Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Bradley Cooper: Playing Lance would be 'nuts'

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

First, Bradley Cooper told the BBC that he'd be "interested" in playing disgraced cyclist Lance Armstrong, but now he says that's "nuts." Cooper told the L.A. Times this week that he didn't really grasp what the BBC was asking him.

Getty Images file

Bradley Cooper, right, says he won't play Lance Armstrong, left, in an upcoming movie.

"Oh my God, that's so nuts!" he said. "I had no idea what (the interviewer) was talking about. I didn't even know that J.J. (Abrams) has the rights, I had no idea. I don't know anything about it."

According to The Hollywood Reporter, "Lost" producer Abrams and Paramount Pictures have the movie rights to an upcoming book, "Cycle of Lies: The Fall of Lance Armstrong."

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Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/29/16754773-bradley-cooper-playing-lance-armstrong-would-be-nuts?lite

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Tots Essential Kit Guarantee Launched By Award-Winning Family ...

-- /EPR NETWORK/ -- Parents with toddlers and babies will be able to travel light to safe and relaxing family holidays this summer thanks to the Tots Essential Kit Guarantee, a new initiative launched today by award-winning family travel specialists Tots To Travel.

Instead of struggling to fit all the essential items little ones need into their luggage, and hauling it through customs on a fleet of baggage trolleys, parents can be sure of finding it all waiting for them at their holiday home.

Tots To Travel are the only company to offer this Tots Essential Kit Guarantee for all of their family holidays which covers over 20 items from pool safety and bulky furniture such as cots, high chairs and stair gates, to often overlooked essentials such as blackout blinds and a range of toys and easily forgotten items like night lights and a hand-held blender.

Tots To Travel owner Wendy Shand said: ?It's a real challenge for new parents trying to get all the kit they need to keep their baby safe and happy into their luggage. There are so many essential items from changing mats to travel cots, sterilisers and baby monitors that we take for granted at home.

?We have hundreds of calls and emails from anxious parents worried they won't be able to take family holidays if they can't be sure they have all these things. So we have compiled a list of the essential items and can now guarantee our holiday homes have all of them.?

Tots To Travel specialises in stylish, safe, fun holiday villas for the under fives and their families, and the Tots Essential Kit Guarantee is another important element in their mission to ensure relaxing family holidays from start to finish.

They offer holiday homes from cottages to chateaux, and take extensive steps to ensure each is suitable. All properties are inspected and vetted by a special team of agents using a system developed with the Child Accident Prevention Trust to ensure they are all safe and genuinely family-friendly.

Tots To Travel also offer a free holiday planner pack and there is also a vast array of useful information on their website, on everything from ?How far is the beach?? to ?Where is the nearest hospital or supermarket??.

The full Tots To Travel kit guarantee covers:

    • Pool barriers (enclosed by fence, hard cover or net)
    • At least one cot that meets EU standards
    • Good supply of cot linen
    • At least one high chair
    • Booster or junior seat (suitable for use at a dining table)
    • Baby monitor
    • At least one changing mat
    • Steriliser
    • Stair gates where needed
    • At least one potty
    • Child's toilet seat
    • Child's step
    • Baby and child cutlery, bowls, cups and plates
    • Bath toys and non-slip mat
    • Hand-held blender
    • At least one bed guard
    • Blackout blinds/curtains/shutters in child bedrooms
    • Children's books, indoor and outdoor toys
    • DVD player and children's DVDs
    • Microwave
    • Night light in children's rooms

Unsurprisingly, pool safety comes top of the list, as Wendy Shand, a mother of three, set up the company after her little boy fell into an unenclosed swimming pool on a family holiday. That terrible accident was a turning point which led her to set up her holiday company to ensure safe family holidays for under 5s.

She said: ?It felt there had to be a safer and more enjoyable way to holiday with small children. More to the point there must be plenty of parents just like me who need a safe, family-friendly holiday more than ever before.?

When Wendy couldn't find a family-friendly holiday company to suit her needs, she decided to start her own ? and quickly found its services in demand. ?There's something terribly motivating about having children. You suddenly have the drive to make life as you want it to be, rather than living by somebody else's rules,? she said.

Tots To Travel is now a multi-award winning company, which Wendy runs with husband Rob, a former RAF fighter pilot.

The company's success has been recognised with a range of prestigious awards including the Cisco Customer Kings Award for outstanding customer service (2010) and Woman of the Year Award from the Loved By Parents website (2011).

Notes to Editors

  1. For more information go to http://www.totstotravel.co.uk
  2. If you would like to speak with Wendy Shand or for all Tots To Travel media enquiries please contact Eleanor Treharne-Jones on
    07811 093648, eleanor@theconversationco.com or @EleanorTJ.
  3. Key statistics:
    • Tots To Travel launched with nine holiday homes in April 2006 and now feature more than 400 safe, family friendly properties
    • The company offers holiday homes in France, Italy, Portugal, Spain and the UK
    • Tots To Travel have sent 1000s of families away of their holidays
    • They have developed a Blueprint For Lettings Success which helps holiday home owners to let their property more successfully in the family market

Source: http://express-press-release.net/105/Tots-Essential-Kit-Guarantee-Launched-By-Award-Winning-Family-Holidays-Company-78345652.php

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Controlled crumpling of graphene forms artificial muscle

Jan. 23, 2013 ? Duke University engineers are layering atom-thick lattices of carbon with polymers to create unique materials with a broad range of applications, including artificial muscles.

The lattice, known as graphene, is made of pure carbon and appears under magnification like chicken wire. Because of its unique optical, electrical and mechanical properties, graphene is used in electronics, energy storage, composite materials and biomedicine.

However, graphene is extremely difficult to handle in that it easily "crumples," which, depending on circumstances, can be a positive or negative characteristic. Unfortunately, scientists have been unable to control the crumpling and unfolding of large-area graphene to take advantage of its properties.

Duke engineer Xuanhe Zhao, assistant professor in Duke's Pratt School of Engineering, likens the challenge of controlling graphene to the difference between unfolding paper and wet tissue.

"If you crumpled up normal paper, you can pretty easily flatten it out," Zhao said. "However, graphene is more like wet tissue paper. It is extremely thin and sticky and difficult to unfold once crumpled. We have developed a method to solve this problem and control the crumpling and unfolding of large-area graphene films."

The Duke engineers attached the graphene on a rubber film that had been pre-stretched multiple times of its original size. Once the pre-stretch in the rubber film was relaxed, part of the graphene detached from the rubber while other part kept adhering on the rubber, forming an attached-detached pattern with a size of a few nanometers. As the rubber was relaxed, the detached graphene was compressed to crumple. Once the rubber film was stretched back, the adhered graphene will pull on the crumpled graphene to unfold it.

"In this way, the crumpling and unfolding of large-area atomic-thick graphene can be controlled by simply stretching and relaxing a rubber film, even by hand," Zhao said.

The results were published online in the journal Nature Materials.

"Our approach has opened avenues to exploit unprecedented properties and functions of graphene," said Jianfeng Zang, a postdoctoral fellow in Zhao's group and the first author of the paper. "For example, we can tune the graphene from being transparent to opaque by crumpling it, and tune it back by unfolding it."

In addition, the Duke engineers layered the graphene with different polymer films to make a "soft" material that can act like muscle tissues by contracting and expanding on demand. When electricity is applied to the graphene, the artificial muscle expands in area; when the electricity is cut off, it relaxes. Varying the voltage controls the degree of contraction and relaxation, giving actuation strains over 100 percent.

"Indeed, the crumpling and unfolding of graphene allows large deformation of the artificial muscle." Zang said.

"New artificial muscles are enabling diverse technologies ranging from robotics and drug delivery to energy harvesting and storage," Zhao said. "In particular, they promise to greatly improve the quality of life for millions of disabled people by providing affordable devices such as lightweight prostheses and full-page Braille displays. The broad impact of new artificial muscles is potentially analogous to the impact of piezoelectric materials on the global society."

Zhao's work is supported by the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Triangle Materials Research Science and Engineering Center, NSF Materials and Surface Engineering program, and National Institutes of Health (NIH). Other members of the team are Duke's Qiming Wang and Qing Tu.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Duke University. The original article was written by Richard Merritt.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Jianfeng Zang, Seunghwa Ryu, Nicola Pugno, Qiming Wang, Qing Tu, Markus J. Buehler, Xuanhe Zhao. Multifunctionality and control of the crumpling and unfolding of large-area graphene. Nature Materials, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nmat3542

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/OvIiUOFjQuc/130123165042.htm

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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

This Is the Most Embarrassing Furniture Ever

If you really hate your guests, looks no further than Jay Watson Design's thermochromic furniture. Before they sit down it looks like any normal old table and bench—but when they rise, their sweaty ass will leave a large bright patch that would make any man blush. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/NGcVLLibVOY/this-is-the-most-embarrassing-furniture-ever

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An Apple job ad seeks expertise of 802.ac...

An Apple job ad seeks expertise of 802.ac Wi-Fi—which bodes well for those rumors of super-fast Wi-Fi hitting Macs soon. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/oSk_VueK98I/

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Alcoa earnings as expected, revenue tops forecasts

In this Saturday, April 9, 2011, photo, the Alcoa headquarters building stands in downtown Pittsburgh. Alcoa Inc. says fourth-quarter earnings in 2012 met Wall Street's expectations, and it sees slightly higher demand for aluminum this year. The company said Tuesday that net (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

In this Saturday, April 9, 2011, photo, the Alcoa headquarters building stands in downtown Pittsburgh. Alcoa Inc. says fourth-quarter earnings in 2012 met Wall Street's expectations, and it sees slightly higher demand for aluminum this year. The company said Tuesday that net (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

(AP) ? Alcoa Inc. said Tuesday that fourth-quarter earnings met Wall Street's expectations, and it sees slightly higher demand for aluminum this year.

The sluggish global economy has weakened prices for aluminum used in everything from airplanes to soda cans. But Alcoa sees demand growing 7 percent in 2013, up from a 6 percent gain in 2012, with the best prospects in aerospace but slower improvement in demand for autos, packaging, and building and construction materials.

Separately, the company announced that chief financial officer Charles D. McLane Jr., 59, will retire and be replaced by William F. Oplinger, the chief operating officer of Alcoa's primary-products business unit. The change will happen April 1.

Oplinger, 45, joined Alcoa in 2000 and has held several finance and planning jobs. He is on the executive council, which plots company strategy.

In the fourth quarter, Alcoa's net income was $242 million, or 21 cents per share. That includes one-time gains like income from selling a hydroelectric project.

Without those gains, the company would have made six cents per share ? exactly what analysts expected, according to FactSet ? on revenue of $5.90 billion. Sales were higher than the $5.58 billion that analysts predicted.

A year ago, the company posted a fourth-quarter loss of $191 million, or 18 cents per share, on revenue of $5.99 billion, and a loss after special items of 3 cents per share.

The company said it hit record profits in its aluminum-rolling and product-making businesses while cutting costs in its mining and refining or "upstream" segment.

Chairman and CEO Klaus Kleinfeld said the company overcame volatile aluminum prices and global economic weakness and was in "strong position to maximize profitable growth" in 2013.

Alcoa is the first company in the Dow Jones industrial average to report fourth-quarter earnings. Because it makes aluminum for so many key industries, investors study Alcoa's results for clues about the health and direction of the overall economy.

Alcoa shares ended regular trading where they began, unchanged at $9.10. In after-hours trading following the earnings report, the stock rose 8 cents to $9.18.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-01-08-Earns-Alcoa/id-383baee3cb7f49bf9ca9e4a0f6dcfd8a

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