Saturday, December 31, 2011

Apple ricorrer? in appello contro la multa inflitta dall?Antitrust

Notizia flash per informarvi che, dopo la decisione dell?Antitrust di multare Apple per una somma pari a 900.000 euro, i legali dell?azienda di Cupertino fanno sapere che ricorreranno in appello per difendere l?interesse della societ? californiana.

Come vi avevamo spiegato nell?articolo di qualche giorno fa, secondo l?autorit? italiana Apple avrebbe mancato di informare i clienti dei punti vendita reali e virtuali (Apple Store, apple.com e store.apple.com) che il codice di consumo prevede due anni di assistenza gratuita sui prodotti acquistati e non solo uno, come abitualmente veniva comunicato.

Questa grave mancanza non era dettata dalla dimenticanza dell?operatore di turno ma era legata ad un piano strategico per incoraggiare i clienti ad acquistare ?AppleCare Protection Plan?, un?estensione a pagamento dell?assistenza che invece avrebbe dovuto gi? essere inclusa e gratuita.

I portavoce Apple non hanno rilasciato particolari commenti riguardo la vicenda, limitandosi a riferire che hanno dato compito ai legali della societ? di ricorrere in appello, respingendo ogni accusa.

Via | The Register

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ispaziomac/~3/Br-EGtKsF0s/apple-ricorrera-in-appello-contro-la-multa-inflitta-dallantitrust

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Gov't to pay family $17.8M for California military jet crash

SAN DIEGO -- A federal judge on Wednesday ordered the U.S. government to pay $17.8 million to a family that lost four members when a Marine Corps fighter jet crashed into their San Diego home in 2008.

U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Miller's ruling came after a nonjury trial between the Department of Justice and the family, who sought $56 million for emotional and monetary loss. The Marine Corps blamed the crash on a mechanical failure and human errors.

The case was unique in that the government admitted liability but disputed how much should be paid to Don Yoon and his extended family. Government lawyers had put economic losses at about $1 million but left it up to Miller to decide how much should be paid for the emotional loss.

Don Yoon lost his 36-year-old wife, Youngmi Lee Yoon; his 15-month-old daughter, Grace; his 2-month-old daughter, Rachel; and his 59-year-old mother-in-law, Seokim Kim Lee, who was visiting from Korea to help her eldest daughter take care of their children.

The judge said the deaths of the two girls deprived Yoon of "the comfort, companionship, society and love a young child is capable of providing to a new parent and, then, in later life. By all accounts, the Yoon girls would have been raised with traditional cultural and family values emphasizing love and devotion to parents and family."

He ordered Yoon to be awarded nearly $10 million, and his father-in-law to be given nearly $4 million. The rest should go to the father-in-law's three adult children for the loss of their mother, Seokim Kim Lee.

Miller called her an extraordinary woman after hearing the testimonies of her husband and children, who flew in from Korea to testify at the trial.

The family's attorney, Brian Panish, said he found the amount "fair and just." Department of Justice attorneys could not be immediately reached for comment.

The Marine Corps has said the plane suffered a mechanical failure but a series of bad decisions led the pilot - a student - to bypass a potentially safe landing at a coastal Navy base after his engine failed on Dec. 8, 2008. Low oil pressure killed the jet's first engine, and the second died when fuel stopped flowing from the tank.

The military disciplined 13 members of the Marines and the Navy for the errors. The pilot ejected and told investigators he screamed in horror as he watched the jet plow into the neighborhood, incinerating two homes.

Yoon broke down crying throughout his testimony, which came three years to the day when he buried his wife and baby girls in the same casket. Yoon told the judge he only looks forward to the day when he can join them again.

"The family is happy that this part of the process is over, but they've lost so much that they will never get back," Panish said.

Source: http://www.macon.com/2011/12/28/1841389/govt-to-pay-family-178m-for-military.html

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Bahrain to host Saudi prince's news network

(AP) ? Bahrain has been picked to host the headquarters for Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal's new international Arabic news network despite months of unrest, according to the tiny Gulf kingdom's media oversight authority.

Alwaleed's channel, dubbed Alarab, will be based in the Bahraini capital Manama's new Media City office complex, Sheik Fawaz bin Mohammed Al-Khalifa, a member of the Bahraini royal family and head of the country's Information Affairs Authority, said in a statement late Tuesday.

The network is expected to be launched next December with an initial staff of about 300 people, according to the Bahraini statement.

Alwaleed's office has not itself said where the channel will be based.

Jamal Khashoggi, the Saudi journalist hired to lead the network, said by email Wednesday he expects the deal to be finalized later in the day.

The channel aims to focus "on the important shifts taking place across the Arab world, with an emphasis on freedom of speech and freedom of press," Alwaleed said in September.

The new channel will compete against older pan-Arab news networks bankrolled by wealthy Gulf backers, including Qatar's Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiya, which is funded by Saudi investors but based in Dubai.

Alwaleed has signed a deal with business news service Bloomberg LP to provide content for Alarab. That could potentially put it in competition with Dubai-based business news channel CNBC Arabiya as well.

The Saudi prince, through the Kingdom Holding Co. investment firm he controls, has a major stakes in Citigroup Inc., Apple Inc. and Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.

He and the investment company last week invested a combined $300 million into microblogging site Twitter, which played a key role in conveying developments during this year's Arab Spring uprisings.

The senior management of Alwaleed's Rotana entertainment television division is also expected to move to Bahrain as part of the deal, according to the IAA. Rotana runs film and music video channels across the Middle East that draw on the company's extensive Arabic film and music catalogs.

Bahrain has been shaken by 10 months of large-scale protests, and clashes between security forces loyal to the Sunni monarchy and opposition groups led by the country's majority Shiites.

The kingdom's leadership is closely allied to Saudi Arabia, which looms large in Bahrain's domestic politics and provides vital tourist dollars. Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states sent security forces into Bahrain at the invitation of the king to help put down the protests in March.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-28-ML-Bahrain-Saudi-Network/id-e565cc4799834ebfae0a96587e4e28f8

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How to File an Auto Insurance Claim - NYTimes.com

December 28, 2011, 11:04 am By ANN CARRNS

The Consumer Federation of America estimates that more than 325,000 auto accidents will occur during this year?s holiday travel period, resulting in more than 200,000 claims filed with the nation?s insurance companies.

To help drivers navigate the claims process, and avoid getting underpaid, the federation has published a new guide, ?Navigating the Auto Claims? Maze: Getting the Settlement You Deserve.?

The guide and an accompanying claims checklist were written by Mark Romano, the federation?s director of insurance claims projects and a former insurance industry professional.

Often, he said, people traveling during the holidays are on unfamiliar roads, which contributes to accidents. The new guide offers tips for filing a claim with the other driver?s insurance company if you aren?t at fault and how to seek help from regulators if you?re unsatisfied with your treatment.

?People tend to buy an insurance policy and then stick it in a drawer and never look at it?until something happens,? said Mr. Romano. ?So we?re trying to educate people in advance.?

Have you had difficulty filing an auto claim after an accident? Tell us about your experience.

Source: http://bucks.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/28/how-to-file-an-auto-insurance-claim/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Inside border city that's deadlier than Afghanistan

In March, municipal police officers detained the two brothers of Armida Vazquez and whisked them away in patrol cars.

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Vazquez and her mother searched for Dante and Juan Carlos, cell phone shop workers in their mid-20s, and checked with the local and federal police here, to no avail. Nineteen days later, the strangled bodies of the brothers were found on the outskirts of this notoriously violent city. Witness testimony and other evidence led to three policemen, now in jail awaiting trial.

But the police pushed back. Policemen in civilian clothes, Vazquez says, approached her mother outside church and told her to stop making trouble. When Vazquez made a statement against the suspects last month, she says other policemen and relatives of the officers threatened her outside the courthouse.

Terrified, 20 members of the Vazquez family packed their bags and fled across the U.S. border to El Paso, Texas, a short trip into a world of gleaming shopping malls, well-kept highways and safe neighborhoods.

"We left all we had in Juarez, our house, everything," said a pregnant Vazquez, in the tiny apartment she and her three children now share with a sister in El Paso.

Tens of thousands more people like her have abandoned Ciudad Juarez, a city wrecked by Mexico's drug violence. Although official figures vary, the city this month likely surpassed 10,000 homicides in the past four years. That's more than Afghanistan's civilian casualties in the same period and more than double the number of U.S. troops killed in the entire Iraq war.

Story: Drug violence creeps into Mexico City

The violence here, as across the nation, fundamentally stems from a turf war among drug cartels. U.S. and Mexican officials say the battle in Ciudad Juarez pits the Sinaloa cartel, run by Mexico's most wanted man, Joaquin "Shorty" Guzman, against the Juarez cartel, with deep ties along Mexico's northern border.

But the Vazquez family's nightmare underscores another challenge in Mexico's war on drugs: the government's own warriors.

Business owners, security experts and ordinary residents told Reuters that official corruption at all levels of the security forces has fanned violence in the city, with local and federal police and soldiers complicit in, or actually committing, many of the murders.

The human rights commission of the local state of Chihuahua registered 1,250 complaints of torture, forced disappearances and extrajudicial executions by the army during its two-year deployment in Ciudad Juarez. It counts 400 similar grievances against the federal police who moved in when the soldiers were pulled out. These numbers document only 20 percent of the violations taking place, it estimates.

When President Felipe Calderon launched his war on drug cartels in late 2006, he meant it quite literally. He sent security forces to many parts of the country to try to put powerful drug gangs on the defensive. The nation's armed forces, in particular, were seen as a relatively clean player that would change the game.

Story: US mom, 2 daughters killed in Mexico attacks

The drug warriors have failed at every level of government in places like Ciudad Juarez. Before the army and federal police rolled into the city, many of the municipal and state police were paid operators for the Juarez cartel, government officials have conceded, directly involved in drug trafficking, kidnappings and murder. It has now come full circle: The army left Juarez in the face of a popular backlash, and the local police force is back in charge of the city's security, struggling to clean up its reputation.

While the problem is extreme in Ciudad Juarez, deep corruption inside the security forces is a problem across Mexico, a major weak spot in Calderon's campaign. It hinders efforts to end the violence that has killed more than 45,000 people around the country in the past five years.

Video: Inside Mexico?s Drug War, Part 1 (on this page)

Public outrage over the deaths is bleeding into debates ahead of next year's presidential election, with Calderon's strategy widely criticized and his conservative ruling party trailing in opinion polls.

In a speech this month, Calderon explained what he believes has happened. He said the crisis began in the 1990s when Mexican traffickers transporting Colombian cocaine north to consumers in the United States began receiving payment in kind. They found a ripe market among Mexicans and began selling drugs at home, which swelled the army of criminals and forced them to fight one another for territorial control.

"They no longer employ tens or hundreds of people, but thousands of people, thousands, extending their networks into areas that did not exist before," Calderon said. He said they get into other criminal activities, bribe authorities to look the other way and, if unchecked, ultimately create a "symbiosis where crime and security institutions are one and the same."

In Ciudad Juarez, many people believe Calderon's campaign was poorly designed and caused unnecessary suffering.

There were only 300 murders here in 2007, but when the violence arrived in early 2008 it rolled across the city with a vengeance. The government sent in 10,000 troops and federal police to try to quell the mayhem, but the deaths kept rising.

State officials counted 3,622 homicides in 2010, making Ciudad Juarez the city with the highest murder rate in the world at 272 per 100,000 residents. Authorities cite a drop in killings this year as a sign of success, but the murder rate is still more than six times higher than it was in 2007.

"As president, you should know what you are, and are not, capable of and not steer the country into the tragic situation we are in now," said Hugo Almada, an academic and psychotherapist who treats victims of violence in the city. "He calculated very badly."

Hit list
Ciudad Juarez was once a kind of Las Vegas during the U.S. Prohibition era of the 1920s and early 1930s, hosting American film stars and singers at its bars.

Named after Benito Juarez, a 19th-century president who in 1865 briefly took refuge here with his forces during the French invasion of Mexico, it is still scattered with dilapidated monuments that recall the fighting during the Mexican Revolution between 1910 and 1920. It later became famous for modern manufacturing industries that attracted workers from across the country and billions of dollars in foreign investment.

But it is now a shadow of its former self. The Autonomous University of Ciudad Juarez estimates 239,000 of the city's 1.3 million people have gone in the past four years. Nearly one in three of the businesses along the main boulevard is shuttered, often gutted by bands of looters who rip out copper wiring and the insulation in the walls.

Video: Inside the drug tunnels (on this page)

Some say the descent into chaos began on New Year's Day 2008 when a local cop turned up dead, riddled with bullets in his black Volkswagen Jetta. The killings continued, and later that month, an ominous hit list appeared on a monument honoring fallen policemen. Under a heading "for those who didn't believe," it named five recently murdered officers. Under "for those who continue not believing" were 17 more.

Most of the 17 were killed within the year, along with many others. Around 50 policemen had been killed by mid-year, and the murder rate in the city quintupled.

Experts believe many of the murdered policemen were working for "La Linea," or "The Line," the armed wing of the Juarez cartel, and were targeted by a rival gang, most likely the Sinaloa cartel.

The Juarez cartel is run by Vicente Carrillo, 49, a keen horseman who took charge in 1997 after his brother Amado died during plastic surgery in an attempt to change his appearance. Amado, the more flamboyant of the two, was known as "Lord of the Skies" for his prowess using a fleet of airplanes to ferry Colombian cocaine into Mexico.

The younger Carrillo now handles about a fifth of Mexico's $40 billion-a-year narcotics business, drug experts say, and has avoided capture for the past 13 years, in part by adeptly corrupting local officials.

"All our police forces are infiltrated. All of them, it's as simple as that," Chihuahua state's then-governor, Jose Reyes Baeza, said in 2008.

Junkyard murders
Along the bustling border, cars and mechanics are cheaper in Mexico than in the United States. Ciudad Juarez built up a busy auto parts business with around 600 junkyards, some legitimate and some chop shops for stolen cars.

Like others, the business has been ravaged by the cartels. Junkyard owners say the trouble started at the end of 2007, when a group of men contacted a leader of their business association demanding a collective protection fee. Fifteen days after he refused to pay, the first junkyard owner was kidnapped.

The group raised a complaint with the state police, said one leader of the junkyard industry. He says he found their reply menacing.

"Instead of getting a consoling response from them, the first commander said, 'I am not interested, I don't want to hear anything about it,'" he said. "And the second commander said, 'Well, when people start showing up wrapped in sheets and stuffed in boxes, you'll probably start paying attention'."

He interpreted it as a warning to just pay the gangs. "I left there really scared."

Since 2008, at least 30 junkyard owners have been kidnapped and some of them killed. More than three-quarters of the city's junkyard businessmen simply decided to shut down their shops, and most who stayed open have to pay regular protection money to the gangs, the leader said.

Send in the cavalry
Calderon sent 2,500 soldiers to Ciudad Juarez in March 2008, and more the following year. At first the crackdown was welcomed. People hoped the army would be less corrupt and less abusive than local authorities.

The army's first target was the police. Just one month after their arrival, soldiers arrested 21 police officers, stripping off their clothes, interrogating them and holding them for a day without charges. Some 400 police officers were fired after they failed federal background checks. Many others quit.

By mid-2008 there were fewer than 200 local police patrolling the streets per shift. Transit police were banned from carrying weapons, leaving them unprotected. Soldiers in charge of day-to-day security operations used the demoralized officers as chauffeurs, said Gustavo de la Rosa from the state human rights commission.

Accusations of torture and illegal detention against soldiers began to surface, and not even the harsh tactics had any impact on the surging homicide rate.

General Jorge Juarez, in charge of the mission in Ciudad Juarez and the rest of Chihuahua State at the time, told reporters they should stop writing about "one more death" and instead print that there was "one less criminal."

In a recent report, Human Rights Watch says army abuses are not unique to Ciudad Juarez but endemic across Mexico and that the government has failed to properly address most complaints.

Gerardo Baca filed one of them. He says his son Victor was just 21 when he was picked up by soldiers three years ago at a hot dog stand with a couple of friends. Victor has not been heard from since.

Video: Drug violence comes to Mexican resort (on this page)

Even after his friends were released claiming they were in custody with Victor, the army denies ever having held him. Baca goes every week to the morgue to scan records of unidentified bodies, hoping to find some characteristics matching his son. He has reported the case to every authority he can think of with no success.

"This is hell, we are living in a nightmare," Baca said in the small living room of his publicly subsidized home, pointing to pictures of Victor, one in a white cowboy hat, another in a plaid shirt. "I wouldn't wish this on anybody, not even the soldiers who detained my son."

The army did not respond to requests for information about specific cases for this article.

In his recent speech, President Calderon conceded the army has gone too far in some cases. "There have been excesses, that's true, unfortunately," he said. And we are very concerned and it's very serious. But believe me, my friends, that these cases, given the magnitude of the operations carried out, the arrests that are made daily, are the exception rather than the rule."

Video: Drug war leaves town in constant fear (on this page)

One former professional hitman says the abuses may have gone much deeper.

Interviewed by Reuters late last year, the hitman said he had worked with a group of 20 other paid assassins doing jobs for bosses he never met. He claimed his main contact was a former military officer, that he received training on a military base, and that he and other hitmen collaborated with soldiers.

"There are groups, paramilitary groups, that are the big ones in the army," said the man, who admitted to beheading and torturing his victims. Many times, he says, he did not know why he had been ordered to target the person he was killing.

"One time I saw the army wave through a checkpoint three vans filled with hitmen from Sinaloa with automatic weapons," he said. "They didn't wait in line, just gave a code, showed a paper and they let them through to do their work."

The army did not respond to questions about the claims, which couldn't be independently confirmed.

A spokesman for Calderon's government said in September that "there is no evidence that phenomenon of paramilitary groups exist."

Human Rights Watch found there were 921 investigations opened in the military justice system for abuses in Chihuahua between December 2006 and May 2011 ? more than any other state. Charges were brought in only two cases and no sentences were handed were down.

Rising disenchantment with the military siege sparked a series of public protests in Ciudad Juarez in late 2009. The army handed over control to the federal police in mid-2010, just as the violence was peaking.

A fightback
Once the federal police took charge, they went after the criminal gangs, arresting more than 400 suspected members of the Juarez and Sinaloa cartels along with over 5,000 other alleged criminals, breaking up kidnapping and extortion gangs.

Crime decreased, although the flow of narcotics was barely interrupted and the state human rights commission said complaints of corruption continued.

In what was dubbed "green zone," federal police set up checkpoints to patrol the main commercial strip of bars and discos near the border even after most businesses, squeezed by extortionists, had shut down or were set on fire. The intensive patrols were meant to encourage patrons to return to the area. They didn't work, in part because police were looking for bribes and potential customers were worried the police would be targets for criminals, making the area more dangerous.

Video: Drug flow from Mexico on the rise (on this page)

"People were not only afraid of the criminals but also of the police," said Federico Ziga, the head of the restaurant association.

The area is still largely abandoned. Places like the Sphinx, a once-popular nightclub shaped like a pyramid with a golden pharaoh's head on the roof, are up for rent.

In October, the federal police followed the army and left, handing command of the city's security back to the local authorities. Mayor Hector Murguia says he has beefed up the municipal police force to 2,600 officers, spending 47 percent of the city's budget on security.

He brought in a tough new police chief, a retired military man named Julian Leyzaola, last March. Praised by the socialite magazine "Quien" as one of Mexico's most influential people, Leyzaola is credited with bringing down crime rates in the violent border city of Tijuana, across from San Diego, Calif.

Leyzaola has said he helped purge the Tijuana force of corrupt and inefficient officers. Four local policemen in Tijuana say they were detained and tortured by Leyzaola, a charge he vehemently rejects. Leyzaola's office did not respond to requests for an interview for this article.

Mayor Murguia stands by the police chief. "I am not interested in these complaints, let them be pursued legally," the mayor said. "As far as I'm concerned he is showing results in Juarez and I think he is one of the best police commanders in this country."

Murguia, a member of the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, is in his second term as mayor.

During his latest election campaign, rival politicians, rights groups and drug trade experts accused Murguia of being in the pay of the Juarez cartel. He has never been charged and denies any wrongdoing.

Signs of life?
The government points to a drop in homicides, car thefts and armed robberies of businesses this year as a sign of success in Ciudad Juarez even as violent car-jackings rose.

Special agent Joseph Arabit at the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in El Paso said improved intelligence sharing between the U.S. and Mexico has helped the two governments make more arrests.

Factory jobs in the city's more than 300 assembly plants for export, or "maquilas," are slowly picking up again after a steep drop in 2008 and 2009 during the U.S. recession. Ziga of the restaurant association said customers are venturing out again, encouraged by relatively calmer streets. And the mayor said there was a good turnout for Mexico's independence day celebrations, a sharp contrast to last year when most were canceled due to fear of attacks.

"We are much more effective at capturing criminals," said Murguia. "We have been able to reduce the kidnapping rate to basically zero."

Snacks protection racket? 5 bodies found in Mexico

Moments after the interview with Murguia, 15 minutes from his office, reporters crowded around a red Nissan with the windows shot out that had been abandoned in the middle of the street, the keys still in the ignition. It was another "levanton," or "pick up," where the fate of the driver is unknown. It didn't merit a mention in the next day's local newspaper.

Minutes later, on the same street, police cars chased armed men who had tried to rob a carwash. After a shootout, three men were arrested. Panicked witnesses crashed their cars trying to escape the scene.

Another day this month, a day like many others, 13 people were killed. Among the dead were four dialysis patients and a paramedic gunned down in an ambulance.

Additional reporting by Patricia Giovine in El Paso.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45796913/ns/world_news-americas/

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Juhuhu! Imam twitter!

Hvala Samo! ;)Tukaj.

Tags: I absolutely love them

Source: http://tags.blog.siol.net/2011/12/27/juhuhu-imam-twitter/

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Intel's 32nm Medfield SoC specs and benchmarks leak

Medfield
Intel's Medfield may still be a ways from breaking into the smartphone and tablet market, but we're finally starting to get some concrete details on its specs and capabilities. VR-Zone got the nitty gritty on Chipzilla's first true SoC and it looks almost ready to run with the big dogs. A reference tablet, running at 1.6GHz with 1GB of RAM (which also packs Bluetooth, WiFi and FM radio) was put through some Android benchmarks and held it's own against a Tegra 2 and a Snapdragon MSM8260 -- which pulled a 7,500 and 8,000 in Caffeinemark 3, respectively. The admittedly higher clocked Atom scored an impressive 10,500, though power consumption on the pre-production chips was a bit higher than anticipated. At idle, the fledgling Medfield was sucking down 2.6W and spiking to 3.6W under load. Ultimately Intel hopes to cut those numbers to 2W at idle and 2.6W while pushing out HD video -- not far off from current-gen ARM SoC. Lets not forget though, benchmarks only tell part of the story -- we'll be waiting to see working hardware before declaring a victor.

Intel's 32nm Medfield SoC specs and benchmarks leak originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Dec 2011 16:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Netbook News  |  sourceVR-Zone  | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/L8vrZ9VKh6Q/

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Video: What will New Year bring GOP?

With the Iowa Republican caucuses just a week away, CNBC's John Harwood looks at the GOP field and the importance of getting a good jump out of the primary race gate.

Related Links:

TODAY.com home page

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/45786955/

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Alabama's tornado victims say its going to be a 'grateful, thankful' Christmas (slideshow, video)

PLEASANT GROVE -- In a year of tornadoes and destruction, Alabamians celebrate this Christmas thankful for the gifts that don't need shiny wrapping and are sometimes taken for granted, such as home and family.

"It's going to be a grateful, thankful Christmas," said retired teacher Mary Freeberg of Pleasant Grove, who has returned to her rebuilt home that had been destroyed in the April 27 tornado. "We're moving stuff in. We'll probably be doing that for a while. We're ready for Christmas."

Freeberg has a small, potted Christmas tree sitting on a countertop of her kitchen, decorated with lights and ornaments. She plans to keep track of how much it grows. "I'll measure it every year," she said. "It will be my little, special tree."

The house her late husband, Harold, built in 1960 was almost entirely gone after the tornado hit. She, her daughter, son-in-law and grandson hid in the basement and came up to see just part of a brick wall standing. A team of church volunteers led by Gorden Thomason of Oak Mountain Presbyterian Church rebuilt the house, working to save some of the original brick exterior.

"I've had miracle after miracle," she said. "That's what Christmas is all about -- miracles."

Dan Stucky and his son, Stephen, 18, live a few blocks away. The same team of church volunteers, called Locally Organized Volunteer Effort, built his new home. "It was a team of Methodists, Baptists and Presbyterians, all working together to pull this off," Thomason said.

Some leaders of the tornado relief effort have noticed an upturn in the spirit of Christmas this year.

"There's been a rise in an attitude of helping," said Tracy Hipps, executive director of Christian Service Mission, which coordinated more than 17,000 tornado relief volunteers and distributed more than $10 million in aid.

"The people's receptivity to help other people has been heightened," Hipp said. "There's a sense of, 'Do a little less for myself and more for other people.'"

Those helped have been appreciative, and say this Christmas may be the most meaningful one they've ever experienced.

Stucky, a disabled former machinist, suffers from diabetes and two years ago had part of his right foot amputated. While the Stuckys helped church volunteers in the construction of their house, Stephen fell off the roof and broke his right wrist. "It could have been worse," Stephen said.

"It's been a long hard summer," his father said.

The new house features a wood stove facing the front door, which is decorated right now with a Christmas wreath.

"We're not much for decorating," said Stephen Stucky, a senior at Pleasant Grove High School. "It took so long to build we're just anxious to get in."

The Stuckys haven't had time to move in furniture yet. In the bare kitchen, they recalled lying in a hallway as the house was blown away around them.

"One minute everything was fine," Dan Stucky said. "The next minute you don't own a toothbrush."

The new house is the best Christmas present he could have hoped for. "It's better than we ever imagined," Stucky said.

Stucky said he's learned to appreciate what he's got and hopes others do the same this Christmas.

"A lot of people take a lot of stuff for granted," he said. "We're fortunate to be here. We're really thankful for everything we got."

Join the conversation, add a comment or email: ggarrison@bhamnews.com

Source: http://blog.al.com/spotnews/2011/12/alabamas_tornado_victims_slowl.html

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Musical Google Doodle Wishes Users 'Happy Holidays'


Google continued the holiday cheer today with a homepage doodle that highlights the symbols of the season.

In an image reminiscent of a Lite-Brite, Google spells out its logo with a snowflake, Santa Claus, a bell, snowman, candle, and a present. When you first click on the logo, though, there will be six blinking lights below the Google name. Click them to dim the background lights and turn on the Christmas lights. Once all the images are lit up, they will begin to dance to "Jingle Bells."

This is not Google's first holiday-related surprise for its users. Last weekend, the company published one of its Easter Eggs: searching for the term "let it snow" (without quotes) produced some snowy search results that allowed users to "draw" on the snow-covered screen. Searching for "Hanukkah" and "Christmas," meanwhile, also produced search results enhanced by holiday lights.

Doodle Xmas

Earlier in the week, Google went live with Santa's Google Voice number (855-34-SANTA), which lets kids call the man in red directly from a Gmail account and leave a message. There's also the option to craft a message that will be sent to the child (or grownup) of choice.

If you need something a little more visual, Google-owned YouTube is also offering special video messages from a cartoon Santa, which can be customized to suit the name and specific tastes of the recipient.

Also on YouTube, users can click a new snowflake icon to "make it snow" atop the videos. The snowflakes will gather at the bottom of the screen, eventually obscuring your view, unless you click the snowflake again to clear it. To create your own customized snow scene, meanwhile, Snowify.me lets users enter an address and create a personalized holiday card using Google Street View imagery and digital snow.

Holiday Google Doodle

Last year, Google replaced its logo with a collection of holiday scenes created by the company's "chief doodler." The 17 scenes included an "Up on the Housetop" drawing of Santa approaching a snowy chimney as well as several other doodles representing holiday traditions around the world. They included: a Buche de Noel, a traditional Christmas dessert enjoyed in many French-speaking countries; a depiction of three women performing a classical Indian dance; several men performing on an oud, a pear-shaped stringed instrument commonly used in Middle Eastern music; and Moroccan henna lamps.

For more on Google's doodles, meanwhile, see the slideshow below. One of the company's more popular doodles was a playable image in honor of musician Les Paul, which eventually got its own standalone site. The company has also honored Gumby creator Art Clokey, Muppets creator Jim Henson, Queen frontman Freddie Mercury, and Intel co-founder Robert Noyce.

Earlier this year, it was revealed that Google obtained a patent for its popular homepage doodles, covering "systems and methods for enticing users to access a Web site."

For more from Chloe, follow her on Twitter @ChloeAlbanesius.

For the top stories in tech, follow us on Twitter at @PCMag.

Source: http://feeds.ziffdavis.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/breakingnews/~3/UN2Pcfnfwlk/0,2817,2398039,00.asp

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6 die in latest school bus accident in China (AP)

BEIJING ? At least six people have been killed in the latest crash involving students in China when their overloaded van plunged off a mountain road, state media said Sunday.

The official Xinhua News Agency said an overloaded van taking 12 students home crashed into a 195-foot (60-meter) deep valley in southwest China on Saturday. It said the eight-seat van was carrying 14 people and the other eight, including six students, were all hurt.

The report did not give the ages of the students or the cause of the accident. Xinhua said the crash happened on a mountainous road in Yunnan province. A local government official confirmed the accident but would not give any details. A local news portal in Yunnan showed a picture of the van, with all its sides and roof crushed in.

Badly maintained school transport has been the focus of public anger in recent weeks after a series of accidents in which children were killed on their way to and from school, leading China's safety regulator to demand immediate action to improve safety aboard frequently overloaded and badly maintained school buses.

Earlier this month, a school bus taking primary students home slipped off a country road into an irrigation ditch in the eastern province of Jiangsu, killing 15 children. Officials later acknowledged the bus was overloaded.

In the worst recent accident, 19 children and two adults were killed last month when a nine-seat private kindergarten van packed with 62 students crashed head-on with a truck in northwest Gansu province.

The crashes came amid a national debate over the poor condition of Chinese school buses and chronic underfunding of public schools, particularly in rural areas, which have lagged far behind cities over the past three decades of rapid economic development.

Road safety is also a serious problem in China, with many accidents caused by poorly maintained roads and bad driving habits.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_re_as/as_china_school_bus_accident

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Baseball Americas Aaron Fitt reports that Ryan Garvey son of Steve Garvey has transferred from USC to Riverside Community Coll...

SbB LIVE FROM LA (Dec 24, 2011 @ 4:08pm ET)

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

4:00 PM: The Cleveland Browns became the last team this season to score a return TD, as Josh Cribbs returned a punt 84 yards for a score.

3:45 PM: Baseball America's Aaron Fitt reports that Ryan Garvey, son of Steve Garvey has transferred from USC to Riverside Community College.

3:30 PM: Miami Dolphins RB Reggie Bush has rushed for 1,000 yards in a season for the first time in his career, while Denver Broncos RB Willis McGahee has rushed for 1,000 yards in a season for his third different team.

3:15 PM: Video of Cincinnati Bengals receiver Jerome Simpson doing a full body somersault & landing on his feet in the end zone for a TD against the Arizona Cardinals.

3:00 PM: The Minnesota Vikings have lost both RB Adrian Peterson (knee injury) & QB Christian Ponder (concussion) during Saturday's game against the Washington Redskins.

2:45 PM: The Miami Dolphins' early 17-0 lead on New England is the Patriots' largest deficit so far this season.

2:30 PM: New York Giants receiver Victor Cruz set a new record for longest play from scrimmage in franchise history with a 99-yard TD catch against the Jets.

2:15 PM: Some New York Giants players weren't happy with the Jets covering up the Giants' Super Bowl logos at MetLife Stadium with black curtains.

2:00 PM: The Oakland A's could reportedly be given permission to move to San Jose by February.

1:45 PM: The Metro UK shares pics from a nude calendar featuring female soccer fans from Poland hoping to raise money for their cash-strapped club (possibly NSFW).

1:30 PM: Paralyzed Rutgers football player Eric LeGrand tweets that he'll be flying out to Denver for the Broncos' regular season home finale against the Kansas City Chiefs on New Year's Day.

1:15 PM: Carolina Panthers QB Cam Newton has broken Peyton Manning's NFL rookie passing record.

1:00 PM: A South Carolina man died last month after eating cocaine hidden in his brother's butt while the two were sitting in the back of a police car.

12:45 PM: Former Illinois basketball player Jereme Richmond has been placed under house arrest as he awaits trial on aggravated battery & gun charges.

12:30 PM: A Benicia (CA) High School basketball player was arrested on stautory rape charges for having sex with a girl under 18 years old.

? previous entries

Source: http://www.sportsbybrooks.com/sbblive?eid=31982

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Italian enraged by laundromat fumes kills 3

An elderly man shot dead in a Christmas Eve massacre three members of a family who owned a laundromat in southern Italy, apparently because he was incensed by a years-long battle over the smoke and fumes emitted by the washing machines.

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The ANSA news agency reports that the suspect used an automatic weapon to shoot the mother in front of the laundromat and two adult children as they tried to flee. He also seriously wounded the father, who was at home in the tiny town of Genzano Di Lucania, near Potenza and southeast of Naples, ANSA says.

The dead were identified in local media as Antoinette Di Palma, 55, and Maria Donata Menchise, 31, and Matthew Menchise, 27.

Their father, Leonardo Menchise, 60, was admitted to a hospital and reportedly had serious wounds.

The suspect, Ettore Bruscella, 77, was immediately taken into custody.

ANSA reports that Bruscella and the Menchise family had a long-running legal feud over the laundromat's chimney.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45785485/ns/world_news-europe/

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Ancient green grocer target of fiery curse

A fiery ancient curse inscribed on two sides of a thin lead tablet was meant to afflict not a king or pharaoh, but a simple green grocer selling fruits and vegetables some 1,700 years ago in the city of Antioch, researchers find.

Written in Greek, the tablet holding the curse was dropped into a well in Antioch, then one of the Roman Empire's biggest cities in the East, today part of southeast Turkey, near the border with Syria.

The curse calls upon Iao, the Greek name for Yahweh, the god of the Old Testament, to afflict a man named Babylas who is identified as being a green grocer. The tablet lists his mother's name as Dionysia, "also known as Hesykhia," it reads. The text was translated by Alexander Hollmann of the University of Washington.

The artifact, which is now in the Princeton University Art Museum, was discovered in the 1930s by an archaeological team but had not previously been fully translated. The translation is detailed in the most recent edition of the journal Zeitschrift f?r Papyrologie und Epigraphik.

Reading a curse
"O thunder-and-lightning-hurling Iao, strike, bind, bind together Babylas the green grocer," reads the beginning of one side of the curse tablet. "As you struck the chariot of Pharaoh, so strike his (Babylas') offensiveness."

Hollmann told LiveScience that he has seen curses directed against gladiators and charioteers, among other occupations, but never a green grocer. "There are other people who are named by occupation in some of the curse tablets, but I haven't come across a green grocer before," he said.

The person giving the curse isn't named, so scientists can only speculate as to what his motives were. "There are curses that relate to love affairs," Hollmann said. However, "this one doesn't have that kind of language."

It's possible the curse was the result of a business rivalry or dealing of some sort. "It's not a bad suggestion that it could be business related or trade related," said Hollmann, adding that the person doing the cursing could have been a green grocer himself. If that's the case it would suggest that vegetable selling in the ancient world could be deeply competitive. "With any kind of tradesman they have their turf, they have their territory, they're susceptible to business rivalry.?

The name Babylas, used by a third-century Bishop of Antioch who was killed for his Christian beliefs, suggests the green grocer may have been a Christian. "There is a very important Bishop of Antioch called Babylas who was one of the early martyrs," Hollmann said.

Biblical metaphors
The use of Old Testament biblical metaphors initially suggested to Hollmann the curse-writer was Jewish. After studying other ancient magical spells that use the metaphors, he realized that this may not be the case.

"I don't think there's necessarily any connection with the Jewish community," he said. "Greek and Roman magic did incorporate Jewish texts sometimes without understanding them very well."

In addition to the use of Iao (Yahweh), and reference to the story of the Exodus, the curse tablet also mentions the story of Egypt's firstborn.

"O thunder?and-lightning-hurling Iao, as you cut down the firstborn of Egypt, cut down his (livestock?) as much as..." (The next part is lost.)

"It could simply be that this (the Old Testament) is a powerful text, and magic likes to deal with powerful texts and powerful names," Hollmann said. "That's what makes magic work or make(s) people think it works."

Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

? 2011 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45765797/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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NCAA Blunder: Changing North Dakota's Tribal Nickname

For years, college and pro sports teams have taken heat for caricaturing Native Americans with their nicknames and mascots. Sometimes, teams do the right thing. In 1994, for example, St. John's University changed its name from the Redmen to the Red Storm. At other times, they've acted irresponsibly. We still have the Washington Redskins, and the Cleveland Indians haven't scrubbed Chief Wahoo ? a cartoonish representation of a Native American ? off their hats. In other instances, a tribe's backing has allowed a team to keep its nickname, as happened with the Florida State Seminoles and the Utah Utes.

And then there's the puzzling, unique case of North Dakota. In 1930, the University of North Dakota (UND) adopted "Sioux" as its nickname for its sports teams. UND teams then became the Fighting Sioux in the 1960s. Spirit Lake, the Sioux reservation closest to the University of North Dakota's campus in Grand Forks, overwhelmingly backs the name. The tribe argues, and evidence seems to support the case, that Spirit Lake and another local Sioux reservation, Standing Rock, actually gave UND its blessing to use the nickname in a religious ceremony over 40 years ago. (See the top 10 worst team names.)

On the surface, the name seems harmless and even a positive for the Sioux nation ? many Irish Americans, for example, bleed Notre Dame green simply because of the school's Fighting Irish moniker. The school's logo is not cartoonish; it's classy in its simplicity: a headshot of a stern-looking Sioux warrior. Nor does UND have an idiotic mascot who would be unflattering to Native Americans. In April, the North Dakota legislature passed a law stipulating that the University of North Dakota would always be known as the Fighting Sioux.

So why, then, is the University of North Dakota preparing to phase it out?

For Spirit Lake tribe members, the blame rests with a familiar foe: the NCAA. In 2005, the NCAA mandated that UND and 17 other schools ban the use of American-Indian imagery and nicknames. If they refused, the schools would not be able to host postseason events or use the nickname or logo during postseason play. "Why should the NCAA come in and tell us that we should be offended?" asks Frank Black Cloud, Spirit Lake's pro-nickname leader. "It makes no sense to us."

UND sued the NCAA, arguing that the Fighting Sioux name was neither hostile nor abusive. Under the terms of the lawsuit settlement, the NCAA said that if the university wanted to keep the Fighting Sioux name and not face sanctions, both Spirit Lake and Standing Rock, the other Sioux reservation headquartered in North Dakota, would need to approve it. In 2009, Spirit Lake put the question to a full tribal vote: members voted by a 2-to-1 ratio in favor of keeping the name. "UND has allowed us to participate and have input on some of the Indian programs they have developed," says John Chaske, a Spirit Lake member. "The school deserves to use our name. We should take pride in that. There's nothing wrong with that." (See the top 10 sports moments of 2011.)

Standing Rock's tribal council has voted to eliminate the name. The council, however, has not put the question to a full tribal vote, to the dismay of Standing Rock members who like the Fighting Sioux. "Aw, man, it's not right for people not to have a say," says Archie D. Fool Bear, a member of Standing Rock. Fool Bear says he has petition signatures from 1,000 Standing Rock residents opposing the nickname change, and he is confident his side would prevail in a full vote. Calls to the home and office of Charlie Murphy, chairman of the Standing Rock tribal council, were not returned.

Other Native American tribal councils, from both Sioux nations and non-Sioux nations like North Dakota's Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians, have passed resolutions stating their opposition to the Fighting Sioux name and logo. To which Black Cloud responds: Butt out. "We, as tribal members and Sioux, we don't tell other tribes what to do," he says. "We would expect that same respect from them as well." Opponents of the nickname cite instances in which the Sioux logo was defaced on T-shirts worn by supporters of North Dakota State, UND's archrival. "Those are isolated incidents that people like to exploit to say that's the norm," says Black Cloud. "There are several thousand events that happen where the name is held in high respect and high regard."

In August, top UND officials and state lawmakers, including Governor Jack Dalrymple, met with the NCAA in Indianapolis. There, they asked the organization to reconsider its stance on the Fighting Sioux name. Spirit Lake was not asked to participate. "How can we not have a seat at the table?" asks Black Cloud.

In response to an interview request, NCAA spokesman Erik Christianson wrote in an e-mail, "The settlement between the NCAA and the university gave the university three years to obtain agreement from the tribes. That did not occur. The policy does not require a change in nickname or logo. That is a university decision. But without a change, the university cannot host a championship or display the nickname or logo at a championship."

After that meeting, at which the NCAA made clear that UND would face sanctions if the nickname wasn't changed and the logo wasn't removed, the North Dakota legislature repealed the April law keeping the Fighting Sioux name on the books. "The directive from the State Board of Higher Education is to transition away from the nickname and logo," says Peter Johnson, a UND spokesman. "At this point in time, that's the best thing for our athletic programs. There's no question about that." (Watch TIME's video "The Best NCAA Upset.")

Fighting Sioux supporters argue that the NCAA is violating their religious rights. The Grand Forks Herald reported on July 21, 1969, that "a band of Standing Rock Sioux formally gave UND teams the right to use the name of 'Fighting Sioux' for their athletic teams." Black Cloud insists that Spirit Lake members also took part in this ritual blessing. (UND recognizes that a ceremony took place but says the intent of it remains unclear.) So why should a current tribal council, the NCAA or anyone else reverse the wishes of the elders who are so respected in Native American culture? "If we let an outside entity dictate to us how we should feel about our sacred ceremonies," says Black Cloud, "what does that say about us?"

The NCAA has plenty of issues to worry about, most importantly melding academics and athletics. Isn't the organization picking the wrong fight here? According to UND, a public university, the estimated cost of selecting a new nickname, removing the Fighting Sioux logo from athletic facilities across campus and ordering new equipment and apparel without the Fighting Sioux logo would be at least $750,000.

Spirit Lake and the 1,000 nickname supporters from the Standing Rock tribe recently filed a federal lawsuit against the NCAA, claiming violation of religious rights. Black Cloud is also leading an effort to repeal the repeal of the state law keeping the Fighting Sioux name in place. "We fight for what Spirit Lake wants," says Black Cloud. "Why is the NCAA ignoring us? We are a sovereign nation. The name is an enormous source of pride. To have that taken away from us ? it's more hurtful than you can possibly understand."

Sean Gregory is a staff writer at TIME. Keeping Score, his sports column for TIME.com, usually appears every Friday. Follow him on Twitter at @seanmgregory. You can also continue the discussion on TIME's Facebook page and on Twitter at @TIME.

See TIME's Pictures of the Week.

See TIME's top 10 everything of 2011.

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Japan releases 40-year nuke plant cleanup plan (AP)

TOKYO ? Japan's government said Wednesday that it could take 40 years to clean up and fully decommission a nuclear plant that went into meltdown after it was struck by a huge tsunami.

Nuclear crisis minister Goshi Hosono suggested that the timetable was ambitious, acknowledging that decommissioning three reactors with severely melted fuel plus spent fuel rods at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant was an "unprecedented project," and that the process was not "totally foreseeable."

"But we must do it even though we may face difficulties along the way," Hosono told a news conference.

Under a detailed roadmap approved earlier Wednesday following consultation with experts and nuclear regulators, plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. will start removing spent fuel rods within two to three years from their pools located on the top floor of each of their reactor buildings.

After that is completed, TEPCO will start removing the melted fuel, most of which is believed to have fallen to the bottom of the core or even down to the bottom of the larger, beaker-shaped containment vessel, a process that is expected to begin in 10 years and completed 25 years from now. The location and conditions of the melted fuel is not exactly known.

That's more than twice as long as it took to remove the fuel from the Unit 2 reactor at Three Mile Island that suffered a partial meltdown in 1979.

Trade Minister Yukio Edano promised that authorities would ensure safety at the plant. He also vowed to pay attention to the concerns of tens of thousands of residents displaced when the plant was knocked out by Japan's March 11 earthquake and tsunami, spawning the world's worst nuclear crisis since the Chernobyl accident in 1986.

"We must not allow the work toward decommissioning to cause any new risks or delay the return of the residents to their homes," he said.

Completely decommissioning the plant would require five to 10 more years after the fuel debris removal, making the entire process up to 40 years, according to the roadmap.

The roadmap for Fukushima is twice as long the time set aside to decommission the Tokai Power Station, the country's first commercial reactor that stopped operation in 1998.

The process still requires the development of robots and technology that can do much of the work remotely because of extremely high radiation levels inside the reactor buildings. Officials say they are aiming to have such robots by 2013 and start decontaminating the reactor buildings in 2014.

The operator and the government would also have to ensure a stable supply of workers and save them from exceeding exposure limits while keeping the long process going.

They also have to figure out ways to access each containment vessel and assess the extent of damage, as well as locate holes and cracks through which cooling water is leaking and flooding the area.

The decades-long process also would place an enormous financial burden on TEPCO. The ministers said that the total cost estimate cannot be provided immediately, but promised that there will be no delay because of financial reasons.

Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda announced last Friday that the plant has achieved "cold shutdown conditions," meaning the plant had been brought to stability in the nine months since the accident.

The announcement officially paves the way for a new phase that will eventually allow some evacuees back to less-contaminated areas currently off limits.

Experts say the plant 140 miles (230 kilometers) northeast of Tokyo is running with makeshift equipment and remains vulnerable to cold weather and earthquakes.

Another problem is huge volume of radioactive waste and debris that will come out of the plant during its dismantling process. Officials said they have not decided what to do with them and that part is not covered by the 40-year roadmap.

"We still need to discuss what to do with the waste, including development of such technology," said Koichi Noda, a trade ministry official in charge of nuclear accident cleanup.

The two ministers acknowledged that they may not be even around to see the decommissioning process through the end.

"I will take responsibility as a person and get involved in this as long as I live," Edano said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111221/ap_on_re_as/as_japan_nuclear_crisis

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Cheezburger?s Ben Huh: If GoDaddy Supports SOPA, We?re Taking Our 1000+ Domains Elsewhere

cheezburgerAnd the anti-SOPA rallying of the tech world's best continues. Just minutes after Ycombinator's Paul Graham disclosed that SOPA-friendly companies would be blacklisted from the YC Demo Day, Cheezburger (as in I Can Has Cheeseburger, FAIL Blog, Know Your Meme, etc.) CEO Ben Huh has announced that they will be moving their array of over 1,000 domains away from GoDaddy unless the registrar recants their support of the act.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/yUF2SCAqmeM/

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

StoneAtwine: I just ousted @deejaysanch as the mayor of Mediterraneo (Junction) on @foursquare! http://t.co/F9NE8hUv

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I just ousted @deejaysanch as the mayor of Mediterraneo (Junction) on @foursquare! 4sq.com/e9Kmii StoneAtwine

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Southwest, plains face blizzard watch (Reuters)

AUSTIN. Texas. (Reuters) ? A blizzard watch is in effect until Tuesday for parts of Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas as a severe winter storm is expected to bring high winds and up to a foot of snow there on Sunday night and Monday, according to the National Weather Service.

The storm was expected to edge into the mountains of Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado before heading east on Sunday night or Monday morning, the agency said in a statement. The areas were under winter weather advisories or watches on Sunday.

A blizzard watch means forecasters believe life-threatening winter weather conditions are likely, including winds of at least 35 mph and visibility less than a quarter mile.

As the United States readies for a week of holiday travel, weather officials warned of dangerous road conditions on Sunday and Monday in the plains. The storm is expected to bring heavy rains and high-elevation snow to the mountains of Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona on Sunday afternoon before moving east.

"It is likely that slippery areas will develop Sunday and progress to the east over the high ground along I-40 in Arizona and New Mexico," meteorologist Alex Sosnowski said on Accuweather.com.

"As snow spills out over the southern High Plains Sunday night and Monday, snow is likely to fall and accumulate in part of I-40 stretching across the northern Texas Panhandle and Route 54 reaching northeastward into southern Kansas."

The mix of rain and snow will move through eastern Kansas on Monday night and into the Chicago and Detroit areas on Tuesday, forecasters said.

(Writing by Karen Brooks, editing by Ian Simpson)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111218/us_nm/us_weather_storm

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Ukraine flavors Vatican Christmas tree lighting (AP)

VATICAN CITY ? Ukrainian pilgrims sang folk songs and carols and recalled the late Pope John Paul II's visit as the Vatican lit its Christmas tree in St. Peter's Square, a 25-meter (82-foot) pine from the Carpathian mountains in their country.

The tree was decorated with 2,500 gold and silver balls and figures of animals and toys. The ceremony Friday evening included a folk choir with children carrying giant pinwheels, a Christmas tradition in Ukraine.

Polish-born John Paul began the tradition of erecting a tall Christmas tree in the square in 1982; the Bavarian-born Pope Benedict XVI has continued it.

Archbishop Mieczyslaw Mokrzycki, who served as a secretary to John Paul before returning to his homeland of Ukraine, said the tree was "to thank John Paul" for his 2001 visit.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111218/ap_on_re_eu/eu_vatican_christmas_tree

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UK-Odd Summary (Reuters)

Philippine men bare all to save the earth

MANILA (Reuters) ? Dozens of men ran naked on Friday around a university campus in the Philippine capital, Manila, calling for cleaner rivers and greater efforts to save the earth. In what has become an annual tradition at the University of the Philippines, fraternity members dashed through the halls wearing only masks to hide their faces and carrying signs calling for environmental protection.

Greek man claims for 19 kids-none real, police say

ATHENS (Reuters) - A former Greek policeman who invented 19 fictional offspring to claim benefits for what would have been the largest family in Greece has been arrested for benefit fraud, police said. The former police officer, divorced and with no children of his own, quit his 1,000-euro-a-month (837.52 pounds) job in 2001 and has been living solely on benefits ever since, police said on Thursday.

Six-pack hunks - more than Singapore can bare?

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Shirtless men clad in red sweatpants have been lining up for days in Singapore's prime shopping district, part of an advertising gimmick revealing not just muscle but also a gradual unpeeling of the city state's puritanical ways. The feverish reception given the "shirtless greeters" by the Singapore public, both in real life and online, where it has gone viral in social media, signals how the notoriously conservative city-state has been loosening up in recent years, experts said.

Google donates $11.5 million to fight modern slavery

(Reuters) - Google Inc is donating $11.5 million (7.4 million pounds) in grants to fight modern slavery and its hold on 27 million people worldwide, the technology company said on Wednesday. The donation is believed to be one of the largest corporate initiatives ever to fight slavery.

Take off that tie to save energy, Chilean men told

SANTIAGO (Reuters) - Chile's government wants men in the South American country to take off their ties to help fight global warming, hoping the campaign will save on air conditioning as summer starts in the southern hemisphere. "Let's all take our ties off this summer to save energy," Economy Minister Pablo Longueira says in television spots airing around the country.

Heir-apparent's hair's apparent in North Korea capital

SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korean heir-apparent Kim Jong-un's slicked-back, high-sided haircut is a fashion hit in Pyongyang where young men are apparently queuing up for a similar cut. Kim, believed to be in his late 20s and known as the "Young General," is packaged to look like his late grandfather, the secretive state's founder, Kim Il-sung.

Kids won't eat veggies? Try rewards, a study says

(Reuters) - If your preschoolers turn up their noses at carrots or celery, a small reward like a sticker for taking even a taste may help get them to eat previously shunned foods, a UK study said. Though it might seem obvious that a reward could tempt young children to eat their vegetables, the idea is actually controversial, researchers wrote in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

Chinese man arrested for hiring wedding strippers

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese police have arrested a man who hired two strippers to perform at his son's wedding after the performance was mobbed by villagers, a newspaper reported on Wednesday. Zhang Cheng, from Xuzhou in eastern Jiangsu province, had originally wanted a band to play at the nuptials, but was then advised he could get performers whose show would have "special features," the Global Times said.

Take care selling the family silver, hard up Greeks told

ATHENS (Reuters) - Greece published guidelines on Tuesday to protect its austerity-hit citizens from being ripped off by pawn shops buying their family gold and silver. The consumer protection agency issued the unusual notice as new pawn shops spring up across Athens to meet demand for instant cash in Greece's contracting economy. But crisis-hit families may be getting a poor deal from unscrupulous traders.

Italy winemaker sends literary message in the bottle

MILAN (Reuters) - Nowadays when people spend more and more time exploring the depths of cyber space or just watching TV, every effort counts to bring them back to the traditional pleasure of reading. A leading Italian book store chain Feltrinelli and wine-makers Santa Margherita from northern Italy decided six years ago to join forces to promote reading in their own way.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/environment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/od_uk_nm/oukoe_summary

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