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Post-Sandy Second Summer – Jersey Shore Hopes High

June 24, 2014 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

It’s been a year and a half to Super storm Sandy and the affected areas are still rebuilding. On the Jersey Shore, which is also reconstructing, the Memorial Day weekend thrills the peak tourism season.

Business owners rushed to reopen in last summers and they succeeded. But homeowners wriggled to repair and rent their properties.

In July, Long Beach Township Mayor Joe Mancini said, “He thought the weekly rental market in his area of the shore was down about 30 percent. Many tourists were confused about the level of damage at each area along the shore. You know, every time they showed that roller coaster in the water off of Seaside, they thought that was the entire Jersey coast, but it’s not.”

News was not that bad, the majority of countries affected by the Sandy, saw modest gains in the amount tourists spent last year and the main credit goes to the recovery effects, said by the professor of hospitality and tourism management at Richard Stockton College in Atlantic County, Mr. Brian Tyrrell.

Tyrrell said, “We actually saw some increase last year, particularly early in the year. He further continued, “We’re fully expecting that it’s going to be a real banner year this year for the Jersey Shore, I think that there’s a lot of communities are really ready and well prepared to see visitors coming back.”

Realtor Matt Schlosser local entrepreneur says, “Things are looking up after Sandy cut his business in half last summer, mainly because so many people hadn’t finished fixing their houses yet. I don’t think we’ll be on track for 2012 numbers. The demand is there, but if we have 20 percent less homes, we can’t do those types of numbers”.

The real estate agent with Prudential Zack Shore Properties, Ms. Elaine Atlee says, “Rentals on Long Beach Island last summer started slow, but eventually picked up.” So she is very much expectant about this season.

Atlee says, “Overall, driving around, it really doesn’t look like there was a storm anymore. Everything looks good, in order.” She continued, “There’s a handful that will be ready for next summer, so the inventory will increase again next year.”

The houses are now newer, bigger and more expensive, which helps the house owners to make up some of the lost revenue and every week, more homes are available to rent as people finish repair work.

Some people are renting out their homes for the first time, because of the storm including Atlee. When construction on her new house is done, renters will move in before she does. She’s already fully booked for August.

Filed Under: Business, Headlines

A Painful Virus Rapidly Hitting Caribbean

June 16, 2014 By Nancy Young Leave a Comment

People are suffering intense headaches, a burning fever and pain in their joints they can hardly walk or use their hands. It’s like having a terrible flu combined with a sudden case of arthritis and the decease is still not known. This is not a scene of Bollywood movie, this is actually happening in Caribbean.

“You feel it in your bones, your fingers and your hands. It’s like everything is coming apart,” a patient describes his situation while sitting for her turn in San Cristobal hospital.

painfulandra

Hospitals, medical centers and clinics throughout the Caribbean are seeing thousands of people with the same symptoms, victims of a virus with a long and unfamiliar name that has been spread rapidly by mosquitoes across the islands after the first locally transmitted case was confirmed in December.

The cause is a virus called chikungunya, derived from an African word that loosely translates as “contorted with pain.” People encountering it in the Caribbean for the first time say the description is fitting. While the virus is rarely fatal it is extremely debilitating.

Outbreaks of the virus have long made people miserable in Africa and Asia. But for Caribbean it is new, with the first locally transmitted case documented in December in French St. Martin, likely brought in by an infected air traveler.

Health officials are now working feverishly to educate the public about the illness, knock down the mosquito population, and deal with an onslaught of cases. There have been no confirmed cases of local transmission but experts say the high number of travelers to the county means that could change earlier.

An estimated 60% to 90% of those infected show symptoms, compared to around 20% for dengue, which is common in the county. There is no vaccine and the only cure is treatment for the pain and fluid loss.

According to Nasci, chief of a CDC branch that tracks insect-borne diseases, “With the increase in travelers the likelihood that something like this would happen goes up and eventually it did. We ended up with somebody at the right time and the right place infecting mosquitoes. What we’re seeing now is an increase in the number of infected travelers coming from the Caribbean, which is expected because there’s a lot of U.S. travel, a lot of vacation travel, a lot of work travel. The evidence suggests that once you get it and recover, once your immune system clears the virus you are immune for life”.

We cannot ban the outsiders to visit the Caribbean. Jacqueline Medina, a specialist at the Instituto Technologico University in the Dominican Republic stated that, “It’s building up like a snowball because of the constant movement of people”

Filed Under: Headlines, Health

Google Maps Adds Elevation Feature For Bike Routes

June 16, 2014 By Nancy Young Leave a Comment

Now the navigating world for the bikers and you is easier, being a biker you can explore the world around you. Just garb your phone opens up the Google Maps web app, and find all you need to search, navigate and explore.

All this possible because of a feature Google just added to the maps web app. Google however, made no official announcement but the news is confirm that a new addition for the bike route is added to the desktop version of Google map.
This feature includes the bike route for 14 countries that includes Austria, Australia, Finland, Great Britain, Netherlands, Norway, New Zealand Belgium, Canada, Switzerland, Germany, Denmark, Sweden and the United States.
The map shows you the entire path including hills, mountain rivers etc. Other than the graphical representation of hills you will have to hike, the new card also shows you the total number of feet you will have to hike on your route and those blissful miles you get to just kick back.
So now don’t be surprised if you can ultimately chart cooler passage when you’re already on the road.

Filed Under: Headlines

BioCryst Pharma’s Hereditary Angioedema Disorder Drug Succeeds in Trail

May 27, 2014 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

BioCryst Pharmaceuticals Inc’s oral drug found effective in preventing from hereditary angioedema (HAE). HAE is a disease in which patient suffers from sudden attacks of swelling of the skin or mucous membranes, which can be disfiguring, painful and even fatal.

If it approves, it would be the first oral medicine of its kind. While other medicine like Shire Plc’s Firazyr, Dyax Corp’s Kalbitor and CSL Behring’s Berinert are injected to manage attacks after they occur, BioCryst’s oral preventive would directly compete with Shire’s injectable Cinryze.

BioCryst said in a statement on Tuesday that, “Patients given the drug, BCX4161, in a mid-stage trial had an average rate of 0.82 attacks per week, compared with 1.27 for those given a placebo.”

BioCryst’s CMO William Sheridan said that, “We don’t intend to study the drug head to head against Cinryze. We’d like to make Cinryze obsolete because it’s an IV therapy”.

According to analysts because of the strong patient preference for an oral therapy, it would be hard to see how there wouldn’t be significant competitive advantage for BioCryst’s drug.

HAE

BioCryst’s study verified the safety and effectiveness of a 400 mg dose of the drug managed three times a day for 28 days in patients with high HAE. Patients given the drug have experienced attack-less 22days, compared with 19 days for those given the placebo.

BioCryst plans to conduct a 12-week trial for the drug in the second half of this year on more population of HAE.

H.C. Wainwright & Co analyst Andrew Fein expected the drug to be launched in the United States in 2017 and estimated peak U.S. sales of $1.2 billion by 2031.

Filed Under: Headlines, Health

Dead Whale stinks up Memorial Day at Califronia Beach [video]

May 26, 2014 By Nancy Young Leave a Comment

About a week ago a reported 45-ton Fin Whale washes up onto a California beach near a waste water plant. The dead Fin Whale was about 57 feet long and weighs about 35-45 tons. The waste removal crew towed the 57 foot behemoth out to sea until the line hoisting the whale snapped 14 miles off the coast. The Waste Removal crew didn’t expect to see the same whale wash up again to a neighborhood beach stinking up this Memorial Day evening.

ABC_dead_whale1_ml_140526_16x9_608

They think that it is indeed the same whale as last weeks mishap but why do whales even wash up onto land. Soon they would have to do something with the whale because when an animal dies their body fills up with nitrogen, carbon and maybe methane. After a certain point the pressure has to be released. Either via some exit hole or the passing of gas. But when an animal of this magnitude dies the gas is on a higher scale and with gravity keeping the mouth closed the gas can not be properly released. So the whale usually ends up exploding.

Usually dead whales wash up when they die and their carcass somehow gets caught in an ocean current similar to what had happened to this particular whale. Other times the whale is caught in a storm and the storm surges will wash it on to land. They are usually rescued by concerned citizens who show up bucket of water to keep the marine mammal moist and then the fire department comes and hoists the whale back to sea.

Filed Under: Headlines, Tech & Science

Facebook’s newly introduced Privacy Setting Changes you may Like

May 26, 2014 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

Facebook has recently changed its privacy settings to offer better and tighter security for its traditional features. With the new privacy settings the world’s most popular social networking site has made its way to a whole new level. Here’s everything that Facebook changed.

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Privacy warning pop-up

Whenever you are about to post anything to Facebook it pops a ‘privacy disclosure’, which the company announced back in April. This new pop-up is aimed at reminding the user that he is making a public post. This pop-up now includes privacy checkup tool that lets long-time users review their settings.

Login anonymously

One of the most needed features that Facebook recently announced is ‘Anonymous login’. Most apps use your Facebook account to login into the app and eventually post something onto your timeline, which is very annoying. Facebook announced anonymous login feature that let’s you login into any app without sharing any personal information.

Offering optimum privacy to new users

New users don’t have any idea about the post’s privacy settings feature. Whenever a new user posts something his post is likely to be published as public post. Thus, invading their privacy for the first time.

Overcoming this Facebook has added a very neat feature that marks ‘share only with friends’ as the default privacy setting for the new user. Thus offering them more security.

Facebook can’t hear you

Facebook’s mobile app can now listen what’s happening around you and determine what you are doing. This is functional only if you have turned it on. Facebook claims this feature as a way to discover music, TV shows and movies, and share it without actually typing it. However, with this feature into action the privacy is concerned.

A Facebook spokesperson recently told International Business Times that the app doesn’t store the actual sound. That means the data will be collected and discarded and Facebook will only have records of what you like to do.

Filed Under: Headlines, Tech & Science

Samsung Galaxy S5 Active Releasing Soon: Preview Appeared On Twitter

May 24, 2014 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

Yet again an unscheduled appearance of the Samsung Galaxy S5 Active leaked on Twitter. This time an image of the AT&T version of the rugged smart phone made the twitter rounds, @evleaks courtesy.

samsung galaxy s5 active
There’s nothing new or surprising in the new Samsung Galaxy S5 Active. It is now expected to be released in the near future. The rumored specification includes a Qualcomm Snapdragin 801 SoC, 2GB RAM and with a camera of 16MP

Filed Under: Headlines, Tech & Science

Terry Crews Applauding Him – “The View” MAY 24, 2014 samsung-galaxy-s5 HTC One M8 vs Samsung Galaxy S5 : Comparison MAY 24, 2014 sandy Post-Sandy Second Summer – Jersey Shore Hopes High MAY 24, 2014 brain2 Brain Changes in Diabetes 1 Cause Memory Issues in Your Young One MAY 24, 2014 summer Warmer the Season Higher the Diseases – Be Aware MAY 24, 2014 qiagen Qiagen Earns U.S. Approval MAY 24, 2014 thailand In Thailand Military Carries out Coup LOAD MORE Dr.Ben Made Terry Crews Applauding Him – “The View”

May 24, 2014 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

Appearing on “The View” Tuesday, Dr. Ben Carson explained why he believes the current welfare system in the United States is not doing the poor any favors.

Dr. Ben Carson believes that the current welfare system in the United States is not doing the poor any favors and he is supports his argument at various platforms. On Tuesday, he appears on “The View” and explained the reasons of his believe.

Dr. Ben Carson: “When you rob someone of their incentive to go out there and improve themselves, you are not doing them any favors”

“When you take somebody and pat them on the head and say, ‘There there, you poor little thing… Let me give you housing subsidies, let me give you free health care because you can’t do that.’”

“What would be much more empowering is to use our intellect and our resources to give those people a way up and out,” he concluded.

His perceptive response actually moved actor Terry Crews to join the audience in giving a round of applause.

Crews responded: “I agree,” and clapping along with the audience.

terry

Co-host Whoopi Goldberg exposed that once she was a “welfare mother” and argued that very few people actually want to be on welfare and would rather work.

Whoopi Goldberg: “I don’t feel bad about being a welfare mother because I contribute as an American. Because the welfare system is so bizarre, you can’t work, they don’t allow you to work because they take the money from you. So if we fix the system so that it doesn’t hurt the people, maybe they’ll get better.”

Filed Under: Headlines, United States

Post-Sandy Second Summer – Jersey Shore Hopes High

May 24, 2014 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

It’s been a year and a half to Super storm Sandy and the affected areas are still rebuilding. On the Jersey Shore, which is also reconstructing, the Memorial Day weekend thrills the peak tourism season.

Business owners rushed to reopen in last summers and they succeeded. But homeowners wriggled to repair and rent their properties.

In July, Long Beach Township Mayor Joe Mancini said, “He thought the weekly rental market in his area of the shore was down about 30 percent. Many tourists were confused about the level of damage at each area along the shore. You know, every time they showed that roller coaster in the water off of Seaside, they thought that was the entire Jersey coast, but it’s not.”

News was not that bad, the majority of countries affected by the Sandy, saw modest gains in the amount tourists spent last year and the main credit goes to the recovery effects, said by the professor of hospitality and tourism management at Richard Stockton College in Atlantic County, Mr. Brian Tyrrell.

Tyrrell said, “We actually saw some increase last year, particularly early in the year. He further continued, “We’re fully expecting that it’s going to be a real banner year this year for the Jersey Shore, I think that there’s a lot of communities are really ready and well prepared to see visitors coming back.”

Realtor Matt Schlosser local entrepreneur says, “Things are looking up after Sandy cut his business in half last summer, mainly because so many people hadn’t finished fixing their houses yet. I don’t think we’ll be on track for 2012 numbers. The demand is there, but if we have 20 percent less homes, we can’t do those types of numbers”.

The real estate agent with Prudential Zack Shore Properties, Ms. Elaine Atlee says, “Rentals on Long Beach Island last summer started slow, but eventually picked up.” So she is very much expectant about this season.

Atlee says, “Overall, driving around, it really doesn’t look like there was a storm anymore. Everything looks good, in order.” She continued, “There’s a handful that will be ready for next summer, so the inventory will increase again next year.”

The houses are now newer, bigger and more expensive, which helps the house owners to make up some of the lost revenue and every week, more homes are available to rent as people finish repair work.

Some people are renting out their homes for the first time, because of the storm including Atlee. When construction on her new house is done, renters will move in before she does. She’s already fully booked for August.

Filed Under: Business, Headlines

In Thailand Military Carries out Coup

May 24, 2014 By Cristopher Hall Leave a Comment

On Thursday, after long political gridlock, protests and deadly fierceness, Thailand’s military scrapped the constitution and seized power in a coup. In eight years, this was the second coup of Thailand and since 1932 it’s the 12th.

Majority Thailand has been calm, with little if any military presence seen on the streets of the capital. Troops discrete demonstrators on Friday evening, detaining at least two people.

On Saturday, the demonstrators vowed to march to a nearby army base, but soldiers with riot shields prevented them. They later began walking to Victory Monument, a major city landmark about 9 kilometers away. Rows of soldiers and police were lined up on a road near the monument to stop the protesters.

Life in Bangkok was normal despite of a curfew that last for 7hours. TV and inflammatory postings on Social media were also restricted.

Several nations have condemned the coup. The United States, Thailand’s key ally, suspended $3.5 million in military aid on Friday, and State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said Washington was reviewing a further $7 million in direct U.S. assistance. British Foreign Secretary William Hague said “Country looked to Thai authorities to set out a quick clear timetable for elections to help re-establish the democratic framework of governance”.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay advised Thailand to “ensure respect for human rights and a prompt restoration of the rule of law in the country.”

Street protests started in November against then-Prime Minister Yingluck, and she dissolved the lower house of Parliament in a failed bid to ease the crisis. A court ousted her for nepotism this month but left the ruling party in place. Anti-government protesters wanted to install an unelected prime minister to make unspecified reforms they said would root out corruption and remove the Shinawatra family’s extensive influence from politics.

In first declaring martial law on Tuesday, the army said it needed to restore order. Last week, grenades fired at an anti-government protest site in Bangkok left three people dead and more than 20 injured. At least 28 people have died in protest-related violence since November.

Prayuth assumed the role of mediator by summoning key political rivals for their first face-to-face talks since the political turmoil escalated six months ago. Meetings on Wednesday and Thursday among bitter enemies failed to break the deadlock before Prayuth announced the coup.

Filed Under: Headlines

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