Boeing 787 Dreamliner Deliveries To Resume In May

Boeing 787 Dreamliner Deliveries To Resume In May

We’ve covered the whole Boeing 787 Dreamliner saga here. The jet was grounded earlier this year after its faulty battery system caused emergency landing of one flight and filling up of smoke in another. Since then Boeing has developed a new battery system, it has conducted flight certification tests, and only last week the FAA cleared its new battery system which will now be installed on Dreamliner planes that are sitting in hangars across the world. Flights have not resumed as of now, but are expected to in the near future.

Today during the fiscal results call, Boeing CEO Jim McNerney said that the aircraft manufacturer is likely to resume deliveries by next month. The company expects to fix all 50 aircraft with the new battery systems by mid-May. Those who, like me, are aching to get on board a 787 would then have to wait for airlines to schedule flights on this jet. Boeing posted a profit of almost 20% in its earnings report despitae analyst’s estimates on the contrary, it seems not all investors haven’t been put off by the whole 787 Dreamliner episode.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Apple Patent Wants To Use Your iPhone To Help Find, Start Your Vehicle, Electric Chevrolet Spark Minicar To Outrange Nissan Leaf,

    

Jordan Kahn, Red Medicine Chef, Divulges His Favorite 5 LA Restaurants (PHOTOS)

Story comes courtesy of LA Weekly

By Besha Rodell

Where The Chefs Eat is an ongoing series in which we ask a local chef to give us his or her favorite dining options. This week, we check in with Red Medicine’s chef, Jordan Kahn.

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‘RaiseForWomen’ Challenge Kicks Off Fundraising Efforts For Women-Focused Nonprofits

HuffPost and partners have officially launched the fundraising portion of RaiseForwomen, a campaign providing resources and awareness for nonprofits run by and for women

Daniel Koh, Chief of Staff to Arianna Huffington, appeared on HuffPost Live Wednesday to announce that 80+ organizations — chosen from a pool of more than 250 applications from 160 cities and 38 states — will compete to see which can raise the most money between now and June 6.

Koh stressed that while the nonprofits are women-focused, the impact is universal.

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Cute Kid Note Of The Day: ‘Positive Ways Our Family Handles Stress’ (PHOTO)

Here at HuffPost, we are all about stressing less. So naturally, we have some alternative ideas to share with the author of today’s cute kid note.

Title: Positive Ways Our Family Handles Stress

Author: Reddit user Ltravis‘s little sister

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LED streetlamp innovation aims to reduce light pollution

A group of researchers from both Taiwan and Mexico have developed a new design for an LED streetlamp that will limit light pollution all the way down to 2%. Currently, LED streetlamps can leak as high as 20% of their light into areas they weren’t intending to target. These new streetlamps will only shine light in areas they are configured to light up, and will only leak a tiny amount of light into the night sky or surrounding objects.

LED streetlamp innovation aims to reduce light pollution

According to the New Jersey Astronomical Association, around 30% of electricity generated from out door lights is being wasted illuminating areas that aren’t meant to receive the lighting. This light leakage also has adverse affects on nature as well. Birds are confused and sent off course, turtles who require the night sky to navigate become lost on their way towards the ocean, and many other animals have their sleeping patterns disrupted.

These new LED streetlamps would combat those adverse affects. The streetlamps’ design is also very adaptable, meaning that it can be adjusted to fit various environments. Ching-Cherng Sun, a member of the team behind the LED streetlamps, stated that current streetlamps either lean into the middle of a road or are posted in a zig-zag formation on different sides of a street. Those current designs are good for high-traffic areas, but not for other areas. Sun says that the new streetlight design is flexible enough to be used in a variety of situations and can be used to maintain a high efficiency in lighting.

The lamp is based on a 3-part fixture. The first part holds a cluster of LEDs, each fitted into a TIR (Total Internal Reflection) lens that helps focus the light making the rays parallel to each other instead of intersecting. The TIR lens-covered LED lights are then mounted inside a reflecting cavity, which recycles the light and makes sure that most of it is used to illuminate its target area. Lastly, the light leaves the lamp through a microlens sheet that reduces unwanted glare.

The new LED streetlight would reduce the amount of light pollution around the globe, and also reduce the amount of electricity used up by wasted light. It would also be beneficial to homes that have to deal with the unwanted glare produced by a nearby streetlight. Sun and his team are working diligently on their streetlamp prototype, and may finish it within 3-6 months. They hope to have these new streetlamps available by next year.

[via Nature World News]


LED streetlamp innovation aims to reduce light pollution is written by Brian Sin & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Chili Cheese Fry Burrito From Del Taco Might Appeal To The Stoner Demographic

French fry-stuffed sandwiches are a real phenomenon, and as those familiar with them will tell you, they’re fabulously indulgent.

Consider the fry-laden sandwiches from Pittsburgh’s famous Primanti Bros; the fry-stuffed “Fat Sandwiches” from Grease Trucks like R U Hungry at Rutgers University; or falafel and shawarma sandwiches topped with fries sold at shops the world over.

Now, another creation joins their rank: Chili cheese fry-stuffed burritos from Del Taco.

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Married Couple Photo Shows What True Love Really Looks Like (PHOTO)

Love is patient, love is kind, love is… posing with your husband as he leaps into the air holding a giant fish?

Reddit user brookemayo showed us what 11 years of marriage really look like when she posted this outrageous photo on Reddit Wednesday. She wrote in the comments section that the couple married when they were both 20 (they’re 31 now), have two children and are “crazy in love.” Check out the goofy photo below:

This is What 11 Years of Marriage Looks Like

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Gut Bacteria Implicated In Heart Attacks, Stroke

By Sharon Begley

NEW YORK, April 24 (Reuters) – Thousands of heart attack victims every year have none of the notorious risk factors before their crisis – not high cholesterol, not unhealthy triglycerides. Now the search for the mystery culprits has turned up some surprising suspects: the trillions of bacteria and other microbes living in the human gut.

In a study released on Wednesday, scientists discovered that some of the bugs turn lecithin – a nutrient in egg yolks, liver, beef, pork and wheat germ – into an artery-clogging compound called TMAO. They also found that blood levels of TMAO predict heart attack, stroke or death, and do so “independent of other risk factors,” said Dr Stanley Hazen, chairman of cellular and molecular medicine at the Cleveland Clinic’s Lerner Research Institute, who led the study.

That suggests a TMAO test could enter the arsenal of blood tests that signal possible cardiovascular problems ahead. “TMAO might identify people who are at risk (for heart attacks and strokes) despite having no other risk factors,” Hazen said.

The discovery also suggests a new approach to preventing these cardiovascular events: altering gut bacteria so they churn out less TMAO.

The study joins a growing list of findings that link human “microbiota” – microbes in the gut, nose and genital tract, and on the skin – to health and disease. Research has shown that certain species of gut bacteria protect against asthma, for instance, while others affect the risk of obesity. Last week scientists reported that circumcision alters bacteria in the penis, and that this change (not only the anatomical one) helps protect men from HIV/AIDS, probably by reducing the number of bacteria that live in oxygen-free environments such as under the foreskin.

“It’s very strong work,” Dr Martin Blaser of New York University Langone Medical Center, a pioneer in studies of the microbiota, said of the TMAO study. “They show clearly that human microbiota play a key role in producing TMAO, suggesting new approaches to prevention and treatment” of cardiovascular disease.

NORMAL CHOLESTEROL, FATAL HEART ATTACK

The new study builds on a 2011 discovery by the Cleveland Clinic team that, in lab mice, gut bacteria turn lecithin in food into TMAO, or trimethylamine-N-oxide, causing heart disease. In addition, they found, people with high levels of TMAO are more likely to have heart disease.

But that research left two questions hanging: Do human gut bacteria trigger the lecithin-to-TMAO alchemy, like those in mice? And do high levels of TMAO predict heart attacks and stroke in people many years out, not simply mark the presence of cardiovascular disease at the time of the blood test?

To answer the first question, Hazen and his colleagues had 40 healthy adults eat two hard-boiled eggs, which contain lots of lecithin. Just as in lab mice, TMAO levels in the blood rose. After a week of broad-spectrum antibiotics, however, the volunteers’ TMAO levels barely budged after they ate eggs, the researchers reported in the New England Journal of Medicine.

“That showed that the intestinal bacteria (which antibiotics kill) are essential for forming TMAO,” said Hazen.

Next, to see whether TMAO predicts cardiovascular events, the researchers measured its levels in 4,007 heart patients. After accounting for such risk factors as age and a past heart attack, they found that high levels of TMAO were predictive of heart attack, stroke and death over the three years that the patients were followed.

Moreover, TMAO predicted risk more accurately than triglyceride or cholesterol levels, Hazen said. And it did so in people without substantial coronary artery disease or dangerous lipid levels as well as in sicker patients.

Specifically, people in the top 25 percent of TMAO levels had 2.5 times the risk of a heart attack or stroke compared to people in the bottom quartile.

The reason TMAO is so potent is that it makes blood cholesterol build up on artery walls, causing atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) and, if the buildup ruptures and blocks an artery, stroke or heart attack.

Earlier this month, the Cleveland Clinic researchers reported that gut bugs also transform carnitine, a nutrient found in red meat and dairy products, into TMAO, at least in meat eaters. Vegetarians made much less TMAO even when eating carnitine as part of the study, suggesting that avoiding meat reduces the gut bacteria that turn carnitine into TMAO, while regular helpings of dead animals encourages their growth and thus the production of TMAO.

More studies are needed to show whether TMAO reliably predicts cardiovascular crises, and does so better than other blood tests. Experts disagree on how many people have no other risk factors but would be flagged by TMAO. Dr Gordon Tomaselli, chief of cardiology at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and past president of the American Heart Association, guesses it is less than 10 percent or so of the people who eventually have heart crises.

Someone with high levels of TMAO could reduce her cardiovascular risk by eating fewer egg yolks and less beef and pork. But someone with a two-eggs-a-day habit but low TMAO probably has gut microbes that aren’t very adept at converting lecithin to TMAO, meaning she can eat eggs and the like without risking a coronary.

Just as statins control unhealthy cholesterol, prebiotics (compounds that nurture “healthy” gut microbes) or probiotics (the good bugs themselves) might control unhealthy TMAO. For now, however, no one knows which prebiotics or probiotics might do that. In one study, probiotics actually increased TMAO-producing bacteria – “not what you want,” Hazen said.

Neither will popping antibiotics work: bacteria become resistant to the drugs. Developing compounds that crimp the ability of the bacteria to turn lecithin into TMAO, Hazen said, is more likely to succeed. (Reporting by Sharon Begley; editing by Michelle Gershberg and Prudence Crowther)

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Elizabeth Warren, Joe Biden Speak At MIT Police Officer Sean Collier’s Memorial Service (VIDEO)

On Wednesday, Vice President Joe Biden and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D) spoke at the memorial service for Massachusetts Institute of Technology police officer Sean Collier, who was shot and killed allegedly by the Boston Marathon bombing suspects on April 18. Both politicians had a somber tone while addressing the thousands who had assembled to remember Collier.

“We are strong. We are Collier strong,” Warren said. “We are Boston strong.”

“We will miss you, Sean,” Warren said.

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Mexico Could Loosen Restrictions On Foreigners Buying Land

MEXICO CITY — The lower house of Mexico’s congress voted Tuesday to loosen longstanding restrictions on foreigners buying property along the coast and the nation’s borders, a proposal that drew stiff criticism from some quarters.

The measure, which passed 356-119 in the Chamber of Deputies, still needs approval from the Senate and a majority of the country’s 32 state legislatures to become law.

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