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One Fund Boston Requests Starting To Roll In

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One Fund Boston Requests Starting To Roll In Patch Charlestown, MA --

As of noon on Wednesday, 126 complete One Fund Boston applications had been submitted—a considerable increase as only a handful had been turned in a month ago, when fund administrators urged victims to apply.

"The applications will continue to be delivered throughout the day and up to the June 15 deadline. The submissions are being sent primarily via special overnight courier with some submissions coming in via U.S. mail. Most of the submitted applications are complete—those claimants whose applications are deficient are being contacted immediately as soon as the deficiency is determined," Camille Biros, deputy administrator of the One Fund, told Patch.

While One Fund Boston administrator Ken Feinberg has repeatedly said that no amount of money will heal all the scars left from the bombings, the more than $45 million raised as of Wednesday morning will be distributed to many survivors.

"There was a tremendous outreach effort by the One Fund staff and the mayor’s office as well as MOVA [Massachusetts Office for Victim Assistance] to reach all potential claimants and encourage them to submit their claims. We are confident that we will receive claims for all of those individuals who were physically injured and from the families of the deceased," Biros said.

She characterized the increase in submissions during the last few days as "absolutely typical" of compensation funds for survivors and victims of events such as the Aurora, CO shooting, 9/11 attacks and the Virginia Tech shooting.

Funds are scheduled to start being distributed on June 30, with the three families who lost a loved one to receive around $1 million each. 

Next, those who suffered double amputations or more will receive funds, then single amputees, then those who required an overnight hospital stay. The final protocol for dispersing funds can be viewed on the One Fund site.

Downloadable claim forms are available through the One Fund Boston website. Victims can read and download a Frequently Asked Questions section about One Fund Boston for filing claims.

Help with completing One Fund forms is available by calling 866-298-2951 or visiting the One Fund Boston website.  Reported by Patch 3 days ago.

Death Penalty, Hickenlooper Supported By Coloradans: Poll

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From The Colorado Independent's John Tomasic.

DENVER– Coloradans support the death penalty by wide margins, according to a poll released today by Quinnipiac University (pdf). Pollsters tied the strong views held on capital punishment to the slim margins Governor John Hickenlooper notched against three potential Republican rivals in the same poll.

Nearly 70 percent of Centennial State respondents told Qunnipiac they would like to retain capital punishment as an option for prosecutors, even though only roughly 50 percent of the voters surveyed believe the death penalty is applied fairly in the state and even though 57 percent say they don’t believe it prevents crime.

Momentum in the U.S. has generally been moving away from capital punishment in recent years. Officials have argued against it as DNA evidence has exonerated defendants who have landed on death row and as repeat studies show death sentences are more frequently meted out in cases featuring poor and ethnic minority defendants.

Colorado Democratic Governor Hickenlooper has drawn fire in the weeks since he granted death row convicted murderer Nathan Dunlap a reprieve. Dunlap gunned down four people in Aurora in 1993. There was never any question about his innocence. Hickenlooper said the reprieve was less about Dunlap than about the fact that the death penalty is unevenly applied in Colorado.

“Our system of capital punishment is imperfect and inherently inequitable,” he said. “Such a level of punishment really does demand perfection.”

The three men currently on the state’s death row all come from Arapahoe County. They are all African American.

More than 70 percent of Republicans but less than 50 percent of Democrats surveyed said they support capital punishment.

Hickenlooper polled between one and six points ahead of each of the three Republican candidates cited in the poll. The relative closeness of each of the match-ups likely speaks to the fact that, a year and a half from Election Day, few Coloradans are thinking about the governor’s race.

Hickenlooper topped former U.S. Representative and anti-illegal-immigration crusader Tom Tancredo 42 percent to 41 percent. But 20 percent of Latinos polled said that, at this point, they didn’t have a preference or were unfamiliar with the candidates. That would surely change if Tancredo stays in the race.

Hickenlooper bested Secretary of Sate Scott Gessler 42 percent to 40 percent, but lots of voters are unfamiliar with Gessler and he polled even worse among Latinos than did Tancredo. Among Latinos, Hickenlooper ran ahead of Tancredo 55 percent to 19 percent and ahead of Gessler 59 percent to 19 percent.

Hickenlooper garnered 43 percent support to rural-conservative state Senator Greg Brophy’s 37 percent. Brophy has not declared his candidacy and enjoys little name recognition. More than 85 percent of voters polled couldn’t identify him well enough to have an opinion.

Pollster conducted interviews in person and via land line and mobile phones last week. They surveyed 1,065 registered voters and reported a margin of error of +/- 3 percentage points. Quinnipiac generally polls on the east coast. This is its first-ever Colorado poll. A spokesman said no one commissioned the poll and that Colorado was added to its list of states to survey this year along with Iowa.

Survey details available at the Quinnipiac website. Reported by Huffington Post 3 days ago.

QuickMobile CEO Invited to Speak at Launch of the United Nations Global Compact in Canada

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Patrick Payne joins panel to discuss the importance of senior buy-in and engagement to drive, change and sustain measurable impact.

Vancouver, BC (PRWEB) June 13, 2013

QuickMobile, the leading provider of mobile event app solutions, today announced that CEO Patrick Payne has been selected to participate in a panel discussion at the official launch of the United Nations Global Compact’s Local Network in Canada.

The panel, "Responsible Leadership Looks Like? Vision from the Leaders," is from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m. on June 13, 2013 at the Evergreen Brick Works in Toronto. During the panel discussion, speakers will address the importance of senior buy-in and engagement to drive, change and sustain measurable impact, followed by a question and answer period facilitated by George Haynal, Professor of Corporate and Diplomatic Practice, Munk School of Global Affairs.

Joining Payne on the panel are the following:


· Lois Brown, MP, Newmarket-Aurora, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of International Cooperation
· Ambassador Guillermo Rishchynski, Canada's Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Canada to the United Nations (Video)
· Venkatesh Mannar O.C., President, Micronutrient Initiative
· Kevin Coon, Managing Partner, Baker & McKenzie LLP
· Wayne Kozun, Senior Vice President, Public Equities, Ontario Teachers Pension Plan

“The principles that we will cover during the panel discussion such as leadership, sustainability, corporate responsibility, long-term strategies for growth and sustainable technologies are really important to me and our company,” said Payne. “From our technology which helps to decrease the environmental footprint of organizations and their events, to in-kind technology development, donations to nonprofit organizations and our corporate support of the David Suzuki Foundation, we are committed to being an ethical and environmentally and socially responsible corporate citizen.”

Payne added, “Our sustainability initiatives are certainly not ‘lip service.’ The private sector plays a significant role in creating a sustainable future, and as a business leader, this is something I am passionate about, and I am very proud of what we have done and continue to do at QuickMobile. I am honored to participate in this distinguished panel and event.”

QuickMobile collaborated with the UN Global Compact at last year’s Rio+20 Corporate Sustainability Forum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. To help achieve the event's goals and objectives to showcase sustainable, technological innovations, and keep participants informed and engaged, event organizers turned to QuickMobile to develop a mobile meeting app. A case study about the event is available at QuickMobile.com.

More than 7,000 businesses in 140 countries have made a commitment to the universal principles of the UN Global Compact, driving positive change and innovation in areas as diverse as energy and climate change, women’s empowerment and anti-corruption. Canadian participation in the Global Compact now exceeds 70 companies and other stakeholders working to align business operations and strategies with 10 universally accepted principles in the areas of human rights, labor, environment and anti-corruption and to catalyze actions in support of broader UN goals.

About QuickMobile
QuickMobile is transforming meetings and events with mobile apps that engage and delight audiences. QuickMobile's event app platform creates an always-on communication channel that allows event owners to increase attendee participation, build loyalty and generate revenue through richer experiences. By fully leveraging the capabilities of QuickMobile's mobile and social solutions, customers can extend events into yearlong conversations and build lasting relationships with their audiences. QuickMobile’s head office is located in Vancouver, Canada. For more information, visit http://www.quickmobile.com. Follow QuickMobile on Twitter @quickmobile. Reported by PRWeb 3 days ago.

Robert J. Elisberg: Let's Hear It for the NRA, Again. And Again.

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I don't feel any more personal or horrified by the recent mass shootings in Santa Monica that left five dead, just because it happened about three miles from me -- or about half a mile (or to put it another way, 900 yards) from where I had planned to go that day but got too busy and so put it off. I was under no threat, and my reaction is the same wherever it would have occurred.

My reaction is -- okay, is it not "too soon" to talk about the tragedy yet? And by "the tragedy," I mean the mass shooting at Newtown. Or, maybe I mean Aurora, Colorado. Or perhaps Virginia Tech. Or...

The point is that I lose track. It's always "too soon" to talk about these mass gun tragedies for the gun manufacturer-owned NRA far-right fringe group. So, we've built up a big backlog of these mass gun tragedies.

Having read over the weekend that the gunman had 1,300 rounds of ammunition, it would seem like a perfectly fine time to start talking about this mass gun-killing in Santa Monica, too. But hey, that's just me. Me, I think a killing with one round is appropriate to start talking about, and 1,300 rounds would demand it. After all, imagine if the gunman has been able to use all 1,300 rounds, which one has to figure was the point. That we lucked out that he didn't get that far is what makes it all the more palatable that we can talk about it. Otherwise, the world would probably be speechless.

Having read on Tuesday that a teacher once spotted the alleged killer surfing the Internet about assault weapons, and that the police were informed and he was admitted to a psych ward, it would seem reasonable to assume that even when measures are taken properly with someone who has mental problems, that guns can still get in their hands. But hey, that's just me, too. Me, I just think that when someone with psychiatric problem can get his hands on so much guns and ammunition, it's an appropriate time to be taking about better controls.

I keep thinking of the late-Charlton Heston's infamous line, when he was the president of the gun manufacturer-owned NRA, about us having to pry his guns from his "cold, dead hands." What tends to get lost in the chest-thumping bravado of the statement is that while the mass-murdering gunman was able to keep his gun in his warm, live hands, it was the innocent victims whose hands ended up very cold and even more dead.

Though it's another quote from Mr. Heston -- who apropos of nothing, went to my high school, and whose sister Lila taught at Northwestern University in the School of Speech when I got my Bachelors degree in Speech there -- that also comes to mind. That's when he said on Meet the Press in 1997, "Any gun in the hands of a decent person is no threat to anybody -- except bad people"

Since "any" is pretty much all-inclusive, I would assume that in the Mr. Heston's all-continuing universe that would include the 4-year-old boy who just over the weekend accidentally shot and killed his father.

On the other cold, dead hand, I'm sure that that father thought his four-year-old son was wonderfully decent. Even with the gun in his hands posing a tragic threat.

By the way, it was a year after saying this that Mr. Heston was elected president of the gun manufacturer-owned NRA, so it would seem that the far-right outlier fringe group didn't have a problem with the sentiment.

Which is why they have so much blood on those cold-dead hands.

The mass killings in Santa Monica didn't get as much attention nationally as some of the other (many other) recent mass killings, but perhaps that's because only five people were killed. But the killer had 1,300 rounds of ammunition. I repeat, 1,300 rounds of ammunition.

Just imagine if...

*

To read more from Robert J. Elisberg about other matters from politics, entertainment, technology, humor, sports, and a few things in between, visit Elisberg Industries. Reported by Huffington Post 3 days ago.

Man Sought for Assault Drops Girlfriend Off at Police Station, Arrested: Police Blotter

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Man Sought for Assault Drops Girlfriend Off at Police Station, Arrested: Police Blotter Patch Solon, OH --

A Euclid man practically turned himself in to Solon police after he was wanted for assault.

On June 9 cops responded to the Chipotle on Aurora Road where a man was assaulted with head wounds.

The victim, a 31-year-old Chagrin Falls man, said Reported by Patch 3 days ago.

Home Never Looks The Same Again

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As the sun shutters the world, city lights crackle to life.

There's a dancing curtain of aurora borealis. And stars seemingly swarming all around.

This is Earth, as seen from hundreds of kilometres away, by a handful of its most fortunate citizens.

We should all see the world from this vantage.

It may, in fact, do us a world of good.

"When we look down on the Earth from space, we see this indescribably beautiful planet," says former astronaut Ron Garan in a short documentary released at the end of last year called Overview. "It looks like a living, breathing organism. But it also at the same time looks extremely fragile."

Indeed, that staggering perspective, dubbed 'the overview effect', may be the most enduring legacy of space travel — the sense of a home that is intimately shared.

"We're all basically living in this one eco-system called Earth," Garan adds. "And everything you do on one side of the eco-system affects the other side."

That sense of interdependence drives the film's powerful environmental message — understanding borne of a stellar perspective. But it's a perspective that one doesn't need to leave the Earth to gain.

In 1968, when Apollo 8 ventured to the moon, astronauts beamed back stunning images of the Earth.

"That was the first time I had ever seen the planet hanging in space like that," says author Frank White in the film. "And it was profound." Reported by Huffington Post 3 days ago.

Lawyers for James Holmes say they could withdraw insanity plea

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Attorneys for Aurora movie theater shooting suspect James Holmes have suggested they might withdraw Holmes' insanity plea if his upcoming independent psychiatric evaluation doesn't go their way. Reported by Denver Post 3 days ago.

Tom Engelhardt: Of Ice Mountains, Canards, and Wild Mushrooms

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Here are my three fleeting personal experiences of the far North. In 1982, on my only trip to Japan, I flew over the Aleutian Islands. Out the plane window was a spectacular sight, jagged, snowy mountaintops tearing through clouds -- spectacular, that is, until a stewardess came over and asked me to pull down the shade. The movie Fame was onscreen and the Aleutian light was bothering the passengers around me.

In another distant year, after a boondoggle of a summer trip to a "peace conference" in Stockholm and a night spent farther north in Sweden where the sun set late and slow, and I could go out "after dark" to gather wild mushrooms with an expert (and her two Egyptian wolfhounds), I flew home over Greenland. That place had loomed mysteriously large on my childhood globe and indeed, even from the heights, Greenland once again loomed large and mysterious.

Finally, if memory is to be trusted, I once saw the Aurora Borealis faintly over Long Island (New York). Other than that my sole venture north of southern Canada was in an early, particularly degraded part of my work life. I first broke into publishing as a freelance editor of textbooks for professors whose idea of scholarly research was, in at least one case, to take a publisher's money meant for a research assistant and spend it on a snow blower. (Perhaps that, too, should qualify as an obscure connection to the snowy north.) In any case, it meant that I became a de facto researcher for the book, my entertainment at the time.

I ended up writing those little boxes, you know, the ones with curious tales and even more curious facts that are meant to enliven a dreary text, including one I wrote about the far north that has never left my mind. As it happened, in the Middle Ages, certain birds like the "barnacle goose" had breeding grounds so far north that no European had seen them. Conveniently, for those in Catholic Europe yearning to eat flesh on Fridays, that aptly named goose and other northern breeders could be imagined as generating from shells and so products of the sea ("neither flesh, nor born of flesh"). Once the actual breeding grounds were discovered and the lack of barnacles with geese in them became apparent, the French word for that goose (and more generally for "duck"), "canard," also became the word for "hoax,""false report,""lie." Fully accurate or not, it's the memory of "the north" that I carry with me.

Today, in a lovely experiment, Rebecca Solnit has adapted a section of her new book, The Faraway Nearby, for my website TomDispatch.com. That book contains some of the most beautiful writing she's ever done, sentences that will make you (or at least made me) gasp out loud. The book is officially a memoir about her difficult relationship with her mother, but honestly that's a little like saying The Odyssey is a tale of a traveler's conflicted relationship with a one-eyed stranger. The Faraway Nearby is also a flight and an escape, literal and figurative, into the north of everything, into a place of total darkness -- which, TomDispatch readers will remember, was the confounding image of hope Solnit first brought to this site in May 2003 -- and of total light. It's about fleeing yourself and so finding yourself, often in others and in the most unexpected ways. It's about Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Che Guevara's visit to a leprosy colony. It's about... well, take a taste of her piece at TomDispatch and then make sure that you explore The Faraway Nearby at your leisure. Head north, young woman (or young man), into the healing darkness that links you to the rest of us. No recent book I've picked up has been more worth the read. Reported by Huffington Post 3 days ago.

Potito Coluccelli, 61, Norwalk resident

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Potito Coluccelli, 61, Norwalk resident Patch Norwalk, CT --

*Submitted by Magner Funeral Home*

Potito Coluccelli, age 61 and loving husband of Michele Taccone Coluccelli, died Thursday, June 13 at Aurora Senior Living.  

He was born on May 22, 1952 in Tripoli, Lybia, the son of the late Gi Reported by Patch 3 days ago.

Williamsville pushes WNY district streak to 10 years; East Aurora edges Clarence for second place

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The streak has now extended into double digits. Williamsville is No. 1 yet again in Business First's academic rankings of Western New York school districts. This marks the 10th straight year that it has occupied first place. "We have the right recipe for success here -- motivated students, supportive parents, hardworking teachers, committed administrators and a community that truly values education," says Scott Martzloff, Williamsville's superintendent. WESTERN NEW YORK SCHOOL DISTRICT LINKS •… Reported by bizjournals 3 days ago.

HR.com Announces Two Low Cost Options for Certification Preparation and Re-Certification to Fit Anyone's Budget

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HR.com is expanding its products for members, making career advancement easier and more affordable with a guaranteed pass certification preparation course as well as a new certification membership level with unlimited e-learning credits. SHRM attendees registering at the conference will have access to membership discount.

(PRWEB) June 14, 2013

SHRM Chicago/HR.com Aurora, Ontario -- HR.com, the largest social network for human resources (HR) professionals with over 220,000 members globally, is pleased to announce two new products to help educate HR professionals and enable them to stay on top of the latest best practices and standards.

Currently, the national pass rates are only 59% for PHR, and 48% for SPHR - depicting how challenging these exams are to write. HR.com has teamed up with The Human Resource Certification Preparation (HRCP) Program to facilitate an instructor-led course, blended with experienced HR.com personnel, offering 30 to 36 hours of individual guidance and instruction. This Preparation Course package offered by HR.com is so comprehensive and effective that HR.com is guaranteeing the participants will pass their PHR/SPHR online exam, or HR.com will return the entire cost of the Preparation Course.

"Attending a PHR/SPHR prep course can be a highly effective way to prepare for the certification exam," says Terri Zaugg, HRCP's business manager. "Not only do you have an instructor whose knowledge or expertise may exceed your own, but their experience in helping others prepare for the exam is of great value. Working together with a peer group provides support and encouragement, as well collective experience to draw from throughout the duration of the course."

Registration also includes the HRCP Program which is comprised of six units covering all functional areas tested on the exam, hundreds of flash cards, and online access to over 800 practice questions. The virtual classes are small and personal (12-15 students per online class) and very flexible scheduling allows registrants to conveniently fit the course into their busy calendar. The next series of classes begins in July to prepare for the December exam session. For more information on the course or future dates, visit http://www.hr.com/prepcourse.

A growing number of HR professionals are seeking career advancement, increased job security, and overall expanded knowledge in best practices and core principles of HR management. HRCI is the global leader in the HR space for certification, which is one of the most effective ways for HR professionals to set themselves apart from others by showcasing their commitment.

In addition to the PHR/SPHR test preparation program, HR.com is also announcing the most comprehensive offering of re-certification credits. HR professionals are now able to obtain all the required re-certification credits (webcasts and e-learning credits) for HRCI re-certification, WorldatWork credits where applicable, as well as credits for IHR certification across 23 specialty areas.

HR professionals looking to certify can compare HR.com to other suppliers' offerings:

HR.COM


· Free webcasts
· $40 per e-learning credit or unlimited for $200
· Total re-certification cost with HR.com $200
· Total re-certification cost only $150 with registration at the SHRM conference
· Over 3,500 webcasts and 350 e-learning credits to choose from, all HRCI approved
· HR.com webcasts also count towards World@Work and IHR Certification programs

Other Suppliers


· Up to $199 for each webcast (PHR, SPHR, and GPHR need at least 20 of these to recertify online)
· $60 - $150 for each e-learning credit (PHR, SPHR, GPHR require 40 of these to recertify online)
· Total recertification cost $1500 or more

Individuals looking to obtain re-certification credits at SHRM are invited to drop by Booth #1855 at SHRM in Chicago June 16-19, 2013 and save an additional $50 off an HR.com Certification Preparation Membership that is ordered at the show. A $200 HR.com membership gives HR professionals everything they need to re-certify their PHR, SPHR, or GPHR.

The HR Certificate Institute (HRCI) is the leading certifying organization for HR professionals worldwide offering professional certifications, including those for Professional in Human Resources (PHR), Senior Professional in Human Resources (SPHR), and Global Professional in Human Resources (GHRP).

About HR.com
HR.com, the largest global social networking and resource site for HR Professionals, is the only place to earn IHR (Institute for Human Resources), HRCI and WorldatWork credits all at the same time for no cost. HR.com is committed to providing a deeper understanding of the HR function for 220,000+ members by offering 23 Certification Programs, 3,500+ webcasts, 230+ virtual conferences, blogs, community networks, industry news and advisory boards. http://www.hr.com

About HRCP
Since 1995, HRCP has been dedicated to helping individuals prepare for the PHR and SPHR Certification Exams. The HRCP Program is a comprehensive set of study materials, which includes six units (one covering each area tested on the exam), a set of flash cards (over 600 terms and definitions), and online access to over 800 review questions. http://www.hrcp.com

For more information, contact:
Debbie McGrath
Chief Instigator and CEO
HR.com
dmcgrath[at]hr[dot]com
1-877-472-6648, ext. 104 Reported by PRWeb 3 days ago.

126 One Fund Boston Applications Received So Far as Deadline Looms

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126 One Fund Boston Applications Received So Far as Deadline Looms Patch Fenway-Kenmore, MA --

As of Wednesday, 126 complete One Fund Boston applications had been submitted—a considerable increase as only a handful had been turned in a month ago, when fund administrators urged victims to apply.

"The applications will continue to be delivered throughout the day and up to the June 15 deadline. The submissions are being sent primarily via special overnight courier with some submissions coming in via U.S. mail. Most of the submitted applications are complete—those claimants whose applications are deficient are being contacted immediately as soon as the deficiency is determined," Camille Biros, deputy administrator of the One Fund, told Patch.

While One Fund Boston administrator Ken Feinberg has repeatedly said that no amount of money will heal all the scars left from the bombings, the more than $45 million raised as of Wednesday morning will be distributed to many survivors.

"There was a tremendous outreach effort by the One Fund staff and the mayor’s office as well as MOVA [Massachusetts Office for Victim Assistance] to reach all potential claimants and encourage them to submit their claims. We are confident that we will receive claims for all of those individuals who were physically injured and from the families of the deceased," Biros said.

She characterized the increase in submissions during the last few days as "absolutely typical" of compensation funds for survivors and victims of events such as the Aurora, CO shooting, 9/11 attacks and the Virginia Tech shooting.

Funds are scheduled to start being distributed on June 30, with the three families who lost a loved one to receive around $1 million each. 

Next, those who suffered double amputations or more will receive funds, then single amputees, then those who required an overnight hospital stay. The final protocol for dispersing funds can be viewed on the One Fund site.

Downloadable claim forms are available through the One Fund Boston website. Victims can read and download a Frequently Asked Questions section about One Fund Boston for filing claims.

Help with completing One Fund forms is available by calling 866-298-2951 or visiting the One Fund Boston website. 

*FENWAY-KENMORE PATCH: *Facebook | Twitter | E-mail Updates Reported by Patch 3 days ago.

Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Market is led by General Atomics Aeronautical Sytems Says New Research Report at ReportsnReports.com

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“Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) Market (2013 - 2018)” is the new market research report added to ReportsnReports.com store.

Dallas, Texas (PRWEB) June 14, 2013

In today’s context UAV’s play an important role in varied missions such as military attacks, border surveillance, mapping, surveying, weather determination and regional law enforcements. This technology has grown at a rapid pace and production companies present across the globe, as the country want to showcase their military strength in order to wade off potential attacks. Civilian usage of UAV operations have still not started at a pace can be expected as the local regulations apprehended the usage. Also, misunderstanding over the lack of safety and privacy of citizens has hindered their operational capabilities.

Key Take-Aways from “Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) Market (2013 - 2018) - http://www.reportsnreports.com/reports/253291-unmanned-aerial-vehicle-uav-market-2013-2018-.html ”


·     The global UAV market size can be expected to grow to $8,351.11 million by 2018.
·     (HALE/MALE/SUAV) Market has the highest business potential throughout the study period.
·     USA and Israel will be the maximum revenue generator, among the countries manufacturing UAV’s.
·     SPUAV (Solar Powered Unmanned Aerial Vehicle) will be one of the major technological advances in the near future.
·     ”We believe the UAV market in EU will take off and grow rapidly in the coming years from now. Major obstacle may be, if national regulations become too complicated.” Ola Fristrom, Managing Director, SmartPlanes AB.
·     General Atomics Aeronautical Sytems is the leader in UAV market with 18.78% of the market share.

UAV’s have developed from radio controlled model airplanes to urbane aircraft that today play a unique role in many public missions and also have the potential to do so for many civil missions as well. Special airworthiness certificates will be obtaining to civilian operators for experimental purposes, which unfortunately exclude operations for compensation or hire.

According to industry estimates, UAS operations will increase manifold in a variety of key military and civil areas. About 50 U.S. companies, universities, and government organizations in the U.S. are developing over 150 different unmanned aircraft designs. From an operational, infrastructure and safety perspective, this presents a number of challenges due to the diversity of aircraft, control stations, levels of autonomy, and communications methods. UAV’s width is of a wide spectrum of size, endurance, and performance characteristics, often different from manned aircraft.

Sophisticated navigation and communications technologies were not available a few years back, and increases in armed forces telecommunications satellite bandwidth have made remote operation of UAV’s more realistic. The wars fought in Iraq and Afghanistan has also increased the demand for UAV’s, as identification of and strikes against targets hiding among civilian populations required persistent surveillance. Manned systems could accomplish many if not all of the same goals. But unmanned systems reduce the risk to our war fighters by providing a sophisticated standoff capability that supports intelligence, command and control, targeting, and weapons delivery. These systems also improve situational alertness and reduce many of the poignant hazards inherent in air and ground combat, thus decreasing the likelihood of causing civilian noncombatant casualties. UAVs have gained favor as ways to reduce risk to combat troops have been established, the cost of hardware and the reaction time in a surgical strike and to conduct missions in areas that can be difficult to access or otherwise considered too high-risk for manned aircraft or personnel on the ground.

Buy a copy of report @ http://www.reportsnreports.com/purchase.aspx?name=253291.

Markets Covered
BY UAV Type


·     Hale (High altitude long endurance)
·     Male (Medium altitude long endurance)
·     SUAV (Small unmanned aerial vehicle)
·     TUAV (Tactical unmanned aerial vehicle)
·     VTOL (Vertical takeoff and landing)
·     UCAV (Unmanned combataerial vehicle)

By Region


·     North America
·     South America
·     Africa
·     Europe
·     Asia-Pacific (APAC)
·     Middle East

By Country


·     Argentina
·     Austria
·     France
·     India
·     Israel
·     Latvia
·     South Africa
·     Spain
·     Sweden
·     Switzerland
·     United kingdom
·     USA
·     Mexico
·     Canada
·     Brazil
·     Colombia
·     Chile
·     Germany
·     Poland
·     Italy
·     Japan
·     Russia
·     South Korea
·     Australia
·     UAE
·     Singapore

Stakeholders


·     Global UAV Market
·     UAV Manufactures
·     Technology Suppliers
·     Regulating Bodies
·     Software / Hardware / Service and Solutions Provides
·     Component Suppliers

Company Profiles - Aai Corporation, Aeronautics Limited, Aerovironment, Alenia Aeronautica, Aurora Flight Sciences, Bae Systems, Bell Helicopter, Boeing Defense, Space & Security, Cassidian (EADS), Cybaero Ab, Dassault Aviation, Denel Dynamics, Elbit Systems, Embraer, Emt, General Atomics Aeronautics Systems Inc.

Explore more reports on Public Sector Market @ http://www.reportsnreports.com/market-research/government/.

About US:
ReportsnReports.com is an online market research reports (http://www.reportsnreports.com/) library of 200,000+ reports and in-depth studies of 5000+ micro markets. Reported by PRWeb 2 days ago.

I Survived: Marie Claire's Mass Shooting Exclusive

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As the gun control debate rages on, Marie Claire gathered seven women who lived through Newtown, Aurora, and other mass shootings. In this exclusive, they reveal the truth about life after unthinkable trauma. Reported by Marie Claire 2 days ago.

I Survived: A Marie Claire Exclusive

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As the gun control debate rages on, Marie Claire gathered seven women who lived through Newtown, Aurora, and other mass shootings. In this exclusive, they reveal the truth about life after unthinkable trauma. Reported by Marie Claire 2 days ago.

MOVIE REVIEWS: 'This Is The End' is Deadly Fun

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MOVIE REVIEWS: 'This Is The End' is Deadly Fun Patch Roswell, GA --

Seth Rogen, James Franco, Jonah Hill and Emma Watson play versions of themselves in this Hollywood satire.

*"This Is The End" is **rated R and runs one hour and 60 minutes. *****It is now playing at **Aurora Cineplex and Studio Movie Grill in Roswell**. For more theater information, show times and pricing, click the links above.******

Here's what the critics are saying:



Judgment Day comes to Hollywood with a vengeance in "This Is the End."Jonah Hill is in bed with the devil — in James Franco's mansion. An inferno rages in the front yard, and movie star egos are filleted for fun. When the apocalyptic comedy gets deadly serious about roasting the ethos of celebrity, its satire grows white-hot. — Betsy Sharkey, Los Angeles Times

There is stuff in “This Is the End” that had me laughing so hard, I sensed new body parts joining in to help out — my pancreas was heaving, my bile ducts ripped. — Kyle Smith, New York Post 

Beneath the gore, goofiness and anxiety posing as raunchy bravado, “This Is the End” actually possesses a genuine if simplistic point about actorly narcissism and spiritual bankruptcy. — Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post

["This Is The End" is] the wildest screen comedy in a long time, and also the smartest, the most fearlessly inspired, and the snort-out-loud funniest. — Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly



*Do you plan on seeing this movie? Leave a review of the film with a comment below after you do.* Reported by Patch 2 days ago.

8 Fascinating Reads

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Filed under: Investing

Happy Friday! There are more good news articles, commentaries, and analyst reports on the Web every week than anyone could read in a month. Here are eight fascinating ones I read this week.

*Centuries old, still relevant 
*Eddy Elfenbein finds a set of market rules from a book written by Jose de la Vega in 1688:



The first rule in speculation is: Never advise anyone to buy or sell shares. Where guessing correctly is a form of witchcraft, counsel cannot be put on airs.

The second rule: Accept both your profits and regrets. It is best to seize what comes to hand when it comes, and not expect that your good fortune and the favorable circumstances will last.

The third rule: Profit in the share market is goblin treasure: at one moment, it is carbuncles, the next it is coal; one moment diamonds, and the next pebbles. Sometimes, they are the tears that Aurora leaves on the sweet morning's grass, at other times, they are just tears.




The fourth rule: He who wishes to become rich from this game must have both money and patience.



*Advice from a con man
*MarketWatch has a talk with Bernie Madoff from prison: 



*MarketWatch:* You have worked with some of the most elite financial firms on Wall Street. How has it changed since before you started the Ponzi scheme?

*Bernard Madoff:* The individual investor is the last person that has any information. The average investor is coming up against professional financial firms, hedge funds and the professional trader, and it's easy to be scared out of the market.

*MW:* You say the individual investor is facing an unfair market environment, what can be done to level the playing field?




*B.M.:* The SEC needs more resources to protect investors. It's grossly undercapitalized and it doesn't have money to hire the right people. Basically it's a training ground, by the time people are qualified they leave and work for private firms. They didn't catch me because the whistleblower, Harry Markopolos, was leading them down the wrong alley. He was an idiot.






*The key to success
*Robert Frank of CNBC discusses a survey of successful people:


Among people worth $5 million or more, more than 98 percent cited hard work as a "wealth creation factor." More than 90 percent cited education, followed by "smart investing,""frugality" and then "taking risk."
 
Slightly more than half of those surveyed cited "being at the right place at the right time" as a factor in their success -- ranking it far below hard work and education.
 
Among business owners, however, the number of self-described "lucky wealthy" is much higher: 79 percent of them cited "being at the right place at the right time" as a factor in their success. Fully 68 percent of business owners cited "luck" as a factor.


*Career risk*
Noah Smith asks if we should trust economists:


No matter how much we might wish they were, economists are not go-to experts who know just how the world works or how to fine tune it. They are not car mechanics. And if they act like they are car mechanics, you should instantly be suspicious. But they do have a lot of interesting things to say. They might help you clarify or reevaluate your own beliefs about how the economy functions. They can also help you spot the flaws in each other's arguments.


*Investment attention deficit disorder*
Carl Richards writes about the logic of checking your portfolio all day:


Since many of us use the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index as a proxy for the market, let's take a look at the period from 1950 to 2012 to see how often we're likely to feel positive, based on how often we check our investments:
 
If you checked daily, it would be positive 52.8 percent of the time.
If you checked monthly, it would be positive 63.1 percent of the time.
If you checked quarterly, it would be positive 68.7 percent of the time.
If you checked annually, it would be positive 77.8 percent of the time.


*Risk and reward*
Star investor Joel Greenblatt talks about *Apple* :


Right now something that is very cheap would be Apple. I always ask my students, what do you do of a company where the technology is always changing and it is not clear what the competition will look like in a few years. The answer to that would be: always skip that one and try to find out the ones that you can figure out. I don't know what is going to happen with Apple, but if I own a bucket of Apples then, on average, that is a really good bet. You are buying good businesses with a great franchise at six times cashflow, have great market share and good management, strong balance sheets and so forth. So, if I own a bucket of Apples rather than just Apple, I am pretty sure it is going to work out very well.


*The new king*
John Gapper in The Financial Times praises *Google* :


Indeed, the best comparison for Google seems to me not Microsoft in the 1980s but General Electric in the late 19th century -- the age of electrification. Like GE, Google is a multifaceted industrial enterprise riding a wave of technology with an uncanny ability not only to invent far-reaching products but also to produce them commercially.


*Don't act like you're not jealous* 
The Wall Street Journal profiles what has to be the best job of all time: Warren Buffett's financial assistant at *Berkshire Hathaway* : 


When Tracy Britt arrived in Omaha, Neb., in 2009 to meet with Warren Buffett, she brought a Harvard M.B.A., a glittering resume and a boatload of ambition. But she also brought the famed investor a gift to highlight their shared Midwestern roots: a bushel of corn and a batch of tomatoes.
 
The seed Ms. Britt planted that day yielded quick results: a job for Ms. Britt as Mr. Buffett's financial assistant at Berkshire Hathaway Inc.


Enjoy your weekend. 

The article 8 Fascinating Reads Reported by DailyFinance 2 days ago.

Man falls Aurora overpass onto Mercer Street

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A pedestrian tumbled 20 feet or more off Aurora Avenue onto Mercer Street on Saturday afternoon, and apparently survived. The incident happened around 4 p.m.  Police mentioned it on Twitter but haven’t provided an update.  The man was walking southbound on Aurora Avenue, in a co Reported by Seattle Times 19 hours ago.

Man falls off Aurora overpass onto Mercer Street

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A pedestrian tumbled 20 feet or more off Aurora Avenue onto Mercer Street on Saturday afternoon, and apparently survived. The incident happened around 4 p.m.  Police mentioned it on Twitter but haven’t provided an update.  The man was walking southbound on Aurora Avenue, in a co Reported by Seattle Times 18 hours ago.

Dem Senator Faces Fire From Both Sides

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LITTLE ROCK, Ark. -- The conservative Club for Growth tags Democratic Sen. Mark Pryor as President Barack Obama's "closest ally" in the state. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg's gun-control advocacy group says Pryor "let us down."

Pryor's re-election race is 17 months away, but the Democratic incumbent seen as perhaps the most vulnerable in 2014 is already taking hits from the right and the left. That's forced the second-term senator to aggressively defend himself and step into re-election mode sooner than planned, even though he has no Republican opponent.

"My goal right now is to put the campaign off until the election year, 2014," Pryor told reporters recently. "They keep dragging me back into the politics, they keep running ads and trying to keep it stirred it up here."

Republicans are trying to unseat Pryor and three other Democratic incumbents who represent states that Republican Mitt Romney won in last year's presidential race: Mark Begich of Alaska, Kay Hagan of North Carolina and Mary Landrieu of Louisiana.

Democrats need to defend 21 seats, including seven in largely rural states that Obama lost in 2012.

Republicans need to pick up six seats to regain Senate control. But the GOP is defending fewer incumbents and could benefit from history: The party controlling the White House usually loses seats during the midterm election of a second-term president.

Pryor, who began airing his first television ad last month, faces pressure especially early in Arkansas. He's trying to survive in a state where Republicans enjoyed widespread gains over the past two election cycles, fueled by Obama's unpopularity.

The GOP controls both chambers of the Legislature and all four U.S. House seats. In 2010, Democratic Sen. Blanche Lincoln lost her bid for a third term. Last year, Republicans swept all four House seats and won control of the Legislature for the first time since Reconstruction.

National and state Republicans are eager to topple Pryor, whose father, David, was a senator and governor. It's a turnaround from 2008, when Republicans were unable to find anyone to challenge Mark Pryor and he easily won a second term.

"When you hear Arkansas Democrats try to spin things for Mark Pryor, the only things they can point to is he's raised a lot of money, he's got a high name ID and the fact his father is popular," David Ray, a spokesman for the state GOP. "That's not a very strong place to start."

Among Republicans, U.S. Reps. Tom Cotton and Steve Womack are widely viewed as potential challengers.

So far, Pryor is taking heat from outside groups rather than a challenger. The Senate Conservatives Fund, a political action committee, has begun airing $320,000 worth of television ads criticizing Pryor's 2009 vote for the federal health care law and calling him too liberal.

The conservative Club for Growth, which backed Cotton last year, has aired ads linking Pryor to Obama.

At the same time, Pryor has absorbed criticism from the left after voting against expanded background checks for firearms purchases.

Mayors Against Illegal Guns, the Bloomberg group, is airing television and radio ads criticizing Pryor for the vote. The ad invokes the shooting death of Bill Gwatney, the state Democratic Party chairman who was killed in his office in 2008. Bloomberg has also urged New York donors to not contribute to Pryor or the other Democratic senators who voted against the background checks measure in April.

"When my dear innocent friend was shot to death, I didn't blame guns. I blamed a system that makes it so terribly easy for criminals or the dangerous mentally ill to buy guns," Angela Bradford-Barnes, who worked with Gwatney, says in the ad. "That's why I was so disappointed when Mark Pryor voted against comprehensive background checks. On that vote, he let us down."

Robert McLarty, a Democratic consultant in Little Rock who's not affiliated with Pryor's campaign, said the senator's biggest challenge right now is that he doesn't have an announced opponent while he's fending off attacks from both sides.

"He's not able to direct a compare and contrast style campaign," McLarty said. "He's not able to take a candidate on the other side and say this is how we differ."

But McLarty and others say Pryor is in a better position than Lincoln was in 2010.

She survived a bruising Democratic primary with the help of former President Bill Clinton, who campaigned for her. But she lost handily in the fall of 2010. Pryor has higher approval figures than Lincoln did and appears unlikely at this point to draw a serious primary challenger next spring.

Clinton headlined a March fundraiser to kick off Pryor's re-election bid, helping him raise more than $1 million in a night. Pryor reported having more than $3.4 million in the bank for the 2014 race.

"The reason this is a race of national significance is because it's about whether a senator who cares about his own people more than ideological purity can be financed, elected, lifted by the people he has served in the face of all these crazy currents that are taking America and tearing it to shreds," Clinton said at the event.

Pryor is trying to find middle ground on issues such as gun control, where he contends his vote represents a constituency that values hunting and gun rights. He's also argued that a competing measure he supported that was endorsed by the National Rifle Association would have done more to address gun violence.

The NRA has also stepped in to help Pryor, with a radio ad airing in the state thanking the lawmaker for his vote.

Without an opponent, Pryor is casting the fight over gun control as one with Bloomberg.

"The mayor of New York City is running ads against me because I opposed President Obama's gun control legislation. Nothing in the Obama plan would have prevented tragedies like Newtown, Aurora, Tucson or even Jonesboro," Pryor says in his television ad. "I'm committed to finding real solutions to gun violence while protecting our Second Amendment rights."

When Bloomberg's group ran ads before the background checks vote, Pryor responded: "I don't take gun advice from the mayor of New York City. I listen to Arkansans."

He's also distanced himself from Obama and national Democrats on other issues. He's opposed gay marriage despite a growing chorus of support from lawmakers from his party in other states and criticized the Internal Revenue Service for targeting conservative groups.

Pryor said he's trying to keep his focus on Arkansas.

"All I can do is be the very best senator I can be. I wish these outside groups would let me do that and not have to fool around with the election," Pryor said. "People in Arkansas are tired of the election. They want us to get up to Washington and take care of the nation's business."

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Associated Press writer Ken Thomas contributed to this report.

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Follow Andrew DeMillo on Twitter at www.twitter.com/ademillo Reported by Huffington Post 9 hours ago.
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