Sunday, September 30, 2012

Noble Energy contracts Atwood?s drillship for exploration program

EBR Staff Writer
Published 28 September 2012

Noble Energy, US based oil and gas exploration and production company, has announced signing a three year contract with Atwood Oceanics? subsidiary for the under construction offshore drillship named Atwood Advantage.

The company will use the Atwood Advantage to carry out its deep water exploration and development program.

Upon completion of the drillship, Noble Energy will pay $584,000 per day as the lease rate for the offshore drilling equipment.
Noble Energy will first employ the drilling rig to spud deep oil targets in the Eastern Mediterranean.

The 12,000ft water depth and 40,000ft drill depth ratings, dual BOP stacks, increased mobility, and improved offline capabilities will further complement the company's offshore program.

Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering Co., Korean shipbuilder, is building the rig and is expected to deliver it in the final quarter of 2013.

Source: http://explorationanddevelopment.energy-business-review.com/news/noble-energy-contracts-atwoods-drillship-for-exploration-program-280912

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Baghdad to make payments to ease Kurd oil conflict

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Oil payments from Baghdad to Iraq's Kurdish region will be transferred today, Kurdish Energy Minister Ashti Hawrami said on Sunday, offering hope that a long-running conflict between the central government and autonomous region is easing.

Baghdad and Kurdistan agreed earlier this month to draw a line under a dispute over oil payments after the latter pledged to continue exports and Baghdad said it would pay foreign companies working there.

Kurdistan has riled Baghdad by signing deals with foreign oil majors, such as Exxon and Chevron, contracts the central government rejects as illegal.

"Payments will be transferred to the Kurdish regional government today: that's what I've been told in Baghdad today," Hawrami told reporters in the Iraqi capital.

Small oil producers like London-based Genel Energy and DNO of Norway have been in the region for about a decade. Majors including Exxon, Chevron and Total are newer arrivals.

"This is great news. Payments are crucial for us to keep oil flowing," said an official with a company operating in Kurdistan.

The oil contracts row, however, is part of a broader battle between the Baghdad government and Kurdistan over oil rights, territory and regional autonomy that is straining Iraq's uneasy federal union.

Hawrami was in Baghdad for the meeting of a special committee formed earlier this month to try to resolve differences over the country's long-awaited oil and gas law.

Iraqi Oil Minister Abdul-Kareem Luaibi, who also attended, described the talks as "very positive".

More than nine years after the toppling of Saddam Hussein, the OPEC member still has no binding hydrocarbon law. A 2007 draft national oil law that aims to resolve the disputes over crude has been caught up in political infighting.

A draft national oil law that aims to resolve the disputes over crude has been caught up in political infighting for years.

Another member of the committee tasked with forging consensus over the oil and gas law said Sunday's discussions were a small step.

"We don't expect much from this meeting. It's the first meeting for the committee. Building confidence and removing tension is the topic of today's meeting," said Qasim Mohammed, a Kurdish member of the panel.

Luaibi said crude exports would exceed 2.6 million barrels per day (bpd) in September and estimated production at more than 3.3 million bpd this month.

With the help of foreign firms, Iraq has ambitious plans to boost production capacity beyond 12 million bpd by 2017, but this target has proved unrealistic due to infrastructure bottlenecks and logistical shortcomings.

It is expected to target 8-8.5 million bpd, but some oil analysts and executives see even 6 million bpd by 2017 as stretch for the war-torn country.

Under U.S. and European sanctions on the country over its controversial nuclear program, Iranian output has declined sharply this year, forcing it into third place on OPEC's list of largest oil producers, just behind Iraq.

(Writing by Isabel Coles; Editing by David Goodman and Patrick Graham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/baghdad-payments-ease-kurd-oil-conflict-143502695.html

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Thursday, September 6, 2012

Kids INTENSIVE August'12 | Kaleb | Biz Studio: Vancouver Film + TV ...

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AFTERNOONS:

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Source: http://www.bizstudio.ca/archives/7944

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Sunday, September 2, 2012

SPORTS NM prep volleyball Wingate, Tohatchi see positives in rival game http:...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/navajotimes/posts/478477262177175

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Can You Jumpstart an Innovative Company in 54 Hours? - Sba

?It?s Sunday evening in a huge loft in New York City?s Chinatown, and leaders of nine motley teams are presenting their ideas for startup businesses to investors, advisors, and other wannabe Mark Zuckerbergs.? So begins an Entrepreneur article about ?How Startup Weekend Got Its Start.??

?Startup Weekends take place in locations from Kansas City to Singapore. They are 54-hour events where developers, designers, marketers, product managers and startup enthusiasts come together to share ideas, form teams, build products, and launch startups. More than the cash prizes, the gold medals of these events are the team experiences they foster and the links they help forge to potential funders, mentors, co-founders, managerial talent, subject matter experts, and business service providers.

?Startup Weekend Co-founders Marc Nager and Franck Nouyrigat will be among the participants in a panel on Maximizing Entrepreneurship: Showcasing Innovation Accelerators at the Office of Advocacy?s September 19 conference in Seattle.?

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Another innovative organization helping entrepreneurs get started and grow is the Northwest Entrepreneur Network (NWEN). Since 1985, NWEN has been ?the hive of the Pacific Northwest entrepreneurial community.? Its almost 800 members connect, learn, and share through more than 60 events annually. By offering a community to rely on and educational offerings geared towards the specialized needs of the entrepreneur, NWEN helps its members find the funding and resources they need. Representing NWEN on the panel will be Executive Director Dan Rossi.

?Jonathan Sposato of GeekWire.com will moderate the panel, which includes the Small Business Administration?s Chief Counsel for Advocacy Winslow Sargeant, Startup Washington Co-chair Lindsay Andreotti, and Advocacy Economist Christine Kymn. Dr. Sargeant comes from an entrepreneurial background, having started his own successful company. He worked with the National Science Foundation?s Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program before being appointed to head the Office of Advocacy. Lindsay Andreotti is chief executive officer of Brilliance Enterprises and the Brilliance Foundation. Dr. Kymn has degrees in economics and law and worked with the Office of Management and Budget?s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs before joining the Office of Advocacy.

?The Office of Advocacy conference, cosponsored with the Seattle Center, NWEN, and?GeekWire is being held in Seattle in conjunction with the ?Next Fifty? commemoration of the 1962 World?s Fair. (See the Small Business Watchdog, Aug. 10). For more information and to register, visit Small Business and Government: Maximizing Entrepreneurship, Driving Innovation.

?Kathryn Tobias, Senior Editor

Source: http://weblog.sba.gov/blog-advo/?p=1798

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Samsung Galaxy Note II gets early benchmark treatment at IFA

 Samsung Galaxy Note II gets early benchmark treatment at IFA

Here at IFA, the Galaxy Note II's glossy plastic build is practically fading under the ambush of cameras snapping away at Samsung's booth, but clearly this phone is more than just a (super sized) pretty face, and it's time to take a look at what's under the hood. As mentioned in our hands-on, Samsung upgraded the original Note's dual-core 1.4GHz chipset to a quad-core 1.6GHz Exynos processor. We put the device to the test today to see how those amped-up insides reflect in the Note II's benchmark scores. As you'll see below, Sammy's latest handset fares significantly better than the original Note and the Galaxy S III.

Galaxy Note II

Galaxy Note (international)

Galaxy S III (I9300)


AnTuTu

11,736

N/A

11,960

Quadrant

6,644

3,810

4,454

Vellamo

2,466

901

1,751

SunSpider 0.9.1 (ms, lower is better)

1,330

2,902

1,460

CF-Bench

15,305

N/A

13,110

GL Benchmark Egypt Offscreen

114 fps

N/A

99 fps

Oh, what a difference a processor makes. Clearly the step up to a quad-core CPU is to thank for the large performance delta between the Note II and the last-gen Note, though the international version of the Galaxy S III, with a quad-core 1.4Ghz Exynos processor, also falls behind in Quadrant and other tests. The Note II also trumped its Samsung siblings on the browser-focused Vellamo benchmark, which hints at snappier performance on this phone. The phone's graphics chops look pretty good, too, if the GL Benchmark score is any indication. Our testing got cut short before we could run SunSpider, but we'll add that figure shortly.

Update: We've added SunSpider as well -- the device clocked in at 1,330ms, which is a hair faster than the Galaxy S III.

Filed under:

Samsung Galaxy Note II gets early benchmark treatment at IFA originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 31 Aug 2012 07:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/08/31/samsung-galaxy-note-ii-early-benchmark-ifa/

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Saturday, September 1, 2012

Assuming We Develop the Capability, Should We Bring Back Extinct Species?

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/123133/Assuming_We_Develop_the_Capability__Should_We_Bring_Back_Extinct_Species_

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