শুক্রবার, ২৫ অক্টোবর, ২০১৩

Bad guy blues: Myanmar villains struggle to get by


YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — In a dimly lit alley on a cramped side street of a teeming Southeast Asian city, the bad guys cluster together, plotting their next move.

There is A Yaing Min, the "King of Cruelty," who twirls his mustache as he talks and cultivates a pointy beard with a pointed message: Mess with me, and I will end you. There is Myint Kyi, who has been dispatching enemies — typically with spears — since 1958. There is Phone Naing, muscular and sinewy in tight military pants, who talks only in a low snarl.

Granted, these are not actual evildoers. They are longtime cinematic villains who gather each morning in a tightly packed enclave of video production houses, movie-poster studios and worse-for-wear apartment buildings that serves as the tattered ground zero of the Burmese movie industry. In the heart of Yangon's Little Hollywood, they sit on tiny plastic chairs, glowering, spitting carmine betel-nut saliva onto the ground. They wait, and wait, and wait some more, stalking a quarry that is becoming ever more elusive: a day's work.

For decades, as Myanmar endured dictatorship and international isolation, these actors were the twisted faces of wrongdoing that the country's struggling film industry showed the Burmese people in movies that rarely made it out of the country — and even more rarely dealt with anything that really mattered. Now this nation is opening to a wider world brimming with pop-culture choices, big-budget special effects and international bad guys who jet from Stockholm to Shanghai to wreak destruction on shiny, globalized levels.

The struggle is a microcosm of change in the country once known as Burma, whose military dictatorship handed power to a civilian government in 2011 after elections the previous year. What happens when the world opens up to you? For Myanmar's movie industry, one of the answers was this: It got harder to earn a living being evil.

"The market is in trouble," says A Yaing Min, a former boxer who turned to on-screen villainy in the early 1980s and became a fixture in such Burmese staples as "The Bad Guy with a Pure Heart."

"In other countries," he says, "villains don't have to walk the streets to get their jobs."

Each morning, the bad guys of Yangon and their brethren — all members of Ko Lu Chaw, or "Handsome Guy Group," effectively a trade union for cinematic villains — arrive at dawn. They take up position at outdoor breakfast stalls along 35th and 36th streets, order coffee or tea, and hope for work.

It comes more rarely every day. When it does, it is hardly lucrative — a day or two on bottom-budget videos, a few dollars here and there, perhaps not even practicing the villainy that has been their bread and butter for so long.

Several things made this happen. The government privatized the state-controlled film industry in 2010. Decaying theaters, unable to afford new digital systems to project DVDs, began to close; today, many sit crumbling on street corners. Films were supplanted by a sausage-grinder glut of cheap home videos made in mere days, even hours.

The masses began turning away from overwrought Burmese action movies, electing — in, finally, times of tentative hope — to favor romance, comedy and supernatural horror. And, of course, the arrival of movies from India, South Korea and Thailand, plus visually arresting Hollywood epics like "The Amazing Spider-Man" and "Wolverine," pointed up the lack of production values in the homegrown, B-movie culture.

"I worry very much these days. I used to work nonstop. But I haven't had regular work in six months," says Phone Naing, 45, a movie villain for the last quarter century. His compatriots nodded vigorously. Things have gotten so bad, he complained, that directors will press their film technicians into service to play bad guys.

"They'll be working on a set and someone will say, 'Hey, can you be a villain?'" Phone Naing says. "You use cheap villains, you get what you pay for."

Membership in the villains' union helps, a bit. Some of the group's 100 members contribute money to support others. And this year, a coalition of stars got together to donate 100 bags of rice each month to the society. A Yaing Min points proudly to a recent newspaper tabloid that shows him receiving rice from actress Wut Hmone Shwe Yi, Myanmar's latest It girl.

Myanmar's movie industry is organized in a unique way. Actors and actresses congregate — form unions, develop health-care plans, lobby for benefits — based on the roles they play on screen. There is an aging mothers' guild, a spinsters' guild, a comedians' guild. It is typecasting, pulled into the real world.

The villains' union was founded in 1990 to offer such assistance. Myint Kyi, 73, one of its founding members, talks not only of aging but of the injuries that many villains suffered during filming of acrobatic, athletic scenes that usually were done without any stuntmen.

"There was no one to help us when we die, nobody to pay for our funerals or help with our hospital bills when we were injured," says the soft-spoken Myint Kyi, known for the 2000 movie "Blood: A Love Story" and probably one of the few villains seen in public wearing a fanny pack.

He learned his craft from a 1950s screen villain known as "Spear Prince." It was not exactly a safe apprenticeship. "I would get cut all the time," he says. Once his mouth was cut open and he had to have surgery to fix it — on his own dime.

These days, in the hierarchy of movie roles, comedians seem to fare better. Perhaps because Myanmar is hungry for laughter, not villainy, most movies made inside the country these days are comedies. Thus, those who make people smile are higher on the food chain. This is of no small import to the villains, befuddled by a world where the jokester outpaces the scoundrel.

Just up the street, clustered around a plastic table drinking tea, the comedians see it differently. Kyaw Htoo, one of Myanmar's best-known, says the video industry's rise glutted the market for everyone, not just villains. And like so much media today, an easy overabundance means cheaper production values. He talks of Indian movies with multiple generations in the same movie. But in Myanmar, "they let Father die, they let Mother die. It's cheaper to have a boy without parents."

"We face the same obstacles," Kyaw Htoo says. "There's just not enough money."

The numbers seem bleak. Last year, just 17 feature films were produced, down from more than 60 five years ago, according to the Myanmar Motion Picture Organization. By contrast, more than 1,000 videos were made — and that official figure probably excludes hundreds of others, according to U Aye Kyu, a screenwriter and the organization's vice president.

"When we were young, it took many months to shoot a film. Casting was careful, and people were committed," says Aye Kyu. "I'm worried. If they just show foreign films, that's bad news for Myanmar movies."

One contributing factor: whether a coherent international strategy for Burmese movies eventually emerges. Few Burmese films have gone beyond the country's borders, says Tom Vick, author of "Asian Cinema: A Field Guide," and those that have are more on the serious side — hardly the crime-and-potboiler fare that these villains are accustomed to.

"They've been thinking about the local audience and what a local audience wants to see. The question is, would any of these films translate well or will they only appeal to people there and just be a curiosity in other places?" says Vick, the curator of film at the Smithsonian Institution's Freer/Sackler Gallery.

"They have to decide how to focus their film industry," Vick says. "Once countries open up, suddenly Hollywood dominates the movie screen. ... If 'Skyfall' is taking over, what hope does a local filmmaker have?"

That's precisely the worry that consumes our Central Casting of villainy down on 35th Street. Accustomed for so long to being despised and loving it, they never imagined they'd wind up at the margins of the Burmese show-business caste system, lost in a confusing landscape after being so delightfully nefarious to so many for so long.

"I want to see our industry be alongside the international movie industry," says A Yaing Min, the bearded King of Cruelty. "But you have to think of the right people for the right characters, or we villains are done for."

___

Follow Ted Anthony on Twitter at http://twitter.com/anthonyted

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bad-guy-blues-myanmar-villains-struggle-062120118.html
Category: stenographer   American Horror Story   Steam Controller   Clemson University   paulina gretzky  

A cost-effective way toward personalized cancer drugs

A cost-effective way toward personalized cancer drugs


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25-Oct-2013



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Contact: Axel Storz
axel.storz@ipa.fraunhofer.de
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This news release is available in German.


Before a cancer patient embarks on a course of treatment, tests can be carried out to establish whether or not the chosen cytostatic agent combination is likely to be effective. But the time-consuming and expensive nature of traditional testing methods is prohibiting their widespread use. Collaborating with DITABIS Digital Biomedical Imaging Systems AG and scientists from Universitts-Frauenklinik Tbingen, Fraunhofer researchers have developed a cost-effective, automated system that allows doctors to determine which medications will prove most benefit for each patient. The "DiagnoSYS" system will be on show at BIOTECHNICA 2013 (Booth E09 in Hall 9), which will take place from October 8-10 in Hannover, Germany.


In treating many types of cancer, doctors often use combi-nation of chemotherapy with other treatments. The cytostatic agents used are designed to target faster growing cancer cells. But there is little consistency in how different patients respond to the various treatments: even when dealing with the same type of tumor, there are vast differences in tumor cell reaction to a given treatment. What greatly helps one person may have little effect on another. Thanks to in vitro chemosensitivity testing, it is possible to find the most effective drug for each patient before commencing treatment. The catch is that current methods of testing are extremely expensive and are not covered by standard health insurance plans, meaning that this personalized approach to treating tumors is rarely put into practice.


"Up till now, these tests have mainly been carried out manually," explains biologist Caroline Siegert from the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation IPA. Medical laboratory scientists begin by mechanically disrupting a tumor sample and then use enzymes to generate a single cell suspension. They then culture the cell mixture for seven days in the presence of various different cytostatic agents, allowing them to see which drug proves most effective. "Performing the different stages manually makes this way of testing not only very expensive but also more prone to error," says Siegert, citing the drawbacks of the method used to date. "Manual cell isolation methods provide a comparatively low sample yield. Moreover, in addition to tumor cells, the samples used for testing tend to contain a variety of other cell types, any of which is capable of affecting the outcome of the test."


Scientists from Fraunhofer IPA's Project Group for Automation in Medical Engineering and Bioengineering PAMB decided to tackle this issue. Together with colleagues from Universitts-Frauenklinik Tbingen and DITABIS Digital Biomedical Imaging Systems AG, they have developed an automated test system which they have dubbed DiagnoSYS. The full title behind the name is Innovative Diagnostic System for Automated Personalized Chemosensitivity Assays.


The system optimizes chemosensitivity tests used to date: the process starts with the automated, mechanical disruption and enzymatic preparation of the tissue sample. The scientists then use magnetic bead activated cell sorting to enrich the yield of tumor cells. This involves equipping antibodies with magnetic particles. These "magnetic" antibodies recognize and bind onto specific structures on the surface of tumor cells, allowing targeted separation of the tumor cells from the rest of the sample. The tumor cells are then cultured together with a variety of cytostatic agents.


The scientists use an ATP luminescence assay in order to evaluate which drugs succeed in killing off cancer cells and which fail. In living cells, ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is a universal energy source. The scientists treat the sample with a luminescent dye, allowing them to use the assay to determine how much ATP is present. The lower the concentration of ATP a sample shows, the more effective the drug.


The process is entirely automated and is carried out under sterile conditions. This increases both the quality and the stability of the assay compared to tests conducted manually. Christian Reis, head of the bioprocess engineering group at Fraunhofer PAMB, outlines the advantages of the process: "In addition to optimizing and standardizing tumor analysis, automation mainly serves to make it cost effective. It will now be possible to deliver the most effective drugs possible, tailored to each individual cancer patient." And by helping to eliminate ineffectual courses of chemotherapy, the new method can even help drive down healthcare costs.


The system's modular structure, meaning it can be easily adapted to fit changing require-ments, is yet another advantage. Visit the joint Fraunhofer booth (E09) in Hall 9 at BIOTECHNICA 2013 to discover just how DiagnoSYS works.



###


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A cost-effective way toward personalized cancer drugs


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

25-Oct-2013



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Contact: Axel Storz
axel.storz@ipa.fraunhofer.de
49-711-970-3660
Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft





This news release is available in German.


Before a cancer patient embarks on a course of treatment, tests can be carried out to establish whether or not the chosen cytostatic agent combination is likely to be effective. But the time-consuming and expensive nature of traditional testing methods is prohibiting their widespread use. Collaborating with DITABIS Digital Biomedical Imaging Systems AG and scientists from Universitts-Frauenklinik Tbingen, Fraunhofer researchers have developed a cost-effective, automated system that allows doctors to determine which medications will prove most benefit for each patient. The "DiagnoSYS" system will be on show at BIOTECHNICA 2013 (Booth E09 in Hall 9), which will take place from October 8-10 in Hannover, Germany.


In treating many types of cancer, doctors often use combi-nation of chemotherapy with other treatments. The cytostatic agents used are designed to target faster growing cancer cells. But there is little consistency in how different patients respond to the various treatments: even when dealing with the same type of tumor, there are vast differences in tumor cell reaction to a given treatment. What greatly helps one person may have little effect on another. Thanks to in vitro chemosensitivity testing, it is possible to find the most effective drug for each patient before commencing treatment. The catch is that current methods of testing are extremely expensive and are not covered by standard health insurance plans, meaning that this personalized approach to treating tumors is rarely put into practice.


"Up till now, these tests have mainly been carried out manually," explains biologist Caroline Siegert from the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation IPA. Medical laboratory scientists begin by mechanically disrupting a tumor sample and then use enzymes to generate a single cell suspension. They then culture the cell mixture for seven days in the presence of various different cytostatic agents, allowing them to see which drug proves most effective. "Performing the different stages manually makes this way of testing not only very expensive but also more prone to error," says Siegert, citing the drawbacks of the method used to date. "Manual cell isolation methods provide a comparatively low sample yield. Moreover, in addition to tumor cells, the samples used for testing tend to contain a variety of other cell types, any of which is capable of affecting the outcome of the test."


Scientists from Fraunhofer IPA's Project Group for Automation in Medical Engineering and Bioengineering PAMB decided to tackle this issue. Together with colleagues from Universitts-Frauenklinik Tbingen and DITABIS Digital Biomedical Imaging Systems AG, they have developed an automated test system which they have dubbed DiagnoSYS. The full title behind the name is Innovative Diagnostic System for Automated Personalized Chemosensitivity Assays.


The system optimizes chemosensitivity tests used to date: the process starts with the automated, mechanical disruption and enzymatic preparation of the tissue sample. The scientists then use magnetic bead activated cell sorting to enrich the yield of tumor cells. This involves equipping antibodies with magnetic particles. These "magnetic" antibodies recognize and bind onto specific structures on the surface of tumor cells, allowing targeted separation of the tumor cells from the rest of the sample. The tumor cells are then cultured together with a variety of cytostatic agents.


The scientists use an ATP luminescence assay in order to evaluate which drugs succeed in killing off cancer cells and which fail. In living cells, ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is a universal energy source. The scientists treat the sample with a luminescent dye, allowing them to use the assay to determine how much ATP is present. The lower the concentration of ATP a sample shows, the more effective the drug.


The process is entirely automated and is carried out under sterile conditions. This increases both the quality and the stability of the assay compared to tests conducted manually. Christian Reis, head of the bioprocess engineering group at Fraunhofer PAMB, outlines the advantages of the process: "In addition to optimizing and standardizing tumor analysis, automation mainly serves to make it cost effective. It will now be possible to deliver the most effective drugs possible, tailored to each individual cancer patient." And by helping to eliminate ineffectual courses of chemotherapy, the new method can even help drive down healthcare costs.


The system's modular structure, meaning it can be easily adapted to fit changing require-ments, is yet another advantage. Visit the joint Fraunhofer booth (E09) in Hall 9 at BIOTECHNICA 2013 to discover just how DiagnoSYS works.



###


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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/f-acw102513.php
Category: kris jenner   affordable care act   justin timberlake   Christopher Lane   Hunter Hayes  

Pan-African Ecobank opens first branch in Ethiopia


LAGOS (Reuters) - Pan-African banking group Ecobank Transnational has opened its first branch in Ethiopia, establishing a foothold in the fast-growing East African economy and extending its African network to 35 countries.


Economic growth in Africa's second most populous country is running at more than 9 percent and the government could open up the state-dominated banking sector to new entrants before too long.


Ecobank CEO Thierry Tanoh said that the new branch will give the lender a head start in marketing its pan-African services to overseas businesses and other banks in the region before possible banking deregulation.


"Ethiopia has emerged as one of Africa's most exciting new markets and is forecast to be the world's third-fastest-growing economy between 2011 and 2015, behind only China and India," Tanoh said, adding that Ecobank aims to profit from increasing trade across different African nations as the continent steps up its development and infrastructure.


Tanoh said that such trade had grown to 12 percent of total trade on the continent last year, from less than 10 percent five years ago.


Shares in the bank slipped 1.36 percent to 13.85 naira on Friday, but the stock has gained 24 percent since the start of the year.


Ecobank, which has been expanding rapidly across Africa in recent years, said it obtained the licence for a representative office in July and that the new operations will start with an initial staff of three people.


Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation with 160 million people to Ethiopia's 80 million, contributes more than 40 percent of Ecobank's group revenue.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pan-african-ecobank-opens-first-branch-ethiopia-142550311--sector.html
Category: parenthood   iPhone 5S   michael jackson   Zayn Malik   Lisa Robin Kelly  

Apple's Oct. 22 event: Join us Tuesday (live blog)

Apple's holding an event tomorrow in San Francisco. New iPads, Macs, and software are expected. Join CNET for live coverage.


The Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Theater in San Francisco, where Apple's event will take place.

The Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Theater in San Francisco, where Apple's event will take place.


(Credit: Josh Lowensohn/CNET)

It's Apple event time again, and this is your best place to get the news as it happens.


Apple's holding its event in downtown San Francisco on Tuesday, and CNET will be there to bring you live photos and news updates.



Expected are new iPads, updates to several Macs, along with a formal price and release date for Apple's new Mac Pro computer and OS X Mavericks, both of which were announced at a developer event earlier this year. For more on that, check out our full rundown of what we believe Apple will show off.


The presentation is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. PT. We'll start our live blog about an hour before Apple officially kicks off its event, along with a live video show from CNET's headquarters just a few blocks away from the venue.


You can tune in to the live blog by clicking the image below, which also includes a way to schedule an e-mail reminder:



Apple held a similar event almost exactly one year ago in San Jose, Calif., where the first iPad Mini appeared. The company has used this particular venue in downtown San Francisco several times before, including for the first iPad's introduction in 2010.



Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-57608231-37/apples-oct-22-event-join-us-tuesday-live-blog/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=News-Apple
Tags: Ian Somerhalder   The Family   9 news   notre dame   Romain Dauriac  

'Fifty Shades' New Guy: 8 Things We Learned From Jamie Dornan's Twitter


MTV News browsed the actor's Twitter to learn more about him.


By Jocelyn Vena








Source:
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1716128/jamie-dornan-fifty-shades-of-grey-twitter.jhtml

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AMBER robot walks on human-like feet but isn't quite ready for British Knights


DNP RObot with humanlike heels and toes video


Until recently, bipedal robots have sometimes had to take interesting approaches to imitate human walking because they lack our first points of contact with the road: heels and toes. The latest breakthrough from Texas A&M's Amber Lab robotics team may have fixed that, though. An approximation of those foot bones grants the robo-Manziel the pivot-points necessary for (somewhat) naturalistic locomotion. However, this advancement doesn't do nearly as much in terms of making the synthetic legs any stronger. Near the end of the embedded video, the disembodied legs stumble and fall when the attached boom isn't supporting their weight. This is great news for us meatbags, because it makes 2029 feel that much further away.



Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/24/texas-am-robot-with-humanlike-feet/?ncid=rss_truncated
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Amazon's Gigantic Biodomes Have Been Endorsed By Seattle

Amazon's Gigantic Biodomes Have Been Endorsed By SeattleAmazon has somehow gained initial approval to build a huge series of greenhouses slap-bang in the middle of Seattle so it's employees need never leave work.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/qinGV55t7i0/amazons-giagantic-biodomes-have-been-endorsed-by-seatt-1451266530
Tags: engadget   Delbert Belton   Moto X   Riley Cooper Racial Slur Video   Nick Jonas  

Short Stories Episode 4: Backcountry Adrenaline With Dave Short



Posted by: Evan Litsios / added: 10.24.2013 / Back to What Up


Dave Short ripped the Whistler Backcountry last spring, as shown in this episode of Short Stories. Dave goes right for the spines, steeps and hairy situations, managing the dangers with a smart head and pure boarding ability. Dave isn't working on sticking his double corks. He's got big lines in his eyes, and as you can see he has every intention of ripping them. 



Short Stories Episode 4 - Adrenaline from 33MAG on Vimeo.





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Source: http://www.frqncy.com/news/2013/10/24/short-stories-episode-4-backcountry-adrenaline-with-dave-short?utm_campaign=blog_feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_source=feed_reader
Category: packers   college football scores   Dedication 5   Into the Wild   Jose Iglesias  

With Red Sox in World Series, TV ratings rebound


BOSTON (AP) — With the Boston Red Sox back in the World Series, television ratings jumped for the opener.

Boston's 8-1 win over the St. Louis Cardinals drew an 8.6 national rating, a 14 share and 14.4 million viewers, Nielsen Media Research said Thursday.

The rating was up 13 percent from the 7.6/12 for San Francisco's 8-3 victory over Detroit last year, which was a record low for a World Series opener. Wednesday night's game was seen by 14.4 million viewers, an 18 percent increase from 12.2 million last year and the most-watched Series opener since the Giants' 11-7 win over Texas in 2010 was seen by 15 million.

Wednesday's game peaked with 16.9 million viewers during the second inning, when the Red Sox scored twice and took a 5-0 lead.

The rating is the percentage of television households tuned to a program, and the share is the percentage tuned to a broadcast among the TV households with sets on at the time.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/red-sox-world-series-tv-ratings-rebound-185742785.html
Related Topics: Grambling State University   denver broncos   remembering 9/11   Jack Nicholson   mick jagger  

বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৪ অক্টোবর, ২০১৩

Kerry Washington: I Don't Drink and I Get Bored Easily

She might drink a big glass of wine as she tries to deal with situations on her hit series "Scandal," but away from the studio, Kerry Washington refuses to go near any alcoholic beverages.


During an interview with the NY Post, the 36-year-old actress revealed why drinking is not part of her normal diet.


"I actually live quietly. Work hard. Get bored easily," Miss Washington explained. "Don't drink. Who needs those empty calories."


In regards to how she keeps her body in shape, Kerry stated, "I watch what I eat. I train, do Pilates."


Besides working on her hit ABC series, Miss Washington dished about her home makeover. "I'm now renovating my L.A. apartment, and that tests your patience and clarity."


"Living out of a suitcase so long, I'm finally establishing residence, but I'm always back in NYC. I'm born here. My parents are here," she added.


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/kerry-washington/kerry-washington-i-dont-drink-and-i-get-bored-easily-1054399
Category: Dario Franchitti   julianne hough   The Blacklist   january jones   obama speech  

When scaling the quantum slopes, veer for the straight path

When scaling the quantum slopes, veer for the straight path


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24-Oct-2013



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Contact: Morgan Kelly
mgnkelly@princeton.edu
609-258-5729
Princeton University






Like any task, there is an easy and a hard way to control atoms and molecules as quantum systems, which are driven by tailored radiation fields. More efficient methods for manipulating quantum systems could help scientists realize the next generation of technology by harnessing atoms and molecules to create small but incredibly powerful devices such as molecular electronics or quantum computers.


Of course, controlling quantum systems is as painstaking as it sounds, and requires scientists to discover the ideal radiation field that leads to the desired response from the system. Scientists know that reaching that state of quantum nirvana can be a long and expensive slog, but Princeton University researchers have found that the process might be more straightforward than previously thought.


The researchers report in the journal Physical Review A that quantum-control "landscapes" the path of a system's response from the initial field to the final desired field appears to be unexpectedly simple. Although still a mountain of a task, finding a good control radiation field turns out to be very much like climbing a mountain, and scientists need only choose the right path. Like a hiker, a scientist can take a difficult, twisting path that requires frequent stops to evaluate which step to take next. Or, as the Princeton researchers show, they can opt for a straighter trail that cuts directly to the summit.


The researchers observe in their paper that these fast tracks toward the desired control field actually exist, and are scattered all over the landscape. They provide an algorithm that scientists can use to identify the starting point of the straight path to their desired quantum field.


The existence of nearly straight paths to reach the best quantum control was surprising because the landscapes were assumed to be serpentine, explained first author Arun Nanduri, who received his bachelor's degree in physics from Princeton in 2013 and is working in the laboratory of Herschel Rabitz, Princeton's Charles Phelps Smyth '16 *17 Professor of Chemistry.


"We found that not only can you always climb to the top, but you can climb along a simple path to the top," Nanduri said. "If we could consistently identify where these paths are located, a scientist could efficiently climb the landscape. Looking around for the next good step along an unknown path takes great effort. However, starting along a straight path requires you to look around once, and you can keep walking forward with your eyes closed, as it were."


Following a straighter path could be a far more efficient way of achieving control of atoms and molecules for a host of applications, including manipulating chemical reactions and operating quantum computers, Nanduri said. The source of much scientific excitement, quantum computers would use "qubits" that can be entangled to potentially give them enormous storage and computational capacities far beyond the capabilities of today's digital computers.


If the Princeton research helps scientists quickly and easily find the control fields they need, it could also allow them to carry out improved measurements of quantum systems and design new ones, Nanduri said.


"We don't know if our discovery will directly lead to futuristic quantum devices, but this finding should spur renewed research," Nanduri said. "If straight paths to good quantum control solutions can be routinely found, it would be remarkable."

###


The paper, "Exploring quantum control landscape structure," was published in the journal Physical Review A. The work was funded by the Program in Plasma Science and Technology at Princeton University, the Army Research Office, and the U.S. Department of Energy.




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When scaling the quantum slopes, veer for the straight path


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

24-Oct-2013



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Contact: Morgan Kelly
mgnkelly@princeton.edu
609-258-5729
Princeton University






Like any task, there is an easy and a hard way to control atoms and molecules as quantum systems, which are driven by tailored radiation fields. More efficient methods for manipulating quantum systems could help scientists realize the next generation of technology by harnessing atoms and molecules to create small but incredibly powerful devices such as molecular electronics or quantum computers.


Of course, controlling quantum systems is as painstaking as it sounds, and requires scientists to discover the ideal radiation field that leads to the desired response from the system. Scientists know that reaching that state of quantum nirvana can be a long and expensive slog, but Princeton University researchers have found that the process might be more straightforward than previously thought.


The researchers report in the journal Physical Review A that quantum-control "landscapes" the path of a system's response from the initial field to the final desired field appears to be unexpectedly simple. Although still a mountain of a task, finding a good control radiation field turns out to be very much like climbing a mountain, and scientists need only choose the right path. Like a hiker, a scientist can take a difficult, twisting path that requires frequent stops to evaluate which step to take next. Or, as the Princeton researchers show, they can opt for a straighter trail that cuts directly to the summit.


The researchers observe in their paper that these fast tracks toward the desired control field actually exist, and are scattered all over the landscape. They provide an algorithm that scientists can use to identify the starting point of the straight path to their desired quantum field.


The existence of nearly straight paths to reach the best quantum control was surprising because the landscapes were assumed to be serpentine, explained first author Arun Nanduri, who received his bachelor's degree in physics from Princeton in 2013 and is working in the laboratory of Herschel Rabitz, Princeton's Charles Phelps Smyth '16 *17 Professor of Chemistry.


"We found that not only can you always climb to the top, but you can climb along a simple path to the top," Nanduri said. "If we could consistently identify where these paths are located, a scientist could efficiently climb the landscape. Looking around for the next good step along an unknown path takes great effort. However, starting along a straight path requires you to look around once, and you can keep walking forward with your eyes closed, as it were."


Following a straighter path could be a far more efficient way of achieving control of atoms and molecules for a host of applications, including manipulating chemical reactions and operating quantum computers, Nanduri said. The source of much scientific excitement, quantum computers would use "qubits" that can be entangled to potentially give them enormous storage and computational capacities far beyond the capabilities of today's digital computers.


If the Princeton research helps scientists quickly and easily find the control fields they need, it could also allow them to carry out improved measurements of quantum systems and design new ones, Nanduri said.


"We don't know if our discovery will directly lead to futuristic quantum devices, but this finding should spur renewed research," Nanduri said. "If straight paths to good quantum control solutions can be routinely found, it would be remarkable."

###


The paper, "Exploring quantum control landscape structure," was published in the journal Physical Review A. The work was funded by the Program in Plasma Science and Technology at Princeton University, the Army Research Office, and the U.S. Department of Energy.




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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/pu-wst102413.php
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Actress: Dancing with prince 'better than sex'




Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi , centre, stands with Britain's Prince Charles Camilla Duchess of Cornwall during a meeting at Clarence House, in London Wednesday Oct. 23, 2013. (AP Photo/Arthur Edwards/Pool)





LONDON (AP) — Actress Emma Thompson says dancing with Prince Charles is "better than sex."

Thompson makes the comment in a Time magazine feature on the 64-year-old heir to the British throne.

Charles tells the magazine he has had a lifelong desire to "heal and make things better."

The prince, who backs a host of charitable and environmental causes, said he feels it is his "duty to worry about everybody and their lives in this country, to try to find a way of improving things if I possibly can."

He also reveals that he recently staged a rehearsal to help teach his son, Prince William, how to host an investiture ceremony in which Britons receive knighthoods and other honors.

William presided over his first investiture at Buckingham Palace last week without any problems.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/actress-dancing-prince-better-sex-190357708.html
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Obamacare 101: Enroll by March 31 to avoid penalty


The Obama administration has clarified the deadline by which Americans must sign up for health insurance to avoid paying a penalty. That deadline is in fact March 31, not Feb. 15,  according to guidance released by the White House Wednesday night.

The Affordable Care Act (ACA), or “Obamacare,” allows Americans to be uninsured for three consecutive months in a calendar year without penalty. The individual mandate to buy insurance begins on Jan. 1, 2014, which means an individual can go without insurance through March 31, 2014, and not pay a fine.

Originally, the law was interpreted to mean that a person had to have coverage in effect by March 31. In the health-insurance exchanges – i.e, Healthcare.gov and the 14 state-run exchanges – that meant enrolling by Feb. 15 for a policy that starts March 1. Health-insurance policies begin on the first of the month, and so if one waited until after Feb. 15, the policy would not go into effect until April 1.

Now, the White House statement says, “If you sign up for insurance by the end of March, you will not face a penalty.”

The White House maintains that the timing of the individual mandate has not changed.

“The deadline for signing up for insurance is March 31,” said the guidance released Oct. 23 by Assistant White House Press Secretary Jessica Santillo. “It was true this morning. It is true tonight.”

The Obama administration has faced growing pressure to extend the deadline to buy health coverage, especially since the problem-riddled launch of Healthcare.gov on Oct. 1. On Oct. 22, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire became the first Democrat to make that call.

"Given the existing problems with the website, I urge you to consider extending open enrollment beyond the current end date of March 31, 2014. Allowing extra time for consumers is critically important so they have the opportunity to become familiar with the website, survey their options, and enroll," Senator Shaheen wrote in a letter to the White House.

"Further, in light of the difficulties individuals may be having with enrolling through Healthcare.gov, I ask that you clarify how the individual responsibility penalty will be administered and enforced. If an individual is unable to purchase health insurance due to technical problems with enrollment, they should not be penalized because of lack of coverage."

Sens. Mark Pryor (D) of Arkansas and Mark Begich (D) of Alaska have backed Shaheen’s proposal. All three are up for reelection in 2014.

Another Democratic senator, Joe Manchin of West Virginia, is proposing legislation to delay the penalty on those who fail to buy insurance.

Related stories

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obamacare-101-enroll-march-31-avoid-penalty-white-130608492.html
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A la Apple, Samsung apologizes in China after state media criticism


Months after Apple apologized to consumers in China, Korean rival Samsung is doing the same after the country's state media criticized the vendor for failing to fix glitches in several of its phone models.


"We welcome the scrutiny from the media," Samsung posted to its China website on Wednesday. "Due to problems with management that brought inconvenience to our customers, the company expresses its sincerest of apologies."


[ Keep up on key mobile developments and insights via Twitter and with the Mobile Edge blog and Mobilize newsletter. | For a quick, smart take on the news you'll be talking about, check out InfoWorld TechBrief -- subscribe today. ]


Earlier this week, the country's state-controlled China Central Television aired a 30-minute segment that put a spotlight on flaws found in Samsung phones. The affected models include handsets that are part of Samsung's Galaxy S3 and Note 2 product line.


According to CCTV's report, a software glitch in the phones can permanently damage a memory chip within the device's motherboard. This can cause the phone to frequently crash, from 20 to 30 times a day, according to one Galaxy S3 owner interviewed in the segment.


Samsung, however, refused to properly acknowledge the problem, CCTV claimed in its report. Instead, the company said the glitch could be fixed with a software update, rather than replacing the phone's hardware.


In response, Samsung issued an apology on Wednesday and said it would offer free repairs or replace phones with persistent problems. In addition, all affected phone models will receive another year of warranty protection, regardless of whether they showed any glitches.


The flaws in the phones could be unique to the Chinese market. Samsung said the problems stem from certain local third-party apps installed on the handsets. These unspecified apps cause the phone's application processor and memory to overrun when "waking up," and they will continue to contact servers even when in "sleep" mode.


"This issue can be prevented through a simple firmware over-the-air (FOTA) software update," the company said in an email.


Samsung is just the latest tech company to be scrutinized by China's state press. In March, Apple faced similar criticism over its warranty policies, which CCTV alleged treated U.S. customers more favorably than those in China.


Apple later apologized in April and made changes to its policies.


Other foreign companies have also been targets. This past week, Starbucks has been defending itself after CCTV criticized the company for pricing its coffee products higher in China than in the United States.


China's state press will regularly scrutinize companies, both foreign and domestic, as a way to regulate them, according to analysts. Apple and Samsung are two of the largest smartphone vendors in the country.


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/mobile-technology/la-apple-samsung-apologizes-in-china-after-state-media-criticism-229456
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Woman in Bulgaria questioned in 'Maria' case

In this police handout photo taken on Thursday , Oct. 17, 2013, Christos Salis, 39, right, and his companion Eleftheria Dimopoulou, 40, or Selini Sali — as the woman has two separate sets of identity papers. pose with the little girl only known as "Maria" in the Larisa regional police headquarters, Greece. Police in Greece have released the photographs of a couple alleged adductors of a girl known “Maria” after they were formally taken onto pre-trial custody and an international search for the girl’s parents intensified. (AP Photo/Greek Police)







In this police handout photo taken on Thursday , Oct. 17, 2013, Christos Salis, 39, right, and his companion Eleftheria Dimopoulou, 40, or Selini Sali — as the woman has two separate sets of identity papers. pose with the little girl only known as "Maria" in the Larisa regional police headquarters, Greece. Police in Greece have released the photographs of a couple alleged adductors of a girl known “Maria” after they were formally taken onto pre-trial custody and an international search for the girl’s parents intensified. (AP Photo/Greek Police)







(AP) — Bulgarian prosecutors pressed preliminary charges Thursday against a Roma woman who may be the mother of a girl found living with an unrelated couple in Greece. Though DNA tests have yet to prove she is that girl's mother, the woman's admission that she once left a baby behind in Greece opened her up to a formal investigation.

Sasha Ruseva, 35, acknowledged to Bulgarian TV that she had been questioned about the girl in Greece known as "Maria," who is believed to be 5-6 years old. The girl's case has gained global notice and drawn what some say is unfair attention to the Roma, who have long faced racism, poverty and some of whom have resorted to crime.

Ruseva said that if DNA proves she's the girl's mother, she'll take her back. But she denied taking any money for giving up her baby to another Roma, or Gypsy, family, years ago. The preliminary charges filed against her allow authorities to start an investigation into if she is telling the truth about whether money exchanged hands.

Greek authorities took custody of "Maria" after finding her while raiding a Roma camp for illegal weapons and drugs. The child stood out to police and others on the scene because she was blond and fair-skinned — and looked nothing like the couple who claimed to be her parents.

After a DNA test proved she wasn't theirs, an international search was then launched to find the child's real parents, while the couple she had been living with were arrested. The search apparently led to central Bulgaria, where police tracked down Ruseva in the town of Nikolaevo.

Ruseva said that she gave birth to a girl while working in Greece "several years ago," but that she had to leave the child because she didn't have enough money to take her home. Ruseva has had eight children.

"I intended to go back and take my child home, but meanwhile I gave birth to two more kids so I was not able to go back," said Ruseva, who insisted that she did not get paid for giving up the girl.

Though Ruseva herself is dark-haired and dark-skinned, as she spoke to the TV channel, she held a young girl in her arms who looked quite similar to the girl in Greece.

Bulgarian Interior Ministry chief secretary Svetlozar Lazarov confirmed that his office was working on the case with Greek police.

Lazarov said that during Thursday's questioning Ruseva said she had recognized the Greek Roma couple in the "Maria" case, whose pictures have been broadcast on TV, as the same people with whom she left her child while working in Greece.

Prosecutors, meanwhile, announce they had pressed preliminary charges against Ruseva for "deliberately selling a child while residing out of the country."

"A DNA test has been taken from Ruseva, and information has been collected about her trips to Greece in the last years," said a statement from the prosecutor's office.

The "Maria" case has spurred concerns about child trafficking within the Roma community, and cries of racism as well.

In Ireland this past week, in an episode apparently inspired by the Greek case, two young blond, blue-eyed children were taken by Irish police from their Romanian Gypsy parents, who had different complexions. But the girl and boy were returned Wednesday to their families after DNA tests determined the children were rightfully theirs.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-10-24-Greece-Mystery%20Girl/id-89178d14f94d413f84940ed4aefd158b
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NGOs Call US Drone Program Illegal In Damning Reports


Two reports out today criticize the U.S. counterterrorism drone program and claim that the attacks kill many more civilians than the U.S. has acknowledged. The group Human Rights Watch studied six cases in Yemen. Amnesty International examined drone strikes in Pakistan during the past year and a half. Both groups accuse the U.S. of violating international law and call on the U.S. to make the secret drone program more transparent to the public.



Copyright © 2013 NPR. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.


AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:


Today, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International released a report documenting the aftermath of drone attacks in Pakistan and Yemen. A 68-year-old grandmother killed in a farm field in front of her family. Laborers killed after they had gathered in a tent to get out of the summer sun after a long day's work. The human rights groups are calling for more transparency from the Obama administration about America's drone program. NPR's Carrie Johnson reports.


CARRIE JOHNSON, BYLINE: Human rights researchers say they traveled to remote dangerous areas to interview witnesses comparing those accounts with satellite images and photos of drone strikes in Pakistan and Yemen. But Mustafa Qadri of Amnesty International says the biggest hurdle came from Washington.


MUSTAFA QADRI: The most challenging situation we had to face was the complete and utter secrecy of the U.S. authorities. Because of that, we cannot be 100 percent certain, but we are extremely concerned that these and other killings documented in our report may constitute extra-judicial executions or war crimes.


JOHNSON: Qadri says attacks on rescuers who raced to help after strikes in Pakistan raise concerns about whether the U.S. complied with the laws of war. But he doesn't know enough about U.S. targeting decisions to be certain. The same is true for Letta Tayler of Human Rights Watch, who studied the use of drones in Yemen.


LETTA TAYLER: These strikes have killed an estimated 473 people. Yet the U.S. has only publicly acknowledged two of these strikes - those that have killed Americans. It's as if the hundreds of Yemenis killed in these attacks simply never existed.


JOHNSON: To make the case, Human Rights Watch tried to humanize the victims of drone strikes. For example, in September 2012, a drone in Yemen struck a dozen people in a passenger van, not an al Qaida figure, Tayler says.


TAYLER: It turned out that all 12 people killed were villagers coming home from market. Their loved ones found their charred bodies in pieces on the road side, dusted in flour and sugar that they were bringing home to their families.


JOHNSON: Advocates say they're not calling on the White House to stop using drones altogether. Instead, they want to know more about the legal basis for the attacks and how the drones are being deployed. Andrea Prasow of Human Rights Watch says it's short sighted for American authorities to keep avoiding those questions.


ANDREA PRASOW: Keep in mind that the United States is not the only nation that has drones. Drones are proliferating and the failure to abide by international law now by the United States will set a dangerous precedent for other nations to also disregard it.


JOHNSON: International law requires countries to offer compensation for the killing of civilians. But the researchers say they found little evidence that happens. In one case they could identify, the family of a 68-year-old grandmother who died in Pakistan last year got about $100. At the White House today, spokesman Jay Carney said the groups are overestimating civilian deaths.


JAY CARNEY: By narrowly targeting our action against those who want to kill us and not the people they hide among, we are choosing the course of action least likely to result in the loss of innocent life. U.S. counterterrorism operations are precise, they are lawful and they are effective.


JOHNSON: In a speech at the National Defense University earlier this year, President Obama laid out a framework for his counterterrorism strategy. He acknowledged the U.S. had killed some innocent civilians, though fewer than human rights groups say. Obama said drones are still far more precise than conventional weapons that kill more people. And recent evidence suggests the U.S. is already using drones less often. Carrie Johnson, NPR News, Washington.


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And more ALL THINGS CONSIDERED is coming up right after this.


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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/xJxvZ8XgZck/story.php
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George Clooney's 'Monuments Men' pushed to 2014




This film image released by Columbia Pictures shows Matt Damon, left, and George Clooney in "The Monuments Men." A spokesman for Sony Pictures said Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2013, that the film will now be released in the first quarter of next year, instead of its planned release date of Dec. 18. “Monuments Men,” which Clooney directed, co-wrote and stars in, had been expected to be a top Oscar contender. (AP Photo/Columbia Pictures - Sony, Claudette Barius)





NEW YORK (AP) — George Clooney's World War II drama "The Monuments Men" is being pushed to 2014 and out of the fall awards season.

The movie will now be released in the first quarter of next year, instead of its planned release date of Dec. 18, a spokesman for Sony Pictures said Wednesday. "Monuments Men," which Clooney directed, co-wrote and stars in, had been expected to be among the top Oscar contenders.

The film could still compete for awards next year, but the early-in-the-year positioning suggests Sony doesn't expect it to. Movies released early in the year — much less sought-after territory than the lucrative holiday movie-going season — rarely garner any awards interest.

Sony said the film is being delayed so Clooney can finish the film's extensive visual effects.

"The Monuments Men," which also stars Matt Damon and Bill Murray, is about a World War II platoon whose mission is to rescue artworks from the Nazis. Based on a true story, the film is adapted from Robert Edsel's book "The Monuments Men: Allie Heroes, Nazi Thieves and the Greatest Treasure Hunt in History."

Reportedly made for $65 million, Clooney has conceived of "The Monuments Men" as a popular period drama tinged with comedy in the mold of "The Great Escape." While an early 2014 release takes the film out of the awards hunt, it could find more room at a less crowded box office.

"The Monuments Men" is only the latest film to shift out of the fall movie-going season. Previously pushed into 2014 were "Foxcatcher," ''Grace of Monaco" and "The Immigrant."

The Los Angeles Times first reported the release date change.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/george-clooneys-monuments-men-pushed-2014-155241060.html
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China 2013 growth seen at 7.6 percent, topping target, slowdown likely next year: Poll


BEIJING (Reuters) - China's economy is set to grow 7.6 percent in 2013, beating the government's 7.5 percent target, before losing some steam next year as the government forges ahead with structural reforms, a Reuters poll showed.


Growth for 2014 may come in at 7.4 percent, according to the median forecast in a poll of economists conducted between October 18-22.


The forecasts were little changed from a Reuters poll in July, when economists had predicted growth of 7.5 percent for both this year and next.


While an expansion of 7.6 percent in 2013 year would be the weakest in 24 years, it would still be comfortably above the government's 7 percent bottom line for annual economic growth.


"A renewed economic slowdown over the next few months is looking increasingly likely. This might reawaken fears of a hard landing. But as long as it was the result of slower growth in credit, it would be a welcome development," Mark Williams, an economist at Capital Economics, wrote in a research note.


Growth is likely to stabilize at 7.5 percent in the fourth-quarter of 2013 from 7.8 percent in the previous three months, and maintain that level into the second quarter of 2014, according to the poll.


Beijing has repeatedly said it would accept slower growth as it tries to wean the economy off dependence on investment and exports in favor of domestic consumption, but such rebalancing has been proceeding gradually.


The uptick in third-quarter growth, the second increase in the previous 10 quarters, came thanks to a "mini-stimulus" from the government in July, which saw increased investment and assistance to the trade sector.


There were signs, though, that these measures were already beginning to lose their potency towards the end of the third quarter, as factory output and retail sales growth eased in September.


Economists say soft global demand for Asia's exports will remain a risk for the Chinese economy in the coming months.


"I don't think external demand is likely to pick up meaningfully in the next few months," said Qu Hongbin, an economist at HSBC. "We see better numbers from the U.S. but we also see slowing in emerging markets."


China's consumer inflation rose to a seven-month high of 3.1 percent in September, still below the official target of 3.5 percent for the whole of 2013.


The poll showed that consumer inflation may pick up to 3.1 percent in 2014, from an expected 2.7 percent in 2013. The previous poll in July put inflation next year at 3.3 percent from an expected 2.6 percent in 2013.


The poll also showed economists believe China's central bank is likely to keep benchmark interest rates unchanged in the next year-and-a-half, while the required reserve ratio for banks should remain the same for most of next year, with a chance of a reduction in the final quarter of 2014.


China's central bank last week pledged to uphold its prudent policy with timely fine-tuning, while blaming capital inflows for much of the recent credit expansion.


A policy adviser to the People's Bank of China told Reuters on Tuesday the authority may tighten cash conditions in the financial system to address inflation risks.


(Reporting By Natalie Thomas; Editing by Kim Coghill)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/china-2013-growth-seen-7-6-percent-topping-093032891--business.html
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HealthCare.gov Glitches Haven't Hurt Obamacare...Yet


The glitchy roll out of the Affordable Care Act federal health exchange website has had the Obama administration scrambling — for tech support, explanations, patience, and foot soldiers to help spread the word about the president's signature achievement.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=240291630&ft=1&f=1014
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Amazon's Giving Away Accessories and Lens Discounts with Canon DSLRs

Amazon's Giving Away Accessories and Lens Discounts with Canon DSLRs

If you've been planning to pick up a new Canon DSLR, either for yourself or for the holidays, Amazon has a great opportunity to save on everything you need.

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