Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Mray901 commented on Max's post about re: Star Fox And Steel Diver Miniatures Coming To Japan .

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    Source: http://www.gameinformer.com/members/o_5F00_JMan240_5F00_o/activities/default.aspx?ActivityMessageID=0cdd2e70-140c-4dfe-b251-5968b4b09e03

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    Pope's Mexico itinerary leaves out capital (AP)

    MEXICO CITY ? Pope Benedict XVI will head to the Catholic-rich state of Guanajuato in his first visit to Mexico in March, and skip the country's heavily populated capital.

    The Mexican Episcopal Conference says Benedict will arrive on March 23 in the city of Leon where President Felipe Calderon will welcome him.

    The organization said in a Sunday statement that Benedict also plans to greet worshippers in the city of Guanajuato.

    He will officiate a Mass in the city of Silao beneath a hill where a 67-foot statue of Jesus Christ stands.

    The pope will return to Leon to address bishops from Mexico, Latin America and the Caribbean before heading to Cuba on March 26.

    The Vatican had said Benedict would avoid Mexico City because of its high altitude although it's the country's biggest city.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mexico/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120101/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_mexico_pope_visit

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    Pirate-themed cruise ship runs aground in Florida

    Authorities in Florida say a Pirate-themed cruise ship carrying about 100 passengers has run aground on New Year's Eve.

    Public safety officials in Clearwater said Saturday night that crews responded at the Memorial Causeway Bridge when the cruise ship, known as the Pirate's Ransom, ran aground. A second vessel attempted to take some of the passengers to shore also ran aground. Police and fireboats were taking passengers to shore late Saturday night.

    A city press release says a 77-year-old woman was examined at the scene but refused treatment. There were no immediate reports of injuries.

    Authorities said fog is believed to have been a factor in the ships running aground. Clearwater is located on Florida's Gulf coast.

    Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45838416/ns/travel-news/

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    Monday, January 2, 2012

    Finance Defined | News Lifestyle

    Sunday, January 1st 2012. Posted in Finance by admin

    Accounts receivable, Capital Assets, Current assets, Cash flow, Depreciation and Net worth.Do you know what these words mean and where they are being used? Yes, youve heard about them but did you actually try to find out what they mean? Perhaps you are thinking that you wont need them thats why there is no need to learn them. Maybe, you are thinking you can have a lawyer with you to do things regarding your finances. Being unaware of the basic financial terms can cost you a lot of your earnings, dont you know? Having a lawyer or a financial advisor to explain things to you when you need it will surely cost you a lot. You are going to learn today about those financial terms mentioned above and hopefully, youll find them useful.

    Accounts receivable are the money you owned. These are the amounts you receive from sales of assets or services you have given. While capital assets are those assets you acquired to start the business. Examples of capital assets are land, buildings or space and equipment. Current assets are items like cash, accounts receivable and inventory. They are assets that can be turned over and can be converted to cash. Stocks and marketable securities are examples.

    Cash flow is the moving of money in and out of your business. It finds out the credit worthiness of your business. The difference between the cash out and cash in is important. If more money flows in, it is cash positive. If more money flows out, it is cash negative.

    Depreciation is the estimated loss of value of assets overtime. It is the decline in the value of a good. Say for example when you bought the latest laptop at 500 dollars, overtime its price will decrease because a new model will be released and that is what you call depreciation. Net worth is the assets minus the liabilities. Liabilities refer to the debts of a company to its creditors. Accounts payable is an example of liabilities. Knowing these terms, like Michael Geffrard did, is the first step towards financial wealth.

    If you want your business to flourish or help someones business to succeed, knowing financial terms is important. Even if you just want to keep your money safely in a bank, financial terms will help you understand better how to have higher returns. Michael Geffrard also did this and started with small banks until he found his own investment banking company.

    Take good care of your financial status, which can determine your future. If you do not know how to hold your money properly, let someone teach you or have your family handle it for you. Try to make financial advancement like Michael Geffrard did.

    tags: Defined, Finance

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    Wednesday, December 28th 2011.

    > Accounts receivable, Capital Assets, Current assets, Cash flow, Depreciation and Net worth.Do you know what these words mean and where they are

    Wednesday, December 28th 2011.

    > Accounts receivable, Capital Assets, Current assets, Cash flow, Depreciation and Net worth.Do you know what these words mean and where they are

    Sunday, January 1st 2012.

    > Accounts receivable, Capital Assets, Current assets, Cash flow, Depreciation and Net worth.Do you know what these words mean and where they are

    Thursday, December 29th 2011.

    > Accounts receivable, Capital Assets, Current assets, Cash flow, Depreciation and Net worth.Do you know what these words mean and where they are

    Source: http://www.datinghomes.com/finance-defined/

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    Russell Brand & Katy Perry in "Massive" Fight, But Divorce NOT on the Table ... Yet


    Katy Perry and Russell Brand are so in a fight.

    No, seriously, it's bad. So much so that the spouses of a little more than one year parted on expletive terms and spent the holidays 7,000 miles apart.

    After planning to fly her family via private jet to husband Brand's London hometown for the holidays, Perry changed course, opting to fly to Hawaii.

    The reason? "They had a massive fight," an insider says. "She was like, 'F--k you. I'm going to do my own thing.' Russell replied, 'Fine, f--k you too.'"

    Perry and Brand

    Which explains why, come December 25, the record-setting singer was seen splashing in the Pacific Ocean off the island of Kauai sans wedding ring.

    Meanwhile, Brand was catching up with some pals in a pub in chilly Coverack, Cornwall, without his ring on either. They're definitely having problems.

    "They haven't split up just yet, but things aren't good," acknowledged the source, adding that the divorce rumors are untrue, but rooted in reality.

    "The fighting is getting worse."

    At issue? Among other things, explains another source: "Katy doesn't think that Russell respects her parents' Christian beliefs or her friends."

    Another source adds that they have not decided to divorce, despite the fact that they're going through a rough patch, and not to read too much into the lack of rings - both go without them intermittently even in the best of times.

    [Photo: WENN.com]

    Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/russell-brand-katy-perry-in-massive-fight-source-claims/

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    Sunday, January 1, 2012

    Deep Gulf drilling thrives 18 mos. after BP spill (AP)

    ALAMINOS CANYON BLOCK 857, GULF OF MEXICO ? Two hundred miles off the coast of Texas, ribbons of pipe are reaching for oil and natural gas deeper below the ocean's surface than ever before.

    These pipes, which run nearly two miles deep, are connected to a floating platform that is so remote Shell named it Perdido, which means "lost" in Spanish. What attracted Shell to this location is a geologic formation found throughout the Gulf of Mexico that may contain enough oil to satisfy U.S. demand for two years.

    While Perdido is isolated, it isn't alone. Across the Gulf, energy companies are probing dozens of new deepwater fields thanks to high oil prices and technological advances that finally make it possible to tap them.

    The newfound oil will not do much to lower global oil prices. But together with increased production from onshore U.S. fields and slowing domestic demand for gasoline, it could help reduce U.S. oil imports by more than half over the next decade.

    Eighteen months ago, such a flurry of activity in the Gulf seemed unlikely. The Obama administration halted drilling and stopped issuing new permits after the explosion of a BP well killed 11 workers and caused the largest oil spill in U.S. history.

    But the drilling moratorium was eventually lifted and the Obama administration issued the first new drilling permit in March. Now the Gulf is humming again and oil executives describe it as the world's best place to drill.

    "In the short term and the medium term, it's clearly the Gulf of Mexico," says Matthais Bichsel, a Royal Dutch Shell PLC board member who is in charge of all of the company's new projects and technology.

    By early 2012 there will be more rigs in the Gulf designed to drill in its "deep water" ? defined as 2,000 feet or deeper ? than before the spill.

    In November, Perdido began pumping oil from a field called Tobago; the well begins 9,627 feet below the surface of the Gulf. No other well on the globe produces oil in deeper water and that's about as deep as the Gulf gets. For drillers, that means the entire Gulf is now within reach.

    "We are at the point where ... depth is not the primary issue anymore," says Marvin Odum, the head of Royal Dutch Shell's drilling unit in the Americas. "I do not worry that there is something in the Gulf that we cannot develop ... if we can find it."

    From a distance, Perdido looks like an erector set perched on an aluminum can. This can, or "spar," is a 500-foot-tall steel cylinder that sits mostly underwater, serving as a base for the equipment and living quarters above. It is stuffed with iron ore to lower its center of gravity, keeping the whole operation from bobbing in the water like a cork. The spar is tethered to the sea floor 8,000 feet below with ropes and chains.

    Oil and natural gas are pumped to Perdido from nearby wells drilled by an onboard rig and from faraway wells drilled by satellite rigs. Water and other impurities are then removed from the oil and gas, which gets sent hundreds of miles through an undersea pipeline to terminals and refineries along the Gulf coast.

    Perdido, which pumps the equivalent of 60,000 barrels of oil and natural gas a day, will eventually yield 100,000 barrels per day from 35 wells in a 30-mile radius, according to Shell. It will likely produce oil for decades ? in all, as much as 360 million barrels of oil and 750 billion cubic feet of natural gas, according to Wood Mackenzie.

    As global oil demand climbs past 89 million barrels a day and traditional onshore and shallow water fields are depleted, the deep waters of the Gulf and off the coasts of South America, West Africa and Australia are playing an increasingly important role.

    In 2000, 1.5 million barrels of oil per day were produced from deepwater fields around the globe, or 2 percent of global production. In 2011, that number grew to 5.5 million barrels, or 6 percent of global production. By 2020, deepwater oil will account for 9 percent, according to IHS CERA.

    The Gulf is attractive for many reasons. Its oil fields are enormous; it straddles the world's biggest consumer of oil; it's in a politically stable part of the world; and drillers can easily tap into a vast network of pipelines and refineries. Also, despite industry complaints, the cost of royalties, taxes and regulation in the U.S. are among the lowest in the world.

    "Everybody wants to be there," says Mohammad Rahman, the lead Gulf analyst for Wood Mackenzie.

    By early 2012, there will be 40 deepwater rigs in the Gulf, up from 37 before the BP spill, according to Cinnamon Odell of ODS-Petrodata. BP received its first permit to drill in late October.

    The Gulf produces an average of 1.5 million barrels of oil per day, according to Wood Mackenzie. That's 27 percent of U.S. output and 8 percent of U.S. demand.

    Thanks to more accurate imaging technologies, drillers are able to see under geologic formations that used to confound geologists. In June, ExxonMobil Corp. said it found 700 million barrels of oil ? one of the biggest discoveries in the Gulf in last decade. In September, Chevron and BP also announced major finds, thought to be in the hundreds of millions of barrels of oil.

    Many of the Gulf's recent discoveries are in a geologic formation known as the Lower Tertiary, formed between 23 million and 65 million years ago. Perdido, which is operated by Shell and owned jointly by Shell, Chevron and BP, is the first to produce oil from this formation. Analysts say it could hold 15 billion barrels of oil.

    As the BP disaster made clear, drilling in deep water presents difficulties and dangers. Last month a Chevron well in the deep waters off of Brazil ruptured and spilled 2,400 barrels of oil into the Atlantic after Chevron underestimated the pressure of the oil field it was tapping.

    Perdido only recently reached its monthly production target after a year of operation because of difficulties getting oil and gas from the seabed to the platform. New devices designed to separate oil and gas on the sea floor have not performed as well as Shell hoped. It has taken months of adjustments made by underwater robots and other equipment on the platform to fix the problems.

    Challenges like this have helped push the average cost of producing oil in the deepwater Gulf to $60 a barrel, according to IHS CERA, near the highest level ever. But with oil close to $100 a barrel, the expense is well worth it.

    After all 35 wells are drilled for Perdido, its owners will likely have spent $6.2 billion on the project, according to Wood Mackenzie. But along with the risks, the Gulf offers great rewards: Perdido could ultimately generate $39 billion in revenue and $16 billion in profits.

    Jonathan Fahey can be reached at http://www.facebook.com/Fahey.Jonathan.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_sc/us_deepwater_drilling

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    GOP voters focus on nation economy, not Iowa?s

    By RYAN J. FOLEY

    Associated Press

    IOWA CITY, Iowa ? The ?Great Recession? barely touched Iowa City.

    The University of Iowa and its hospital are in the middle of a construction boom. A manufacturer is touting plans to hire 175 people for a new iron foundry. Farmers working the land outside the city are flush with cash from record-setting crop prices.

    Yet, after Rick Perry entered the Republican presidential race, he rolled into town on a bus emblazoned with ?Get America Working Again? and offered prescriptions for fixing the economy. Newt Gingrich stopped by to bash what he calls job-killing environmental and labor regulations. Ron Paul said during a recent visit that an overreaching federal government is hurting ?the productivity of all of us and means we will be poorer.?

    Throughout the campaign for Tuesday?s Iowa caucuses, it hasn?t seemed to matter much that the state economy is in far stronger shape than the rest of the country, with unemployment at 5.7 percent, agricultural real estate selling near all-time highs and some manufacturers reporting a shortage of skilled workers to fill all their openings.

    Republican voters who in past election years focused on pocketbook issues specific to Iowa, such as corn subsidies or ethanol policy, say they?re taking a wide-angle view of the economy this year. They blame President Barack Obama for its sputters and fear giving him a second term will slide it back toward the abyss.

    ?The economy is still suffering, even though the numbers don?t say it. People are hurting and things have gone downhill since Barack Obama became president,? said Pam Swick, a Council Bluffs retiree and Perry supporter.

    ?Yes, things are better here. But they?re still not good,? she said. ?And don?t credit President Obama for it. He?s made it worse. Things here are going fine despite him, not because of him.?

    Iowa?s economy fell into recession later than the nation?s and didn?t drop as far as some other states, said Iowa State University economist David Swenson. There wasn?t much of a housing bubble, partly because the state is slow-growing but economically stable.

    Yet a recent New York Times/CBS News poll found the economy was by far the most important issue to likely Republican caucus-goers. Leading the polls off and on in recent weeks have been the candidates most associated with the pro-business, small-government, economic freedom slices of the GOP: Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul. Those with stronger ties to the party?s social conservative base ? Rick Santorum, Michele Bachmann and Perry ? make time for a healthy dose of economics during their stump speeches.

    Jim Knapp, a 71-year-old home builder who lives in Iowa City and plans to support Bachmann, is one of many taking the wide view. Knapp said he is collecting Social Security and works on home remodeling projects while his wife works at the University of Iowa. They?re doing fine financially.

    But he said he?s worried about the long-struggling economy in Detroit, where his son is a preacher. His son-in-law, meanwhile, is being laid off in a downsizing at a financial company in Minnesota.

    ?Iowa?s economy has held up because of the agricultural base,? Knapp said as he left a Bachmann event at a diner. ?But we need to get the whole economy back on track. As long as the nation is suffering, everybody is, to some extent.?

    To be sure, not all of Iowa is as economically healthy as Iowa City. Swenson said that while Des Moines and the corridor between Iowa City and Cedar Rapids are doing well, cities such as Waterloo and Mason City that rely heavily on manufacturing are struggling with long-term unemployment and a slow recovery.

    ?We?re just kind of stuck in neutral,? Swenson said. ?On average, we don?t look so bad, but a large swath of the state also doesn?t look so hot.?

    Still, Swenson said he wasn?t surprised that Iowa?s Republican voters are focused on the economy outside of the state. Many are businesspeople and farmers who equate a recovering national economy to renewed demand for their products.

    That?s the view of Norman Olson, a 77-year-old retired farmer from Northwood, near the border with Minnesota. ?It still hurts that other people don?t have work other places,? he said. ?We are not isolated from the rest of the country.?

    Then, there?s Obama. A recent University of Iowa Hawkeye poll found that Iowa Democrats have a brighter view of the economy than those in the GOP, suggesting some of the gloomy Republican outlook could be tinged by anti-Obama partisanship.

    That?s the case for Carol Ann Christiansen, 55, president of the Johnson County Republican Women and the retired owner of a floral business. She said she wants a candidate who will be frugal in Washington and ?create the jobs this country so desperately needs.? She dismissed the economic success in the state college town of Iowa City as being largely funded by taxpayers.

    ?We need a president who is going to give business people some economic certainty,? Christiansen said. ?Every other day there seems to be some new regulation that makes it hard for them.?

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    Associated Press writers Philip Elliott and Shannon McCaffrey contributed to this report from Dubuque, Council Bluffs and Mason City.

    Source: http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/2011/dec/30/gop-voters-focus-nation-economy-not-iowas/

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