Monday, February 11, 2013

Samsung Series 7 NP700Z5C-S02UB UEFI Bios and Windows 7


Hello-
From my previous thread, I had planned on removing the 5400 rpm 1tb HDD from my laptop and installing a Samsung 840 SSD.

That went well but I am running into an issue. This has the UEFI bios on it with the secure boot so I had to do a clean install of Win8. Win8 IS NOT FOR ME, hate it. So i want to put Win7 Pro on the unit.

Problem is when I go to boot the install CD I get an error because of the UEFI secure boot. When I review the settings under Seurity boot config, I have one option to factory reset the UEFI settings and one to over write it.

I select the second to over write it and the Win7 media boots but hangs when it says starting windows and the four colors come out.

So basically my question is how do I do a clean Windows 7 install on this unit?
Cheers
K

Source: http://forum.notebookreview.com/samsung/708108-samsung-series-7-np700z5c-s02ub-uefi-bios-windows-7-a.html

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Sunday, February 10, 2013

Syrian troops, rebels clash over Damascus highway

In this Friday February 8, 2013, photo, Free Syrian Army fighters sit behind their anti-aircraft weapon in Aleppo, Syria. Syrian rebels brought their fight within a mile of the heart of Damascus on Friday, seizing army checkpoints and cutting a key highway with a row of burning tires as they pressed their campaign for the heavily guarded capital, considered the likely endgame in the nearly 2-year-old civil war. (AP Photo/Abdullah al-Yassin)

In this Friday February 8, 2013, photo, Free Syrian Army fighters sit behind their anti-aircraft weapon in Aleppo, Syria. Syrian rebels brought their fight within a mile of the heart of Damascus on Friday, seizing army checkpoints and cutting a key highway with a row of burning tires as they pressed their campaign for the heavily guarded capital, considered the likely endgame in the nearly 2-year-old civil war. (AP Photo/Abdullah al-Yassin)

In this Friday February 8, 2013, photo, a Free Syrian Army fighters patrols close to the front lines near a main highway in Aleppo, Syria. Syrian rebels brought their fight within a mile of the heart of Damascus on Friday, seizing army checkpoints and cutting a key highway with a row of burning tires as they pressed their campaign for the heavily guarded capital, considered the likely endgame in the nearly 2-year-old civil war. (AP Photo/Abdullah al-Yassin)

In this Friday February 8, 2013 photo, a Free Syrian Army fighter sits behind his antiaircraft machine gun in Aleppo, Syria. Syrian rebels brought their fight within a mile of the heart of Damascus on Friday, seizing army checkpoints and cutting a key highway with a row of burning tires as they pressed their campaign for the heavily guarded capital, considered the likely endgame in the nearly 2-year-old civil war. (AP Photo/Abdullah al-Yassin)

In this Friday February 8, 2013 photo, a Free Syrian Army fighter walks past destroyed shops in Aleppo, Syria. Syrian rebels brought their fight within a mile of the heart of Damascus on Friday, seizing army checkpoints and cutting a key highway with a row of burning tires as they pressed their campaign for the heavily guarded capital, considered the likely endgame in the nearly 2-year-old civil war. (AP Photo/Abdullah al-Yassin)

In this Friday February 8, 2013 photo, a Free Syrian Army fighter sits behind his antiaircraft machine gun in Aleppo, Syria. Syrian rebels brought their fight within a mile of the heart of Damascus on Friday, seizing army checkpoints and cutting a key highway with a row of burning tires as they pressed their campaign for the heavily guarded capital, considered the likely endgame in the nearly 2-year-old civil war. (AP Photo/Abdullah al-Yassin)

(AP) ? Syrian troops backed by warplanes battled rebels for control of a key highway in Damascus Saturday, a day after opposition forces cut the strategic artery as part of what they say are efforts to lay the groundwork for an eventual assault on the heavily defended capital.

Rebels have been on the offensive in Damascus since launching a series of attacks on government positions on Wednesday. They brought their fight to within a mile of the heart of the capital on Friday, seizing army checkpoints and cutting a key highway as they pressed their campaign for the city, the seat of President Bashar Assad's power.

The fighting is the heaviest to hit Damascus since July, when a first rebel assault managed to capture several neighborhoods before a punishing government counteroffensive. After that rebel foray, the regime quickly reasserted its control over the city, which has spared Damascus much of the violence and destruction that the civil war has wrought on other major urban centers.

Both the rebels and the government consider the fight for Damascus the most likely endgame in a civil war that has already killed more than 60,000 people. The city is heavily fortified and dotted with armed checkpoints, and activists say it is surrounded with three of the most loyal divisions of the army, including the Republican Guard and the feared 4th Division, commanded by Assad's brother Maher.

The latest Damascus offensive did not appear to be coordinated with rebels on other sides of the capital, and it was unclear whether the opposition fighters would be able to hold their ground.

Activists said the fighting on Saturday focused on a main highway that leads to northern Syria, a key road the regime uses to move troops and supplies. Rebels cut the road on Friday, and still controlled parts of it on Saturday despite government airstrikes and shelling to try to roll them back, said Damascus-based activist Maath al-Shami.

Activists say the fighting is the only beginning of a long battle for the capital.

"The attack was planned for more than 20 days and those responsible for it are army defectors," al-Shami said. "This is one of the stages to enter the capital. .... Storming Damascus is not easy."

He said only one checkpoint still stands in the way before the rebels reach Abbasid Square, a landmark plaza in central Damascus.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported intense air raids on several Damascus suburbs on Saturday, including Zamalka and Douma, and near the highway as well. It added that troops shelled the northeastern neighborhoods of Jobar and Qaboun, which have witnessed clashes since Wednesday.

Rebels also captured a housing compound for army officers in the Damascus suburb of Adra, the Observatory and the Local Coordination Committees activist group reported.

Al-Shami said the housing unit is close to Adra Prison, one of the country's largest jails, where thousands of detainees are held.

In northern Syria, the Observatory said rebels entered parts of the Mannagh air base near the border with Turkey, and opposition fighters also attacked the Kwaires military base in Aleppo province.

Earlier in the day, President Bashar appointed seven new ministers in a move that appeared aimed at trying to shore up an economy that has been ravaged by the country's 2-year-old revolt, state media said.

State TV said Assad replaced the heads of the oil, finance, social affairs, labor, housing, public works and agriculture ministries. Key security ministries such as defense and interior, which are on the front lines of the civil war, remained unchanged.

The civil war has devastated the Syrian economy, leaving major cities and key infrastructure in ruins and nation's industries gutted. Power outages are common and Syrians in some areas must stand in hours-long lines for bread and gasoline.

Syria's crisis began in March 2011 with largely peaceful protests inspired by the Arab Spring revolts elsewhere in the region that toppled longtime Arab dictators. It evolved into a civil war as the opposition took up arms to fight a government crackdown on dissent.

The fighting has settled into a bloody stalemate and shows no signs of stopping, despite several tentative proposals from both sides to find a peaceful resolution to the conflict.

Syria's Information Minister Omran al-Zoubi floated the latest proposal late Friday, saying Damascus is ready for dialogue with the opposition so long as the rebels lay down their weapons. He said anyone who responds will not be harmed.

The offer is unlikely to gain any traction among the Syrian opposition. The rebel movement is highly decentralized and deeply distrusts the regime, and most groups are unlikely to stop fighting so long as Assad remains president.

The opposition in January rejected a proposal that Assad put forward for ending the conflict, although it would have kept him in power. He offered a national reconciliation conference, elections and a new constitution. He also dismissed any chance of dialogue with the armed opposition and called on Syrians to fight what he called "murderous criminals."

Late last month, the head of the opposition Syrian National Coalition, Mouaz al-Khatib, changed course and said he is willing to talk to the regime if that would help end bloodshed. He suggested that Assad release tens of thousands of political prisoners as a first step.

Members of the opposition criticized al-Khatib's offer to talk to the regime, and the government flatly rejected it.

Also Saturday, Cardinal Bechara al-Rai, head of the Maronite Catholic church, began the first visit to Damascus by the leader of the church in decades. Rai will attend a ceremony Sunday marking the enthronement of John Yazigi as the new patriarch of the Greek Orthodox Church.

The Maronite Church was an outspoken critic of Syria's three-decade domination and military presence in Lebanon.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-09-ML-Syria/id-0613528863a9442f9ef9347202f8ab4b

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NASA's MAVEN mission completes assembly, begins environmental testing

Feb. 10, 2013 ? NASA's Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN (MAVEN) spacecraft is assembled and is undergoing environmental testing at Lockheed Martin Space Systems facilities, near Denver, Colo. MAVEN is the next mission to Mars and will be the first mission devoted to understanding the Martian upper atmosphere.

During the environmental testing phase, the orbiter will undergo a variety of rigorous tests that simulate the extreme temperatures, vacuum and vibration the spacecraft will experience during the course of its mission. Currently, the spacecraft is in the company's Reverberant Acoustic Laboratory being prepared to undergo acoustics testing that simulates the maximum sound and vibration levels the spacecraft will experience during launch.

Following the acoustics test, MAVEN will be subjected to a barrage of additional tests, including: separation/deployment shock, vibration, electromagnetic interference/electromagnetic compatibility and magnetics testing. The phase concludes with a thermal vacuum test where the spacecraft and its instruments are exposed to the vacuum and extreme hot and cold temperatures it will face in space.

"The assembly and integration of MAVEN has gone very smoothly and we're excited to test our work over the next six months," said Guy Beutelschies, MAVEN program manager at Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company. "Environmental testing is a crucial set of activities designed to ensure the spacecraft can operate in the extreme conditions of space."

"I'm very pleased with how our team has designed and built the spacecraft and science instruments that will make our measurements," said Bruce Jakosky, MAVEN principal investigator from the University of Colorado at Boulder's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics. "We've got an exciting science mission planned, and the environmental testing now is what will ensure that we are ready for launch and for the mission."

MAVEN is scheduled to ship from Lockheed Martin's facility to NASA's Kennedy Space Center in early August, where it will undergo final preparations for launch.

MAVEN, scheduled to launch in November 2013, is a robotic exploration mission to understand the role that loss of atmospheric gas to space played in changing the Martian climate through time. It will investigate how much of the Martian atmosphere has been lost over time by measuring the current rate of escape to space and gathering enough information about the relevant processes to extrapolate backward in time.

"This phase of the program is particularly important in that it will provide us with a good assessment of the MAVEN system's capabilities under the simulated extremes of the space environment," said David Mitchell, MAVEN project manager at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "Of significance, the spacecraft is entering system level test right on schedule, while maintaining robust cost and schedule reserves to deal with the technical or programmatic surprises that could occur during test or in the run to launch. Tracking on plan is critically important to being ready for launch later this year and the science that MAVEN will deliver one year later."

MAVEN's principal investigator is based at the University of Colorado at Boulder's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics. The university will provide science operations, science instruments and lead Education/Public Outreach. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center manages the project and provides two of the science instruments for the mission. Lockheed Martin of Littleton, Colo., built the spacecraft and is responsible for mission operations. The University of California at Berkeley Space Sciences Laboratory provides science instruments for the mission. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., provides navigation support, the Deep Space Network and the Electra telecommunications relay hardware and operations.

For more information on MAVEN, visit: http://lasp.colorado.edu/home/maven/

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/space_time/astronomy/~3/Tg-de3yM7f0/130210085956.htm

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Saturday, February 9, 2013

Eye-catching rickshaws promote peace in Pakistan

Fareed Khan / AP

A rickshaw driver, his vehicle adorned with a message of peace, makes his way through the slums of Karachi, Pakistan on Feb. 2, 2013.

By Sebastian Abbot, The Associated Press

Published at 5:23 a.m. ET:?KARACHI, Pakistan?? Pakistani youth leader Syed Ali Abbas Zaidi has a plan to counter the relentless message of violence spewed forth by radical Islamic groups in his country ? and he is stealing a gimmick from the hard-liners' own playbook to do it.

His weapon: the three-wheeled motorized rickshaws that buzz along Pakistan's streets carrying paying customers.

Fareed Khan / AP

Artists prepare colorful panels for rickshaws in Karachi on Feb. 2, 2013.

Radical Islamists have long used the rickshaws as a canvas to display slogans in support of religious warfare in neighboring India and Afghanistan and to foster hatred against the United States.

Zaidi is turning that strategy on its head with a fleet of rickshaws emblazoned with peace slogans and decorated with colorful designs similar to those found on many trucks and buses in the country. Read the full story.

Source: http://photoblog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/08/16895999-eye-catching-rickshaws-promote-peace-in-pakistan?lite

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The Beginning of the Storm in Maine

Yahoo! News is gathering brief first-person accounts, photos and video from the severe winter weather in the northeastern United States. Here's one resident's story.

FIRST PERSON | FREEDOM, Maine -- It is absolutely freezing out there. Right now, the snow is powdery and not piling up too fast.

Mt. View Complex here in southern Maine is dismissing school at noon today, although many of the schools around me closed this morning. I noticed this morning that the roads were a bit slippery as of 7 a.m. I live on a discontinued dirt road, and am very glad that we own a plow truck and four-wheel drive vehicles. My niece's birthday party was pushed back since many of us have to travel a fair distance. From what I could see, all around me there are shovels on porches near the doors, and cars moved as far out of the way as possible to allow for plowing.

In my area, we could be facing up to two feet of snow.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/beginning-storm-maine-181500613.html

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Boy given pot to manage autism | MNN - Mother Nature Network

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Source: http://www.mnn.com/health/fitness-well-being/videos/boy-given-pot-to-manage-autism

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Friday, February 8, 2013

Sandors' Leadership Gift Names Coase-Sandor Institute in Honor of ...

Sandor makes major gift to Law School; Coase-Sandor Institute named to honor mentor

Law School Office of Communications

Dean Michael Schill announced today that Dr. Richard Sandor, Chairman and CEO of Environmental Financial Products LLC, and his wife Ellen are the principal donors to a $10 million endowment in law and economics at the University of Chicago Law School. The Sandors made the gift in honor of Richard?s mentor, Nobel Laureate Ronald Coase, Clifton R. Musser Professor Emeritus of Economics at the Law School.

In honor of Coase?s path-breaking work and Sandor?s own extraordinarily important innovations in the world of finance and the environment, the Institute for Law and Economics will be renamed the Coase-Sandor Institute for Law and Economics. Current and future work of the Coase-Sandor Institute will focus on the role of law, private property rights and transaction costs in promoting efficient markets. Scholars at the Institute also will study the appropriate relationship between transactions, government regulation, self-regulation and economically efficient outcomes in such disparate substantive areas as climate change, water, endangered species, health care, education, housing and corporate restructuring.

?Over half a century, Ronald Coase?s pioneering work has exemplified the distinctive and powerful nature of University of Chicago scholarship. By transcending the traditional boundaries of two disciplines, Professor Coase helped shape a new field of thought in law and economics,? said University President Robert J. Zimmer. ?It is fitting that the inquiry he helped spark continues in an institute that bears his name, and we are grateful to Richard and Ellen Sandor for making that possible.?

?Richard Sandor has been an extraordinary innovator in the financial world for decades and is also an intellectual heavyweight on matters of economics,? said Michael H. Schill, Dean of the Law School and Harry N. Wyatt Professor of Law. ?His generous gift to the Institute for Law and Economics celebrates the tradition of innovation that Ronald Coase began and Richard has continued here at Chicago Law. It has been such a boon to our students to have Richard teach in our classrooms and become an important part of our intellectual community.? His gift shows his extraordinary commitment not only to the future of one of the most important ideas in the history of legal scholarship, but also to his mentor, Ronald Coase. It was very important to Richard to name the Institute for Ronald Coase and very important to us to recognize Richard and Ellen in the name of our Institute as well.?

Sandor is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Environmental Financial Products LLC, which specializes in inventing, designing and developing new financial markets. EFP was established in 1998, and was the predecessor company and incubator to the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX), the European Climate Exchange (ECX) and the Chicago Climate Futures Exchange (CCFE).? Ellen Sandor is an internationally acclaimed artist and founder of (art)n. She is currently an Affiliate of eDream, the National Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Mrs. Sandor has had work displayed in galleries and museums throughout the world, including the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, the International Center of Photography, the Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art at the University of Oklahoma, the Museum of Jewish Heritage, the Museum Victoria, Australia, the National Academy of Sciences, the U.S. Art in Embassies Program (Germany and Zimbabwe), and the Mus?e Carnavalet, Paris. She recently received the Thomas R. Leavens Award for Distinguished Service to the Arts through Lawyers for the Creative Arts. She is currently co-editing a forthcoming book that chronicles the oral history of pioneering, female, new media artists. Ellen and Richard are both major philanthropists who support a wide array of institutions, including the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, the Art Institute of Chicago, the International Center of Photography, and the Gene Siskel Film Center.

The Sandors are also major philanthropists to the University of California ? Berkeley, the University of Minnesota, the University of Oklahoma, and the City University of New York ? Brooklyn College.

While on sabbatical from the University of California, Berkeley in the early 1970s, Richard Sandor served as vice president and chief economist of the Chicago Board of Trade. It was at that time that he earned the reputation as the principal architect of the interest-rate futures market. Sandor was honored by the City of Chicago and the Chicago Board of Trade for his contribution to the creation of financial futures and his universal recognition as the "father of financial futures." In October 2007, he was honored as one of Time Magazine?s ?Heroes of the Environment? for his work as the ?father of carbon trading.? In addition to his service as a lecturer at the Law School, Sandor is a distinguished professor of environmental finance at Guanghua School of Management at Peking University and a member of its International Advisory Council. In 2012, he authored a book entitled Good Derivatives: A Story of Financial and Environmental Innovation.

Sandor said that Coase shaped his thinking throughout his career.

?Professor Coase has had a profound impact in my career as an academic and practitioner. His clarity of thought and intellectual honesty have been critical to my understanding of what it takes to create, build and nurture new markets. The importance of his work will continue to be felt in areas such as the environment, health and entrepreneurship. Ellen and I are proud and humbled to make this contribution to help ensure that Coase?s legacy will continue to have an impact on scholars, entrepreneurs and policy makers in the United States and around the world.?

Coase has served on the faculty of the Law School since 1964. His impact on the fields of both economics and law has been profound. His 1937 paper, ?The Nature of the Firm,? established the field of transaction cost economics. ?The Problem of Social Cost,? published in 1961, set out what is now commonly called the ?Coase Theorem? and pioneered a new field in economic research, ?law and economics.? Professor Coase was the editor of the University of Chicago?s Journal of Law and Economics from 1964 to 1982. Among his many publications are The Firm, the Market and the Law (1988) and Essays on Economics and Economists (1994). Professor Coase was awarded the Alfred Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1991, the first and only time that award was given to a professor whose primary appointment was in a law school. His current work, including the book How China Became Capitalist (with Ning Wang, PhD?02) continues to use the tools of law and economics to understand the modern history of China.

?I am very grateful to both the University of Chicago Law School, my academic home for many decades, and to Richard and Ellen Sandor for this honor,? said Coase. ?It is wonderful to know that after all these years and all the work that has been done, that ideas are still, and ever will be, paramount at Chicago. I am delighted that law and economics has a secure future at the Law School, and cannot wait to see the new scholarship that comes from the Institute.?

Building on a long tradition of excellence as the birthplace of law and economics, the University of Chicago Law School launched the Institute for Law and Economics in 2011. The goal of the Coase-Sandor Institute is to promote the understanding and dissemination of the economic approach to law, including transaction cost economics, empirical analysis and economic theory. It supports research and learning by students, faculty, and fellows, and organizes events and activities in Chicago and beyond. Sandor?s gift will support all facets of the Coase-Sandor Institute?s mission, including research, teaching, scholarships and conferences.? Additional gifts over the past year have included two research chairs for young scholars.

?The Institute for Law and Economics is founded on the intellectual legacy of Ronald Coase, who demonstrated how economics can reshape our thinking about the law,? said Omri Ben-Shahar, the Leo and Eileen Herzel Professor of Law and Kearney Director of the Coase-Sandor Institute. ?Richard Sandor's financial innovations and entrepreneurship exemplify the enormous practical value of Coase's insights. In naming the Coase-Sandor Institute, we celebrate 50 years of law and economics at the University of Chicago and its deep influence on both legal thought and public policy.??

Source: http://www.law.uchicago.edu/news/sandors-leadership-gift-names-coase-sandor-institute-honor-mentor

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