Tuesday, April 30, 2013

FOX News: Florida deputy wrangles 10-foot alligator found in parking lot

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Florida deputy wrangles 10-foot alligator found in parking lot
Apr 30th 2013, 19:12

Published April 30, 2013

FoxNews.com

  • 43013_gator.jpg

Workers at a Florida business complex got a surprise Tuesday morning when they arrived for work: an alligator in the parking lot, snapping at cars. 

The workers called the local sheriff's office to remove the gator, which they estimated to be about eight feet long, MyFoxTampaBay.com reports.

Deputy Jeff Krandell was the first to arrive. But instead of waiting for an alligator trapper,  Krandell grabbed a rope from his trunk.

He said the animal was heading towards the roadway, so he had to jump into action. Krandell was able to wrangle the gator and tie it up the animal, which turned out to be 10 feet long.

When Florida Fish and Wildlife arrived, the alligator was turned over to a licensed trapper.

The alligator was in the Woodlands Parkway area in Palm Harbor outside an Achieva Bank and a dentist's office.

This was not Deputy Krandell's first animal encounter. He wrestled another alligator about 15 years ago, also while on the force with the sheriff's office.

Click for more from MyFoxTampaBay.com.

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FOX News: Skyrocketing inflation: Russia now charging NASA $70 million per seat to fly US astronauts

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Skyrocketing inflation: Russia now charging NASA $70 million per seat to fly US astronauts
Apr 30th 2013, 17:23

Published April 30, 2013

Associated Press

  • NASA Soyuz launch Mar 2013.jpg

    March 28, 2013: A Russian Soyuz rocket blasts off from the Central Asian spaceport of Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan carrying a new crew to the International Space Station.NASA

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. –  NASA is blaming Congress for the need to pay $424 million more to Russia to get U.S. astronauts into space.

NASA announced its latest contract with the Russian Space Agency on Tuesday. The $424 million represents flights to and from the International Space Station aboard Russian Soyuz spacecraft, as well as training, for six astronauts in 2016 and 2017.

That's $70.6 million per seat — well above the previous price tag of about $63 million.

Several U.S. companies are working on rockets and spacecraft to launch Americans from U.S. soil. But that's still a few years away.

NASA Administrator Charles Bolden says if Congress had approved the space agency's request for more funding for its commercial space effort, this contract would have been unnecessary.

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FOX News: Here's why it's a great time to buy a new TV

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Here's why it's a great time to buy a new TV
Apr 30th 2013, 17:22

  • samsung HDTV.jpg

    Large screen HDTVs like this 46-inch model from Samsung are far more affordable than ever before.Samsung

Obsolescence may be the biggest fear shoppers face when considering a high-tech purchase. Is this smartphone going to be bested next month? Should I get a laptop or is that rumored tablet going to be better?

Perhaps the most difficult choice of all tech decisions: Is it the right time to buy a new TV?

Most of us hold onto our televisions for several years -- seven years or more according to some market research. So you want to get the best picture you can afford since it's going to be sitting in your living room for a long time. Meanwhile, prices of HD TVs keep falling, by as much as 25 percent last year in some segments of the market. So the temptation is to wait for even lower prices. However, now may just be the time to strike -- especially if you have a tax-refund check burning a hole in your pocket.

Prices on HD TVs could be near the bottom for some time to come.

Analysts have been painting a bleak picture for television manufacturers. Paul Gray, a leading analyst at research firm NPD DisplaySearch, recently noted that for the first time ever, LCD shipments were down last year, falling 1 percent. Gray, whose remarks were made at press conference in advance of the IFA consumer electronics show coming up in Berlin this September, wasn't more sanguine about TV sales this year. He predicts that the LCD market will be flat. So prices on HD TVs could be near the bottom for some time to come.

In other words, what may be bad for manufacturers can be good for consumers. Prices have fallen to a point where a solid performing 50-inch HD TV with built-in Wi-Fi and connected services like Netflix can be found for under $650.

Indeed, most TV makers are now focusing on price and convenience, rather than snazzy new features like 3D, which went over like a lead balloon. So getting a new TV now doesn't mean that you also have to pay to upgrade the rest of your home theater equipment.

Even Samsung, known for cutting-edge features like video conferencing and voice recognition, will be emphasizing friendlier features for couch potatoes. According to Samsung spokesman Michael Zoeller, this fall the company will be underscoring "discovering TV." In other words, it will be touting better video search features rather than gee-whiz picture technologies.

But what about new and supposedly better TV formats like 4K that are coming? Won't that make current TV sets obsolete?

While it is true that so-called 4K or Ultra HD sets are already on the market and offer up to four times the resolution of standard HD sets, the 4K models are expensive -- $5,000 for a 55-inch set -- and face compatibility issues. A broadcast standard for such higher definition programs has not been worked out, for example, there are issues about the type of connectors needed for such sets, and while there's general consensus on how Ultra HD video may be streamed online, few households have the kind of ultra high-speed Internet connection necessary to accommodate such video feeds. Consequently, NDP DisplaySearch's Gray doesn't expect Ultra HD to become a practical reality for at least 3 years.

In fact, it may never take off. Broadcasters are already talking about even sharper video formats, such as 8K. So people who buy Ultra HD sets today may be pining for 8K sets in a few years.

Moreover, popular LCD sets aren't likely to be usurped by another technology any time soon. OLED (organic light-emitting diode) screens, for example, are brighter and deliver arguably better colors than LCDs, but manufacturers have struggled to produce large screen sizes reliably.

So this may be the ideal time to get a deal on a large screen TV. While the most popular sets used to be in the 42-inch and 46-inch category, consumers are moving to ever larger sets. The 50-inch category may be the most popular this year, but some families are taking advantage of deals to move to bigger sizes, such as 60- and 65-inch displays.

Indeed, prices are so good couples have stopped fighting over where to put the TV. "I'm surprised, but people are willing to rearrange their furniture now to fit them in," said Gray.

Follow John R. Quain on Twitter @jqontech or find more tech coverage at J-Q.com.

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FOX News: Mysterious Hebrew stone depicts archangel Gabriel, called a 'Dead Sea Scroll in stone'

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Mysterious Hebrew stone depicts archangel Gabriel, called a 'Dead Sea Scroll in stone'
Apr 30th 2013, 17:00

  • Israel Gabriel Stone 1.jpg

    April 30, 2013: A museum worker points at the 'Gabriel Stone' as it is displayed at an exhibition at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner

  • Israel Gabriel Stone.jpg

    April 30, 2013: A museum worker walks next to the 'Gabriel Stone' as it is displayed at an exhibition at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner

  • Israel Gabriel Stone 2.jpg

    April 30, 2013: A museum worker looks at the "Gabriel Stone" as it is displayed at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner

JERUSALEM –  An ancient limestone tablet covered with a mysterious Hebrew text that features the archangel Gabriel is at the center of a new exhibit in Jerusalem, even as scholars continue to argue about what it means.

The so-called Gabriel Stone, a meter (three-foot)-tall tablet said to have been found 13 years ago on the banks of the Dead Sea, features 87 lines of an unknown prophetic text dated as early as the first century BC, at the time of the Second Jewish Temple.

'The Gabriel Stone is in a way a Dead Sea Scroll written on stone.'

- James Snyder, director of the Israel Museum

Scholars see it as a portal into the religious ideas circulating in the Holy Land in the era when was Jesus was born. Its form is also unique -- it is ink written on stone, not carved -- and no other such religious text has been found in the region.

Curators at the Israel Museum, where the first exhibit dedicated to the stone is opening Wednesday, say it is the most important document found in the area since the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls.

"The Gabriel Stone is in a way a Dead Sea Scroll written on stone," said James Snyder, director of the Israel Museum. The writing dates to the same period, and uses the same tidy calligraphic Hebrew script, as some of the Dead Sea Scrolls, a collection of documents that include the earliest known surviving manuscripts of Hebrew Bible texts.

The Gabriel Stone made a splash in 2008 when Israeli Bible scholar Israel Knohl offered a daring theory that the stone's faded writing would revolutionize the understanding of early Christianity, claiming it included a concept of messianic resurrection that predated Jesus. He based his theory on one hazy line, translating it as "in three days you shall live."

His interpretation caused a storm in the world of Bible studies, with scholars convening at an international conference the following year to debate readings of the text, and a National Geographic documentary crew featuring his theory. An American team of experts using high resolution scanning technologies tried -- but failed -- to detect more of the faded writing.

Knohl, a professor of Bible at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, eventually scaled back from his original bombshell theory but the fierce scholarly debate he sparked continued to reverberate across the academic world, bringing international attention to the stone. Over the last few years it went on display alongside other Bible-era antiquities in Rome, Houston and Dallas.

Bible experts are still debating the writing's meaning, largely because much of the ink has eroded in crucial spots in the passage and the tablet has two diagonal cracks the slice the text into three pieces. Museum curators say only 40 percent of the 87 lines are legible, many of those only barely. The interpretation of the text featured in the Israel Museum's exhibit is just one of five readings put forth by scholars.

All agree that the passage describes an apocalyptic vision of an attack on Jerusalem in which God appears with angels on chariots to save the city. The central angelic character is Gabriel, the first angel to appear in the Hebrew Bible. "I am Gabriel," the writing declares.

The stone inscription is one of the oldest passages featuring the archangel, and represents an "explosion of angels in Second Temple Judaism," at a time of great spiritual angst for Jews in Jerusalem looking for divine connection, said Adolfo Roitman, a curator of the exhibit.

The exhibit traces the development of the archangel Gabriel in the three monotheistic religions, displaying a Dead Sea Scroll fragment which mentions the angel's name; the 13th century Damascus Codex, one of the oldest illustrated manuscripts of the complete Hebrew Bible; a 10th century New Testament manuscript from Brittany, in which Gabriel predicts the birth of John the Baptist and appears to the Virgin Mary; and an Iranian Quran manuscript dated to the 15th or 16th century, in which the angel, called Jibril in Arabic, reveals the word of God to the prophet Mohammad.

"Gabriel is not archaeology. He is still relevant for millions of people on earth who believe that angels are heavenly beings on earth," said Roitman. The Gabriel Stone, he said, is "the starting point of an ongoing tradition that still is relevant today."

The story of how the stone was discovered is just as murky as its meaning. A Bedouin man is said to have found it in Jordan on the eastern banks of the Dead Sea around the year 2000, Knohl said. An Israeli university professor later examined a piece of earth stuck to the stone and found a composition of minerals only found in that region of the Dead Sea.

The stone eventually made it into the hands of Ghassan Rihani, a Jordanian antiquities dealer based in Jordan and London, who in turn sold the stone to Swiss-Israeli collector David Jeselsohn in Zurich for an unspecified amount. Rihani has since died. The Bible scholar traveled to Jordan multiple times to look for more potential stones, but was unable to find the stone's original location.

Israel Museum curators said Jeselsohn lent the stone to the museum for temporary display.

Lenny Wolfe, an antiquities dealer in Jerusalem, said that before the Jordanian dealer bought it, another middleman faxed him an image of the stone and offered it for sale.

"The fax didn't come out clearly. I had no idea what it was," said Wolfe, who passed on the offer. It was "one of my biggest misses," Wolfe said.

What function the stone had, where it was displayed, and why it was written are unknown, said curators of the Israel Museum exhibit.

"There is still so much that is unclear," said Michal Dayagi-Mendels, a curator of the exhibit. Scholars, she said, "will still argue about this for years."

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FOX News: Sir Richard Branson plans orbital spaceships for Virgin Galactic, 2014 trips to space

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Sir Richard Branson plans orbital spaceships for Virgin Galactic, 2014 trips to space
Apr 30th 2013, 14:48

Following the historic first rocket-powered flight of its SpaceShipTwo vehicle, Virgin Galactic plans to build a fleet of spaceships and begin ferrying hundreds of tourists into space in 2014. And then? A whole new kind of spacecraft, Sir Richard Branson said.

"We'll be building orbital spaceships after that," Branson told Fox News Tuesday.

'Now we can start testing at 2,00 miles an hour, 3,000 miles an hour, 4,000 miles an hour...'

- Sir Richard Branson

On Monday morning, Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo space plane fired its rocket engines for the first time in a test flight out of California's Mojave Air and Spaceport. After being hoisted into the air aboard the "mothership" craft WhiteKnightTwo, it was released at an altitude of about 46,000 feet before firing its rocket for 16 seconds and racing to a speed of Mach 1.2, fast enough to beat the speed of sound.

It was a huge leap for Virgin Galactic, taking the company much closer to its goal of space tourism, Branson said.

"It was the biggest milestone in this program, and it's taken us eight and a half years to get there. Now we know it can break the sound barrier safely. Now we can start testing at 2,000 miles an hour, 3,000 miles an hour, 4,000 miles an hour -- and then by the end of the year, be ready to do flights into space," Branson said.

"It was a historic day, and great fun," he added.

Following those increasingly fast and long rocket-powered tests, Branson said the company will begin flights into space, as soon as the end of the year. To reach that goal, he has greenlit new spacecraft, he told Fox News.

"We've already given the go-ahead to start building more spaceships, more motherships, more satellite launchers … it really is the start of a whole new era of space travel."

Only 500 people or so have travelled into space so far. Branson aims to send another 500 into space in 2014 alone, at which point they'll be able to officially call themselves astronauts.

"They're the pioneers. They've enabled us to begin this program. And they'll be able to go into space next year," Branson said.

And Branson has plans for the future of the company: far longer trips into space, potentially lasting for days or even longer.

"We'll be building orbital spaceships after that," Branson said, "so that people who want to go for a week or two can."

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FOX News: British archaeologists plan to exhume second tomb at site where Richard III's skeleton found

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British archaeologists plan to exhume second tomb at site where Richard III's skeleton found
Apr 30th 2013, 13:42

Published April 30, 2013

Associated Press

LONDON –  Archaeologists who unearthed the skeleton of England's King Richard III under a municipal parking lot say they want to dig up a 600-year-old stone coffin found nearby.

University of Leicester scientists say they hope to learn more about the medieval Church of the Grey Friars, where Richard was unceremoniously buried after he was killed at the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485.

In February scientists from the university announced that remains found on the site were "beyond reasonable doubt" those of the king.

Now the university says it wants to examine a nearby tomb which may contain the remains of a 14th-century medieval knight, Sir William Moton.

The university said Tuesday it has asked for an exhumation license from the British government and plans to start digging in July.

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FOX News: Happy birthday, Web! Public Internet turns 20 today

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Happy birthday, Web! Public Internet turns 20 today
Apr 30th 2013, 13:35

  • Internet 1993.jpg

    A 1993 computer that could have let an ordinary citizen surf that esoteric, geeks-only thing known as the World Wide Web.AP GraphicsBank

Happy birthday, world wide web!

In 1989, Tim Berners-Lee developed a technology to help physicists in universities and institutes around the world share information. On April 30, 1993, the European science agency CERN where Berners-Lee worked, officially made Berners-Lee's W3 software public domain, letting the public at large access it.

Yadda yadda yadda: Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and the rest.

'I was lucky enough to invent the Web at the time when the Internet already existed.'

- Tim Berners-Lee

"There is no sector of society that has not been transformed by the invention, in a physics laboratory, of the web," Rolf Heuer, CERN Director-General, said in a statement. "From research to business and education, the web has been reshaping the way we communicate, work, innovate and live. The web is a powerful example of the way that basic research benefits humankind."

To help celebrate what they label "the birth of the web," CERN has launched a project to preserve and recreate the digital assets associated with the birth of the web.

"For a start we would like to restore the first URL - put back the files that were there at their earliest possible iterations. Then we will look at the first web servers at CERN and see what assets from them we can preserve and share," the agency writes on a website associated with the project.

That website was -- the first in the world -- was hosted on Berners-Lee's NeXT computer, a cutting edge computer from the company of the same name that was built by Steve Jobs after he left Apple. The website described the basic features of the web; how to access other people's documents and how to set up your own server.

The NeXT machine -- the original web server -- is still at CERN, the agency said. But the world's first website was no longer online at its original address, the world's first URL: http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/TheProject.html

Up until this morning, it simply redirected the browser to CERN's front page. In honor of the 20th anniversary, that URL is back up and running, using the archived copy of the site that CERN has kept on its server the whole time.

For the record, Berners-Lee -- who is often called The Godfather of the Internet -- did not "invent" the Internet, and is quick to dispel any such rumors. In a post on his website, he explains the distinctions between the web protocol he developed and the larger Internet.

"I was lucky enough to invent the Web at the time when the Internet already existed -- and had for a decade and a half. If you are looking for fathers of the Internet, try Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn who defined the "Internet Protocol" (IP) by which packets are sent on from one computer to another until they reach their destination."

Also for the record, no word on whether Al Gore baked a birthday cake.

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FOX News: Bend your ear? Flexible phones are coming

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Bend your ear? Flexible phones are coming
Apr 30th 2013, 11:30

  • MorpheePhone

    Researchers demonstrate the Morphee-couture, a flexible phone made from wooden tiles that uses a projector to create a touch-responsive screen.University of Bristol

What if your phone could fit to your ear when you make a call? Could turn up at the edges to hide what you're looking at from others? Could mold to fit your hand depending on whether you're texting, playing a game or just need something solid to squeeze?

Just days after LG's mobile division announced plans to release a phone with a flexible OLED screen by the end of 2013, researchers at the University of Bristol in the U.K. have published a paper outlining six different prototypes for "self-actuated flexible mobile devices."

'The reason behind this research is much more than just … because it's cool.'

- University of Bristol postdoctorate researcher Anne Rodaut

Dubbed Morphees, these flexible phones would be able to change their shape to best suit the task in which the user is engaging. If you were typing in a password, for example, most of the prototypes would automatically curl up at the edges to hide the screen from prying eyes.

That doesn't mean you could grab these phones and twist, though — Morphees work by automatically re-forming themselves into one of several learned positions depending on what the user is asking of it. 

One of these Morphees is made entirely of wood.  Called Morphee-couture, the device is made up of interlocking wooden pieces that are moved via wires that connect them. These wires are made of a material called shape memory alloys and can be "taught" to move themselves into remembered positions, thus operating as the joints of the Morphee-couture. This serves as the smartphone body; the screen is created via a projector and camera, mounted on the user's shoulder, that can track the position of the user's finger relative to the device surface.

Another prototype, called Morphee-forged, is a little more like what you might imagine a flexible smartphone to be. The casing, circuits and E Ink screen are all made of flexible materials, and built around a net of shape memory alloy wires that bend in various remembered positions.

Aside from the prototypes, the team has also developed a measurement for flexible devices that they've dubbed "shape resolution." Just as screen resolution refers to the sharpness of an image, shape resolution refers to the degree of detail to which a device can form a relevant, ergonomic shape.

In their paper the team outlines 10 criteria for measuring shape resolution, including the device's curvature, stretchability and the speed at which it can change its shape.

There are still plenty of problems to overcome before we start seeing Morphees in stores, though. For one, the added moving parts mean a significant additional drain on the phone's battery life.  The constant bending also takes a physical toll on the devices, causing them to wear out and break relatively quickly.

Still, University of Bristol postdoctorate researcher Anne Rodaut said Morphees are "just a step behind" the flexible screens expected to become commercially available in the next one to two years.

"The reason behind this research is much more than just … 'because it's cool,'" Rodaut told TechNewsDaily. "When I see my phone with all the possible functions that it can achieve but with the same static rectangular shape, I feel that we are missing something," she added. "I think shapes should fit functionalities to help us better interact and manipulate our devices."

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FOX News: Video games embrace non-white protagonists

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Video games embrace non-white protagonists
Apr 30th 2013, 12:00

  • Launch_08

    Juan runs from an Alebrije in Guacamelee.Drinkbox Studios

Gaming is a more welcoming hobby than it's ever been. Compared to the pasty, bearded programmers of the 1980s, the pasty, awkward nerds of the 1990s or the pasty, shrieking teenagers of the 2000s, gamer culture is finally learning to embrace people from all races, genders and lifestyles. Why, then, are most video-game protagonists still 30-year-old white men with brown hair?

While mainstream game protagonists haven't changed much over the last decade or two, the downloadable game market has given rise to a number of non-white protagonists. These characters can help present a unique perspective on their cultures and give minority players representation in their favorite games.

'The game is in Mexico; people here are going to be Mexican.'

- Augusto Quijano, a concept artist and animator at Drinkbox Studios

One of this year's unexpected gems was a clever little game called "Guacamelee" from Toronto-based Drinkbox Studios. This 2D side-scroller focused on Juan Aguacate, a simple agave farmer who becomes a luchador, a flamboyant Mexican wrestler who is as much a pop-culture icon to Mexicans as are cowboys to Americans. In addition to a modest price tag, polished gameplay, striking visuals and a catchy soundtrack, "Guacamelee" distinguishes itself by being both a celebration and a parody of Mexican culture.

Augusto Quijano, a concept artist and animator at Drinkbox Studios, emigrated from Mexico to Canada seven years ago. The staff at Drinkbox knew it wanted to make a side-scrolling action game, but it was Quijano who proposed the Mexican theme, inspired by El día de los Muertos, the Mexican holiday that celebrates the dead with joyous skeletons and garish colors.

"Thinking back on all the things I loved and all the things I found were peculiar, being away from Mexico, I wanted to have [the game] come from a genuine place," Quijano told us. "We like having fun, so the fun stuff just comes out naturally … That's the stuff we celebrate."

Juan himself is not the deepest protagonist: He doesn't say a word, and becomes a luchador to take on an evil mustachioed skeleton, a sultry sorceress with a quick temper, a bipedal jaguar and a fire demon obsessed with his next shot of tequila. Still, these stereotypes are over-the-top and, according to Quijano, intended for fun rather than any kind of commentary. The overall effect feels jubilant rather than derogatory, and the development team's love for Latin American culture shines through.

"From the beginning, the setting was going to be in Mexico, so I never thought about [the protagonist] in ethnic terms," said Quijano. "I just thought, 'The game is in Mexico; people here are going to be Mexican.'" Nevertheless, Quijano believes that Juan has a number of positive traits that make him an identifiable hero, especially for Latino audiences. See also: 5 Hit Games Made on a Shoestring]

"I thought it was more interesting to have an agave farmer than a guy who, from the beginning, has a [luchador] mask," said Quijano. "His courage, by trying to stand up to [the villain] Calaca at the beginning, is what earned him the right to wear the mask. He's the only guy who showed up in the whole town. That made him special, and to me, that's more relatable."

Juan and "Guacamelee" charm audiences through their humor and colorful representations of Mexican culture, but "The Walking Dead" (based on the comics of the same name, although not directly related to the TV show) from Telltale Games takes a more down-to-earth approach. Protagonist Lee Everett is a black man from Macon, Georgia, and doesn't fit neatly into any common black stereotypes. [See video: Reskinned: Video Games Embrace Non-White Protagonists | Video]

Lee is a history professor at the University of Georgia — or at least he was until he committed a horrific crime. Though a convicted felon, Lee is anything but a hardened criminal. Being both a brilliant scholar and a dangerous hothead makes Lee at least an interesting two-dimensional character; the player's decisions make him into a three-dimensional one.

Player choice is a key component of "The Walking Dead." Lee and a small band of survivors must navigate the state of Georgia, which has been ravaged by the zombie apocalypse, to find safe haven on the coast. Along the way, you'll decide where to go, how to acquire supplies and, ultimately, who lives and dies. Moreover, your actions will determine the kind of person Lee becomes: a compassionate father figure or a ruthless survivor. [See also: 10 Great Games You're Missing]

If Lee were black and no one commented on it, his race would be irrelevant, but Telltale strikes a very subtle balance between leaving it alone and drawing attention to it. Atlanta may be the New South, but old tensions don't disappear overnight.

One survivor, Kenneth, is a down-home Florida boy with a Scandinavian wife. Even though he and Lee can become fast friends, he still wonders whether Lee knows how to pick a lock because he's "urban," and promptly apologizes for the remark. As the game progresses, Lee becomes the primary caretaker for Clementine, a young mixed-race girl. The relationship between the two is all the more powerful because they share a racial connection.

Lee is a contradiction — a natural friend, reluctant leader, smart historian, ill-tempered brute, white-collar worker and born survivor. He is not a great black character — he is a great character who happens to be black. In other words, Lee is a well-written protagonist who appeals to any thoughtful player.

Juan and Lee are two strong steps forward for the game industry, but there's still a long way to go. In addition to straight male minorities, what about stronger female and LGBT characters? Within the next few years, the game store shelf could become a very colorful place.

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FOX News: NASA eyes monster hurricane on Saturn

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NASA eyes monster hurricane on Saturn
Apr 30th 2013, 11:30

  • saturn-hurricane-cassini

    The spinning vortex of Saturn's north polar storm resembles a deep red rose surrounded by green foliage in this false-color image from NASA's Cassini spacecraft. The storm's eye is about 1,250 miles (2,000 kilometers) across with cloud speedsNASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI

  • saturn-north-pole-cassini

    The north pole of Saturn, in the fresh light of spring, is revealed in this color image from NASA's Cassini spacecraft.NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI

Spectacular new images from a NASA spacecraft orbiting Saturn have captured the most detailed views ever of an enormous hurricane churning around the ringed planet's north pole. 

The stunning new images and video of the Saturn hurricane, which were taken by NASA's Cassini probe, show that the storm's eye is 1,250 miles wide — about 20 times bigger than typical hurricane eyes on Earth. And the Saturn maelstrom is more powerful than its Earth counterparts, with winds at its outer edge whipping around at 330 mph.

'We did a double take when we saw this vortex because it looks so much like a hurricane on Earth.'

- Cassini imaging team member Andrew Ingersoll

"We did a double take when we saw this vortex because it looks so much like a hurricane on Earth," Cassini imaging team member Andrew Ingersoll, of Caltech in Pasadena, said in a statement. "But there it is at Saturn, on a much larger scale, and it is somehow getting by on the small amounts of water vapor in Saturn's hydrogen atmosphere." [Amazing Views of Saturn's Mysterious Hurricane (Photos)]

Saturn's hurricane swirls inside a mysterious, six-sided vortex. Unlike hurricanes on Earth, which tend to drift northward as our planet rotates, the Saturn storm and its hexagonal vortex have been camped out at the north pole for a while.

"The polar hurricane has nowhere else to go, and that's likely why it's stuck at the pole," Kunio Sayanagi, a Cassini imaging team associate at Hampton University in Hampton, Va., said in a statement.

While the Saturn hurricane is larger and more powerful than Earth hurricanes, storms on the two planets are alike in some ways. For example, both have central eyes containing very low clouds or no clouds at all, researchers said. Other shared traits are high clouds forming the eye wall, and a counterclockwise spin in the northern hemisphere.

So scientists plan to study how the Saturn storm feeds off atmospheric water vapor, in the hopes of gaining insight into hurricanes here on Earth (which gain their strength from warm ocean water).

Cassini's instruments detected the Saturn storm shortly after the probe arrived in orbit around the ringed planet in 2004. The hurricane was in darkness at the time, however, because it was the middle of the northern Saturn winter.

So Cassini had to wait for the onset of the northern spring in August 2009 to get a good look at the hurricane in visible light. The detailed new views required a shift in the spacecraft's orbit as well, achieved using flybys of Saturn's huge moon Titan, researchers said.

"Such a stunning and mesmerizing view of the hurricane-like storm at the north pole is only possible because Cassini is on a sportier course, with orbits tilted to loop the spacecraft above and below Saturn's equatorial plane," said Scott Edgington, Cassini deputy project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena.

"You cannot see the polar regions very well from an equatorial orbit," Edgington added. "Observing the planet from different vantage points reveals more about the cloud layers that cover the entirety of the planet."

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Monday, April 29, 2013

FOX News: Family crypt of medieval knight discovered?

FOX News
FOXNews.com - Breaking news and video. Latest Current News: U.S., World, Entertainment, Health, Business, Technology, Politics, Sports. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Family crypt of medieval knight discovered?
Apr 29th 2013, 18:30

  • medieval-knight-family-crypt-1.jpg

    The burial crypt contained seven complete and one partial skeleton.Headland Archaeology

  • knight-grave.jpg

    This carved slab, thought to be the headstone of a medieval knight, was found under a parking lot in Edinburgh. Now researchers say they have unearthed what may be the knight's family.Headland Archaeology/ Edinburgh Centre for Carbon Innovation

Archaeologists have unearthed skeletal remains of eight people that may be the relatives of a medieval knight discovered under a parking lot last month in Scotland. The team uncovered one partial skeleton and seven complete skeletons, including one infant and an adult female.

The remains were all buried behind a wall in what may have been an ancient family burial crypt.

'[The site] is turning out to be a real treasure trove of archaeology.'

- Ross Murray, a former student at the University of Edinburgh

"This site just keeps getting more and more interesting, it is turning out to be a real treasure trove of archaeology," Ross Murray, a former student at the University of Edinburgh, said in a statement. "These new finds look likely to be the possible relations of the suspected Medieval knight we found earlier this year. The skull of the skeleton found immediately beneath the location of the knight looks like that of a female and the remains found on the other side of the ornate slab belong to an infant from the same period." [See Images of the Knight's Family Crypt]

Last month, archaeologists on hand at new building construction site unearthed a medieval skeleton under a parking lot in the Old Town of Edinburgh, Scotland. The skeleton was near a slab engraved with a Calvary cross and sword, markers of nobility.

Archaeologists anticipated finding historic remains, because the site had once been a 13th-century Blackfriar's monastery.

"We always knew that the building retrofit might uncover historical artifacts given the site's history but this knight is an extraordinary and exciting find," said Andy Kerr, director of the Edinburgh Center for Carbon Innovation, which is undertaking the construction at the site, told LiveScience at the time.

Scientists still have to analyze the bones and teeth of the skeletons to determine how old they are and how they are all related.

During last month's excavations, archaeologists uncovered some of the ruins of the monastery, which was destroyed in the 16th century during the Protestant Reformation. In the 16th and 17th centuries, the site held two high schools.

And there may be even more skeletons yet to unearth, said the researchers, who plan to continue excavating at the site.

Parking lots have become rich veins for archaeological discoveries in England. A lost medieval church was buried under a parking lot and more recently, researchers unearthed the bones of King Richard III under a parking lot in Leicester, England, presumably buried there after the Battle of Bosworth Field during the War of the Roses. The notorious King's discovery has spurred passionate debate about who the man was and how King Richard's bones should finally be laid to rest.

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FOX News: Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo makes history with 1st rocket-powered flight

FOX News
FOXNews.com - Breaking news and video. Latest Current News: U.S., World, Entertainment, Health, Business, Technology, Politics, Sports. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo makes history with 1st rocket-powered flight
Apr 29th 2013, 16:45

Published April 29, 2013

Associated Press

  • sir richard branson spaceshiptwo.jpg

    Sir Richard Branson in SpaceShipTwo holding a model of LauncherOne.Mark Chivers

  • sir richard branson spaceshiptwo 2.jpg

    Sir Richard Branson in SpaceShipTwo holding a model of LauncherOne.Mark Chivers

MOJAVE, Calif. –  Virgin Galactic's passenger spaceship has made its first powered test flight.

SpaceShipTwo fired its rocket engine early Monday after being released from a jet-powered mothership over California's Mojave Desert.

The rocket firing lasted 16 seconds and the spaceship then descended and landed safely at Mojave Air and Space Port.

The flight did not involve a trip to space. Virgin Galactic says it's ramping up to go beyond the atmosphere later this year and begin passenger flights shortly afterward.

SpaceShipTwo is the commercial version of SpaceShipOne, which in 2004 became the first private manned rocket to reach space.

More than 500 aspiring space tourists have paid $200,000 or plunked down deposits for a chance to experience several minutes of weightlessness.

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