Sunday, July 14, 2013

Chinese Bus Stops Spray Cooling Mist On Overheated Commuters

5 Best Vacuums For Pet Owners

10 Cool Gadgets To Assist People With Arthritis Hand Pain

Truly Better Eyeglasses ? CliC Readers

The Best Microphone For The Job

Top 10 Best New Spy Cameras For The Sneaky Surveillance Enthusiast

Article source: http://inventorspot.com/articles/chinese_bus_stops_spray_cooling_mist_overheated_commuters

TAGS:? brochures, flip book, flip books, flipbook, flipbooks, flippies, giveaways, promotional products
This entry was posted on Friday, July 12th, 2013 at 11:35 PM and is filed under Trends Flip. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

Source: http://flippies.com/adflipoff/archives/42973

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200 jobs to be eliminated at Pilgrim's Pride plants in Chattanooga

published Saturday, July 13th, 2013

A Pilgrim's Pride employee unloads a chicken truck at the chicken processing plant in downtown Chattanooga. A Pilgrim's Pride employee unloads a chicken truck at the chicken processing plant in downtown Chattanooga. "; objLink.IsAboveImage = false; objLink.LinkTarget = "_blank"; objLink.Render();

Pilgrim's Pride will cut 200 jobs in Chattanooga, building on a previous wave of 400 layoffs in 2012.

The company employed more than 1,500 workers at its Broad Street and Market Street facilities at the beginning of 2012, but today employs closer to 900.

According to the company, its cook and cold-storage facilities, which are in its Market Street building, will shut down within the next two weeks.

There are no changes at Pilgrim's "kill" operation on Broad Street, nor to its deboning operation on Market Street, the company said.

A spokesman said that employees would be offered jobs at Pilgrim's remaining downtown Chattanooga facilities, and that 40 jobs already had been added at the deboning plant.

The shift is part of a larger realignment at Pilgrim's that has been ongoing since May, which has seen Chattanooga moved from the prepared foods division to the small bird deboning division.

The eliminated cooking and cold storage operations are being consolidated at more modern and efficient facilities elsewhere in the region, said spokesman Cameron Bruett.

J.Ed. Marston, the Chattanooga Area Chamber of Commerce's vice president for marketing, said he's disappointed to hear about the job loss.

"Pilgrim's Pride has been a major employer for a long time," he said. "Although this is a large number of jobs, they'll remain a major employer. It's unfortunate but sometimes businesses have to make tough decisions. This reinforces the continuing need for job-creation efforts."

Contact staff writer Ellis Smith at esmith@timesfreepress.com or 423-757-6315.

about Ellis Smith...

Ellis Smith joined the Chattanooga Times Free Press in January 2010 as a business reporter. His beat includes the flooring industry, Chattem, Unum, Krystal, the automobile market, real estate and technology. Ellis is from Marietta, Ga., and has a bachelor?s degree in mass communication at the University of West Georgia. He previously worked at UTV-13 News, Carrollton, Ga., as a producer; at the The West Georgian, Carrollton, Ga., as editor; and at the Times-Georgian, Carrollton, ...

Source: http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/2013/jul/13/company-cuts/

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Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Our Marie Curie Cancer Care Challenge is finished! Pop in and see these beautiful Blankets

Good Evening,

A very hot day here in the UK today and to be honest I have spent the whole day virtually on-line up-dating our 'SIBOL' Blog. There is always so much going on in our Group and I do like to keep everything up to date for you.

First of all I do hope you will scroll down to previous post and view the beautiful work from wilfi over in the Netherlands. It just can't be missed!

On Thursday September 13th I started a new Challenge off. I had the idea to make 9 Daffodil Blankets for the 9 Marie Curie Cancer Care Hospices here in the UK. I invited Ladies over on RAVERLY and in Blogland also on Flickr ?to help me by making a Daffodil Square. The task actually was quite daunting and there was a time when I thought no...... we will never be able to complete this Challenge, but with the help of Ladies worldwide I am very happy to be telling you that it is now finished.

Yesterday the final Blanket was finished by wilfi and I send her my thanks.

We have now made 9 Blankets which will be donated to the 9 Hospices up and down the Country. Marie Curie Cancer Care have Hospices in Belfast Ireland, Bradford, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Hampstead, Liverpool, ?Newcastle and the West Midlands.

These are the Blankets which will be donated to the Hospices.

The 10th Blanket which we made will be auctioned on EBAY.

If you are interested in purchasing this Blanket yourself why not email me
Sue on sueatpigsty@talktalk.net
All reasonable offers will be considered.

Now I will prepare the Blankets for sending off to the Hospices and I will do my best to ask them for some photographs of them receiving them.

I will let you know when the Blanket is ready for auction too if it hasn't been sold through a private sale.

All money raised will be given to the Marie Curie Cancer Care organisation.

I would like to thank everyone for their fantastic support with this Challenge.

Each Square has been lovingly created by Ladies worldwide and I can't thank you all enough!

x Sue x?

Source: http://sunshineinternationalblanketsoflove.blogspot.com/2013/06/our-marie-curie-cancer-care-challenge.html

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Egypt's security clampdown disrupts Gaza smuggling

RAFAH, Gaza Strip (AP) ? An Egyptian security crackdown has severely disrupted smuggling to the neighboring Gaza Strip, causing a fuel shortage, doubling the price of building materials and shutting down some construction sites in the Hamas-ruled territory.

Egypt's military clamped down on the lawless Sinai Peninsula, which abuts Gaza, in the run-up to mass protests planned for Sunday by Egyptian opposition activists trying to force out the country's president, Mohammed Morsi.

It's not clear if the Sinai lockdown is temporary or signals a tougher security regime aimed at restricting smuggling through tunnels running under the Egypt-Gaza border in the long term. That would have a devastating effect on Gaza, which has relied on smugglers since Israel imposed a border blockade following the rise to power of the Islamic militant group Hamas in 2006.

The Sinai campaign began this month when Egypt's military sent troop reinforcements and set up dozens of roadblocks across the sparsely populated stretch of desert that runs from the Suez Canal to the Gaza border. As a result, Egyptian trucks carrying cement, steel rods, fuel and other goods could no longer reach the Gaza tunnels.

"Nothing can get to the (tunnel) area," said Abu Khaled, 44, a tunnel operator in Gaza. "We are like a dry lake now. ... We all pray that this will end soon."

Gaza has only small reserves of cement, steel and other materials for private construction. With few exceptions, Israel bans such goods for fear Hamas will divert them for military use.

In response to the Sinai clampdown, the price of cement has doubled to $220 per ton, forcing some of the more than 200 private construction sites in the territory to shut down, contractors said. A shortage of cheap Egyptian fuel is forcing Gaza motorists to buy more expensive Israeli imports.

For now, Gaza's Hamas government is keeping silent.

Hamas and Morsi's Freedom and Justice Party share the same roots in the region-wide Muslim Brotherhood, and Hamas leaders appear reluctant to add to Morsi's troubles by complaining publicly about the disruption of smuggling.

The Egyptian military is known to be wary of Morsi's close ties to Hamas, viewing it as a threat to Egypt's public security. The military is bound to play a pivotal role in the current showdown between Morsi and his opponents, with both camps trying to ensure its support. Hamas would undermine Morsi by demanding an end to the Sinai crackdown now.

Mahmoud Zahar, a Hamas leader in Gaza, said the movement is aware of Morsi's domestic problems. "We are waiting until the administration (will) be more solid and stable" before raising demands for a new border regime, he said.

A collapse of the Morsi government would deal a major setback to the Brotherhood, including Hamas.

The Arab Spring uprisings of 2011 swept the Brotherhood to power in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya, easing Hamas' political isolation in the region. Hamas, which has killed hundreds of Israelis in suicide bombings and other attacks, has long been shunned by Israel and the West as a terrorist organization. Morsi's Western-backed predecessor, Hosni Mubarak, had joined Israel in enforcing the Gaza border blockade ? though he turned a blind eye to the tunnels because of the Egyptian public's sympathy for the Palestinians.

Hamas' hopes of normalization on the Gaza-Egypt border following Morsi's inauguration a year ago have not materialized. An Egyptian-brokered cease-fire ending eight days of fighting between Israel and Hamas last November called for new border arrangements, but nothing has changed so far.

The land crossing between Egypt and Gaza is not equipped to handle cargo, and opening the border to trade would have violated previous international agreements, a risky step Morsi did not want to take early on in his presidency. Instead, he eased passenger travel slightly and allowed limited construction materials ? those intended for large Qatar-funded projects in Gaza ? to be transported above ground.

As a result, Gaza continued to rely on tunnels, mainly for cement, gravel, iron rods and fuel. Most consumer goods have been shipped through an Israeli cargo crossing since Israel eased its border restrictions three years ago.

In normal times, about 70 tunnels are active ? most for cargo, but some also for travelers evading Egyptian border controls. Tents or in some cases houses cover the openings on the Gaza side of the 14-kilometer (nine-mile) border. Hamas levies customs on smuggled imports and has turned the tunnel zone into a closed bonded area, with a line of checkpoints searching cargo trucks.

During a visit this week, the tunnel zone ? normally humming with the sound of generators and the rumbling of trucks ? was quiet. Only a few trucks loaded goods that had crossed the Sinai before the clampdown.

Egyptian military officials said the immediate target of the Sinai campaign is to keep out militants who might sneak into Egypt through the tunnels to spread chaos. Egyptian authorities never had a strong presence in the remote peninsula, but the last vestiges of law and order broke down after the 2011 uprising.

Militants have stepped up attacks in the Sinai, including last year, when 16 Egyptian soldiers were killed near Gaza. In addition, Bedouin tribal gangs are involved in smuggling and other criminal activities.

Egyptian security officials met with their Hamas counterparts at the start of the current security campaign. They are working together to minimize any threat at a time when Morsi is facing the most serious challenge to his rule, said officials from both sides who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss their talks with reporters.

Egyptian officials, however, said the reason they are virtually sealing off the Sinai is that Hamas is not doing enough.

Gazans are used to frequent shortages, and those involved in cross-border trade expressed hope the current crisis would blow over quickly.

"Everyone here and in Egypt is waiting to see what will happen (after Sunday), and we all pray for the good," said Nimr Rabah, a Gaza contractor who had to shut down two of his sites.

Abu Khaled, who imports gravel, expressed understanding for Egypt's security concerns, but said the closure is hurting a lot of people. He said 18 families on both sides of the border depend on his tunnel for their livelihood.

Truck driver Abu Tawfik, who transports cement from the tunnels to construction sites, said he has been idle for the past week. As a result, construction work is also slowing down, hurting one of the pillars of Gaza's shaky economy.

The construction industry has recovered slightly since the height of Israel's border blockade, employing about 20,000 people.

Nabil Abu Muaileq, chairman of the contractors' union, said there are more than 200 private construction projects, including homes and apartment buildings, in addition to projects by the Gaza government and international aid groups.

Rabah, the contractor, said the cement shortage forced him to stop work several days ago on a home and an apartment building. "We were told by the tunnel dealers they were unable to secure what we need due to the security arrangements" in Egypt, he said.

An Egyptian intelligence official said the crackdown on smuggling likely will continue, if perhaps not at the current level, even if Egypt's current political crisis is resolved.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief reporters on internal deliberations, said any decision to shut down the tunnels completely would have to come not from the military, but from Morsi.

____

Associated Press writers Karin Laub and Mohammed Daraghmeh in Gaza City contributed reporting.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-security-clampdown-disrupts-gaza-smuggling-062538735.html

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WSJ: Google working on Android game console, smartwatch and more

gaming

This is kind of interesting. Hot on the heels of reports that iOS 7 contains proper third-party support for physical game controllers comes word that Google is hard at work building a full-fledged gaming console and smartwatch based on its Android operating system.

The story comes from The Wall Street Journal, who reported last night that the Mountain View-based company is looking to expand its mobile platform beyond smartphones and tablets, and is hoping to combat similar devices that?Apple?may release in the future?

The Journal?s Amir Efrati has the scoop:

?Google?Inc.?GOOG?+0.39%?is developing a videogame console and wristwatch powered by its Android operating system, according to people familiar with the matter, as the Internet company seeks to spread the software beyond smartphones and tablets?

?The people briefed on the matter said Google is reacting in part to expectations that rival Apple will launch a videogame console as part of its next Apple TV product release.?

Google has also been watching Ouya?s efforts with close interest. Ouya, a $99 gaming console built on Android, collected over $8.5 million in pledges as a Kickstarter project last year, and has been making a lot of noise in recent weeks as it finally begins shipping to its backers.

Apparently the search giant is working on a slew of new devices, separate from its Motorola Mobility hardware division, including a smartwatch and a second version of the Nexus Q?a media streaming box that was pulled after brief availability last year for various reasons.

?The company?s hardware efforts come as it wraps up development on the next version of Android, which is expected to be released in the fall. Among other things, the software will be better tailored to the lower-cost smartphones prevalent in developing countries with the aim of firming up Android?s market-share globally, said some of the people familiar with the matter.?

In addition to expanding its own hardware offerings, Efrati says that with the next version of Android?known internally as ?K release? or ?Key Lime Pie??Google will give manufacturers like Samsung more freedom to use the OS in devices other than smartphones and tablets.

Apple has long been rumored to be expanding its?presence?in the living room, with either a TV set or advanced set-top box, and more recently has been said to be working on a smartwatch. And with Google now said to be doing the same, it?s time that these rumors materialized.

It seems like things in the mobile world are about to get really exciting.

What do you think?

Source: http://www.idownloadblog.com/2013/06/28/google-working-on-console/

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Cardiac patients given longer prescriptions at discharge more likely to continue taking medication

Cardiac patients given longer prescriptions at discharge more likely to continue taking medication [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Jun-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Julie Saccone
julie.saccone@wchospital.ca
416-323-6400 x4054
Women's College Hospital

Elderly cardiac patients prescribed heart medications for 60 days or more after leaving hospital have four times the odds of adhering to the drug regime than patients prescribed the same medications for 30 days, according to research conducted at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) and Women's College Hospital (WCH).

The study, published today in the Canadian Journal of Cardiology, found longer initial prescriptions when leaving hospital are associated with long-term adherence in elderly patients. The findings suggest prescriptions covering a longer interval of time are both more patient-centered and more effective.

"Studies show that adherence to cardiac medications after a cardiac event like a heart attack declines over time. But we know that taking these medications for the long-term is absolutely essential for preventing further cardiac events," said Dr. Noah Ivers, lead author of the study and family physician at Women's College Hospital. "This study shows that longer prescriptions for cardiac patients after leaving hospital increase the likelihood that patients will take the medications for the long term, which may reduce their risk of heart attacks, stroke or even death."

In the study, researchers investigated medication adherence of more than 20,000 elderly patients with coronary artery disease to three common classes of cardiac medications ACE inhibitors, beta blockers and statins. For an 18-month period, the researchers compared the results of those prescribed the medications for less than 30 days, for 30-60 days and for 60 days or more. They found:

  • Patients prescribed the medication for 60 days or more were more likely to adhere to the medication in the long term than those prescribed the medication for 30 days or less
  • Older patients were less likely to adhere to medications.
  • Male patients were more likely to continue to take some medications but not others.
  • Up to 50 per cent of prescriptions covered only 7 days.
  • More than 80 per cent of patients had a follow-up appointment within one month, regardless of prescription length.

"The majority of patients in our study left hospital with a prescription for cardiac medications for 30 days or less," said Dr. Ivers. "This may be a result of the common clinical perception that short prescriptions encourage patients to go to their followup appointments, yet our study found regardless of the duration of the prescription, nearly all patients did, in fact, attend their followup appointment."

Short prescriptions may inadvertently suggest to patients and family physicians alike that long-term adherence isn't necessary, the authors suggest.

"When we reduce the requirement for early refills, patients still follow up with their family physician or cardiologist and they are more likely to remain on the medications as well, Dr. Ivers said. "We certainly want to encourage early outpatient follow up after hospitalization, but holding medications ransom may not be the best way to do it."

Modifying the length of a prescription is an easy fix, Dr. Ivers adds.

"Forcing elderly patients to frequently visit their cardiologist or family physician to renew prescriptions is only exacerbating the problem," he said. "While dosage adjustments are sometimes required, increasing the duration of a prescription for cardiac patients can easily be done, leading to significant benefits for patients."

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Cardiac patients given longer prescriptions at discharge more likely to continue taking medication [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Jun-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Julie Saccone
julie.saccone@wchospital.ca
416-323-6400 x4054
Women's College Hospital

Elderly cardiac patients prescribed heart medications for 60 days or more after leaving hospital have four times the odds of adhering to the drug regime than patients prescribed the same medications for 30 days, according to research conducted at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) and Women's College Hospital (WCH).

The study, published today in the Canadian Journal of Cardiology, found longer initial prescriptions when leaving hospital are associated with long-term adherence in elderly patients. The findings suggest prescriptions covering a longer interval of time are both more patient-centered and more effective.

"Studies show that adherence to cardiac medications after a cardiac event like a heart attack declines over time. But we know that taking these medications for the long-term is absolutely essential for preventing further cardiac events," said Dr. Noah Ivers, lead author of the study and family physician at Women's College Hospital. "This study shows that longer prescriptions for cardiac patients after leaving hospital increase the likelihood that patients will take the medications for the long term, which may reduce their risk of heart attacks, stroke or even death."

In the study, researchers investigated medication adherence of more than 20,000 elderly patients with coronary artery disease to three common classes of cardiac medications ACE inhibitors, beta blockers and statins. For an 18-month period, the researchers compared the results of those prescribed the medications for less than 30 days, for 30-60 days and for 60 days or more. They found:

  • Patients prescribed the medication for 60 days or more were more likely to adhere to the medication in the long term than those prescribed the medication for 30 days or less
  • Older patients were less likely to adhere to medications.
  • Male patients were more likely to continue to take some medications but not others.
  • Up to 50 per cent of prescriptions covered only 7 days.
  • More than 80 per cent of patients had a follow-up appointment within one month, regardless of prescription length.

"The majority of patients in our study left hospital with a prescription for cardiac medications for 30 days or less," said Dr. Ivers. "This may be a result of the common clinical perception that short prescriptions encourage patients to go to their followup appointments, yet our study found regardless of the duration of the prescription, nearly all patients did, in fact, attend their followup appointment."

Short prescriptions may inadvertently suggest to patients and family physicians alike that long-term adherence isn't necessary, the authors suggest.

"When we reduce the requirement for early refills, patients still follow up with their family physician or cardiologist and they are more likely to remain on the medications as well, Dr. Ivers said. "We certainly want to encourage early outpatient follow up after hospitalization, but holding medications ransom may not be the best way to do it."

Modifying the length of a prescription is an easy fix, Dr. Ivers adds.

"Forcing elderly patients to frequently visit their cardiologist or family physician to renew prescriptions is only exacerbating the problem," he said. "While dosage adjustments are sometimes required, increasing the duration of a prescription for cardiac patients can easily be done, leading to significant benefits for patients."

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-06/wch-cpg062813.php

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Tips to Lighten Up Your Summer Cooking - Borderstan | Borderstan

From Chelsea Rinnig. Email her at chelsea[AT]borderstan.com.

"Summer"

Some healthy tips for your summer cooking. (Chelsea Rinnig)

Healthy meal tips to keep you on track this summer

Barbecues, picnics, beach and beer ? all a recipe for fun activities this summer. But frankly, I begin to feel it after a weekend of drinking beer all day; all of a sudden, a beach weekend becomes a looming fear where you wished you?d toned up a little more and drank a little less.

So, here are a few tips and past articles that may allow you to indulge a little in the outdoor events while staying healthy and looking good!

Substitutions

  • Instead of butter, use extra virgin olive oil and just a drizzle. Roast vegetables on the grill for a side instead of the potato chips and go for the ground turkey or chicken breasts when making your burgers.
  • Instead of bringing that baguette and cheese to the picnic, try these collard wraps.
  • Try out zucchini hummus instead of chickpeas for a backyard bash: roast a large zucchini, whole, at 425 for 30-40 minutes (until tender). Cool, slice, and blend with a ? cup olive oil, juice from half a lemon, and 3 tablespoons of Tahini. Serve with carrot sticks ??it?s delicious. Add spinach for a boost of iron and extra green! The color is beautiful.
  • Swap a juicy, fresh watermelon for dessert ??they will be in season soon! Or roast some peaches and serve with plain vanilla ice cream or vanilla yogurt.

So have a beer for being good all week and enjoy the best your local markets have to offer this summer!

Get an?RSS Feed for all Borderstan stories?or?subscribe to Borderstan?s daily email newsletter.

This post was written by:

chelsea - who has written 45 posts on Borderstan.

Rinnig moved to Borderstan in Fall 2011 from Baltimore and hails originally from Los Angeles. Her dedication to the local food movement and commitment to eating simply and nutritiously have led her to both develop her culinary skills and write about her tasting new dishes both in her new city as well as her own kitchen. You can find Rinnig working downtown on weekdays, selling stone fruits and berries at the Dupont Farmers market on Sundays and splurging at fine restaurants here and there in-between. Email her at chelsea[AT]borderstan.com.

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Source: http://www.borderstan.com/06/tips-to-lighten-up-your-summer-cooking/

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