Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Lakers 105, Celtics 97


Preview - Box Score - Recap

March 20, 2006

The Lakers' first two games of their road trip ended with missed contested 3-pointers by Bryant. The Lakers lost to New Jersey 92-89 Friday and to Cleveland 96-95 Sunday despite leading by as many as 18 against the Cavaliers.

This time, Bryant scored 16 fourth-quarter points -- including the Lakers' last 12 -- to make sure the game didn't come down to the closing seconds.

"When the game is on the line, they put the ball in my hands," Bryant said. "I've gotta do what I've gotta do, I don't care if it's 50 shots, 60 shots, five shots."

The Celtics trailed 56-40 at halftime, but chipped away at the lead in the third quarter and pulled within 82-74 to start the fourth.

Pierce cut the deficit to 99-94, but Bryant responded with a driving layup with 1:20 remaining to extend the Lakers' lead to 101-94. He then made two free throws with 49.6 seconds left to extend the lead.

"Kobe was the difference," Celtics forward Wally Szczerbiak said. "In the second half, we came back and we competed. But against a good team and a great player, we just didn't play well enough to win."

The Lakers double-teamed Pierce for much of the fourth quarter and held him to two points.

The Lakers' first two games of their road trip ended with missed contested 3-pointers by Bryant. The Lakers lost to New Jersey 92-89 Friday and to Cleveland 96-95 Sunday despite leading by as many as 18 against the Cavaliers.

This time, Bryant scored 16 fourth-quarter points -- including the Lakers' last 12 -- to make sure the game didn't come down to the closing seconds.

"When the game is on the line, they put the ball in my hands," Bryant said. "I've gotta do what I've gotta do, I don't care if it's 50 shots, 60 shots, five shots."

The Celtics trailed 56-40 at halftime, but chipped away at the lead in the third quarter and pulled within 82-74 to start the fourth.

Pierce cut the deficit to 99-94, but Bryant responded with a driving layup with 1:20 remaining to extend the Lakers' lead to 101-94. He then made two free throws with 49.6 seconds left to extend the lead.

"Kobe was the difference," Celtics forward Wally Szczerbiak said. "In the second half, we came back and we competed. But against a good team and a great player, we just didn't play well enough to win."

The Lakers double-teamed Pierce for much of the fourth quarter and held him to two points.

"We just threw everybody at (Pierce)," Odom said. "If you put two guys on him, you have a high percentage of stopping him."

Smush Parker scored 14 points and Kwame Brown had 11 points and nine rebounds for the Lakers.

After missing his first four shots, Bryant made six of his next eight attempts and scored 12 first-quarter points to help the Lakers jump out to a 32-26 lead.

Szczerbiak cut the deficit to 42-35 with a 3-pointer midway through the quarter, but the Lakers went on a 14-2 run to make it 56-37 on an Odom layup with 43.7 seconds remaining.

"When you're down by 19, it just puts too much pressure on your defense," Pierce said. "We needed to make consecutive shots and just couldn't sustain it."

Notes

Pierce rolled his right ankle early in the first period, but returned to the court 2 minutes later and promptly made a turnaround jump shot. ... The Celtics are the only team in the NBA to have an all-time winning record against the Lakers. ... Allen set career highs with four blocked shots, nine free-throw attempts and eight free throws made. ... The Lakers are 17-12 against Eastern Conference teams, 18-22 against Western Conference teams.

Source: Yahoo! Sports
http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/recap...

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


LA Lakers 105, Boston 97

Preview - Box Score - Recap






1
2
3
4
Total


LA Lakers 32 24 26 23 105 Final




Boston 26 14 34 23 97



LA Lakers
Name Min FG 3Pt FT Off Reb Ast TO Stl Blk PF Pts
L. Odom 41 6-10 3-5 2-2 2 9 4 7 0 0 4 17
B. Cook 15 3-6 0-0 0-0 0 4 1 0 1 0 4 6
K. Brown 35 5-7 0-0 1-2 4 9 5 0 0 0 4 11
S. Parker 35 6-11 2-5 0-0 0 5 5 1 1 0 3 14
K. Bryant 40 18-39 0-5 7-10 2 5 4 2 5 0 3 43
J. Jackson 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0
D. George 18 1-3 0-1 0-0 0 3 1 1 3 0 2 2
L. Walton 26 3-9 1-2 2-2 4 6 4 1 1 1 2 9
S. Vujacic 10 1-1 1-1 0-0 0 1 2 0 0 0 2 3
A. Bynum 4 0-3 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
R. Turiaf 3 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
D. Green DNP - Coach's Decision
A. McKie DNP - Coach's Decision
C. Mihm DNP - Coach's Decision

Totals 231 43-90 7-19 12-16 12 45 27 12 11 1 25 105
Percentages:
.478 .368 .750
Team Rebounds: 9

Boston
Name Min FG 3Pt FT Off Reb Ast TO Stl Blk PF Pts
R. Gomes 30 4-9 0-0 0-0 1 4 1 0 0 0 1 8
P. Pierce 37 8-19 2-8 8-11 2 9 2 5 1 1 6 26
R. LaFrentz 22 2-5 0-2 3-4 1 10 3 1 1 0 2 7
D. West 38 5-14 1-3 2-2 0 2 7 3 1 0 2 13
W. Szczerbiak 39 6-14 2-6 1-1 0 3 2 2 1 0 0 15
O. Greene 11 1-1 0-0 0-0 1 3 1 0 0 0 0 2
T. Allen 29 5-11 0-2 8-9 2 2 3 3 2 4 4 18
G. Green 2 0-0 0-0 1-2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
K. Perkins 14 2-4 0-0 1-1 3 8 3 0 1 3 3 5
A. Jefferson 9 1-3 0-0 0-0 2 3 0 1 0 1 0 2
D. Dickau DNP - Coach's Decision
D. Jones DNP - Coach's Decision
M. Olowokandi DNP - Coach's Decision
B. Scalabrine DNP - Coach's Decision

Totals 231 34-80 5-21 24-30 12 44 22 15 7 9 18 97
Percentages:
.425 .238 .800
Team Rebounds: 5

Game Info
Technical Fouls: Phil Jackson
Officials: Greg Willard, Kevin Fehr, Monty Mccutchen

- - - - - - - - - - - - -
Sec: 321, Seats: 15-17

Thursday, March 16, 2006

Made by Muslims

Indlieb Farazi
Monday 13 March 2006 1:28 PM GMT

Muslims learnt the world was round 500 years before Galileo.

A cup of coffee, windmills, carpets, soap and the fountain pen, what do they all have in common? Apparently they were all invented by Muslims.

Muslims have invented everything from surgical instruments to the camera, according to an exhibition touring Britain. One inventor featured is Ibn Hazm, an Arab astronomer the exhibition credits with discovering that the world was round 500 years before Galileo made his discovery.

The exhibition opened this month in Manchester and aims to uncover the lost history of Muslim science and invention.

The exhibition, 1001 Inventions: Discover the Muslim Heritage In Our World, now showing at the Manchester Museum of Science & Industry, features some of the best-kept secrets and scientific contributions made by ancient scholars on which much of Western civilisation and the world now rely.

Professor Salim Al-Hassani, chairman of the Foundation for Science, Technology and Civilisation (FSTC), which organised the exhibition, said: "The extent to which Muslims have contributed to Western civilisation is not generally well known. Yet these ancient scholars from the Islamic world gave us many of the everyday things we use such as coffee, soap and clocks.

"This exhibition shows that Muslims have always shared the heritage that provides a platform for developments that makes the Western world tick."

Flowering civilisation

In the West, the Dark Ages are usually seen as an interlude between two great flowering civilisations, in which little advancement of knowledge took place.

"This exhibition shows that Muslims have always shared the heritage that provides a platform for developments that makes the Western World tick"Professor Salim Al-Hassani, chairman, FSTCHowever, in this period Islamic scholars across southern Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Persia and Central Asia were busy preserving and building on the knowledge of the ancient world.

For example, the exhibition organisers say that records show that the coffee bean was first used to make a drink when the bean was exported from Ethiopia to Yemen where Sufis drank it to stay awake at night to pray on special occasions.

Much of the Islamic world began to regard coffee as an aid for devotion, allowing dervishes to stay awake for long hours dedicating their nights to divine remembrance.
By the late 15th century it had arrived in Makka, Saudi Arabia, then Turkey, and later arrived in Venice in 1645.

Inventions

The exhibition credits the invention of the first pin-hole camera to Ibn al-Haitham, a 10th-century Muslim mathematician, astronomer and physicist.

It also says that Islam's requirement for cleanliness and purity encouraged Arabs to develop the ancient Egyptians' use of soap, and create the recipe combining vegetable oils with sodium hydroxide that we still use today.

A 10th-century Muslim surgeon, known only as al-Zahrawi, is said to have designed surgical instruments, which are still in use.

And Ibn Nafis, a 13th-century Muslim medic, is said to have described the circulation of the blood 300 years before William Harvey discovered it.

Muslims doctors are also credited with inventing anaesthetics of opium and alcohol mixes and developing hollow needles to suck cataracts from eyes in a technique still used.
The windmill, often associated with the Dutch, is said to have been invented in 634 for a Persian caliph and used to grind corn and draw up water for irrigation.

Missing history

Examining a thousand years of missing history, the exhibition brings to life historical inventions and innovations made by some of the greatest Muslim minds.

"Open any school book in Britain and you will find little, if any, mention of what Muslims have achieved historically"Mohammed El Gomati,director, FSTCMohammed El Gomati, the director of FSTC, said: "The project started six years ago. The FSTC, a group made up of Muslims and non-Muslims alike, realised there was a need to travel around the country and educate and inform the public about Muslim contribution to the world."

The exhibition is designed to encourage and inspire British youth to pursue careers in science, engineering and technology. It helps to dispel negative perceptions of Muslims and provide positive role models to young British Muslims in particular.

El Gomati, a lecturer in physics and electronics at the University of York in England, said: "There is definitely an element of ignorance in the West towards the Arab Muslim world. Open any school book in Britain and you will find little, if any, mention of what Muslims have achieved historically.

"We have decided to readdress this imbalance."

The nationwide exhibition ends in June.

Source: al Jazeera
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/609785AC-6432-412A-AAA1-E97C5926F74B.htm

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Feeling constantly tired? You're exhausted

Always tired? Feel like you're running on empty? Join the club - increasing numbers of us are suffering from constant fatigue. Jane Feinmann reveals how to tell if there's a medical cause - or if it's just modern life wearing you out

Published: 21 February 2006 8:20

If you're almost too exhausted to make it to your doctor for a check-up, be consoled: at least you're not alone. More people are tired today than ever before. On any day, one in five of us is feeling unusually fatigued, while one in 10 has persistent low energy, sufficient to undermine quality of life and day-to-day functioning.

It's an epidemic that worries sufferers and frustrates their doctors. "It's a very disabling condition, and it's perhaps not surprising that people come to see us desperately looking for a quick fix for a problem that is ruining their lives," says Dr Sarah Jarvis, a GP in west London.

Yet being tired all the time has been adopted as a bitter shorthand by Britain's doctors, who use the term TATT to describe the condition that they most dread walking through their consulting-room door. "Unfortunately, nine times out of 10 there's absolutely nothing we can do about it beyond ordering a batch of blood tests to eliminate the usual suspects," says Jarvis, a spokesperson for the Royal College of General Practitioners.

The vast majority of weary people suffer because of the way they choose to live, says Professor Fred Zijlstra of Surrey University. "People work ever-longer hours and then take files home or check their e-mails in the evening. New technology means they're on call 24/7. With double burden of being a working parent, there's a constant feeling of never getting things finished. It's this that can be so tiring."

Even so, fatigue is a symptom in a wide range of physical and psychological problems. If exhaustion is now a way of life, you could be one of the "lucky" ones with a "real", or at least treatable, condition. If not, it may be time to ask yourself some difficult questions.

ANAEMIA

Unusual tiredness is the main symptom of anaemia, a group of disorders in which insufficient red blood cells are produced to carry adequate supplies of oxygen throughout the body.

The most common type is iron deficiency anaemia, normally the result of losing blood faster than the body can make it. Around one in seven menstruating women suffers iron deficiency anaemia. It is also common during pregnancy when there is extra demand for iron.

Two other types are: vitamin B12 deficiency anaemia, which mostly affects vegetarians and vegans (B12 is only found in animal fats, meat, fish, eggs and milk); and folic acid deficiency anaemia, which occurs in pregnancy and as a result of high alcohol consumption or a poor diet, particularly in the elderly.

What to do

A blood test can diagnose anaemia, and doctors will normally recommend supplements along with dietary advice. If your blood count is at the low end of normal, but not anaemic, boosting your iron intake could make you feel better.

CHRONIC FATIGUE SYNDROME

Overwhelming exhaustion, made worse by activity and not helped by rest, could be CFS (or ME, myalgic encephalomyelitis). One in 100 people, usually in their twenties or thirties, is affected, with three times as many women sufferers as men. CFS appears to be triggered by an infection, even a minor one. It can be worsened by stress. Symptoms include muscle pain, sore throat, an inability to start or sustain activity, and finding that any increase in activity requires a prolonged recovery time.

What to do

Take as much information about your symptoms to your GP as possible. Diagnosis is tricky, and frequently involves excluding other conditions. Training in the form of graded exercise can help mild CFS. Cognitive behavioural therapy, along with a supervised lifestyle management programme, is effective in severe cases.

COELIAC DISEASE

Extreme fatigue, with bowel symptoms such as diarrhoea and bloating, can indicate a flare-up of this lifelong inflammatory condition of the small gut in response to gluten, a substance found in wheat, barley and rye. Most commonly diagnosed in people aged 30 to 45, it can come out of the blue or occur in people with a history of stomach upsets. As many as one in 100 people are thought to be affected, and as many as nine out of 10 remain undiagnosed, on some estimates.

What to do

A blood test can pick up antibodies, and the diagnosis can be confirmed by an investigation of the lining of the small bowel, normally carried out at the endoscopy unit of the local hospital. A gluten-free diet can bring real improvement in less than a week.

DEPRESSION

Severe tiredness and loss of energy that persists for most of the day, nearly every day, for more than two weeks is one of the clearest signals of clinical depression. This is suffered by up to one in 10 of the population at any one time. A GP will suspect depression when fatigue is experienced with symptoms such as loss of confidence; inability to enjoy things that are usually pleasurable; a desire to avoid people, including friends; irritability; and feeling like a "waste of space".

What to do

Consult your GP with a list of symptoms and work with him or her to decide the best treatment. This can include psychotherapy or counselling, along with medication.

TYPE 2 DIABETES

Extreme tiredness that develops slowly, with constant thirst, a need to urinate and episodes of thrush, could be type 2 diabetes. People with the disease have problems converting food into energy because the insulin, a hormone that muscle, liver and fat cells use for this, becomes ineffective, often due to obesity. While these cells are starved of energy, blood glucose levels remain high, eventually damaging nerves and blood vessels and leading to serious complications. Type 2 diabetes usually occurs in people over 40, although children as young as seven have been diagnosed. It is three times more common in Asians and West Indians.

What to do

A simple blood test will diagnose the disease and, if picked up at an early stage, changes such as weight loss, a healthy diet and exercise can prevent further deterioration.

GLANDULAR FEVER

Severe fatigue, accompanied by feverish symptoms such aching muscles, loss of appetite and swollen lymph glands in the groin, suggests the "kissing disease". The infection is most common in the teens and early twenties; by their late twenties, most people have developed immunity to the Epstein-Barr virus, which is spread in saliva via kisses, coughs or sneezes. The tiredness frequently persists for weeks or even months after the other symptoms have disappeared.

What to do

Diagnosis by symptoms can be confirmed by a blood test. Antibiotics will not help; rest is the best treatment.

LYME DISEASE

Flu-like symptoms including tiredness could be a sign of this relatively rare tick-borne infection, which can affect walkers and cyclists who fail to tuck their trousers into socks in long grass and heathland in parts of UK.

What to do

Ideally, take the tick with its identifiable bite-mark and surrounding rash to your GP. Otherwise, diagnosis is by exclusion or by a blood test around eight weeks after infection, which can be quickly cleared up with antibiotics.

SLEEP APNOEA

Severe daytime sleepiness is the most obvious symptom of sleep apnoea, where sleep is disrupted by snoring. The disorder, which actually halts breathing, sometimes hundreds of times a night, causes a brief awakening each time as the body senses what is happening and acts to prevent suffocation.

What to do

Diagnosis requires an overnight stay in hospital, although a home test is being developed. Wearing a gumshield and avoiding alcohol after 6pm can reduce snoring. Severe cases are best treated with a pump that blows air gently through the nose. It's cum- bersome, but most sufferers decide to use the machine at home every night, says the Sleep Apnoea Trust.

UNDERACTIVE THYROID (HYPOTHYROIDISM)

Tiredness and excess sleep, with symptoms including constipation, sensitivity to cold and weight gain, may be a sign of an underactive thyroid. This disorder, which is caused by the body failing to produce sufficient thyroxine hormone, thereby slowing the metabolism, is most common in older people, affecting one in 50 women and one in 1,000 men at some time in their lives.

What to do

A risk of developing the condition can be detected with a blood test to measure TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone), which is raised when the thyroid gland is not producing sufficient thyroid hormone. A further test can then measure T4, the actual level of thyroxine. A condition known as sub-clinical hypothyroidism exists when levels of TSH are raised but thyroxine levels are normal. Some doctors decide to offer thyroxine treatment to see if it works: others prefer to wait and see whether the metabolism continues to slow.

Is your life too tiring?

Do you demand too much of yourself?

If yes: try to manage stress; learn to say no; set priorities; pace yourself. Take time each day to simply relax, perhaps using a tape or relaxation class. Consider whether there is a good balance of work and play in your life and what you can do about it. If necessary, you may want to reconsider what you want from life.

Have you been affected recently by a stressful event?

If yes: Be realistic, and be kind to yourself. Events such as moving house, having a baby, starting a new job, being bereaved or ending an important relationship can be exhausting, especially when you feel you have no control over what's happening. Don't expect to be back to your normal self overnight. Remember; all progress is good, however small or unimportant it may seem to you at the time.

Is regular exercise part of your daily life?

If no: Begin to change that. If you are unfit, start with 10 minutes of moderate physical activity each day and build up to at least 30 minutes. "It may seem counter-intuitive, but aerobic exercise is an excellent way to counter fatigue," says Dr Sarah Jarvis.

Is your diet healthy?

If no: try to begin the day with an energy-packed, low-fat, high-fibre breakfast. Reduce the amount of high-fat and high-sugar foods, which will to make you feel sluggish later on. If you are underweight, gradually increase your portion sizes and calorie intake. If you are overweight, focus on eating less (but don't crash-diet) and being more physically active. There's no good evidence that vitamins, minerals, stimulants or fortified wine will help to combat tiredness.

Are you drinking too much?

If yes: cut down on the booze. It acts as a sedative, and even small amounts can make you tired for hours.

Are you sleeping well?

If no: practice good sleep habits. Avoid eating, reading or watching television while in bed. Keep your bedroom cool, dark and quiet, and set the alarm to get up at the same time each day - a routine will help you to establish a regular schedule. Staying in bed all day will not help.

Source: The Independent
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health_medical/article346806.ece

Saturday, February 18, 2006

U.S. Company Plans $265M Spaceport in UAE

Sat Feb 18, 12:45 AM ET

A day after Space Adventures announced it was in a venture to develop rocket ships for suborbital flights, the company said Friday it plans to build a $265 million spaceport in the United Arab Emirates.

The commercial spaceport would be based in Ras Al-Khaimah near the southern end of the Persian Gulf, and the UAE government has made an initial investment of $30 million, the Arlington, Va.-based company said in a statement.

The spaceport announcement comes on the heels of Space Adventures' new partnership with an investment firm founded by major sponsors of the Ansari X Prize to develop rocket ships for suborbital flights.

The agreement between Space Adventures and the Texas-based venture capital firm Prodea would help finance suborbital vehicles being designed and built by the Russian aerospace firm Myasishchev Design Bureau.

Space Adventures is best known for sending the first three space tourists to the orbiting international space station for a reported $20 million a person.

Space Adventures' jump into the infant suborbital flight industry comes at a time when several companies already are designing spaceships to take paying passengers on short trips up into space and then back to Earth without circling the globe.

Last December, British tycoon Richard Branson announced development of a $225 million spaceport in southern New Mexico, which will be the headquarters of Branson's Virgin Galactic space tourism company.

Virgin Galactic is contracting with Burt Rutan's Scaled Composites to develop a suborbital spaceship based on SpaceShipOne technology.

Flying out of Mojave, Calif., SpaceShipOne made history on June 21, 2004, as the first privately financed manned rocket to reach space, then made two more flights later that year to win the $10 million Ansari X Prize.

Copyright AP via Yahoo! News

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Linksys Router for Sale

I am selling my old router because I upgraded to a wireless one so I can tool around with my PSP.
If anyone is interested, please bid on eBay. Following is the link:

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=5860714552

Friday, January 13, 2006

Hamza Yusuf: Dajjal and the New World Order

Excerpts from Hamza Yusuf's lecture Dajjal and the New World Order:

I find it fascinating that Hajj, which is the greatest gathering in the entire world – collective gathering of human beings that takes place yearly – and yet in the United States it is never aired on the news, it's never aired on the news. They'll mention it in a very short thing or the beginning of Ramadan. They do not actually show the Kaaba, they do not show people circling the Kaaba, just the visual picture of that is very powerful experience for many people. When people actually see the Kaaba, see the circumambulation of the Kaaba, they're overwhelmed; non-Muslims, when they see it, it's very powerful. Yet despite that, they do not air, they do not show it. And so there is concerted effort not to present the Muslim image.

Another thing they love to do is to take extremist positions within the Islamic ummah and literally blow them up , give full programs dedicated to looking at this. What they term “fundamentalist” type, “fanatical, extremist,” the angrier the better. They prefer very angry, vociferous people that are going to be shouting in the face of the camera and throwing out all of this anger and wrath. This is very effective in terms of presenting the Muslims as these kinds of irrational, and Salman Rushdie's case is a good example of that, of what was done, book burning and irrational people.

--

One of the signs of the end of time is the jihad becomes shouting and calling out names. You know “down with Israel, down with Russia, down with...” and what, then what, you go home and have your T.V. Dinner and watch the 8 o'clock news, watch them showing pictures of you saying “down with...”? What kind of people is that? It's pathetic, really it's pathetic. We're not people of slogan, the Prophet didn't even like people to raise their voices in jihad. When they went on jihad, they used to start raising their voices and get excited. He said “[Arabic]” Lower your voices, you're not calling some death lord.

Now, if you're saying down with Israel, who are you saying to? Who are you saying to? I mean these are ways of people of getting this cathartic experience, they feel “Alhumdulillah we really let them have it today didn't we, we really told them where it was at, where it was happening, Allah hu-akbar.” And they're just saying look at these people, what kind of people are that? Who can respect those people?