Monday, March 4, 2013

Ever thought of streaming live events online? | Server Room Blog

You probably remember the early years of the television when broadcasting live shows was a huge deal. Millions of people were on the edges of their seats at home every time there was a live sporting event being broadcasted on the TV. We have come a long time since then and now the live event streaming technology is available for virtually anyone.

If you are worried about not having any technical skills that are required to start streaming live video online then you can stop right now. Most of nowadays services are very user-friendly and they will take you by the hand every step of the way. Even if you have no technical background whatsoever, you will still have no problem in setting up a live video stream by yourself.

Price is also not a problem when it comes to live event streaming services. Since there are so many online companies offering this type of service, competition can only mean good things for the end-user. However, if you are going to stream your live event to a very large audience then be prepared to pay accordingly. The video quality of the stream is also going to influence the price you pay for this service.

As previously mentioned, you don?t need to have any type of technical knowledge in order to be able to start streaming video content online. Even if your video streaming provider is not at all helpful, there are still hundreds if not more online tutorials in every format imaginable that are just waiting for you to check them out. However, if you stumble upon a company that won?t offer you support then simply move on to the next. There are many companies offering this type of service and they should be begging you for your business.

Even though?live video streaming?is very easy to do and won?t cost you a fortune, you still have a few requirements. You probably already have a computer with an internet connection. All you need now is a video camera or even a decent quality web camera. Keep in mind though that if you want to viewing quality of the stream to be good, you will also need to have a pretty good device to record with. Besides the computer, internet connection and video camera you will also need a live video streaming service that we have talked about earlier.

The beauty about the even streaming service is that you can use it for anything you have in mind. If you have a music concert coming up then you can use even streaming to broadcast the live event to your friends, family and fans. You can even use live streaming at personal events such as weddings and baptism ceremonies.

With live video streaming you can have as many or as few people watching as you like since this technology is extremely flexible. So as long as there is an internet connection, people from all over the world will be able to tune in on your live broadcast and enjoy your video content.

March 1st, 2013 ?


Source: http://blog.serverroom.us/online-live-events/

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NY Cardinal Dolan a 'happy warrior' for church

NEW YORK (AP) ? Challenging a White House mandate for birth control coverage in health insurance, New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan sounded like a general rallying the troops.

"The only thing we're certainly not prepared to do is give in," Dolan said at a national bishops' meeting last November. "We're not violating our consciences."

Weeks earlier, he had appeared in a far less formal setting, at New York's Fordham University with comedian Stephen Colbert. From the 3,000 cheering audience members, one student considering the priesthood asked whether he should date. Dolan said it could help decide the right path, then quipped, "By the way, let me give you the phone numbers of my nieces."

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EDITOR'S NOTE: As the Roman Catholic Church prepares to elect a successor to Pope Benedict XVI, The Associated Press is profiling key cardinals seen as "papabili" ? contenders to the throne. In the secretive world of the Vatican, there is no way to know who is in the running, and history has yielded plenty of surprises. But these are the names that have come up time and again in speculation. Today: Cardinal Timothy Dolan.

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Catholic News Service calls him a happy warrior for evangelization. Kean University historian Christopher Bellitto calls him the bear-hug bishop. Dolan, 63, is an upbeat, affable defender of Catholic orthodoxy, and a well-known religious figure in the United States.

He holds a job Pope John Paul II once called "archbishop of the capital of the world." His colleagues broke with protocol in 2010 and made him president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, instead of elevating the sitting vice president as expected. And during the 2012 presidential election, Republicans and Democrats competed over which national political convention the cardinal would bless. He did both.

But scholars question whether his charisma and experience are enough for a real shot at succeeding Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI. The thinking ahead of the conclave is Dolan's chances are slim.

"It's not a personal attack on his qualities as a cardinal or individual," said Monsignor Michael Fahey, a scholar at Fairfield University in Conn. "Cardinal Dolan has a knack for getting people to feel relaxed and to laugh and to expect the unexpected, but that is not what the church needs right now."

Dolan spent seven years in Rome as rector of the North American College, considered the West Point for U.S. priests, where he had studied for his own ordination years earlier. However, he never worked in a Vatican office or congregation ? experience that would have helped him develop ties with cardinals from other countries and raise his profile in a conclave.

Benedict made Dolan a cardinal just a year ago. Still, the former pope chose the New York archbishop for the honor of delivering a speech to other church leaders in Rome. His address on spreading the faith was highly praised, and he emerged as something of a star of the event, gaining mention in some Italian media as potentially "papabile," or having the qualities of a future pope.

No American has ever served as pontiff. Some cardinals express concerns a superpower pope and the potential for his actions to be viewed as serving the U.S. instead of the church.

Ahead of this conclave, church-watchers seem split over whether that old assumption still applies. Dolan's credentials as upholder of the faith have been especially burnished by the bishops' ongoing conflicts with President Barack Obama. Obama endorses same-sex marriage, supports abortion rights and included the birth control coverage rule in his health care overhaul.

However, Dolan speaks only halting Italian and a little Spanish, and no French or Latin, a huge drawback for a potential leader of a 1.2 billion-member global church. (By contrast, Benedict speaks eight or so languages.) The cardinal's informality and folksy vocabulary, which help make him so approachable in the United States, could actually undermine his chances in Rome. In recent comments about other challenges the church has survived, Dolan noted that some former popes have been "lemons." When taking the stage to greet Colbert, before about 3,000 cheering students, Dolan jokingly kissed Colbert's ring instead of shaking the comedian's hand.

Along with his humor, Dolan can artfully convey church teaching. He earned a doctorate in church history from The Catholic University of America and sprinkles his speeches with details of the early struggles Catholic immigrants trying to carve a place for themselves in Protestant America. Noting that secularism is growing in the U.S, he argues that broader society is in a "drive to neuter religion" and "push religion back into the sacristy." On his blog, "The Gospel in the Digital Age," Dolan writes on a wide range of issues, from gun control to abortion to the future of Catholic schools.

A St. Louis native of Irish ancestry and the oldest of five children, Dolan began his path to the priesthood as a boy. He said he would set up cardboard boxes with sheets to make a play altar in the basement. He attended a seminary prep school in Missouri and by 1985 earned his doctorate. After working as a parish priest, professor and seminary leader, he served briefly as an auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese of St. Louis before John Paul appointed him in 2002 as archbishop of Milwaukee, which serves about 675,000 parishioners. In 2009, Benedict appointed Dolan archbishop of New York, the nation's second-largest archdiocese after Los Angeles, serving about 2.5 million Catholics.

Like every U.S. bishop in recent years, Dolan has had to grapple with fallout from the clergy sex abuse scandal.

Dolan's predecessor in Milwaukee, Archbishop Rembert Weakland, who had been planning to retire, left abruptly after news broke that the archdiocese had paid a $450,000 settlement to a man claiming Weakland tried to sexually assault him. Weakland admitted an "inappropriate relationship" but denied abuse.

In 2004, Dolan publicly released the names of Milwaukee diocesan priests who had been accused of molesting children. However, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests said he said he didn't work closely enough with civil authorities to also identify accused clergy from religious orders.

Days before Dolan left for the conclave, he sat for a deposition with attorneys for people who said they had been abused as children by clergy working in the Milwaukee archdiocese. Dolan's successor in Milwaukee sought bankruptcy protection for the archdiocese from 570 abuse claims. Advocates for victims have accused Dolan of having tried to shield the Milwaukee archdiocese assets, in part by transferring millions of dollars several years ago into a cemetery trust fund and a parish fund. Dolan denies the accusation.

On the final day of Benedict's pontificate, Dolan stood with seminarians on the roof of the North American College and waved as a helicopter flew overhead, carrying the departing pope to what will be his temporary retirement home, the papal retreat in Castel Gandolfo. In his trademark way, he put any talk of his elevation aside, by recalling a conversation with his mother.

She told him, "You better be back in time for St. Patrick's Day because I want to walk down Fifth Avenue with you in the parade."

___

AP reporter Trisha Thomas contributed from Rome.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ny-cardinal-dolan-happy-warrior-church-093322539.html

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Sunday, March 3, 2013

Spending cuts seem here to stay

President Barack Obama gestures as he speaks to reporters in the White House briefing room in Washington, Friday, March 1, 2013, following a meeting with congressional leaders regarding the automatic spending cuts. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama gestures as he speaks to reporters in the White House briefing room in Washington, Friday, March 1, 2013, following a meeting with congressional leaders regarding the automatic spending cuts. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

(AP) ? The spending cuts are here to stay if you believe the public posturing Sunday.

The Senate's Republican leader Mitch McConnell called them modest. House Speaker John Boehner isn't sure the cuts will hurt the economy. The White House's top economic adviser, Gene Sperling, said the pain isn't that bad right now.

So after months of dire warnings, Washington didn't implode, government didn't shut down and the $85 billion budget trigger didn't spell doom. And no one has a tangible proposal for rolling back those cuts.

"This modest reduction of 2.4 percent in spending over the next six months is a little more than the average American experienced just two months ago, when their own pay went down when the payroll tax holiday expired," McConnell said.

"I don't know whether it's going to hurt the economy or not," Boehner said. "I don't think anyone quite understands how the sequester is really going to work."

And Sperling, making the rounds on the Sunday news shows, added: "On Day One, it will not be as harmful as it will be over time."

Both parties cast blame on the other for the automatic, across-the-board spending cuts but gave little guidance on what to expect in the coming weeks. Republicans and Democrats pledged to retroactively undo the cuts but signaled no hints as to how that process would start to take shape. Republicans insisted there would be no new taxes and Democrats refused to talk about any bargain without them.

"That's not going to work," said Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H. "If we're going to increase revenue again, it's got to go to the debt with real entitlement reform and real tax reform when you actually lower rates. ... I'm not going to agree to any more tax increases that are going to go to increase more government."

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said any tax increases were unacceptable.

"I'm not going to do any more small deals. I'm not going to raise taxes to fix sequestration. We don't need to raise taxes to fund the government," Graham said.

All of this comes ahead of a new, March 27 deadline that could spell a government shutdown and a debt-ceiling clash coming in May.

Boehner said his chamber would move this week to pass a measure to keep government open through Sept. 30. McConnell said a government shutdown was unlikely to come from his side of Capitol Hill. The White House said it would dodge the shutdown and roll back the cuts, which hit domestic and defense spending in equal share.

"We will still be committed to trying to find Republicans and Democrats that will work on a bipartisan compromise to get rid of the sequester," Sperling said.

Obama has phoned lawmakers but it isn't clear to what end; the White House refused Sunday to release the names of lawmakers Obama phoned. Boehner and McConnell said they had a productive meeting with Obama on Friday, but it didn't yield a deal.

"Well, no one can think that that's been a success for the president," said Mitt Romney, Obama's unsuccessful rival in November's election. "He didn't think the sequester would happen. It is happening."

Obama and the Republicans have been fighting over federal spending since the opposition party regained control of the House of Representatives in the 2010 midterm elections. The budget cuts were designed in 2011 to be so ruthless that both sides would be forced to find a better deal, but they haven't despite two years to find a compromise.

The $85 billion in cuts apply to the remainder of the 2013 fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30. But without a deal they will continue slashing government spending by about $1 trillion more over a 10-year period.

McConnell spoke to CNN's "State of the Union." Boehner was interviewed on NBC's "Meet the Press." Sperling appeared on ABC's "This Week," NBC and CNN. Ayotte appeared on ABC. Graham spoke with CBS' "Face the Nation." Romney was a guest on "Fox News Sunday."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-03-03-Budget%20Battle/id-b8d8aead72024c3fa0caa673fdbbd7db

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Shirakawa's exit highlights county's rules for succession (San Jose Mercury News)

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Study shows key enzyme missing from aggressive form of breast cancer

Friday, March 1, 2013

A new study led by the University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center's Dr. Peter Zhou found that triple-negative breast cancer cells are missing a key enzyme that other cancer cells contain ? providing insight into potential therapeutic targets to treat the aggressive cancer. Zhou's study is unique in that his lab is the only one in the country to specifically study the metabolic process of triple-negative breast cancer cells.

Normally, all cells ? including cancerous cells ? use glucose to initiate the process of making Adenosine-5'-triphosphate (ATP) for fuel to carry out essential functions. This process, called glycolysis, leads to other processes that use oxygen to make higher quantities of ATP ? but solid tumor cells, which have little access to oxygen, are forced to rely almost exclusively on aerobic glycolysis for survival.

Zhou's study, published in Cancer Cell, showed that the powerful transcription factor complex Snail-G9a-Dnmt1 is over-expressed in triple-negative breast cancer, inhibiting the enzyme 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP1). The loss of this enzyme shuts down the glucose anabolic pathway and promotes the glucose catabolic pathway, leading to a large amount of glucose entering the tumor cells and thus "feeding" the aggressive cancer. This metabolic switch empowers the triple-negative breast cancer cells to suck more glucose from the body, increasing macromolecule biosynthesis in tumor cells and maintaining ATP production despite a dearth of nutrients and an oxygen-free environment.

Triple-negative breast cancer is the most deadly subtype of breast cancer, and tends to occur in women at a younger age. This subtype of breast cancer has poor clinical outcomes due to the early metastasis of tumor cells, resistance to chemotherapy, and the lack of specific drugs that target it. Identifying this change in the cancer's metabolic process provides major insight into developing drugs to target the disease, Zhou says.

"These findings present significant insights regarding the development and progression of triple-negative breast cancer," said Zhou, associate professor of molecular and cellular biochemistry at UK. "They indicate that targeting the metabolic alteration will lead to an effective approach for treating this deadly disease."

Zhou's research was aided by the team in the Free Radical Biology in Cancer Shared Resource Facility (FRBC) of the Markey Cancer Center, directed by Dr. Allan Butterfield. The FRBC used an instrument called the Seahorse XF-96 Flux Analyzer to test and confirm the predictions of Zhou's findings in triple-negative breast cancer.

"The significance of this study rests in proving that triple negative breast cancer cells utilize glycolysis for survival and growth," Butterfield said. "The FRBC will assist Dr. Zhou in furthering this exciting research, potentially helping to identify key proteins in triple negative breast cancer cells that are expressed or modified differently than in control cells. Such knowledge may lead to new insights to potential approaches to treat this aggressive cancer."

###

University of Kentucky: http://www.uky.edu

Thanks to University of Kentucky for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 40 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127084/Study_shows_key_enzyme_missing_from_aggressive_form_of_breast_cancer

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Saturday, March 2, 2013

Nearly 1 in 4 women newly diagnosed with breast cancer

Friday, March 1, 2013

A study by researchers at the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center (HICCC) at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center, has found that nearly one in four women (23 percent) newly diagnosed with breast cancer reported symptoms consistent with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) shortly after diagnosis, with increased risk among black and Asian women. The research has been e-published ahead of print in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

"This study is one of the first to evaluate the course of PTSD after a diagnosis of breast cancer," said lead author Alfred I. Neugut, MD, PhD, the Myron M. Studner Professor of Cancer Research, professor of medicine and epidemiology, at Columbia University's College of Physicians & Surgeons and Mailman School of Public Health, and a member of the HICCC.

"We analyzed interview responses from more than 1,100 women," said Dr. Neugut. "During the first two to three months after diagnosis, nearly a quarter of them met the criteria for PTSD, although the symptoms declined over the next three months. Younger women were more likely to develop symptoms of PTSD, and data suggest Asian and black women are at a more than 50 percent higher risk than white women."

The 1,139 research participants were part of the Breast Cancer Quality of Care Study (BQUAL). Between 2006 and 2010, women with newly diagnosed breast cancer, stages I to III, over the age of 20 were recruited from NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center and Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City; the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit; and Kaiser-Permanente in Northern California. Each participant completed three phone interviews. The first was two to three months after diagnosis and before the third chemotherapy cycle, if the patient was receiving chemotherapy. The second interview was four months after diagnosis, and the third was six months after diagnosis.

"The ultimate outcome of this research is to find ways to improve the quality of patients' lives," said Dr. Neugut, who is also an oncologist at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia. "If we can identify potential risk factors for PTSD, when women are diagnosed with breast cancer, we could provide early prevention and intervention to minimize PTSD symptoms. This approach might also have an indirect impact on the observed racial disparity in breast cancer survival."

The research team believes that these findings may apply to patients with other cancer diagnoses as well. Dr. Neugut noted that in previous research, symptoms of PTSD have been reported following prostate cancer and lymphoma diagnoses.

###

Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health: http://www.mailman.hs.columbia.edu

Thanks to Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 2 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127089/Nearly___in___women_newly_diagnosed_with_breast_cancer

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Research rides dragon to the International Space Station

Mar. 1, 2013 ? A second contracted flight for the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft to the International Space Station will be twice as nice for researchers working with investigations on the orbiting laboratory. While other cargo ships can bring research payloads to the station, only the Dragon and the Russian Soyuz can safely get the cargo home. Scientists in the United States, Canada, France and Japan -- and several high school students -- are awaiting the return of their research studying a wide range of subjects, from plants to liquid crystals.

The Dragon capsule is scheduled to launch March 1 on a Falcon 9 rocket, carrying about 1,268 pounds (575 kilograms) of supplies.. On March 2, Expedition 34 commander Kevin Ford and Flight Engineer Tom Marshburn of NASA will grab the capsule with the station's robotic arm and attach it to the Harmony module, where it will stay for about three weeks. Dragon is scheduled to return to Earth on March 25, bringing home nearly double the amount of supplies it brought up -- about 2,668 pounds (1,210 kilograms). Returning investigation samples will demonstrate how life in microgravity affects the growth of plant seedlings, changes to the human body, the behavior of semiconductors and detergents, and more.

Several studies involve a small flowering plant called thale cress, or Arabidopsis thaliana, which is essentially the lab mouse of plant research. The Plant Signaling investigation and Biological Research in Canisters (BRIC) 17-1 both study how the plants' gene expressions change in microgravity. Scientists think plant cells living in space do not behave the same way as cells in plants on Earth, and the experiments will examine these changes on a molecular level.

In BRIC 17-1, cell cultures derived from thale cress plants are grown in Petri dishes and later examined to determine which genes are involved in certain cellular changes. A related experiment, BRIC 17-2, exposes thale cress seedlings to low oxygen levels to examine its effects on the health of their roots. The BRIC investigations will be delivered to station aboard Dragon and will come home after its three-week stay. These experiments will help biologists understand how plants respond to microgravity, which will improve efforts aimed at growing food in space -- a crucial component of long-duration missions to Mars or elsewhere in the solar system. It can also inform crop production here on Earth.

Another study making a round trip with Dragon will look at how metal mixtures solidify. Coarsening in Solid Liquid Mixtures-3 (CSLM-3) examines the growth and solidification of lead-based liquids that contain small amounts of tin. When the liquid solidifies, the tin forms small branch-like structures called dendrites. By using tiny amounts of tin, scientists can observe single dendrites at a time, which would be impossible on the ground because of gravity's effects. By understanding how temperatures and time control the growth of these dendrites, materials scientists may find new ways to produce materials from molten metals.

Microgravity research can also benefit scientists trying to improve the shelf life of consumer products like toothpaste and laundry detergent. Dragon is delivering the Advanced Colloids Experiment-M-1 (ACE-M-1) investigation on behalf of Procter & Gamble, which owns several brands of personal care products. ACE-M-1 testing will take advantage of the microgravity environment of station to study how microscopic particles spread out and clump together in gels and creams. Particle additives can make a product last longer by maintaining its consistency, but they sink and clump together after a certain amount of time, which can spoil a product. It's difficult to study these dynamics on Earth because gravity gets in the way, making the space station an ideal research platform for these important industrial processes.

Along with scientists from NASA centers and private industry, plenty of students are excited for the deployment of their own experiments, facilitated by the NanoRacks system. Students from several California schools developed investigations to study bacteria, iron corrosion, battery performance and carbon dioxide levels aboard station, all of which will be delivered by Dragon.

Finally, the Wet Lab Kit will provide crew members with frequently-used tools and supplies needed to perform in-orbit experiment sample manipulation and analysis. Wetlab will increase experiments' science return while decreasing the time between investigations.

Dragon as a mode of return transport also increases the station's science return, an important capability to retrieve samples for analysis on the ground. Samples taken from the crew support human health studies in microgravity, such as the Nutrition investigation. Astronauts already provide blood and urine samples before and after flight so scientists can examine changes to their metabolism, but Dragon's cold stowage capability will allow scientists to examine samples returned in the middle of the crew's mission.

Additionally, the returning Dragon capsule will bring back several "space fish," Japanese Medaka fish (Oryzias latipes) that lived on the station since October 2012. Researchers in Japan will study changes in the bone density of the fish in the Medaka Osteoclast investigation Dragon's round-trip carrying capacity also will help scientists build upon their previous work and explore new questions. After this month's delivery, the cargo ship could have even more to bring home on its next trip -- the third time will be a charm.

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FileAudit 4


For many organizations, keeping track over who has access to?data?is critical for maintaining corporate compliance. Such auditing is also mandatory for adhering to compliance regulations like HIPAA. Companies that need this sort of insight into their data should consider IS Decision's FileAudit 4.

The Windows ecosystem has native auditing capability. But auditing in Windows is tightly interwoven with Event Viewer. Configuring auditing and deciphering the sometime cryptic text of Event Viewer requires the skill of a Windows system administrator. Data auditors are seldom part of IT and, in fact, companies often want to keep auditing and auditing reports out of IT's purview. That's why third-party solutions that make it easy to see what's happening with company data and make running audits reports easy are often necessary. IS Decisions' FileAudit 4 is one such solution.

With FileAudit, organizations have an easy yet robust tool for auditing files and folders that reside on Windows systems, run audit reports without the help of IT, and even send alerts about auditing events. It's not a cheap solution, at a starting price of $826. Plus, it only audits files and directories on Windows, something that the company may want to address as user data is increasingly being kept on a wide-variety of devices. However, Windows shops with critical auditing needs will find FileAudit 4 worthy of consideration.

Pricing and Requirements
As mentioned, unit pricing starts at $826, which includes a year's free maintenance. Pricing is per server on which files are to be audited. Organizations with many servers can take advantage of volume licensing.

FileAudit can audit machines running Windows XP, Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, as well as Windows Server OSes from Server 2003 on up to Server 2012. The company states the product will likely support Windows 8 Pro tablets but it has yet to test and verify.
Requirements include the.NET Framework 3.5 SP1and 60MB of free disk space. FileAudit also requires a database. Microsoft Access is included in the price, but you can opt to use it with Microsoft SQL Express 2005/2008/2008 R2 and Microsoft SQL Server 2005/2008/2008 R2/2012.

The software also needs access to port 445 (SMB TCP) and ICMP-Ping. You can perform a console-only install on a client machine to remotely manage and run auditing on?machines running the FileAudit service. For console installs, port 2000 must be open for the remote connection.

Install and Configuration
You can install FileAudit on a Windows 2012 server for instance,?and manage and configure it from that server or perform a console install on a client machine and manage FileAudit remotely (my preferred method for managing server utilities).

The install process is quite simple and involves a few clicks. Opening the FileAudit interface reveals a Windows-8 like, tile-based look but I would argue even more professional and polished with uniform colors.

The interface is divided into three sections: Audit, Access, and Tools. You click on "Audit Configuration" under the Audit section to get started.? You can browse to select the file or folder you want to audit. You can add remote files and folders too, as long as the remote machine has a FileAudit license.

I selected a folder and then received another wizard, this one for assisting in configuring the folder for access auditing. This means configuring the server on which the folder is stored, for object access audit, NTFS audit on the folder path, licensing the server, and finally configuring the server to be constantly monitored by FileAudit.

I clicked Next in this wizard to kick off the configuration steps. For each configuration, the wizard asked if I wanted FileAudit to automatically configure itself or if I wanted to configure manually. I opted for the former and the appropriate configurations were made and the folder was added to FileAudit's watch.

One bothersome limitation seems to be that you only have the ability to add one folder or one file at a time and neither in bulk, at least within the interface. The alternative is to go into Windows Explorer on the server FileAudit is installed on, multi-select files and folders, and then right-click for the contextual menu. FileAudit is added to the menu and clicking it will launch path configuration for each object consecutively.

Overall, the automated configuration is impressive and certainly easy even for the most novice tech user.?

Alerts, Reports and Customization
After adding the files and folders you want to be audited, you can also set up alerting on any of those data objects. For example, you can set up an alert in case someone attempts to delete a specific folder or tries to open a file with Write permissions, or tries to take ownership.

These alerts can all be viewed in FileAudit's File Access Viewer. There's a list of events that took place with each audited object. You get a comprehensive view that includes the time and date of the event, the access type, whether access was granted or denied, the user, domain, and the source. Source is the name of the process generating the event. For instance, when I set auditing on a text file and then deleted the file, I saw this deletion event listed with the source being Notepad.exe.

By the way, although you can only audit Windows files and folders, FileAudit will audit access from non-Windows machines and devices.

FileAudit can also email alerts. You can set it to send individual alerts or all alerts together by adding?the SMTP settings of an email server in FileAudit.

You can also schedule the app to run and email reports, just as you do with alerts. You select the audited objects you want to report on as well as the type of events?or you can view all access types and events.? Information in the report is laid out the same way as in File Access Viewer.

The handiest feature is Statistics, which gives an at-a-glance view of everything that's happening with audited data including, the access type,? percentage of deletes, writes and any other attempts to change or tamper with file or folder permissions. You can also view useful information like the top five accessed folders and the top five users accessing audited objects.

FileAudit's interface is clean and uncluttered. The simplicity of design means there isn't much to customize but there are a few settings you can tweak in the Settings section.

You can exclude specific files from being audited within a folder such as .exe files, or exclude users from audit. Licensing, permissions, as well as database and email settings are all configured in Settings. Delete all audited events at any time by clicking Event Cleaner.

Customers also have lots of help resources right in the interface including support, documentation, and a user community.

Minor Quibbles
FileAudit is a very straightforward application and easy to navigate through. I have a few minor quibbles and they mostly are about what I would like to see added to the interface. One is a validation settings in the email set up page. When you set email there's no button for sending a test email to ensure proper configuration.

I'd also like a "Send Now" button when sending a report on-the-fly. You can work around this by setting up a report and send it instantly using the test button.

Also, customizing reports would be another useful feature to add. Some businesses may want to send out audit reports with their own branding.

Simple, Yet Effective Auditing
Even without the features I mention above FileAudit makes the often dreary task of data auditing easy yet effective. The solution is a more polished, user-friendly way to keep tabs on auditing over simply using Windows' Event Viewer. I would like to see the solution branch out to audit information on Mac and Linux machines that house data as well, but Windows Servers are still the standard as file servers in business. Although it may be pricey for smaller businesses, FileAudit 4 is worth checking into if auditing is a must in your organization and is a four-star Editors' Choice for business software.

More?Business Software Reviews:
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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/egTygrR6JBc/0,2817,2416073,00.asp

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Friday, March 1, 2013

Patchy Irish data dampen Barroso's sunnier outlook

DUBLIN (Reuters) - Irish retail sales fell for the third month in a row and house prices pointed to an uneven and slow recovery, dampening hopes expressed by the European Commission's President on Thursday that Ireland's economy is turning a corner.

Data released on Wednesday showed the jobless rate fell to 14.2 percent in the fourth quarter of last year, a more than two-year low, in a boost to hopes that Ireland's struggling domestic economy may soon begin to recover.

That prompted European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso, on a visit to Dublin, to say bailed-out Ireland was showing that the tough fiscal policies advocated by the European Union, but rejected by Italian voters this week, were working.

"Confidence is returning to Ireland and Europe, the Irish economy is turning the corner. The employment data just published suggest clearly that this could be happening," Barroso told a conference of company chief executives.

"It shows that the (bailout) programmes can work. It shows that there is light at the end of the tunnel."

While Ireland's economy returned to growth in 2011 and probably grew again last year, albeit at a slower pace, it has been driven by exports as the domestic side of the economy struggles due to high unemployment and relentless austerity.

A 1.7 percent month-on-month dip in retail sales in January, following a smaller fall in December which dashed retailers hopes that busier Christmas sales would spur activity, showed how cautious consumers remain in Ireland.

Irish house prices fell for the second successive month in January, dropping 0.6 percent month-on-month, and tempering hopes of a rebound after 50 percent peak-to-trough falls.

However prices in the capital Dublin, where much of the recent increase in purchases has been focused, rose 0.5 percent on the month and turned positive on annual basis for the first time since 2007 - indicative, analysts said, of the patchy nature of the stabilisation in the domestic economy.

"The general tone of the data over the last couple of days suggests an uneven and extended process of bottoming out in domestic activity," said Austin Hughes, chief economist at KBC Bank Ireland.

"The numbers for the past couple of days are telling you Ireland is in a different place to Spain and Italy, but it's not leaping forward. Even in success stories austerity has a cost in terms of the level of economic activity and spending power."

(Reporting by Conor Humphries and Padraic Halpin; Editing by Catherine Evans)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/irish-retail-sales-fall-1-2-percent-january-113353003--business.html

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Dane Cook to voice lead of Disney's "Planes," replacing Jon Cryer

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - Dane Cook will lend his voice to Dusty, the lead character in Disney's upcoming movie "Planes," a spin-off of its "Cars" film franchise, the studio announced on Thursday.]

Cook replaces Jon Cryer, who had been attached to the project but bowed out. Dusty dreams of competing as an air racer but has a crippling fear of heights.

"Dane Cook brings unmatched charisma and brilliant comedic timing and instincts to the character," Klay Hall, the film's director, said in a statement. "He gives Dusty a great edge."

Hall, who has directed both "The Simpsons" and "King of the Hill," is a Disneytoon Studios veteran. Pixar/Disney Animation chief creative officer John Lasseter is producing the film, which Disney initially intended to release direct to video.

It will now release the 3D animated comedy in theaters August 9.

Cook, the once ubiquitous stand-up comedian, has appeared in films such as "Dan in Real Life" and "My Best Friend's Girl." He recently starred in a few episodes of "Next Caller" for NBC, but the network cancelled the show before it aired.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dane-cook-voice-lead-disneys-planes-replacing-jon-202918551.html

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Source: http://timsnewconstruction.com/Blog/2013/02/27/home-improvement-and-restoring-services-santa-ana-california/

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