Thursday, October 10, 2013

Puck Daddy Viewing Guide: Rick Nash out; Julien ... - Yahoo Sports


Here is the Puck Daddy Viewing Guide: Spotlighting five things to watch for during tonight's slate of games. Make sure to stop back here for the nightly Three Stars when the games are finished.


Getty ImagesCreate-a-Caption: Calgary Flames captain Mark Giordano and his falling pucks.


• • •


Preview: Colorado Avalanche at Boston Bruins, 7 p.m. EDT



Preview: Columbus Blue Jackets at Buffalo Sabres, 7 p.m. EDT



Preview: Carolina Hurricanes at Washington Capitals, 7 p.m. EDT



Preview: Phoenix Coyotes at Detroit Red Wings, 7:30 p.m. EDT



Preview: Florida Panthers at Tampa Bay Lightning, 7:30 p.m. EDT



Preview: Toronto Maple Leafs at Nashville Predators, 8 p.m. EDT



Preview: Winnipeg Jets at Minnesota Wild, 8 p.m. EDT



Preview: Montreal Canadiens at Edmonton Oilers, 9:30 p.m. EDT



Preview: San Jose Sharks at Vancouver Canucks, 10 p.m. EDT



Preview: New York Rangers at Anaheim Ducks, 10 p.m. EDT



• • •


Five things to know about tonight's NHL games ...


1. No Go For Nash. The Rangers will be without star Rick Nash against the Ducks on Thursday night, as he recovers from the hit to the noggin from Brad Staurt. He's officially day-to-day, but will be out of action on Saturday for the Rangers as well. According to Newsday, the Rangers are shuffling lines, with Brad Richards back at center between Ryan Callahan and Benoit Pouliot.


2. Invasion Of The Jets. It's the first divisional matchup between the Jets and Wild. According to the CBC, "A fan-operated blog called The Team of 18,001 issued a special call on Wednesday, explaining locals were being 'out-gunned' by several hundred visiting Jets fans and needed to do better."


3. Julien Ready For Roy. In a battle of unbeaten teams, the Bruins host the Avs. Knowing how, ahem, passionate Patrick Roy can be behind the bench, Coach Claude Julien told the media: "I spent the last couple of days solidifying the glas between the benches. ... It gave me lots of time to do a lot of different things. That's the good part of having a few days off."


4. Power Outtage. Of the three teams without a power-play goal (Dallas being the other), two are in action tonight. The Red Wings are 0-for-8 in three games; the Panthers are a brutal 0-for-16.


5. Sister Foligno, Reporter: Cara Foligno introduces us to her brothers, Marcus and Nick, before they face each other in Thursday's Sabres-Blue Jackets game. This is great.



• • •


Bold Prediction: Joe Thornton scores a hat trick, but the fourth goal never comes.




Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nhl-puck-daddy/puck-daddy-viewing-guide-rick-nash-julien-ready-214358914--nhl.html
Similar Articles: once upon a time   cher   Brian Hoyer   Kendrick Lamar diss   tiger woods  

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Spring break over, Curiosity rover goes back to work

Curiosity's one-month spring vacation, caused by Mars slipping behind the sun, is now over. "Can you hear me now? Conjunction is over," tweeted Curiosity's handlers today.

By Mike Wall,?Space.com / May 2, 2013

NASA?s Mars rover Curiosity takes a self-portrait. After a month-long 'spring break,' Curiosity is ready to continue exploring the red planet.

Courtesy of NASA / AP / File

Enlarge

The Mars rover Curiosity's month of freedom on the Red Planet is over.

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

Curiosity had been on its own since early April, when Mars slipped behind the sun from Earth's perspective. Our star can disrupt communications between the two planets in this alignment, which is known as a Mars solar conjunction, so Curiosity's handlers at Mission Control had temporarily stopped sending commands to the 1-ton rover.

But the heavens have shifted, bringing Mars and Earth back in touch and the Curiosity rover back within reach of its masters.

"Can you hear me now? Conjunction is over. I have a clear view of Earth & am back to work!" NASA officials wrote on behalf of the rover via the Curiosity Twitter feed today (May 2).

Curiosity landed inside the Red Planet's huge Gale Crater last August, kicking off a two-year surface mission to determine if Mars has ever been capable of supporting microbial life.

The rover has already checked off its main mission goal. Before conjunction, Curiosity collected samples from a hole it drilled 2.5 inches (6.4 centimeters) into a rocky outcrop called "John Klein." The rover's analysis of these samples allowed mission scientists to determine that Mars was indeed habitable billions of years ago.

The post-conjunction plan involves drilling another hole nearby, mission officials have said, to confirm and extend scientists' understanding of the John Klein area. When that work is done, Curiosity will likely begin the 6-mile (10 kilometers) trek to the base of Mount Sharp, the mysterious 3.4-mile-high (5.4 km) mountain that rises from Gale's center.

Mars solar conjunctions occur every 26 months, so veterans of NASA's Mars missions are used to dealing with them. While this was Curiosity's first conjunction, it was the fifth for NASA's Opportunity rover, which touched down in January 2004 and is still roving, and the sixth for Mars Odyssey, which has been orbiting the Red Planet since 2001.

While Curiosity's handlers didn't send any commands during conjunction, the rover didn't quite get the month off. Curiosity didn't do any driving or other complex operations, but it did continue monitoring Martian weather and radiation.

Follow Mike Wall on Twitter?@michaeldwall?and?Google+.?Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebookor Google+. Originally published on?SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/ivU1WS_I06k/Spring-break-over-Curiosity-rover-goes-back-to-work

wisconsin recall doris day buffalo sabres texas news kim mulkey sarah palin today show dallas tornado video

Friday, May 3, 2013

GM profit tops view as North America strong, Europe improves

By Ben Klayman and Deepa Seetharaman

DETROIT (Reuters) - General Motors Co posted stronger-than-expected quarterly profit on Thursday as the U.S. automaker kept a tight grip on costs in its North American and European businesses.

GM shares rose 3.6 percent to $31.27, near their initial public offering debut of $33 in the fall of 2010, and hit the highest point since July of 2011.

The increase is welcome news for GM's largest shareholder, the U.S. Treasury, which acquired its stake after a taxpayer-funded bailout. Treasury, which says it will sell its remaining position over the next year, gains almost $250 million for every $1 increase in GM's stock price.

"GM, while still beset with issues, is generally executing better than investors give it credit for," Barclays analyst Brian Johnson said in a research note.

The company still expects to return to breakeven by mid-decade in Europe, where it has reported 13 straight years of losses, said GM Chief Financial Officer Dan Ammann.

RBC Capital Markets analyst Joseph Spak welcomed the results, pointing to the company's ability to cut costs.

"Better-than-expected results (in Europe) will be well received, giving investors confidence that progress is being made and breakeven by mid-decade is possible," he said in a research note.

GM's smaller U.S. rival Ford Motor Co last week posted a stronger-than-expected first-quarter profit on strength in North America, but overall costs spiked as it took steps to reinvest in its global lineup and shore up European operations.

About $225 million in higher structural costs in the quarter stemmed from Ford's efforts to fix the European business after an economic downturn hit consumer demand for new cars.

'TOO SOON TO CALL A BOTTOM'

Ammann said GM doesn't see any signs of a turnaround in Europe. "It's too soon to call a bottom in Europe."

Ford officials have said the European auto industry may see some stabilization toward year-end or early 2014.

GM's first-quarter net income attributable to common stockholders fell 13.5 percent to $865 million, or 58 cents a share, from $1 billion, or 60 cents a share, in the year-earlier period. The company took a $400 million hit to earnings due to falling prices for its vehicles and weaker volume.

The latest quarter included a $162 million noncash charge for the devaluation of the Venezuelan currency.

Excluding one-time items, GM earned 67 cents, topping the analysts' estimate of 54 cents, according to a poll by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

"We are much more of a formidable competitor now than we have been in more than a generation," Chief Executive Dan Akerson said on a conference call.

Revenue fell 2.4 percent from last year to $36.9 billion, and was just above the Wall Street target of $36.6 billion.

GM's North American unit reported operating profit of $1.41 billion, better than the Wall Street estimate of $1.21 billion, according to FactSet StreetAccount. The result was down from a year ago due to higher costs from preparing plants for new vehicle launches, especially the redesigned Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra full-size pickup trucks, as well as lower shipments because the plants were down.

The company also saw a $200 million drop in operating earnings as it was forced to offer pricing deals on its current large truck line ahead of the launch of the new models.

Analysts have warned that a weaker Japanese yen and deteriorating European market will likely lead to more competitive pricing in North America. Japanese automaker Nissan Motor Co said this week it was cutting prices on seven models representing 65 percent of its U.S. offerings.

KEEPING COSTS FLAT

GM kept North American costs in the quarter flat, which was better than anticipated. In January, company officials said costs would increase this year.

GM officials said while most of the expected increase in costs in North America will occur in the second and third quarters because of the new-vehicle launches, it will benefit from higher prices and lower incentives associated with the new cars and trucks.

RBC's Spak said the North American unit's 6.2 percent profit margin was stronger than the 4.7 percent he expected. Ford had a North American margin of 11 percent in the quarter.

GM's loss of $175 million in Europe was smaller than the $469 million loss Wall Street estimated, according to FactSet.

In the region, GM cut $300 million in costs and was able to keep the pricing on its vehicles unchanged, both better than anticipated.

Ammann said GM will see cost savings in Europe slow as the year progresses, and Edward Jones analyst Christian Mayes said fixing its European operations will be "a long slog."

Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas said in a research note that it was the first time GM's Europe unit topped Wall Street expectations in nearly two years and the first year-over-year improvement in results in five quarters.

The international unit, which includes China, had an operating profit of $495 million, while South America recorded a small $38 million loss. Both results were weaker than expected.

Ammann said strong results in China were offset by weakness in the rest of the international operations. He said the South America business is expected "to build" this year on last year's profit.

GM said adjusted free cash flow in the quarter was a negative $1.3 billion due mostly to the lower earnings and timing-related items that it said would reverse during the rest of the year.

The Detroit automaker ended the quarter with total liquidity of $35.3 billion in its automotive business.

Treasury officials declined to say whether the rise in GM's stock price could accelerate the sale of its remaining stake. According to GM's proxy, Treasury still owned more than 241 million shares as of April 17, so it would need to sell at an average of about $79.03 a share to break even.

Federal officials said last week that Treasury had recovered about $30.4 billion of its investment in GM as of the end of March. In January, Treasury initiated a prearranged written trading plan to sell the rest of the stake.

The government got an 18 percent GM stake following the $49.5 billion bailout in 2009.

(Reporting by Ben Klayman and Deepa Seetharaman; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gm-posts-strong-profit-north-america-europe-better-113422512.html

paleo diet paleo diet earth day Luis Suarez Earth Day 2013 westboro baptist church meteor shower

Super Thin Graphene Solar Panels Could Pave the Way for Powered Paint

Covering any and all things with solar panels would be an awesome way to get power, but the bulk and expense of the tech we've got today makes it a little less than practical. But wonder-material-at-large graphene is shaking up the scene with ultra-thin solar panels and, maybe someday, solar-powered paint.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/-xHTpVtMURU/super-thin-graphene-solar-panels-could-pave-the-way-for-489111383

stephen strasburg shabazz legion baby found alive in morgue rockies second degree murders bobby petrino

Robotic Housefly Buzzes to Life

Flying insects are a pain this time of year, but Harvard researchers couldn't be happier about the bug buzzing around their lab. A study published in Science today announced the world's first controlled flight of an insect-size robot, the result of a decade-long project by the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard.

Modeled after a housefly, the tiny robot weighs less than a tenth of a gram and is about half the size of a paperclip. Its two delicate wings can flap independently at up to 120 times per second. At that speed they're barely even visible to the human eye.

"The motivation was to explore basic research questions about how insects fly, and to apply those lessons to making very small mechanical devices," researcher Kevin Y. Ma tells PM. The scientists chose flies, he says, because of their extreme maneuverability and agility. Building robots that duplicate a fly's aerial talents could let scientists design tiny machines that monitor the environment for certain chemicals, aid in search-and-rescue missions in collapsed buildings, or even aid in the pollination of crops as artificial bees. That's all down the road, Ma says. "It's an exciting challenge, but we're really interested in the design process, and what we can learn from it."

One breakthrough needed to build such a small flying bot was a new manufacturing process. Ordinary ways to make stuff were either too big or too small for the scale of an insect-size robot. "Traditionally," Ma says, "you have a nuts-and-bolts manufacturing process. But our robot is the size of a bolt, so we can't really use that." On the other end of the spectrum are microelectromechanical systems, which are used for manufacturing cell phone circuits and other very small mechanical structures. But this is for devices on the scale of micrometers, and the Harvard team wanted to build a structure with features on the order of a millimeter to a centimeter?10 or 100 times larger than that.

The answer, Ma says, is to make 2D structures and fold them into 3D?a little like origami. He says this technique is becoming widespread in other fields, where engineers are using it to build instruments for laparoscopic surgery, for example. In the manufacturing process, thin layers of material (in the case of the flying robot, carbon fiber?reinforced composites) are laser cut and stacked, then fused into a single flat piece. By using a combination of materials, the designer can create structures that have both rigid beams and flexible joints, which unfold into a 3D structure like a pop-up book. The insect has five layers of carbon fiber, two plastic layers to provide flexible joints, two brass layers for locking the final 3D structure into place, one layer of titanium to mimic insect wings, and two ceramic plates to actuate them.

But then there's the issue of power and computing speed. Current prototypes of the fly bot are tethered to a power source by a thin cable and controlled by a connected computer. There just aren't fuel cells or computational processors that can fit on the robot's tiny frame and operate efficiently. To fulfill their potential, these mini-machines need to go out in the world without a leash. With current tech, researchers estimate only a few minutes of flight using onboard power systems small enough not to hinder movement. The team hopes that high density fuel cells will get even smaller in the coming years and could serve as onboard battery packs.

Meanwhile, biologists on the team continue to study living flies, hoping to better understand how they perform such impressive aerobatics using the tiniest of brains?another quality future robots will hopefully share with them. Real houseflies use constant wing movement (reaching nearly 200 flaps per second) to maintain flight. Flies use three different aerodynamic mechanisms to stay airborne: When an insect sweeps its wing forward, it creates a vortex of air above them, creating lift. When the wing rotates backward, air is pulled over the top faster than the bottom, producing a force called a backspin?similar to the spin that makes a tennis ball stay in the air. And when the wing changes direction, it passes through the vortex created by the opposite stroke, extracting one last bit of energy and lift from it. Flies change direction so quickly because their wings move independently, allowing them to lift one higher than the other and steer.

The robot, unlike some previous prototypes, also has independent wings. Made out of ceramic, the artificial flight muscles rely on piezoelectric movement?the property that makes materials like ceramic expand and contract with the application of an electric field. Plastic hinges translate these tiny movements into flaps of a wing, and a control system commands rotational motions separately in each.

While their tethers keep them from flying with quite the finesse of a real bug, the robots did well in lab flight tests?the researchers were able to demonstrate stable hovering at a fixed point (with position errors of one body length of the robot) and sustained flights of longer than 20 seconds without any crashes. They were also able to make the robots fly laterally between two fixed points.

In a Harvard press release, project leader Robert J. Wood emphasized that this study is just the beginning. "Now that we've got this unique platform," he said, "there are dozens of tests that we're starting to do, including more aggressive control maneuvers and landing."

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/engineering/robots/robotic-housefly-buzzes-to-life-15421620?src=rss

New Orleans Pelicans chris brown hillary clinton apple stock Pro Bowl 2013 Kick Ass Torrents jamarcus russell

PepsiCo pulls Mountain Dew ad criticized for racism

May 1 (Reuters) - Post position for Saturday's 139th Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs after Wednesday's draw (listed as barrier, HORSE, jockey, trainer) 1. BLACK ONYX, Joe Bravo, Kelly Breen 2. OXBOW, Gary Stevens, D. Wayne Lukas 3. REVOLUTIONARY, Calvin Borel, Todd Pletcher 4. GOLDEN SOUL, Robby Albarado, Dallas Stewart 5. NORMANDY INVASION, Javier Castellano, Chad Brown 6. MYLUTE, Rosie Napravnik, Tom Amoss 7. GIANT FINISH, Jose Espinoza, Tony Dutrow 8. GOLDENCENTS, Kevin Krigger, Doug O'Neill 9. OVERANALYZE, Rafael Bejarano, Todd Pletcher 10. PALACE MALICE, Mike Smith, Todd Pletcher 11. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pepsico-pulls-mountain-dew-ad-criticized-racism-201334985.html

49ers Vs Falcons Mama Movie flyers epo suits PlayStation Network chip kelly

Instacast releases free beta for Mac users

Instacast releases free beta for Mac users

If you're a hardcore podcast follower, the odds that you use a better third party option on your iPhone or iPad like Instacast is probably pretty high. If you own a Mac, you can now rejoice as Instacast finally has a Mac version. It's in beta for now so you'll have to be understanding about bugs and oddities you may experience.

If you've never really cared for the way iTunes handles podcasts, and lets face it, most don't, taking a look at the beta of Instacast for Mac may not be a bad idea since the official version will undoubtedly come with a price tag just like its iOS counterpart. It's hands down one of the best alternative podcast apps available for iOS and we'd expect pretty much the same of their Mac version. So if you'd like to try before you buy, hit the source link below for a download link.

Source: 9to5Mac

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/OlbodPLuF-0/story01.htm

go daddy Tom Kenny Long Island Medium Alfonso Ribeiro adam sandler College Football Scoreboard nfl scores