Thursday, April 11, 2013

Perks-Focused Hotel Startup ?Want Me Get Me' Gets A New Search-By-Map Feature

want me get me logoMembers of Want Me Get Me, a startup promising its members a VIP experience at any partner hotel, should have an easier time finding the right hotel starting today. The site connects travelers with luxury and boutique hotels looking to attract new customers and build loyalty. Every booking through Want Me Get Me includes a spot on the hotel's VIP list, free WiFi, and a room upgrade when available. Users can search for other free perks too. And the startup even sends users' Facebook profile photo to the hotel so that they can be greeted by name when they arrive.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/us0SZ8O48N8/

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Tint Gives Businesses An Easy Way To Bring Social Media Feeds To Their Websites, Apps And Facebook Pages

Screen shot 2013-04-10 at 9.02.17 PMLast year, Tim Sae Koo, Nikhil Aitharaju, Eunice Noh and Ryo Chiba launched HypeMarks to give people a less hectic way to consume social media. The startup aggregated tweets, articles, links and more shared by influencers and celebrities on social media accounts and, by grouping those by topic, aimed to give people a snapshot of an industry through the eyes of the people who know it best.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/05E_zSIrbKU/

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Advancing secure communications: A better single-photon emitter for quantum cryptography

Advancing secure communications: A better single-photon emitter for quantum cryptography

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

In a development that could make the advanced form of secure communications known as quantum cryptography more practical, University of Michigan researchers have demonstrated a simpler, more efficient single-photon emitter that can be made using traditional semiconductor processing techniques.

Single-photon emitters release one particle of light, or photon, at a time, as opposed to devices like lasers that release a stream of them. Single-photon emitters are essential for quantum cryptography, which keeps secrets safe by taking advantage of the so-called observer effect: The very act of an eavesdropper listening in jumbles the message. This is because in the quantum realm, observing a system always changes it.

For quantum cryptography to work, it's necessary to encode the message?which could be a bank password or a piece of military intelligence, for example?just one photon at a time. That way, the sender and the recipient will know whether anyone has tampered with the message.

While the U-M researchers didn't make the first single-photon emitter, they say their new device improves upon the current technology and is much easier to make.

"This thing is very, very simple. It is all based on silicon," said Pallab Bhattacharya, the Charles M. Vest Distinguished University Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and the James R. Mellor Professor of Engineering.

Bhattacharya, who leads this project, is a co-author of a paper on the work published in Nature Communications on April 9.

Bhattacharya's emitter is a single nanowire made of gallium nitride with a very small region of indium gallium nitride that behaves as a quantum dot. A quantum dot is a nanostructure that can generate a bit of information. In the binary code of conventional computers, a bit is a 0 or a 1. A quantum bit can be either or both at the same time.

The semiconducting materials the new emitter is made of are commonly used in LEDs and solar cells. The researchers grew the nanowires on a wafer of silicon. Because their technique is silicon-based, the infrastructure to manufacture the emitters on a larger scale already exists. Silicon is the basis of modern electronics.

"This is a big step in that it produces the pathway to realizing a practical electrically injected single-photon emitter," Bhattacharya said.

Key enablers of the new technology are size and compactness.

"By making the diameter of the nanowire very small and by altering the composition over a very small section of it, a quantum dot is realized," Bhattacharya said. "The quantum dot emits single-photons upon electrical excitation."

The U-M emitter is fueled by electricity, rather than light?another aspect that makes it more practical. And each photon it emits possesses the same degree of linear polarization. Polarization refers to the orientation of the electric field of a beam of light. Most other single-photon emitters release light particles with a random polarization.

"So half might have one polarization and the other half might have the other," Bhattacharya said. "So in cryptic message, if you want to code them, you would only be able to use 50 percent of the photons. With our device, you could use almost all of them."

This device operates at cold temperatures, but the researchers are working on one that operates closer to room temperature.

The paper is titled "Electrically-driven polarized single-photon emission from an InGaN quantum dot in a GaN nanowire." The first author is Saniya Deshpande, a graduate student in electrical engineering and computer science. The work is supported by the National Science Foundation. The device was fabricated at the U-M Lurie Nanofabrication Facility.

###

University of Michigan: http://www.umich.edu/

Thanks to University of Michigan for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127675/Advancing_secure_communications__A_better_single_photon_emitter_for_quantum_cryptography

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Man Killed Moving a Rabbit in Wyoming

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/man-killed-moving-a-rabbit-in-wyoming/

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How To Create A Google+ Business Site - Internet Marketing Academy




April 11, 2013


plus signA Google+ site for a business is much like a personal Google+ site. It can be used to blog, to embed content from other websites, or to link to other websites. Your business Google+ site is linked to your business Google+ account. If you do not already have a Google+ account for your business, your first step is to create a Google+ account.

Claim your existing Google+ listing

Many business pages for local businesses were created automatically by Google, based on available information. To find out if your business already has a page, log on to your Google+ account (http://plus.google.com) and search for your business name. If you have a page that you have not claimed, there will be a button under the heading ?Is this your business?? that reads ?Manage this page?. Click the button to claim the business page.

Create a new Google+ page

To create a new page, on the left hand side of the screen, select the Pages icon if available, or if not select the More icon followed by the Pages icon. Then click the ?Create new page? button and follow the prompts. You will need to select the type of page, whether a local business, a business with multiple locations, or a product or brand. Since you can create multiple pages, you can create one for every business location or every product, as well as one for your entire business. Verify the ownership of the page, and assign multiple managers to oversee the page.

Personalise your Google+ page

Add a description and links to your website. Add a profile picture of 250 x 250 pixels, and then change the cover image to either a single image spanning the page or a row of five smaller images. Pages for local businesses should also include an introduction, your business hours, the website name and address, the contact information, recommended links, photos, and videos. See How To Use Google+ Local for more details specific to local business use. The Google+ page allows you to post updates, pictures, and videos. Use these interactive features to list your latest special offers, link to your most recent blog posts, or display your latest videos.

Hang out

Google+ pages are different from other social media pages in that they integrate with Google Hangouts. This allows you to put a video chat room feature on the page. You can use the Hangouts to create specific events such as product briefings or video training seminars which can be recorded and posted on YouTube. You can also use the Hangouts as a customer service platform, or as a bonus feature provided to VIP clients.

Thanks!

?

Sean

?

Sean McPheat

Managing Director

The Internet Marketing Academy

http://www.internetmarketingacademy.com

?

(Image: MorgueFile)


Posted in Google+ | Tagged branding, Google, social networking |

Source: http://www.internetmarketingacademy.com/blog/how-to-create-a-google-plus-business-site/

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Another Big Ol? Booty Coming Between Kanye & Kim Kardashian?

Another Big Ol’ Booty Coming Between Kanye & Kim Kardashian?

Kanye hooking up with Iggy Azalea?Kim Kardashian and Kanye West, who are expecting a baby girl together, have hit a rocky patch after the reality star fears the rapper is hooking up with sexy Australian rapper, Iggy Azalea. Insiders reveal Kim worries her weight gain is a huge turn-off to Kanye and worries he might cheat on her! A source ...

Another Big Ol’ Booty Coming Between Kanye & Kim Kardashian? Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/04/another-big-ol-booty-coming-between-kanye-kim-kardashian/

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Calm in Guam as islanders doubt North Korean missile aim

The US territory's crisis-ready inhabitants are trusting God, Uncle Sam, common sense, and poor aim to keep them safe from a ballistic assault by North Korea.

By Jeffrey Tomas Marchesseault,?Contributor / April 10, 2013

Members of the 374th Airlift Wing of US Air Force work on a C-130 aircraft during the Cope North military exercises at Andersen US Air Force Base in Guam, in February. North Korea is threatening to attack the US territory.

Koji Ueda/AP/File

Enlarge

Doomsday missives aside, the beat goes on in Guam.

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Yes, North Korea is threatening to attack the island. And, yes, this 30-mile stretch of?terra firma?at the south end of the Marianas archipelago may be well within missile range. But the American territory's crisis-ready inhabitants are trusting God, Uncle Sam, common sense, and poor aim to keep them safe from a ballistic assault.

This isn't the first time the repressive, isolated regime has flaunted the notion that Guam is within striking distance. Nor is it probably the last time Guamanians will hear that North Korea lacks the technology to make a direct hit. Islanders don't treat the current round of vitriol lightly, but aren't paralyzed by it either.

?When I became a reporter, the North Korean threat was one that I was deeply interested in,? says Clynt Ridgell, a local TV news anchor. ?Over the years, however, I've begun to see that these threats are usually empty. Every couple of years it seems that the DPRK [the Democratic Republic of Korea] will ramp up the rhetoric ... usually because they want some sort of aid or they just want the US and the world to take notice,? Mr. Ridgell says, referring to the official name of North Korea. ?Then things will calm down, everything goes back to normal and we all seem to forget that North Korea even exists.?

You might say Guam has lived through worse.

On Dec. 8, 1941, Japan bombed US Guam. It happened within hours of the Imperial attack on Pearl Harbor that drew the United States into World War II, and soon drove the nation to retake Guam by force. By 1941, the island had already been a US possession for two generations as a spoil of the Spanish-American War, after which Spain had ceded the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Guam to America. Spain conquered Guam during the Age of Exploration and ruled it from the Renaissance until 1899. Since then, the island has often been described as a political pawn in a world ruled by superpowers and has weathered tropical storms, floods, and earthquakes along the way.

On the 61st anniversary of the Japanese invasion of Guam, Super Typhoon Pongsona ripped through the island, knocking out utilities and causing nearly a billion dollars in damage. An 8.1 magnitude earthquake rocked the territory in 1993, compromising the island's typhoon-ready concrete superstructure and forcing the demolition of a destabilized hotel months later. More recently, the tsunami that devastated northern Japan in March 2011 kept Guam on red alert for several hours.

Guam's hard-won battle scars may be a bit too calloused to feel the sting of amped up rhetoric streaming out of the Democratic People's Republic over the past two weeks. So far, the beat of war drums hasn't been frightening enough to keep locals from living their everyday lives. Over the past weekend, residents enjoyed sunny days paddle-boarding on the beach, barbecuing, and catching up on errands.

Visitors, too, are still keeping their itineraries. The island hosted the Guam International Marathon on Sunday, welcoming many residents and several Asian distance runners, including top finishers from South Korea and Japan. And Wednesday morning local media outlets were reporting Guam's highest visitor arrivals in 50 years, bucking the perception of an island in the crosshairs.

Tourism is one of Guam's economic twin engines. The other is the federal government, which maintains Naval Base Guam in the south and Andersen Air Force Base in the north. Andersen in particular has featured prominently on the DPRK's recent purported kill list.

Remote as the chance of attack may be, the faithful remain vigilant. Archbishop Anthony Apuron welcomed congregants to the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral Basilica in the capital city of Hag?t?a in a mass for world peace on Sunday morning and asked parishes across the island to pray along.

"I was a little surprised ... when the priest started off his Homily talking about the situation in Korea,? says John Ryan, a local business consultant who attended church service in Yigo, near Andersen. ?The priest pointed [out] how strong faith can overcome fear. ?I think many people in this predominantly Catholic island relate well to that perspective as they think about what is happening on the Korean peninsula,? he says.

"While I have heard people talk about the damage and loss of life that a missile strike could cause to our small island, I do not know anyone who has changed their daily routine,? Mr. Ryan said after an active weekend with friends. ?Of course we are paying close attention to what is happening in Korea, but I think people here are just as concerned for the safety and well being of the people of South Korea. If I had to guess, I'd say for most Guamanians our thoughts and prayers are with the people of Korea first, if for no other reason than our faith and trust in the US and its allies to diffuse the crisis, or to respond appropriately if diplomacy fails."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/kqtVRR9KgNI/Calm-in-Guam-as-islanders-doubt-North-Korean-missile-aim

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