Space Pictures This Week: Lunar Gravity, Venusian Volcano









































































































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Nurse Duped by 'Queen's' Prank Call Found Dead













The hospital receptionist who was hoaxed by a prank call from a DJ claiming to be the queen asking about Kate Middleton has been found dead.


"It is with very deep sadness that we confirm the tragic death of a member of our nursing staff," the hospital said in a statement released today.


The nurse was identified as Jacintha Saldanha. The hospital said that Saldanha worked at the hospital for more than four years. They called her an "first-class nurse" and "a well-respected and popular member of the staff."


"We can confirm that Jacintha was recently the victim of a hoax call to the hospital," the statement said. "The hospital had been supporting her throughout this difficult time."


The hospital extended their "deepest sympathies" to family and friends, saying that "everyone is shocked" at this "tragic event."


"She will be greatly missed," the hospital said.


Earlier this week, the hospital fell for a prank call from an Australian radio show where the hosts pretended to be Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Charles looking to speak to Kate Middleton, who had been admitted to the hospital for her pregnancy. The call was put through to a second nurse who told the royal impersonators that Kate was "quite stable" and hadn't "had any retching."


Saldanha was the nurse who transferred the impersonators to the second nurse who gave information about Kate's condition.








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"The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are deeply saddened to learn of the death of Jacintha Saldanha," a spokesman from St. James Palace said in a statement.


"Their Royal Highnesses were looked after so wonderfully well at all times by everybody at King Edward VII Hospital, and their thoughts and prayers are with Jacintha Saldanha's family, friends and colleagues at this very sad time," the statement said.


Police were called to an address near the hospital at about 9:35 a.m. GT today to "reports of a woman found unconscious," according to a statement from Scotland Yard.


The woman was pronounced dead at the scene. "Inquiries continue to establish the circumstances of the incident. Next of kin have been informed," the statement said.


Circumstances of the death being investigated, but are not suspicious at this stage, according to police.


The duchess spent three days at the hospital undergoing treatment for hyperemesis gravidarum, severe or debilitating nausea and vomiting. She was released from the hospital on Thursday morning.


The Tuesday morning prank call came from Australian DJ's Mel Greig and Michael Christian. They impersonated the royals, complete with exaggerated accents. They even enlisted two co-workers to bark like the queen's pet corgis.


The queen impersonator asked for her granddaughter and was promptly transferred to another hospital employee.


"I'm just after my granddaughter, Kate. I want to see how her little tummy bug is going," the radio host said, suppressing laughter.


"She's sleeping at the moment, and she has had an uneventful night and sleep is good for her," the nurse said. "She's been getting some fluids to rehydrate her because she was quite dehydrated when she came in, but she's stable at the moment."


The fake royals went on to ask when would be a good time to visit and were told that "anytime after 9 o'clock would be suitable."


"She's quite stable at the moment. She hasn't had any retching ... since I've been on duty. And she has been sleeping on and off. I think it's difficult sleeping in a strange bed as well," the nurse said.


The hospital apologized for the mistake.






Read More..

Zoologger: The toughest eggs in the world









































Zoologger is our weekly column highlighting extraordinary animals – and occasionally other organisms – from around the world












Species: Eucypris virens
Habitat: Temporary ponds throughout Europe and central Asia, shrugging things off in a blasé manner












As anyone who has ever dropped one will know, eggs are fragile things. They are so easy to break, it's a wonder they make it to hatching point – particularly when you consider that they have probably been sat on by a chicken.












But while many birds lay fragile eggs, other species have evolved distinctly tougher ones. They have had to, because they live in harsh or even toxic environments.












The champion of tough eggs may well be a tiny crustacean called Eucypris virens. Its eggs can be frozen, irradiated, drenched in saltwater or digestive enzymes, deprived of oxygen or exposed to pesticides – with no discernible ill effects.











Asexual spread












E. virens is a kind of crustacean called an ostracod, or seed shrimp. This is another of those luckless groups of animals that hardly anyone is interested in, despite being extremely common and critical to many ecosystems. At first glance they could be mistaken for molluscs, as their bodies are encased in hard shells rather like those of clams.













Like many seed shrimp, E. virens exists in two forms: sexual and asexual. The two are subtly different in shape, and while the asexuals are found throughout Europe, the sexual forms are confined to the south, particularly Spain.












The sexual E. virens are best known for producing some of the largest sperm known in the animal kingdom. A single sperm can measure up to 1 centimetre, which is several times longer than the animal itself.












Still, asexual E. virens have spread further, possibly because they can spread faster into new environments. It only takes one asexual individual to colonise a new area, which explains how they were able to rapidly spread north after the glaciers retreated at the end of the last ice age.












While E. virens appears to be widespread, that may be an illusion. A 2010 genetic analysis suggested that what was thought to be one species might actually be at least 40, only one of which had been recognised.











Pond life













E. virens lives in temporary pools that last just weeks or months before drying out. They lay piles of dormant "resting eggs" that have evolved to survive being left high and dry, and then hatch when the water returns.












Wondering just how hardy these eggs are, Jochen Vandekerkhove of the University of Gdańsk in Poland and colleagues subjected both asexual and sexual eggs to a range of stressors and monitored how many hatched successfully.












The eggs were variously frozen to -72 °C for three weeks, exposed to ultraviolet B radiation for 10 hours, deprived of oxygen for a week, exposed to four digestive enzymes, drenched with salt water and treated with insecticide. Control eggs were stored in the dark without water.












Only the UV-B radiation had any effect, slightly delaying the hatching of asexual eggs. Sexual eggs were unaffected. Nothing else had any discernible effect.











This extreme tolerance puts E. virens in an elite group of animals that cope with a huge range of different environments. Many animals can survive being frozen or being exposed to toxins and other stressors, but it's unusual to be able to survive so many different things.












The only animals that can top E. virens are the tardigrades, or "water bears": tiny invertebrates that can handle being frozen to just above absolute zero, that's -273 ºC, and have even survived in the vacuum of space. Someone needs to send E. virens eggs into space to see if they can, too.













Journal reference: Freshwater Biology, DOI: 10.1111/fwb.12051


















































If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.




































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IMF says Bangladesh loan program on track






WASHINGTON: The International Monetary Fund on Thursday said Bangladesh was making progress with reforms under an IMF loan program and may be eligible for the second aid payment.

An IMF mission to Dhaka met with senior Bangladeshi officials in the first review of the country's performance under a $987 million Extended Credit Facility granted in April.

Bangladesh's performance under the loan program so far has been generally sound, said IMF mission leader David Cowen.

"Quantitative targets are broadly on track, with all performance criteria met at end-June 2012 -- the first test date under the ECF," he said in a statement.

Under the three-year loan deal, Bangladesh has pledged wide-reaching structural reforms to get its economy back on track and ease long-term poverty.

Bangladesh received some $141 million in an initial disbursement in April.

Cowen noted progress on structural measures as well as commitments by the government on several measures, including containing the budget deficit to 4.5 percent of gross domestic product in fiscal 2013.

The government also pledged to boost efforts to curb subsidy costs, particularly through a fuel price adjustment formula, and to take steps to lessen the negative impact on the most vulnerable.

The IMF Executive Board is expected to complete its review in January, which would make the second disbursement of some $141 million available to Bangladesh.

The government sought the IMF aid after rising global oil prices delivered a double whammy, spurring inflation and taking scarce foreign currency out of the country.

Under the IMF agreement, the government must hike prices of oil, power and fertilizer to bolster the country's shaky balance of payments. But poor farmers have relied on deep subsidies for decades.

"Despite global headwinds, Bangladesh's economy performed well in FY12, with preliminary estimates pegging growth at 6.3 percent," Cowen said.

The IMF projects GDP growth of about 6 percent in the current fiscal year, citing external uncertainties and the broader global slowdown.

-AFP/ac



Read More..

Made in America? Foxconn mulls U.S. expansion



Foxconn operates factories in several Chinese cities, including two campuses in Shenzhen. This is the gate of the Shenzhen factories.



(Credit:
Jay Greene/CNET)

"Made in the U.S." is becoming more appealing to at least one Asian manufacturer.

Foxconn, a major supplier to Apple and other tech companies, today told Bloomberg that it's seeking to expand its operations in North America as customers request more of their products made in the region.

"We are looking at doing more manufacturing in the U.S. because, in general, customers want more to be done there," Louis Woo, a Foxconn spokesman, told Bloomberg.

He didn't provide many other details beyond saying the supply chain is a big challenge for U.S. expansion, and any manufacturing in the U.S. would need to leverage high-value engineering talent as opposed to the low-cost labor in China.

While Woo didn't say which customers want to manufacture in the U.S., it's not too difficult to figure out one of them is likely Apple. Chief Executive Tim Cook, speaking to Bloomberg in an interview published today, confirmed that Apple is moving some Mac production to the U.S and is investing $100 million to help produce the computers here.

Foxconn, meanwhile, has been largely noncommittal about expanding in the U.S. The company told CNET last month that it wan't growing its North American presence despite reports at the time that it was doing so.

The company, which has a spotty labor history, would likely face a tough time in the U.S. As CNET noted last month, a new U.S. factory would have to conform to local labor laws, and Foxconn is rife with complaints about worker conditions in factors making iPhones and other high-volume tech products.

We've contacted Foxconn and will update the post when we have more information.

Read More..

High-Voltage DC Breakthrough Could Boost Renewable Energy

Patrick J. Kiger



Thomas Edison championed direct current, or DC, as a better mode for delivering electricity than alternating current, or AC. But the inventor of the light bulb lost the War of the Currents. Despite Edison's sometimes flamboyant efforts—at one point he electrocuted a Coney Island zoo elephant in an attempt to show the technology's hazards—AC is the primary way that electricity flows from power plants to homes and businesses everywhere. (Related Quiz: "What You Don't Know About Electricity")


But now, more than a century after Edison's misguided stunt, DC may be getting a measure of vindication.


An updated, high-voltage version of DC, called HVDC, is being touted as the transmission method of the future because of its ability to transmit current over very long distances with fewer losses than AC. And that trend may be accelerated by a new device called a hybrid HVDC breaker, which may make it possible to use DC on large power grids without the fear of catastrophic breakdown that stymied the technology in the past.  (See related photos: "World's Worst Power Outages.")


Swiss-based power technology and automation giant ABB, which developed the breaker, says it may also prove critical to the 21st century's transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources, by tapping the full potential of massive wind farms and solar generating stations to provide electricity to distant cities.


So far, the device has been tested only in laboratories, but ABB's chief executive, Joe Hogan, touts the hybrid HVDC breaker as "a new chapter in the history of electrical engineering," and predicts that it will make possible the development of "the grid of the future"—that is, a massive, super-efficient network for distributing electricity that would interconnect not just nations but multiple continents. Outside experts aren't quite as grandiose, but they still see the breaker as an important breakthrough.


"I'm quite struck by the potential of this invention," says John Kassakian, an electrical engineering and computer science professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "If it works on a large scale and is economical to use, it could be a substantial asset."




Going the Distance


The hybrid HVDC breaker may herald a new day for Edison's favored mode of electricity, in which current is transmitted in a constant flow in one direction, rather than in the back-and-forth bursts of AC. In the early 1890s, DC lost the so-called War of the Currents mostly because of the issue of long-distance transmission.


In Edison's time, because of losses due to electrical resistance, there wasn't an economical technology that would enable DC systems to transmit power over long distances. Edison did not see this as a drawback because he envisioned electric power plants in every neighborhood.


But his rivals in the pioneering era of electricity, Nikola Tesla and George Westinghouse, instead touted AC, which could be sent long distances with fewer losses. AC's voltage, the amount of potential energy in the current (think of it as analogous to the pressure in a water line), could be stepped up and down easily through the use of transformers. That meant high-voltage AC could be transmitted long distances until it entered neighborhoods, where it would be transformed to safer low-voltage electricity.


Thanks to AC, smoke-belching, coal-burning generating plants could be built miles away from the homes and office buildings they powered. It was the idea that won the day, and became the basis for the proliferation of electric power systems across the United States and around the world.


But advances in transformer technology ultimately made it possible to transmit DC at higher voltages. The advantages of HVDC then became readily apparent. Compared to AC, HVDC is more efficient—a thousand-mile HVDC line carrying thousands of megawatts might lose 6 to 8 percent of its power, compared to 12 to 25 percent for a similar AC line. And HVDC would require fewer lines along a route. That made it better suited to places where electricity must be transmitted extraordinarily long distances from power plants to urban areas. It also is more efficient for underwater electricity transmission.


In recent years, companies such as ABB and Germany's Siemens have built a number of big HVDC transmission projects, like ABB's 940-kilometer (584-mile) line that went into service in 2004 to deliver power from China's massive Three Gorges hydroelectric plant to Guangdong province in the South. In the United States, Siemens for the first time ever installed a 500-kilovolt submarine cable, a 65-mile HVDC line, to take additional power from the Pennsylvania/New Jersey grid to power-hungry Long Island. (Related: "Can Hurricane Sandy Shed Light on Curbing Power Outages?") And the longest electric transmission line in the world, some 2,500 kilometers (1,553 miles), is under construction by ABB now in Brazil: The Rio-Madeira HVDC project will link two new hydropower plants in the Amazon with São Paulo, the nation's main economic hub. (Related Pictures: "A River People Await an Amazon Dam")


But these projects all involved point-to-point electricity delivery. Some engineers began to envision the potential of branching out HVDC into "supergrids." Far-flung arrays of wind farms and solar installations could be tied together in giant networks. Because of its stability and low losses, HVDC could balance out the natural fluctuations in renewable energy in a way that AC never could. That could dramatically reduce the need for the constant base-load power of large coal or nuclear power plants.


The Need for a Breaker


Until now, however, such renewable energy solutions have faced at least one daunting obstacle. It's much trickier to regulate a DC grid, where current flows continuously, than it is with AC. "When you have a large grid and you have a lightning strike at one location, you need to be able to disconnect that section quickly and isolate the problem, or else bad things can happen to the rest of the grid," such as a catastrophic blackout, explains ABB chief technology officer Prith Banerjee. "But if you can disconnect quickly, the rest of the grid can go on working while you fix the problem." That's where HVDC hybrid breakers—basically, nondescript racks of circuitry inside a power station—could come in. The breaker combines a series of mechanical and electronic circuit-breaking devices, which redirect a surge in current and then shut it off.  ABB says the unit is capable of stopping a surge equivalent to the output of a one-gigawatt power plant, the sort that might provide power to 1 million U.S. homes or 2 million European homes, in significantly less time than the blink of an eye.


While ABB's new breaker still must be tested in actual power plants before it is deemed dependable enough for wide use, independent experts say it seems to represent an advance over previous efforts. (Siemens, an ABB competitor, reportedly also has been working to develop an advanced HVDC breaker.)


"I think this hybrid approach is a very good approach," says Narain Hingorani, a power-transmission researcher and consultant who is a fellow with the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. "There are other ways of doing the same thing, but they don't exist right now, and they may be more expensive."


Hingorani thinks the hybrid HVDC breakers could play an important role in building sprawling HVDC grids that could realize the potential of renewable energy sources. HVDC cables could be laid along the ocean floor to transmit electricity from floating wind farms that are dozens of mile offshore, far out of sight of coastal residents. HVDC lines equipped with hybrid breakers also would be much cheaper to bury than AC, because they require less insulation, Hingorani says.


For wind farms and solar installations in the Midwest and Rocky Mountain regions, HVDC cables could be run underground in environmentally sensitive areas, to avoid cluttering the landscape with transmission towers and overhead lines. "So far, we've been going after the low-hanging fruit, building them in places where it's easy to connect to the grid," he explains. "There are other places where you can get a lot of wind, but where it's going to take years to get permits for overhead lines—if you can get them at all—because the public is against it."


In other words, whether due to public preference to keep coal plants out of sight, or a desire to harness the force of remote offshore or mountain wind power, society is still seeking the least obtrusive way to deliver electricity long distances. That means that for the same reason Edison lost the War of the Currents at the end of the 19th century, his DC current may gain its opportunity (thanks to technological advances) to serve as the backbone of a cleaner 21st-century grid. (See related story: "The 21st Century Grid: Can we fix the infrastructure that powers our lives?")


This story is part of a special series that explores energy issues. For more, visit The Great Energy Challenge.


Read More..

Deadly, or Just Misused? Feds Sue Nap Nanny













The Consumer Product Safety Commission is taking action against the makers of a portable baby recliner called the Nap Nanny after five infant deaths linked to the product.


The commission filed a complaint Wednesday to force the manufacturer, Baby Matters LLC, to pull its product off store shelves and offer full refunds to their customers. In addition to the five deaths, the commission says there have been 70 complaints about children falling out of the Nap Nanny.


The commission says normally it can work things out with manufacturers to voluntarily recall a dangerous product, but for five months the makers of Nap Nanny have defiantly refused to pull its product or offer refunds.


"We believe it is a hazardous product and we are concerned about the safety of the children that are in there," Consumer Product Safety Commission spokesman Alex Flip told ABC News.


Baby Matters LLC describes the Nap Nanny as an infant recliner designed to increase the baby's comfort.


"We had to take action because of the number of incidences, and that is why we have filed this complaint against the company. They would not agree to a voluntary recall," Flip said.


The Nap Nanny was invented by a Philadelphia sportscaster and mother Leslie Gudel. She came up with the idea after learning her daughter would only fall asleep in the car seat.








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In a statement posted on Nap Nanny's website, Gudel said she is heartbroken for the families who have lost a child, but says the victims' parents misused her product by either not strapping the baby in or placing the device on a table or in a crib.


Some of the cases involved recliners that were placed in a crib, which the company has urged parents not to do.


"We do not believe the complaint has merit and stand behind the safety of our product when used as instructed," Gudel wrote in the statement. "The Nap Nanny should be placed on the floor with the harness secured."


Gudel says that the ongoing battle with the CPSC has cost her company so much money that it was forced to close last month.


"Another small business is gone. Twenty-two Americans are out of work between Nap Nanny and our supplier. This doesn't take into account the financial impact our closure has had on our other U.S. suppliers," Gudel wrote.


The first infant death was reported in 2010, which caused Nap Nanny to recall the product that same year and raise the sides of the recliner. The manufacturer also posted warnings and made an instructional video for parents.


According to the complaint, in April 2010, a six-month old died when she suffocated while using the Generation Two Nap Nanny. The infant was not secured in the harness and the medical examiner ruled the cause of death was positional asphyxia.


In July 2010, a four-month old died when she suffocated between a Generation Two Nap Nanny and the bumper in her crib. This time, the infant was secured in the harness but it failed to adequately restrain her in the recliner.


Still, the maker of the Nap Nanny stands by their product and says they have gone to "great lengths to make the safest product possible."


"No infant using the Nap Nanny properly has ever suffered an injury requiring medical attention," Gudel said in the statement.


Some 5,000 Nap Nanny Generation One and 50,000 Generation Two models were sold between 2009 and early 2012. About 100,000 Chill models have been sold since January 2011, reports The Associated Press.



Read More..

Dying aspen trees sound alarm for world's forests









































They say what doesn't kill you makes you stronger, but that's not true for the US's iconic aspen trees.












They appeared to survive a severe drought between 2000 and 2003, but it is now clear that it fundamentally weakened them. If the same is true for other tree species, climate change may be pushing many forests perilously close to a tipping point.












Ever since the drought in western North America, aspen trees have been dying at an alarming rate, a phenomenon now known as sudden aspen decline. In some places, nearly a fifth of the trees – one of the main species in western US forests – have died.












Earlier this year, William Anderegg of Stanford University in California and his colleagues showed that the trees were dying mainly from water stress (PNAS, doi.org/fgfbsk). But it was unclear why they were still dying years after the drought had ended.











Air bubble intrusion













To find out, the team looked at the xylem, or water-conducting pipes, of declining aspen trees in Colorado. As trees lose water through their leaves, they suck up more through their roots. The drier the tree, the harder it must suck, but if it sucks too hard, air bubbles can creep into the xylem, interrupting water flow.












When Anderegg experimentally induced such cavitation in aspen twigs, he found that it developed more readily in those that had been through the drought, whether apparently healthy or dying. "There seems to have been some damage that would leave them more vulnerable to future water stress," says Anderegg.












Some evidence suggests that the stress of previous cavitation during the drought may have cracked the seams where xylem tubes connect, making it easier for air to creep in – and this so-called "cavitation fatigue" is still there nearly a decade later.











Tipping point













This means prior drought stress may make trees more likely to die from a later drought, says Anderegg. Since much of the world will experience more severe droughts as climate changes, researchers will need to take this into account when trying to predict the fate of the world's forests. "Accounting for history is going to be pretty key," says Anderegg.











This could be very bad news for forests. A recent study showed 70 per cent of tree species in 81 forest sites worldwide, from moist forests to arid ones, are already close to their threshold for drought-induced cavitation.













If every severe drought lowers this threshold, many of these species might be pushed past the tipping point to mortality. "Our forests are potentially going to change a lot," says that study's co-author John Sperry at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.












Journal reference: Global Change Biology, DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12100


















































If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.




































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Football: West Ham recommended for Olympic Stadium move






LONDON: West Ham United took an important step towards moving into London's Olympic Stadium after being granted 'first bidder' status by the London Legacy Development Corporation (LLDC) on Wednesday.

The Premier League team are competing with third-tier football club Leyton Orient, a football business college and a Formula One racing group to become permanent tenants of the east London arena.

"We had four good bids, as everybody knows. The bid that has been ranked top is West Ham United. I am very pleased about that," said LLDC chairman and London Mayor Boris Johnson.

"It will, if it goes through, mean a football legacy for the stadium but there is still a lot of negotiation to go on between the LLDC and West Ham United about the terms of the deal."

The LLDC board voted unanimously to make West Ham their first choice to occupy the arena.

West Ham's preferred bidder status does not involve the signing of any contracts but it puts the club in pole position to secure the 99-year lease on the stadium.

"In selecting West Ham United, the LLDC have secured a long-term viable financial future for the (Olympic) Park," said West Ham vice-chairman Karren Brady.

"On behalf of West Ham United, I feel privileged to have been granted the responsibility to play a key part in delivering a true Games legacy.

"We are now committed to working closely with our new partners and stakeholders in the Stadium to successfully conclude our discussions and bring our collective ambitions to fruition."

The Olympic Stadium, which cost £486 million ($782.7 million, 598.7 million euros) to construct, has been vacant since the end of the Paralympics in September.

Before West Ham could move in, the stadium would have to be converted into a football ground with retractable or moveable seating over the running track.

As part of a pre-existing legacy agreement, the stadium must continue to be used as an athletics venue.

Any future tenants would therefore have to share the ground with UK Athletics, while the 2017 World Athletics Championships are scheduled to take place at the stadium.

A final agreement would also be dependent on the new tenants securing funding for adjustments to the stadium, gaining planning permission and obtaining approval from the appropriate national governing bodies.

The LLDC, meanwhile, will be keen to make sure that taxpayer investment in the initial construction of the venue is protected so that any future benefits will be equally shared between investors.

"There is no deal-breaker as such," said Johnson.

"It is just a question of making sure that an asset, which is a public asset and something that taxpayers put half a billion pounds into, that the value of that is properly reflected in the commercial deal that is now being done with a private sector entity.

"People will understand that my job is to get the best possible deal for the taxpayer."

The LLDC confirmed earlier this month that the stadium will not re-open until 2015 at the earliest.

West Ham hope that leaving their current 35,000-capacity Upton Park home for the much larger Olympic Stadium would enable them to compete with the leading clubs in the Premier League.

-AFP/ac



Read More..

Facebook has 350 apps with 1M+ monthly active users each


Facebook's app world is getting pretty big.

The social networking giant today says there are now more than 350 apps on its Web site, with more than 1 million monthly active users each.

On the mobile side, nearly 200,000 iPhone and
Android apps are integrated with Facebook, including nine of the top 10 grossing iPhone apps. Additionally, more than 45 percent of the top 400 grossing iOS apps use the Facebook SDK.

Facebook, which is at the LeWeb conference this week in Paris, also revealed that Paris has become one of the top locations for timeline app development. The city of lights falls behind only San Francisco in terms of Open Graph submissions.

Read More..