Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Interactive nails give you a screen at your fingertips

Paul Marks, chief technology correspondent

rexfeatures_1821756q.jpg

(Image: Kayleigh O'Connor/Solent News/Rex Features)

We already have displays at our fingertips - one day, we might have them ON our fingertips. Engineers in Taiwan are investigating ways to coat fingernails in organic light emitting materials and display useful content instead of the latest garish styles from the nail salon.

The aim is to continue the visual display that's on your smartphone or tablet's screen, even when your fingernails are obscuring it. Chao-Huai Su and colleagues at National Taiwan University in Taipei don't care that the NailDisplay technology they visualise doesn't exist yet - they are trying to work out how we will use it when it does arrive. So they created a clunky, half-centimetre-thick, 2.5-cm diagonal OLED screen and attached it to a large finger ring so they could give the idea a test drive.

Screen-shot-2013-01-28-at-13.11.59.jpg(Image: Chao-Huai Su et al/National Taiwan University/Academia Sinica)

In their draft paper to be presented at the Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems in Paris in April, they imagine three use cases: first, the screen on your fingernail enlarges the are of the device's screen beneath it so that it's easier to tap small buttons or read small text. Second, they imagine it providing a display for screenless music playing devices like the iPod shuffle, showing control buttons or even video on your NailDisplay.

Finally, thanks to the incorporation of an accelerometer, the display could show content related to the gestures your fingers are making.

The possibilities are endless - but what would you do with such a device?

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Monday, January 28, 2013

The Daily Roundup for 01.28.2013

DNP The Daily RoundUp

You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours -- all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

RIM: A brief history from Budgie to BlackBerry 10

Listen to much of the chatter about Research in Motion today...

Report: Apple prepping a 128GB version

Still waiting for a 128GB iPad? One could come sooner than you think...

The biggest 1080p phone so far

It's been such a mighty, mighty long time since the Vega No. 5 came out to tug on the Dell Streak 5's coattails...

Samsung SCH-i337 appears in UAProf

Mum's still the word on the arrival of Samsung's next Galaxy S device...

Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/28/the-daily-roundup-for-01-28-2013/

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Investing in Collaborative Consumption: Venture Funding in 2012

Image courtesy of CollaborativeConsumption.com

By Stephanie Brincat

Dubbed the ?Megatrend that swallowed Silicon Valley,??collaborative?consumption ventures will continue to be a hot area for investors in 2013. Investments in startups topped $431M in 2012, up from $400M in 2011. While not a significant increase in overall funding, the collaborative consumption space has received consistent venture capital over the last 12 months from leading investors such as Sequoia, Union Square Ventures and Floodgate.

Here?s our roundup of where the big investments were made across sectors:

Money

The biggest winner in the payment space was Social Finance (SoFi) ? a peer-to-peer student loan network ? raising an outstanding $77.2M. With student debt in the U.S. reaching $1 trillion in 2012, SoFi offers students a lending fund with a better fixed loan rate than unsubsidized government loans.

Marketplace payment platform Stripe picked up $38M in funding over two rounds, with an estimated valuation of $500M. Stripe makes it much easier for businesses to start accepting online payments, a big friction point for collaborative consumption marketplaces. Y-Combinator backed Balanced Payments is another player in the space, securing $1.4M in funding. The platform focuses on making sure sellers get paid quickly and is already being used by TheFancy, Kitchit, CrowdTilt, Copious and Zaarly.

Travel and accommodation

Airbnb?s success after its $117M Series B round in mid-2011 has paved the way for other startups seeking funding in the travel and accommodation space. HouseTrip, a platform that allows people to rent out their homes online, picked up an impressive $40M in Series C funding. Couchsurfing received $15M in Series B funding to help extend its 5-million-strong social travel network. Overall, the travel and accommodation space received over $78M in funding in 2012, making it an ongoing trend to watch for 2013.

Fashion

Online fashion marketplaces were one of the standout trends for 2012, with fashion startups receiving more than $56M in funding. Recently, there has been a move away from swapping or ?swishing? marketplaces towards the buy/sell or consignment model. Poshmark, a peer-to-peer clothing marketplace for new and used clothes, raised $12M in Series B funding. Users can download the app and start taking photos of their closet immediately, giving potential buyers the chance to purchase unwanted items. ThredUP, the children?s clothing exchange platform, moved away from swapping to a consignment model, meaning parents can now send a bag of children?s clothing, which then gets individually sorted and listed online via the thredUP marketplace. ThredUP raised $14.3M in Series C funding to help expand the business.

Ridesharing

Ridesharing experienced explosive growth in 2012, attracting investors to make some big bets. Startups in the space received more than $48M in funding worldwide. European companies BlaBlarCar, Hailo and Carpooling.com (recently expanded into the U.S) secured $37M of this funding pool, demonstrating the immense success of ridesharing in Europe.

It?s all in the niche

Collaborative consumption startups that focus on a niche market opportunity continue to attract interest as people experiment with sharing services in other parts of their lives. Pet-sitting services received just over $10M in funding, with DogVacay securing $7M over two rounds and Rover.com getting $3.4M in Series A. Cherry, an on-demand carwash service launched in San Francisco that enables you to wash your car on the spot, landed $4.5M in Series A.

Our top 3 trends for 2013

While 2012 has been about increased activity and competition in a number of key verticals across the collaborative consumption space, 2013 will see a focus on the market leaders, as well as enthusiasm for a number of emerging sectors. Here are our top three picks for what will make the headlines this year:

  • Errand networks go international: After proven success in local markets, errand networks like TaskRabbit will focus investment dollars on scaling up and global expansion.
  • Building trust in p2p transactions: If 2012 was the year of p2p payment systems, the rise of identity and reputation tools focused on further reducing friction in p2p marketplaces will be a hot investment area in 2013.
  • Shareable office space: The next frontier in space rental, we are seeing progression from bespoke coworking spaces, to tapping into the assets of corporate work environments through the likes of LiquidSpace, which closed a $6M round in January this year.

Where would you place your bets on the hot investment areas for the collaborative consumption space in 2013?

***

Stephanie Brincat is Community Manager for CollaborativeConsumption.com,?the premier online portal for curated news, information and examples related to collaborative consumption worldwide.

Scroll down to see comments.


Source: http://www.triplepundit.com/2013/01/investing-collaborative-consumption-venture-funding-2012/

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Researchers build a working tractor beam, on a very small scale

Researchers develop a working tractor beam, on a very small scale

We recently saw research that suggested negative radiation pressure in light could lead to a practical tractor beam. A partnership between the Czech Republic's Institute of Scientific Instruments and Scotland's University of St. Andrews can show that it's more than just theory: the two have successfully created an optical field that flipped the usual pressure and started pulling objects toward the light. Their demo only tugged at the particle level -- sorry, no spaceships just yet -- but it exhibited unique properties that could be useful here on Earth. Scientists discovered that the pull is specific to the size and substance of a given object, and that targets would sometimes reorganize themselves in a way that improved the results. On the current scale, that pickiness could lead to at least medicinal uses, such as sorting cells based on their material. While there's more experiments and development to go before we ever see a tractor beam at the hospital, the achievement brings us one step closer to the sci-fi future we were always told we'd get, right alongside the personal communicators and jetpacks.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Via: BBC

Source: University of St. Andrews, Nature

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/26/researchers-make-a-working-tractor-beam/

Electoral College map

ECB's Asmussen warns against unilateral forex moves

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - European Central Bank Executive Board member Joerg Asmussen called for international cooperation to address the current debate about competitive currency devaluation, saying central banks are not the ones to solve structural problems.

Policymakers in advanced countries, particularly Japan and the United States, have been acting aggressively to reflate their economies, which has the effect of weakening their currencies.

Central bankers and politicians have warned against the risk of competitive devaluations and Asmussen said the issue was best tackled in international groupings.

"We have well-established fora of economic governance like the G7 or the G20 and we should use them," he told the Sunday edition of Greek newspaper Kathimerini in an interview.

"We should not fall back to a situation where everyone is looking after his own interests," Asmussen said, adding that when the underlying problems were structural, asking the central bank to do more would not help.

"The mere appearance of political dominance threatens to undermine market confidence," he said.

Asmussen said he was "clearly against" a higher inflation target for the ECB, because merely debating one could upset inflation expectations. The bank has a mandate to pursue price stability, defined as an inflation rate of just below 2 percent.

He said there was no room for complacency, even though the ECB's new bond purchase program, which he called a game-changer, has taken some of the heat out of the euro zone crisis.

"The biggest risk this year for the euro area is doing nothing. The reduction of the pressure that came from elevated spreads may lead to complacency regarding reforms. This would be wrong. This is a year to show perseverance, to stay the course, in all member-countries," Asmussen said.

He said Greece was in the final stretch of its fiscal adjustment and could cut debt to sustainable levels without further debt relief if it carried out reforms prescribed by foreign lenders.

"The marathon was invented in Greece. As a country, you have now been through two-thirds of it, but everyone knows the last third is the hardest part," Asmussen said.

(Reporting by Eva Kuehnen in Frankfurt and Renee Maltezou in Athens; editing by Mark Trevelyan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ecbs-asmussen-warns-against-unilateral-forex-moves-203417029--business.html

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Immune cell suicide alarm helps destroy escaping bacteria

Friday, January 25, 2013

Cells in the immune system called macrophages normally engulf and kill intruding bacteria, holding them inside a membrane-bound bag called a vacuole, where they kill and digest them.

Some bacteria thwart this effort by ripping the bag open and then escaping into the macrophage's nutrient-rich cytosol compartment, where they divide and could eventually go on to invade other cells.

But research from the University of North Carolina School of Medicine shows that macrophages have a suicide alarm system, a signaling pathway to detect this escape into the cytosol. The pathway activates an enzyme, called caspase-11, that triggers a program in the macrophage to destroy itself.

"It's almost like a thief sneaking into the house not knowing an alarm will go off to knock down the walls and expose him to capture by the police," says study senior and corresponding author Edward Miao, PhD, assistant professor of microbiology and immunology at UNC. "In the macrophage, this cell death, called pyroptosis, expels the bacterium from the cell, exposing it to other immune defense mechanisms."

A report of the research appears online in the journal Science on Thursday January 24, 2013.

Miao, also a member of the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, says the new findings show that having this detection pathway protects mice from lethal infection with the type of vacuole-escaping Burkholderia species: B. thailandensis and B. pseudomallei.

Both are close relatives. But they differ in lethality. B. pseudomallei is potentially a biological weapon. Used in a spray, it could potentially infect people via aerosol route, causing sickness and death. Moreover, it also could fall into a latent phase, "essentially turning into a 'sleeper' inside the lungs and hiding there for decades," Miao explains. In contrast, B. thailandensis, which shares many properties with its species counterpart, is not normally able to cause any disease or infection

These environmental bacteria are ubiquitous throughout S.E. Asia, and were it not for the caspase-11 pathway defense system, that part of the world could be uninhabitable, Miao points out.

This grim possibility clearly emerged in the study. Mice that lack the caspase-11 detection pathway succumb to infection not only by B. pseudomallei, but also to the normally benign B. thailandensis. "Thus caspase-11 is critical for surviving exposure to ubiquitous environmental pathogens," the authors conclude.

Miao points to research elsewhere showing that the pathway's abnormal activation in people with septic shock, overwhelming bacterial infection of the blood, is associated with death. "We discovered what the pathway is supposed to do, which may help find ways to tone it down in people with that critical condition.

As to bioterrorism, the researcher says it may be possible to use certain drugs already on the market that safely induce the caspase-11 pathway. "Since this pathway requires pre-stimulation with interferon cytokines, it is conceivable that pre-treating people with interferon drugs could ameliorate a bioterror incident. This could be quite important in the case of Burkholderia, since these bacteria are naturally resistant to numerous antibiotics.

"But first we have to find out if they would work in animal models, and consider the logistics of interferon stockpiling, which are currently cost prohibitive."

###

University of North Carolina Health Care: http://www.med.unc.edu

Thanks to University of North Carolina Health Care 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.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126466/Immune_cell_suicide_alarm_helps_destroy_escaping_bacteria

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Charges won't be filed against 49ers' Crabtree

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? Criminal charges won't be filed against 49ers wide receiver Michael Crabtree after an alleged sexual assault in a hotel after the team's playoff victory over the Green Bay Packers, San Francisco's district attorney said Friday.

After examining information submitted by police, District Attorney George Gascon said his office determined that no charges would be filed "at this time."

"The San Francisco Police Department - Special Victims Unit completed and submitted a thorough investigation of the allegations against Michael Crabtree," Gascon said.

Crabtree's attorney, Joshua Bentley, didn't immediately return a call seeking comment.

San Francisco police said Crabtree was never detained or arrested in the matter, and that he cooperated fully with their investigation.

The 49ers are preparing to meet the Baltimore Ravens in the Super Bowl on Feb. 3 in New Orleans.

49ers general manager Trent Baalke said the team was pleased that the district attorney decided to not file charges after reviewing the matter.

"Michael and the team can now put this behind us and move forward," Baalke said in a statement.

During the regular season, Crabtree became the first San Francisco wide receiver with more than 1,000 yards in a season since Terrell Owens in 2003.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/charges-wont-filed-against-49ers-crabtree-025220477--nfl.html

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The Harts of Nashville

The Harts of Nashville

Welcome to Nashville! Follow the lives of the rich and famous, or the struggling artists, as dreams come true, hearts break, love blossoms, and mishap is right around the corner.

Owner:

Game Masters:

This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, ?The Harts of Nashville?. Anything posted here will also show up there.

Topic Tags:

Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.
This is the auto-generated OOC topic for the roleplay "The Harts of Nashville"

You may edit this first post as you see fit.

* Nezzera * chaoticsunrise * RaeRaeButterfly *

Beautiful Dreamer, wake unto me,
Starlight and dewdrops are waiting for thee;
Sounds of the rude world heard in the day,
Lull'd by the moonlight have all pass'd away!

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UCTigerette
Member for 3 years



Hey! May I reserve Minka Kelly please? :D

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BleedingLover
Member for 1 years


Can I steal Lucy Hale? :3 And possible Kellan Lutz, if no one else wants him.

"She offered herself to the big, bad wolf and didn't scream when he took the first bite."

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bandgeek
Member for 1 years


BleedingLover - Of course! She's reserved.
bandgeek - Reserving both now!

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UCTigerette
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I would love to take FC: Leighton Meester please?

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emogirlrockz11
Member for 4 years


emogirlrockz11 - Reserving. (:

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UCTigerette
Member for 3 years


I cannot make the bio today, but can I reserve Taylor Kitsc

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Sonohra
Member for 1 years


Hihihi! ^.^
Could I possibly reserve Lucas Till please? I'll probably have him up way later on tonight. :D
<I never sleep.>

?Whenever you take on playing a villain, he has to cease to be a villain to you. If you judge this man by his time, he's doing very little wrong.?

? Colin Firth

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MusaMe
Member for 0 years


Sonohra - Reserved. Reservations last a week. Please keep that in mind. (:
MusaMe - Reserved! (:

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UCTigerette
Member for 3 years



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Friday, January 25, 2013

Disorder at Work

Proteins without a definite shape can still take on important jobs

By Tanya Lewis

Web edition: January 24, 2013
Print edition: February 9, 2013; Vol.183 #3 (p. 26)

Enlarge

In its unbound state, some parts of the p53 protein take on a definite structure (gray model) while other regions remain flexible and disordered (other colors).

Credit: P. Tompa/Trends in Biochemical Sciences 2012

Richard Kriwacki refused to give up on his protein. He had tried again and again to determine its three-dimensional shape, but in every experiment, the protein looked no more structured than a piece of cooked spaghetti.

Normally, this lack of form would be a sign that the protein had been destroyed, yet Kriwacki knew for a fact it could still do its job in controlling cell division. While discussing the conundrum with his adviser in the atrium of their La Jolla, Calif., lab, insight dawned: Maybe the floppy protein didn?t take shape until it attached to another protein. Kriwacki raced off to do yet another experiment, this time combining his protein, p21, with a partner. Sure enough, Kriwacki got what he was looking for. Once joined, a seemingly ruined mess gave way to a neatly folded structure. The finding defied a foundational dogma of biology, that structure determines function.

Nearly everything the human body does, from shuttling oxygen through the bloodstream to digesting a meal, relies on proteins. These biological workhorses are composed of chains of molecules called amino acids. Whenever a chain is made, conventional scientific wisdom says, electrical forces cause it to immediately bend into helical ribbons and tight zigzags, which twist further into even more defined three-dimensional forms. The resulting shape determines what other molecular players the protein can bind to and thus what it can accomplish in a cell. Unfolded proteins were thought to result only from intolerable conditions that render a protein useless, such as extreme heat or acidity.

But since around the time of Kriwacki?s discovery more than 15 years ago, disorder has surfaced as a key player in the protein world. ?Intrinsically disordered proteins,? or IDPs, turn out to play vital parts in controlling cellular processes. More than one-third of all human proteins, in fact, may be partially or completely disordered in structure, floating around like strands of wet noodles. ?The roles that disordered regions can play are quite diverse,? says Kriwacki, now at St. Jude Children?s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn.

Enlarge

Some disordered protein regions, such as the one above (in purple), take shape once they meet up with another protein (gray).

Credit: H.J. Dyson and P.E. Wright/Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 2005

To better understand how something so flexible can be functional, researchers are now taking a closer look at how the disordered proteins interact with other proteins. The disordered dissidents can behave as switches, quickly turning cellular processes on or off in response to changing conditions, or as shape-shifting ensembles that integrate multiple signals before telling a cell to get a job done. Studying the interactions of intrinsically disordered proteins may even yield insight into certain diseases and lead to new treatments.

Floppiness exposed

Disordered proteins flew under the radar for so long because the standard technique for determining a protein?s structure, known as X-ray crystallography, requires that the protein retain a set shape long enough to be crystallized. Scientists had found a few examples of proteins that couldn?t be crystallized, but these were thought to be anomalies.

When Kriwacki encountered the troublesome p21 protein, he was working with molecular biologists Jane Dyson and Peter Wright at the Scripps Research Institute. Dyson and Wright were using a technique called nuclear magnetic resonance, or NMR, spectroscopy, which reveals a molecule?s form based on the magnetic properties of its atoms? nuclei as opposed to its crystal structure. ?Peter and Jane?s lab at the time was the world-leading protein NMR lab,? says Kriwacki. Advances in NMR were what allowed him to finally figure out what his protein looked like.

Enlarge

STRUCTURE SPECTRUM

Choosing to label a protein as disordered or ordered is not always straightforward. Some proteins are as wiggly as cooked spaghetti, while others can be mostly structured with just a few regions that dabble in disorder.

Credit: H.J. Dyson and P.E. Wright/Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 2005

After p21, examples of these proteins just kept turning up. You don?t need to go looking for them, Dyson says, ?they?ll come looking for you, believe me.? In 1999, Dyson and Wright published a landmark review paper in the Journal of Molecular Biology that set the stage for a new protein paradigm. There were too many examples to be mere outliers; it was clear that something bigger was going on. ?We were finding that these proteins were not only unstructured, but had to be,? Dyson says.

Meanwhile, other scientists were independently building a strong case for the existence of intrinsically disordered proteins. Keith Dunker, a bioinformatician at Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, and Peter Tompa, a protein chemist at the Free University of Brussels, were both leading efforts to predict disorder mathematically. ?The main thing we did was to determine that unstructured proteins have a fundamentally different amino acid composition compared to structured proteins,? Dunker says.

A protein?s mix of amino acids can create regions that are either hydrophilic (?water-loving?) or hydrophobic (?water-hating?). Structured proteins that exist in solution typically fold into spherical shapes with a hydrophilic shell enclosing a hydrophobic core. But disordered proteins contain few, if any, hydrophobic regions, so they don?t fold up. They also tend to have more electrically charged portions. ?If you look at these differences, you can anticipate that they?re not going to fold into a 3-D structure,? Dunker says. To help study the differences, he and his colleagues developed ?DisProt,? a database of proteins that experiments have shown to be disordered.

Though scientists often speak of ?structured proteins? and ?intrinsically disordered proteins? as if they are distinct classes, along the way it has become clear that any particular protein?s degree of disorder falls on a spectrum, from precise rigidity to complete disarray. Proteins can also migrate along that spectrum from one moment to another, shifting into different versions of themselves. Many disordered proteins, including p21, eschew their wiggly nature when binding to a partner protein ? like a string puppet snapping to attention. Others fold to a more limited extent upon binding, and some never shape up at all.

Enlarge

PROTEIN POWER

View larger image | Because of its disorder, a protein known as I?B? can act as a switch that turns a host of cellular behaviors on and off. It?s I?B??s interaction with another disordered protein, NF?B, that makes this regulatory role possible.

Credit: Source: H.J. Dyson and E.A. Komives/Iubmb Life 2012, adapted by S. Egts

Fold for a cause

How a protein?s degree of disorder enables its function is now a hot topic of research. Ongoing efforts suggest some disordered proteins act like switches, triggering or stopping an action in response to a signal. This makes them well-suited for controlling activities such as the production of other proteins, cell growth or division, and the sending of cellular signals.

Lately, Dyson has been working with Elizabeth Komives of the University of California, San Diego to study a duo of proteins, NF-kappaB and I-kappa-B-alpha. Together, the proteins control a host of vital phenomena in cells, from growth and development to immunity and stress response. The proteins, which both contain disordered regions, normally exist bound together as a complex within a cell. When the cell receives a signal, such as a hormone molecule binding to its surface, I?B? is tagged for destruction and degraded. NF?B is released and sent to the nucleus. There, NF?B binds to the DNA, turning on genes that hold the instructions for making specific proteins.

One of the proteins produced is more I?B?, which allows the response to be switched off again when it is no longer needed. I?B? binds to NF?B and strips it from the DNA, Dyson and Komives reported last year in IUBMB Life. It?s not yet clear how the stripping process works, but the disordered regions of I?B? appear to cast around like a fishing line to find NF?B and peel it off the DNA. The new complex of NF?B and I?B? leaves the nucleus and returns to its resting state within the cell. Thanks in part to the disordered regions, the cell can respond flexibly and rapidly to external stimuli.

Enlarge

Alpha-synuclein, a protein implicated in Parkinson?s disease (spots show abnormal clumping in brain stem), may be disordered in its healthy state.

Credit: S. Rajan/WikiMedia Commons

While NF?B and I?B? become mostly structured upon binding, other IDPs remain highly dynamic. One example is Sic1, a disordered protein found in yeast that prevents DNA replication and thus keeps cells from dividing. A 2008 study led by Julie Forman-Kay of the University of Toronto and then-colleague Tanja Mittag revealed how proteins such as Sic1 function as ?dynamic ensembles? of disordered states. Sic1 contains six short disordered regions that take turns binding in a ?pocket? of a partner protein. At any given moment, only one of Sic1?s six regions sits inside the pocket, while the other regions remain disordered. Each of these six regions is susceptible to modifications that can deactivate it in a way that prevents it from binding. All six of them must be ready to bind for Sic1 to hold onto its protein partner and stave off cell division. Each segment?s activation is like a weight added to one side of a balance ? only with enough weights does the scale tip.

While some disordered regions play active roles in sensitive responses, others serve only to hold more structured areas together like beads on a string. The disordered protein complex CBP/p300 has several structured regions connected by long, floppy ?flexible linkers.? The linkers form a malleable scaffold for bringing together the structured parts of the protein complex, controlling how and when these other players interact.

In sickness and health

Historically, before IDPs took off, anything other than a properly structured protein was considered a disease risk. This was a reasonable conclusion, given that diseases often result when proteins take forms they aren?t meant to, a process called misfolding. Today, though, scientists know that a disordered protein is not the same as a misfolded one.

Still, IDPs, like any proteins, can misfold. And misfolded proteins known to play roles in some high-profile diseases have recently turned out to be disordered. The tau protein, for example, forms the characteristic protein tangles seen in Alzheimer?s disease. Same, it seems, for alpha-synuclein and Parkinson?s disease. Some scientists think disordered proteins may be more prone to misfolding than other types, but the relationship is not yet clear. By understanding the full range of protein folding behavior, scientists hope to gain insight into the causes of such diseases.

Homing in on interactions involving disordered proteins could also lead to new approaches to treatment. Drug developers have traditionally focused on creating molecules that bind to highly structured proteins that carry out reactions in a cell. That means binding to what?s called an ?active site.? But the new understanding of IDPs opens possibilities for designing drugs that instead interfere with protein-protein interactions, by binding to intrinsically disordered proteins or binding to a site on a partner protein where the IDP attaches.

?The idea of targeting disordered proteins themselves remains very challenging,? Kriwacki says. ?Much more feasible is to target binding sites on folded [partner] proteins.? If a short sequence of a disordered protein is known to bind to another protein that triggers a disease state, a small molecule could mimic that sequence, binding to the partner protein and deactivating it. An anticancer drug developed by the pharmaceutical company Roche is made from Nutlin-3a, a chemical that works in just this way. Nutlin-3a prevents an IDP commonly associated with cancer, p53, from interacting with its partner protein.

Of course, scientists? current understanding of disordered proteins assumes that the versions studied in lab dishes are in fact disordered in cells, a notion some researchers challenge.

Disorder doubters

As with any paradigm shift, the idea that proteins can be disordered but still functional has its skeptics. ?I think the majority of people accept disorder,? says Wright, ?but there are still a few critics.? Most studies of IDPs are conducted in lab dishes rather than in living cells, because today?s techniques, for the most part, aren?t sensitive enough to allow the study of proteins at the low amounts present in actual cells. Scientists commonly use bacterial cells to create many copies of a protein. The protein is then isolated and studied under artificial conditions. This has led some researchers to question whether the apparently disordered state of IDPs is merely an artifact of the lab environment. In the true setting of a cell, which is much more crowded with other molecules, the proteins might be folded, the critics argue.

Neuroscientist Dennis Selkoe of Harvard Medical School and colleagues published a controversial paper in 2011 suggesting that alpha-synuclein protein, widely believed to be disordered in its healthy form, actually exists in a structured state inside cells. Selkoe?s team studied alpha-synuclein obtained from human brain cells grown in a lab dish, reporting that the protein appears to occur naturally as a helix-shaped ?tetramer? of four proteins as opposed to a single, unstructured protein.

But the findings are highly contested, and others have failed to replicate them. Philipp Selenko, a biochemist at the Leibniz Institute of Molecular Pharmacology in Berlin, used NMR to show that alpha-synuclein was unstructured inside intact E. coli bacteria. Biologist Guy Lippens of Lille University of Science and Technology in France and colleagues have shown that tau protein, too, appears unstructured in immature frog egg cells. Still, says Lippens, the question of whether all lab-studied IDPs are truly disordered in cells remains open.

Assuming the proteins are unstructured, another mystery is how they evade degradation. Cells have machinery that recognizes proteins that haven?t folded properly and digests them. One theory posits that since IDPs lack regions of the type the degradation system recognizes, the disordered proteins appear to the cell as folded proteins. Another theory holds that ?chaperone? proteins bind to IDPs to stabilize them so they don?t get eaten up by the cell. A third theory suggests that IDPs are tightly regulated and kept at low levels in the cell, broken down when they are not needed. Studying proteins under natural conditions ? in cells ? will help provide the answer.

Despite a growing awareness of disorder in proteins, much more research remains to be done. In this chaotic new view of the protein world, scientists must reexamine everything they have assumed about structure and function. ?Just like in physics,? Tompa says, ?the protein universe seems to have this dark matter we have neglected, which now turns out to be important in cells.?


Loose jobs
Intrinsically disordered proteins, or IDPs, have important regulatory and signaling jobs in cells (some outlined below). Their disorder is thought to make them better at these tasks, by enabling quick and flexible responses to the changing conditions that cells face.

  • Cell cycle activities? Disordered proteins help control when and how a cell grows and divides.

  • Transcription? These proteins turn on and off the copying of genes (DNA) into protein-making instructions (RNA).

  • Translation ?IDPs are involved in the reading of RNA to make proteins.

  • Signal transduction? The flexibility of intrinsically disordered proteins allows them to convert a signal coming from outside the cell into a response that shows up within the cell.

  • Self-assembly of multiprotein complexes? IDPs help bring together different proteins to form larger structures ? such as the ribosome, a molecular machine that serves as the site of protein synthesis.

  • Cargo transport? These proteins play a role in moving large molecules around a cell along the fibers making up the cell?s skeleton.

  • Apoptosis ?Disordered proteins can mediate a cell suicide pathway.

M. Babu et al. Versatility from Protein Disorder. Science, Vol. 337, September 21, 2012, p. 1460. doi: 10.1126/science.1228775.

M. Babu et al. Intrinsically disordered proteins: regulation and disease. Current Opinion in Structural Biology, Vol. 21, June 2011, p. 432. doi: 10.1016/j.sbi.2011.03.011.

R. Das et al. Unmasking Functional Motifs Within Disordered Regions of Proteins. Science Signaling, Vol. 5, April 17, 2012, p. 17. doi: 10.1126/scisignal.2003091.

A. K. Dunker and R. W. Kriwacki. The orderly chaos of proteins. Scientific American, April 2011, p. 68.

A. K. Dunker. Function and structure of inherently disordered proteins. Current Opinion in Structural Biology, Vol. 18, November 2008, p. 756. doi: 10.1016/j.sbi.2008.10.002.

A. K. Dunker. DisProt: a database of protein disorder. Bioinformatics, Vol. 21, January 1, 2005, p. 137. doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/bth476.

H. J. Dyson and E. Komives. Role of Disorder in I?B-NF?B Interaction. Life, Vol. 64, June 2012, June, 2012, p. 499. doi: 10.1002/iub.1044.

A. K. Dunker. Sequences and topology: intrinsic disorder in the evolving universe of protein structure. Current Opinion in Structural Biology, Vol. 21, 2011, p. 1. doi: 10.1016/j.sbi.2011.04.002.

H. J. Dyson and P. Wright. Intrinsically Unstructured Proteins And Their Functions. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, Vol. 6, March 2005, p. 197. doi: 10.1038/nrm1589.

R. Kriwacki. Structural studies of p21Waf1/Cip1/Sdi1 in the free and Cdk2-bound state: conformational disorder mediates binding diversity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol. 93, Oct. 15, 1996, p. 11504.

D. Jones et al. Prediction and Functional Analysis of Native Disorder in Proteins from the Three Kingdoms of Life. Journal of Molecular Biology, Vol. 337, March 26, 2004, p 635. doi:10.1016/j.jmb.2004.02.002.

G. Lippens et al. NMR observation of Tau in Xenopus oocytes. Journal of Magnetic Resonance, Vol. 192, June 2008, p. 252. doi: 10.1016/j.jmr.2008.03.006.

J. Forman-Kay et al. Dynamic equilibrium engagement of a polyvalent ligand with a single-site receptor. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol. 105, November 18, 2008, p. 17772. 10.1073/pnas.0809222105.

J. Rumi-Masante et al. Structural Basis for Activation of Calcineurin by Calmodulin. Journal of Molecular Biology, Vol. 415, January 13, 2012, p. 307. doi: 10.1016/j.jmb.2011.11.008.

P. Selenko et al. Bacterial in-cell NMR of human alpha-synuclein: a disordered monomer by nature? Biochemical Society Transactions, Vol. 40, October 2012, p. 950. doi: 10.1042/BST20120096.

D. Selkoe et al. [agr]-Synuclein occurs physiologically as a helically folded tetramer that resists aggregation. Nature, Vol. 477, March 2011, p. 107. doi: 10.1038/nature10324.

P. Tompa. Intrinsically disordered proteins: a 10-year recap. Trends in Biochemical Sciences, Vol. 37, December 2012, December, 2012, p. 509. doi: 10.1016/j.tibs.2012.08.004.

P. Tompa and M. Fuxreiter. Fuzzy complexes: polymorphism and structural disorder in protein?protein interactions. Trends in Biochemical Sciences, Vol. 33, January, 2008, p. 2. doi: 10.1016/j.tibs.2012.08.004.

P. Wright and H. J. Dyson. Linking Folding and Binding. Current Opinion in Structural Biology, Vol. 19, February 2009, p. 31. doi: 10.1016/j.sbi.2008.12.003.

P. Wright and H. J. Dyson. Intrinsically Unstructured Proteins: Re-assessing the Protein Structure-Function Paradigm. Journal of Molecular Biology, Vol. 293, October 22, 1999, p. 321. doi: 10.1006/jmbi.1999.3110.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/347758/title/Disorder_at_Work

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Ultimate Ears intros Vocal Reference Monitors to save singers from strain

Ultimate Ears intros Vocal Reference Monitors to save singers from strain

Believe it or not, few musicians' in-ear reference monitors are tuned to emphasize voice; singers might have to compete for attention with wailing guitars and drums inside their own heads. Rather than risk artists shouting themselves hoarse, Ultimate Ears has launched its Vocal Reference Monitors. Separate versions for men and women focus on their typical vocal ranges and narrow the frequency range to between 90Hz and 8kHz, cutting out the more extreme sounds of instruments in the mix. The $999 price rules out the Vocal line for most garage bands -- it might, however, be perfect for pros whose screaming isn't part of the act.

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Logitech Introduces First In-Ear Monitor Custom Tuned for Vocalists

The New Ultimate Ears Vocal Reference Monitors are Designed to Deliver the Vocal Response Singers Need

NEWARK, Calif. - Jan. 23, 2013 - Today at The NAMM Show in Anaheim, Calif., Logitech (SIX: LOGN) (NASDAQ: LOGI) unveiled the first custom in-ear monitors engineered specifically for vocalists - the Ultimate Ears[TM] Vocal Reference Monitors. This new monitor is the first-ever custom in-ear monitor that focuses only on the vocal spectrum.

The Ultimate Ears Vocal Reference Monitors have been designed with two different sound signatures to accommodate male and female voice frequencies. These unique signatures allow singers to concentrate only on what they need to hear.

"Most concert attendees don't realize just how loud it is on stage," said Philippe Depallens, vice president and general manager of the Ultimate Ears custom line of products. "Often, singers exhaust their voices in an effort just to hear themselves above the instruments and amplifiers. It puts a tremendous strain on their voice."

The Ultimate Ears Vocal Reference Monitors address this problem in two ways. First, they act as an earplug and reduce overall stage volume by up to 26 decibels through passive noise cancellation. This brings the sound pressure levels down so that vocalists can hear their own voice more clearly. Second, instead of hearing a full frequency mix like most other monitors, the three balanced armatures in each ear are engineered to emphasize the general voice band, with frequency response between 90Hz - 8kHz, so that singers can hear what's most important to their performance.

Additionally, the Ultimate Ears Vocal Reference Monitors will be equipped with RewardTag. If your Ultimate Ears Vocal Reference Monitors are lost or stolen, whoever finds your device can return it through RewardTag, and Ultimate Ears will give the individual a reward for their safe return.

Pricing and Availability

Both versions of the Ultimate Ears Vocal Reference Monitors are available directly through Ultimate Ears or through any authorized dealer. The retail price is $999.00. For more information please visit www.ultimateears.com.

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Source: Ultimate Ears

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/24/ultimate-ears-intros-vocal-reference-monitors-to-save-singers/

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Brit Writers speaks with Paul Templer, author of What&#39;s Left of Me ...

Brit Writers speaks with Paul Templer, author of What?s Left of Me?

Who is Paul Templer?

Despite growing up in Africa in the midst of a vicious civil war, I look?back?fondly upon my childhood. I found it easy to get along and played well with others and for the most part, life was a grand adventure.

After school, I travelled the world seeking the meaning of life ? translation: I toured extensively, held a lot of odd jobs, drank a lot of beer, met some fascinating people, made a lot of mistakes and laughed a lot. I proudly served with the British Army before returning to Africa and a life of safaris and extreme expeditions . . . until a bad day at?the office when I ended up headfirst and waist-deep down the throat of a hippopotamus who was having a temper tantrum.

Nowadays, I live?as a naturalized American citizen?in the U.S.A., largely due to Cupid having no respect for geography. My wife is an?American, as are my three children. Most of my days are filled with writing, speaking,?working with my Foundation and leading a handful of businesses?? as a serial entrepreneur, the only way I?ve been able to hold down a steady job has been to own the companies I work for. My passion is spending time with my family.

?

Why have you written ?What?s Left of Me??

There were times?during the writing process when?I wondered the same thing. The flip answer when I asked myself that question was so that people would stop bugging me?to do so?and?I could make some money.

When I look a little deeper, I found the writing process to be therapeutic and at some point during the process, I?bought into the notion that sharing my entertaining misadventures and the ways I?ve dealt with my lot in life has the potential to inspire?and help?people.

Who should read this book and why?

There are a variety of readers who have let me know that they enjoyed reading What?s Left of Me. I?ve received some great reviews from people who were simply looking for an entertaining page-turner or a human interest adventure story.

I?ve also been quite moved by some of the feedback I?ve received from people who find themselves navigating adversity and change?in their lives?and?are looking for inspiration. ?They?ve let me know that, though my experiences range from the exotic to the mundane, they?re easy to identify with, which makes my responses to my challenges universally applicable.?I?m humbled that my story has evoked both inspiration and motivation and helped people.

?

Tell us more about you ? How long have you been writing for and what are your plans for the future as an author?

After reading one of my blogs, Anne-Marie (my children?s baby-sitter) commented that I wrote pretty well for someone who wasn?t a writer. It got me to thinking about how I?ve been writing for as long as I can remember. I started writing What?s Left of Me in 1996 and it took until 2012 for me to get my act together and let it be published. Anne-Marie and I discussed that, considering my blogs, a few books I?ve contributed to, writing my Keynote speeches and writing the intellectual property we produce at our consulting company, I write quite a lot for someone who, as she says, is not really a writer.

A passion project that I?m currently working on is a?young reader?s version of?What?s Left of Me. I?love?exploring topics like gratitude, kindness, accountability and the opportunities and consequences associated with the choices we make. My three young children and their friends are my research assistants and critics on this project and writing this book?is a lot of fun.

?

What would you like to say to whoever is reading this right now?

If you?re looking for a delightfully entertaining romp that has you?question how you show up in your life?and?at the same time inspires you to move forward more powerfully, peacefully and joyfully, then I?m confident that you?ll?be delighted with What?s Left of Me???go buy it now.

If you know someone who?s going through a tough time at the moment and could use a?pick-me-up ? something entertaining that reveals new ways of looking at and responding to what?s going on in his or her life ?? then go buy a copy of?What?s Left of Me?and give it to the person. ?I?m confident that he or she will be grateful to you.

?

Thank you Paul.

?

Join us on the Brit Writers Blog ? http://britwriters.blogspot.co.uk

Buy ?What?s Left of Me? today -

?

Source: http://www.britwriters.com/news/brit-writers-speaks-with-paul-templer-author-of-whats-left-of-me.html

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The Brain behind Local Live: An Interview with Jordan Pannell | Free ...

Pictured above is Jordan Pannell. Photo taken by Alana Settles during Dirty Dub Radio, hosted by Buda Love & Rob Bass.

By: Erin Dyer

Free Press Houston spoke with Jordan Pannell, a young, influential Houstonian making advancements in discovering, representing, and promoting local arts and music by means of Local Live (including Local Live Media, L.L.C, LocalLiveMedia.com, LocalLiveHouston.com, and LocalLiveRadio.com). If you are unfamiliar with Local Live, do yourself a favor and check it out. Like, right now. After all, awareness and involvement in our city will ultimately emanate continuous growth of Houston as a prominent art community as we reinvest in ourselves and our cumulative, raw talent.

FPH:?So, you are the founder of Local Live? tell us a little about the different projects currently involved with that.

Jordan Pannell:?Yes ma?am, I am the founder and brainchild of Local Live, which includes Local Live Media, L.L.C., LocalLiveMedia.com, LocalLiveHouston.com, and LocalLiveRadio.com. Local Live Media, L.L.C. is our multimedia company which works with clients looking for videography, TV/Film production, audio engineering, events planning, promotions, and community organization. LocalLiveHouston.com and LocalLiveMedia.com currently both link you to our website?s front page, which, from there, you can choose one of our three 24/7 streaming online community radio stations from around the nation, along with access to our archives, and more soon to come. LocalLiveRadio.com is a direct link to our Local Houston community radio station, Local Live Houston Radio, which is our main and most active station.

(LocalLiveMusic.com is not a URL we use at all, though I am considering buying now!)

FPH: Have you always had an affinity for local music, and local art in general?

JP: Mainly music in my early years. When I was younger, my brother, Brad, played in two different Ska bands, named ?The Refried Beans? and ?Car 54?. They played at places like Fitzgerald?s (2706 White Oak), house parties, and even our community church. This led me to grow an ear and love for local music and venues on every spectrum. Later on, in the early 2000?s, a pal, David Lanning, started an online radio station with friends, which he named HHPRadio. I mp3-DJ?d local hip hop and rock, while the main focus of the station was drum and bass.

I began to love and appreciate local art about 7-8 years back, when I met and became inspired by local artists, such as my buddy Skeez, Dune-Micheli Patten (whose art was always around me as a teen), and of course, both of my grandmothers, who are craftwork artists, and whose work I began to appreciate in a different light.

FPH: Why did you create LocalLiveHouston.com? What effect did you hope it would have on the community? Did you expect the impact to expand beyond the city of Houston?

JP: Local Live was created because we recognized need for social justice, a voice for the city, and more expansive exposure for the music, media, arts and entertainment community. We want to return radio and media to the roots of the community. This means developing programs that originate in Houston, and includes people who are active in the communities. By broadcasting on the internet, the hope is to reach other communities outside of Houston, and draw attention to the diverse culture and interesting people that make up our city. The idea is to get other motivated people in other cities to join up with similar efforts? to create locally-based programming for their community? and to spread the love that naturally breeds itself as a result. We have already expanded the Local Live Radio format to Portland, Oregon and Dallas, TX. The sister 24/7 online community radio stations are ?Portland Oregon Tunes & More Radio,? or ?P.O.T. Radio?, managed by musician/activist Justin James Bridges, which highlights folk, blues, Americana, rock, Cannabis culture, and local news coverage. Now I know how Houstonians have a passionate dislike for Dallas, yet my cousin, Diamond Dave, runs ?Entertainment Network Dallas,? or ?E.N.D. Radio? online, which focuses on country, rock, talk radio, and news coverage. And yes, I admit? Dallas sucks.

FPH: Concerning LocalLiveHouston.com, what do your day-to-day duties look like?

JP: Presently, the staff of LocalLiveHouston.com is mostly voluntary? and big ups to Chris Shannon, my co-pilot. Aside from administrative tasks involved in coordinating that staff, most of the duties center around programming, podcasting, networking, public relations, audio engineering, community planning, and much more. Production duties make up most of the day. We have live broadcasts 12pm-2am Tues-Fri, and on weekends we do remote broadcasts from concerts, conferences, and events. Each of those shows require personal time and attention, along with promotion and networking via social media. Between 2am and 12pm, and on weekends without events, you can catch an amazing rotation of Houston?s finest musicians, along with other independent musicians from around the globe? and truly get to know your local music! Development of new programming and opportunities in other multimedia mediums are also a daily task. ?The fun around here is nonstop.

We are constantly working on expanding our programming and adding new content to the station. Also, we work with LoveSun TheDon, Urban Circus, Houston Media Source, and have many new TV, film, and movie projects in the works to keep our followers entertained and connected to their community? so keep an eye out for that!

FPH: Everyone working with LocalLiveHouston.com is clearly active and enthusiastic about the whole idea, but it seems that you haven?t had a lot of media coverage. My question is? how do we get a broader audience in Houston to get involved with this platform?

JP: So far, LocalLiveHouston.com has had to garner its own coverage in the Houston media. It was an honor being awarded winner at the 2012 Houston Press Music Awards for Best Radio Station without having to get politically involved. We won this because we are one of the only broadcast media groups that supports the Houston music scene as much as we do, other than 90.1 KPFT. That room during the awards was full of musicians who we have been honored to build relationships with, and who have played live on Local Live Radio airwaves. We all know Musical artists and fans recognize the importance of a local broadcast platform. Unfortunately, business models and trends keep many media outlets focused on music that comes from big-money production companies that can manipulate the system they have created. Aside from Free Press Houston, most of the media outlets are owned by people who do not live in Houston and have no interest in promoting the community in which their airwaves or press reach. The broadcast media companies save money by using the same formats and promote the same music across the country, leaving a HUGE void on the local scene. Recognition of local acts is few and far between, and LocalLiveHouston.com fills this void because our main focus is featuring local talent and community groups over the internet. Much of our culture over the last few decades has led a great segment of the population to believe that nothing worth their entertainment dollar comes from their local community? yet, those that get out into their community know about thriving cultural opportunities, and support it strongly. We aim to share those opportunities, and shift that thinking into a robust perspective to help support and sustain our own local music, media, arts, and entertainment community scene.

Continued presence in the community, along with expanding our programming to reach diverse segments of listeners, is the best strategy to reach a broader audience. Also, we hope to get in on the LPFM (Low Power FM) radio market with the help of Austin Airwaves and Prometheus Radio when the window opens this coming year? or at least assist them. We want to work with as many nonprofit and community organizations as we can, to establish a pure mission in ensuring this city has a media outlet for social justice. Grassroots is a slow-build, and unless a controversy arises, local media does not see a story; however, it is the effort that those at?locallivehouston.com?are making that should garner local media attention. The people who work for media companies owned by people outside of Houston should want success for musicians, entertainers, and people that live in their city; and they should take it upon themselves to promote local musicians and artists. One way they can do this is by supporting our grassroots media source because we work hard to do just that. People need to know thy neighbor.

FPH: What are your biggest challenges within LocalLiveHouston.com?

JP: Streaming internet programming is very much a niche market. Continuing to develop local programming and involving a wide variety of locals will meet this challenge. Locallivehouston.com also faces the challenge of creating a new model for how ?radio? programming creates revenue. Staying away from arbitron earnings is a given. Creating ways to gain sponsors and expand to different media production which will support the musicians, artists, entertainers and events will also meet this challenge. The key is to remain pure in our efforts, and persevere.

FPH:?Any personal stories or memories you?d like to share with our readers?

JP: If you see Bob Lane of local band, Another Run, playing trumpet on stage? well, that happens to be the trumpet I grew up playing in Jazz band that I passed on to Bob so that it could travel every stage and get put to good use! Devil Killing Moth and Bury the Crown both released albums in 2012 which they put a thanks and shout out to LocalLiveHouston.com, Stiletto Radio show and Free Thinker Radio inside the CDs? that was pretty rad! Providing audio and music for the US Vets Fun Run and Homeless In Memoriam the past couple years has always been an honor to be involved with. An amazing memory was taking part in coordinating and co-curating the 1st Annual Summer Street Art Festival with the lovely and talented Skeez and Aimee Jones. There were vendors, music, art, drinks, and an amazing fashion show on the industrial rooftop catwalk overlooking the president heads sculptures and the Houston skyline. What was even cooler is one of our Local Live Radio show hosts, Jimmy BL!TZ of the Alter Audio radio show, saved the night as EmCee of the Fashion show when we received word that our scheduled EmCee couldn?t make it! The BL!TZ owned it for being a virgin of fashion show catwalkin?. Honestly I have tons of funny stories and random personal accounts that I?d love for Free Press Houston readers to ask me about if they catch me around town at a local event, or at the newly reopened Moon Tower Inn? which, might I add, has damn good food and cold ass beer: a perfect combo for tellin? memorable stories.
If you want to get involved with the station, now is the time as we are expanding our programming in order to better serve every bit of Houston. We need volunteers who want to help out as production engineers, street team & more which you can find out by emailing?staff@locallivehouston.com?with your info. I would personally like to thank every musician, entertainer, artist, earthling, extraterrestrial & person who has come through our many studio doors to entertain the listeners along with sharing your very important messages. We have so much more entertainment planned for Houston this year, we are excited & know its going to be a blast!

LocalLiveMedia.com
LocalLiveRadio.com
LocalLiveHouston.com
Facebook.com/LocalLiveMedia
Twitter: @LocalLiveMedia

Source: http://www.freepresshouston.com/music/the-brain-behind-local-live-an-interview-with-jordan-pannell/

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