Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Hello Again

Hello, welcome...back, to RPG.

I'd have to ask the the rest of the staff that question myself because the problem doesn't seem to happen to me. Or, if it did, it rarely happens. Perhaps I'm a special case. I hope that the server issues don't happen to you again, but if they do, try to hit up one of the staff leads on the issue. I'm pretty sure RPG has gotten better than the previous year.

Anyway, with that said, I need to get on with my real job.

Ciao, and welcome back. We're glad to have you aboard...again.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/mPNmzKlEpk4/viewtopic.php

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Buy A Coffee Grinder And Get The Freshest Coffee In The World ...

You are here: Home / Coffee / Buy A Coffee Grinder And Get The Freshest Coffee In The World



Coffee Grinders Review

Grinding coffee beans is truly a treat for the senses. The sweet aroma of coffee is very enjoyable during the grinding process. This amazing aroma takes over while the coffee is brewing. It enhances the coffee drinking experience. Coffee that has just been grounded is a nice bonus for your senses. Grinding your own coffee beans is a must if you are a true coffee lover. Never get a new coffee grinder until you see different reviews on Coffee Grinders.

The best thing about grinding your own coffee is that you will get a cup of coffee that has a stronger aroma and flavor. This is because the coffee beans do not come into contact with the air until they are actually grinded. This is different from coffee that is purchased from the store because the coffee grounds have already been grounded and touched by air. When you use different types of Coffee Grinders, you already know that your coffee is fresh because you did it yourself. You never have this luxury with store bought coffee. There is a strong possibility that it has been sitting on the grocer shelf for weeks or even months.

Shop around and do a few comparisons on coffee grinders. You will discover that it is possible to make your favorite coffee at home instead of visiting your local coffee shop. Below is a collection of coffee grinders. Find out what is best for you.

The blade coffee grinder is one of the most common and least expensive coffee grinders available. They work with a fast speed, but this could be both good and bad. But all in all, you will get a better cup of coffee than you could with a blade grinder.

The conical burr coffee grinder is considered to be the best type of coffee grinder available. It runs on the slowest speed, which allows it to provide grounded coffee with the best aroma and flavor. However, keep in mind that it will also have the highest price tag. If you are an espresso coffee lover, then this is the best type of coffee grinder for you.

So, if you are not happy with stale coffee, you might want to see some Coffee Grinders and their reviews before buying one for yourself. It is easy to find coffee beans at a neighborhood coffee shop or even your local grocer. Get your own coffee beans and do not grind them up until you are ready for them. Keep in mind that your next cup of coffee will not be fresh if you opt to grind all of your coffee beans right now.

Source: http://www.theyellowads.com/food_drink/buy-a-coffee-grinder-and-get-the-freshest-coffee-in-the-world

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Europe takes on Google, looks to Brazil with hope

FILE - In this Dec.6, 2011 file photo, the Google logo is seen on the carpet at Google France offices before its inauguration, in Paris. Publishers in France, Germany and Italy want their governments to impose a "news tax" on Google to save them from extinction, demanding a law that would charge the search engine small payments in exchange for links to stories. Google, in response, says it will cease to index the sites altogether, warning that the proposals do nothing to solve the industry's problems on the continent that invented the printing press. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon, Pool, File)

FILE - In this Dec.6, 2011 file photo, the Google logo is seen on the carpet at Google France offices before its inauguration, in Paris. Publishers in France, Germany and Italy want their governments to impose a "news tax" on Google to save them from extinction, demanding a law that would charge the search engine small payments in exchange for links to stories. Google, in response, says it will cease to index the sites altogether, warning that the proposals do nothing to solve the industry's problems on the continent that invented the printing press. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon, Pool, File)

FILE - In this Oct. 29 2012, file photo, Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt arrives at the Elysee Palace for a meeting with French President Francois Hollande, in Paris. Publishers in France, Germany and Italy want their governments to impose a "news tax" on Google to save them from extinction, demanding a law that would charge the search engine small payments in exchange for links to stories. Google, in response, says it will cease to index the sites altogether, warning that the proposals do nothing to solve the industry's problems on the continent that invented the printing press. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere, File)

FILE - In this Dec. 6, 2011 file photo, cups bearing the Google logo are displayed at Google France offices before its inauguration, in Paris. Publishers in France, Germany and Italy want their governments to impose a "news tax" on Google to save them from extinction, demanding a law that would charge the search engine small payments in exchange for links to stories. Google, in response, says it will cease to index the sites altogether, warning that the proposals do nothing to solve the industry's problems on the continent that invented the printing press. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon, Pool, File)

(AP) ? European news organizations bleeding money and readers are trying to avoid extinction by asking governments in France, Germany and Italy to step in and charge Google for using their content in its search results ? something the Web giant has always done for free.

Critics ? including, unsurprisingly, Google ? say the strategy is shortsighted and self-destructive, and the search engine warns it will stop indexing European news sites if forced to pay. But publishers advocating a "Google tax" aimed at benefiting their industry point to the example of Brazil, where their counterparts abandoned the search engine and say repercussions have been minimal.

The dispute underscores a fundamental question facing media agencies around the world: Who should benefit from links to online content that is costly to produce and yet generates a fraction of the ad revenue that once allowed newspapers to flourish?

Europe has tried to sidestep Google before. Six years ago, then-French President Jacques Chirac unveiled plans for Quaero (Latin for "I search") as the answer to U.S. dominance of the Internet. The multi-platform search and operating system was supposed to work with desktop computers, mobile devices and even televisions.

Despite millions spent to develop Quaero, it went nowhere.

This week, implicit threats hovered over a meeting between current French President Francois Hollande and Eric Schmidt, Google's executive chairman.

Hollande demanded Google reach a deal with publishers over the copyright dispute and also address the French taxes it escapes by basing its European headquarters in Ireland. Google essentially reiterated a point it made in a recent letter to French publishers: Paris' latest attempt to impose itself would force readers to "Anglo-Saxon" sites based in countries with more favorable copyright laws, such as Britain and Ireland.

Google's post-meeting statement said the discussions dealt with "the contributions of the Internet to job creation and the influence of French culture in the world."

Adding to the pressure on Google in France, a French newspaper reported Wednesday that French authorities are threatening Google with a 1 billion euro tax bill and investigating alleged financial wrongdoing.

Google France denied being notified of such a tax bill and said it will "continue to cooperate with the French authorities." Government spokeswoman Najat Vallaud-Belkacem wouldn't comment on the report in the weekly Canard Enchaine, except to say that if there were a tax probe, it would be covered by laws on fiscal secrecy.

French publishers, along with counterparts in Germany and Italy, are hoping Brazil will be the proof that there is a successful way to confront Google.

After failing to come to terms with Google in the past year, Brazil's biggest papers ? representing 90 percent of circulation ? decided to boycott Google News by essentially making their content unavailable to anyone using the search engine. The result? Negligible losses in Web traffic, the Brazilian papers say.

Brazilian newspapers haven't ruled out reopening talks with Google, if the company whose name is synonymous with "search" agrees to pay for their content. Unlike in Europe, the Brazilian publishers have not turned to their government to act as a mediator or impose a tax as part of their dealings with Google.

"Newspapers live off advertising revenues, like Google. They're our competition and they have billions and billions in revenues globally," said Ricardo Pedreira, executive director of Brazil's National Association of Newspapers.

Still, Pedreira is not convinced Brazil is a good model for European nations. "Every country has a specific reality, and I think there will probably evolve different models in each nation," he said.

Others in Brazil have warned about long-term consequences of the boycott.

Carlos Castilho, a media critic and TV journalist, writing on the press watchdog website Observatorio da Imprensa, argued that the boycott was a backward strategy, because "news is everywhere today and to surround it with walls of copyrights is like trying to dry ice."

The growth of search engines as a way to find information is affecting news organizations in different ways.

Print news was suffering in the United States and Europe long before financial crises took hold in recent years, its business model eroded by television and the Internet. As print advertising revenues have declined, more media organizations are trying to boost circulation and earn more through subscriptions, including charging for online content.

The New York Times is among the most prominent news organizations with a website paywall. The Associated Press and Google have a long-standing business agreement that includes Google licensing of AP content as well as joint efforts to improve news products and services.

European publishers have seen less rapid change in readership patterns as a result of the Internet and have been able to stave off the dramatic losses that gutted American print journalism. Still, competition has grown fiercer and profits slimmer with the onset of the European debt crisis. In France, the once-iconic newspaper France Soir went into liquidation in July. In October, dapd, a major Germany news agency, filed for bankruptcy protection.

German publishers already are getting some government support: A measure is headed through the legislature to force search engines to pay for links that include excerpts of content.

And in Italy, publishers say they are willing to risk leaving Google if the search engine refuses to pay, citing a study that indicates that clicks from Italian readers would drop by 6 or 7 percent ? "a very low percentage," said Isabella Splendore, lawyer for the Italian Newspaper Publishers Federation.

The European publishers insist they are not trying to keep readers from getting information, but that they deserve compensation for use of their intellectual property. But Jeremie Zimmerman, of the French Internet liberty group the Quadrature of the Net, described engaging in the dispute with Google as "idiotic."

"It shows that the industry hasn't understood anything about the Internet and is fundamentally conservative about its future, and defending private interests rather than adapting to technology," he said.

Emma Llanso of the Washington-based Center for Democracy and Technology said that, at least for now, the dispute among governments, Google and publishers is a loss for readers.

"When we're looking at the free flow of information online, how much relevance do national boundaries have?" she said. "As the Internet becomes a primary source of information around the world, governments see a threat or a way to benefit. I think we are seeing a lot of national governments struggling to think of what they want it to be."

___

Associated Press writers Bradley Brooks in Sao Paulo, Brazil, and Frances D'Emilio in Rome contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2012-10-31-Europe-Google/id-2a6e31dc72fd42f6b6dc3382fd949c03

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Three new residents arrive at International Space Station

The Soyuz TMA-06M spacecraft docked at the space station's rooftop Poisk module after a two-day orbital chase.

By Tariq Malik,?SPACE.com / October 25, 2012

The Russian Soyuz TMA-06M spacecraft as seen from the International Space Station as it approaches on Oct. 25, for docking.

NASA TV

Enlarge

A Russian Soyuz space capsule linked up with the International Space Station Thursday (Oct. 25) to deliver three new residents to the orbiting laboratory.

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The Soyuz TMA-06M spacecraft docked at the space station's rooftop Poisk module at 8:29 a.m. EDT (1229 GMT) after a two-day orbital chase.?Riding on the Soyuz?were American astronaut Kevin Ford of NASA and Russian cosmonauts Oleg Novitskiy and Evgeny Tarelkin, who are beginning a five-month mission to the space station.

"We can see you, everything looks fine,"?Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko, who was already onboard the station, told the approaching crew before?the two spacecraft docked about 230 miles (370 km)?over southern Ukraine.

The Soyuz crew will float inside the space station at about 11:15 a.m. EDT (1415 GMT) during a cosmic welcome ceremony.You can?watch the Soyuz crew's welcome ceremony?live on SPACE.com here?via a NASA TV feed.?The NASA broadcast will begin at 10:45 a.m. EDT (1445 GMT).

"We?ll stay until March," Ford said in a NASA interview before launch. "We?ve got some space station maintenance activities planned, some kind of periodic maintenance that we?ve trained for, but really the emphasis will be on getting the science rolling and getting as much utilization out of the flight as we can."

Ford, Novitskiy and Tarelkin launched into space on Tuesday (Oct. 23) atop a Soyuz rocket that blasted off from the Central Asian spaceport of Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. They are the second half of the space station's six-person Expedition 33 crew, which is commanded by NASA astronaut Sunita Williams. Malenchenko and?Japanese astronaut Akihiko Hoshide round out the crew. [Launch Photos: Soyuz Rocket Blasts Off With Station Crew]

The Soyuz spacecraft is bringing some fishy friends to the space station in addition to its human crew. The spacecraft is ferrying 32 small medaka fish to the space station so they can be placed inside a tank, called the Aquatic Habitat, for an experiment to study?how fish adapt to weightlessness.

Thursday's Soyuz docking at the space station kicks off a flurry of arrivals and departures at the International Space Station.

A robotic Dragon space capsule built by the private spaceflight company SpaceX will depart the space station on Sunday (Oct. 28) and splash down in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Southern California. The Dragon capsule will return nearly 2,000 pounds (907 kilograms) of science experiment hardware and other gear back to Earth.

On Wednesday (Oct. 31), an unmanned Russian Progress spacecraft will launch toward the space station and arrive six hours later to make a Halloween delivery of food, equipment and other Halloween treats.

One day later, on Thursday (Nov. 1), Williams and Hoshide will don bulky spacesuits and float outside the space station on a spacewalk to fix an ammonia leak in the orbiting lab's cooling system.

Williams, Hoshide and Malenchenko are in the final weeks of their mission to the space station, and will return to Earth Nov. 12. At that time, Ford will take command of the space station crew to begin the Expedition 34 mission.

You can follow SPACE.com Managing Editor Tariq Malik on Twitter?@tariqjmalik?and SPACE.com on Twitter?@Spacedotcom. We're also on?Facebook?&?Google+.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/7VSYi3n-V-0/Three-new-residents-arrive-at-International-Space-Station

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Friday, October 26, 2012

S. Dakota bids farewell to former Sen. McGovern

Members of an honor guard carry the casket of former Democratic U.S. Sen. and three-time presidential candidate George McGovern into the Washington Pavilion of Arts and Science in Sioux Falls, S.D., for the funeral service, Friday, Oct. 26, 2012. McGovern died Sunday in his native South Dakota at age 90. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

Members of an honor guard carry the casket of former Democratic U.S. Sen. and three-time presidential candidate George McGovern into the Washington Pavilion of Arts and Science in Sioux Falls, S.D., for the funeral service, Friday, Oct. 26, 2012. McGovern died Sunday in his native South Dakota at age 90. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

Family members including great-grandson Will Mead, bottom right, watch as the casket of former Democratic U.S. senator and three-time presidential candidate George McGovern, is carried into the Washington Pavilion of Arts and Science in Sioux Falls, S.D., for the funeral service, Friday, Oct. 26, 2012. McGovern died Sunday in his native South Dakota at age 90. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a prayer service for former Democratic U.S. senator and three-time presidential candidate George McGovern at the First United Methodist Church in Sioux Falls, S.D., Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. McGovern died Sunday in his native South Dakota at age 90. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

Vice President Joe Biden speaks during a prayer service for former Democratic U.S. senator and three-time presidential candidate George McGovern at the First United Methodist Church in Sioux Falls, S.D., Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. McGovern died Sunday in his native South Dakota at age 90. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, Pool)

Vice President Joe Biden speaks at a prayer service for former Democratic U.S. senator and three-time presidential candidate George McGovern at the First United Methodist Church in Sioux Falls, S.D., Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. McGovern died Sunday in his native South Dakota at age 90. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

(AP) ? Three former Democratic presidential candidates paid personal respects Friday to former Sen. George McGovern, whose 1972 campaign for president galvanized the party's liberal wing and ushered in a new generation of political activism.

Walter Mondale, John Kerry and Gary Hart ? who like McGovern all spent time in the Senate before unsuccessful runs for the White House ? led a crowd of hundreds of mourners at McGovern's funeral. McGovern died Sunday after a brief stay in hospice care. He was 90.

In a sign of McGovern's stature in sparsely populated South Dakota, the service aired live on television in the state's largest city. It served as a final farewell to South Dakota's native son. A private burial for McGovern in Washington will be scheduled later.

Larry Fuller, a retired newspaper publisher from Sioux Falls who became friends with McGovern, said it was a fitting tribute for the man who served the state in Washington for two decades. McGovern left office in 1981 after a losing a campaign for a fourth Senate term.

"I think it's a wonderful opportunity for this state to recognize everything he did for South Dakota, something that didn't happen after his last election," Fuller said. "I can't think of any South Dakotans who had as positive and impact on history as George McGovern."

Even though he came up short in three tries for president, McGovern is revered on the left as someone who inspired a coterie of young Democrats who would go on to great things. Among his flock of campaign workers were future senators, a secretary of state in Hillary Clinton and a president in Bill Clinton.

The two days of ceremony were something of a reunion of ardent supporters. Old-timers sporting quarter-sized "McGovern" campaign buttons paused for group photos. Another man wore a button declaring: "I Want McGovernment."

Vice President Joe Biden spoke at a prayer service Thursday night. The dignitary list for Friday included Mondale, a former vice president who was the Democratic nominee in the 1984 presidential race that marked McGovern's last bid for public office. Kerry, a Massachusetts senator and the 2004 Democratic nominee, made the trip on short notice.

Hart, McGovern's campaign manager in 1972, was the only one due to speak at the gathering.

Most in the audience were family, friends and admirers.

A few hours before the funeral, McGovern's family gathered to walk behind a hearse bringing the senator's flag-draped coffin the few blocks from a funeral home to the service. One of McGovern's eight great-grandchildren held a crisply folded flag at the front of the processional.

Bill Walsh, of Deadwood, S.D., drove 400 miles to attend the funeral of a man he has known since growing up two blocks away from McGovern's home in Mitchell 60 years ago. Walsh said he knew his standing in the relationship with McGovern.

"You realized he was the teacher and I was the pupil," Walsh said. Reflecting on the 1972 campaign, Walsh said his friend could have won the presidency if he had emphasized his record as a war hero.

His role as a military pilot who did bombing runs over Europe during World War II was a muted part of McGovern's biography. He returned with medals for valor, but was reluctant to mention that in a campaign setting, especially in the presidential race where he urged an immediate end to U.S. involvement in Vietnam.

It was a plan he never had a chance to execute. He lost that year to Nixon, who won all but one state. South Dakota even went Nixon's way. Soon after the election, Nixon resigned amid the Watergate scandal.

McGovern, who was also known for his advocacy for world nutrition, continued that cause well after leaving public office. In 2008, he was awarded the World Food Prize along with former Republican Sen. Bob Dole, who had also faced defeat in a presidential race.

A testament to McGovern's crusade against hunger was in the lobby at the funeral: a basket brimming with dried food goods that will go to a needy family.

A program distributed at the memorial service had an image of a smiling McGovern in his twilight and bore a comment Pope John XXII made to McGovern when he was an emissary to Rome for John F. Kennedy's administration. It read: "When you meet your Maker and he asks, 'Have you fed the hungry, given drink to the thirsty, and cared for the lonely?' you can answer, 'Yes.'"

___

Associated Press writer Kristi Eaton and AP photographer Nati Harnik contributed.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-26-McGovern-Services/id-71d13306cb06488799ebea36844b3ff3

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Dot Earth Blog: Lessons from Sandy, a brewing superstorm

2:33 p.m. | Updated |
Federal weather forecasters don?t like to overstate things. So even when they say things that are utterly chilling, they say it this way:

?THE DETERMINISTIC GUIDANCE (PARTICULARLY THE 00 UTC ECMWF) SHOW PRESSURE SOLUTIONS WELL BEYOND WHAT HAS EVER BEEN OBSERVED NEAR THE NEW JERSEY/NEW YORK COAST (EVEN EXCEEDING THE 1938 LONG ISLAND EXPRESS HURRICANE)?

That?s an excerpt from the latest extended forecast from the Hydrometeorological Prediction Center of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration for the superstorm that nearly all computer simulations see developing in a few days as the remains of Hurricane Sandy ? which has already killed at least 21 people in the Caribbean ? collide over the East Coast with a cold front sweeping in from the west. (Here?s an interactive map of the storm track.)

I can?t possibly track all the details, given the breadth of my beat (and I will be busy battening down given how other recent flooding storms have affected my part of the Hudson Valley.)

But I can point you to some great guides, if you live in the affected region: There are others, but I find particular value in the analysis offered by Brian McNoldy and Jason Samenow of the Washington Post?s Capital Weather Gang (Samenow led me to that forecast above), as well as?Andrew Freedman at Climate Central and Eric Holthaus of The Wall Street Journal.

This is also a good time to pause and consider the astonishing power of the forecasting tools and intellectual capacity that the United States and Europe have invested in in recent decades ? and the importance of sustaining and expanding the human capacity to observe and understand this turbulent, fast-changing planet.

Given our tendency toward short-termism, it?s always a tough sell, whether in Congress or a town council ? to push for investing in infrastructure ? whether it?s better supercomputers and new satellites or flood-worthy roads. But it?s worth pushing.

While I hope the long lead time in this forecast demonstrates the merits of such unsexy investments, the value is only there if people respond effectively to improving warnings. Given how communities often fail to get out of harm?s way, particularly in how and where they build (see Nicholas Pinter here), that means there?s plenty of work to do on better communication and education, as well.

2:33 p.m. |Update

I hope you?ll read and pass around this article by John Cushman: ?Aging Satellite Fleet May Mean Gaps in Storm Forecasts.?

Source: http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/26/lessons-from-sandy-a-brewing-superstorm/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Making My Ex Miss Me - How To Do It

Making My Ex Miss Me  -  How To Do It

You can't help but smile when you think of the initial stages of your relationship. You always held hands - even if you were just walking to the mailbox. You couldn't get enough of each other, and every waking moment was spent imagining the next time you got to see each other. Everything seemed to be flying high, and you couldn't imagine a time when you didn't feel as happy as you did then. No other option seemed to be possible; unfortunately you realized that you were wrong.

Your ex threw a monkey wrench into all of your plans for the future when they decided to break things off. You're left wondering where things went wrong, and when you lost the magic that you believed defined you as a couple. Instead of wandering around in endless wonder forever, make a progressive step forward. Instead of simply wishing them back, make it happen by doing something that they probably never saw coming.

The Fundamental Aspect of Missing Someone

How many times have you thought about getting back together with your ex since the two of you broke up? Now think about how much time you've spent imagining what your ex is thinking or wanting right now. It's likely that the two are highly unbalanced. That doesn't make you selfish, it makes you human. Overlooking the desires of an ex are normal, given the circumstances, but taking the time to weigh your options can give you a vital piece of the puzzle that often remains missing indefinitely.

The fact of the matter is that how you feel right now isn't going get you very far to earn a second shot at being together. The only thing that's going to matter is how they see you and your previous time together. Not all of their thoughts are negative. They probably share some common, positive memories. When they focus on those and not the reasons behind the breakup, they'll start missing you - and that's the important part of the process. You don't stand a chance until they do.

Going Past the Memories - Remembering the Way YOU Were

You may be in the initial stages of recognizing some things that may have gone awry throughout the course of your relationship. Believe it or not, this is a GOOD THING. Now you have a starting point, and a goal to work towards that you CAN control. This rests on you, and takes the pressure off of what you want your ex to be feeling.

How has your personality changed between when you first started dating your ex and now? For one, the breakup did some serious damage to your emotional state and your self-confidence. While it may not be as easy as simply taking a deep breath and putting it behind you, overcoming that obstacle is a key factor in your plan - and one that you can choose to conquer.

Turn Your Relationship in a Full Circle

When your relationship first began, you were on cloud nine. When your ex broke up with you, you were in the pit of despair. You've run the gambit throughout the process, and so has your plan. Things have gone 180 degrees, and now it's time to turn it around again. It's not an impossible dream - it's a potential reality. Now you can choose to take the control back into your own hands and drive your plan home.

Saying that you've accomplished a lot throughout this time is an understatement of epic proportions but the fact is that all of the effort in the world won't mean much if you aren't able to put the rest of your plan into motion. That means using your head instead of just acting with your heart. Getting back together with an ex is like balancing on a ledge - sometimes you have to risk falling to reach the top. You have to be strong but not pushy. You want to express confidence but not arrogance. You want to say the right things at the right times. All these things work together to create a whole picture, and now you're on the pinnacle of success.

That's why your best option is to utilize your plan wisely instead of just jumping into the fire while hoping for the best. You've experienced a lot and risked more. Don't throw your chance away by acting impulsively. Calm confidence is your best bet when moving forward, even though your insides may be shaky at best.

What To Do Next

Gaining an insight into why you were dumped is an important first step on the road to reconciliation. It is essential that you learn from past mistakes. Getting your ex back is much simpler if you arm yourself with the knowledge needed to do so.

Another thing that you should strive to gain knowledge about is managing contact with your ex. Too many people jump the gun and attempt to contact an ex before the dust has time to settle after a breakup. Timing is key.

Source: http://www.streetarticles.com/reconnecting/making-my-ex-miss-me-how-to-do-it

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Sunday, October 14, 2012

As EU basks in peace prize, separatists on rise

Historic world port and fashionista capital, Antwerp has always lived on the crest of the wave. Now, a separatist party heading into municipal elections Sunday wants to use the city as a base for breaking away from Belgium ? putting it at the forefront of a European breakaway trend just as the EU celebrates winning the Nobel Peace Prize for fostering continental unity.

Moves toward separatism have been getting a bigger these past months as the economic crisis pushes people faster toward stark choices on nationhood and their future. It is no different in Spain's Catalonia, another wealthy region grousing that it has to pay for others in its crisis-hit country.

Scotland, too, is looking at the option of going its own way, making the United Kingdom a little less united.

Two days after the European Union won the Peace Prize for bridging ties between former enemies, Belgium holds municipal elections in which separatists hope to pick up city halls across Dutch-speaking northern Flanders. Bart De Wever, the leader of a Flemish separatist party, is running for mayor of wealthy Antwerp and has been perennially at odds with ailing French-speaking Wallonia.

If elected, De Wever plans to use city hall as a platform for the 2014 national election and an even more ambitious program of separatism.

By that time, he says, he will be counting on a "democratic revolt" at the polls.

De Wever's NV-A party already surged in the 2010 national elections, and was the main reason why Belgium had the longest period without a government on record ? at 541 days. Coalition-building was paralyzed as the separatists sought concessions to give Flanders as much autonomy as possible.

It didn't work out and De Wever ended up in opposition facing French-speaking socialist Prime Minister Elio Di Rupo, a staunch defender of the Belgian nation-state. But De Wever is the frontrunner in Sunday's Antwerp vote, and his party is likely to surge across Flanders, polls have shown.

For De Wever, the municipal elections are not primarily about parking spots or ring-roads. They are about the fate of the 6 million Flemings in the kingdom of 11 million, and he chides Di Rupo for imposing too many taxes, sapping too much money from Flanders.

"Little by little, the Flemings don't take that anymore and they are worried about their wealth," De Wever said.

The city is still dripping with exterior signs of wealth, though. The Antwerp fashion designers have turned the historic center into a magnet of conspicuous consumption, its gothic and baroque landmarks are examples of sumptuous renovation, its MAS museum an icon of contemporary design, and its famous port is still thriving.

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    7. Woman dining with family dies after car hits pizzeria

Separatism is also rife in Spain ? a country at the center of Europe's crisis with a youth unemployment rate of more than 50 percent.

While De Wever was making reasoned arguments in a political debate last Sunday, the 98,000-capacity Camp Nou of FC Barcelona was already a scene of seething Catalan foment for the famed encounter against Real Madrid.

Real Madrid is still identified with the unified Spanish state and was met with a mosaic of color cards forming the red-and-yellow stripes of Catalonia's "la senyera" flag. At one stage during the match, incessant collective shouts of "Independence!" cascaded down the stands as fans waved the pro-independence "estelada" flag.

Last month, 1.5 million Catalans took to the streets in Barcelona to call for a separate state in the biggest march since the 1970s. Catalonia's regional government voted on Sept. 27 to hold a referendum on Catalonia's self-determination at a date still yet to be set. The Spanish government says this would be unconstitutional.

Spanish prime minister Mariano Rajoy said on Tuesday that those seeking independence for Spain are making "a mistake of colossal proportions."

But Rajoy, like many of his fellow European leaders, is in a bind: National governments have had both to cede power to the supranational EU and to regions demanding greater autonomy and local accountability.

"People are anxious because the European Union seems far away," said Prof. Hendrik Vos, head of Ghent University's Center for EU Studies. "That is why there is this yearning to keep things close."

And local control has become ever more important for rich pockets of Europe.

"Those regions say how hard they had to work for their wealth," Vos said, "and they don't want to throw it away or share with the rest of the EU."

-------------

Associated Press Writer Joseph Wilson contributed from Barcelona.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49399703/ns/world_news-europe/

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Become A Success Using Internet Promotion With This Advice ...

So, you have decided it is time to do some Website marketing. Isn?t this exciting? Well, except for the fact that there is so much information that you have no clue where to start! Well, this article is a great place to begin! You will find some suggestions listed below to assist you in getting started and also organized, so you can have success as an internet marketer.

TIP! Avoid spending too much money on advertising. If it will not work for you, do not spend money on it.

Offer a FAQ section on your website to improve visitors? satisfaction. It will also please your potential customers because they will be able to locate answers to their concerns quickly and easily. If your potential customer is able to perceive possible benefits easily, it will be very helpful to you.

TIP! Add your website as a link in each signature block you use. If you post in a forum, you can usually link to your site right in your signature, which will make it appear with every post you make.

Include Facebook and Twitter in your Online marketing plan. You can use these sites to advertise new offers or to share your latest articles. Use caution as to how hard you push your promotions in the comments you leave on the sites. A better option is to offer up content that enriches and entertains your followers, tempered with the occasional promotional blurb.

TIP! Keep a list of consumers who have purchased from you and later send out an online catalog or email, offering other items they might be interested in. Always tell them you appreciate their business and invite future purchases.

Keeping up with your competition is another important aspect of Internet marketing. Find out what is working for them and what isn?t, and keep track of their strategies. Observation of the way others in your field are doing business can provide much valuable insight. By doing this, you can learn from their mistakes and not repeat them.

TIP! Always test how effective your email marketing is to see what resonates with customers. Try A/B testing.

Use a public relation page as part of your marketing strategy. Try to target your audience with articles that may be seen in magazines and newspapers. This is an easy and effective way to show your business to the public.

TIP! If you are able, you should make an interesting video that has the potential to go viral that includes information about your business. Also include a link to your site embedded in the video description.

Avoid spamming people at all costs. People hate it when they see spam, so avoid making yourself unlikeable and don?t spam your followers. Actually, impersonal advertising will turn off people giving them the opposite effect you intended to give.

TIP! Watching what your competitors do is a key aspect of the Internet marketing game. It doesn?t matter the niche you choose to work in, there will always be some sort of competition.

Be active on the major social media networks to increase your customer base. By creating and maintaining a Facebook page for your business, you encourage customers and fans to interact and spread the word about your products and services. Another excellent way to build up a conversation with your customers is through Twitter.

TIP! A strong job title can help build respect among your peers. If the business is yours, then become the CEO.

Get ready, because this affiliate marketing tip will change your life! Reassure your visitors that they can have confidence when they come to your site. Add a link to your site?s privacy policy on each page in a visible location above the fold. Your customers will feel more comfortable purchasing items from you if they know their sensitive information is safe. Assure them that their identity is safe on your website.

TIP! Your website should be well made and have content people want to see! The success of any Internet marketing campaign depends on how well the website is created. The webpage should be very well made and have content that is of interest to people.

To boost your site traffic and optimize your site for search engines, you absolutely must have unique, original and fresh content. This is very important to retailers who are in industries that have heavy competition online. It is critical that your website stands out. You can write your own content, have a trusted employee write it or hire an article writer.

TIP! Keep an eye on your competitors, and learn from what they are doing. If they look like they are a site that you would purchase product from, then they might be a very good role model for you.

Do you feel better after reading this advice? Although it may seem like there is a large amount of information, you can use what you learned to develop your marketing plan. Plus, you can always review the preceding tips in case you do not remember everything

TIP! It requires lots of dedication and hard work to make anything successful. Luck alone will not make you money through internet marketing.

Source: http://www.paginaswebexitosas.com/become-a-success-using-internet-promotion-with-this-advice.html?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=become-a-success-using-internet-promotion-with-this-advice

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Longtime GOP Senate moderate Arlen Specter dies

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) ? Former U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter, the outspoken Pennsylvania centrist whose switch from Republican to Democrat ended a 30-year career in which he played a pivotal role in several Supreme Court nominations, died Sunday. He was 82.

Specter, who announced in late August that he was battling cancer, died at his home in Philadelphia from complications of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, said his son Shanin. Over the years, Arlen Specter had fought two previous bouts with Hodgkin lymphoma, overcome a brain tumor and survived cardiac arrest following bypass surgery.

Specter rose to prominence in the 1960s as an aggressive Philadelphia prosecutor and as an assistant counsel to the Warren Commission, developing the single-bullet theory that posited just one bullet struck both President Kennedy and Texas Gov. John Connally ? an assumption critical to the argument that presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone. The theory remains controversial and was the focus of Oliver Stone's 1991 movie "JFK."

In 1987, Specter helped thwart the Supreme Court nomination of former federal appeals Judge Robert H. Bork ? earning him conservative enemies who still bitterly refer to such rejections as being "borked."

But four years later, Specter was criticized by liberals for his tough questioning of Anita Hill at Clarence Thomas' Supreme Court nomination hearings and for accusing her of committing "flat-out perjury." The nationally televised interrogation incensed women's groups and nearly cost him his seat in 1992.

Specter was Pennsylvania's longest-serving senator when Democrats picked then-U.S. Rep. Joe Sestak over him in the 2010 primary, despite Specter's endorsements by President Barack Obama and other Democratic leaders. Sestak lost Specter's seat to conservative Republican Rep. Pat Toomey by 2 percentage points.

A political moderate, Specter was swept into the Senate in the Reagan landslide of 1980.

He took credit for helping to defeat President Clinton's national health care plan ? the complexities of which he highlighted in a gigantic chart that hung on his office wall for years afterward ? and helped lead the investigation into Gulf War syndrome, the name given to a collection of symptoms experienced by veterans of the war that include fatigue, memory loss, pain and difficulty sleeping. Following the Iran-Contra scandal, he pushed legislation that created the inspectors general of the CIA.

As a senior member of the powerful Appropriations Committee, Specter pushed for increased funding for stem-cell research, breast cancer and Alzheimer's disease, and supported several labor-backed initiatives in a GOP-led Congress. He also doggedly sought federal funds for local projects in his home state.

Specter was not shy about bucking fellow Republicans.

In 1995, he launched a presidential bid, denouncing religious conservatives as the "fringe" that plays too large a role in setting the party's agenda. Specter, who was Jewish, bowed out before the first primary because of lackluster fundraising.

Despite his tireless campaigning, Specter's irascible independence caught up with him in 2004. Specter barely survived a GOP primary challenge by Toomey by 17,000 votes of more than 1.4 million cast. He went on to easily win the general election with the help of organized labor, a traditionally Democratic constituency.

Specter startled fellow senators in April 2009 when he announced he was switching to the Democratic side, saying he found himself "increasingly at odds with the Republican philosophy." Earlier in the year, he had been one of only three Republicans in Congress ? and the only one facing re-election in 2010 ? who voted for President Barack Obama's economic stimulus bill.

He also said he had concluded that his chance of defeating a GOP challenger in the 2010 party primary was bleak. But he said the Democrats couldn't count on him to be "an automatic 60th vote" to give the party a filibuster-proof majority.

Specter outspent Sestak, a retired Navy vice admiral, but Sestak attacked him as a political opportunist who switched parties to save his job. A memorable campaign ad used Specter's own words against him: "My change in party will enable me to be re-elected."

Specter was diagnosed in 2005 with stage IV Hodgkin lymphoma, a cancer of the lymphatic system. Announcing the diagnosis with his trademark doggedness, Specter said: "I have beaten a brain tumor, bypass heart surgery and many tough political opponents and I'm going to beat this, too."

"Arlen Specter was always a fighter," Obama said in a statement Sunday. "From his days stamping out corruption as a prosecutor in Philadelphia to his three decades of service in the Senate, Arlen was fiercely independent ? never putting party or ideology ahead of the people he was chosen to serve. He brought that same toughness and determination to his personal struggles."

He wrote of his struggle in a 2008 book, "Never Give In: Battling Cancer in the Senate," saying he wanted to let others facing similar crises "ought to know they are not alone."

Cancer handed him "a stark look at mortality" and an "added sense of humility," Specter told The Associated Press.

Intellectual and stubborn, Specter played squash nearly every day into his mid-70s and liked to unwind with a martini or two at night. He took the lead on a wide spectrum of issues and was no stranger to controversy.

Born in Wichita, Kan., on Feb. 12, 1930, Specter spent summers toiling in his father's junkyard in Russell, Kan., where he knew another future senator ? Bob Dole. The junkyard thrived during World War II, allowing Specter's father to send his four children to college.

Specter left Kansas for college in 1947 because the University of Kansas, where his best friends were headed, did not have Jewish fraternities. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1951 and Yale law school in 1956. He served in the Air Force from 1951 to 1953.

Friends say his childhood circumstances made him determined, tough and independent-minded. Specter considered his father's triumphs the embodiment of the American dream, a fulfillment that friends say drove him to a career in public life.

He entered politics as a Democrat in Philadelphia in the early 1960s, when he was an assistant district attorney who sent six Teamsters officials to jail for union corruption.

After working on the Warren Commission, he returned to Philadelphia and challenged his boss, James Crumlish, for district attorney in 1965. Specter ran as a Republican and was derided by Crumlish as "Benedict Arlen." But Crumlish lost to his protege by 36,000 votes.

It was to be the last time until 1980 that Specter would win an election to higher office, despite three attempts ? a 1967 bid for Philadelphia mayor, a 1976 loss to John Heinz for Senate and a 1978 defeat by Dick Thornburgh for governor.

Specter lost re-election as district attorney in 1973 and went into private practice. Among his most notorious clients as a private attorney was Ira Einhorn, a Philadelphia counterculture celebrity who killed his girlfriend in 1977.

Finally, in 1980, Specter won the Senate seat vacated by retiring Republican Richard Schweiker, defeating former Pittsburgh Mayor Pete Flaherty.

After leaving the Senate in January 2011, the University of Pennsylvania Law School announced Specter would teach a course about Congress' relationship with the Supreme Court, and Maryland Public Television launched a political-affairs show hosted by the former senator.

A funeral was scheduled for Tuesday in Penn Valley, Pa., and will be open to the public, followed by burial in Huntingdon Valley, Pa.

He is survived by his wife, Joan, and two sons, Shanin and Steve, and four granddaughters.

___

Associated Press writers Ron Todt in Philadelphia and Lara Jakes contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/longtime-gop-senate-moderate-arlen-specter-dies-165919376--politics.html

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Saturday, October 13, 2012

Paris prosecutor opens preliminary probe into LVMH

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Amazon.com down for some, sporadically

16 hrs.

Bad news for folks who were rushing to do some online shopping on Friday morning: Amazon.com went down for some.

Based on an overwhelming number of tweets declaring that the popular online retailer's site was down, attempts by several NBC News editors to access the site, and a peek at the handy-dandy DownForEveryoneOrJustMe.com, it seems that the Amazon site was either down in certain regions or sporadically timing out.?

We've reached out to the folks at Amazon to see what happened and will update when we know more.

Want more tech news?or interesting?links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts,?or circling her?on?Google+.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/amazon-com-down-some-1C6422755

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Lack of heritage insurance concerns | Stuff.co.nz

Heritage campaigners are alarmed the Christchurch City Council has no insurance cover on more than 50 heritage buildings that it owns and only minimal cover on others.

"It is totally irresponsible for a public organisation to not have their buildings adequately insured," Canterbury Earthquake Heritage Buildings Fund chairwoman Anna Crighton said.

"The whole insurance issue is a disaster."

Before the quakes, the council had $90 million insurance cover for the 66 heritage buildings it owned, but inquiries by The Press revealed it now had cover for only about a quarter of those buildings.

The council negotiated new insurance cover this year for its social housing portfolio (valued at $385m) and for more than 100 of its buildings (valued at $724m), but only 15 of its heritage buildings (valued at $13.5m) are included in that cover.

Crighton said that cover was "woefully inadequate" and raised questions about the council's commitment to preserving the city's heritage.

"The council has significantly abdicated its responsibility to the people of Christchurch through ineptness and through not being transparent about their insurance cover," she said.

Council audit and risk subcommittee chairman Cr Tim Carter said his subcommittee was not happy with the council's insurance position and would be constantly reviewing it to see how it could be improved.

The problem was the council's buildings, before the quakes, were insured by the Local Authority Protection Programme, which was administered by Civic Assurance, and it did not have sufficient capacity to offer ongoing cover, so the council had been forced to go out to the market.

After the quakes it had proved difficult and expensive to obtain new insurance, Carter said.

The goods news was the insurance market was changing quite quickly and insurance cover was becoming more readily available, he said.

Council corporate services general manager Paul Anderson said the council had been forced to look overseas for insurance, and because of the scarcity and cost of cover, its brokers had advised it to initially focus on its top 100 assets with the least damage.

It was now progressively working through a prioritised list of the other buildings and assets it owned to see whether insurance could be obtained.

In the meantime, the council was effectively self-insuring.

"If there was another event, the council would have to rely on its ability to borrow funds to repair those facilities," Anderson said.

Most of the heritage buildings that were uninsured were quake-damaged and would be subject to claims under the council's previous insurance policy.

Historic Places Canterbury chairman Mark Gerrard said it was "deeply concerning" that so many buildings treasured by the community were uninsured and did not even have fire cover.

He said he had been asking the council since last December whether it had any shortfall in insurance cover for its heritage buildings but had never received an answer.

- ? Fairfax NZ News

Comments

Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/news/christchurch-earthquake-2011/7810615/Concern-over-lack-of-insurance-for-council-heritage-buildings

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Friday, October 12, 2012

Malware frames victims by emailing out death threats

16 hrs.

At least three individuals arrested for making online death threats in Japan will not be prosecuted. That's because they didn't actually make them. Even though the violent messages came from accounts linked to the arrestees, the messages were actually sent on behalf of the users by a malicious piece of software.

It was discovered that each of the likely bewildered arrestees were victims of the same malware infection the gives remote control of the infected computer over to the attacker. Authorities believe the cybercriminal or criminals are really the ones responsible for the threats.

The threats showed up in a variety of formats and places. On a government website, a post threatened to kill en masse at a shopping center. In an email sent to an airline, the sender threatened to bomb a plane. In another email, received by a school attended by a member of the Japanese royal family, the sender threatened harm against the kindergarten class.

The malicious file is called iesys.exe, Symantec employee Joji Hamada said on the?Symantec blog. The security company said it discovered at least two versions of the malware, but there may be more.

The threat is relatively isolated and can be protected against by remaining vigilant when installing software and by keeping antivirus software up-to-date.

In our world, where social media has quickly become a primary source of information for billions of people, identity fraud can cause havoc in facets of our lives where it never could before. A decade ago, a stolen birth date and Social Security number could become a financial headache. But now, armed with the right info, a malicious person could?drain your bank account, wreck your reputation online, rifle through your emails anddestroy saved work and important data.

There's a flipside, too.

As people become more comfortable sharing more of themselves and their experiences online, caution often falls by the wayside. It's important to remember that electronic communications sent from accounts that are usually controlled by people you know and trust can and do?fall into the wrong hands. Just because a friend's name is on that email, text message, tweet or post, doesn't mean they're the one that sent it; it's an assumption many people make all too often.

Follow Ben on Twitter@benkwx.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/malware-frames-victims-emailing-out-death-threats-1C6420002

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Executive Interview: Michael Levin, Fameco | Commercial Real ...

Untitled 276x300 Executive Interview: Michael Levin, Fameco

Michael Levin

Chief Operating Officer

Fameco Real Estate

?

Michael Levin joined Fameco Real Estate, L.P. in 2007 as Chief Operating Officer.? As COO, Michael oversees all aspects of Fameco?s operations, with particular focus on the Brokerage Division.? In 2008, Michael was instrumental in opening the Fameco office serving central and northern New Jersey and he continues to oversee the operation of that office. In 2011, he opened the Center City Philadelphia office for Fameco to better serve its Center City clients.

Michael previously served as Executive Vice President, Real Estate and Operations, at Five Below and Sr. Vice President of Real Estate and Operations at Zany Brainy. He?led the national store roll out campaigns for both these start-up ventures. At its peak, Zany Brainy operated 188 stores in 34 states. He opened Five Below?s first store in 2002 and then led its expansion to 60+ stores along the eastern seaboard before joining Fameco.

Michael brings over 25 years of retail real estate, executive management, and legal experience to Fameco.? He is a magna cum laude graduate of the University of Connecticut,where he majored in Economics with a minor in Business Administration.? He went on to receive his J.D. with honors from the University of Maryland School of Law. Michael is an active member of the ICSC and sits on the Board of Tristate Brokers Commercial Alliance, Inc.

*

Q: Tell us how you got involved in retail real estate, as opposed to another sector or asset type within this industry.?

I have always had a strong interest in real estate. Early in my career I decided to attend the University of Maryland Law School with the goal of practicing real estate law. During and following law school, I went to work for a Baltimore, MD law firm called Frank, Bernstein, Conaway and Goldman. From the beginning of my tenure with Frank, Bernstein I was very involved in shopping center leasing, representing both landlords (such as the Rouse Company) and retailers (such as Brookstone and Jos. A. Bank).

During that time I realized that I wanted to get involved in the business side of the retail real estate process and not just the legal side. From there I spent the next 15 years working in house for Crown Books, Zany Brainy and Five Below, focusing on all aspects of the new store development process for these retailers, among various other responsibilities.

?Q: In your experience, has the retail real estate sector changed over the years?

Absolutely. When I first started in the industry the malls dominated the regional shopping experience and grocery anchored centers took care of the daily needs. In the 1990?s we saw the proliferation of the power center and the big box category killer. Today many of the same retailers that grew so rapidly in the 1990?s and early 2000?s are going out of business (such as Linens and Things, Circuit City and Borders Books) and others are looking to downsize their store count and footprint as they are losing market share to the online players like Amazon.

Q: What is your favorite part of your job? What do you find most challenging?

I enjoy that no two days are alike. As long as I have been involved in retail real estate I have found each day to bring new issues, successes and opportunities. Although it can be challenging to find quality new salespeople, I get tremendous satisfaction hiring someone just starting out in the industry and helping them develop into a successful salesperson with a strong knowledge of the market and industry.

Q: How have economic conditions affected your industry? Have you widened or narrowed your focus (in terms of asset class, market, client base, etc.) as a result? ?

Over the past four years the economic conditions have slowed the deal approval process, the development of new shopping centers and the sale of existing shopping centers. We have also witnessed the closure of some big box retailers, but most of these have successfully been back-filled with other retailers. The greater Philadelphia market did not experience the tremendous over-storing that some other cites have experienced.

At Fameco our focus is only on retail real estate and we have not changed that focus. We pride ourselves in the strength of our relationships and market knowledge as these relate to the retail real estate world. During these tougher economic times, more of the larger and institutional shopping center owners have engaged Fameco to lease their shopping centers. I think the more challenging leasing environment has caused them to seek our help where they may have tried to lease their centers themselves in better times. Additionally, we have also been engaged by a number of retailers to assist them with the disposition of their excess real estate.

Q: Online retailers like Amazon have presented a challenge to many in your sector. Has Fameco Real Estate changed its strategy because of this challenge?

Many of our retail clients are affected by the online retailers. Some clients are downsizing their footprints and, at times, reducing their store count. We are also pursuing more alternative uses for retail space such as medical facilities and training schools.

Q: If you didn?t work in the Mid-Atlantic market, what region would you be interested in exploring? Why?

I have lived and worked in the Mid-Atlantic market my entire life and cannot imagine working in another area. If I had to choose another region I suppose it would be the southeast as I find I no longer enjoy the cold and snow in the winter.

Q: In what ways do you image Philadelphia?s retail real estate will change in coming years? How about retail nationwide?

I think in both the Philadelphia area and nationwide, we are going to see smaller stores due to the online competition. In many cases I think that stores will shrink and will be part of a multi-channel distribution network with the online retail. We will also see more and more non-traditional retail uses in shopping centers. Finally, I think that restaurants and other lifestyle businesses will continue to expand as people look to them for an entertainment experience.

?


Source: http://llenrock.com/blog/executive-interview-michael-levin-fameco/

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Your Favorite Video Game Characters: Then and NowRant Gaming

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Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now

Feature Image for Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now Slideshow

Click "Next" to start the show!

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Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Mario

The evolution of Mario.

Donkey Kong vs New Super Mario Bros. U.

Mario (Donkey Kong 1981)

When Mario first appeared in 1981, he was neither a plumber or the titular character. Rather, he showed up as a portly carpenter nicknamed "Jumpman," in Donkey Kong. He might have stayed Jumpman as well had Mario Segale, the landlord of a warehouse Nintendo was renting, hadn't showed up demanding some overdue rent.

3 of 16

Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Slime

The evolution of the blue slime.

DQ1 vs DQX.

Slime (Dragon Quest 1985)

I may or may not be biased for slimes. I have a healing slime hanging on my rear view mirror, I have a gaggle hanging from phone, and my room is littered with stuffed versions of them. If only I could eat them, then my life would be complete. The adorable little slime made its first appearance in 1986 in Enix?s RPG, Dragon Quest.

4 of 16

Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Link

The evolution of Link.

The Legend of Zelda vs The Legend of Zelda Wii U.

Link (The Legend of Zelda 1986)

Link originally appeared back in 1986 on the Family Computer Disk System, in a somewhat obscure game called The Legend of Zelda (perhaps you?ve heard of it?). Although the game celebrated it?s 25th anniversary just last year, Link still hasn?t graduated from his love of green suede and over-sized belt buckles it seems.

5 of 16

Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Kid Icarus (Pitt)

The evolution of Kid Icarus aka, Pitt.

Kid Icarus vs Kid Icarus: Uprising.

Kid Icarus (Kid Icarus 1986)

Kid Icarus (also known as Pitt-kun), made his first appearance on the Family Computer Disk System back in 1986 in a game name after him, which I both love and hate for its infuriating platforming. The years have definitely been good to Pitt, and he?s looking younger and hotter than ever. Work that skirt! (Toga. Dress. Whatever.)

6 of 16

Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Samus Aran

The evolution of Samus Aran.

Metroid vs Metroid Other M.

Samus Aran (Metroid 1986)

Although it?s now common knowledge that Samus Aran is indeed a woman, back in 1986 when Metroid first made it?s appearance on the Family Computer Disk System, boys found themselves dumbstruck whilst girls cheered with joy upon discovering the identity of the game?s bad ass protagonist.

7 of 16

Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Solid Snake

The evolution of Solid Snake.

MGS1 vs MGS4.

Solid Snake (Metal Gear 1987)

Despite his somewhat youthful appearance, Hideo Kojima has been making games for at least as many years as a good number of today?s biggest Metal Gear fans have been alive. The original Solid Snake first showed up stealthily on the MSX2 in 1987 in his trademark olive drab camo.

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Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Ryu

The evolution of Ryu.

Street Fighter vs Street Fighter 4.

Ryu (Street Fighter 1987)

I was too little to go to the arcades when the original Street Fighter first showed up back in 1987?according to my mom, it was a BAD place with BAD people). So I had to wait until Street Fighter II before being introduced to one of the literal grand daddies of the fighting game genre back in, karate-ka, Ryu. And yes, that foot does indeed belong to his long time rival, Ken. I?m all for bringing back them sexy red shoes.

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Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Chocobo

The evolution of the chocobo.

FFII vs FFXIV.

Chocobo (Final Fantasy II 1988)

Although the yellow birdie didn't show up until Final Fantasy II in 1988, it's inspired enough songs (from mambos to waltzes to sambas) and almost as many spin offs than the actual game itself. Couldn't imagine a Final Fantasy without one!

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Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Kazuya

The evolution of Kazuya.

Tekken 1 vs Tekken Tag Tournament 2.

Kazuya (Tekken 1991)

By 1994, I was finally able to visit my first real video game arcade (gasp!) where the original Tekken was introduced by Namco. I know the graphics are awfully blocky now, but back in the day, the game was one of the first 3D fighting games out on the market and an amazing sight to behold (if there wasn?t a crowd of 50 people around the arcade box.)

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Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Kasumi

The evolution of Kasumi.

DOA1 vs DOA 5.

Kasumi (Dead or Alive 1996)

Even back in 1996 when Dead or Alive first appeared, Team Ninja proved themselves to be huge supporters of furry fan service. I?m slightly afraid of what DOA 6 might bring as adorable kunoichi Kasumi?s outfits have gotten shorter and skimpier throughout the years. (Are they just going to bamf ninja disappear?)

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Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Chris Redfield

The evolution of Chris Redfield.

RE1 vs RE6.

Chris Redfield (Resident Evil 1996)

Chris Redfield and the Resident Evil franchise which began in 1996 have gone through a number of incarnations over the years. (Remember the live actor who portrayed him with the massive widow?s peak?) Although I don?t care too much for the extra Roid ragey version of Chris from RE5, I have to admit he?s looking a lot more proportional in Capcom?s newest offering, Resident Evil 6.

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Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Lara Croft

The evolution of Lara Croft.

Tomb Raider 1 vs Tomb Raider the Reboot.

Lara Croft (Tomb Raider 1996)

Over the years, Lara Croft has probably seen the biggest make over of all since first popping up?and out?on the gaming scene on the Sega Saturn and PlayStation back in 1996?s Tomb Raider. her designers have definitely ditched the Indiana Skank look, and I for one appreciate her evolution into a real woman in the newest reboot of the franchise.

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Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Grand Theft Auto

The evolution of Grand Theft Auto.

GTA 1 vs GTA 5.

The Car (Grand Theft Auto 1997)

The original Grand Theft Auto launched to a somewhat mixed bag of reviews back in 1997 when it first arrived on the PC. I enjoyed it a lot more in it?s later, console incarnations, but I do have to give props to Rockstar (then known as DMA Design) in keeping true to the open world destruction which allowed layers to wreck havoc on the denizens of Liberty City throughout the years.

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Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: The Zerg

The evolution of the Zerg Rush.

Starcraft 1 vs Starcraft II.

Zerg Rush (Starcraft 1998)

For almost 15 years now since Blizzard released the their revolutionally RTS and global blockbuster, StarCraft, Zerglings have been doing what they do best. No, not dying in horrible ways 1v1 a Terran Marine, but Zerg Rushing.

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Your Favorite Video Game Characters Then and Now: Captain Price

The evolution of Captain Price.

COD 1 vs COD: MW3.

Captain Price (Call of Duty 2003)

Those who have read my deranged ramblings before know that my top video game crush of all time is Captain Price from Infinity Ward?s Call of Duty franchise. Captain John Price originally appeared in 2003?s Call of Duty as the current Captain Price?s ?grandfather.? One of the baby franchise of this article, but I made an exception for the ?stache.

Then and Now:? The Evolution of Video Game Characters

Then and now are concepts which not only carry through the real world, but into the virtual world of video games as well.? Back then, some of you might remember listening to cassette tapes on your Walkman and going to school with Trapper Keeper folders hugged tightly to your chest, where as now, students listen to their iPods and hug their iPads and Notebooks close by.

As gamers, we are hardly immune to the then and now either, and many of us have come to take the stunning high-definition graphics of this generation consoles and games for granted?heck, we may even condemn what could be an amazing experience due to average graphics.? But a long, long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, there was something called 8 bit and 16 bit graphics, and once upon a time there was a silly little system called the PlayStation which could handle astounding resolutions anywhere from 256??224 to 640??480.

So to commemorate the then and now of gaming (aka, I was feeling old as all fudge because someone called me ?ma?am? at the gas station), here are some side by side comparisons of some of our favorite video game characters, from a dozen of gaming?s longest lived franchises.

Source: http://www.rantgaming.com/2012/10/11/ideo-game-characters-then-and-now/

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