security technology with faster operation and lower CPU utilization. Kingsoft Antivirus provides real-time malware protection against attacks from worms, trojans, spyware, malware and unnamed viruses, detects emerging threats and removes hidden threats from your computer quickly without slowing down your system at all.

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