2008年12月9日星期二

Sea species at Barracuda Point in Malaysian island

A scuba diver swims near two green turtles at Barracuda Point off the Malaysian island of Sipadan, December 9, 2008. [Agencies]

A school of giant barracudas swims in a swirling formation at Barracuda Point off the Malaysian island of Sipadan, December 9, 2008. [Agencies]

A school of bumphead parrotfish grazes over a reef at Barracuda Point off the Malaysian island of Sipadan, December 9, 2008. [Agencies]

A scuba diver approaches a swirling school of giant barracudas at Barracuda Point off the Malaysian island of Sipadan, December 9, 2008. [Agencies]

A school of giant barracudas swims in a swirling formation at Barracuda Point off the Malaysian island of Sipadan, December 9, 2008. [Agencies]

A scuba diver swims near two green turtles at Barracuda Point off the Malaysian island of Sipadan, December 9, 2008.

2008年12月8日星期一

Grand prize winner: Lion

ART IN NATURE WINNER: Waterfall

Photographer: Karen Garbee

Location: Milford Sound, South Island, New Zealand

Narrative:

Milford Sound is the most well known and accessible of the grand, glacier-carved fiords scattered along the southwestern edge of New Zealand's South Island. This narrow, 13.7-mile inlet off the Tasman Sea is one-half mile deep in some places and is hedged on both sides by rainforest-covered cliffs as high as 4,593 feet. Solid granite mountain peaks rising from the waters of Milford Sound send waterfalls cascading over sheer cliff faces to the sea below, softening the area with a fine, calming mist.

Native Maori legend tells how the fiords in Fiordland National Park were created by a mighty demigod who started carving them on the south coast; by the time he finally reached Milford Sound, his technique had been perfected. The park is a sacred place for the Maoris, who came into the area one thousand years ago in search of a green jade-like stone. They were the first to cast their eyes on the scenery that still dazzles tourists today.

"On a boat tour of Milford Sound, the captain steered us very close to the base of this waterfall. The texture of the water captured my attention and the light was just right for a photograph. The scene was enveloped in a stunning blue, from the ripples in the water to the interplay of light and color. When I examined the printed photo back at home, I noticed all the shapes within the mist. But just above center on the right side of the image, I could see the shadow of a man's face. Now I see the 'face of Neptune' each time I look at this image."

GRAND PRIZE WINNER: Lion

Photographer: Brian Hampton

Location: Okavango Delta, Botswana

Narrative:

The Okavango Delta in Botswana is a sprawling inland area that floods seasonally, forming a permanent source of water in the midst of arid habitats. This unique mosaic of islands and waterways supports one of the richest faunas in southern Africa. Lions have adapted to the wetlands and, as they travel through the constantly changing environment to stalk their prey, they are sometimes forced to swim or wade across rivers.

"In order to join other lions tracking a herd of buffalo, this lion needed to cross a treacherous crocodile-infested river. Hearing the call of the others in her pride, she began to head for the waterway. I had to reposition myself several times to try to anticipate where the lion might come through the river. I had the good fortune of having my 600mm lens trained on the lion's eye as she exploded into a run, splashing through the shallow river. My companions and I huddled motionless as the lion came right toward us-then passed by. We all breathed a sigh of relief as she hurried to rejoin the pride."

Sling.com like video site Hulu with a twist

In this image provided by Sling Media, a page from its video streaming site, Sling.com, is shown. (AP Photo/Sling Media)

Since its launch in March, video-streaming site Hulu has become a popular place to catch TV shows, video clips and movies for free on the Web.

Apparently, the folks behind Hulu — which is a joint venture between General Electric Co.'s NBC Universal and News Corp. — aren't the only ones that think this is a good idea.

This week, Sling Media, which makes the Slingbox device that lets you watch your home TV remotely, rolled out a "beta" version of its own video-streaming site, Sling.com. Owing to deals with Hulu and a number of the same partners that Hulu has, Sling.com has much of the same content. But there is one neat twist: if you have a Slingbox device, which lets you control and watch your TV from any Mac- or Windows-based computer equipped with high-speed Internet access, you can also use the site to control your Slingbox.

It's definitely not breaking any ground as far as content is concerned — the only full-length movie I spotted on Sling.com that Hulu didn't have was blaxploitation horror flick "Blacula" — but overall the site makes a pretty good alternative, especially if you have a Slingbox, which starts at $180.

Sling.com has a fairly clean look, and I found it easy to navigate. You don't need to create a site profile if you just want to watch TV shows, movies or clips, but it's necessary if you want to set up subscriptions to channels and shows so you'll be alerted when new content is added to the site. Unlike with Hulu, you don't have to log in to watch R-rated movies. And Slingbox users who want to watch live TV can use the e-mail address and password associated with their Slingbox to log in.

As with Hulu, Sling.com is free to use but there are commercial interruptions during TV shows and movies, shorter than the ones you'd sit through when watching TV.

I spent some time watching the show "30 Rock" and teen cheerleader classic "Bring it On." "30 Rock" looked pretty good, but "Bring it On" was pixelated and jerky at times when viewed on both Firefox and Internet Explorer over my high-speed Internet connection. A newer computer with a dual-core processor probably wouldn't have the same problem.

You can watch in a browser window or in full-screen mode. Depending on what you're watching, the full-screen mode may look fuzzy because of the low resolution of the feed.

Sling.com does have a number of content partners besides Hulu, including CBS and comedy Web sites CollegeHumor and 23/6. The site also has deals with the Associated Press and Reuters for news videos.

The site's coolest feature is that it lets Slingbox owners watch live TV online. Before, this required the installation of a standalone program called SlingPlayer. Setting up to watch through the Web browser is much easier and quicker, though it requires the installation of a proprietary plugin that works only on Windows-based PC's running Mozilla's Firefox or Microsoft's Internet Explorer. Sling Media said it hopes to have the feature working with Macs in a few months.

The option of watching through the Web browser would make it much easier to jump on my non-TV owning friends' computer if we had a sudden craving for a cable television fix. I liked being able to use an on-screen remote to watch content that had been recorded to a home DVR or to record new things to watch later.

You'll need a decent high-speed Internet connection at home to enjoy watching your Slingbox through the site. Unfortunately, my cable modem wasn't fast enough to give me a decent picture. When I watched "The Today Show" on NBC, anchor Lester Holt's face looked like it was melting and the sound was choppy and often rather tinny-sounding — issues I didn't have when I tried a few demo Slingboxes set up by Sling Media that streamed live TV at a much higher rate.

Sling.com still has a ways to go if it wants to truly differentiate itself from Hulu. Sling Media said it plans to keep adding content partners, so hopefully its video selection will improve. And if it can add some more interesting features that will appeal to non-Slingbox owners, it may become a contender.

Brain scans show root of memory glitch with aging

A brain scan in a file image. A breakdown in a reaction between immune cells and blood vessels in the brain appears to play a key role in epilepsy, Italian researchers said Monday. (File/Reuters)

Brain scans of older people in a noisy lab machine give biological backing to the idea that distraction hampers memory with aging, researchers reported Wednesday.

The finding bolsters a theory about one reason why memory weakens with age: older people have more trouble remembering some things because they're more easily distracted when they try to learn them.

The memory exercise reported in the latest issue of the Journal of Neuroscience dealt with recognizing faces, but the findings apply to the more general task of trying to remember something a person sees or hears, said lead author Dale Stevens.

Stevens, a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard University, did the work while at the Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest, which is affiliated with the University of Toronto.

Older people who have to learn something should do all they can to focus on that task and eliminate potential distractions, he advised.

The study compared 10 healthy people in their 60s and 70s to a dozen younger volunteers, ages 22 to 36. Their brains were scanned while they looked at photographs of people they did not know. As each photograph was displayed for one second, the volunteers were asked if they'd seen it before in the study.

In all they saw 180 different faces, of which 120 showed up a second time. The older participants failed to recognize a face they'd already seen 43 percent of the time, compared to 26 percent for the younger volunteers.

Researchers went back to see what was going on in the brains of the volunteers when they first saw a face that they later failed to recognize. Why didn't those faces get planted in memory?

In both groups, a brain area called the hippocampus, which is involved in memory, was less active when a face failed to stick in the memory than when it did. That was no surprise. More interestingly, the older group also showed heightened activity in certain other brain areas while the younger volunteers did not.

Those areas included the auditory cortex, which plays a role in analyzing sound, and several areas involved in directing attention, Stevens said.

So what was going on? The brain-scanning machine was noisy, with lots of knocking, buzzing and banging like a jackhammer, Stevens said. Even with the earplugs the volunteers wore, "it's a little distracting," he said.

The brain activity in the older volunteers shows that the noise was more distracting to them than to the younger participants, and reveals the brain circuits involved, researchers concluded.

The study could not address when a person's brain starts to act up this way. But Cheryl Grady of the Rotman institute, another author, said she suspects it may begin between ages 40 and 60.

Dr. Barry Gordon, a neurology professor and memory expert at The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions in Baltimore, called the work "an appreciable advance." A next step could be seeing whether older people will do better on a memory test if they're warned about the distraction problem, said Gordon, who wasn't involved in the new study.

In any case, he said, "if you want to remember something, it's more important if you're older than younger not to be listening to your iPod."

Games, music dominate Top 10 iPhone applications in 2008

(File photo)

Music and games are the most sought-after programs of 2008 for hot-selling iPhone and iPod Touch devices, Apple said on Wednesday.

A freshly added "Top Apps" section at Apple's online iTunes shop lists the 10 most popular free and paid applications at the California firm's "App Store" since its July launch.

Google Earth mapping software and a mobile version of social-networking website Facebook joined Liveradio and games Tap Tap Revenge, Labyrinth Lite, Lightsaber Unleashed and iPint in a Top 10 free applications category.

The iPint game, restricted to people of age to legally imbibe alcohol, lets iPhone users simulate drinking a tall glass of ale using the innovative device's motion-sensing feature.

Lightsaber imbues swinging iPhones with sound effects simulating the famed Jedi warrior weapons.

Tap Tap Revenge, the most popular iPhone game of the year, challenges users to stay in rhythm with hip songs by tapping a device's touch-sensing screen in time with music.

"Tap Tap is sitting at the intersection of music and games, and music and games are everywhere," said Bart DeCrem, chief executive of startup Tapulous, which created the application.

"IPhones really trace their roots to the iPod and people think of music when they think of iPods."

Popular paid applications include videogames PocketGuitar, Cerebral Challenge, and Texas Hold'em poker along with allRadio software for streaming online radio broadcasts.

The best-of paid category includes pocketDEMO software that turns iPhones into precise distance measuring tools and an Essence program for finding bargains at nearby petrol stations.

Landscape winner: Edith Creek

ANIMAL ANTICS WINNER: Macaroni Penguins

Photographer: Andrew Rouse

Location: South Georgia Island

Narrative:

Macaronis are the most abundant of all the world's penguins and are the largest of the six species of crested penguins. Standing about 28 inches tall and weighing between 10 to 15 pounds, they have red eyes, red beaks, and elaborate crests of orange-yellow feathers. Macaronis inhabit the maritime Antarctic and sub-Antarctic regions; their massive rookeries can be found on the rocky cliffs and hillsides of South Georgia, where an estimated 5.4 million pairs live. This rugged island in the Southern Ocean offers unique opportunities to observe wildlife amid unspoiled scenery, including the vast populations of seabirds and marine mammals that breed along its shores.

"While I was hiking uphill to get into position for a high wide-angle shot of the bay, I spotted a line of penguins coming across a glacier. It made me laugh so hard-I knew I had to get a photograph to record the scene. After 30 minutes of slithering downhill on my backside (who says photography isn't fun?), I got my gear set up and spent the rest of the afternoon smiling as wave after wave of macaronis skied across the glacier in front of me."

LANDSCAPE WINNER: Edith Creek

Photographer: Daniel Ewert

Location: Mt. Rainier National Park, Washington, USA

Narrative:

Mt. Rainier, standing at 14,410 feet and containing 26 major glaciers, is the highest mountain in the Cascade Range, with one of the most glaciated peaks in the continental United States. Its beauty and wealth of flora and fauna led early conservationists such as John Muir to seek federal protection for the mountain and surrounding areas. Due in part to these efforts, Mt. Rainier National Park was established in 1899 as America's fifth national park. Some of the best views of Mt. Rainier can be found in the subalpine meadows at the base of the mountain. Every July and August, the heavy snowpack in Paradise Meadows melts away and a diverse array of flora burst into colorful bloom for a short but beautiful summer season. During this period, numerous wildflowers carpet the meadow floors. The abundant wildlife in these meadows include red fox, hoary marmot, pika, black-tailed deer, elk, black bear, chipmunk, and the rarely seen mountain lion.

"I arrived at this location early in the morning just as the first rays of sun were lighting up the mountain and the meadow. I used a graduated neutral density filter to balance the light in the sky and foreground and I used a shutter speed of just over one second to intentionally blur the water movement of the creek. By using a tripod, I was able to keep the rest of the scene very sharp during the long exposure."

Teddy take-off: bears launched into space

This Cambridge University press office (CUPO) handout shows two of the four teddy bears that were lauched to the edge of space. Four teddy bears, fully decked out in custom-made spacesuits, were launched to the edge of space this week as part of a British university experiment. [Agencies]

LONDON – Four teddy bears, fully decked out in custom-made spacesuits, were launched to the edge of space this week as part of a British university experiment.

Blasting off from Cambridge University's Churchill College on Monday, they were attached to a helium balloon and fitted with multiple cameras, a GPS receiver, flight computer and radio for the two-hour nine-minute flight, which saw them rise 30 kilometres (18.8 miles) above sea level.

The spacesuits were designed by local schoolchildren, as part of a project to engage youths in science and engineering, organised by the Cambridge University Spaceflight student club.

CU Spaceflight said the aim of the experiment was to find out which of the four spacesuits, each designed by a different group of students, best insulated the cuddly toys from the -53 degrees Celcius (-63 degrees Fahrenheit) temperatures.

"We want to offer young people the opportunity to get involved in the space industry whilst still at school and show that real-life science is something that is open to everybody," said Iain Waugh, CU Spaceflight's chief aeronautical engineer.

"High altitude balloon flights are a fantastic way of encouraging interest in science. They are easy to understand, and produce amazing results."

A Cambridge University spokeswoman noted: "No treasured possessions were endangered in this experiment."