Archive for February, 2009

Party Planning

Friday, February 27th, 2009

I will be holding a party soon and I am thinking about all the finishing touches at the moment. I have decided on the food I am serving and the flowers that I will be having on the table. However, I just want something a little bit special on the table. As it is a special party to celebrate the fact that my group of friends and I, have known each other for twenty years, I thought that it would be nice to give everyone a small gift. I have found some dear little photo frames and I am going to put a mini photo in each of the group of us. I am now looking for something to wrap them up in.

I tend to put gifts in cellophane bags so that they match everything and then tie them up with some coloured ribbons. However, I would like this to be more of a surprise so that I can see everyone’s faces as they open the gifts and so I have decided on getting something that is not see through. I have found some really nice gift boxes which match in with my colour scheme and will look really pretty, I just hope that they have enough in stock and can get them to me in time!

Need a Dog Bite Layer in California? Know Your Rights!

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Everyday, many people are bitten by dogs. Dogs attack for many reasons, and many times the bites are unwarranted. If you are ever attacked by a dog, try to identify it and find out who the owners are. You may be entitled to compensation. You can find out how good your chances are by consulting with dog bite attorneys. Los Angeles is known to be the home of many dangerous dogs, so if you live in or around that area, then odds are you’ve come across mean dogs a time or two.

Getting medical help for a dog bite is expensive. Sometimes even surgery is required. With a good dog bite lawyer in California, you may be able to get all your medical expenses paid for. You should get medical treatment and make your claim as soon as possible. Not only will it help your chances of winning the lawsuit, but you’ll also be bringing other families’ attention to the dog.

Good, experienced dog bite attorneys in Los Angeles will help you every step of the way. All you have to do is contact one right away for a consultation, so that you can learn about your rights and options.

Suffering From a Personal Injury? Arizona Lawyers Can Help You!

Friday, February 27th, 2009

If, for any reason, you need Arizona personal injury lawyers to help make your case, then you’ll be glad to know that there are many experienced attorneys and firms throughout the state. If you or a family member is suffering from an injury due to the careless actions of someone else, you need to have your rights preserved and protected.

There are many reasons why you need to contact Phoenix or Scottsdale personal injury lawyers, the most obvious being that your hospital bills need to be taken care of. Hospital and emergency bills will add up a great deal, and before you know it, you may owe more money than you’ll ever be able to afford. The only way you can ensure that it will all be taken care of is by contacting Scottsdale or Phoenix personal injury attorneys and asking for help.

Some are reluctant to take their personal injury claims to court. They worry that others will look down on them, or accuse them of being “greedy”. If you are truly worried about your finances, and the root of your worrying is due to carelessness ane negligence of others, then don’t be afraid of calling Arizona personal injury lawyers. Many are experienced and reliable and will give you great advice.

Electronic evidence firm grilled over absent memos

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

Guidance Software Inc. bills itself as the leading provider of technology that helps companies dig up old e-mails and other electronic documents that might be evidence in a lawsuit. Yet when Guidance itself had to face a judge, it was accused of bumbling its internal digital search.

Whether Guidance intentionally hid documents or just couldn’t find them is a matter of dispute. The company said it did all that was required. But its inability to cough up certain e-mails, even over several months, led an arbitrator to accuse it of gross negligence and proceeding in bad faith.

At the very least, the case shows how thorny electronic evidence searches can be, even for a specialist.

The mountains of digital information piling up on hard drives and backup tapes have made discovery — the exchange of information between parties at the start of a lawsuit — increasingly complex. “E-discovery” software and services boomed from a $40 million business in 1999 to nearly $2.8 billion in 2007, according to George Socha and Tom Gelbmann, directors of the industry group Electronic Discovery Resource Model.

Pasadena, Calif.-based Guidance Software is one of the largest software specialists, with sales of $89 million over the last four quarters. The company began in 1997 making tools to help criminal investigators search computer hard drives. In recent years Guidance added new programs for scouring corporate networks for digital evidence.

Guidance needed to turn that expertise on itself in a case involving its former marketing director, Cassondra Todd.

Todd believed Guidance’s chairman pressured her manager to fire her, in part because she is a woman. After she got a scathing performance review in 2007, she asked for an investigation.

“I was quite confident that whatever information was produced would wipe clean what was going on,” Todd said in an interview. “That’s what we did for a living.”

But Guidance told Todd it found no evidence of discrimination. It apologized for the harshness of the review but wouldn’t delete it from her file.

Todd responded by hiring Arnold Peter, an attorney with Los Angeles-based Raskin Peter Rubin & Simon. A few weeks later, she was laid off.

Todd filed a wrongful-termination claim, and both sides were required to perform discovery, a hunt for documents that might matter to the case.

The results of Guidance’s initial run of e-discovery seemed scant to Todd. She expected to see far more e-mails from her days in the company. But she couldn’t argue Guidance was holding back — intentionally or not — until she got a break a few months later.

Tim Leehealey, Todd’s first manager at Guidance and now the head of a rival company, had printed and saved some memos from the time of Todd’s bad performance review. When Todd reviewed his stash, she found e-mails about her that Guidance hadn’t turned over. In one, Leehealey questioned whether someone in the company was setting Todd up to be fired.

“Other than (Guidance Chairman Shawn McCreight’s) hatred of her, she was a good employee and produced for me,” he wrote to Victor Limongelli, now Guidance’s chief executive.

Whether Guidance didn’t find Leehealey’s memos or whether it chose not to hand them over, “either one was extremely damning,” Leehealey said in an interview.

“Those documents were on people’s hard drives for sure, and they didn’t produce them,” said Leehealey, whose company, AccessData Inc., tried to buy Guidance last year but was turned down.

The arbitrator handling Todd’s case, a retired judge, ordered Guidance to do a more thorough round of e-discovery. The company came back empty-handed — except for news that one of its e-mail backup tapes had been corrupted. The arbitrator lost patience.

“I want this game-playing stopped,” the arbitrator, William McDonald, told Guidance’s attorney, according to a court transcript.

McDonald stopped short of saying Guidance was sitting on a smoking gun. But he was disturbed that Todd kept identifying documents the company hadn’t unearthed. When he learned the corrupted backup tape had purportedly gone unnoticed for nearly a year, he had harsh words for the company.

“These are routine things in this business. And it wasn’t done until pulling and screaming and kicking and facing the ultimate sanction,” McDonald said, referring to his option to end the case in Todd’s favor. “We’re looking at people who should be very sophisticated in this area, given Guidance’s business.”

As punishment, McDonald ordered the company to pay for Todd’s expert witnesses and her travel costs, plus the cost of rescheduling the trial. He also forced Guidance to search the backups, despite its arguments that it would take weeks, amounting to a task Guidance would charge customers $100,000 to perform.

In an interview, Limongelli said he didn’t know in detail why Guidance didn’t initially find many of the files Todd identified as missing, though he blamed a lost laptop for one oversight. Guidance executives also say the company was not legally required to search its backup tapes at first, given the expense of reading them.

“It wasn’t an attempt to hide any information,” Limongelli said. “We think we followed what is a quite normal course.”

Some experts not involved with the case said there is support for Guidance’s argument about the backup tapes. Under federal rules, all electronically stored information is potentially discoverable. But the rules distinguish between “reasonably accessible” files and ones that are too expensive to tackle, at least in initial e-discovery. Backup tapes often count as overly burdensome, said Scott Carlson, co-chair of e-discovery for the law firm Seyfarth Shaw.

Outside experts hired by Todd gave the arbitrator more critical assessments of Guidance’s actions.

Brett Harrison, a director in FTI Consulting Inc.’s electronic evidence consulting group, wrote that the way Guidance saved documents once it knew of Todd’s legal actions “was not performed to commonly accepted standards within the e-discovery field and in great part did not occur at all.”

A second expert, William Moylan of Aon Consulting Inc., questioned why Guidance asked that deleted files be ignored during discovery because hunting for them would be a burden.

“Recovery and searching of deleted files is at the very heart of computer forensics,” he wrote.

Ultimately, the arbitrator found enough information to decide in Todd’s favor. He awarded her more than $300,000, about twice her annual compensation. A federal court is also set to consider whether Todd should receive damages under separate laws that prohibit discrimination. With most of the facts of Todd’s dismissal already established, her attorney plans to focus on whether Guidance attempted to thwart e-discovery during arbitration.

Guidance was “egregiously in violation of everything they report to be best practices,” Todd says. “They had every resource at their disposal. They didn’t want to take it seriously.”

Scientists map Neanderthal genome

Friday, February 13th, 2009

In a development which could reveal the links between modern humans and their prehistoric cousins, scientists said they have mapped a first draft of the Neanderthal genome.

Researchers used DNA fragments extracted from three Croatian fossils to map out more than 60 percent of the entire Neanderthal genome by sequencing three billion bases of DNA.

“The Neanderthal genome sequence will clarify the evolutionary relationship between humans and Neanderthals as well as help identify those genetic changes that enabled modern humans to leave Africa and rapidly spread around the world,” Germany’s Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology said in a press release.

“These DNA sequences can now be compared to the previously sequenced human and chimpanzee genomes in order to arrive at some initial insights into how the genome of this extinct form differed from that of modern humans.”

Research suggests that the last common ancestor of Neanderthals and humans lived about 660,000 years ago. Neanderthals are widely believed to be the hominid form most closely related to present-day humans, although the precise relationship remains unclear.

The squat, low-browed Neanderthals lived in parts of Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East for around 170,000 years but traces of them disappear some 28,000 years ago, their last known refuge being Gibraltar.

Verizon Wireless copies Alltel’s My Circle

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

Verizon Wireless is set to announce Thursday that subscribers on some qualifying plans will be able to pick five or 10 phone numbers that they can call for free, without drawing down their plan’s minutes.

There is no added charge for the service. It mimics a popular feature called “My Circle” at Alltel Corp., a smaller carrier that Verizon Wireless bought in January.

Verizon Wireless’ announcement means that former Alltel customers will be able to keep the feature when they sign up for new plans, and expands the availability to other Verizon Wireless customers.

Verizon Wireless, now the country’s largest cellular carrier, is calling the feature “Friends & Family.” It will be available starting Sunday. Customers on single-line plans starting at $60 per month will get five free numbers, and those on family plans starting at $90 per month for two lines will get ten free numbers.

Customers will need to sign up for the feature and pick their numbers online.

T-Mobile USA, the fourth-largest carrier, has a similar feature, which it calls “myFaves.”

MCI, which Verizon Communications Inc. later bought, had a long-distance plan called “Friends & Family” in the early 1990s.

Verizon Wireless is a joint venture of New York-based Verizon and Vodafone Group PLC of Britain.

Google announces Google Sync

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Google on Monday announced a beta version of Google Sync for the iPhone and Windows Mobile phones. In a statement, Microsoft said that Google’s new software was made possible by a license from Microsoft.

Horacio Gutierrez, deputy general counsel and VP of intellectual property and licensing at Microsoft, in a statement “Google’s licensing of these Microsoft patents relating to the Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync protocol is a clear acknowledgment of the innovation taking place at Microsoft.”

Google Sync is available for iPhone, BlackBerry, Nokia S60, Nokia standard, Sony Ericsson, and Windows Mobile. The BlackBerry version, which has been available for months, isn’t in beta; the other versions are.

“This agreement is also a great example of Microsoft’s openness to generally license our patents under fair and reasonable terms so long as licensees respect Microsoft intellectual property,” Horacio Gutierrez added.

DUI attorney for you

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

The term DUI stands for drinking under the influence of alcohol. There are a number of cases that involve drunk drivers and it is up to the attorney to find out the truth. A Massachusetts DUI attorney is one who is very well versed with the complexities and facts that arise when such cases are put in court. Ignition interlock device or IID is device is affixed within the interior of the person’s car. The principle of working of this device is similar to that of a breath analyzer. The IID also asks at specific time intervals for a breath sample so that if the person who is driving is drunk he will not be able to continue. The IID in such cases will turn off the ignition, switch on hazard light and start an inbuilt siren to warn people.

A hardship license is a certificate issued to a minor who is 14 or 15 years of age. The individual who procures such a license is not permitted to drive heavy vehicles or tow vehicles. However if an individual carrying a hardship license finds himself in a situation in which he is the only one who is qualified to drive a vehicle he is allowed to do so.

Erectile Dysfunction Predicts Heart Disease

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Erectile dysfunction makes for lots of snickering, slick drug commercials, and no doubt plenty of frustration in the bedroom. But it can also serve as a window to serious disease.

Men with erectile dysfunction (ED) are 80 percent more likely to develop heart disease compared to men who do not have ED, a new Mayo Clinic study finds. Men ages 40 to 49 with ED are twice as likely to get heart disease.

The results, published in this month’s issue of the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings, suggest that younger men and their doctors may need to consider erectile dysfunction a harbinger of future risk of coronary heart disease, said Mayo Clinic researcher Jennifer St. Sauver.

Researchers don’t know why the link exists.

Some have theorized that erectile dysfunction and coronary artery disease may be caused by the same underlying problem. A buildup of plaque that can block arteries around the heart may plug the smaller penile arteries first. Another idea is that arteries may lose elasticity over time, affecting the penis first and the heart later.

The study followed 1,402 men age 40 and up who lived in Olmsted County, Minn., for a 10-year period starting in 1996. None had heart disease at the start of the study.

Erectile dysfunction increases with age. The prevalence of ED at the start of the study:

  • Age 40-49: 2.4 percent.
  • Age 50-59: 5.6 percent.
  • Age 60-69: 17 percent.
  • Age 70 and up: 38.8 percent.

In men in their 50s, 60s and 70s, the total incidence of new cases of heart disease also was higher in those with erectile dysfunction. However, the differences were not as striking as those seen among the 40- to 49-year- olds.

“In older men, erectile dysfunction may be of less prognostic importance for development of future heart disease,” St. Sauver said.

Two previous studies, in 2005, reached similar but preliminary conclusions.

The new findings, rooted in data, “raise the possibility of a ‘window of curability,’ in which progression of cardiac disease might be slowed or halted by medical intervention,” Dr. Martin Miner of the Men’s Health Center at Miriam Hospital in Providence, R.I., writes in an editorial in the Proceedings.

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New technique to read people’s minds

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

Canadian researchers have developed a new infra-red scanning technique to read people’s thoughts.

University of Toronto researchers, who have developed this optical brain imaging technique in collaboration with Canada’s largest children’s rehabilitation hospital here, say it will help decode thoughts of people with speech disability.

By measuring near-infrared light absorbed in brain tissue when a person made a decision, the researchers were able to predict accurately up to 80 percent their preference for one thing over the other, a university release said Monday.

‘This is the first system that decodes preference naturally from spontaneous thoughts,’ the release quoted study leader and biomedical engineering student Sheena Luu as saying.

As part of their study, the researchers chose nine adults who were first asked to rate eight drinks on a scale of one to five.

After this, they were made to wear a headband fitted with fibre-optics emitting light into the pre-frontal cortex of their brain, and then shown two drinks on a computer and asked to make a decision about which they liked more.

As they made the decision, their brain activity was monitored on a computer specially programmed to recognize the unique pattern of this activity associated with preference.

To their surprise, the computer accurately predicted which drink any individual would prefer 80 percent of the time.

Explaining this, Luu said, “When your brain is active, the oxygen in your blood increases and depending on the concentration, it absorbs more or less light.

‘In some people, their brains are more active when they don’t like something, and in some people they’re more active when they do like something.’

The study leader added, ‘Preference is the basis for everyday decisions. When children with disabilities can’t speak or gesture to control their environment, they may develop a learned helplessness that impedes development.’

The study will help them develop a portable, near-infrared sensor that rests on the forehead and relies on wireless technology to know the preferences of disabled people who cannot speak or walk, the university release said.

The study has been published in The Journal of Neural Engineering.