2 Churches againts ‘Angels and Demons’ filming

June 17, 2008 – 1:43pm

        The Italian Catholic Church has refused to let a new movie based on a Dan Brown novel be filmed in churches in Rome after the author’s "The Da Vinci Code" novel and film outraged the Vatican.

"Angels and Demons," starring Tom Hanks and Ewan McGregor, is the prequel to Brown’s best-selling novel. The book is set mostly in Rome and the Vatican. Filming began this month at some of the capital’s most famous sights including Piazza Navona and Piazza del Popolo, but entry was denied to the churches of Santa Maria del Popolo and Santa Maria della Vittoria. The two famous Rome churches are among around 700 places of worship that are owned by the Italian interior ministry and run by Italy’s Church. Archdiocese spokesman Rev. Marco Fibbi said the interior ministry had received a request from the film’s producers to use the churches. The interior ministry asked the archdiocese for its opinion and it was negative.

"I don’t think they would have asked us directly because they knew what the answer would be," Fibbi told Reuters. "The Da Vinci Code" outraged the Vatican and some Catholics because of its storyline that Jesus married Mary Magdalene and had children, creating a royal blood line that Church officials kept secret for centuries.Christians are taught that Jesus never married, was crucified and rose from the dead.

Santa Maria del Popolo is home of two masterpieces by Caravaggio — "The Crucifixion of St. Peter" and "The Conversion of St. Paul." Fibbi said permission to film in Italian churches is granted in exceptional circumstances and usually if the production is compatible with religious sentiment or if it is a documentary about religion or art.


Australia to lure tourists with epic movie with Kidman, Jackman

June 17, 2008 – 1:37pm
     Australia's Best Actor and Actress
                                                           
      An epic Australian outback movie starring Oscar-winning actress Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman will spearhead a new tourism campaign designed to recapture the country’s "mojo" and lure more visitors Down Under. Titled "Australia" and directed by flamboyant home-grown director Baz Luhrmann, the A$130 million ($122 million) film follows an English aristocrat (Kidman) who inherits a sprawling property and falls in love with a rugged drover (Jackman). With sweeping Outback scenery and set in northern Australia on the eve of World War Two, "Australia" will see Kidman and Jackman take 2,000 cattle overland and caught in the wartime bombing of Darwin by the Japanese. "This movie will potentially be seen by tens of millions of people and it will bring to life little-known aspects of Australia’s extraordinary natural environment, history, and indigenous culture," Tourism Minister Martin Ferguson said at the weekend. Tourism Australia will kick off an international marketing campaign to coincide with the film’s planned release in November, Ferguson said. The epic was tipped to bring the biggest boost to tourism since Crocodile Dundee in 1986. Some cinema critics have predicted the film will be an amalgam of Australian cliches. But tourism industry officials are hopeful the movie epic will kickstart the country’s tourist arrivals which have stagnated since the 2006 Sydney Olympics. The film, Luhrmann’s first film since Moulin Rouge in 2001, has been shot on location in the remote Kimberley region of Western Australia, the Northern Territory capital Darwin and the tropical city of Bowen. Australia’s government recently dumped the controversial A$180 million "Where the bloody hell are you?" tourism campaign featuring a bikini model, which was banned in Britain and Canada. Ferguson has flagged a new international campaign presenting Australia for the next three years as a "mature, inviting country", while riding on the expected popularity of "Australia" with international audiences. Tourism numbers have fallen off recently in the face of a Australian dollar approaching parity with the U.S. greenback and with rising fuel and airline ticket prices keeping many potential visitors away. Tourism industry spokesman Christopher Brown this month lamented that Australians had "lost our mojo" for tourists. Tourism data in April showed signs of weakness from key markets including Japan, Hong Kong and Britain. Overseas arrivals were down 1.2 per cent in February and 0.7 per cent in January. Holidaymakers injected A$85 billion into the A$1 trillion economy in 2006 to 2007, with overseas visitors accounting for A$22 billion of that, according to the latest Australia Bureau of Statistics data. Tourism accounted for 3.7 pct of the Australian economy, but overseas arrivals were down 1.2 pct in February. A Tourism Australia official this week told the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper that "Australia" would be "basically a two and a half hour ad" for the country.

How Your Phone Can Make You Smarter

June 17, 2008 – 1:10pm

Your cellphone may soon be able to help you skirt a big traffic snarl. At least, that’s what Nokia believes, based on research that it did earlier this year to uncover more ways to use wireless technology.

The project was part of a trend called "crowd sourcing," which aims to harness the brainpower and energy of crowds to develop useful services.

People are using their cellphones to review restaurants, share their favorite hometown hangouts, discover new jogging routes, even dodge speeding tickets. "The Internet is about the long tail," "Mobile is about pushing that even further out to the ultimate edge: an individual, at all times, with his device."

Spotting an opportunity to make their phones more indispensable to consumers, Nokia (nyse: NOK - news - people) is investing in crowd sourcing. It sees the most promise in services that leverage global positioning system (GPS) technology, mapping and the mobile Web.

"We see phones as becoming less phones and more a bridge between the analog world we live in and the digital world of the Internet," says Nokia Chief Technical Officer Bob Ianucci.

One example is the company’s Sports Tracker application, which enables runners and cyclists to record and share their workouts on a map-based software system. The initial concept, called "Personal Best," aimed to allow individuals to track their sports performance for personal use. But athletes began using it to network with one another, creating more of a community feel. Since April 2007, Sports Tracker has been downloaded more than 1 million times.

Now Nokia is hoping smart applications can solve traffic snarls. In February, its research arm teamed with the University of California, Berkeley’s Center for Innovative Transportation to test the ability of phones to track traffic conditions in real time. For the project, 160 Berkeley students drove a California highway with Nokia phones that transmitted data about traffic speeds. The goal: to show that phones could provide data as accurate as more expensive traffic sensors.

The software could help consumers in myriad ways, says Ianucci. Linked to the phone’s calendar, it could warn users to leave early for an appointment, because the route is congested. It could also map out alternate routes that would deliver the user to the appointment in time.

All of which is good for business. Nokia wants to sell 35 million GPS-enabled phones by the end of the year. Ianucci says the traffic experiment could spawn a Nokia application in the future.

Smart applications can even save you from a speeding ticket. That’s the aim of Trapster, an application that lets drivers report police car sightings and speed cameras via a toll-free number, e-mail or text message. Users can also get warnings based on their car location sent to their phones. Everything happens in real time, which is the value of Trapster, says creator Pete Tenereillo. The rapid feedback generates a social networking effect–when one person submits a report, several others soon follow.

In other words, it’s smart to be necessary–and necessary to be smart.


Coffee Beans May Be Newest Stress-Buster

June 16, 2008 – 12:09pm

Just sniffing that first hot cup of coffee in the morning may help ease some stresses you might be feeling, a South Korean trial indicates.

When rats inhaled the aroma of roasted coffee beans, a number of genes were activated, including some that produce proteins with healthful antioxidant activity, the researchers reported.

“The meaning of it is not totally clear yet,” said Dr. Peter R. Martin, director of the Institute of Coffee Studies at Vanderbilt University. “What it does show is that coffee smells do change the brain to some degree, and it behooves us to understand why that is happening.”

The findings, from a team led by Han-Seok Seo at Seoul National University in South Korea, were expected to be published in the June 25 issue of the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.

The experiment was done with laboratory rats, some of whom were stressed by being deprived of sleep. The researchers did detailed genetic studies that showed the activity of 11 genes was increased and the activity of two genes was decreased in the rats that smelled the coffee, compared to those who did not. In effect, the aroma of the coffee beans helped ease the stress of the sleep-deprived rodents.

The experiment provides “for the first time, clues to the potential antioxidant or stress-relaxation activities of the coffee bean aroma,” the researchers wrote.

And they added, “These results indirectly explain why so many people use coffee for staying up all night, although the volatile compounds of coffee beans are not fully consistent with those of the coffee extracts. In other words, the stress caused by sleep loss via caffeine may be alleviated through smelling the coffee aroma.”

“They used the latest in technology to see how brain expression of RNA changed,” Martin said. RNA is the molecule that carries out the instructions encoded in genes. “This is just the beginning of a very interesting line of investigation,” he added.

The aromatic compounds responsible for coffee’s odor may be antioxidants, “but they are not the same as the major antioxidants that are in the drink,” said Joe A. Vinson, a chemistry professor at the University of Scranton in Pennsylvania.

Chemically, the antioxidants in liquid coffee are polyphenols, Vinson said. Those in the aroma are heterocycle compounds containing sulfur or nitrogen atoms.

“There are two ways to get things into your system, and the quickest way is to smell them,” Vinson said. “Caffeine gets into the brain via the blood stream. Here, aromatic molecules get into the brain through the olfactory system. The levels in the air are parts per million, so obviously these are minor components in the air. But they are doing something.”

Previous studies have shown that coffee consumption can reduce depression and suicide risk, as well as relieve stress, effects generally attributed to the caffeine in coffee, the researchers noted. But while some 900 compounds that float away from the bean have been identified, this is the first study to assay their possible effects, they added.

It’s too early to recommend that people feeling stress sniff coffee to ease their way, Martin said. But, he added, “people who don’t even drink coffee are fascinated by the odor of it. Ever since my little boy was two years old, he has loved the odor of coffee. I have always thought that coffee has some mystic quality, and there is some deep historical basis for it.”