Saturday, May 4, 2013

HTC One $100 trade-in deal back until May 5

HTC One

Get a second chance at $100 (or more) with trade-in, no preorder required

In February, HTC started a promotion for those that preordered the HTC One: trade-in a qualifying old smartphone, and get at least $100 back with proof of purchase. This required a unique pre-registration code that HTC sent out upon preordering.

Those that missed HTC's original offer now get another shot at the $100 Visa gift card (up to $375 based on trade-in value). This second chance at the money back promotion is good for this weekend only (May 2 - May 5). Instead of unique codes given to each customer, HTC is giving out a universal code for anyone to use. To qualify, follow these three steps:

  1. Buy a new HTC One between 5/2/13 - 5/5/13
  2. Go to the promo page and enter the promotion code: HTC100
  3. Use the shipping label provided to mail-in your eligible smartphone and proof of your new HTC One purchase postmarked by 6/15/13 and you'll get a Prepaid Visa card by mail

This offer is good for phones purchased through U.S. carriers or national retails stores only. If you've been looking for an excuse to pickup a One, now's your chance.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/jj45bLAHVjc/story01.htm

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Friday, May 3, 2013

Focus on STD, not cancer prevention, to promote HPV vaccine use

May 2, 2013 ? The HPV vaccine can prevent both cervical cancer and a nasty sexually transmitted disease in women. But emphasizing the STD prevention will persuade more young women to get the vaccine, a new study suggests.

These results go against the conventional wisdom that scaring women about the possibility of cancer is the best way to get them vaccinated.

The failure of that cancer-threat message may be one reason that fewer than 20 percent of adolescent girls in the United States have received the HPV vaccine, said Janice Krieger, lead author of the study and assistant professor of communication at The Ohio State University.

"Young women don't respond strongly to the threat of cervical cancer," Krieger said.

"They seem to be more worried about getting an STD. That's the way we should try to encourage them to get the HPV vaccine."

The vaccine -- most commonly sold under the brand name Gardasil -- prevents the types of HPV, or human papillomavirus, that cause most cases of cervical cancer and most cases of genital warts, a sexually transmitted disease.

Krieger conducted the study with Melanie Sarge of Texas Tech University. It appears in a recent issue of the journal Health Communication.

Many early studies of how to sell the benefits of the HPV vaccine found that the message that it prevents cancer was effective. But these studies often involved women of all ages, from adolescence to old age. The problem, though, is that the vaccine is targeted to women under the age of 26.

"Cancer is something people start to worry about later in life, not when they're in high school and college. We decided to do a clean study that compared what message worked best with college-aged women versus what worked with their mothers," Krieger said.

Participants in the study included 188 female college students (average age of 22) and 115 of their mothers (average age of 50).

The mothers and students both received a packet of materials that included a questionnaire and a pro-vaccine message. The student message recommended talking to a doctor about the HPV vaccine, and the parent message recommended encouraging their daughter to talk to a doctor.

Two different messages were created. Half of the mothers and students received a message sheet about the vaccine with a large headline that read, "Prevent cervical cancer." The other half received a similar message, but with the headline declaring, "Prevent genital warts." A text box on the sheet also re-emphasized either the cancer or the genital warts message.

Participants then filled out the questionnaire, which asked a variety of questions that included how they felt about the threat of HPV and whether they felt they (or their daughter) could talk to a doctor about receiving the vaccine.

Results showed that the message emphasizing the vaccine's effectiveness at preventing genital warts was a clear winner with the young women.

Compared to those who received the cancer prevention message, young women who read that the vaccine prevented genital warts were more likely to say they intended to talk to their doctor about the vaccine. They also said they felt more comfortable talking to their doctor about the vaccine.

"Preventing cancer was not a big motivator," Krieger said.

Overall, the findings showed that scaring young women into getting the vaccine doesn't seem to be a good strategy.

Young women who perceived HPV as a bigger threat to their health than others, or who thought they were more likely to get the virus, were not consequently more likely to say they would get the vaccine or talk to their doctor.

"Our results suggest it is more important to get women to feel comfortable talking to their doctor about the vaccine," she said. "Fear doesn't work. They need to feel it is not difficult or embarrassing to discuss the vaccine with their doctor. That's the best way to encourage them to be vaccinated."

The researchers expected that the mothers in the study would be more likely to talk to their daughters about getting the HPV vaccine if they read the cancer prevention message rather than the STD prevention message.

Part of their reasoning was that the mothers, being older, were at a stage in their life when cancer was a bigger issue for them, Krieger said. But they also thought mothers would not feel comfortable about an STD message that assumes that their daughters were sexually active.

However, it turned out that the mothers weren't affected by which of the messages they received.

"We believed that mothers would react negatively to the message about preventing genital warts, but that wasn't supported. Mothers reacted similarly to the genital warts and cancer prevention messages. It suggests that if we focus on the prevention of genital warts in our messages to daughters, it may not mean we have lost the mothers."

Krieger said the results should encourage policymakers, doctors and others to shift their messages to young women concerning the HPV vaccine.

"Cancer may seem to be the more serious issue to some older adults, but it is not the top concern for young women," she said.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Ohio State University. The original article was written by Jeff Grabmeier.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Janice L. Krieger, Melanie A. Sarge. A Serial Mediation Model of Message Framing on Intentions to Receive the Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Vaccine: Revisiting the Role of Threat and Efficacy Perceptions. Health Communication, 2013; 28 (1): 5 DOI: 10.1080/10410236.2012.734914

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/child_development/~3/yHA7pTOaEBU/130502120439.htm

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Woodson wants Knicks focused on court, not closets

New York Knicks forward Iman Shumpert (21), guard Pablo Prigioni and forward Chris Copeland (14) react on the bench in the second half of Game 5 of their first-round NBA basketball playoff series against the Boston Celtics at Madison Square Garden in New York, Wednesday, May 1, 2013. The Celtics won 92-86. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

New York Knicks forward Iman Shumpert (21), guard Pablo Prigioni and forward Chris Copeland (14) react on the bench in the second half of Game 5 of their first-round NBA basketball playoff series against the Boston Celtics at Madison Square Garden in New York, Wednesday, May 1, 2013. The Celtics won 92-86. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

(AP) ? Call it bad fashion sense or poor playoff etiquette.

New York Knicks coach Mike Woodson sure didn't like his players' decision to wear black to Game 5 of their playoff series against Boston on Wednesday night, which they expected to be the Celtics' "funeral."

Only the Celtics are still alive after winning 92-86, and Woodson said Thursday he told the Knicks to focus only on the court, not their closets.

"I made reference to our guys, we need to stay out of the paper and just concentrate on playing," Woodson said after practice, "because that's not important. What you wear doesn't have anything to do with how you play on the basketball floor."

The Knicks won the first three games of the series and perhaps got overconfident along the way. Guard J.R. Smith threw an elbow into Boston counterpart Jason Terry's chin late in Game 3, earning a one-game suspension, then said he would have been playing golf Tuesday instead of practicing if he'd played in Game 4.

New York then broke out the black for Wednesday's game, showing a lack of humility for a franchise that hasn't won a series since 2000.

"This game has shown the immaturity of the Knicks team . the inexperience, maybe, in this situation. The playoffs are always a process and you have to learn as you go. They have learned something here," TNT analyst Steve Kerr said, according to a transcript of the broadcast.

"You have to approach things in the playoffs in a very professional manner. You had the elbow from J.R. Smith that led to the suspension; a lot of trash talking the last couple of days; the shenanigans with wearing black. This is about executing and playing as a team and playing hard, and this is part of the process."

Center Tyson Chandler said the Knicks understood Woodson's message but didn't regret wearing black, saying his Dallas Mavericks 2011 championship team that included current teammate Jason Kidd and Terry did the same.

"We did that every single time we had a closeout game in Dallas. There was nothing to look back on. It just reminds you of what you're trying to accomplish," Chandler said. "It's nothing against the Celtics, it's something we were doing as a team. It wasn't meant to offend anybody or anything like that, it was meant to motivate the guys in the locker room."

It may have motivated the Celtics, so Woodson, who said he wasn't aware of the players' dress code until Thursday morning, wants his team bringing the right mentality to Boston.

"I've addressed that with our players and that's enough," he said. "Again, the game is played on the floor and that's where it should be played."

___

Follow Brian Mahoney on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/Briancmahoney

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-05-02-BKN-Knicks-Woodson/id-9768260fa5a64e37af6619aa5cc15f7c

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Anti-EU party shakes British PM's Conservatives in local vote

By Andrew Osborn and Guy Faulconbridge

LONDON (Reuters) - The anti-European Union UK Independence Party made big gains in local elections on Friday, siphoning support from British Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservatives in a vote that underlined the threat it poses to his re-election chances in 2015.

Its success in council elections in mostly English rural areas that have traditionally been Conservative strongholds rattled Britain's three main parties, as voters deserted their ranks to switch allegiance to the populist group.

UKIP, which wants Britain to leave the European Union and an end to "open-door immigration", polled an average of 26 percent of the vote in council elections, according to early results, the best result for a fourth party since World War Two.

It also pushed Cameron's Conservatives into third place in an election for a national parliamentary seat in a traditional Labour stronghold in northern England, where Labour's majority was almost halved compared to three years ago.

"It sends a shockwave, I think, through the establishment," said Nigel Farage, the former commodity trader turned politician who leads UKIP.

Cameron once dismissed UKIP as "a bunch of fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists," and a senior Conservative minister called the party "a collection of clowns" before the vote.

"Send in the clowns," Farage quipped to Sky News. "We have been abused by everybody, attacked by the entire establishment who did their best to stop ordinary decent people from going out and voting UKIP and they have done in big, big numbers."

Though UKIP still has no seats in the 650-seat lower house of the British parliament, its surge in the polls will increase pressure on Cameron from nervous lawmakers in his own party to take a tougher stance on Europe and immigration.

The results suggest UKIP could split the center-right vote at the next national election. That would make it harder for Cameron to defeat Labour, which leads his Conservatives by up to 10 percent in opinion polls as the economy shows tentative signs of recovering despite unpopular public spending cuts.

"SHOCKWAVE"

While the results are likely to reignite questions about Cameron's leadership from malcontents who complain he is too liberal, they will also concern Labour leader Ed Miliband, who faces growing UKIP support in traditional Labour strongholds.

Although Labour, which has controlled the South Shields since 1935, held onto the parliamentary seat, UKIP won 24 percent of the vote in South Shields, its second highest result in such an election. Turnout was low at 39 percent.

"They have become a populist, center-right, 'small c' conservative party of protest and they will be sapping votes from the Conservatives who are unpopular mid-term but also from the other parties as well," Tony Travers, director of British government at the London School of Economics, said of UKIP.

The Lib Dems, the junior partner in Cameron's coalition, are also under pressure. They won so few votes in South Shields they lost their deposit and early results for the council elections showed their vote was also down.

Early results showed UKIP had won 77 council seats after 28 of 35 councils had been declared. Full results of the elections for more than 2,000 council seats in England and Wales are expected later on Friday.

Although the Conservatives are expected to lose hundreds of seats, they are still likely to win overall because the vote was held in their own heartlands.

Critics say UKIP's success means it will come under increasing scrutiny and that voters will ultimately find it does not have properly-developed policies, a claim UKIP rejects.

Farage says Britain's political leaders have failed voters by allowing far too many immigrants into the country and by allowing the European Union to purloin too much sovereignty.

Grant Shapps, the chairman of the Conservative party, said his party, the senior partner in a two-party coalition, had heard the voters' message "loud and clear".

But the real choice at 2015 parliamentary election would be between Labour and the Conservatives, he said.

Though significant, UKIP's gains are unlikely to give it control of a single council and Britain's first past the post system means it will have to poll even greater numbers if it is to win a large number of seats in a general election.

"It is a worry for all three party leaders," Travers from LSE said. "None of us knows whether UKIP is a flash in the pan."

(Additional reporting by Peter Griffiths and Stephen Addison)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/anti-eu-party-shakes-british-pms-conservatives-local-135818703.html

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How to Get a Math Tutor - Article Submitter

Mathematics is one of the most difficult subjects for many students, especially those in the higher elementary levels and in the senior high school and college levels. For younger children, though, it is more common to have an appreciation of learning about adding up, telling time, addition and subtraction, patterns, and so forth. Therefore, if your child is just beginning school but is already showing a lack of enthusiasm for math topics, then this may be an indicator for you to consider working with a math tutor.

Why a Child Might Require a Math Tutor?

In the earlier elementary levels, your child's math grades will give you an idea if they would require additional aid and a boost of reassurance in this specific discipline. Getting a mathematics tutor may help the child not only have much better grades but also develop a greater appreciation and interest for math through regular exercises. A tutor can help the child focus and also figure out the certain areas that ought to be developed and enhanced. Enjoyable and interesting tasks and worksheets can be provided to make the topics seem more exciting.

It is also great to have a mathematics tutor if your child seems burnt out in class but is undoubtedly proficient at solving equations and word problems. Maybe he or she has an advanced level and may need more challenging work. A tutor can lead your child and further develop his or her giftedness in this aspect.

If you yourself are not very good in math or you can not spare adequate time to teach your child in this subject area, it is really a good idea to simply hire a private mathematics tutor or to avail of this service in a reputable tutorial center.

Where to Get a Math Tutor.

It's easy to find a qualified math tutor because this is a topic that's always in demand. You can start by asking your child's teachers because sometimes the school itself may have a special after-school program that will be hassle-free and useful for your child. These instructors may also know a lot of available mathematics instructors who can come to your home regularly to tutor your child.

Furthermore, you can always try hunting in your area for tutorial centers that offer specialized math programs suitable for your child's age and grade level. If you can exert the time and effort to guide your child, you may also opt to make use of an online math tutorial program.

Undoubtedly learning mathematics can be both enjoyable and difficult, but is definitely necessary in advancing to progressive skills that a child needs as he goes up in formal education. Understanding mathematics is also valuable in daily living, especially if your child later on decides to take up engineering, architecture, bookkeeping, business management or an additional program that relies greatly on math skills.

For more information and tips about how to find a good homework tutor, check out Good Grades Guide. I'm sure you'll find it interesting and helpful!

Source: http://articles.submityourarticle.com/how-to-get-a-math-tutor-327650

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Thursday, May 2, 2013

App Install Ads Earned Facebook ?Real Revenue? And Helped 3800 Developers Drive 25M Downloads

Facebook New App Install Ad ScreenshotFacebook app install ads were the star of Facebook's earnings call today. Sheryl Sandberg said 3800 developers, including 40% of the top 100 iOS app developers, used the ads to drive over 25 million installs. Mark Zuckerberg meanwhile said, "We're starting to see real revenue from selling mobile app installs."

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/cgVA8yUshOc/

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E-Reading Rainbow: Hachette to bring entire e-book catalog to public libraries

EReading Rainbow Hachette to bring entire ebook catalog to public libraries next week

If you're still balking at the cost of download-to-own e-books, and would rather stick to the tried-and-true library lending system, then this Hachette news is for you. Come next Wednesday, the entirety of Hachette's ebook catalog -- over 5,000 titles -- will be made available to nonprofit libraries throughout the US. The announcement and finalized pricing model follows two years worth of pilot testing, during which the publisher examined ebook consumption and lending habits at select libraries. Under the currently set terms of sale, e-books that bow in tandem with print editions will run three times the price of their physical counterparts for "single-user-at-a-time circulations, " with prices falling to just one and a half that of the hard copy one year later. By Hachette's own admission, this pricing scheme is not entirely set in stone -- the company plans to continually reevaluate the model on a per-year basis. So, there's hope yet the publisher will gouge libraries a bit less for the perks of e-borrowing.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/P8TW0NLCFqQ/

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