Tuesday, October 15, 2013

gamesGRABR Launches Equity Funding Campaign To Be 'Pinterest ...

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Source: http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/15/gamesgrabr-launches-equity-funding-campaign-to-be-pinterest-for-games/
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Sponsors help women reach executive ranks





 Mentors can dispense sage wisdom over endless cups of coffee, but it takes a sponsor's relentless advocacy to propel a woman to a seat on a corporate board and a desk in a corner office.


That's the message that will be presented Tuesday when the Forum of Executive Women releases its annual report on women in business leadership.


"Sponsorship goes beyond mentoring," said Nila G. Betof, president of the businesswomen's association. "Sponsorship is where the sponsor puts his or her capital on the table in advocating for a woman."


"Sponsorship is like mentoring on steroids," said Deanna Byrne, a partner in the Philadelphia office of PricewaterhouseCoopers L.L.P. She credits one of her sponsors for positioning her to land her current assignment providing accounting services for one of the company's Fortune 500 clients.




The forum has been studying the influence of women on the leadership of the region's publicly traded companies since at least 2005.


In that time, there has been progress, but not enough, leaders say.


For example, women held 12 percent of board seats in 2012 (103 out of 829), a 30 percent increase since 2005. There is also a higher percentage of female executives - 12 percent in 2012, up 33 percent from 2005.


Significantly, women also are commanding more money. In 2012, one in 10 of the top earners (50 of 491) were women, up 67 percent from 2005.


But a third of the region's top 100 publicly traded companies have no women on their boards.


One in five companies have no women board members, no women executives, and no women among the company's top earners.


Only six of the 100 chief executives are women, and only eight companies have three or more women on their boards.


"The progress continues to be very, very slow," said Betof, chief operating officer of the Leader's Edge/Leaders by Design, a Bala Cynwyd company that grooms executives to advance their careers.


The issue of female corporate leadership is attracting more attention. Catapulting the topic onto talk shows and radio programs was Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead, a book by Sheryl Sandberg, chief operating officer of Facebook.


In September, Mayor Nutter signed a law that will require companies doing business with Philadelphia to disclose the number of women in their executive ranks.


"Female employees who work hard and play by the rules are often overlooked when it comes to the 'big' assignments and large promotions," said P. Edward Lovelidge, managing director of PricewaterhouseCoopers in Philadelphia.


"It is relationships with sponsors that can make the difference," he said.


Titled The Power of Sponsorship: A Call to Action, the forum's report lists companies and their female executives (or lack of them), and tells the stories of sponsors and their protégés.


For example, F. William McNabb 3d is the chief executive officer and chairman of the Vanguard Group of Mutual Funds - the top job in one of the nation's top financial companies. Martha G. King is a managing director at Vanguard and head of U.S. financial intermediaries - one of the company's top positions. She heads Vanguard's second biggest line of business.


McNabb and King are related, but not in the family sense. Shortly after King began at Vanguard as a college hire, McNabb recognized her as a potential leader, and took aggressive and substantial measures to sponsor her rise through the company. Their relationship is now 25 years old.


McNabb sponsored King to head institutional sales for the western region, though she wasn't the obvious choice of the selection committee, the report said. He also transferred her back early to the company's headquarters to lead the institutional investment only business. That was a large, integrated business unit, compared with her earlier more-focused responsibilities.


"Someone did it for me, and I have an absolute obligation to do it for others," McNabb said in the forum report.


Helen F. Giles-Gee president of the University of the Sciences, described how she sponsored Emile "Mel" Netzhammer, now chancellor of Washington State University, Vancouver, when Giles-Gee was president of Keene State College in New Hampshire.


She hired him as provost and then assigned him to chair a finance committee. Netzhammer would have preferred a more academic assignment, but ended up with important skills.


Giles-Gee nominated Netzhammer for his current job.


 



jvonbergen@phillynews.com


215-854-2769


@JaneVonBergen


www.inquirer.com/jobbing


 


Source: http://www.philly.com/r?19=961&43=166721&44=227757391&32=3796&7=195342&40=http://www.philly.com/inquirer/front_page/20131015_Sponsors_help_women_reach_executive_ranks.html
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Church of England sees momentum for ethical investment


By Belinda Goldsmith and Chris Vellacott


LONDON (Reuters) - The global financial crisis has strengthened the Church of England's drive for more ethical business practices by making companies and shareholders more receptive to change, according to the man who manages its investment fund.


With about 5.5 billion pounds ($8.8 billion) of financial and property assets, the Church has greater clout than many hedge funds. But it has often struggled to make its voice heard.


That is starting to change, according to First Church Estates Commissioner Andreas Whittam Smith.


"It's on both sides," he told Reuters in his wood-paneled office in the shadows of London's Westminster Abbey. "It's not only companies considering whether they are behaving as they should as good citizens," it's also investors preparing to line up alongside the Church to promote better behavior, he said.


"Our typical holdings in companies are half percents, so in itself it doesn't make a lot of difference, but if you can represent with others 15 percent of the capital you can achieve something."


Ethical investment comes at a cost, estimated at about 0.7 percent a year of growth lost from "opportunities foregone".


But the Church's fund still made a return of 9.7 percent last year and stands firmly by its decision to sell out of News Corp in 2012 and mining company Vedanta in 2010, unhappy with how the companies were run.


Taking a moral high ground to investment has meant some public relations hiccups along the way.


Scrutiny of the Church's portfolio intensified this year after it was found to indirectly invest in short-term lender Wonga which Church leader, Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, said he wanted "to compete out of business".


But Whittam Smith, a former financial journalist who founded the Independent newspaper in 1985, said ethical investment was not just about avoiding shares in firms involved in pornography, gambling, alcohol and tobacco, or the like.


"With ethical investment there are two aspects. One is to disinvest, the second is to stay and see whether you can change things," he said.


"CHANGE IN MORAL CLIMATE"


About 2.5 billion pounds of the Church's portfolio is invested in shares listed in Britain or overseas, including in drug companies GlaxoSmithKline and AstraZeneca , miner Rio Tinto , and bank HSBC .


Whittam Smith said the Church had discussed its role in the banking sector after a string of scandals over mis-selling and huge compensation payouts, but decided it had more influence as an activist shareholder within to change the moral compass.


"Active ethical investment is not visible from the outside but I see from the inside it changes things," he said.


Whittam Smith added he believed the City of London's financial industry had undergone a "change in moral climate", reining in the bloated bonuses and unscrupulous behavior of recent years. Much still needed to be done, however.


"We still have concerns about the banks as you would imagine. I think there is a change in sentiment in retail banking. I'm not sure there's a change of sentiment in investment banking," he said.


His confidence in bringing change in the banking sector was reflected two weeks ago when it emerged the Church had joined U.S. investors to back a new "ethical" British bank from branches sold by Royal Bank of Scotland .


Whittam Smith said the Church's investment in 314 branches of the dormant Williams & Glyn's brand was worth about 60 million pounds and the Church would appoint one board director.


This move indicated the Church was taking an increasingly hands-on role in its investment, for example managing its own property assets worth over 1.1 billion pounds, he said.


Other recent changes in the portfolio include a greater investment in timber, mostly in the United States, and taking a more rigorous path in choosing managers to run fund assets.


Whittam Smith was confident the portfolio was faring well this year and would again beat its annual growth target of five percentage points over the rate of inflation, with much of the income used to pay clergy pensions and support Church work.


"I believe we will exceed that this year," he said.


He said the Church fund was looking to invest in infrastructure projects either in Britain or overseas, increase investment in private equity, and had considered investing in Brazil but had veered off that idea for now.


Asked what kept him awake at night, Whittam Smith expressed deep concerns about the fiscal impasse in the United States.


"If it all went terribly wrong and there was a default it would unpick things very quickly, much more quickly than people think, because so many things depend on it," he said.


(Editing by Mark Potter)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/church-england-sees-momentum-ethical-investment-012326984--finance.html
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Study: Temperatures go off the charts around 2047

This undated handout photo provided by Marinelifephotography.com shows Soft corals, crinoids and associated reef fishes in Southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia. A new study on the timing of climate change calculates the probable dates for when cities and ecosystems across the world would regularly experience never-before-seen hotter environments based on about 150 years of record-keeping. These are the dates when every year is hotter than old hottest annual record. This means the old blistering heat of people's memories will eventually seem unusually cool in comparison to the warming years to come. Coral reef species are the first to be stuck in a new climate that they haven't experienced before and are most vulnerable to climate change, Mora said. Coral reefs will be in that new regime around 2030. (AP Photo/Keoki Stender, Marinelifephotography.com)







This undated handout photo provided by Marinelifephotography.com shows Soft corals, crinoids and associated reef fishes in Southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia. A new study on the timing of climate change calculates the probable dates for when cities and ecosystems across the world would regularly experience never-before-seen hotter environments based on about 150 years of record-keeping. These are the dates when every year is hotter than old hottest annual record. This means the old blistering heat of people's memories will eventually seem unusually cool in comparison to the warming years to come. Coral reef species are the first to be stuck in a new climate that they haven't experienced before and are most vulnerable to climate change, Mora said. Coral reefs will be in that new regime around 2030. (AP Photo/Keoki Stender, Marinelifephotography.com)







This undated handout photo provided by Marinelifephotography.com shows a reef slope densely covered by soft corals in Southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia. A new study on the timing of climate change calculates the probable dates for when cities and ecosystems across the world would regularly experience never-before-seen hotter environments based on about 150 years of record-keeping. These are the dates when every year is hotter than old hottest annual record. This means the old blistering heat of people's memories will eventually seem unusually cool in comparison to the warming years to come. Coral reef species are the first to be stuck in a new climate that they haven't experienced before and are most vulnerable to climate change, Mora said. Coral reefs will be in that new regime around 2030. (AP Photo/Keoki Stender, Marinelifephotography.com)







Map shows when select cities will go beyond normal temperatures for 150 years ; 3c x 4 inches; 146 mm x 101 mm;







(AP) — Starting in about a decade, Kingston, Jamaica, will probably be off-the-charts hot — permanently. Other places will soon follow. Singapore in 2028. Mexico City in 2031. Cairo in 2036. Phoenix and Honolulu in 2043.

And eventually the whole world in 2047.

A new study on global warming pinpoints the probable dates for when cities and ecosystems around the world will regularly experience hotter environments the likes of which they have never seen before.

And for dozens of cities, mostly in the tropics, those dates are a generation or less away.

"This paper is both innovative and sobering," said Oregon State University professor Jane Lubchenco, former head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, who was not involved in the study.

To arrive at their projections, the researchers used weather observations, computer models and other data to calculate the point at which every year from then on will be warmer than the hottest year ever recorded over the last 150 years.

For example, the world as a whole had its hottest year on record in 2005. The new study, published Wednesday in the journal Nature, says that by the year 2047, every year that follows will probably be hotter than that record-setting scorcher.

Eventually, the coldest year in a particular city or region will be hotter than the hottest year in its past.

Study author Camilo Mora and his colleagues said they hope this new way of looking at climate change will spur governments to do something before it is too late.

"Now is the time to act," said another study co-author, Ryan Longman.

Mora, a biological geographer at the University of Hawaii, and colleagues ran simulations from 39 different computer models and looked at hundreds of thousands of species, maps and data points to ask when places will have "an environment like we had never seen before."

The 2047 date for the whole world is based on continually increasing emissions of greenhouse gases from the burning of coal, oil and natural gases. If the world manages to reduce its emissions of carbon dioxide and other gases, that would be pushed to as late as 2069, according to Mora.

But for now, Mora said, the world is rushing toward the 2047 date.

"One can think of this year as a kind of threshold into a hot new world from which one never goes back," said Carnegie Institution climate scientist Chris Field, who was not part of the study. "This is really dramatic."

Mora forecasts that the unprecedented heat starts in 2020 with Manokwa, Indonesia. Then Kingston, Jamaica. Within the next two decades, 59 cities will be living in what is essentially a new climate, including Singapore, Havana, Kuala Lumpur and Mexico City.

By 2043, 147 cities — more than half of those studied — will have shifted to a hotter temperature regime that is beyond historical records.

The first U.S. cities to feel that would be Honolulu and Phoenix, followed by San Diego and Orlando, Fla., in 2046. New York and Washington will get new climates around 2047, with Los Angeles, Detroit, Houston, Chicago, Seattle, Austin and Dallas a bit later.

Mora calculated that the last of the 265 cities to move into their new climate will be Anchorage, Alaska — in 2071. There's a five-year margin of error on the estimates.

Unlike previous research, the study highlights the tropics more than the polar regions. In the tropics, temperatures don't vary much, so a small increase can have large effects on ecosystems, he said. A 3-degree change is not much to polar regions but is dramatic in the tropics, which hold most of the Earth's biodiversity, he said.

The Mora team found that by one measurement — ocean acidity — Earth has already crossed the threshold into an entirely new regime. That happened in about 2008, with every year since then more acidic than the old record, according to study co-author Abby Frazier.

Of the species studied, coral reefs will be the first stuck in a new climate — around 2030 — and are most vulnerable to climate change, Mora said.

Judith Curry, a Georgia Institute of Technology climate scientist who often clashes with mainstream scientists, said she found Mora's approach to make more sense than the massive report that came out of the U.N.-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change last month.

Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann said the research "may actually be presenting an overly rosy scenario when it comes to how close we are to passing the threshold for dangerous climate impacts."

"By some measures, we are already there," he said.

___

Online:

Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature

Mora lab: http://www.soc.hawaii.edu/mora/

___

Seth Borenstein be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2013-10-09-Climate%20Change%20Timing/id-065dc576c5ae4f9f9f66ff3415c00297
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Tokyoflash turns hexagonal fan concept watch into $109 reality (video)

Remember that time you submitted a script to Babylon 5 and it was accepted for a show? Yeah, didn't happen to us either, but apparently Tokyoflash has a much more open mind with its fans. It just launched the Kisai Quasar, a hexagonal-themed watch that was originally submitted by Tokyoflash buff ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/IRrS31-YiSw/
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Monday, October 14, 2013

Jessica Simpson Looks Stunning During Pal's Wedding Weekend: Pictures


That girl's got a glow about her! Jessica Simpson looked absolutely stunning as she and fiance Eric Johnson strolled through Los Angeles International Airport on Sunday, Oct. 13. The singer, 33, donned sky-high black boots, a deep-cut black top and sparkly grey blazer for her airport attire.


She accessorized with an oversized black leather bag in the crook of her right arm and a pair of large sunglasses, with her long blonde hair in waves around her face. Johnson, meanwhile, kept his look casual-chic as well, in a dar navy button-down, brown slacks and dark brown loafers.


PHOTOS: Jessica Simpson's family album


Simpson kept her left arm firmly intertwined with her former NFL star beau as the pair made their way through the terminal.


Jessica Simpson stunned in a flowing blue gown at her longtime publicist's wedding in Rhode Island on Saturday, Oct. 12.

Jessica Simpson stunned in a flowing blue gown at her longtime publicist's wedding in Rhode Island on Saturday, Oct. 12.
Credit: FameFlynet



Just one day earlier, the happy mother-of-two (to daughter Maxwell, 16 months, and son Ace, 3 months) looked similarly gorgeous as she walked down the aisle at longtime publicist Lauren Auslander's wedding in Newport, R.I.


PHOTOS: Maxwell's baby photos


Simpson shared a few precious snapshots from the event, including one particularly sweet one of her with Johnson's mother.


"Beautiful morning with my future mother-in-law and MoJo to my babies!" she captioned the shot, in which Simpson and her future mother-in-law share matching grins and oversized shades.


PHOTOS: Jessica Simpson's body evolution


Simpson and Johnson, 34, got engaged in November 2010.


Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-body/news/jessica-simpson-looks-stunning-with-fiance-eric-johnson-after-pals-wedding-picture-20131410
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Saturday, October 12, 2013

Book Review: The Hot Latin Diet - Fit Bottomed Eats

Hot Latin Diet book

Think The Hot Latin Diet will give you a hot body?


With more than 100 million people in the United States annually on a diet it is no surprise the weight-loss industry is a 20 BILLION dollar business! Everyone is an authority and has the answer to America’s obesity problem. Bookstore shelves are lined with such titles as The Ornish Diet, The Sugar Busters Diet, and The 3-Hour Diet, all just waiting for the next sucker to pick one up.


The FBG crowd knows better than to put their health in the hands of these snake oil salesmen. However, I just couldn’t help but snatch up a copy of The Hot Latin Diet — The Fast-Track Plan To A Bombshell Body, just for giggles. This one ought to be good, I thought: it guarantees weight loss and the ability to turn me into a curvaceous hottie. Me: the girl with the figure that is more boyish than bodacious.


Written by Dr. Manny Alvarez and inspired by the fact that most Miss Universe winners are from Latin countries, the author reveals their secret weapon: seven Latin powerfoods, supposedly not found in any other diet plan, that are nutrient-dense, naturally detoxifying, metabolism-boosting, cholesterol-lowering, libido-enhancing and just down right tasty. They are  — drum roll please — tomatillos, garbanzo beans, avocado, garlic, cinnamon, chiles and cilantro. Not earth-shattering news.


There is no argument about his chosen seven foods, but they can be added to a long list of other fiber-packed and nutritionally superior foods found in those countries, such as lentils, pumpkin, quinoa, collard greens and so forth. So what gives?


As I continued my read, I realized that the author is not promoting a “diet” at all. His plan is a “lifestyle change,” incorporating fresh, organic fruits and vegetables, lean meat, fish and complex carbs. He caters to vegetarians and carnivores alike with a motivational program that incorporates balance and a ton of flavor.


He deftly explains why deprivation never works, promotes three daily meals plus two snacks, as well as the importance of sleep and a positive attitude. His book contains common sense, how-to-get-started tips and includes recipes from some top-notch Latina chefs. These meals are anything but bland diet food. So, why have the silly title?


Those 100 million dieters I spoke about in the first paragraph? Well, a whopping 85 percent of them are women, and their main reason for dieting is rarely their own health. Vanity is the top motivator for weight loss, and the author was savvy enough to act on it. Who wouldn’t want the attributes of a Miss Universe? Long legs, great hair, big white teeth, glowing skin, poise and enough confidence to strut across a stage wearing a swimsuit with heels.


I was prepared to hate The Hot Latin Diet but just couldn’t. Sure, Dr. Alvarez titled his book to appeal to the ego, but if that’s what it takes to get people interested in their own well being, so be it. His philosophy is realistic with sound nutritional information that is easy to understand. And those powerfood recipes, in my opinion, are just a fun way to expand your palate.


I’ve personally eaten this way for years, sans the spicy chiles, and it has kept me feeling and looking my best. On the outside I may look like the blond-haired, green-eyed girl from next door, but on the inside — baby, this is one hot chica!


Fit Bottomed Line: This is an easy read with solid information pertaining to diet and life skills. Plus, some darn good recipes.


Do you secretly (or not-so-secretly) yearn to be a hottie? What keeps you motivated to eat well? —Karen


Source: http://fitbottomedeats.com/2013/10/ay-caramba-its-the-hot-latin-diet-a-book-review/
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