Nepal avalanche hit climbers as they were sleeping

KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) ? Mountaineers who survived a predawn avalanche high on the world's eighth-tallest peak say they waited an hour for the sun to rise and then saw pieces of tents and bodies of victims strewn around them on the snow.

Italian climber Silvio Mondinelli said he and a fellow mountaineer were asleep when they heard a violent sound and felt their tent start to slide.

"It was only a few seconds and we did not know what happened, but we had slid more than 200 meters (650 feet)," Mondinelli told The Associated Press on Monday. "All we wanted was for it to stop."

The avalanche hit at about 4 a.m. Sunday while more than two dozen climbers were sleeping in tents at Camp 3 on Mount Manaslu in northern Nepal.

At least nine climbers were killed and six are believed still missing. Many of the 10 survivors were injured and were flown to hospitals by rescue helicopters.

Helicopters flew over the slopes on Monday to search for the missing mountaineers as climbers and guides searched on foot. Rescuers brought down eight bodies ? four French, one each from Germany, Italy and Spain and a Nepali guide ? and were trying to retrieve the ninth from the 7,000-meter (22,960-foot) area where the avalanche struck, police Chief Basanta Bahadur Kuwar said.

Three French climbers and two Germans were transported to hospitals in Katmandu on Sunday. Two Italians were flown there on Monday ? Mondinelli, who has climbed the world's 14 highest peaks, and fellow mountaineer Christian Gobbi.

Mondinelli said a third Italian climber and their Sherpa guide were sleeping in another tent and both were buried by the avalanche and died.

Gobbi said they could not see at first when they looked out of their torn tent because it was pitch dark and they had no light.

"We found someone's boots and put them on," he said.

When the sun rose an hour later, they saw parts of tents scattered across the snow, along with people who had been killed or injured.

They said they were able to assist the injured with the help of Sherpa guides who came up from lower mountain camps. Those who could walk made their way down to the base camp while those who were injured were picked up by helicopters.

At least three of the victims were from the French Alps town of Chamonix, a hub for climbers on Mont Blanc and nearby peaks. An avalanche on a route to the summit of Mont Blanc in July killed nine experienced climbers.

Two French climbers were still unaccounted for as of Monday afternoon, the French Foreign Ministry said. The rescue effort was called off "at least for today, probably definitively," Christian Trommsdorff, president of the French Mountain Guides Syndicate, said on BFM television.

A total of 231 climbers and guides were on the mountain, but not all were at the higher camps hit by the avalanche.

Nepal Mountaineering Department chief Balkrishan Ghimire identified the eight recovered bodies as Fabrice Priez, Philippe Lucien Bos, Catherine Marie Andree Richard and Ludovic Paul Nicolas Challeat of France; German Christian Mittermeyer; Italian Alberto Magliano; Spaniard Marti Roirg Gasull; and Nepali Dawa Dorji.

Sunday's avalanche came at the start of Nepal's autumn climbing season, when the end of the monsoon rains makes weather in the high Himalayas unpredictable. Spring is a more popular mountaineering season, when hundreds of climbers crowd the peaks.

Mount Manaslu, which is 8,156 meters (26,760 feet) high, has attracted more climbers recently because it is considered one of the easier peaks to climb among the world's tallest mountains.

Nepal has eight of the 14 highest peaks in the world. Climbers have said in recent years that conditions on the mountains have deteriorated and risks of accidents have increased, with some blaming global warming.

Avalanches are not very frequent on Mount Manaslu, but in 1972 one struck a team of climbers and killed six Koreans and 10 Nepalese guides.

Ang Tshering of the Asian Trekking agency in Katmandu, who has equipped hundreds of expeditions, said low snow levels and the increased number of climbers on Manaslu have made climbing conditions difficult.

"It used to be a low-risk mountain in the past but now that has all changed," Tshering said, adding that conditions have become more unpredictable.

___

Associated Press writer Angela Charlton in Paris contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nepal-avalanche-hit-climbers-were-sleeping-161114461.html

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Jonnyfortycoats strong in the It's Your Final Chance To Pick A - Bettor

Jonnyfortycoats strong in the It?s Your Final Chance To Pick A Winner 525 ?

The Grade A1 It?s Your Final Chance To Pick A Winner 525 has brought together six talented hounds in the 525 yards flat track at Harold?s Cross on Tuesday, 25th September, 2012. Three out of six entries of the race share the same chances of winning, Buchail Rosie, Kearneys Fairy and Jonnyfortycoats.

Not all the entries have been successful the last time that they raced, and there are those too who have not won even longer than that. None of the entries for the ?250 prize money have won at the Grade A1 level recently.

The three-year-old, Jonnyfortycoats, is the only candidate who won over 525 yards the last time he raced, but that too was not at the Grade A1 level.

The Horan trained won the Grade A3 Welcome To Harolds Cross A3 525 on 14th September, 2012 at Harold?s Cross over 525 yards.

The joint favourite took flight from the second trap, and led on for covering the track distance from the second position. Finishing well had him clocking the track distance in 29.01 seconds.

The black and white dog has been racing since 2010, and the almost constant distance that he has been racing over is 525 yards. He raced at Shelbourne Park during the 2011 campaign, but ever since then he has his racing destination fixed at Harold?s Cross.

Winetavern Oscar?s son had raced in three Grade A1 races since 6th July, but failed at all the instances. However, his performance through the tries, did improve.

The three-year-old ended fourth in the Grade A1 Download The IGB Phone App 525 on 6th July, 2012 at Harold?s Cross.

On 27th July, 2012, he landed third in the Grade A1 The Happy 40th Anniversary Agnes And Eddie 525 at Harold?s Cross over 525 yards.

Even the third try could not help much as he finished fourth in the Grade A1 The Pick Four Starts Now on 17th August, 2012 at Harold?s Cross.

Each time the hound broke from a different trap, and today he has drawn the second stall.

He is backed by 3 to 1 odds, and will need to keep a stern check on the competition.

The views expressed in this article are the writer's own and in no way represent bettor.com?s official editorial policy.

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Source: http://blogs.bettor.com/Jonnyfortycoats-strong-in-the-Its-Your-Final-Chance-To-Pick-A-Winner-525-a190126

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Combining Your Social Media, SEO & PPC Campaigns | Release ...

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Daily Tips for Business: Solo Professionals

5 Home Based Businesses That Actually Work

Posted: 24 Sep 2012 01:59 PM PDT

Making money from home seems like a dream, and because it seems too good to be true, unethical marketers jump all over the opportunity to sell you something that isn't real. However, this doesn't mean that home based businesses do not exist, because they do.

Fun - A Golden Key to Success?

Posted: 24 Sep 2012 11:04 AM PDT

Last weekend I spent time with a beautiful group of likeminded people. The proposal had been put forward by a couple of the participants to bring together a group of Three Principle facilitators in a retreat like situation and see what happens. And that was it. No agenda. No outcome. No goals. Just a space and time together to see what unfolded. It was fabulous.

How Can Listening Increase Profit?

Posted: 24 Sep 2012 11:04 AM PDT

I have a client who is a coach and is having trouble with listening and I have been helping her improve this skill. If you are not a coach, or know nothing about coaching, you may not understand the implications of this. So let me explain. In my opinion, a really great coach always creates a safe space for a client to explore their own challenges/ desires/issues, and the only really effective way to do that is to listen at a really deep level.

A Simple 3 Step Formula to Create a Compelling Message

Posted: 24 Sep 2012 09:45 AM PDT

What do you do? The question that we want to hear when we are business, and also the question that can be the most terrifying. Terrifying in the sense that because you are so passionate about what you do that you could speak about if for hours, but you have experienced the "glazed over" look and polite excuses to get away many times over, and just don't want to go there again.

Niche and Target Market - What's the Difference?

Posted: 24 Sep 2012 07:29 AM PDT

So first of all, let me address why you would even need to know the difference. Basically, it makes life a lot simpler when it comes to marketing your business. And simplicity is an excellent benefit in and of itself. The simpler you can keep your life and business, the better.

Get Great Results by Assuming the Worst

Posted: 24 Sep 2012 06:33 AM PDT

One of the best things I've learned about business management is to always assume the worst - assume that everything will go wrong and many mistakes will be made.? This rule has saved me and saved my projects when I was a project manager in corporate America, in my home renovation and of course in my business.

Source: http://dailytipsforbusiness.blogspot.com/2012/09/solo-professionals_24.html

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In birds' development, researchers find diversity by the peck

ScienceDaily (Sep. 24, 2012) ? It has long been known that diversity of form and function in birds' specialized beaks is abundant. Charles Darwin famously studied the finches on the Galapagos Islands, tying the morphology (shape) of various species' beaks to the types of seeds they ate. In 2010, a team of Harvard biologists and applied mathematicians showed that Darwin's finches all actually shared the same developmental pathways, using the same gene products, controlling just size and curvature, to create 14 very different beaks.

Now, expanding that work to a less closely related group of birds, the Caribbean bullfinches, that same team at Harvard has uncovered something exciting -- namely, that the molecular signals that produce those beak shapes show even more variation than is apparent on the surface. Not only can two very different beaks share the same developmental pathway, as in Darwin's finches, but two very different developmental pathways can produce exactly the same shaped beak.

"Most people assume that there's this flow of information from genes for development to an inevitable morphology," says principal investigator Arhat Abzhanov, Associate Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology (OEB). "Those beaks are very highly adaptive in their shapes and sizes, and extremely important for these birds. In Darwin's finches, even one millimeter of difference in proportion or size can mean life or death during difficult times. But can we look at it from a bioengineering perspective and say that in order to generate the exact same morphological shape, you actually require the same developmental process to build it? Our latest research suggests not."

The findings have been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The Caribbean bullfinches, geographic and genetic neighbors to Darwin's finches, are a group of three similar-looking species that represent two different branches of the evolutionary tree. These bullfinches have very strong bills that are all exactly the same geometric shape but slightly different sizes.

"They specialize in seeds that no one else can touch," explains Abzhanov. "You'd actually need a pair of pliers to crack these seeds yourself; it takes 300 to 400 Newtons of force, so that's a really nice niche if you can do that. But the question is, what developmental changes must have occurred to produce a specialized beak like that?"

A new and highly rigorous genomic analysis by coauthor Kevin J. Burns, a biologist at San Diego State University, has shown that among the three Caribbean bullfinch species, this crushing type of beak actually evolved twice, independently. Convergent evolution like this is common in nature, and very familiar to biologists. But understanding that phylogeny enabled Abzhanov, lead author Ricardo Mallarino (a former Ph.D. student in OEB at the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences), and colleagues in applied mathematics at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) to perform a series of mathematical and morphogenetic studies showing that the birds form those identical beaks in completely different ways. Such studies must, by their nature, be performed early in the embryonic stage of the birds' development, when the shape and tissue structure of the beak is determined by the interactions of various genes and proteins.

"In the small bullfinch you have almost a two-stage rocket system," says Abzhanov. "Cartilage takes you halfway, and then bone kicks in and delivers the beak to the right shape. Without either stage, you'll fail. In the larger bullfinches, the cartilage is not even employed, so it's like a single-stage rocket, but it's got this high-energy, synergistic interaction between two molecules that just takes the bone and drives its development straight to the right shape."

In embryos of the small bullfinch, Loxigilla noctis, the control genes used are Bmp4 and CaM, followed by TGF?IIr, ?-catenin, and Dkk3, the same combination used in Darwin's finches. Embryos of the larger bullfinches, L. violacea and L. portoricensis, use a novel combination of just Bmp4 and Ihh.

"Importantly," Abzhanov says, "despite the fact that these birds are using different systems, they end up with the same shape beak, and a different shape beak from Darwin's finches. So that reveals a surprising amount of flexibility in both the shapes and the molecular interactions that support them."

The finding offers new insight into the ways birds -- the largest and most diverse group of land vertebrates -- have managed to adaptively fill so many different ecological niches.

"It is possible that even if the beak shape doesn't change over time, the program that builds it does," explains Abzhanov. "For evolution, the main thing that matters for selection is what the beak actually looks like at the end, or specifically what it can do. The multiple ways to build that beak can be continually changing, provided they deliver the same results. That flexibility by itself could be a good vehicle for eventually developing novel shapes, because the developmental program is not frozen."

Following a standard process in studies of developmental biology, Abzhanov's team began with measurements of the morphological differences between species, followed by observations of gene expression in bullfinch embryos and functional experiments using chicken embryos. Along the way, mathematical models helped the team to quantify and categorize the beak shapes they were seeing.

"We used geometric morphometric analysis, looking at these beaks as curves," says coauthor Michael Brenner, Glover Professor of Applied Mathematics and Applied Physics at SEAS and Harvard College Professor. "The beak shapes would turn into contours, contours were digitized into curvatures, and curvatures were turned into representative mathematical formulas. This provided our biology colleagues with an unbiased way of determining which of the different species had beak shapes that were identical up to scaling transformations, and which were in a completely different group."

In order to observe gene expression in the developing bullfinch embryos, Mallarino and a team of undergraduate field assistants had to collect eggs from wild nests in the Dominican Republic, Barbados, and Puerto Rico. The birds breed in dome-shaped nests with small side entrances, often in the tops of tall cacti. In accordance with strict fieldwork regulations, Mallarino's team collected only every third egg laid, which required them to return to the nests daily, climbing dozens of trees and cacti to carefully label every new egg. Laden with radios, notebooks, markers, heavy ladders, and a special foam crate for the delicate eggs, the team ventured into remote field sites at the crack of dawn and returned to camp before noon to incubate those they collected.

"They're much more fragile than a chicken egg, and extremely small," says Mallarino. "We just walk very carefully."

"It's a big logistical operation," he adds. "It's five months of really, really hard work under the sun in crazy conditions, but when it works it's really rewarding. At day 6 or 7 you have a perfect, live embryo with a beak beginning to form, and you can learn so much about it."

The next step in this work is to widen the lens yet again and compare the morphological development of a broader group of birds.

"In time, hopefully we'll see how the great diversity that you see among all these highly adaptive bird beaks may actually evolve at the genetic level," says Mallarino. "That's the greater challenge."

In addition to Abzhanov, Mallarino, and Brenner, coauthors included Otger Camp?s, a former postdoctoral associate at the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS); Joerg A. Fritz, a graduate student in applied mathematics at SEAS; and Olivia G. Weeks, a graduate student in organismic and evolutionary biology at the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

This work was supported by several grants from the National Science Foundation, as well as the Kavli Institute for Bionano Science and Technology at Harvard and the National Institutes of Health.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. R. Mallarino, O. Campas, J. A. Fritz, K. J. Burns, O. G. Weeks, M. P. Brenner, A. Abzhanov. Closely related bird species demonstrate flexibility between beak morphology and underlying developmental programs. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1206205109

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/jcqlWtoESxI/120924111642.htm

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UNISAME for extending last date for filing income tax returns ...

Karachi,? The Union of Small and Medium Enterprises (UNISAME) has urged the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) to extend the last date for filing income tax returns for the period July 2011 to 30th June 2012 up to 31st October 2012 to enable all the SMEs to file their returns correctly after completing their accounts without rush and hurry.

President UNISAME Zulfikar Thaver said the FBR has announced that the last date for filing income tax returns is 30th September 2012 which is not convenient as during the month of September there have been disturbances, strikes and holidays and the entrepreneurs have not been able to complete and finalize their accounts.

He said even the income tax practitioners have not been able to attend their offices. Moreover due to floods the SMEs in the rural areas have been displaced badly.

Thaver appreciated the facility of e-filing the returns and thanked FBR for making it easy but said the long power outages are also obstructing the computerization and preparations of accounts.

He urged the FBR to extend the last date for filing income tax returns up to 31st October 2012 to enable the business community file their returns comfortably.

Source: http://www.onepakistan.com/finance/news/general/11213-unisame-for-extending-last-date-for-filing-income-tax-returns.html

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Obama at the UN, in shadow of campaign politics

President Barack Obama steps off Air Force One upon his arrival, Monday, Sept. 24, 2012, at JFK airport in New York. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama steps off Air Force One upon his arrival, Monday, Sept. 24, 2012, at JFK airport in New York. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

The Marine One helicopter, with President Barack Obama aboard, lands at the Wall Street heliport in New York, Monday, Sept. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama appear on the ABC Television show ?The View? in New York, Monday, Sept. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama arrives at JFK International Airport in New York, Monday, Sept. .24, 2012. (AP Photo/ Louis Lanzano)

(AP) ? Campaign politics shadowing every word, President Barack Obama will step before the world and declare that anti-American rage and riots among Muslims abroad will never force the United States to backtrack on diplomacy.

In his final international address before the November election, Obama on Tuesday has a United Nations stage afforded to presidents, not presidential challengers. He will use it to try to boost his political standing without mentioning his opponent.

Obama's comments to the General Assembly will be scrutinized around the globe and by the gathering of presidents and prime ministers in the famed United Nations hall, given the tumult, terrorism, nuclear threats and poverty that bind so many nations. He will respond to unrest in the Muslim world and seek to underscore U.S. resolve in keeping Iran from developing a nuclear weapon.

Yet, were there any doubt that the U.S. presidential campaign hung heavy over Obama's speech to the General Assembly, Republican rival Mitt Romney shredded it by assailing Obama's foreign affairs leadership on the eve of the president's speech.

"This is time for a president who will shape events in the Middle East, not just be merciful or be at the mercy of the events," Romney said Monday. Focusing on the killing of the U.S. ambassador in Libya and mass bloodshed in Syria, Romney repeatedly ridiculed Obama's comment that nations moving toward democracy after the Arab Spring face "bumps in the road."

That prompted White House spokesman Jay Carney to fire back at Romney: "There is a certain rather desperate attempt to grasp at words and phrases here to find political advantage, and in this case that's profoundly offensive."

Obama's activities at the United Nations said plenty, too: There are not many of them. Campaigning is his imperative.

He is skipping the private meetings with key allies that a U.S. president typically schedules when the whole international community comes to New York. The president will spend only 24 hours in New York in total this time, and he spent some of it Monday to appear on "The View," giving a talk show interview intended to sell his election pitch to a big TV audience.

The dominant theme of Obama's U.N. speech, according to his aides and Obama's own recent words, will be to underscore his response to the protests raging in places across the Middle East and North Africa. As he has for days, Obama will condemn the violence, defend democratic principles of free speech and promise no U.S. withdrawal of outreach.

Much of the growing ire is aimed at the United States because of an anti-Islam film produced in this country, but the White House has now deemed the attack on its consulate in Libya a "terrorist attack" and has not ruled that it was premeditated. Four Americans, including ambassador Chris Stevens, died in what Obama now says "wasn't just a mob action."

Obama noted in the TV interview Monday that many Libyans have protested the extremist strains in their nation.

"Part of the message for us is that the overwhelming majority of Muslims, they want the same things that families here want," Obama said. "They want opportunity. They want jobs. They want peace. ... We're going to stay engaged. Because ultimately, over the long term, our security is going to be tied up with the success of these countries."

In a preview of Obama's speech, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton appealed for Muslims to show "dignity" as they protest the film denigrating the Prophet Muhammad.

"Dignity does not come from avenging insults," she said in a speech to her husband's Clinton Global Initiative. Romney and Obama were to speak there as well on Tuesday.

The secretary of state was also standing in for Obama. She saw the presidents of Afghanistan, Egypt, Libya and Pakistan. She was due later in the week to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas.

For U.S. presidents, the yearly United Nations address is always laced with domestic politics even though the speeches are scripted without campaign references. Wars and the failed attempts at Mideast peace have dominated in recent years.

Romney's campaign made the campaign linkage directly Monday.

"On the eve of his United Nations address, President Obama's foreign policy is in disarray," spokesman Ryan Williams said. "As president, Mitt Romney will repair our relationships abroad and create a safer, more secure nation."

Polling shows Obama has a clear edge over Romney when voters are asked who they think is a stronger leader and would better protect the country.

__

Associated Press writer Matthew Lee contributed to this story.

__

Follow Ben Feller at http://www.twitter.com/benfellerdc

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-09-25-Obama/id-f03670854a7444b38911cc633ef000fa

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'Sesame Street' switching things for Elmo

NEW YORK (AP) ? Elmo will be carrying a new tune on "Sesame Street." Several, actually.

A shift in how the popular puppet is deployed marks the most visible change on "Sesame Street," the children's program that began its 43rd season on public television on Monday.

The "Elmo's World" segment is being phased out after 13 years, replaced by a new segment, "Elmo the Musical." Ten new skits, each lasting 11 minutes, have been prepared.

The idea is to incorporate music into the "Sesame Street" emphasis on introducing concepts in science, technology, engineering and math to the preschool-aged viewers, said Rosemarie Truglio, senior vice president of education and research at Sesame Workshop, the company that makes the series.

Elmo will use singing and dancing to draw attention to the need for problem-solving skills and make the learning entertaining, she said. The character will be featured in "Sea Captain the Musical," ''Mountain Climber the Musical" and "President the Musical."

The current Elmo, geared largely to 2-year-olds, had some repetitive music segments. "Elmo the Musical" will have seven or eight songs in each skit, and will be aimed at preschool youngsters who are slightly older.

"With really young children, the arts are very relevant to their lives," Truglio said. "We want to be able to use the arts as a tool."

"Sesame Street" began its emphasis on science and technology last season.

The children's show is also bringing in its usual series of guest celebrities this season: Charlize Theron, Halle Berry, Melissa McCarthy, Steve Carell, John Hamm, Zac Effron, Blake Griffin, the rock band Train and rapper Common.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sesame-street-switching-things-elmo-171650635.html

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Apple ?aggressively? recruiting ex-Google Maps employees

News

Apple is on a recruitment drive to develop its native Maps app for iOS 6, reportedly ?luring away? Google Maps employees to help refine their mobile strategy.

According to a report by TechCrunch, Apple wants to improve its Maps application drastically, using new concepts and enabling advanced capabilities, following criticism of its performance with the launch of iOS 6 on September 19.

The report also quotes a contractor who worked on Google Maps, confirming allegations that Apple is pursuing contract employees who helped develop Google Maps:

?Many of my co-workers at Google Maps eventually left when their contracts ended or on their own accord. One guy looked around for other GIS work and ended up at Apple when a recruiter contacted him,? the unnamed source reveals.

?He had heard rumors for a while that Apple was going to develop its own in-house mapping platform, and given his experience at Google, he was an easy hire. Apple went out of their way to bring him down to Cupertino and he?s now paid handsomely.?

The source told TechCrunch similar instances like this were happening regularly, but that Apple had a long way to go before it could compete with Google Maps, by offering an equal or better nativr version on iOS 6.

MacRumors points out that the success of Apple?s own Maps application was short-lived, with ?significant criticism of the quality of the data in many parts of the world.?

Apple has responded to user complaints about its Maps application, speaking with tech website AllThingsD:

?Customers around the world are upgrading to iOS 6 with over 200 new features including Apple Maps, our first map service? Apple spokeswoman Trudy Muller?said in the statement.

?We are excited to offer this service with innovative new features like Flyover, turn by turn navigation, and Siri integration. We launched this new map service knowing it is a major initiative and that we are just getting started with it. Maps is a cloud-based solution and the more people use it, the better it will get. We appreciate all of the customer feedback and are working hard to make the customer experience even better.?

If Apple?s strategy is to poach its rivals? workers, it has a large pool of talent to choose from. Google?s Map subsidiary currently employees a fleet of 7000 staff, with 1,100 full time workers and 6000 contractors. according to Business Insider.

@grace_robinson_

Source: http://www.macworld.com.au/news/apple-aggressively-recruiting-ex-google-maps-employees-73754/

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