Rondo helps Celtics beat Hawks 90-84 in OT

Atlanta Hawks guard Jeff Teague, front, gets past Boston Celtics forward Kevin Garnett, who starts to swipe his arm on a block, during the second half of Game 3 of an NBA first-round playoff basketball series, Friday, May 4, 2012, in Boston. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Atlanta Hawks guard Jeff Teague, front, gets past Boston Celtics forward Kevin Garnett, who starts to swipe his arm on a block, during the second half of Game 3 of an NBA first-round playoff basketball series, Friday, May 4, 2012, in Boston. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Boston Celtics forward Paul Pierce (34) yells as he slams into Atlanta Hawks defender Joe Johnson (2) during the second quarter of Game 3 of an NBA first-round playoff basketball series, Friday, May 4, 2012, in Boston. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Atlanta Hawks guard Jeff Teague (0) passes off to teammate Marvin Williams (24) against Boston Celtics’ Kevin Garnett, center, during the second quarter of Game 3 of an NBA first-round playoff basketball series, Friday, May 4, 2012, in Boston. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Boston Celtics guard Rajon Rondo (9) drives to the basket against Atlanta Hawks guard Kirk Hinrich (6) during the first quarter of Game 3 of an NBA first-round playoff basketball series, Friday, May 4, 2012, in Boston. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Boston Celtics center Greg Stiemsma, right, reaches for the loose ball against Atlanta Hawks guard Joe Johnson (2) during the first quarter of Game 3 of an NBA first-round playoff basketball series, Friday, May 4, 2012, in Boston. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

(AP) ? Celtics coach Doc Rivers looked at his aging team at the end of regulation, and he wasn’t encouraged by what he saw.

“They didn’t look fresh,” he said Friday night after Boston beat Atlanta 90-84 in overtime to take a 2-1 lead in their best-of-seven playoff series. “And, honestly, I looked at the other team ? they looked pretty bad, too. So that made me feel a little bit better.”

Rajon Rondo returned from a one-game suspension and recorded his seventh career playoff triple-double. The Celtics point guard had 17 points, 14 rebounds and 12 assists one game after sitting out for bumping referee Marc Davis in the closing minutes of the series opener.

Rondo did not have a basket in the first half of Game 3, and Rivers said he noticed Rondo struggling to run the offensive plays.

“Then, finally, I told him: ‘Just be a scorer. Just attack.’” Rivers said. “And I thought that freed him up.”

Rondo scored 10 in the second and the first two baskets of overtime, including a post-up hook shot over Jeff Teague that gave Boston the lead for good.

“I felt good about all the shots I took,” Rondo said. “My teammates told me to stay aggressive. Nights like tonight when I take a lot of shots, I finally found a way to get my team a win.”

Game 4 is Sunday night.

Ray Allen returned for Boston after missing almost a month and scored 13 points in 38 minutes. Kevin Garnett had 20 points and 13 rebounds, and Paul Pierce had 21 points one game after scoring 36 points with 14 rebounds to help the Celtics swipe home-court advantage with a Game 2 victory in Atlanta.

Joe Johnson scored 29 points and Jeff Teague had 23 for the Hawks. McGrady had 12 points ? his highest total since he had 40 for Houston in 2008 ? but 10 were in the first half, before he landed awkwardly on his right ankle and went to the locker room. He did not have a field goal in the second half.

“I know I’ll be sore tomorrow. I can feel it already,” he said. “It affected my shot. I had no lift. It affected my cutting. I’ll just go and get treatment tomorrow.”

The Celtics went on an 11-1 run to open a double-digit lead with 7 minutes to play in regulation, but Atlanta rallied and tied it 80-80 on Johnson’s 3-pointer with 1:23 left. Both teams failed to score on their next two possessions, leaving the Celtics with the ball out of bounds with 3.9 seconds left.

Rondo inbounded to Pierce, who was defended by Johnson and had to take a long, fallaway jumper that bounced off the rim at the buzzer.

“There were a few possessions it seemed no one could score,” Johnson said. “We definitely felt like we let one get away. We felt like this was our chance to get one.”

The Celtics got Rondo back from his one-game suspension and Allen back on the court for the first time since April 10. He played just five games over the final month of the regular season because of bone spurs in his right ankle and missed the first two games of the playoffs as well.

The Hawks kept losing players. With top centers Al Horford and Zaza Pachulia already out, forward Josh Smith was scratched with a sprained tendon in his left knee.

“I thought we were depleted but we were still in a position where we could have won the game,” Hawks coach Larry Drew said. “It says a lot about your team when they can step up in the playoffs short-handed and still put themselves in position to win the game. We certainly had our opportunity. We just fell short.”

NOTES: Hawks C Erick Dampier scored six points in 23 minutes. He played 83 minutes over 15 games and scored just two points in the entire regular season. … Pierce’s next playoff game will tie him with Dennis Johnson and Bob Cousy for 10th on the Celtics’ all-time list with 109. Next up is current Celtics GM Danny Ainge, with 112. … John Havlicek played in 172. … Johnson scored eight points in the first quarter and McGrady had 10 points and four rebounds in the second. … Celtics G Avery Bradley went to the locker room in the third with a sore left shoulder. The team initially said he would return, then said he wouldn’t. … Bruins president Cam Neely sat courtside with Celtics owner Wyc Grousbeck, getting a big cheer when he was shown on the scoreboard. … Allen, the NBA’s career 3-point leader, was 0 for 4 from 3-point range. He was 1 for 3 from the line and 6 for 12 from the field.

Associated Press

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Oil prices fall to six-month low. Gas to follow.

Oil prices fall below $99 a barrel on weak jobs report. At $3.80 a gallon, gasoline prices should follow oil prices down.?

The?price?of?oil?plunged to its lowest level in nearly six months Friday, falling below $100 per barrel for the first time since February. A drop in gasoline?prices?can’t be far behind.

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It’s a welcome trend for motorists, with the summer driving season just around the corner. And it eases some pressure on the U.S. economy, which has shown only agonizingly slow growth in the nearly three years since the Great Recession ended.

Oil?fell $4.05, or 4 percent, to $98.49, after a weak U.S. jobs report offered the latest evidence that the global economy is weakening, possibly reducing demand for?oil. At the same time, there is mounting evidence that world?oil?supplies are growing.

“The jobs report was the coup de grace,” said Judith Dwarkin, chief energy economist at ITG Investment Research. “But it’s hard to see how?prices?could have stayed on the boil given ample supplies and continued economic uncertainty.”

For the week,?oil?fell more than $6 and is now about $12 below its February high. U.S. gasoline?prices?have fallen to $3.80 per gallon from a peak of $3.94 in early April.

Now they could go as low as $3.50 per gallon by July 4, according to Tom Kloza, Chief?Oil?Analyst at theOil?Price?Information Service.

Tony Wei, a mechanical engineer from Piscataway, NJ., will welcome lower?prices. He travels 100 miles every day to and from his job in Morris County, N.J. He’s also planning a 500-mile trip to Canada and a 400-mile trip to southwest Virginia this summer in his Honda Accord.

“Definitely, I’m going to notice it,” he said. “I buy so much gas.”

The picture of the?oil?market is the reverse of just a few months ago. Then, world?oil?demand looked to be rising quickly at the same time that world supplies were threatened by a host of small production outages and the potential for drastically reduced production from Iran, the world’s third-biggest exporter.

Those developments raised the prospect that world supplies would be at their most tenuous just as the summer driving season arrived in the developed world. The?price?of U.S. benchmark?oil?rose to about $110. The?price?for international?oil?used to make most of the gasoline in the U.S. spiked even higher, to $128 per barrel.

Gasoline?prices?in the U.S. appeared to be on track to soar past $4 per gallon nationwide, another burden for U.S. consumers already suffering from high unemployment and pitiful wage growth.

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Patients in an intensive care unit (ICU) often become confused or …

Patients in an intensive care unit (ICU) often become confused or delirious soon after, or within a few days of admittance to the ICU. New research published in BioMed Central’s open access journal Critical Care, shows that use of earplugs can result in better sleep (as reported by the patients), lower the incidence of confusion, and delay the onset of cognitive disturbances. Patients in the ICU are thought to suffer confusion and delirium due to sensory overload. Part of this is due to the physical injuries and sensations of the patients, and part due to their environment…

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New Louvre Audio Tour Uses the Nintendo 3DS Gaming Console …

Written by: admin Friday, May 4th, 2012 .

Nintendo 3DS Audio Tour at the Louvre

Even the Louvre, home to the Mona Lisa and Venus de Milo, has had to incorporate new technologies into its visitor experience in order to keep up with the times. In an effort to reach out to younger visitors, the 219-year-old museum has unveiled a new audio guide system based on the Nintendo 3DS console. With this new system, visitors will have access to much more than just audio commentary. The new gadgets are equipped with both a touch screen and 3D screen, as well as a real-time positioning system to help visitors navigate their way through one of the world?s largest museums.

About 50 percent of the Louvre?s 8.8 million annual visitors are under 30: a demographic that is rarely seen without some sort of smart device in their hands. In recent years, the Louvre?s directors had become increasingly aware that the outdated audio tour, with its junky headphones and lackluster commentary, was being lost on this young generation. What they needed was a self-guided tour system that incorporates the technology that has become an integral part of daily life.

So why a game console? The decision to introduce video game technology into as prestigious an institution as the Louvre seems only to be inviting a backlash from those who consider it sacred grounds. This possibility did not escape administrateur g?n?ral Herv? Barabert, who told The Independent ?There?s the risk that things won?t run as smoothly as planned, or that some may disapprove of the use of a games console in a museum, but I am ready to shoulder that risk and the reason why is because it is not a gimmick.? Barabert believes that if visitors look past the console?s original purpose and engage with the new material loaded onto it, they will find that it is really very useful in interacting with the museum?s collection. And there?s no need to worry about kids trying to play video games on their console, as the cartridge slots have been disabled.

3D Model of the Venus De Milo on the Louvre 3DS Audio Tour

Zooming on the Venus De Milo

What patrons will find on their 3DS consoles are over 700 commentaries on some of the museum?s most famous pieces, in addition to many more advanced features. With these tiny black boxes, visitors can zoom in on details in the artworks that they otherwise cannot get close enough to see. But even more impressive is the use of the autostereoscopic screen to view 3D models of the museum?s sculptures without the use of 3D glasses. Again, visitors can use these models to explore the details that might not be accessible on the actual sculpture. Whether or not any of these features appeal to you, the mapping system will definitely come in handy. The Louvre is notorious for being difficult to navigate and the ability to see exactly where you are in the museum at any point in time, might just be the most valuable aspect of these new devices.

The 3DS guides were just recently launched in mid-April, so the verdict is still out on how well the public is receiving them. Regardless of any criticism the system may receive for its origin as a gaming system, the Louvre seems to be headed in the right direction in its attempt to bridge the past and the present.

Image at Top: Nintendo World Report

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Packard Bell EasyNote LV, TV laptops bring Ivy Bridge to speed-hungry Europeans

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Most laptops being updated to Intel’s Ivy Bridge processors have come from international brands, so it may be some relief to European PC buyers that Acer’s local Packard Bell badge has made the leap as well. The 15.6-inch EasyNote TV and 17.3-inch LV will each use the new 22-nanometer processors both to push performance that little bit farther as well as get a middling five hours of battery life. NVIDIA graphics in GeForce GT 620M and 630M flavors will spruce up the gaming side, however, and Packard Bell is delivering a 20 percent more responsive multi-touch trackpad, dedicated music / social keys and a bamboo-like lid pattern to add a little dose of style. The duo will surface in Europe during June at prices starting from €499 ($656). Acer has sometimes brought Packard Bell PCs to the US as roughly equivalent Gateway models and vice versa, so Americans shouldn’t be surprised if they get counterpart laptops before long.

Packard Bell EasyNote LV, TV laptops bring Ivy Bridge to speed-hungry Europeans originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 May 2012 06:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mark Zuckerberg Will Cash In for a Billion Dollars When Facebook Goes Public [Facebook]

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Community Hospital Joins Wave of New Strategic Venture Funds to Drive Disruptive Innovation

Rex Health VenturesThis first part of a two-part series on strategic investors in healthcare focuses on the expansion of the venture business beyond traditional venture and large strategic investors. In the second part, I will outline the backdrop for the investment thesis that strategic healthcare investors are using to guide their capital allocation. Healthcare providers are finding their “play it safe” culture isn’t conducive to breakthrough innovation at a time when it is critically needed. Having spoken with several innovation groups in health systems, most examples of “innovation” are decidedly uninspiring. Primarily, it is due to the fact that virtually all of their decisions have to go through the prism of how new ideas will fit with current businesses — pretty much a guarantee that will doom so-called innovation to be little more than incremental improvements. Consequently, increasing numbers of hospitals and health systems are smartly allocating money to venture funds that have free reign to find truly disruptive new businesses.

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Zeppelins Make Their Comeback as Exotic Lighting [Lamps]

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