Monday, June 3, 2013

Jean Stapleton dies: She was more than 'Edith Bunker' (+video)

Jean Stapleton dies: A stage-trained actress, Jean Stapleton won three Emmys for portraying 'Edith Bunker' in 'All in the Family.' Norman Lear said, 'Jean [Stapleton] was a brilliant comedienne with exquisite timing.

By Jake Pearson and Lynn Elber,?Associated Press / June 1, 2013

Cast members of "All in the Family," from left, Carroll O'Connor, Jean Stapleton, and Sally Struthers pose with their Emmys backstage at the 24th annual Emmy Awards in Hollywood, Calif., 1972. Stapleton passed on at the age of 90 on May 31, 2013.

(AP Photo)

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Jean Stapleton, the stage-trained character actress who played Archie Bunker's far better half, the sweetly naive Edith, in TV's groundbreaking 1970s comedy "All in the Family," has died. She was 90.

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Stapleton died Friday of natural causes at her New York City home surrounded by friends and family, her children said Saturday.

"It is with great love and heavy hearts that we say farewell to our collective Mother, with a capital M," said her son and daughter, John Putch and Pamela Putch, in a statement. "Her devotion to her craft and her family taught us all great life lessons."

Little known to the public before "All In the Family," she co-starred with Carroll O'Connor in the top-rated CBS comedy about an unrepentant bigot, the wife he churlishly but fondly called "Dingbat," their daughter Gloria (Sally Struthers) and liberal son-in-law Mike, also known as Meathead (Rob Reiner).

Stapleton received eight Emmy nominations and won three times during her eight-year tenure with "All in the Family." Produced by Norman Lear, the series broke through the timidity of U.S. TV with social and political jabs and ranked as the No. 1-rated program for an unprecedented five years in a row. Lear would go on to create a run of socially conscious comedies.

"No one gave more profound 'How to be a Human Being' lessons than Jean Stapleton," Lear said Saturday. In a statement, Reiner added: "Jean was a brilliant comedienne with exquisite timing. Working with her was one of the greatest experiences of my life."

Stapleton also earned Emmy nominations for playing Eleanor Roosevelt in the 1982 film "Eleanor, First Lady of the World" and for a guest appearance in 1995 on "Grace Under Fire."

Her big-screen films included a pair directed by Nora Ephron: the 1998 Tom Hanks-Meg Ryan romance "You've Got Mail" and 1996's "Michael" starring John Travolta. She also turned down the chance to star in the popular TV mystery show, "Murder, She Wrote," which became a showcase for Angela Lansbury.

The theater was Stapleton's first love and she compiled a rich resume, starting in 1941 as a New England stock player and moving to Broadway in the 1950s and '60s. In 1964, she originated the role of Mrs. Strakosh in "Funny Girl" with Barbra Streisand. Others musicals and plays included "Bells Are Ringing," ''Rhinoceros" and "Damn Yankees," in which her performance ? and the nasal tone she used in "All in the Family" ? attracted Lear's attention and led to his auditioning her for the role of Archie's wife.

"I wasn't a leading lady type," she once told The Associated Press. "I knew where I belonged. And actually, I found character work much more interesting than leading ladies."

Edith, of the dithery manner, cheerfully high-pitched voice and family loyalty, charmed viewers but was viewed by Stapleton as "submissive" and, she hoped, removed from reality. In a 1972 New York Times interview, she said she didn't think Edith was a typical American housewife ? "at least I hope she's not."

"What Edith represents is the housewife who is still in bondage to the male figure, very submissive and restricted to the home. She is very naive, and she kind of thinks through a mist, and she lacks the education to expand her world. I would hope that most housewives are not like that," said Stapleton, whose character regularly obeyed her husband's demand to "stifle yourself."

But Edith was honest and compassionate, and "in most situations she says the truth and pricks Archie's inflated ego," she added.

She confounded Archie with her malapropos ? "You know what they say, misery is the best company" ? and open-hearted acceptance of others, including her beleaguered son-in-law and African-Americans and other minorities that Archie disdained.

As the series progressed, Stapleton had the chance to offer a deeper take on Edith as the character faced milestones including a breast cancer scare and menopause. She was proud of the show's political edge, citing an episode about a draft dodger who clashes with Archie as a personal favorite.

But Stapleton worried about typecasting, rejecting any roles, commercials or sketches on variety shows that called for a character similar to Edith. Despite pleas from Lear not to let Edith die, Stapleton left the show, re-titled "Archie's Place," in 1980, leaving Archie to carry on as a widower.

"My decision is to go out into the world and do something else. I'm not constituted as an actress to remain in the same role. ... My identity as an actress is in jeopardy if I invested my entire career in Edith Bunker," she told the AP in 1979.

She had no trouble shaking off Edith ? "when you finish a role, you're done with it. There's no deep, spooky connection with the parts you play," she told the AP in 2002 ? but after O'Connor's 2001 death she got condolence letters from people who thought they were really married. When people spotted her in public and called her "Edith," she would politely remind them that her name was Jean.

Stapleton proved her own toughness when her husband of 26 years, William Putch, suffered a fatal heart attack in 1983 at age 60 while the couple was touring with a play directed by Putch.

Stapleton went on stage in Syracuse, New York, that night and continued on with the tour. "That's what he would have wanted," she told People magazine in 1984. "I realized it was a refuge to have that play, rather than to sit and wallow. And it was his show."

Stapleton was born in New York City to Joseph Murray and his wife, Marie Stapleton Murray, a singer. She attended Hunter College, leaving for a secretarial stint before embarking on acting studies with the American Theatre Wing and others.

Stapleton had a long working relationship with playwright Horton Foote, starting with one of his first full-length plays in 1944, "People in the Show," and continuing with six other works through the 2000s.

"I was very impressed with her. She has a wonderful sense of character. Her sense of coming to life on stage ? I never get tired of watching," Foote told the AP in 2002. He died in 2009.

Her early TV career included guest appearances on series including "Lux Video Theatre," ''Dr. Kildare" and "The Defenders."

She and Putch had two children, John and Pamela, who followed their parents into the entertainment industry.

Her post-"All in the Family" career included a one-woman stage show, "Eleanor," in which she portrayed the wife of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Stapleton spent summers working at the Totem Pole Playhouse near Harrisburg, Penn., operated by her husband, William. She made guest appearances on "Murphy Brown" and "Everybody Loves Raymond" and even provided the title character's voice for a children's video game, "Grandma Ollie's Morphabet Soup."

For years, she rarely watched "All In the Family," but had softened by 2000, when she told the Archive of American Television that enough time had passed.

"I can watch totally objectively," she said. "I love it. And I laugh. I think, 'Oh,' and I think, 'Gee, that's good.'"

___

AP Television Writer Lynn Elber contributed to this report from Los Angeles.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/KuZiPWgNtNw/Jean-Stapleton-dies-She-was-more-than-Edith-Bunker-video

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Mutations in susceptibility genes common in younger African American women with breast cancer

Mutations in susceptibility genes common in younger African American women with breast cancer [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 3-Jun-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: John Easton
john.easton@uchospitals.edu
773-795-5225
University of Chicago Medical Center

Genetic testing could protect such patients and their relatives

A high percentage of African-American women with breast cancer who were evaluated at a university cancer-risk clinic were found to carry inherited genetic mutations that increase their risk for breast cancer.

The finding suggests that inherited mutations may be more common than anticipated in this understudied group and may partially explain why African-Americans more often develop early onset and "triple-negative" breast cancer, an aggressive and difficult-to-treat form of the disease.

It also demonstrates the potential benefits of increased access to genetic counseling and testing for women with breast cancer and their close relatives. Through these services, family members who are found to share the same genetic risk factor for breast cancer can be offered personalized strategies for early detection and prevention of breast cancer.

"Our study confirms the importance of screening for mutations in breast cancer susceptibility genes in all African-American breast cancer patients diagnosed by age 45, those with a family history of breast or ovarian cancer, or with triple-negative breast cancer before age 60," said study author Jane Churpek, MD, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Chicago Medicine. "This could identify at-risk family members in time for life-saving interventions and help prevent future cancers for the patients as well."

The study, to be presented June 3 at the 2013 Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Chicago, is the first comprehensive screening among African-American women of all 18 known breast cancer susceptibility genes using new methods called targeted genomic capture and next-generation sequencing.

The researchers found that 56 of the 249 women studied (22 percent) at the University of Chicago Medicine's Cancer Risk Clinic had inherited at least one damaging mutation that increased their risk of breast cancer. Twenty-six of the patients had a BRCA1 mutation. Another 20 patients had a BRCA2 mutation. Twelve women inherited mutations in other genes: CHEK2, PALB2, ATM, and PTEN. Two women inherited mutations in two different genes.

Patients most likely to carry a mutation were those diagnosed with a second primary tumora second cancer that developed independently from the first; 49 percent of those women carried an inherited breast cancer-associated gene mutation. Other groups highly likely to carry inherited mutations included those with a close relative who had either breast or ovarian cancer (30 percent), those with triple-negative breast cancer (30 percent), and those who were diagnosed with breast cancer by age 45 (27 percent).

Identifying these inherited mutations can have a significant impact. Whereas 12 percent of women in the general population will develop breast cancer by age 80, those carrying a harmful mutation in BRCA1 or BRCA2 have a 37 to 85 percent lifetime risk of developing breast cancer. Mutations in these genes provide the best tools for tailoring risk-reducing interventions.

The authors caution that the patients in this study are not a typical cross-section of African-American women. Two-thirds of them were referred to the cancer-risk clinic for genetic evaluation, often due to a family history of breast cancer. Not all of them, however, had this significant risk factor. Forty percent of the 249 patients had no family history of breast or ovarian cancer, yet the researchers found damaging mutations in 12 percent of those patients.

"We expected the women in our study to have a higher risk of carrying an inherited mutation than typical breast cancer patients," Churpek said, "but some of their risk factorsdiagnosis by age 45 or triple-negative breast canceralso are more common among African-American women."

Once diagnosed with breast cancer, African-American women have lower survival rates. Regional variations in survival suggest that much of the difference may be driven by reduced access to screening and optimal care, but there is mounting evidence, including this study, that differences in tumor biology, such as a higher rate of inherited mutations in genes that increase the risk of aggressive forms of breast cancer, also play a role. In those cases, delay of diagnosis can prove deadly.

This study also demonstrates the advantages of next-generation sequencing approaches,which are faster and cost-efficient ways to use one test to look for multiple variants in many genes in many people. This approach is particularly valuable for studying patients of African heritage who tend to have greater genetic diversity. The drawback to the assay is uncertainty about how to make sense of the large numbers of sequence variations that may have no meaningful clinical significance.

"In every population, but especially among those with greater genetic diversity, we often detect changes in genes that may not yet have been studied clinically," Churpek said. "Some people question the utility of using gene panels like BROCA, as we don't always know how to counsel a patient without sufficient data on the clinical consequence of every variant found, but unless we start learning about them now we will never know."

"What you don't know can hurt you," said study co-author Olufunmilayo Olopade, MD, the Walter L. Palmer distinguished service professor of medicine and human genetics and director of the center for clinical cancer genetics at the University of Chicago. "Women with known BRCA1, BRCA2 or other inherited mutations can lower their risk of dying from breast or ovarian cancer." Options include removing healthy ovaries by age 40 to reduce breast and ovarian cancer risk, preventive surgical removal of the breasts, or participating in a breast-surveillance protocol designed for women at increased risk.

The researchers at the University of Chicago cancer-risk clinic are testing new ways to protect women found to carry gene abnormalities that put them at risk. In a related study, also presented at ASCO, medical oncologist Rodrigo Guindalini, MD, a visiting scholar from Brazil working in the Olopade laboratory, and colleagues confirmed that a screening approach that combines MRI scans every six months with an annual mammogram can be effective. The researchers followed 222 patients for an average of 3.2 years. Half of the participants were mutation carriers and one-fifth had been treated for breast cancer.

During the study, 11 cancers were screen-detected: six by MRI, one by mammogram and four by both. All of the cancers were stage 0 or 1the earliest, most treatable and curable stages. The average tumor size was less than 1 centimeter. None had spread to the lymph nodes.

These encouraging results may become an alternative to prophylactic mastectomy for those at the highest risk of developing breast cancer.

###

The genetic study was funded by the National Cancer Institute, Komen for the Cure, and the Breast Cancer Research Foundation. Additional authors include Yonglan Zheng, Matthew Churpek, Dezheng Huo, Cecilia Zvosec, Fang Liu, Qun Niu, Jing Zhang and James Fackenthal of the University of Chicago; and Tom Walsh, Anne Thornton, Ming Lee, Silvia Casadei and Mary-Claire King of the University of Washington.


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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.


Mutations in susceptibility genes common in younger African American women with breast cancer [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 3-Jun-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: John Easton
john.easton@uchospitals.edu
773-795-5225
University of Chicago Medical Center

Genetic testing could protect such patients and their relatives

A high percentage of African-American women with breast cancer who were evaluated at a university cancer-risk clinic were found to carry inherited genetic mutations that increase their risk for breast cancer.

The finding suggests that inherited mutations may be more common than anticipated in this understudied group and may partially explain why African-Americans more often develop early onset and "triple-negative" breast cancer, an aggressive and difficult-to-treat form of the disease.

It also demonstrates the potential benefits of increased access to genetic counseling and testing for women with breast cancer and their close relatives. Through these services, family members who are found to share the same genetic risk factor for breast cancer can be offered personalized strategies for early detection and prevention of breast cancer.

"Our study confirms the importance of screening for mutations in breast cancer susceptibility genes in all African-American breast cancer patients diagnosed by age 45, those with a family history of breast or ovarian cancer, or with triple-negative breast cancer before age 60," said study author Jane Churpek, MD, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Chicago Medicine. "This could identify at-risk family members in time for life-saving interventions and help prevent future cancers for the patients as well."

The study, to be presented June 3 at the 2013 Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Chicago, is the first comprehensive screening among African-American women of all 18 known breast cancer susceptibility genes using new methods called targeted genomic capture and next-generation sequencing.

The researchers found that 56 of the 249 women studied (22 percent) at the University of Chicago Medicine's Cancer Risk Clinic had inherited at least one damaging mutation that increased their risk of breast cancer. Twenty-six of the patients had a BRCA1 mutation. Another 20 patients had a BRCA2 mutation. Twelve women inherited mutations in other genes: CHEK2, PALB2, ATM, and PTEN. Two women inherited mutations in two different genes.

Patients most likely to carry a mutation were those diagnosed with a second primary tumora second cancer that developed independently from the first; 49 percent of those women carried an inherited breast cancer-associated gene mutation. Other groups highly likely to carry inherited mutations included those with a close relative who had either breast or ovarian cancer (30 percent), those with triple-negative breast cancer (30 percent), and those who were diagnosed with breast cancer by age 45 (27 percent).

Identifying these inherited mutations can have a significant impact. Whereas 12 percent of women in the general population will develop breast cancer by age 80, those carrying a harmful mutation in BRCA1 or BRCA2 have a 37 to 85 percent lifetime risk of developing breast cancer. Mutations in these genes provide the best tools for tailoring risk-reducing interventions.

The authors caution that the patients in this study are not a typical cross-section of African-American women. Two-thirds of them were referred to the cancer-risk clinic for genetic evaluation, often due to a family history of breast cancer. Not all of them, however, had this significant risk factor. Forty percent of the 249 patients had no family history of breast or ovarian cancer, yet the researchers found damaging mutations in 12 percent of those patients.

"We expected the women in our study to have a higher risk of carrying an inherited mutation than typical breast cancer patients," Churpek said, "but some of their risk factorsdiagnosis by age 45 or triple-negative breast canceralso are more common among African-American women."

Once diagnosed with breast cancer, African-American women have lower survival rates. Regional variations in survival suggest that much of the difference may be driven by reduced access to screening and optimal care, but there is mounting evidence, including this study, that differences in tumor biology, such as a higher rate of inherited mutations in genes that increase the risk of aggressive forms of breast cancer, also play a role. In those cases, delay of diagnosis can prove deadly.

This study also demonstrates the advantages of next-generation sequencing approaches,which are faster and cost-efficient ways to use one test to look for multiple variants in many genes in many people. This approach is particularly valuable for studying patients of African heritage who tend to have greater genetic diversity. The drawback to the assay is uncertainty about how to make sense of the large numbers of sequence variations that may have no meaningful clinical significance.

"In every population, but especially among those with greater genetic diversity, we often detect changes in genes that may not yet have been studied clinically," Churpek said. "Some people question the utility of using gene panels like BROCA, as we don't always know how to counsel a patient without sufficient data on the clinical consequence of every variant found, but unless we start learning about them now we will never know."

"What you don't know can hurt you," said study co-author Olufunmilayo Olopade, MD, the Walter L. Palmer distinguished service professor of medicine and human genetics and director of the center for clinical cancer genetics at the University of Chicago. "Women with known BRCA1, BRCA2 or other inherited mutations can lower their risk of dying from breast or ovarian cancer." Options include removing healthy ovaries by age 40 to reduce breast and ovarian cancer risk, preventive surgical removal of the breasts, or participating in a breast-surveillance protocol designed for women at increased risk.

The researchers at the University of Chicago cancer-risk clinic are testing new ways to protect women found to carry gene abnormalities that put them at risk. In a related study, also presented at ASCO, medical oncologist Rodrigo Guindalini, MD, a visiting scholar from Brazil working in the Olopade laboratory, and colleagues confirmed that a screening approach that combines MRI scans every six months with an annual mammogram can be effective. The researchers followed 222 patients for an average of 3.2 years. Half of the participants were mutation carriers and one-fifth had been treated for breast cancer.

During the study, 11 cancers were screen-detected: six by MRI, one by mammogram and four by both. All of the cancers were stage 0 or 1the earliest, most treatable and curable stages. The average tumor size was less than 1 centimeter. None had spread to the lymph nodes.

These encouraging results may become an alternative to prophylactic mastectomy for those at the highest risk of developing breast cancer.

###

The genetic study was funded by the National Cancer Institute, Komen for the Cure, and the Breast Cancer Research Foundation. Additional authors include Yonglan Zheng, Matthew Churpek, Dezheng Huo, Cecilia Zvosec, Fang Liu, Qun Niu, Jing Zhang and James Fackenthal of the University of Chicago; and Tom Walsh, Anne Thornton, Ming Lee, Silvia Casadei and Mary-Claire King of the University of Washington.


[ 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/uocm-mis060213.php

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Oswald T Avery, the unsung hero of genetic science

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Sublime: We're Only Gonna Die For Our Own Arrogance

There's nothing quite as awesome as when bands you like like other bands you like, and like them awesomely. Case in point: Sublime's utterly sublime cover of Bad Religion's already fantastic, lo-fi classic "We're Only Gonna Die For Our Own Arrogance."

A simple tune but catchy tune at its core, "We're Only Gonna Die etc etc" still left a lot of room open for Sublime?specifically the golden-throated Bradley Nowell?to have some fun. Despite the fact that the song's little more than a repetition of a chorus, we're still treated to bookends of wonderful ska, with some true-to-the-source punked-out nougat goodness in the center. It's just great.

Add this one to that pantheon of great covers, and someday I'll be back to talk about Goldfinger's "Rio" with you all. [Spotify, Amazon, iTunes]

For reference:

Source: http://gizmodo.com/sublime-were-only-gonna-die-for-our-own-arrogance-510869917

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Pope: church should open up but follow teaching

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Pope Francis is calling for renewal in the Catholic church as he wrapped up two days of mass gatherings in St. Peter's Square aimed at energizing the faithful.

About 200,000 people turned out Sunday for Mass celebrated by Francis, about the same size crowd that came to a pep rally for Catholics that the pope led the night before in the square.

Francis urged his church to be more welcoming and avoid closing in on itself. But he warned that faithful should avoid "dangerous parallel paths" outside of doctrine.

In the pope's native South America, many Catholics have defected to dynamic evangelical Protestant churches.

For a second-straight day, Francis delighted the crowd by riding in his popemobile beyond the confines of Vatican City and down a Rome boulevard.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-church-open-teaching-161435514.html

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rennet fuming: Secrets to Prosperity and Abundance Part 4 ...

by Donna Filipiak | on May 18, 2013

The 4th and final video of the series Secrets to Prosperity and Abundance. This secret is letting go of your ego. Letting go of that ?know it all? attitude. If you get advice from someone who is making the kind of money you want to make, you need to listen to them and do what they tell you to do.

I hope you have enjoyed this series and my wish is that you try these secrets for at least 90 days. Please let me know your experience by contacting me on Facebook or leaving a comment here.

Thanks for watching!

Join me and the Prosperity Team for training and a whole lot more! http://sharethat.ws

Donna Filipiak
32152_10151198015245496_493914527_n

This entry was posted in Self-Development
Tags: business, coaching, ego, prosperity and abundance, self-development, self-improvement, success, training

About The Author: Donna Filipiak

Donna Filipiak is a wife, mother and online business entrepreneur. While looking for a way to help supplement her income, she found the internet. That was 6 years ago and she has gained a large amount of experience and knowledge. She is now in a position to help others make money. Join her and find out how.

Source: http://www.empowernetwork.com/drflip56/blog/secrets-to-prosperity-and-abundance-part-4/

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Source: http://rennet-fuming.blogspot.com/2013/05/secrets-to-prosperity-and-abundance.html

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It's (Mostly) Official: Yahoo Buying Tumblr Youth Serum for $1.1B

Cash! The WSJ says "the Yahoo board has approved a deal" to make this happen, and it's hard to imagine Tumblr turning this down. One of the most unpopular companies in the world will soon own one of the most popular in history, and we'll all find out if you really can buy cool.

Read more...

    

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/xJOUYERRrjM/its-mostly-official-yahoo-buying-tumblr-for-1-1-bill-508716117

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Sages under sieges (Unqualified Offerings)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/306735991?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Sony Cyber-shot WX80 packs WiFi, 10 fps shooting, 12,800 ISO in a $199 point-and-shoot (hands-on)

Sony Cybershot WX80 packs WiFi, 10 fps shooting, 12,800 ISO in a $199 pointandshoot handson

There's no full-frame sensor or advanced mode dial here, but Sony has managed to line up a compelling set of features for its CES flagship point-and-shoot. At $199, the Cyber-shot WX80 offers a huge jump in performance with only a modest bump in price, making it by far Sony's best value of the show. Granted, we haven't seen sample images or video clips, but boy does this camera pack an impressive spec list. There's a 20.1-megapixel CMOS sensor at the core, paired with a 25mm 8x optical zoom lens with SteadyShot OIS and a new lens-shift algorithm, improved autofocus, a 10 frames-per-second consecutive shooting mode, a top ISO of 12,800, 1080p video, a new intelligent flash for more even coverage and a 2.7-inch LCD.

On the software side, Sony's brought over some features from the mirrorless camera line. There's an improved selection of picture effects, like Toy Photo, Pop Color and four color highlight modes that display either red, green, blue or yellow in color with the rest of the frame in black and white. There's also a "virtual cosmetic surgery" function, which changes skin tone, softens skin, removes shine, widens eyes and whitens teeth automatically with adjustable effect levels. As another Cyber-shot first, Sony's added WiFi to the WX80, along with the same Smart Remote Control and Send to Smartphone features we've used with the company's NEX-6.

The camera housing itself has a plasticky feel, despite the high-end internals -- the WX80 may not look like a sub-$200 camera on paper, but its true colors shine through once you have it in hand. The display is fairly basic, and while it looks alright at a distance, the UI experience doesn't exactly feel high-end. The camera will ship in pink, white and black finishes, and you'll want to opt for the latter flavor if you're after a somewhat-premium look and feel. You'll need to hang tight for a few weeks before you have a chance to evaluate the WX80 yourself, but housing and display aside, Sony seems to have a winner here. Sneak a peek in our gallery below.

Continue reading Sony Cyber-shot WX80 packs WiFi, 10 fps shooting, 12,800 ISO in a $199 point-and-shoot (hands-on)

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National Academy of Inventors inaugural conference highlights innovative technologies

National Academy of Inventors inaugural conference highlights innovative technologies [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 8-Jan-2013
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Contact: Judy Lowry
jhlowry@usf.edu
813-974-3181
University of South Florida (USF Innovation)

Focus: Job creation through innovation and global patent harmonization

TAMPA, Fla. (Jan. 8, 2013)The current special issue of "Technology and Innovation-Proceedings of the National Academy of Inventors" is devoted to presentations from the Inaugural Conference of the National Academy of Inventors (NAI), which was hosted by the University of South Florida, Feb. 16-17, 2012.

"This conference brought together inventors, researchers and leaders from universities, nonprofit research institutions, national laboratories and government institutions to discuss issues pertaining the technological development and commercialization," said Paul R. Sanberg, senior vice president for research and innovation at the University of South Florida and president of the NAI.

The goal of the conference, said Sanberg, was to encourage and recognize the value of academic invention and entreprenuership. Presenters spoke on a wide range of topics, including global patent harmonization; job creation through innovation; innovative technologies for surgery; potential therapies for Alzheimer's disease; and legal and intellectual requirements in innovating and inventing, among other topics.

In the conference's first keynote address, David Kappos, Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), discussed the mission and changes enacted by the USPTO since his appointment by President Obama in 2009. Thomas J. Fogarty, who was inducted as the first Charter Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors, was the second conference keynote speaker. Fogarty invented the cardiac balloon catheter. His keynote presentation focused on overcoming institutional barriers to innovation.

The conference featured oral and poster presentations by representatives from National Academy of Inventors Charter Member Institutions. This special issue of Technology and Innovation, volume 14 nos. 3-4, includes a section featuring the oral and poster presentations.

Global Patent Harmonization

Alex Camarota, of the Office of Innovation at the USPTO, spoke on efforts to "harmonize" patent offices around the world to ensure standardized methods of measuring patent quality and, at the same time, help spur global innovation.

"The potential for robust digital collaboration among the world's patent offices remains largely unrealized," said Camarota. "This is not surprising as patent systems, like the nations they serve, embody different languages, cultural values, policies and legal systems."

For Camarota, reconciling these differences represents a "Herculean task," yet it must be done to better ensure the future of innovation.

"Perhaps the most difficult and immediate barrier to harmonization is the lack of a system for measuring patent quality," he said. "Without standard patent quality metrics, collaboration between IP offices is difficult."

He described a partnership between the USPTO and the European Patent Office (EPO) called the "Cooperative Patent Classification" (CPC) project charged with building and maintaining a jointly managed patent classification system using the best practices from each system. The new system, launched Jan. 2, 2013, will be used by 45 patent offices and 20,000 patent examiners worldwide.

Job Creation through Innovation

According to Daniel Daly, director of the Alabama Innovation and Mentoring of Entrepreneurs Center at the University of Alabama, higher labor costs, shrinking margins, and a growing aversion to the risks of longer term research and development appear to play significant roles in job loss in the U.S., especially among chemists. Daly presented a case study in which the American Chemical Society (ACS) responded to help its members, who are highly skilled and highly paid workers, to overcome unemployment, much of it due, according to Daly, to the pharmaceutical industry's trend toward moving its U.S. manufacturing facilities "offshore."

"Unlike during any other time in its 135 year history, the ACS had an opportunity to help its members," said Daly. "The ACS responded by forming an Entrepreneur Resource Center and Training Center to serve as a virtual accelerator providing resources and services to chemical startups. The center provides tools and important networks."

With the help of the ACS center, start-up companies, explained Daly, receive the "invaluable training, advice, and business connections that it would have taken them years, or decades, to acquire on their own."

The second annual conference of the National Academy of Inventors will take place Feb. 21-23, 2013, at the Embassy Suites Hotel in Tampa, FL. The inaugural class of NAI Charter Fellows will be inducted at the conference.

###

The National Academy of Inventors is a 501c3 non-profit member organization comprised of more than 45 U.S. and international universities and non-profit research institutes, with over 2,000 individual academic inventor members, and growing rapidly. It was founded in 2010 to recognize and encourage inventors with a patent issued from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, enhance the visibility of academic technology and innovation, encourage the disclosure of intellectual property, educate and mentor innovative students, and translate the inventions of its members to benefit society. The offices of the NAI are located in the University of South Florida Research Park of Tampa Bay. www.academyofinventors.org

The editorial offices of Technology and Innovation are located at the University of South Florida, USF Research & Innovation, 3702 Spectrum Blvd., Suite 175, Tampa, FL, 33612 USA. Tel: 813-974-1347. TIJournal@research.usf.edu

News Release by Florida Science Communications, www.sciencescribe.net


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National Academy of Inventors inaugural conference highlights innovative technologies [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 8-Jan-2013
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Contact: Judy Lowry
jhlowry@usf.edu
813-974-3181
University of South Florida (USF Innovation)

Focus: Job creation through innovation and global patent harmonization

TAMPA, Fla. (Jan. 8, 2013)The current special issue of "Technology and Innovation-Proceedings of the National Academy of Inventors" is devoted to presentations from the Inaugural Conference of the National Academy of Inventors (NAI), which was hosted by the University of South Florida, Feb. 16-17, 2012.

"This conference brought together inventors, researchers and leaders from universities, nonprofit research institutions, national laboratories and government institutions to discuss issues pertaining the technological development and commercialization," said Paul R. Sanberg, senior vice president for research and innovation at the University of South Florida and president of the NAI.

The goal of the conference, said Sanberg, was to encourage and recognize the value of academic invention and entreprenuership. Presenters spoke on a wide range of topics, including global patent harmonization; job creation through innovation; innovative technologies for surgery; potential therapies for Alzheimer's disease; and legal and intellectual requirements in innovating and inventing, among other topics.

In the conference's first keynote address, David Kappos, Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), discussed the mission and changes enacted by the USPTO since his appointment by President Obama in 2009. Thomas J. Fogarty, who was inducted as the first Charter Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors, was the second conference keynote speaker. Fogarty invented the cardiac balloon catheter. His keynote presentation focused on overcoming institutional barriers to innovation.

The conference featured oral and poster presentations by representatives from National Academy of Inventors Charter Member Institutions. This special issue of Technology and Innovation, volume 14 nos. 3-4, includes a section featuring the oral and poster presentations.

Global Patent Harmonization

Alex Camarota, of the Office of Innovation at the USPTO, spoke on efforts to "harmonize" patent offices around the world to ensure standardized methods of measuring patent quality and, at the same time, help spur global innovation.

"The potential for robust digital collaboration among the world's patent offices remains largely unrealized," said Camarota. "This is not surprising as patent systems, like the nations they serve, embody different languages, cultural values, policies and legal systems."

For Camarota, reconciling these differences represents a "Herculean task," yet it must be done to better ensure the future of innovation.

"Perhaps the most difficult and immediate barrier to harmonization is the lack of a system for measuring patent quality," he said. "Without standard patent quality metrics, collaboration between IP offices is difficult."

He described a partnership between the USPTO and the European Patent Office (EPO) called the "Cooperative Patent Classification" (CPC) project charged with building and maintaining a jointly managed patent classification system using the best practices from each system. The new system, launched Jan. 2, 2013, will be used by 45 patent offices and 20,000 patent examiners worldwide.

Job Creation through Innovation

According to Daniel Daly, director of the Alabama Innovation and Mentoring of Entrepreneurs Center at the University of Alabama, higher labor costs, shrinking margins, and a growing aversion to the risks of longer term research and development appear to play significant roles in job loss in the U.S., especially among chemists. Daly presented a case study in which the American Chemical Society (ACS) responded to help its members, who are highly skilled and highly paid workers, to overcome unemployment, much of it due, according to Daly, to the pharmaceutical industry's trend toward moving its U.S. manufacturing facilities "offshore."

"Unlike during any other time in its 135 year history, the ACS had an opportunity to help its members," said Daly. "The ACS responded by forming an Entrepreneur Resource Center and Training Center to serve as a virtual accelerator providing resources and services to chemical startups. The center provides tools and important networks."

With the help of the ACS center, start-up companies, explained Daly, receive the "invaluable training, advice, and business connections that it would have taken them years, or decades, to acquire on their own."

The second annual conference of the National Academy of Inventors will take place Feb. 21-23, 2013, at the Embassy Suites Hotel in Tampa, FL. The inaugural class of NAI Charter Fellows will be inducted at the conference.

###

The National Academy of Inventors is a 501c3 non-profit member organization comprised of more than 45 U.S. and international universities and non-profit research institutes, with over 2,000 individual academic inventor members, and growing rapidly. It was founded in 2010 to recognize and encourage inventors with a patent issued from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, enhance the visibility of academic technology and innovation, encourage the disclosure of intellectual property, educate and mentor innovative students, and translate the inventions of its members to benefit society. The offices of the NAI are located in the University of South Florida Research Park of Tampa Bay. www.academyofinventors.org

The editorial offices of Technology and Innovation are located at the University of South Florida, USF Research & Innovation, 3702 Spectrum Blvd., Suite 175, Tampa, FL, 33612 USA. Tel: 813-974-1347. TIJournal@research.usf.edu

News Release by Florida Science Communications, www.sciencescribe.net


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

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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/2013-01/uosf-nao010813.php

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