Two local entrepreneurs win food-products contest

Sometimes, all it takes is a little push — a bit of advice, some words of encouragement — to help a business grow.
For the last six years, the Center for Innovative Food Technology has been giving a push to entrepreneurs and small businessmen by way of its annual Food Product Development Contest, which seeks to give a helping hand to people in the region who want to start marketing and selling their food products.
Last week, two winners were named for this year’s contest: Anthony Brubaker of Cygnet, Ohio, for his Reverend T’s BBQ Sauce, and David LaRoe of Grand Rapids, Ohio, for his LaRoe’s House Poppy Seed Dressing.
Both winners will receive practical and technical advice from the experts at the center, ranging from the ins and outs of business planning to everything they need to know about creating labels and testing for shelf stability. In addition, they will be able to make their products at the Northwest Ohio Cooperative Kitchen near Bowling Green, a commercially licensed professional kitchen with the equipment needed to process, make, and bottle food products.
Mr. LaRoe said the assistance offered “give[s] the entrepreneur the chance to flourish.”
Mr. LaRoe, 60, opened LaRoe’s Restaurant in Grand Rapids 36 years ago, and he estimated he has been serving the poppy seed dressing there for 35 of those years.
“People kept asking me, ‘Can I take some home? I can’t find anything like it in stores,’” he said.
The restaurant would give out small samples of the dressing in a to-go cup to patrons who would ask, but after becoming familiar with both the center and the cooperative kitchen, he decided to enter the contest.
Eventually, he said, “I would like to see us create a sister company to the restaurant where we could employ local people and really go to the market with it. Not even just regional. I think it could be a great small business, I really do.”
But first, there are obstacles to overcome. One of the biggest problems with selling salad dressings is that the ingredients tend to separate in the bottles: the vinegar stays on the bottom, the oil rests on top of that, and the poppy seeds float on top of it all. When they make it at the restaurant, they use high-speed blenders that emulsify the ingredients so they all stay blended together.
But mass producing the dressing will require large vats and industrial blenders, and the blenders Mr. LaRoe has seen so far do not move fast enough to create a permanent emulsion.
He said he has been assured by everyone at the organizations that they will be able to help him create a dressing that stays mixed.
For Mr. Brubaker, the road to winning the contest began with a passion rather than a profession.
For the past several years, he has been serving barbecue to the Bowling Green State University football team the day before they begin their punishing two-a-day workouts. The service has grown into what he hopes has become a BGSU tradition.
Apparently, it goes over well. “A kid from the Bowling Green football team said, “Man, you’ve got to sell this,’” he said.
He has the professional chops to do it. Now 42, he is a veteran of Operation Desert Shield and Operation Desert Storm — the first war in Iraq. While he was still in the military, he went to the prestigious culinary school at Johnston & Wales University. After graduation, he worked at a series of restaurants in Virginia before returning to Ohio with his new bride.
He now works as a property manager in Findlay, but cooking is still in his blood.
“With the past several years, I really developed a passion for low and slow hickory pit barbecue. I wanted to develop a sauce that suited my likes and desires, which was a bold barbecue sauce with understated sweetness. It’s not very sweet at all.
“It’s like a trip from Kansas City to Texas. It starts out with the tomato base of a Kansas City barbecue sauce. Then you travel down to Memphis, where you pick up a little bit of the tang of the Memphis sauce, with the understated sweetness that Memphis loves. Then you finish off your journey with the big, grand spices of Tex-Mex barbecue: cumin and garlic and coffee and apple cider vinegar,” he said.
That combination became the basis for Reverend T’s BBQ Sauce — the T is for Tony, his nickname, and the Reverend is because he is an ordained minister and an associate pastor of the non-denominational Basic Truth Church, near Cygnet.
And maybe some day he will become a major producer of barbecue sauce.

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UK: Agricultural Technologies Strategy aims to make Britain world leader in food and farm science


Breakthroughs in nutrition, informatics, satellite imaging, remote sensing, meteorology and precision farming mean the agriculture sector is one of the world’s fastest growing sectors.
The Agricultural Technologies Strategy, launched today, includes a £160 million government investment in developing cutting edge technologies, and taking innovative products such as cancer-fighting broccoli from the field to the shopping aisle.
Industry is also expected to invest heavily in the strategy which will transform farming in the UK, using the latest technologies to ensure the process is as productive as possible whilst reducing environmental impact and resource use.
With the demand for food rising rapidly worldwide, the strategy also aims to make the UK a world leader in addressing global food security issues.
Agri-tech is a well-established and important UK sector. The entire agri-food supply chain, from agriculture to final retailing and catering, is estimated to contribute £96billion to the economy and employ 3.8million people.
Universities and Science Minister David Willetts said: “Some of the biggest brands in farming and food are based in the UK. We have a world class science and research community and our institutes and universities are at the forefront of agricultural research.
“To get ahead in the global race, this strategy sets out how we can ensure that we turn our world-beating agricultural science and research into world-beating products and services.”
This Agricultural Technologies Strategy follows the recent plans for automotive, construction, aerospace and other key sectors to secure sustainable future growth in the economy.
Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Minister for Science Lord De Mauley said: “We face a global challenge to feed the rapidly increasing population in a way which is affordable and sustainable.
“We are investing in technologies that will enable British farmers to meet these challenges and take advantage of the growing demand in export markets for British food.”
To take advantage of agriculture’s opportunities and drive growth the Agricultural Technologies Strategy sets out a range of key actions, including:

•a £90 million government investment in world class Centres for Agricultural Innovation with additional investment from industry. The centres will support the wide-scale adoption of innovation and technology across key sectors, technologies and skills in the food and farming supply chain. This includes up to £10 million for a Centre for Agricultural Informatics and Metrics of Sustainability which will use data from farms, laboratories and retailers to drive innovation

•creating a £70 million Agri-Tech Catalyst to help new agricultural technologies bridge the so called ‘valley of death’ between the lab and the marketplace. Co-funded with industry, the catalyst will specifically support small and medium sized enterprises. The investment includes £10 million to support the transfer of technology and new products to developing countries

•the creation of an industry Leadership Council to unify the agriculture technology sector and make the UK more internationally competitive

•the recruitment of a new UKTI agri-tech team to boost exports and overseas investment in the UK’s agricultural technologies
In addition also announced today:

•£30 million for four agri-science research and innovation campuses by Biotechnolocy and Biological Sciences Research Council

•a multi million pound scientific research partnership between Rothamsted and Syngenta to increase wheat productivity

A new Leadership Council will bring together representatives from the diverse agriculture sector, including food and farming production, industry, science and research, and government.

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Intel Next Generation Processor for Smartphone and Tablets


Intel’s next generation Atom processors with new CPU architecture will be up to three times faster and five times more power efficient than its predecessor chips, and are up in sleeves to break away the common notion that ARM processors are more power efficient- Intel said in a web cast organized for investors and media, reports Times Of India.

 The CPU architecture, code named as ‘Silvermont’ will be incorporated in Smartphones, tablets, PCs and servers starting this year and would form the basis for its next-generation Atom microprocessors called Bay Trail and Merrifield.

While Bay Trail, is to appear in tablets by end of the year, Merrifield would be available inside Smartphones in the first quarter of 2014. They will support the Android and Microsoft operating systems.

Currently ARM makes the core technology that is used by companies like Qualcomm, Nvidia, MediaTek, Apple and Samsung to create microprocessors for phones and tablets. Though Intel’s Atom processors which have performance that is comparable to ARM-based chips, they seem to suffer from the lack of interest from companies that make phones and tablets.

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Cookies in Servlets


Cookies are small bits of textual information that a Web server sends to a browser and that the browser later returns unchanged when visiting the same Web site or domain. The server read information it sent the client previously. The site can provide visitors with a number of conveniences such as presenting the site the
way the visitor previously customized it or letting identifiable visitors in without their having to reenter a password.


Benefits of Cookies
  1. Identifying a user during an e-commerce session
  2. Remembering usernames and passwords
  3. Customizing sites
  4. Focusing advertising
Sending Cookies to the Client

1. Creating a Cookie object. You call the Cookie constructor with a cookie name and a cookie value, both of which are strings.

2. Setting the maximum age. If you want the browser to store the cookie on disk instead of just keeping it in memory, you use setMaxAge to specify how long (in seconds) the cookie should be  valid.

3. Placing the Cookie into the HTTP response headers. You use response.addCookie to accomplish this. If you forget this step, no cookie is sent to the browser


Using Cookies to Detect  First-Time Visitors-Example

import java.io.*;
import javax.servlet.*;
import javax.servlet.http.*;
/** Servlet that says "Welcome aboard" to first-time
 *  visitors and "Welcome back" to repeat visitors.
 *  Also see RepeatVisitor2 for variation that uses
 *  cookie utilities from later in this chapter.
 */
public class RepeatVisitor extends HttpServlet {
  public void doGet(HttpServletRequest request,
                    HttpServletResponse response)
      throws ServletException, IOException {
    boolean newbie = true;
    Cookie[] cookies = request.getCookies();
    if (cookies != null) {
      for(int i=0; i
        Cookie c = cookies[i];
        if ((c.getName().equals("repeatVisitor")) &&
            // Could omit test and treat cookie name as a flag
            (c.getValue().equals("yes"))) {
          newbie = false;
          break;
        }
      }
    }
    String title;
    if (newbie) {
      Cookie returnVisitorCookie =
        new Cookie("repeatVisitor", "yes");
      returnVisitorCookie.setMaxAge(60*60*24*365); // 1 year
      response.addCookie(returnVisitorCookie);
      title = "Welcome Aboard";
    } else {
      title = "Welcome Back";
    }
    response.setContentType("text/html");
    PrintWriter out = response.getWriter();
    String docType = "
      "Transitional//EN\">\n";
 out.println(docType + "\n" + title + "\n" );
  }
}

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Microsoft's operating system nicknamed Windows Blue


The tweaked version of Microsoft's operating system nicknamed Windows Blue will be previewed on June 26 and will be a free update for users as Windows 8.1. The update comes amid a lukewarm reception for Windows 8, an operating system released last year to help the software giant transition from personal computers to tablets and other mobile devices.
The move is part of a goal "of delivering continual updates to create a richer experience for Windows customers," a Microsoft blog post said.

Microsoft's Brandon LeBlanc said a public preview of Windows 8.1 will be available starting on June 26, timed with the Microsoft developer conference in San Francisco. Microsoft said recently it had sold than 100 million licenses for Windows 8 but that the update was planned after listening to customers. Some analysts say Microsoft was forced to act because of slow adoption of Windows 8, which made some radical changes to the design of the desktop. 
With Windows 8, Microsoft was trying to create a system that could be used on mobile touch screen devices while also serving the users of traditional PCs. Microsoft launched Windows 8 last October, revamping its flagship system in an effort to make inroads in the fast-growing mobile segment. At the same time, it launched its Surface tablet computer.

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The Microsoft Surface Tablet


The Microsoft Surface tablet may set a new standard for the tablet industry. Here’s a first look at the new device. The Surface prototype has a 10.6 inch display, framed by a black, beveled chassis made of "vapor-deposited magnesium.” A kickstand folds out from the back of the Surface, a simple innovation that has eluded other tablet makers until now. The Surface even comes with a touch sensitive keyboard that doubles as a display cover, lamping firmly to the display's edges with magnetic fasteners. Two versions of Surf ace will be produced. One will run Windows RT on an ARM processor, while the other will run Windows 8 Pro on an Intel processor. The latter is intended for users who want to run legacy Windows apps; it will include a stylus, too. The RT version of Surface will support 32 or 64 GB of SSD storage, while the Windows 8 Pro version will support 64 or 128 GB. Surface tablets with Windows RT will include a microSD slot, USB 2.0, and a Micro HD port. The Pro versions will have a microSD card slot, USB 3.0, and Min i Display Port. RT devices will weigh about 1.5 pounds and be about 0.36 inches thick.

Surface Pro will weigh closer to two pounds and will be half an inch thick. So what's the difference between Windows RT and Windows 8? They're actually two different worlds. Only software written specifically for Windows RT will run on Surface and other RT platforms. Microsoft calls these "Metro style apps" and will include special versions of Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, as well as apps for a variety of other common tas ks in Windows RT. Third party developers will also supply apps through the Windows Store, similar to the Apple Store, Amazon App Store, and Google Play ecosystems. The Windows software that you're using on your desktop or laptop PC will not run on Windows RT. You'll have to wait for an RT version of your favorite Windows software packages, do without, or go with the more expensive version of the Surface that runs Windows 8 Pro. Two types of cover/keyboards will be available for Surface. The Touch Cover's keys have no "give" while the Type Cover's keys give slightly. The Type Cover is aimed at touch typists. Microsoft says these keyboards (which also include a trackpad) will allow you to type twice as fast as you would on a glass surface. 
Surface with Windows RT will be available around October, in time for the holiday shopping season, and the business oriented Windows 8 Pro version will arrive  sometime in January .A price tag somewhere in the range of $500 to $600 is anticipated . The Windows 8 Pro version wil l be priced to be competitive with ultrabooks at around $1000. While the Surface seemed to perform well over WiFi, mobile connectivity specs were conspicuously missing from the Surface announcement. 
However, the Surface has dual wifi antennas for "the best possible wifi performance." The company was also mum about battery life. Microsoft is running the risk of alienating its hardware partners by releasing hardware of its own. Possibly, Microsoft has not been entirely happy with the tablets its partners have made, and is trying to show them how it should be done. But they're also running the risk of undermining the ultrabook market, while at the same time, courting them to develop hardware to run their flagship Windows 8 software. Microsoft’s track record in hardware has been spotty. The Xbox is a home run with consumers, but the Zune was a foul ball. Will Surface be a grand slam, providing serious compet it ion for the iPad, Kindle Fire and other Android tablets currently on the market.  

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Yahoo Shuts Down Alta Vista, The Search Engine Relic


Alta Vista, which once ruled the roost as search engine in late 90s, has been put to rest on Monday by Yahoo!. It will join the other dead search engines like Kozmo.com and Ask Jeeves, reports AP.
  
AltaVista was introduced in 1995 by Massachusetts-based company CMGI, three years before Google was founded, and was a very popular search engine. However with the advent of Google, it lost its prominence and later was purchased by Yahoo!, who retained the brand and showed AltaVista searches results from its own search engine, along with offering a bevy of online services instead of sticking solely with the search. By the time the site reversed the course, it was too late. Its finances were sinking and Google was on the rise.

 Last month, Yahoo, had expressed its decision to shut down the relic search engine on its Tumblr page.

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