Monday, 14 January 2013

Utah plane crashes in Texas, killing three men

SALT LAKE CITY (ABC 4 News) A Salt Lake City-based plane carrying three men crashed in Texas this morning. There were no survivors.

A statement from Celtic Bank, based in Salt Lake City, confirmed the three men on board were Michael Bradley, Mike Endo, and professional pilot, Rob Thompson.

The Piper PA-46 crashed shortly after taking off from an airport in Paris, Texas, according to Texas Department of Public Safety spokesperson Mark Taggert.

Both Endo and Bradley are from Salt Lake City, according to a bank spokesperson. Endo was the Senior Vice President of Celtic Bank and a commercial loan officer, according to a bank spokesperson. Bradley was the owner and real estate broker with MBA Realty and was consulting with the bank on the sale of property in Texas. It?s unclear where Thompson is from, but a bank spokesperson said he was hired by Celtic Bank to pilot the plane.

In a statement, Reese Howell, Jr. Chairman and CEO of Celtic Bank writes, "This is a challenging and difficult time for the entire Celtic Bank family. We are sad and focused exclusively on providing love and support for the families and friends of those lost in the crash."

Taggert did not know where the plane was heading, but did say there was fog in the area at the time of the crash.

The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the crash.

Source: http://www.abc4.com/content/news/state/story/Utah-plane-crashes-in-Texas-killing-three-men/Rz3QdW0ERU60PLBlCYOP-w.cspx?rss=1451

joe paterno died 49ers game ravens steven tyler national anthem paterno newt gingrich joe pa

Sunday, 13 January 2013

How the cell phone is helping Ghanaian farmers | Africasti.com

Robert Owusu

Robert Owusu

Ghana is experimenting with a novel, ICT- driven means of agricultural information exchange. Robert Owusu is the Managing Director of Esoko, the mobile phone information system serving rural farmers in Ghana. He explains to AfricaSTI.com in Accra, the benefits of using the mobile phone service to improve agriculture and the livelihood of farmers. Excerpts:

Key issues in Ghanaian Agriculture
I am not an expert in agriculture but I know that most Ghanaian farmers are small holder farmers, and some of the challenges are : producers don?t know where to sell; the farmers find it difficult to sell what they have produced; traders don?t know where to buy; wholesalers can?t predict their supplies because sometimes you put up a factory but the supplies are not forthcoming; you produce today , you cannot produce tomorrow because there are no produce from the farmers. That also means government cannot plan for food security. All these because of something that is critical. And that is information.
So what we tried to find out the information needs within the agric sector or from the farmers based on our experience, we discovered that they will be asking questions like: Where do I get extension advice? What is the right price? Who is buying? Where can I buy fertilizer or farm input? What harvest will I get? Are the rains falling? Where are my customers? Where is my truck? Can I trust the buyer to pay for what they have bought? All this brings us to extension services: it?s about weather; it?s about input; it?s about processing; and it?s about transportation. Those are what they are looking for information for.
Mobile phones and information dissemination in Ghana
If you look at the mobile phone, the penetration is high, if you take for example, Ghana, the government of Ghana claimed that the penetration of mobile phone is about 80% that means that about 19 million Ghanaians have mobile phones . We don?t believe that, we think that it may be roughly about 60% or less because some people are using two ,three phones and they are in the cities but in terms of coverage of the mobile phone operators and where you can get access , mobile phone is more around within the country than any other commodity because it?s going faster than electricity, water, health, services and school. So if we use the mobile phone in disseminating this information, then, that will be a success and that is why we are beginning the Esoko. Esoko tries to bring how you can use the mobile to communicate and give information to farmers.
How Esoko works Esoko2
Esoko starts with price alert and what we do is , if anybody has got a phone , and he types in ?1900? and he puts in say, ?maize? or ?yam?, you can easily get the prices from the key commodity market in the country through the mobile phone right now as we speak, you can test it, or you do for rice, cassava, you will get immediate response. Apart from this, we also have farmers already programmed on our profile in the network on our platform. Those who for instance have selected their prices for maize, on weekly bases they receive the price. They want to know the prices on Wednesday because thy will be going to the market on Thursday, or they want to get the prices on Friday because they will be going to the market on Saturday. You can set that as an alert and the message will come to you through your mobile phone showing all the prices that are obtainable in the key markets across the country.
We are doing this by having about 33 agents operating in 38 markets around the country for all major agricultural commodities in the country. And in terms of the commodities, we are covering about 58 markets and recording data on weekly bases in the country, and we are also using the project trying to do a pilot in cape coast to know if there has been an impact on the people. And from what the farmers are saying, because now they have insight into pricing and what is happening in the market place they are saying they are able to improve their income between 25%- 40% but scientifically we have not bothered ourselves to find out if what they are saying is true or not.
Most of them are claiming that they are willing to pay for these services, but now it?s free so they may say they will pay but when it comes to paying whether they will pay or not is a different ball game. But at least that?s what they are saying. Most of them are also claiming that it is benefiting them but we will know when they start paying on their own because this project is being sponsored and we are supplying this information to them for free, this is so because you can go on our platform now and just sign yourself on the platform and you will see the prices alerts depending on the commodity that you select. But at now researchers from the New York university are now doing a study here in Ghana , they started last year, it will end in 2013 , that is when we will know if the mobile information on pricing have helped improve farmers income and their livelihood. The study is on-going, we will know when the result comes out.
How the mobile phone works with the Esoko
Beyond pricing, the mobile phone can be used in terms of trading, we have a system where if you have a ton of maize and you want to sell it you can just pick up your mobile phone and text in ?sell , maize, two tons? and this message will move into our platform and those who have been programmed on the platform to receive the messages will get the information that somebody wants to sell maize two tons at a particular price and this is his contact. So if you are one of the traders you can contact the person for negotiation on how to buy the maize. That is what we are using the phone to do. We also use the phone to send out information and news alerts or whatever is happening just by SMS push. We can send the SMS to the people who have been programmed on the platform. What we have is that if you are a researcher or you are doing any business, you just programme your members into cassava growers, maize growers, whatever you want or any way you want to classify them, you can classify them by districts, or by regions, so that if something is happening within a certain region you can easily transmit that message to that specific region, to those specific people who are on your profile on that network and use it to communicate with that target group.
The same platform can be used if you want to send coupon, instead of sending paper coupon, you can decide to use the mobile coupons and transmit it to farmers or anybody, also by a mobile phone. You can also use it to do simple polls, asking basic questions like, have you planted? Yes or No, if not when will you do that? This simple questions can also be used to do polls on the platform, you can also use it to give you stock alerts to tell you the stock you have in your warehouse or in the farm, you can use it to send alerts about transportation .
And for those of you who are researchers, you can do a small poll per say, send the reports just by SMS message to the recipient if the respondent have just respond the result can be capture if they are on the platform and the analysis will be done so it is very simple to use just because it has a very limited usage ,if you want to use a very large research that means you cannot use the SMS platform because of these limitations . You can use the Android phone or the Java application because they are smart phones and they have the ability to do more interactions that can be used for the Esoko.
On the challenges the mobile platform
There are some challenges in terms of using this platform, currently most SMS have about 169 characters but on our platform you can see up to 560 characters so anything beyond that, you will not be able to transmit that message on the platform and that is a limitation because you cannot use the platform to send much information but only about 560 characters.
You also need to rely on mobile phone operators to deliver the SMS message, in case the network is down, then your recipient will not receive the message and they may not give you the feedback that you need. There is also another limitation for mobile phone services, for somebody to use it effectively, the person must know how to read and write or interpret the message through the mobile phone and that is another challenge to most of our farmers around Africa because reading and interpreting the message you need some skills in doing that which is a limitation.
And when you do a poll by SMS, you send the questions, people have to respond, how do you motivate them to give you the response? If you are in the field it?s a face to face ,so the person have no alternative but to respond to what you have asked him but you can send an SMS to thousands of people but getting the response is an issue . So what we do is that when you send a message to people you tell them that if they respond they get a certain unit of a mobile phone credit, if you do that then you may get people responding if they have the ability to interpret the message and understand it then they can respond effectively to it.
In spite of this , based on our learning and experience in dealing with this project , we have realized that for any good market information system service (M.I.S) you need to address the needs of the target groups because if not, the message may go and they wouldn?t understand or read it. It should also be timely and effective in delivering the message to the audience, the technology should be easily accessible, the message should be clear and understandable and it should be localized ,relevant and customized. This means that you should use the language that the people understand because if they don?t understand they will not respond. It should be timely and accurate, it should be convenient and inexpensive. It should also focus on implementation, training reinforcement and marketing because if you have a product and you didn?t promote and advertise it people will not know.

Reported by : Abah Anthony John

Shortlink:

Posted by AfricaSTI on January 13, 2013. Filed under Interview. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

Source: http://www.africasti.com/interview/how-the-cell-phone-is-helping-ghanaian-farmers

jimmy kimmel amzn white house correspondents dinner phoenix coyotes bruce irvin charlie st cloud celtics

Gyan Panchal leh 2003 Crude oil, 1 liter

Gyan Panchal
leh
2003
Crude oil, 1 liter

Gyan Panchal
leh
2003
Crude oil, 1 liter

2:45am??|?? URL: http://tmblr.co/ZYQ2NybgOvGT
(Notes: 29)?? Filed under: Gyan Panchal?
  1. thehab reblogged this from kiameku
  2. cuadrado3 reblogged this from sisifo
  3. iamdaniellaw reblogged this from sympathyfortheartgallery
  4. sympathyfortheartgallery reblogged this from kiameku
  5. vrotbek reblogged this from kiameku
  6. saintleer reblogged this from kiameku
  7. mitjaissick reblogged this from kiameku
  8. yonkerstomyoddflow reblogged this from kiameku
  9. patriciaiepure reblogged this from kiameku
  10. sisifo reblogged this from kiameku
  11. kiameku posted this

Source: http://kiameku.tumblr.com/post/40439616541

jim caldwell internet blackout jessica capshaw seattle times seattle times walker recall censor

Android Game Review ? Djorick?s Curse

Aspiring developer Keener Apps has launched a new game called ?Djorick?s Curse?! In the style of ?Age of Runes: Genesis? and ?Sargot?, this brain game combines the match 3-gameplay of ?Bejeweled? with characteristics of role playing games. The task and the controls of ?Djorick?s Curse? are easily explained: ?you have to find groups of at least three matching symbols in order to either heal yourself, improve your armor, collect money or fight against the monsters by simply drawing a line. Similar to an RPG,?you start with choosing one out of the two characters, selecting one out of three different paths with special gameplay advantages and finally, you have the opportunity to choose between ten useful spells. Thanks to those role playing aspects, the scope of the game is very decent.

Even though the sound effects match the different symbols, the lack of background music limits the creation of a convenient atmosphere. Additionally, the game offers a nice background story, but it seems that it was not integrated in the gameplay.

All in all, ?Djorick?s Curse? must not fear the comparison with other games of the genre, because the controls and the gameplay are well executed and it will surely be a great challenge for fans of brain games. So download it and see for how long you can resist Djorick?s curse!

Reviewed by Frieda Kreuer

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/playandroidmagazin/~3/ufdQaCigKUY/

mary j blige burger king islands joe flacco 2013 nissan altima masters par 3 contest google augmented reality glasses wonderlic test

Obama: U.S. accelerating Afghan military transition (cbsnews)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/276397901?client_source=feed&format=rss

three stooges the three stooges the bee gees woodward keratosis pilaris rock and roll hall of fame 2012 brandon rios

RFK children speak about assassination in Dallas

DALLAS (AP) ? Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is convinced that a lone gunman wasn't solely responsible for the assassination of his uncle, President John F. Kennedy, and said his father believed the Warren Commission report was a "shoddy piece of craftsmanship."

Kennedy and his sister, Rory, were interviewed by Charlie Rose on Friday night in front of an audience in Dallas as a year of observances begins for the 50th anniversary of the president's death.

Their uncle was killed on Nov. 22, 1963. Five years later, their father was assassinated in a Los Angeles hotel during his primary victory celebration.

Robert Kennedy said his father spent a year trying to come to grips with his brother's death. He said his read writings by Greek philosophers, Catholic scholars, poets and Henry David Thoreau "trying to figure out kind of the existential implications of why a just God would allow injustice to happen of the magnitude he was seeing."

He said his father believed the Warren Commission, which concluded Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in killing the president, was a "shoddy piece of craftsmanship." He said that he, too, questioned the report.

"The evidence at this point is convincing that it wasn't a lone gunman," he said, but he didn't say what he believed may have happened.

The attorney and well-known environmentalist also told the audience light-hearted stories Friday about memories of his uncle.

As a young child with an interest in the environment, he recalled, he made an appointment with his uncle to speak with him in the Oval Office about pollution.

He'd even caught a salamander to present to the president, which unfortunately died before the meeting.

"He kept saying to me, 'It doesn't look well,'" Robert Kennedy recalled.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rfk-children-speak-assassination-dallas-050810379.html

university of louisville louisville ky final four lotto winners mega ball winning numbers baltimore county current tv

Monday, 10 December 2012

Gene-altered mosquitoes could be used vs. dengue

In this Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012 photo, Brittany Mariscal, an entomological technician with the Florida Keys Mosquito Control District, sorts and counts dead captured mosquitoes under a microscope in Key West, Fla. Mosquito control officials in the Florida Keys are waiting for the federal government to sign off on an experiment that would release hundreds of thousands of genetically modified mosquitoes to reduce the risk of dengue fever in this tourist town. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

In this Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012 photo, Brittany Mariscal, an entomological technician with the Florida Keys Mosquito Control District, sorts and counts dead captured mosquitoes under a microscope in Key West, Fla. Mosquito control officials in the Florida Keys are waiting for the federal government to sign off on an experiment that would release hundreds of thousands of genetically modified mosquitoes to reduce the risk of dengue fever in this tourist town. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

In this Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012 photo, Jason Garcia, a field inspector with the Florida Keys Mosquito Control District, tests a sprayer that could be used in the future to spray pesticides to control mosquitos in Key West, Fla. The British company Oxitec and mosquito control officials hope to release genetically modified mosquitoes to control the Aedes aegypti mosquito population, that can transmit dengue fever, without using pesticides and at relatively a low cost. But some Key West residents and environmental groups think the genetically modified mosquitoes pose a bigger threat than regular dengue or even dengue hemorrhagic fever. They worry the modified genetic material will somehow be passed to humans and the Keys ecosystem and they want more research into the potential risks. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

In this Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2012 photo, Mila de Mier, a Key West, Fla., realtor, is shown in her office during an interview with The Associated Press. De Mier has collected more than 116,000 signatures on a petition she posted on Change.org against a proposed trial by the British company Oxitec and mosquito control officials to release genetically modified mosquitoes to control the Aedes aegypti mosquito population, that can transmit dengue fever, without using pesticides and at relatively a low cost. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

In this Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2012 photo, Key West, Fla. resident Joel Biddle rides his bicycle in Key West. Biddle was one of the 93 cases of dengue fever were reported in Key West in 2009 and 2010. The British company Oxitec and mosquito control officials hope to release genetically modified mosquitoes to control the Aedes aegypti mosquito population, that can transmit dengue fever, without using pesticides and at relatively a low cost. But some Key West residents and environmental groups think the genetically modified mosquitoes pose a bigger threat than regular dengue or even dengue hemorrhagic fever. They worry the modified genetic material will somehow be passed to humans and the Keys ecosystem and they want more research into the potential risks. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

In this Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012 photo, Patti Sprague, left, and Jason Garcia, both field inspectors with the Florida Keys Mosquito Control District, inspect a backyard pond at a home in Key West, Fla. The British company Oxitec and mosquito control officials hope to release genetically modified mosquitoes to control the Aedes aegypti mosquito population, that can transmit dengue fever, without using pesticides and at relatively a low cost. But some Key West residents and environmental groups think the genetically modified mosquitoes pose a bigger threat than regular dengue or even dengue hemorrhagic fever. They worry the modified genetic material will somehow be passed to humans and the Keys ecosystem and they want more research into the potential risks. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)

(AP) ? Mosquito control officials in the Florida Keys are waiting for the federal government to sign off on an experiment that would release hundreds of thousands of genetically modified mosquitoes to reduce the risk of dengue fever in the tourist town of Key West.

If approved by the Food and Drug Administration, it would be the first such experiment in the U.S. Some Key West residents worry, though, that not enough research has been done to determine the risks that releasing genetically modified mosquitoes might pose to the Keys' fragile ecosystem.

Officials are targeting the Aedes aegypti mosquitoes because they can spread dengue fever, a disease health officials thought had been eradicated in the U.S. until 93 cases originated in the Keys in 2009 and 2010.

The trial planned by mosquito control officials and the British company Oxitec would release non-biting male mosquitoes that have been genetically modified to pass along a birth defect that kill their progeny before reaching maturity. The idea is that they will mate with wild females and their children will die before reproducing. After a few generations, Key West's Aedes aegypti population would die off, reducing the dengue fever risk without using pesticides and at relatively a low cost, the proponents say. There is no vaccine for dengue fever.

"The science of it, I think, looks fine. It's straight from setting up experiments and collecting data," said Michael Doyle, pointing to research Oxitec has had published in peer-reviewed scientific journals. He inherited the project when he took the lead at the Florida Keys Mosquito Control District in mid-2011.

The district's website says the modified genes will disappear from the environment after the mosquitoes carrying it die, resulting in no permanent change to the wild mosquito population. The district also says that the mosquito species isn't native to the Keys, nor is it an integral food source for other animals.

Dengue fever is a viral disease that inflicts severe flu-like symptoms ? the joint pain is so severe its nickname is "breakbone fever." It isn't fatal but victims are then susceptible at subsequent exposures to dengue hemorrhagic fever, which can be.

"It's very uncomfortable. You ache all over, you have a terrible fever," said Joel Biddle, a Key West resident whose dengue fever symptoms lasted more than a week in 2009.

Biddle is among those concerned about the Key West trial. He worries the modified genetic material will somehow be passed to humans or the ecosystem, and he wants more research done. He and other Key West residents also chafe at the fact that the project was in the works long before it was made public late last year.

Only female mosquitoes bite, so the modified genetic material wouldn't be passed on to humans, Mosquito control and Oxitec officials said. They also say they're being transparent about their data and the trial.

Real estate agent Mila de Mier has collected more than 117,700 signatures on a petition she posted on Change.org against the trial. Most come from outside the Keys, which de Mier says shows that tourists don't support the mosquito control district.

"We are dependent here on our tourists, and people from all over the country have been sending the message," de Mier said.

A University of Florida professor who studies mosquito control said Oxitec's technology works and evidence from the company's experiments elsewhere show it can control mosquito populations, but it's not clear whether its methods are as effective at controlling the risk of disease transmission. Phil Lounibos of the Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory also said it would take repeated releases of modified mosquitoes for the program to work, and the public outcry against genetically modified organisms, even when it's irrational, may be insurmountable.

"The public resistance and the need to reach some agreement between mosquito control and the public, I see that as a very significant issue, outside of the (operating) costs, since this is not just a one-time thing," Lounibos said.

The Aedes aegypti has shown resistance to pesticides used to control other species, and is the most difficult for the district to manage. Common in the Southeast and the Caribbean, it lurks in standing water around homes and businesses and can breed in containers as small as bottle caps.

District inspectors go door-to-door to remove the standing water where they breed, a time-consuming task. The district spends roughly $1 million a year to suppress Aedes aegypti, 10 to 15 percent of the agency's budget, Doyle said.

"Unfortunately, control of Aedes aegypti is a never-ending job," said Larry Hriber, the mosquito control district's research director.

In the trial, thousands of male mosquitoes bred by Oxitec would be released in a handful of Key West blocks where the Aedes aegypti is known to breed; the number of mosquitoes in those neighborhoods would be measured against the numbers from similar blocks where no modified mosquitoes were released.

The state's agriculture department oversees the mosquito control district, and Doyle said he would not expect any challenge from the state if the FDA signed off on the trial. The mosquito control district wouldn't need any local permit for the trial, either, but officials held a public meeting earlier this year and have posted information on the agency's website.

That trial may be years away. FDA spokeswoman Morgan Liscinsky said no genetically modified species can be released without approval.

There hasn't been a case of dengue fever in Key West since November 2010, but two other cases were reported elsewhere in South Florida this fall.

The mosquito trial proposed for Key West wouldn't be the first release of genetically modified insects in the U.S.

In 2009, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service concluded that integrating genetically modified pink bollworms, bred by Oxitec to be sterile but more competitive in mating than regular bollworms, into the agency's plant pest control program was "the environmentally preferable alternative" to combat the cotton pest. The program was discontinued, however, after officials found that the genetically modified insects were not as hardy as pink bollworms sterilized through irradiation, and that their use in organic cotton fields would cause farmers to lose their certification.

Oxitec said the USDA's environmental assessment is one of several examples of proof that the trial's risks and methods are being independently evaluated. The company has trials in Brazil, the Cayman Islands and Malaysia, and it says it's gotten positive reviews from the latter two governments. It also cites its published research in peer-reviewed journals.

But Biddle, the onetime dengue patient, wants Oxitec to continue testing the modified mosquitoes outside the U.S.

"Why the rush here?" the Key West man said. "We already have test cases in the world where we can watch what is happening and make the best studies, because wouldn't it be wonderful if we could find out how it can be fail-safe ? which it is not right now. It's an open Pandora's box."

___

Follow Jennifer Kay on Twitter at www.twitter.com/jnkay .

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2012-12-06-Modified%20Mosquitoes/id-716eb61571a6480381aebe38f2f0db4c

amelia earhart Sally Ride Ichiro minka kelly James Holmes court Rupert Sanders bachelorette