Thursday, February 27, 2014

Ancient Chinese Mummies Carry Evidence Of Oldest Known Cheese


Some cheeses are best when they are aged for five or ten years, but any cheese that you eat today would be considered under-ripe if you base it against a cheese recently discovered in China.
Researchers from Germany’s Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics (MPI-CBG) have found what is being called the world’s oldest cheese after discovering yellowish clumps on the necks and chests of Chinese mummies dating back to around 1615 BC.
An analysis of the clumps revealed that they are a lactose-free variety of cheese that was made quickly and conveniently. Furthermore, the researchers believe the manufacturing process may have “played a role in the spread of herding and dairying across Asia,” reports Traci Watson of USA Today.
“We not only identified the product as the earliest known cheese, but we also have direct … evidence of ancient technology,” said study author Andrej Shevchenko, an analytical chemist at MPI-CBG.
Shevchenko said the cheese, as were the mummies, remained well-preserved for so long due not only to the burial practices, but the region. The conditions at Small River Cemetery Number 5 in northwestern China’s Taklamakan Desert, which was first documented in the 1930s, were perfect for preserving the dead.
The Bronze Age people of the area seemingly buried their dead atop a large sand dune near a now-dry river, interring their kin under what looks like large wooden boats. The researcher noted that these mummies seemed as if they were “vacuum-packed” because of the burial process, which included wrapping the boats tightly with cowhide.
The dry desert air and salty soil prevented the decay of both the dead and the cheese that was sprinkled atop the corpses. The remains and their artifacts were freeze-dried, preserving everything from their light-brown hair to the leather boots and wool capes they adorned. Analysis of seeds and animal tissues in the tombs indicate that the burials date to between 1450 and 1650 BC.
An analysis of the proteins and fats in the clumps confirmed they were cheese and not butter or milk. While it remains unclear why the dead were buried with cheese on their bodies, Shevchenko said it may have been “food for the afterlife.”
The analysis also showed that the cheese was made by combining milk, bacteria and yeast. The technique employed by these ancient people is still used today to make the beverage kefir, as well as kefir cheese, which is similar to cottage cheese.
If the people of this time did in fact use the kefir starter kit to make their cheese, it goes against any conventional thinking on how cheese has always been processed. Most cheeses today are made with rennet, a curdling substance found in the guts of calf, lamb and kid. The common belief is that cheese was invented by accident when humans first began carrying milk in bags made from animal gut.
Using rennet requires the killing of young animals, whereas kefir does not, noted Shevchenko. By using the kefir starter kit, the people of the time had an easy and low cost method of producing cheese, which would have helped drive its spread throughout Asia and into the Middle East.
While this is the oldest known cheese yet discovered, previous research in Poland has uncovered cheese-making strainers dating back more than 7,000 years, noted Oliver Craig, a bioarchaeologist at the University of York. He maintains, though, that Shevchenko undoubtedly has good evidence for what me be the oldest cheese known.
However, it may be harder to prove that the cheese was made with kefir starter rather than rennet. He told USA Today that the proteins may have decayed so much that providing a definitive answer is unlikely. He feels that an analysis of animal bones or pottery is needed to confirm that this cheese was behind the technological drive across Asia.

Roos Foods recalls 16 varieties of cheese after listeria death




WASHINGTON -- A Delaware company, Roos Foods, has recalled 16 varieties of cheese after some of its brands were linked to a death in California and illnesses in newborns and pregnant women.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the cheeses produced by Roos Foods of Kenton, Del., are linked to a listeria outbreak. The recalled products are the company's Mexicana, Amigo, Santa Rosa De Lima, Suyapa, La Chapina and La Purisima Crema Nica brands.
The CDC said there was one death in California and seven illnesses in Maryland. All the Maryland victims reported consuming the cheese. All of the patients are of Hispanic ethnicity.
Five of the illnesses (including two mother-newborn pairs and a newborn) were related to pregnancy.
Seven of the eight patients were hospitalized. All illnesses were diagnosed between Aug. 1, 2014 and Nov. 27, 2013.
The products were distributed in Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia. A full list of brand names and varieties can be found on the Food and Drug Administration's website.
Listeria is especially dangerous to pregnant women because it easily passes through to the fetus.
Symptoms of a listeria infection, or listeriosis, include fever, muscle aches, diarrhea or other gastrointestinal symptoms.
Customers are asked to throw away any cheeses made by Roos Foods, even if it has been eaten without anyone becoming ill. If you develop a fever after eating this cheese, seek medical help immediately.
Although people can sometimes develop listeriosis up to 2 months after eating contaminated food, symptoms usually start within several days.

South American mummy ritually sacrificed

Frontal view of the mummy which reveals typical squatting position

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A team of scientists analysed the skull to find evidence of a blunt trauma to the head, suggesting she died very quickly from the blow.
DNA analysis also revealed she suffered from a parasitic infection called Chagas disease, they write in Plos One.
Her symptoms indicated she would not have lived for much longer even if she had escaped her killers.
Chagas is still endemic in South America - especially those living in poverty - and can be deadly if not treated early.
Andreas Nerlich, co-author of the study from Munich University, Germany, said that the girl was likely to have come from a poor family.
"The parasite lives in mud-brick walls typical of those from lower social classes, not in stone houses or better equipped, cleaner surroundings," he told BBC News.
For more than 100 years, it was unclear where the mummy was from, but now detailed CT scans, injury reconstructions and DNA evidence have finally given clues to her origin.
Detailed view of face
The mummified woman is over 500 years old, and would have died in her early 20s.
She is thought to have arrived in Germany after a Bavarian princess brought her back from an expedition to South America in 1898.
Where exactly she would have lived remains unclear, but based on a stable isotope analysis of her bones and hair, her diet was rich in fish. The researchers therefore suggest she lived near the Peruvian or Northern Chilean coast line.
The rope which tied her plaits was made out of material that originated in South America and her skull formation was also typical of the Inca people.
She was killed and buried in a hot and dry sandy region that resulted in natural mummification. For many years, however, it was simply assumed she was a German bog body.
"We assumed she died in a ritual killing but we have no clear evidence from written sources," explained Prof Nerlich.

"Present-day techniques offer such a wealth of information that we can reconstruct various aspects of past lives, diseases and death."
Three dimensional reconstruction
A 3D reconstruction highlighted signs of a massive cranial injury
The analysis will now help scientists understand the origin of the Chagas pathogen and its molecular construction.
Evidence of ritual sacrifice in South American mummies is well documented.
In the Incan empire, young girls were often given up to the sun god in religious rituals. The parents and local communities of sacrificed victims were consequently highly respected.
Emma Brown from the department of archaeological sciences at the University of Bradford, UK, who was not involved with the study, said that due to the lack of contextual data it was hard to definitively say that the mummy was a human sacrifice.
"This individual is older than the usual profile of ritually killed females, who are typically around the age of 13 or 14," Dr Brown told the BBC.
"It is important to recognise the historical context of this mummy. The radiocarbon dates cover the period of the Spanish conquest of the Americas.
"Historical records describe repressive and extreme forms of violence and recent bio-archaeological investigations of conquest-era cemeteries have revealed that many types of trauma, including massive blunt force cranial trauma [shown here] are quite common," she added.
External appearance of the hair plaits

FA Cup: Manchester City knock Chelsea out but it isn't revenge for Manuel Pellegrini

Manchester:  Manuel Pellegrini, the Manchester City manager, did not believe he had a point to prove over Jose Mourinho despite knocking him and Chelsea out of the FA Cup in a 2-0 fifth-round victory at the Etihad Stadium on Saturday.

City's Chilean manager had come under close scrutiny and had his tactical acumen questioned after losing to Chelsea at home in the league two weeks ago, the second time this season he had lost to Mourinho and the seventh defeat in nine career meetings between the pair. (Mourinho's failure jobe comes back to bite him)

With City facing Barcelona in the Champions League knock-out phase in Manchester on Tuesday, Pellegrini and City maintain an interest in all four competitions but the Chilean insisted progress in the FA Cup did not provide him with any sense of revenge over Mourinho.

"It's easy for me to talk about tactics when you win," said Pellegrini. "But it is not revenge. I really don't think we had any tactical problems against Chelsea the other day.

"We knew exactly the way Chelsea play, they knew how we play, but players always make the difference during the match. Today was not a tactical masterclass.

"We have two important games, today and Tuesday, and so we mixed different players. Now we start thinking about Barcelona but today was very important to have the performance we did in all senses - defending, in possession, attacking - I don't think Chelsea had a single chance to shoot at goal."

City, FA Cup finalists in two of the last three seasons, are now in the last eight of the FA Cup with the Barcelona tie and a League Cup Final date with Sunderland pending.

Pellegrini, however, refused to assess his team's chances of capturing an unprecedented quadruple.

"We never talk about that," he said. "I always say we try to fight in all competitions as far as we can but it is one one step more in one competition.

"For me, the most important thing is we beat a great team but I also had a lot of questions the other day when we lost against Chelsea about are we going to change the way of playing because we lost 1-0?

"I repeat, this team will not change the way it plays and today was a very important test to keep our style of play, always."

- Mourinho not pointing finger -

Opposite number Mourinho saw his team turn in a sub-par display and took off ineffective striker Samuel Eto'o at the interval although the Chelsea manager was in no mood to point blame at individuals.

"There are things I cannot say," said Mourinho. "There are things I can think and keep to myself; it's up to you.

"I don't want to individualise, speak about my striker or my keeper or my left-back, whatever. We are a team, we win as a team, we lose as a team."

Mourinho, whose own Champions League date with Galatasary is still over a week away, refuted the argument that exiting the FA Cup may help his side in that competition or in keeping their place at the top of the Premier League table.

"I keep saying the same; we go game by game, we are what we are. We try to win the next game, it doesn't matter the competition and I don't think one or two more games in the FA Cup would have changed anything for us or for them - especially with the powerful squad they have. I don't think there is a problem."

Meanwhile, Mourinho was in typically mischievous mood when asked about his reaction to the response to his public war of words with Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger whom he labelled a "specialist in failure."

"You mean my comments or the previous comments to my comments?" said Mourinho referring to Wenger's own remarks about the Chelsea manager. "It's your fault. It's always the same guy who's the bad guy. One is polite, the other is the bad guy; okay, okay. I'm not surprised because I know him."

NZ dollar hits 7-week high; euro awaits inflation data

A money changer inspects U.S. dollar bills at a currency exchange in Manila January 15, 2014. REUTERS-Romeo Ranoco
(Reuters) - The New Zealand dollar hit a seven-week high on Friday as an upbeat business survey underscored expectations for a rate hike next month, while the euro eased ahead of a closely-watched reading on euro zone inflation.
China's yuan looks set for its biggest daily loss on record on Friday, as the central bank stepped up its intervention to weaken the currency ahead of a key government meeting next week. In midday trades, the yuan briefly weakened to 6.1808 per dollar, more than 0.8 percent below Thursday's close.
The yen, meanwhile, pushed higher as risk sentiment faltered, with Chinese equities .SSEC slipping 0.5 percent and Japan's Nikkei share average .N225 shedding 0.9 percent, market players said.
In addition, a trader for a European bank in Tokyo said month-end flows from Japanese banks helped drag the dollar lower versus the yen.
The dollar fell 0.5 percent to about 101.65 yen, while the euro shed 0.5 percent to 139.27 yen.
A big mover on the day was the Chinese yuan, which looked set for its biggest daily loss on record as the central bank stepped up its intervention to weaken the currency ahead of a key government meeting next week which may be used as a platform to unveil more market reforms.
Directed at squeezing out speculative plays betting on continued yuan gains, the central bank has set about actively weakening its currency since mid-last week by using a mix of weak daily fixings and asking its agent banks to buy dollars.
The euro eased 0.1 percent to about $1.3699, but stayed above Thursday's two-week low of $1.3643.
Jitters over tensions in Ukraine have weighed on the euro in recent sessions, as investors flocked to safe haven currencies such as the Swiss franc..
The euro's near-term fortunes are seen hinging on euro zone inflation data due later on Friday. The inflation reading will be closely watched for clues on whether the European Central Bank will cut interest rates at its policy meeting next week.
One-third of economists polled by Reuters have penciled in a cut in the ECB's refinancing rate from the current 0.25 percent at its March 6 meeting.
The kiwi dollar rose 0.2 percent on the day to $0.8389. Earlier, it touched a peak of $0.8415, its highest level since mid-January.
One possible resistance level lies at $0.8433, a peak hit on January 14. A rise beyond there would take the New Zealand dollar to highs that haven't been seen since late October.
An ANZ Bank survey showing that New Zealand business confidence surged to a near 20-year high in February fuelled the rally in the New Zealand dollar.
The survey suggests that interest rate hikes by New Zealand's central bank are needed soon, Greg Gibbs, head of Asia Pacific markets strategy for RBS in Singapore, said in a research note.
"While these are probably fully priced, the data increase the risk of somewhat faster hikes... Given the yield seeking nature of the current market near term risk is a topside break of the range in NZD over the last six months," he added.

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand is expected to start its long-awaited tightening cycle at its March 13 policy review, lifting its cash rate from a record low 2.5 percent by 25 basis points.

Australian government upgrades warning for travellers to Bangkok

The father of a pair of siblings killed in a Bangkok bomb blast mourns during their funeral.

Bangkok: The Australian government has upgraded its travel advisory for Bangkok after a surge of shootings and grenade attacks in the capital that left two children dead and dozens injured, many seriously.
“Travellers are strongly advised to avoid all protest sites and surrounding areas, political rallies and processions, political events and large-scale public gatherings due to the risk of further violence,” says the advisory on smartraveller.gov.au.
The re-issuing of the advisory on Friday followed criticism in a report published by Fairfax Media on Wednesday that the previous advisory should be strengthened to warn Australians of increasing dangers.
Anti-government protesters pray near the site of a bomb blast in Bangkok that killed two people and wounded at least 22.
The advisory issued on February 19 made no mention of deadly attacks at protest sites that included an explosion last Sunday in Bangkok’s commercial centre that is frequented by tourists.The new advisory refers to streets near protest areas that have been closed to vehicles and converted into outdoor markets.
Many foreign tourists have been visiting the areas, including Australians, seemingly oblivious to the fact that they have been the target of attacks. Some were with children.
Police treat an officer injured by a grenade thrown by anti-government protesters in Bangkok.
The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has urged Thai authorities, anti-government protesters and parents to keep children out of the protest areas, declaring them “child free” zones.
Amid fears violence is set to escalate, Thailand’s army has stepped up patrols by soldiers across Bangkok, especially on elevated roads, walk-ways and high rise buildings.
Attackers have been using high vantage points to fire grenades from self-propelled launchers.
Soldiers are now manning 176 checkpoints, an increase of 150 from just a few days ago.
Since anti-government protests began last November, 21 people have been killed and more than 800 injured while Thailand’s economy has been dragged down and tourist arrivals have fallen dramatically.
Protesters are demanding the resignation of prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra, who they accuse of being corrupt and a puppet of her elder brother Thaksin Shinawatra, who lives in exile to avoid a jail sentence for corruption.
Ms Yingluck denies the claims.
Her supporters say influential figures in Bangkok are plotting a “judicial coup” to force her removal with the support of state institutions, including judges.

Top world stars to play FIFA-backed Match Against Poverty for Filipino typhoon victims




The 11th annual Match Against Poverty is getting stronger support day by day. Luis Figo, Fabio Cannavaro and Patrick Vieira have accepted Ronaldo and Zinedine Zidane's invitation and are committed to helping the Philippines in the FIFA-supported 11th annual Match Against Poverty that will take place on March 4 at the Stade de Suisse, Bern. Former World Cup referee Pierluigi Collina of Italy will referee the match which will be televised globally.

According to FIFA's website, Figo, the 2000 Ballon D'or winner and the 2001 FIFA World Player of the Year, is very keen to support the cause. "I am making an appeal to the public to come to the Stade de Suisse," he said. I would be delighted to see the stands full of people so we could celebrate football together in the fight against poverty. Let's help the Philippines."

"I am very excited about this game. Football speaks a universal language and we need to take advantage of this to appeal for the reconstruction of the Philippines," said Vieira, who won the 1998 FIFA World Cup and UEFA EURO 2000 alongside various titles in England and Italy.

"It is a great honour to play alongside these talented players who have had such successful careers," said 2006 World Cup and FIFA World Player of the Year Cannavaro, who considers the fight against poverty a priority. "Unfortunately, natural disasters affect us every year. The fight against poverty must be constant and I'm very happy if I can contribute to it through football."

"To have celebrities like Ronaldo, Zidane and Marta lending their names as Goodwill Ambassadors to the work of UNDP means more to us than money could ever buy," UNDP administrator Helen Clark said in a video message to support the Match Against Poverty. "Their reputations are so fantastic, their followings so great that for them to be talking about the work that we do to help devastated communities and people moving out from poverty is just so valuable." she added.

Proceeds from the match will support recovery efforts in the Philippines in the wake of Typhoon Haiyan, one of the most powerful storms on record, said the FIFA website.

The list of players confirmed up to now in the Ronaldo, Zidane & Friends team is: Ronald de Boer (Netherlands), Steve McManaman and Jamie Carragher (England), Robert Pires, Claude Makelele, Christian Karembeu and Patrick Vieira (France), Jens Lehmann (Germany), Gaizka Mendieta , Fernando Hierro and Michel Salgado (Spain), Paulo Ferreira, Fernando Couto, Luis Figo, Paulo Sousa and Deco (Portugal), Marta, Giovane Elber, Juliano Belletti and Roberto Carlos (Brazil), Pavel Nedved (Czech Republic), Gianluca Zambrotta, Gennaro Gattuso, Christian Vieri and Fabio Cannavaro (Italy), Hakan Sukur (Turkey) Hidetoshi Nakata (Japan) and Freddie Ljungberg (Sweden).

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

AT HOME AND ABROAD: Why Chile and South Africa’s growth paths have diverged

The skyline of Santiago, the capital of Chile.  Picture: THINKSTOCK

I am writing this from Chile, a country I visit often for personal reasons and which I find fascinating because of some compelling comparisons with South Africa. The year 1990 was one of historic significance for both — Nelson Mandela’s release for South Africa, and the ouster of the murderous dictator Augusto Pinochet for Chile. Thus a year of mutual reincarnation.
IT IS strange how often one can see the essential issues of one’s homeland more clearly from a foreign shore. I guess it’s the withdrawal from the daily political chatter that helps highlight what really matters. Plus the opportunity to draw comparisons.
Both followed their moments of liberation by instituting truth and reconciliation commissions to deal with the atrocities of the ugly phases from which they had just emerged. Pinochet’s brutal rule saw 80,000 people detained; 30,000 tortured; more than 3,000 murdered; as well countless numbers of desaparecidos — people who simply disappeared.
In the years immediately after their liberation, the two countries recovered, with their economies, both based primarily on mining and agriculture, growing almost in parallel at an average of 4.5% a year — until 2009. In that year, in which President Jacob Zuma came to power, the two began to deviate, with Chile continuing its healthy growth rate, while South Africa floundered.
In the five years since then — the full Zuma term — the two have parted quite strikingly. In 2011, Chile hit a peak of 9.8% growth in gross domestic product, while South Africa fell to 3.9%. The following year, Chile grew another 5.6% to South Africa’s 2.1%, and last year, Chile’s growth was 4.7%, while South Africa slumped to a pathetic 0.7%.
Why the difference? First, because of constant labour unrest in Zuma’s South Africa, which caused us to miss out on not just one but two resource booms. Second, I suggest, because Chile is ranked first in Latin America and seventh in the world on the Index of Economic Freedom, while South Africa is ranked 75th in the world.
The World Bank rates Chile among the most competitive countries in the world and one of the easiest with which to do business; while South Africa chokes its competitiveness with red tape and the Zuma administration seems positively hostile to foreign investment.
Chile’s healthy growth rate has reduced its unemployment rate from 8% to 5% over the past five years, while South Africa’s has continued to balloon from an actual 30% to 35%, with the world’s third-highest youth (younger than 25) unemployment of 50%. Chile has also managed to reduce its economic inequality, while ours continues to widen.
Yet Zuma seems unaware of — or maybe just insensitive to — all of this. "The last five years," he blithely said the other day, "have further advanced change and a better life for all, especially the poor and the working class."
Zuma blames the fall in South Africa’s growth rate entirely on the global recession. We have declined along with the rest of the world, he contends. How, then, does he explain why Chile hasn’t? Nor has its northern neighbour, Peru. Nor Colombia. Nor Vietnam. Nor a number of other emerging countries, especially in Africa.
Now it is election time in South Africa and voters must decide which party really offers the best policy for delivering a better life for all.
The Democratic Alliance (DA) presented its 10-point economic policy last week, which I thought went some way to putting South Africa on a Chilean course by advocating job creation through faster growth, but which Business Day chastised for being too wordy. It failed "the 30-second elevator test", the paper said.
Zuma responded soon after, and passed the test with flying colours. For he said nothing. The elevator didn’t have to move at all. He said he would reveal a new African National Congress (ANC) economic policy after the election.
I have heard many political con tricks in my six decades as a journalist, but never anything to equal this. It’s the ultimate blank cheque, even more outrageous than those signed for Nkandla.
As for the DA policy statement, I thought it quite concise. Just 10 crisp sentences on 10 key aspects of the economy. I know my friend Peter Bruce is keen on snappy headlines and TV sound bites, but I don’t know of any economist who believes there is a snappy silver bullet to solve South Africa’s complex problems.
Perhaps DA leader Helen Zille came closest when she said the core problem was that "too many people are left out of the economy". Getting them in is the hard part. Particularly those who have already exited our wretched education system and face a lifetime as unskilled unemployables.
Which makes it a pity she didn’t include the one thing that could leverage these outsiders into the economy more swiftly than anything else I can think of — which is simply to give them the homes they are living in, both in the former Bantustans and, more particularly, the urban townships and informal settlements.
Give them the houses and shacks, together with the land on which they stand, and, most important of all, the title deeds that certify their legal ownership of those properties.
Do that and you give each family an asset. An asset they can use any way they please, to live in, rent, sell, or use as collateral to raise a loan and maybe start a small business, that would give millions of our poorest outsiders their first step into the economy.
I have been advocating this for years, but nobody seems to be listening. It’s not a silver bullet, but it would be a start on the road to a more inclusive economy.
Another point on which I must disagree with Business Day in its criticism of the DA policy statement, is its contention that there is a contradiction between advocating a free market economy and calling for restraint on executive pay.
The expanding gap between the earnings of the lowest employee and the top executives in big companies is rapidly becoming a global issue.
It erupted recently in Switzerland, a country not known for its hostility to money-making, when the Social Democratic Party’s youth league there raised enough support to enforce a national referendum last November on a proposal that no chief executive should earn more than one-twelfth of his company’s lowest-paid employee. In other words, no boss should earn more in a month than his lowliest worker does in a year.
The issue arose when Daniel Vasella, chairman of pharmaceutical giant Novartis, allocated himself an exit package of 72-million Swiss francs (R887m). Public outrage forced him to cut it to a mere Sf5-million (R61m).
The young campaigners lost their referendum, but more than a third of Swiss voters supported it — enough to spark a movement across Europe, where the idea of setting a ceiling on earnings ratios has been adopted as official policy by the Spanish Social Democratic Party and is a hot topic in Germany and France.
We really must start thinking out of the box to find ways to rectify the damage, psychological as well as economic, that generations of racial oppression and exploitation have inflicted on our society.

WHO Warns Beijing of Hazardous Pollution Risk



BEIJING—The World Health Organization on Tuesday called on China to improve its air quality and urged residents of Beijing to stay indoors as the capital city suffered a sixth day of hazardous-level air pollution.
Bernhard Schwartländer, the organization's China chief, said he is concerned about the smog that has smothered Beijing in recent days. The WHO has been in contact with national authorities to discuss the problem and steps toward a solving it.
"There is no easy solution," Dr. Schwartländer said, adding that solving the problem requires managing industry and the economy.

China's National Meteorological Center said Tuesday it reaffirmed the region's orange alert, its second-most-severe air-pollution warning after red under a system enacted in October amid rising public pressure on authorities to act on pollution. That alert level requires a halt to construction work and orders factories to temporarily reduce emissions by 30%. Fireworks and outdoor barbecuing are also banned. Children and the elderly are advised to stay indoors, and residents are encouraged to use public transportation instead of cars.
As of Tuesday night, levels of tiny, hazardous particulate matter known as PM2.5 averaged 452 micrograms per cubic meter over a 24-hour period, according to readings from the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. That was more than 18 times the WHO's recommended level of 25 micrograms per cubic meter.
Heavily pollution has plagued much of northern and central China since Thursday. Since the weekend, governments in the northeastern city of Tianjin and northern Hebei province have taken steps that include reducing the number of cars on the road and suspending some production in industries such as steel.
In Beijing, where a light gray mist shrouded buildings and landmarks, WHO officials said the pollution levels pose a threat to human health, though they cautioned that they couldn't link recent pollution levels with local media reports of specific cases of lung cancer and other ailments.
"We're cautious of whether the illness is related to air pollution," said Shin Young-Soo, the WHO's Western Pacific regional director, adding, "We know it has an impact on health, but we don't know how much."
In a sign that China's top leadership acknowledges the problem poses a credibility issue for them, official Chinese media covered the pollution problem extensively. The official Xinhua News Agency quoted a local environmental official in Hebei province as acknowledging that a lawsuit filed by a citizen against the local government reflected increasing environmental awareness. Xinhua said the citizen, Li Guixin, filed the suit in a local court in the district of Yuhua on Feb. 20.
Visitors wearing masks outside the Temple of Heaven in smog-covered Beijing. Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
Meanwhile, China's online community remarked on the appearance of China's top leader,Xi Jinping, on a trendy street in Beijing Tuesday. Chinese social media showed Mr. Xi —China's president and the general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party—strolling down an alleyway called Nanluoguxiang, an area popular with tourists and filled with street-food vendors and other businesses. Such public appearances by senior Chinese leaders are rare.
Many noted that he walked outside on such a heavily polluted day without an air mask. "Breathing together, sharing the same fate," read a widely repeated response on SinaCorp.'s SINA +2.23% Weibo microblogging platform

SpaceX Falcon Flight Counted Toward USAF Certification



The Sept. 29, 2013 launch of SpaceX’s Falcon 9v1.1 was approved by the United States Air Force as one of three required launches toward EELV (Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle) certification.  SpaceX, short for Space Exploration Technologies Corporation, is currently under process to obtain EELV certification.  The certification will allow the company to be authorized to provide critical NSS payload launches.  The flight of the Falcon 9v1.1 was approved by the USAF to be counted toward SpaceX’s certification process.  The approval was made public on Feb. 24, 2014 and came from Lt. Gen. Ellen Pawlikowski.  The endorsement was granted even though a restart of the upper-stage encountered a malfunction.
SpaceX made history in December 2010 by becoming the only private company to have a low-Earth orbit spacecraft return.  In 2012, the Dragon, another SpaceX craft, also made history by becoming the first privately owned spacecraft to travel to the International Space Station, exchange cargo and then return to Earth.  The company has since completed repeated ventures for NASA to the space station for more cargo supply missions.
SpaceX’s stated goal is to promote reusable rocketry in the quest to become a multi-planet species.  The company believes that the cost of space exploration and access is prohibitive.  In order for Earth to become a more space-dwelling civilization, the cost of everything involved needs to be substantially reduced.  To that end, SpaceX is advancing the idea that such reusable rocketry will directly enhance and forward space programs.
While becoming a multi-planet species is an admirable, if lofty, goal, SpaceX’s first goal is to become EELV certified.  The Falcon flight, recently counted toward the three flights needed for USAF certification, is the first in what SpaceX hopes to be many such flights.  The certification does not rest solely on the achievement of three successful flights, however.  Ground systems and manufacturing processes must be validated; technical reviews must be completed; and audits must also be performed.  The Air Force will be working in tandem with the company in order to expedite these processes whenever possible.
In fact, there are already two scheduled EELV missions in the works for SpaceX.  The missions are currently scheduled for 2014 and 2015.  The first mission, DSCOVR, an acronym for Deep Space Climate Observatory, is planned for late 2014.  The second mission, Space Test Program 2, or STP-2, is planned for sometime mid-year 2015.  Both missions are expected to be launched from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Space Station in Florida.  These missions fall under the jurisdiction of the United States Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center and are authorized under a contract known as OSP-3 or the Orbital/Suborbital Program-3 contract.
The EELV program has been around since 1994.  It was implemented to reduce costs, standardize operating units, and increase reliability.  In November 2011, a new EELV strategy was approved.  The new EELV recognized only two launch vehicles, the Atlas V and the Delta IV.  These two vehicles were the only ones to meet the service standards in place.  SpaceX hopes to join that list in the near future.
The missions scheduled for SpaceX will be in support of the EELV certification for two rockets manufactured by SpaceX.  The rockets which will be used for the missions are both designated as Falcon rockets.  The rocket for the DSCOVR mission will be the Falcon 9 while the rocket used for STP-2 will be the Falcon Heavy.
For the Falcon 9v1.1, once all review processes are complete and more flights are successful, SpaceX may join the ranks of approved launch vehicles.  While two more launches for the Falcon 9v1.1 are currently under review, to date only the Falcon flight of Sept. 2013 has been counted toward the USAF certification for SpaceX

Minnesota Legislators try to clear confusion over e-cigarettes

Down the street from the State Capitol, in St. Paul’s Midway neighborhood, Vape Pro’s owner Troy Decorsey puffed banana bread-flavored nicotine from his e-cigarette device, which he said helped him quit smoking after 25 years.
“You prove that secondhand vapor is harmful, and I will shut my store down,” he said. “I will leave right now.”
In a crowded hearing room at the Capitol, some legislators said Wednesday that consumers can’t wait decades for proof, the way they did with tobacco.
“This is the Wild West,” Rep. Laurie Halverson, DFL-Eagan, told a panel of lawmakers looking at restricting e-cigarettes. “We just don’t know and the consumer doesn’t know. The consumer is being told they’re harmless, but the fact is the consumer doesn’t know because we haven’t regulated it.”
Minnesota’s debate is part of a national battle over e-cigarettes, with some of the nation’s largest cities adding “No Vaping” to signs that already say “No Smoking.” In Minnesota, where 80 percent of the state’s 200 e-cigarette retailers have popped up in the past year, the Legislature is eyeing the idea of regulating them like regular tobacco, including banning their use indoors and in public places. But the measure is being met with resistance from the industry, which says the products are far from being comparable to cigarettes.
E-cigarettes can contain nicotine laced with various flavors, or can be nicotine-free. There is no tobacco, so the devices emit a vapor rather than tobacco smoke. Experts are divided over whether the vapors themselves contain chemicals that are dangerous to inhale.
“Here’s the deal,” Decorsey said. “As soon as they see ‘smoke,’ they assume the worst. Because they don’t smoke, they assume the worst. The problem is that they’re not knowledgeable about it. Nobody is.”
Opponents call electronic cigarettes the next public health menace, geared toward luring kids into nicotine addiction with candy-sweet flavors like “cola,” “milk chocolate” and “bubble gum.”
Backers say they’re a safer alternative to smoking, and in many cases the only tool that has helped lifelong smokers kick the habit, although for many, nicotine is a component of their vaping.
As Minnesota legislators take their first hard look at the devices that have created a burgeoning industry in the state, both sides have reached a consensus: No one knows just how harmful — or harmless — they really are.
Bans, proposed protections
The Minneapolis City Council is considering whether to support a state ban. Duluth and Mankato have already restricted e-cigarette use in public places, St. Paul is looking at prohibiting sales to minors and Hennepin County has included e-cigarettes in its ban on smoking on county property.
Elsewhere, Chicago and New York City have banned e-cigarettes in public places and Los Angeles is a step away from a similar ban.
New Jersey brought e-cigarettes under its smoking ban in 2010. Utah is looking at a bill that would ban the sale of e-cigarettes to minors, and a pro-vaping website counts restrictions or tax hikes on the products pending in California, Maryland, Washington state, Hawaii and the cities of San Francisco and Philadelphia.
On the flip side, Wisconsin and Tennessee are considering measures that would protect e-cigarettes from smoking bans.
More than 100 people, ranging from tobacco lobbyists to health officials and e-cigarette proprietors, packed Wednesday’s House Health and Human Services Policy Committee hearing. Chairwoman Tina Liebling, DFL-Rochester, twice admonished the crowd that no vaping was allowed in the room, insisting that she could smell it. No one was spotted using a vaping device.
Pat McKone, of the American Lung Association of Minnesota, told Liebling that she might be smelling the devices’ most popular flavor, which she had brought along: lemon blueberry cotton candy. McKone compared the tactics of the e-cigarette makers to Big Tobacco’s marketing to children.

Telegram: Viable WhatsApp Alternative from Russia, But Still Questionably Secure

 
After Facebook bought the messaging application WhatsApp on February 19 for a whopping $19 billion dollars, the messaging app Telegram, a product of the “Russian Zuckerberg” Pavel Durov, surged in popularity.
After the Facebook deal was announced, Telegram downloads increased to more than 800,000 a day on all platforms globally. On the day WhatsApp suffered their “longest and biggest outage in years,” Telegram gained 1.8 million new users.
The founder of the popular Russian social media platform, Vkontakte.ru, says that he designed Telegram to be secure, which seems to be the primary appeal for WhatsApp deserters.
“The No. 1 reason for me to support and help launch Telegram was to build a means of communication that can’t be accessed by the Russian security agencies, so I can talk about it for hours,” Durov told Tech Crunch. He claims the app encryption is of the highest standard available.
To drive this point home, Telegram is advertising a competition: $200,000 in—what else—Bitcoin to the hacker who can break Telegram's encrypted protocol by March 1.
“No one won so far, but a guy from Russia found a serious issue in December and received $100,000 from me,” Durov told Tech Crunch.
Facebook, incidentally, also rewards those who bring bugs and other security glitches to the company's attention. The minimum reward is $500 and there is no maximum reward because “each bug is awarded a bounty based on its severity and creativity.”
However, there is an extensive list of exclusions (bugs on all third party applications, for example) andat least one hacker was rebuffed by the Facebook security team when he reported a legitimate bug. When the hacker reported the bug on Zuckerberg's Facebook page (taking advantage of the vulnerability he wished to expose) his account was subsequently blocked and he was ultimately denied a reward because he had violated Facebook's terms of service.
Pavel Durov and his brother Nikolai began building Telegram in 2012. It features “secret chats,” which are encrypted end-to-end, cannot be forwarded and, like SnapChat, can be made to self-destruct at a particular time. Regular chats are stored in Telegram's cloud; secret chats are not.
While Telegram may be the answer for anyone wanting to avoid big, bad Facebook, many say their security measures are still not good enough.
Geoffroy Couprie, a developer, wrote on his blog:
Basically, their threat model is a simple “trust the server”. What goes around the network may be safely encrypted, although we don’t know anything about their server to server communication, nor about their data storage system. But whatever goes through the server is available in clear. By today’s standards, that’s boring, unsafe and careless. For equivalent systems, see Lavabit or iMessage. They will not protect your messages against law enforcement eavesdropping or server compromise.
Telegram even got a shout-out on the website CryptoFails.com in December:
Telegram is an encrypted instant messaging app for iOS and Android devices. Obviously, I wouldn’t mention it on this blog if its crypto was perfect. In fact, it’s far from perfect. It’s almost horrifying.
They suggest scrapping the whole thing, which is not likely considering recent rampant success.
So I suppose the takeaway is, as with most things, download if you like but proceed with caution. For more on what Geoffroy Couprie thinks a crypto app should include, see here.
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