শনিবার, ২০ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

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Source: http://heavy-equipment-tools-home.blogspot.com/2012/10/miller-flatback-plastic-bucket-blue-8.html

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FCC updates small business cybersecurity planner | FedScoop

The Federal Communications Commission unveiled an updated 2.0 version of its ?Small Biz Cyber Planner,? as part of National Cybersecurity Month.

The enhanced cyber planner features new details about cyber insurance to mitigate interruptions to business and financial loss from cyber attacks, and best practices on avoiding spyware.

It also incorporates the immediate steps to take in case of infection, and recommendations on installing new software systems that enable users to remotely track and erase the hard drive of laptops and mobile devices in the event of theft.

Launched in 2011, the tool has already been used by nearly 10,000 businesses across the country to create customized cybersecurity plans.

New research by Symantec, an FCC Cybersecurity Outreach Partner, indicates that nearly 83 percent of U.S. small businesses have no cybersecurity protection plan.

Chairman Julius Genachowski urged all small business owners to take advantage of this valuable resource, and also announced new and renewed partnerships with public and private sector organizations, including Symantec, eBay, Visa, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the National Cyber Security Alliance, and others.

America?s small businesses are vital drivers of innovation, economic growth, and job creation ? and they?re using the Internet more and more every day. While broadband is creating significant opportunities for small businesses, the cost of cyber attacks are a real concern,? said Genachowski.??We know that not having a plan leaves small businesses vulnerable to cyber attacks. The good news is that small business owners can take simple steps to protect themselves. By making a plan using the FCC?s updated Small Biz Cyber Planner, small businesses can quickly strengthen their online defenses.?

Related

Source: http://fedscoop.com/fcc-updates-small-business-cybersecurity-planner/

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শুক্রবার, ১৯ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

Quick primer on MLS weekend ahead

A full round of nine matches between Saturday and Sunday will further shape the playoff race as teams continue to jostle for position ? and some keep hoping to squeeze in.

Here are three that most intrigue us due to their post-season implications:

Sporting Kansas City at New York

The feature match will be in New Jersey, where two East beasts meet at Red Bull Arena. One more point may just do for Sporting Kansas City, trying to tie off the Eastern Conference crown. Then again, if New York can take all the points, Hans Backe?s team may just escape that 4th- vs. 5th-place playoff match, so the Red Bulls have a lot on the line as well.

The subplot here is that, at this point, anything might help Backe?s personal fate; the ground beneath his Swedish feet seems perilously unstable. And every team wants to dodge the tax and toll of that extra, impending playoff match, which means New York has to move out of 4th place. At the very least, Thierry Henry and Co. will want to hold that fourth spot and host the midweek 4 vs. 5 playoff match, rather than slipping to 5th and be forced into the additional travel.

Columbus at D.C. United

About three weeks ago, this one looked massive for both teams. But Ben Olsen?s side from RFK Stadium just kept ticking off the 1-0 wins, so the playoff spot is all but in the bag. Any point over the remaining two matches will do now, clinching United?s first playoff spot since 2007.

For the visitors, Saturday could bring Waterloo. A loss to D.C. United combined with a Houston win eliminates Columbus. And considering that this would be four years under manager Robert Warzycha without a playoff series victory, you have to wonder about his future in Ohio.

It?s not over yet, but the Crew desperately needs a win in a tough place to find one: Olsen?s team is 11-1-4 at home this year.

Philadelphia at Houston

The Dynamo remains unbeaten at its new BBVA Compass ground, which is commendable. On the other hand, too many draws have left Dominic Kinnear?s team too close to the bottom for comfort. Three ties in the last six weeks (including two against sides that will not make the playoffs) means the Orange left six points on the table, and how big would those points look right now?? I?ll tell you exactly how big: rather than sitting nervously in fifth, with Columbus breathing right up their BBVA backside, the Dynamo would be tied with Chicago for second.

So, here?s another chance at home against a team that won?t make the playoffs. But it is a dangerous Union team, young and talented. Just ask Chicago, which fell to Philly at home two weeks ago.

FC Dallas has a ginormous hill to climb, needing two wins in its last two matches and then some assistance in a Vancouver stumble, so that?s too far-fetched to even talk about (for this week, anyway).

Here is the entire Round 33 schedule:

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Source: http://prosoccertalk.nbcsports.com/2012/10/19/a-quick-primer-on-the-mls-weekend-ahead/related/

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First oil nears for Kazakhstan's supergiant field

KASHAGAN OILFIELD, Kazakhstan (AP) ? The manmade islands that are home to Kazakhstan's mammoth Kashagan oilfield project rise like a mirage to the boats churning through the shallow waters of the Caspian Sea.

Creating them has been a gargantuan feat but the real test is yet to come, as uncertainty persists on when the first oil will actually be drawn, although that's expected sometime next year.

When surveyors confirmed in 2000 that Kazakhstan had a new supergiant oil reserve, the world's energy companies reacted with glee. It was the type of find that had no longer seemed possible. Nothing that big had been seen in four decades.

Kazakhstan's President Nursultan Nazarbayev branded the Kashagan field, which some believe holds up to 13 billion barrels of recoverable oil, as the great hope for the future of his fledgling Central Asian nation.

Yet developing a remote offshore site half the size of Delaware that is blighted by weather ranging from blazing to glacial has proven difficult. The northern section of the landlocked Caspian Sea is extremely shallow compared to most offshore energy projects. That makes transporting heavy equipment a problem, as deep-hulled vessels can't be used. The area's fragile ecosystem is also the site of spawning grounds for endangered sturgeon, birthing habitat for the rare Caspian seal and migratory sites for numerous birds.

Delays in the Kashagan project have also strained relations between the oil companies developing it ? from Italy, France, Holland, the United States and Japan ? and the government of Kazakhstan.

Kazakhstan, a mainly Muslim nation four times the size of Texas that borders Russia and China, gained independence after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union. It's a thinly populated steppe nation of 16.5 million people that has grown wealthy off of several major oil projects and other substantial mineral reserves. Many locals, however, complain that the country's riches are poorly distributed.

ON THE ISLANDS

Away from the politics, technicians on Kashagan's hub island ? two long, narrow mazes of wells and processing modules linked by a bridge to form what is known as D-Island ? exude pride in what they have achieved.

"In 2004, when we first started, the island was just a small box," said Giancarlo Ruiu, offshore project manager with Agip KCO, a subsidiary of the Italian oil giant ENI, which has led the work on Kashagan. Other companies in the consortium are Shell, ExxonMobil, Total, ConocoPhillips, Inpex and Kazakhstan's state-owned KazMunaiGaz.

The rocks and sand needed to build up D-Island and its four satellite islands were laboriously transported from the once-vibrant fishing port of Bautino, some 350 kilometers (217 miles) to the south.

But when the wind pushes the Caspian's lime-green waters south, in effect tilting the entire sea to below-navigable levels, the 18-hour summertime boat trip can become impossible, forcing workers to rely on helicopters. In the winter, ice breakers are deployed to clear paths for convoys to make the stultifying 36-hour voyage.

To protect D-Island from destructive ice drifts, a defensive ring had to be erected.

"You can occasionally get very rare conditions, where it is partially melted, and the water and semi-melted ice becomes like a lubricant. And when you get a surge of the ice, it can move very quickly," said Robert Dunkley, head of information and design at Agip KCO.

The construction team used a computerized system to carefully place tons of material, using building techniques similar to those that created Dubai's palm tree-shaped islands.

"We used to say that you are just dumping rock," Ruiu said. "(But) every single placement of rock was done with GPS control" to calculate depth and location.

In all, some 200,000 tons of concrete, enough to fill 50 Olympic swimming pools, and 600,000 truckloads of rock were used to form D-Island.

The island is now a dense forest of barges housing facilities such as gas injection equipment and emergency generators from Norway, Italy and Dubai.

In parallel with the construction, 12 wells were put down on D-Island to begin tapping into the highly pressurized reservoirs of sulfurous oil located 4,200 meters (13,780 feet) below the seabed. Another eight wells are primed to go on the smaller A-Island, while drilling is still ongoing to complete a further 20 wells on three remaining islands by the end of 2016.

In the meantime, thousands of laborers in orange suits work on the islands and sleep in floating apartment blocks during monthlong shifts. Sometime next year, the workforce on D-Island will be scaled down to 240 people and the largely automated offshore operations will be run from a high-tech control room.

IT WAS A GAMBLE

When test crude at Kashagan was discovered in 2000, oil prices were around $30 per barrel. This made any massive investment on a problematic energy project seem potentially foolhardy, but could also keep costs down.

The price of oil more than tripled over the decade, however, which sent outlays for energy-intensive construction labor, equipment and materials soaring as well.

More than $30 billion has been spent so far on the Kashagan project, way more than its original $10 billion estimate. The final bill for the Phase 1 development stage could even gallop past $45 billion. That figure will swell more with Phase 2 drilling at other patches of the field.

"It's not going to be profitable for the companies until you get into Phase 2," said Andrew Neff, Moscow-based senior analyst with IHS Energy. "Phase 2 is supposed to be by 2018-2019 and there hasn't been any progress in the last two years as far as I'm aware."

Kazakhstan has been irritated by the frequent postponement of the first oil, which over-optimistic planners had once said would start by 2005.

Kashagan operates under a production-sharing agreement where international companies pay for the exploration and development costs. Returns are shared between investors and the government on a sliding scale.

Now that Kazakhstan is growing increasingly rich on oil from other fields, it negotiates from a position of strength and has sought to adapt the deal to more favorable terms. The government is eager to begin receiving oil royalty payments and the state-owned KazMunaiGaz is due a share in the profits as a 16.85 percent owner.

"Everybody has been looking at Kashagan as this great cash cow coming down the road soon," Neff said.

While a KazMunaiGaz chief executive predicted a few years ago that Caspian oil would boost the country's annual oil production up to 180 million tons ? equivalent to 1.3 billion barrels ? by 2015, officials now have tamped that down to 90 million tons.

To reach that target, Kashagan will need to deliver 370,000 barrels of oil a day.

The production-sharing agreement expires in 2041 ? a date that is distressingly near to consortium members, considering the size of their investments. On the bright side for the companies, oil was selling for around $92 a barrel this week.

"We know the life of this field is much longer than 2041," said Alain Guenot, planning director of North Caspian Operating Co., the joint venture that manages Kashagan. "Everybody would like to extend the (deal)."

While Kazakh officials and oil executives are eager to start pumping, workers on the ground are more sanguine.

"Without production, we don't have revenue, they don't have revenue, and they'd like to have revenue as soon as possible," Guenot said. "(But) we're not going to start this plant if we're not sure that it's properly finished."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/first-oil-nears-kazakhstans-supergiant-field-070845105--finance.html

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28 Holy Cross Students to be Inducted into Jesuit Honor Society ...

Twenty-eighty students from the class of 2013 at the College of the Holy Cross will be inducted into Alpha Sigma Nu, the Jesuit honor society, on October 28. Alpha Sigma Nu seeks out students at Jesuit institutions of higher learning who embody and live out the values of scholarship, loyalty and service. Candidates in the top 15 percent of their class are invited to apply, and from this group, membership is awarded to only four percent.

Inductees include:?

??Samantha M. Adams (Concord, Mass.) major: economics, concentration: peace and conflict studies
??Mary G. Bidgood (Melrose, Mass.) major: political science, minor: history, concentration: pre-law
??Andrew J. Biedlingmaier (Severna Park, Md.) major: biology, concentration: premedical
??Alexander J. Bradford (Bedford, Mass.) major: economics and mathematics
??Kelly E. Casey (Wethersfield, Conn.) major: English, concentration: peace and conflict studies
??James M. Cavanagh (Warwick, R.I.) major: history
??Kathryn A. Chobanian (Etna, N.H.) major: self-designed, healthcare studies and sociology
??George R. Ciociolo, Jr. (Jefferson, Mass.) major: psychology
??Suzanne E. Crifo (Glen Rock, N.J.) major: mathematics and music
??Brooke E. Cunningham (West Hartford, Conn.) major: Spanish, minor: chemistry, concentration: premedical
??Katherine A. Grant (Bronxville, N.Y.) major: self-designed, modernism
??Frances D. Klimczak (Collinsville, Conn.) major: mathematics, concentration: peace and conflict studies
??Travis J. LaCouter (Concord, N.H.) major: political science and Catholic studies
??Kevin C. Molloy (Yonkers, N.Y.) major: religious studies
??Kimberly E. Monaco (Stratham, N.H.) major: economics and religious studies
??Brandon T. Nunn (Fairport, N.Y.) major: economics, minor: visual arts/history
??Joshua T. Olson (Woodbury, Minn.) major: chemistry, concentration: premedical
??Patrick J. O?Neil (Bradford, Mass.) major: biology, concentration: premedical
??Allegra M. P Parrillo (Cranston, R.I.) major: biology, concentration: premedical and biochemistry
??Christine M. Renaud (Lisbon Falls, Maine) major: psychology and sociology
??Adriana M. Sarni (Wellesley, Mass.) major: philosophy
??Katherine C. Shapleigh (St Louis, Mo.) major: studies in world literature, concentration: peace and conflict studies
??Christopher R. Shugrue (Rocky Hill, Conn.) major: chemistry
??James R. Simmons, Jr. (Wantagh, N.Y.) major: history and political science
??Elizabeth A. Sundheim (Clarks Summit, Pa.) major: economics
??Katherine A. Wallace (Fairfield, Conn.) major: visual arts/studio, minor: visual arts/history
??Elizabeth A. Watters (San Francisco, Calif.) major: religious studies

Patrick J. O?Neil ?13, was elected president of the society and will represent Holy Cross at the national meeting of Alpha Sigma Nu, which was held in Philadelphia earlier this month.

In addition to student inductees, there will be four honorary members of the College community inducted: Charles Anderton, professor of economics; James Kee, professor of English; Bianca Sculimbrene, assistant professor of chemistry; and Paul Melley, assistant chaplain and director of liturgical music.

Source: http://news.holycross.edu/blog/2012/10/18/28-holy-cross-students-to-be-inducted-into-jesuit-honor-society/

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৮ অক্টোবর, ২০১২

Music Platform 7digital Nabs $10 Million In Funding To Expand Its Profitable Activities

7d_wordmark_colour_RGB7digital is one of the oldest player in the digital music industry. The London-based company announced today that it has raised $10 million from two public technology companies. Even though the company is already profitable, it plans to expand its open platform strategy to power even more music services. 7digital is the key element behind Samsung's Music Hub or the upcoming BlackBerry 10 App World's music section.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/5EuxRZgvj9E/

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Construction up in September

Construction permits for single family housing jumped 6.7 percent from August 2012. Despite the increase, construction remains 69.7 percent below the peak reached in September 2005.

By SoldAtTheTop,?Guest blogger / October 17, 2012

This graph tracks single family housing construction permits since 2001. Last month, single family housing construction permits jumped 27.3 percent above last year's level.

SoldAtTheTop

Enlarge

Today?s?New Residential Construction Report?showed notable gains in September with single family permits increasing significantly from August while starts also increased over the same period.?

Skip to next paragraph SoldAtTheTop

Writer, The PaperEconomy Blog

'SoldAtTheTop' is not a pessimist by nature but a true skeptic and realist who prefers solid and sustained evidence of fundamental economic recovery to 'Goldilocks,' 'Green Shoots,' 'Mustard Seeds,' and wholesale speculation.

Recent posts

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Single family housing permits, the most leading of indicators, jumped 6.7% from August to 545K single family units (SAAR), and increased 27.3% above the level seen in September 2011 but still remained an astonishing 69.7% below the peak in September 2005.?

Single family housing starts increased 11% from August to 603K units (SAAR), and climbed 42.9% above the level seen in September 2011 but still remained 66.9% below the peak set in early 2006.?

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here.To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on paper-money.blogspot.com.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/PaldIyxgCBI/Construction-up-in-September

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