5 Sketchy Things We Still Don’t Know About E-Cigarettes



The FDA has cracked down on e-cigs by asserting its regulatory power and proposing a ban on sales to minors

On Thursday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) flexed its regulatory muscles and extended its authority over more tobacco products, including the highly debated electronic cigarettes, or e-cigarettes. In the announcement, the agency said it now has jurisdiction over items that meet the statutory definition of tobacco products—which includes e-cigarettes, pipe tobacco, and hookah tobacco, among others. The FDA says it also plans to crack down on e-cigarettes by proposing a ban of their sale to people under 18 and by requiring health warnings on packaging.

The UK already has stiff regulations on e-cigarettes and some cities in the U.S., like Los Angeles, have banned them in several public places. The trouble with e-cigarettes is that they are so new, and there’s not enough evidence to definitively determine either how effective they are at helping people quit smoking—or the health risks associated with inhaling vaporized nicotine. Here are five things we are still scratching our heads over.
1. Do e-cigarettes actually help people quit—or are they a gateway for new smokers? Some e-cigarette brands claim that they can help people wean themselves off regular cigarettes by supplying would-be quitters with nicotine (but without the carcinogens in conventional cigarette smoke). However, recent research is questioning whether they really help people quit. A recent study published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine looked at self-reports from 949 smokers–88 of whom used e-cigarettes at the start of the study–in order to determine if e-cigarettes were helping people kick or cut back on nicotine. Researchers found that e-cigarettes did not help people quit, concluding, for now at least, that the case for e-cigarettes as a cessation tool is flimsy at best. (The study size was small, signaling a need for more research.)
There’s also the worry that e-cigarettes are tempting people into trying the real thing. Another study published in March found that adolescents who use e-cigarettes are more likely to smoke other tobacco products and regular cigarettes, which suggests that e-cigarettes are not always the lesser of two evils, but instead, just another vector for nicotine exposure. According todata from the National Youth Tobacco Survey, the percentage of middle school and high school students who have tried e-cigarettes doubled from 3.3% in 2011 to 6.8% in 2012. Of course, there are still not enough studies to reach a firm conclusion that e-cigarettes make people more likely to smoke tobacco—and the FDA says this is not yet determined.
2. How dangerous is liquid nicotine? The health risks associated with the liquid nicotine used in e-cigarettes are not fully understood. A recent New York Timesarticle found that the liquid could be linked to poisonings; the number of poisonings linked to e-cigarette liquids rose to 1,351 in 2013, which is a 300% increase from 2012. The CDC alsoreleased a report earlier this month that showed what they called a “dramatic” rise in e-cigarette-related calls to U.S. poison centers. The spike went from one call a month in September 2010 to 215 calls a month in February 2014. Over half of the calls involved kids age five and under, and 42% involved people ages 20 and older. Known symptoms of liquid nicotine ingestion include vomiting, nausea, and eye irritation.
3. Are the vaporizers safe? Though the numbers are small, there have been a few cases of e-cigarettes exploding and harming users and the people around them. E-cigs contain a small lithium battery that heats up the liquid inside. The liquid is made up of nicotine dissolved in a colorless liquid called propylene glycol, with added synthetic flavor and sometimes dyes. When an e-cigarette exploded in a Florida man’s face, Thomas Kiklas, co-founder of the Tobacco Vapor Electronic Cigarette Association, told the Associated Press that the industry does not know of issues with the cigarettes or batteries exploding.
4. Is propylene glycol dangerous? Propylene glycol is a a clear, colorless liquid that becomes vapor when it’s heated. It can also be found in food, cosmetics, and pharmaceutical products, and the small amounts people are typically exposed to are largely believed to be benign. However, it’s uncertain whether inhaling propylene glycol could come with unique health risks. “As for long-term effects, we don’t know what happens when you breathe the vapor into the lungs regularly,” Thomas Glynn, the director of science and trends at the American Cancer Society told ABC News. “No one knows the answer to that.”
5. Can you get addicted to e-cigarettes? As the FDA says, nicotine is “highly addictive.” The FDA saysthey still don’t know how much nicotine or other potentially harmful chemicals are being inhaled during e-cigarette use. Therefore, it’s hard to tell how much or little damage is being done.
Posted at http://ti.me/1tH1Jcq

Men biased towards women on Twitter

A New Study Has Found That Male Twitter Users Are Biased Towards Their Female Counterparts As Conversations Among Men On The Microblogging Site Feature Fewer Mentions Of Women.

An algorithm was used by the researchers to apply the Bechdel test to real-life conversations via Twitter and to relate these to the gender bias of movies. The Bechdel Test was developed in 1985 by US cartoonist Alison Bechdel and it is used to see whether a movie features a minimum of female independence. 
Twitter users from the US were selected by the researchers and the users were those who shared the link to a movie trailer on YouTube over the course of six days in June 2013. They also analyzed the users who interacted with them over a longer period of time. Around 300 million tweets were given the form of a gigantic movie script with 170,000 characters by the researchers and then analyzed by them.


The analysis showed that Twitter conversations among men featured fewer mentions of women, while there were more conversations between female Twitter users that have references to men than conversations without a male reference. The researchers said that a male bias was however not found in all Twitter users. 

"I expected that on Twitter men would mention women in their conversations as often as women mentioned men," said David Garcia, researcher at the Chair of Systems Design at ETH Zurich.

Posted @ www.delhidailynews.com/

Samsung's Galaxy Tab 4 family set for May 1 debut

The Wi-Fi Galaxy tablets, which range between 7 and 10 inches, will hit the US across a variety of retailers. Multiple carriers are also expected to carry 4G LTE versions this summer.
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Samsung's latest Galaxy tablets arrive in May.The Samsung Galaxy Tab family is getting bigger.
Samsung said on Wednesday that the Wi-Fi versions of its Galaxy Tab 4 line will be offered across a variety of retailers and online stores on May 1. Among those expected to carry the Galaxy Tab 4 are Amazon, Best Buy, Office Depot, OfficeMax, and Samsung.com. Presales will be available for all threetablets starting April 24.

The Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 line will be sold in both black and white color choices and in three size options. The Tab 4 7.0 will retail for $199 while the 8-inch and 10.1-inch versions will carry $269 and $349 price tags, respectively.

Looking ahead to summer, Sprint is expected to carry the 4G LTE version of the Tab 4 7.0. T-Mobile will offer the 4G LTE version of the Tab 4 8.0, and Verizon will sell the 4G LTE version of both the Tab 4 8.0 and the Tab 4 10.1. AT&T, for its part, will sell a 4G LTE version of the Tab 4 though it isn't immediately clear which size(s).

Samsung, which is the second-largest manufacturer of tablets behind Apple, is looking to continue gaining ground through its strategy of flooding the market with devices of multiple sizes.ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Scott Webster  
    Scott Webster has spent the better part of his adult life playing with cell phones and gadgets. When not looking for the latest Android news and rumors, he relaxes with his wife and son. Scott also is the senior editor for AndroidGuys

    Apple earnings preview: Second quarter may test investors' patience

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    Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook speaks before a new-product introduction in Cupertino, Calif. (Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press / September 10, 2013)
    By Chris O'Brien
    April 23, 2014, 6:48 a.m.
    Three months ago, when Apple reported its holiday earnings, the company posted record revenues thanks to refreshed lines of iPads and iPhones that had launched in the fall.

    But instead of basking in a big win, Apple got pounded by Wall Street because of what the company said would happen in this current quarter. Apple projected a range of revenue expectations that raised the possibility of its first revenue decline in more than a decade.

    Apple is scheduled to report second-quarter earnings after the markets close Wednesday, and most analysts think the company will actually squeak out a slight revenue gain. And since the last earnings call, Apple's stock has recovered most of its losses, closing Tuesday at $531.7, up from a dip below $500 a couple months ago.

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    Still, investors and analysts are not exactly bubbling with optimism about Apple these days. They seem resigned to the fact that the days of rocket-like growth of iPhone and iPad sales are over. Indeed, more than half the analysts polled by Fortune expected that Apple would report that iPad sales declined in the March quarter.

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    The company itself forecast revenue of $42 billion to $44 billion for the quarter, compared with $43.6 billion for the same quarter a year ago. Currently, Wall Street's consensus estimate is around $43.62 billion for the quarter.

    On the profits side, Wall Street is expecting earnings of $10.22 per share, compared with $10.09 a year ago. The increase is due in large part to Apple's increasingly aggressive stock buyback program.

    Analysts have accepted the fact that Apple is going to continue to focus on the higher-end, premium market for gadgets. Last year, many were hoping and expecting the company to unveil a lower-priced iPhone in order to be more competitive overseas and at least stem its market-share losses to Android.

    But with Chief Executive Tim Cook making it clear that Apple would continue to focus on quality over quantity of units sold, most analysts have stopped talking about a cheaper iPhone.

    "We see Apple as a provider of premium priced electronics, a lucrative market but one that may not sustain its current market valuation of $473 billion in the years ahead," Colin Gillis, an analyst at BGC Financial, wrote in a note to clients this week.

    In the short term, that has some Apple watchers growing more pessimistic. Brian White, a Cantor Fitzgerald analyst, lowered his outlook for the current quarter that ends in June. Instead, like many analysts, he's looking ahead to the second half of the year, when he hopes some much-rumored new products such as a bigger iPhone will materialize.

    "In our view, the ramp of the iPhone 6 (4.7-inch and 5.5-inch "iPhad"-like device) and iWatch in the second-half of CY:14 are more important than Apple's 2Q:FY14 performance and potentially soft 3Q:FY14 outlook," he wrote in a note to clients.

    Analyst Gene Munster of Piper Jaffray was a bit more optimistic about Apple's earnings for the second quarter, expecting the company to report $44 billion, close to the high end of its range. But he's also expecting Apple to forecast 5% growth for the current quarter, below the 8% Wall Street currently expects.

    Of course, there's almost zero chance that Cook will say anything about new products Wednesday. Most likely, Apple watchers will have to wait for its World Wide Developers Conference in June for any talk of updates or new products.

    The question for Apple is how long investors will be content to ride out a quiet period until those mythical new products appear.

    Original Post at www.news.google.com

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    Now You Can Travel Through Time on Google Maps

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    MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. April 23, 2014 (AP)
    By MICHAEL LIEDTKE AP Technology Writer
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    Trips down memory lane are now available on Google's digital maps.

    The new twist on time travel is debuting Wednesday as part of the "Street View" feature in Google's maps, a navigational tool that attracts more than 1 billion visitors each month.

    Street View snapshots will now include an option to see what neighborhoods and landmarks looked like at different periods in the last seven years, as Google Inc. has been dispatching camera-toting cars to take street-level pictures for its maps.

    Google Inc. intends to keep adding pictures to the digital time capsules as its photo-taking cars continue to cruise the same streets gathering updates.

    "As time goes by, many of these images are going to become vintage," predicted Vinay Shet, a Google product manager who oversaw the company's glimpse into the past. "We want our maps to be comprehensive as we build a digital mirror of the world."

    Like everything else on Google's map, the time-tripping option is free. Google makes money off its maps from advertising, so the Mountain View, Calif., company is constantly coming up with new attractions to keep people coming back.

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    Even though the photos only date back to 2007, some of them illustrate dramatic changes. Some photos show how neighborhoods in cities like Tohoku, Japan looked before and after a 9.0-magnitude earthquake struck in March 2011. Others show the gradual recovery of New Orleans neighborhoods in the years following the devastation of Hurricane Katrina. Scrolling over to Washington D.C. will provide a look at the restoration of the historic Howard Theatre in the nation's capital.

    In New York, the Street View map presents a string of photos illustrating the changing skyline as the Freedom Tower at the World Trade Center was built. Even looking at the evolution of Times Square during the past seven years can evoke nostalgic feelings while gazing at a giant billboard advertising a flip-style cellphone in 2007.

    The visual retrospectives aren't available throughout Google's maps, although Shet says there should be at least one look back in time for just about every neighborhood that can be viewed through the Street View format.

    Google's new feature is displaying more photos of major city centers over time than suburban streets because the company's camera-bearing cars return to densely populated areas more frequently.

    Adding the photos from the past will roughly double the total imagery in Street View once the rollout is completed in the next two days. Google declined to say how many pictures are already in Street View, which spans 55 countries. The look-back feature will be available in all but three of those countries: Germany and Switzerland, where government regulations restrict Google's use of the past images, and South Africa, where technical problems have slowed the feature's rollout.

    When a retrospective is available in Street View, a small clock appears in the left corner of the current picture of a location. Clicking on the clock produces a visual portal into different time periods.

    The trips can be emotional. For instance, Street View's scenes often include people who happened to be in the frame when Google's cars took the picture. Over time, some of these people will die and Google expects those pictures will have special meaning for survivors and other descendants.

    Some Street View pictures posted through the years have also upset people who were captured in activities or visiting places that they wanted to keep private. Google now blurs the images of people who contact the company asking to be shielded from Street View. Masking will be available on the older photos too, Shet said, even if it's just because a person didn't like the way he or she looked a few years ago.

    Posted at http://abcnews.go.com/

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    MH370 search: 'Object of interest' found on Western Australian coast

    (CNN) -- Australian officials say an "object of interest" in the search for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane has been found, but Malaysian authorities said it was too early to tell if it is a real lead.
    Australian Transport Safety Bureau Chief Commissioner Martin Dolan described the object as appearing to be sheet metal with rivets and said it was recovered on the coast of Western Australia.
    "It's sufficiently interesting for us to take a look at the photographs," he said. "We take all leads seriously."
    At a news conference Wednesday, Hishammuddin Hussein, Malaysia's acting transport minister, said that his country has not received any photos from Australia and that so far, all of the objects found in the search have not been related to the missing plane.
    Even the Australians expressed caution.
    "The more we look at it, the less excited we get," Dolan said.
    The object was picked up near Augusta, about 300 kilometers (186 miles) south of Perth, a source with the Australian Defence Force told CNN.
    The source also described the object as having rivets on one side with what appears to be a fiberglass coating.
    When asked about the shape and scale of the object, the source described it as "kind of rectangular," but torn and misshapen.
    The source said it was too difficult to estimate the size because they had only seen one photo with no clear scale.
    The object of interest is in the custody of a police agency in Western Australia. Authorities there wouldn't comment further because it's part of a federal investigation.
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    A determined effort
    The hunt for the Flight 370 is a determined effort, but there have been few headlines so far.
    A high-tech underwater drone was completing its 10th mission Wednesday, without finding any sign of the Boeing 777 jetliner.
    The Bluefin-21 has scanned about 80% of the intended territory.
    With 20% of the search area left to be explored by the drone, the search strategy remains the same, Hishammuddin said Wednesday.
    "We will continue with the search operation until we fully cover the search area," he said.
    Stormy weather postponed the air search for a second day Wednesday. The ships plying the waters off the coast of Australia kept their vigil.
    And despite the search efforts for MH370 repeatedly coming up empty during these 47 days, there's no suggestion the hunt in the southern Indian Ocean is anywhere close to ending.
    Quite to the contrary, according to Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott.
    "We are not going to abandon ... the families of the 239 people who were on that plane by lightly surrendering while there is reasonable hope of finding something," he said Wednesday. "We may well rethink the search, but we will not rest until we have done everything we can to solve this mystery."
    Long-term strategy
    Malaysian and Australian authorities are already mapping out a long-term strategy for the search, which could conceivably go on for months or years, if the two-year search for Air France Flight 447 is any guide.
    Guidelines drafted by Malaysia raise the possibility of a significantly wider search area should the current underwater search fail to turn up evidence of the plane. The document discusses how best to deploy resources, including new underwater search assets.
    Investigators would love to find the flight data recorders from Flight 370, a potential treasure trove of information into what happened to the jetliner and the 239 passengers and crew on board.
    If found, the "black boxes" probably would go to the Australian Transport Safety Board's accident investigation lab.
    But the investigation is officially Malaysian, so that country's officials would decide where the boxes would go.
    Australia is just one of a handful of countries that have the capability and technical know-how to decipher what's inside a black box.
    The Malaysian Cabinet approved the appointment of an international investigation team to look into the disappearance of Flight 370, Hishammuddin said.
    The names of the members will be announced next week, he added. He also said the team will not be looking at the criminal aspects of the investigation, which remain under the Royal Malaysian Police.
    "The main purpose is to evaluate and determine the cause of the accident," Hishammuddin said.
    Malaysia has completed a preliminary report on the incident, as required by the International Civil Aviation Organization, but has not released it publicly, he said.
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    Getting the data
    Sometimes, getting the data is simple.
    "A lot of our work is with undamaged recorders, and it's very easy to download them much as you would a USB memory stick," said Neil Campbell, an Australian transport safety investigator with more than two decades of experience.
    But the process becomes much more technical if the recorders are damaged.
    In the case of water damage, possible after weeks at the bottom of the ocean, Campbell will rinse the board very carefully, then use a water displacement liquid, before drying out the circuit board in an oven. That process can take a couple of days.
    After that, it's a process of downloading the raw data and decoding the information, or in the case of the voice recorder, listening to what was said.
    It may be the only way the families of those on board the March 8 flight -- that set off from the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur destined for Beijing -- may get answers to the questions they've been asking.
    "There's a satisfaction in working out what happened with the accident and the conclusions, and the closure that that brings," Campbell said.
    Posted at CNN

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    Ukraine crisis: Russia 'to respond if its interests' attacked



    The BBC's Natalia Antelava visits Ukrainian soldiers on the border with Russia
    Russia will respond if its interests in Ukraine are attacked, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has said, drawing a parallel with the 2008 Georgian war.
    Speaking to Russian state TV channel RT, Mr Lavrov also accused the US of "running the show" in Ukraine.
    And in a statement, Russia's foreign ministry repeated its call for Ukraine to withdraw military units from the country's east.
    Ukraine's government faces an armed revolt there by pro-Russia separatists.
    Kiev and the West say Moscow commands gunmen in eastern Ukraine - something Russia denies.
    In recent weeks, pro-Russian militants have seized administrative buildings in at least a dozen towns in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions.
    They have installed their own officials, in similar tactics to those used to take over the Ukrainian region of Crimea earlier this year.
                  
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    An armed man in military fatigues stands guard outside the security service (SBU) regional building seized by the separatists in the eastern Ukrainian city of Sloviansk on April 23
    Pro-Russian gunmen largely control at least nine cities in Donetsk region
    Sergei Lavrov in Moscow, 22 April
    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Moscow this week
    Joe Biden, left, talks to Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk during a meeting in Kiev, April. 22
    Joe Biden had talks on Tuesday with Ukrainian leaders including PM Arseniy Yatsenyuk (r)
    The US has called on Moscow to ask pro-Russian gunmen to lay down their weapons and leave public buildings. It has also urged Russia to tone down its aggressive rhetoric or face further sanctions.

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    'Like in Georgia'
    It was "quite telling" that Kiev had re-launched its "anti-terrorist" operation in the region on Tuesday during a visit by US Vice-President Joe Biden, Mr Lavrov told Russia Today.
    "If our interests, our legitimate interests, the interests of Russians have been attacked directly, like they were in South Ossetia for example, I do not see any other way but to respond in full accordance with international law," Mr Lavrov said.
    Russian fought a brief war with Georgia in the summer of 2008 after Tbilisi sent troops into the breakaway region of South Ossetia to regain control from the Russian-backed rebels.
    Thousands of Russian troops have massed along Ukraine's borders in recent weeks.
    Mr Lavrov added: "There is no reason not to believe that the Americans are running the show."
    He also reiterated accusations that Kiev had failed to fulfil commitments laid out in the 17 April Geneva accord designed to end the crisis.
    The EU and US accuse Russia of controlling the gunmen, and of failing to honour the Geneva accord.

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    'Torture claims'
    Meanwhile, the standoff in towns across Donetsk region appears to be intensifying.
    A pro-Kiev local councillor was found dead on Tuesday near the flashpoint city of Sloviansk.
    Ukrainian officials said Volodymyr Rybak's body suggested he had suffered "brutal torture".
    And the US state department has said it is "deeply concerned" at reports that pro-Russian militants in Sloviansk are holding American journalist Simon Ostrovsky, who works for Vice News.
    Unrest began in Ukraine last November over whether the country should look towards Moscow or the West.
    BBC map
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