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Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Hollow Tree Was Ebola's Ground Zero: Scientists

Hollow Tree Was Ebola's Ground Zero: Scientists

Tuesday, 30 Dec 2014 07:12 AM


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  • Insect-eating bats that inhabited a hollow tree in a remote village in Guinea may have been the source of the world's biggest Ebola epidemic, scientists said on Tuesday.
More than 20,000 cases of Ebola, with at least 7,800 deaths, have been recorded by the World Health Organization (WHO) since a two-year-old boy died in the village of Meliandou in December 2013.

Reporting in the journal EMBO Molecular Medicine, scientists led by Fabian Leendertz at Berlin's Robert Koch Institute delved into the circumstances surrounding this first fatality.
The finger of suspicion points at insectivorous free-tailed bats -- Mops condylurus in Latin -- that lived in a hollow tree 50 metres (yards) from the boy's home, they said.

"The close proximity of a large colony of free-tailed bats... provided opportunity for infection. Children regularly caught and played with bats in this tree," the team said after an exhaustive four-week probe carried out in April.

The Ebola virus holes up in a natural haven, also called a reservoir, among wild animals which are not affected by it.

The virus can infect humans who come into contact with this source directly, or indirectly through contact with animals that have fallen sick from it.

Highly contagious, the virus is then passed among humans through contact with body fluids.

A known reservoir is the fruit bat (Epomophorus wahlbergi), a widespread tropical African species that in some countries is killed for food, offering a infection pathway to hunters and butchers of the mammal.

But the role of fruit bats in the current outbreak has never been confirmed, the scientists said.
In contrast, free-tailed bats, a cousin species, have been found in lab tests to be able to carry the virus but not fall sick with it.

That, too, would make them a "reservoir," but no evidence of this has ever been found in the wild.

The German team said evidence that this species helped unleash the present epidemic was strong but not 100 percent.

Local children not only played with the bats at the tree, they also hunted bats that roosted at village homes and grilled them for food, they found.

In addition, they saw no evidence of any local die-off among larger mammals, which would have been a secondary route of infection for humans.

On the other hand, no trace of Ebola virus was found in any of the bats the scientists captured and whose blood was analysed.


When the researchers came to Meliandou, they found the bat colony had fled, for most of the tree had burned and only the stump and branches remained.

Traces of DNA found in surrounding ash and soil pointed to the previous presence of the insect-eating bats. But again, there was no presence of Ebola virus.

"The virus must be very rare in the reservoir," Leendertz said in an email exchange with AFP.

"That is also obvious when you think about how many tonnes of bat meat is consumed every year.

"If more bats carried the virus, we would see outbreaks all the time. That's one of the challenges: the virus is rare and (in) a large multi-species reservoir."

The possibility that this species of bat could be an Ebola vector is a worry, said Leendertz.
Very little is known about how these bats live -- when they migrate and reproduce, where and why they cluster, their sources of food, and so on -- and only understanding this will quantify the risk for humans.

Africa's population explosion has destroyed more and more of the bats' habitat and brought more people into proximity with them.

Leendertz said an early priority should be to encourage co-existence between villagers and bats.

Culling the insect-eating animals could encourage the spread of insect-borne disease.
"It is no solution to start killing bats or disrupting their habitat. That may backfire very badly," he warned.

© AFP 2014

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

The Interview online via YouTube, Xbox Video, and Google Play

Sony is now offering The Interview online via YouTube, Xbox Video, and Google Play (update)

$6 for a rental, $15 to own

Update: It's official — Sony will release The Interview online at 1PM ET today through YouTube, Xbox Video, and others. It'll be $5.99 to rent and $14.99 to own.
Not only will The Interview be available in select theaters this Christmas, it'll also be available for everyone online. First reported by CNN's Brian Stelter and now corroborated by multiple outlets, YouTube has "tentatively agreed" to make it available as a rental. Sony is additionally in talks with other streaming outlets, so it wouldn't be exclusive (according to Recode, that list includes Google Play store and Sony's own website).
On Tuesday, the Alamo Drafthouse revealed that Sony Pictures would now allow the film to be played in select theaters. As the day progressed, the number of theaters playingThe Interview grew into the hundreds. Notably, however, no major US theater has joined the list.
Last Friday, President Barack Obama told the world that he thought it was a "mistake" for Sony to cancel the release of The Interview. Later that same day, the movie studio's CEO, Michael Lynton, defended the company's decision, saying it had no choice but to cancel the film's Christmas release date after all major US theater chains refused to screen the film. He also reiterated in a televised interview that "we have always had every desire to have the American public to see this movie."
"WE HAVE ALWAYS HAD EVERY DESIRE TO HAVE THE AMERICAN PUBLIC TO SEE THIS MOVIE."
The question, until today, was how Sony would get the movie in front of the public's eyes. In that very same CNN interview on Friday, Lynton said that "there has not been one major VOD distributor [or] one major e-commerce site that has stepped forward and said they're willing to distribute this movie for us." He added, "we don’t have that direct interface with the American public so we need to go through an intermediate." That statement suggested that Lynton had entirely overlooked Sony's very own Crackle streaming video service, which is home to a number of Sony Pictures films.
The FBI has linked North Korea to the massive cyberattack that's crippled Sony Pictures since November 24th. The hacking group, which calls themselves the Guardians of Peace, has released massive amounts of internal Sony data and demanded that the company halt the release of The Interview. During Friday's press conference, Obama said the US "will respond" to the North Korean attack on Sony but didn't clarify beyond saying it would be "proportional."
Following threats of physical violence, all major theaters dropped the movie and Sony later canceled the premiere altogether. According to CNN, the hacking group last emailed Sony on Friday, threatening to release more data unless it (somehow) removes all signs that The Interview ever existed. The film's official Facebook and Twitter pages, along with the clips from Sony Pictures' YouTube channel, did in fact disappear for a few days. Everything returned on Tuesday, however, when independent theaters started announcing Christmas Day showtimes.

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Megayacht designed by Eduard Gray is sleek, futuristic and expensive at $25M

Xhibitionist is the Batmobile of the high seas

Megayacht designed by Eduard Gray is sleek, futuristic and expensive at $25M

Xhibitionist
The Xhibitionist looks like the Batmobile at first glance. Photo from Gray Design
At first glance, one might surmise that the above photo is the latest Batmobile that Ben Affleck will be chasing the bad guys in during the next “Batman” movie.
Sleek, futuristic, fast.
It is indeed sleek, futuristic and fast (or at least it looks fast), but it is not a car. Rather, it is a very expensive yacht, one that we could actually envision James Bond tooling around in.
The Xhibitionist is a $25 million, 246-foot megayacht designed by Sweden-based Eduard Gray that Gray Design describes as “Batmobile-esque.” Some are calling it the Batmobile of the high seas, though it’s definitely 007-ish, too.
“A common first reaction, it has to be said, is just that…‘it looks like a car,’” the Gray Design website says. “Indeed, Batman has been mentioned a few times, too.”
Xhibitionist
The Xhibitionist can be yours for $25 million. Photo from Gray Design
The Xhibitionist features a helipad that can accommodate three helicopters or serve as a stage for a concert. It has a viewing window “Jacques Cousteau himself would have approved.” It has eight rooms, a showroom space, and Jacuzzis. It has a matching, swanky vehicle for onshore driving.
And don’t forget the Steinway piano in the lounge.
Xhibitionist
The yacht has been described as Batmobile-esque. Photo from Gray Design
“The Xhibitionist is partly inspired by traditions as old as seafaring itself,” the website says. “The desire to rekindle some of those traditions in an ultra-modern setting has resulted in, not only, the creation of a jaw-dropping superyacht, but the creation of a veritable entity that has almost developed a personality of its own.
“As much thought has gone into the conception of this vessel in terms of its viability as has gone into the actual structural design itself. It is, quite simply, a masterful blend of style, purpose and efficiency.”
Yeah, all of that. And much more.
So, any buyers out there for the Xhibitionist?
Xhibitionist
The yacht has a helipad that also acts as a stage. Photo from Gray Design
helipad
The Xhibitionist has a helipad that can accommodate three helicopters. Photo from Gray Design
Xhibitionist
It looks like a swanky hotel lobby inside. Photo from Gray Design
car showroom
One can turn the Xhibitionist into a showroom of cars if one desires. Photo from Gray Design
vehicle
The ship comes with a matching vehicle. Photo from Gray Design
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