Sabtu, 26 Maret 2011

GLEE: THE MUSIC PRESENTS THE WARBLERS AVAILABLE APRIL 19


GLEE: THE MUSIC PRESENTS THE WARBLERS
AVAILABLE APRIL 19
NEARLY 1 MILLION SONGS SOLD IN ONE WEEK
MARKING BIGGEST WEEKLY SINGLES SALES IN GLEE HISTORY


(New York, NY; Columbia Records; March 23, 2011) – Get ready for Glee’s New Directions rivals, The Dalton Academy Warblers to have their own release, Glee: The Music presents The Warblers, available on Tuesday, April 19th. This release features songs performed by The Dalton Academy Warblers, a male a capella group starring Darren Criss, Chris Colfer and the Tufts University Beelzebubs, tackling such hits as Destiny Child’s “Bills, Bills, Bills”, P!nk’s “Raise Your Glass”, Train’s “Hey Soul Sister” and Wings’ “Silly Love Songs”. The Dalton Academy Warblers debuted on Glee this season with a bang as their version of Katy Perry’s “Teenage Dream” had the best first-week sales of any Glee track to date. Also featured on Glee: The Music presents The Warblers are two album exclusives, the much talked about opening performance of Barbra Streisand’s “What Kind of Fool” from the 2011 MusiCares Person of the Year gala and a never before heard rendition of Rod Stewart’s “Do Ya Think I’m Sexy?” (see below for full track listing).

This week marks another astounding feat for the music of Glee with sales from its ‘Original Song’ episode selling a massive 722,998 downloads in just seven days, the most ever from a single episode. Cumulatively Glee songs sold over 964,000 tracks this week. This surpasses the record the show set back in February when it sold an astonishing 880,000 tracks in one week. Glee original tunes “Loser Like Me” and “Get It Right” top the list of best selling tracks this week with almost 374,000 downloads sold between them. These original tracks also appear on the recently released Glee: The Music, Volume 5 which debuted at #3 last week on Billboard’s Top 200 Albums chart with an impressive 90,000 copies sold. This week Glee: The Music, Volume 5 holds the #4 Spot on that same album chart with over 132,000 units sold since its release on March 8.

In just one season, songs from The Dalton Academy Warblers have sold 1.3 million tracks to add to the over 26 million singles and 10 million Glee albums sold worldwide. Glee broke the record for most charted songs by a single act in the Billboard Hot 100’s history, currently with 120 hits beating Elvis Presley’s long held record of 108. Glee is also now the top television program to be producing the most Top 10 albums, passing, American Idol.

The full track listing for Glee: The Music presents The Warblers is as follows:
1. Teenage Dream
2. Hey Soul Sister
3. Bills, Bills, Bills
4. Silly Love Songs
5. When I Get You Alone
6. Animal
7. Misery
8. Blackbird
9. Candles
10. Raise Your Glass
11. Somewhere Only We Know
12. What Kind Of Fool
13. Do Ya Think I’m Sexy?

Glee Albums


Volume 3 Songs :
Hello Goodbye
Gives You Hell
Hello
A House Is Not A Home
One Less Bell To Answer/A House Is Not A Home (Kristin Chenoweth)
Beautiful
Physical (Olivia Newton-John)
Total Eclipse Of The Heart (Jonathan Groff)
Lady Is A Tramp
One
Rose’s Turn
Dream On (Neil Patrick Harris)
Safety Dance
I Dreamed A Dream (Idina Menzel)
Loser
Give Up The Funk
Beth
Poker Face (Idina Menzel)
Bad Romance


Volume 4 Songs :
Empire State Of Mind
Billionaire
Me Against The Music
Stronger
Toxic
The Only Exception
I Wanna Hold Your Hand
One Of Us
River Deep, Mountain High
Lucky
One Love
Teenage Dream
Forget You
Marry You
Sway
Just The Way You Are
Valerie
(I’ve Had) The Time Of My Life


Volume 5 Songs:
Thriller / Heads Will Roll
Need You Now
She's Not There
Fat Bottomed Girls
P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)
Firework
Baby
Somebody To Love
Take Me Or Leave Me
Sing
Don't You Want Me
Do You Wanna Touch Me (Oh Yeah) (featuring Gwyneth Paltrow)
Kiss (featuring Gwyneth Paltrow)
Landslide (featuring Gwyneth Paltrow)
Get It Right
Loser Like Me

Kamis, 24 Maret 2011

Rare albatross is unique species


The world's rarest albatross has been confirmed as a separate species by scientists.

The genetic analysis solves 20 years of debate over the status of the Amsterdam albatross.

Canadian researchers have proven that the birds' DNA varies significantly from wandering albatrosses, their closest living relatives.

Only 170 of the birds remain on Amsterdam Island, where the whole population breed on a single plateau.

Amsterdam albatrosses are very large seabirds that can weigh up to 8kg and have wingspans as large as 3.5m.

The birds are named after Amsterdam Island in the Indian Ocean, which they use as a breeding ground.

They were first discovered in 1983, but the scientific community has since been divided over whether they are a separate species.

Some scientists believed the birds to be a subspecies of the wandering albatross, which also inhabits the Southern Ocean.

Dr Theresa Burg and her colleagues from the University of Lethbridge, Canada, set out to solve the debate by examining the birds' DNA. Their findings are published in the Journal of Avian Biology.

Dr Burg explained that Amsterdam albatrosses differ in appearance from wandering albatrosses.

"They are slightly smaller in size," she said. "They lay their eggs at a different time and have slightly browner plumage than the other wandering albatrosses."

The team's study also revealed significant differences between the birds' DNA. The analysis showed that Amsterdam albatrosses separated from their cousins, becoming a genetically distinct species, up to 265,000 years ago.

Despite their large wingspan and ability to fly for long distances, Amsterdam albatrosses always return to the same breeding grounds on a single plateau of the island.

They do not share this breeding ground with any other wandering albatrosses and researchers suggest that this geographical isolation is what led the birds to develop as a separate species.

Scientists hope that now the birds are recognised as unique, efforts to conserve them will increase.

"This is one additional, but important, piece of evidence that hopefully can help protect the remaining Amsterdam albatrosses," says Dr Burg.

While the current population is considered stable, the Amsterdam albatross is critically endangered.

An estimated 18-26 pairs breed each year in a tiny area at the centre of the island. Pairs mate for life and produce one egg every other year.

Conservationists say the species' survival is threatened by accidental entanglement in long-line fishing gear and nest-site disturbance by domestic animals.

Dental hearing aid gets approved in Europe


A new hearing aid that transmits sound through a person's teeth has been approved for use in Europe.

The device, called SoundBite, directs sound through the jawbone and into the inner ear.

It is placed onto the upper left or right molars and is custom-made for each patient.

The Royal National Institute for Deaf People (RNID) warned that it may not be suitable for everyone with hearing problems.
Bone conduction

While conventional hearing aids use air conduction to increase the volume of sound travelling through the air, SoundBite uses a different approach - bone conduction.

First, a network of mini microphones placed behind the impaired ear pick up the sound in the environment and cancel out the noise.

The sound is transmitted wirelessly to the prosthetic in the mouth.

The device sends the vibrations through the teeth and bones directly to the cochlea - the auditory part of the inner ear - bypassing the middle and outer ear.

This way it can help those who are deaf in one ear to hear in stereo.

The company that makes the system, Sonitus Medical, said that the mechanism is the first ever non-surgical device to use bone conduction.
UK reception

There are around nine million deaf or partially deaf people in the UK alone.

According to the RNID, only six million of them require a hearing aid - and out of those six million, only about two million actually wear one.

Many do not like the look of it, and there are those who find it difficult to convince their GP to prescribe one, said Angela King, RNID senior audiology adviser.

And there are no guarantees that the new device will enjoy a warm reception in the UK, she added.

"Just by looking at it, you can't imagine it being very comfortable.

"Also, if they do not like conventional hearing aids, they are not going to like this either because it involves wearing something behind the ear as well," said Ms King.

Tweeting with the telly on



The days of families reverentially gathered around the box may be long gone but the doom-mongers who said that on-demand would kill linear TV completely may also be somewhat off the mark.

A new generation of viewers is watching what has been dubbed social TV - a synthesis between TV and social networking.

A recent study from marketing agency Digital Clarity found that 80% of under-25s used a second screen to communicate with friends while watching TV and 72% used Twitter, Facebook or a mobile app to comment on shows.

Currently it is little more sophisticated than watching TV with one eye on Twitter or Facebook, but that is beginning to change as TV executives start to experiment with greater social networking integration.

In New Zealand, TVNZ has just launched a new youth channel which sees Facebook heavily integrated to create an interactive entertainment and music show.

The backbone of the schedule is U live, a show that features chat and commentary driven by a Facebook app. It includes profile pictures, comments and polling activity which automatically become part of the programme.

Holy grail

Last month the US channel HBO ran the Howard Stern movie Private Parts with Stern himself commenting live on Twitter throughout the broadcast.

Twitter bosses are excited about the possibilities of deeper integration with TV, although they are still in the process of figuring out how they will make money from it.

Speaking at Mobile World Congress, Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo claimed that the search for the TV industry's holy grail - a second screen - was over.

"That second screen is Twitter," he said.

The hope is that the conversations started on Twitter can be carried on, and even shaped by TV executives, although how far this will alienate tweeters is open to debate.

According to a Nielsen mobile study, more than 85% of mobile and PC users access the web while watching TV.

But only 24% were looking at content related to the TV programme, while others used it to text family and friends (56%), visit social networks (40%) and browse unrelated content (37%).

Robin Sloan, from Twitter's media partnership team, thinks there is definitely an appetite among the Twitterati for more integration.

He told BBC News that the service saw huge spikes in traffic when certain shows were on - soap operas, live sporting events and reality shows.

"It's remarkable because the Twitter conversation will be going along a few tweets here and there and as soon as a new episode premieres or the Oscars start or a game kicks off, the tweets per minute skyrocket and we see it multiply 10, 20, 50 times and it stays like this until the show ends.

"People like to talk about this stuff as it is happening, which is sort of counter-intuitive because a lot of folks are talking about time shifting and everything being on-demand," he said.

So what is the next stage for Twitter on TV?

Promoted tweets

"At this stage they [TV executives] are primarily using Twitter to engage their existing audience and give them something to talk about. Our goal is to get Twitter integrated into TV shows," said Robin Sloan.

"It means that people think about Twitter as a source of really, really great content and frankly it means that Twitter gets in front of a really big audience."

Promoted tweets, which allow businesses to pay to have their Twitter comments elevated, are one of the main current revenue sources for the firm.

News networks, such as the Washington Post and Al Jazeera were already using promoted tweets to tell people about their news contents and live streams, said Mr Sloan.

There is an obvious correlation between them and Twitter, which has increasingly becoming a tool for breaking news.

"When you walk into a newsroom these days, every other monitor has a Twitter feed on it," said Mr Sloan.

Although, when it comes to finding ways to integrate it into broadcast, it can be a different proposition.

"It means they have to get new kinds of technology to put tweets up on air in real time. We tell some networks they have to do this and they say 'our broadcast graphics were invented in 1963 - we can't do that right now', while others are totally ready to go," he said.

Product placement

Integrating Twitter with TV dramas is proving more problematic.

"With scripted drama, people talk about them on Twitter but not quite in the same way.

"If you are the producer of one of those big shows - let's say CSI or NCIS - and you come to us and say, how should I integrate Twitter into my show? That's actually something we are still trying to figure out," said Mr Sloan.

"This is all still really new and we don't know exactly how Twitter works best or what the right tools are, but we are always looking for partners willing to experiment," he said.

Not everyone is convinced that acting as a second screen will be a huge cash cow for Twitter.

"There is not a huge opportunity for Twitter to monetise this," said Jonathan Doran, a principal analyst at Ovum.

"Social TV is being described as one of the next big things, but in reality people are struggling to know what they would do with it. There are limited amounts of interacting with content. We haven't seen much blending of TV content into social media," he said.

But savvy advertising executives are already beginning to see the possibilities, according to Reggie James, managing director of Digital Clarity.

"There will be more social platforms from advertisers allowing users to carry on enjoying and talking about their favourite TV programmes. The old-fashioned models of advertising will be replaced by things like more product placement," he said.

And while social TV might be heralding a modernisation of advertising, it could also be keeping the home fires burning for the TV industry.

"Social TV is a modern version of the old days of gathering round the TV to watch a variety show on a Saturday night," said Mr James.

Japanese food ban widens across Asia on radiation fears

Australia, Hong Kong and Singapore are the latest countries to ban food imports from areas near Japan's Fukushima nuclear power plant.

The ban will include dairy products, vegetables, fruits, meat and seafood.

They follow similar action from the US which also halted some food imports on Tuesday.

Japan's food producers are under pressure after a deadly earthquake caused radiation to leak from the power plant contaminating produce.

Both Australia and Singapore have banned agricultural food imports from the regions of Fukushima, Gunma, Ibaraki and Tochigi. Hong Kong has added another prefecture, Chiba, to its suspension list.

Australia's regulator, the Food Standards Australia New Zealand, said it was taking a precautionary measure that was consistent with approaches internationally.

Three UN agencies have issues a joint statement saying Japan had been taking the right actions.

"Food monitoring is being implemented, measurements of radioactivity in food are taking place, and the results are being communicated publicly," the International Atomic Energy Agency, the World Health Organisation, and the Food and Agriculture Organisation said.

Domestic worries

The bans on food imports from Japan into other countries come after shipments of certain food products from the Fukushima area were halted domestically as well.

The government has told people living in Fukushima not to eat 11 types of green leafy vegetable that are grown locally amid fears of radiation contamination.

Producers in the region have been asked to not send their goods to the market.

In the Ibaraki prefecture all shipments of milk and parsley have also been stopped.

"Unfortunately, as the situation is expected to last for the long term, we are asking that shipments stop at an early stage," said Japanese Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano.

"It is desirable to avoid intake of the foods as much as possible."

Analysts say radiation fears are likely to hit domestic demand, as most agriculture produce from Japan is consumed within the country.

Export fears

Nonetheless, the effects of the earthquake and tsunami have thrown a shadow over Japan's exports.

Analysts expect a negative impact on export growth in the months to come.

The latest figures showed that exports had actually picked up in February.

Exports rose 9% in February from the same moth last year, according to the Ministry of Finance.

However those figures don't reflect the impact from the earthquake which hit on 11 March.

The expected slump in food exports on top of that in manufacturing could start to weigh on those trade numbers.

Damage from the earthquake has caused major exporters like Toyota and Honda to suspend production.

Camera 'looks' through clothing

All objects emit terahertz radiation

A camera that can "see" explosives, drugs and weapons hidden under clothing from 25 metres has been invented.
The ThruVision system could be deployed at airports, railway stations or other public spaces.
It is based on so-called "terahertz", or T-ray, technology, normally used by astronomers to study dying stars.
Although it is able to see through clothes it does not reveal "body detail" or subject people to "harmful radiation", according to the designers.
"It is totally and utterly passive - it receives only," said a spokesperson for Thruvision.
The portable camera, which has already been sold to the Dubai Mercantile Exchange and Canary Wharf in London, will be shown off at the Home Office scientific development branch's annual exhibition later this week.

Body glow

Unlike current security systems that use X-rays, the ThruVision system exploits terahertz rays, or T-rays.
This electromagnetic radiation is a form of low level energy emitted by all people and objects.
These are able to pass through clothing, paper, ceramics and wood but are blocked by metal and water.
The system works by collecting these waves and processing them to form an image which can reveal concealed objects.
"If I were to look at you in terahertz you would appear to glow like a light bulb and different objects glow less brightly or more brightly," said the firm's spokesperson.
"You see a silhouette of the form but you don't see surface anatomical effects."
In addition, the system does not involve any of the "harmful radiation associated with traditional X-ray security screening", according to the firm.
The company has made previous versions of the camera, but the T5000, as it is known, is the first that works both indoors and out.
The system exploits technology originally developed at the government owned Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL) in Oxfordshire.
"Astronomers use T-ray cameras that can see through dust and clouds in space, revealing what lies beyond," explained Dr Liz Towns-Andrews, of the Science and Technology Facilities Council which runs RAL.
Other terahertz systems, developed by companies such as TeraView, are used to probe the structure of pharmaceutical compounds.

Meninggal dunia bukan alasan untuk tinggalkan dunia maya

Beberapa penyedia jasa pemakaman di Amerika kini menyediakan jasa tambahan selain menguburkan orang di dunia nyata, mereka kini membuat kuburan dunia maya juga. Ketika Anda dikuburkan, Anda bisa meminta layanan agar orang-orang dekat Anda diingatkan mengenai ulang tahun kematian Anda via email. Anda juga bisa minta dibuatkan kuburan virtual, di mana orang bisa datang untuk mengunjungi website kuburan Anda, dan mereka pun bisa membelikan Anda benda virtual (misalnya bunga) untuk “diletakkan” di “kuburan” Anda.

Sebenarnya situs facebook juga bisa menjadi kuburan virtual. Jika ada anggota facebook yang meninggal dunia, dan anggota keluarga bisa membuktikan bahwa dia sudah meninggal (misalnya dengan kliping berita koran), maka halaman profile facebook bisa diubah menjadi memorial. Fitur ini dibuka 2007 ketika ada kasus penembakan di Virginia Tech).

Sabtu, 12 Maret 2011

Ryan Phillippe: 'I'm Dating (Amanda Seyfried)'

Ryan Phillippe drops by The Ellen DeGeneres Show on an episode airing on Friday (March 11)!

The 36-year-old Lincoln Lawyer actor chatted with Ellen about what’s new with his love life!

“I’m dating. Not nearly as veracious as the magazines like to make out. I am dating,” Ryan said, adding that he looks for a woman with a sense of humor and a strength.”

Amanda Seyfried recently told Elle, ““Um, yeah. I’ve been ‘seen’ with him” of her rumored relationship with Ryan.

Minggu, 06 Maret 2011

FACEBOOK WILL END ON MARCH 15th!


PALO ALTO, CA –Mark Zuckerberg announced that Facebook will be shut down in March. Managing the site has become too stressful.

“Facebook has gotten out of control,” said Zuckerberg in a press conference outside his Palo Alto office, “and the stress of managing this company has ruined my life. I need to put an end to all the madness.”

Zuckerberg went on to explain that starting March 15th, users will no longer be able to access their Facebook accounts.

“After March 15th the whole website shuts down,” said Avrat Humarthi, Vice President of Technical Affairs at Facebook. “So if you ever want to see your pictures again, I recommend you take them off the internet. You won’t be able to get them back once Facebook goes out of business.”

Zuckerberg said that the decision to shut down Facebook was difficult, but that he does not think people will be upset.

“I personally don’t think it’s a big deal,” he said in a private phone interview. “And to be honest, I think it’s for the better. Without Facebook, people will have to go outside and make real friends. That’s always a good thing.”

Some Facebook users were furious upon hearing the shocking news.

“What am I going to do without Facebook?” said Denise Bradshaw, a high school student from Indiana. “My life revolves around it. I’m on Facebook at least 10 hours a day. Now what am I going to do with all that free time?”

However, parents across the country have been experiencing a long anticipated sense of relief.

“I’m glad the Facebook nightmare is over,” said Jon Guttari, a single parent from Detroit. “Now my teenager’s face won’t be glued to a computer screen all day. Maybe I can even have a conversation with her.”

Those in the financial circuit are criticizing Zuckerberg for walking away from a multibillion dollar franchise. Facebook is currently ranked as one of the wealthiest businesses in the world, with economists estimating its value at around 7.9 billion.

But Zuckerberg remains unruffled by these accusations. He says he will stand by his decision to give Facebook the axe.

“I don’t care about the money,” said Zuckerberg. “I just want my old life back.”

The Facebook Corporation suggests that users remove all of their personal information from the website before March 15th. After that date, all photos, notes, links, and videos will be permanently erased.