Monday, October 31, 2011

Best places for balloon rides

Adding hot-air balloon rides to your trip always helps lift your spirits.

Pure magic: That?s what most travelers experience as they soar high above some of the most beautiful scenery in the world, suspended in a basket beneath a huge, colorful balloon. This is flight at its most simple and elegant. And it?s no longer an extravagance.

Slideshow: Best places for balloon rides

Balloon trips have gained in popularity over the years, thanks in part to advances in technology (burners and fabrics) that have translated into lower per-person prices over the last decade. Hot-air balloon vacations are now accessible to more and more people. But it?s only recent history that has seen a rise (pun intended) in manned flights.

Riding in a hot-air balloon is an exhilarating and surprisingly non-stressful experience, according to Jane Janvier, a balloon pilot and partner at France Montgolfieres. ?You cannot get vertigo in a balloon. It is like a filming platform with a 360-degree view that is stationary while the world slowly drifts by,? she explains.

Going with the wind is very metaphoric and poetic, but it?s also literal when it comes to balloons, which are shepherded by the breeze. Thus, says Janvier, you have almost no sensation of movement. ?You can carry a candle and the flame won?t go out,? she says. ?You are the wind.?

The lofty concept of filling an envelope with hot air and letting it rise toward the heavens dates as far back as A.D. 220, when the Chinese used candlelit floating lamps made of rice paper, called Kongming lanterns, for military signaling. It wasn?t until 1783, when French brothers ?tienne and Joseph Montgolfier hovered over Paris for 20 minutes, that the idea for passenger flights was born.

Today, hundreds of thousands of airborne adventurers each year ascend into the wide blue yonder to experience flying the way it was meant to be.

Experiencing a travel destination from the air offers a new perspective, often paired with a local experience. Take a visit to the Loire Valley of France up a notch with a balloon ride and tour of a ch?teau after landing. The view of wildlife from the air over the Serengeti in Tanzania cannot be matched from the ground.

Perhaps you prefer to experience hot-air balloons with two feet planted firmly on the earth. A balloon festival ? such as the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta ? where hundreds of hot-air balloons gather, race and participate in events is sure to inspire.

More from Executive Travel

Copyright ? 2011 American Express Publishing Corporation

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45037255/ns/travel-destination_travel/

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Suicide bomber in Turkey kills 2, wounds 12 (AP)

ANKARA, Turkey ? A suicide bomber killed two people in Turkey's southeastern Kurdish region and wounded 12 others, authorities said.

The attack occurred in a main street of the mainly-Kurdish city of Bingol, Gov. Mustafa Hakan Guvencer said. There was no immediate responsibility claim, but Kurdish rebels who are fighting for autonomy in Turkey's southeast have carried out suicide bombings in the past.

Guvencer said the attack was on one the city's busiest streets and three of the wounded were in serious condition. The blast shattered glass and shop windows in surrounding buildings.

Interior Minister Idris Naim Sahin said the blast was near the local branch of the ruling party, but the building was not the intended target. The attack came on the 88th anniversary of the founding of the republic.

Television footage showed people running away from the site of the explosion, while others urged people to evacuate the streets. Some were seen surrounding a corpse.

Turkey's conflict with the rebels of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, has killed tens of people since the insurgents took up arms in 1984.

The attack comes 10 days after Turkey's military launched massive anti-rebel operations in both southeastern Turkey and across the border in northern Iraq _where the rebels maintain bases ? killing dozens of rebels. Those operations were spurred by coordinated rebel attacks on military and police posts near the border that killed 24 soldiers ? the deadliest one-day toll against the military since the 1990s.

The last suicide bombing was in September, when the attacker detonated a bomb outside a paramilitary station near a Mediterranean resort town, wounding two others. Ten days earlier, a car bomb in the capital, Ankara, killed five people. A Kurdish militant group, the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons or TAK, claimed responsibility for the car bombing and threatened more attacks.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111029/ap_on_re_eu/eu_turkey_explosion

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Charlie Sheen's 'Anger Management' Show To Air On FX

Series based on Adam Sandler movie of the same name will debut next summer.
By Gil Kaufman


Charlie Sheen
Photo: Michael Buckner/ Getty Images

Charlie Sheen promised that we hadn't seen the last of him. The excitable, unpredictable former "Two and a Half Men" star has finally found a home for his new series, "Anger Management." The show will start airing on FX next summer, according to The Hollywood Reporter. And in a truly Sheen-ian twist, his new program will be paired with reruns of "Men," the show Sheen was booted from earlier this year after a ratings-bonanza eight-season run due to his erratic behavior.

The new show is based on the 2003 movie of the same name that starred Adam Sandler as Dave Buznik, a man wrongly sentenced to anger management classes after an incident on a plane. His issues are only exacerbated by his therapist, Dr. Buddy Rydell (Jack Nicholson), who eggs Dave on to even more aggressive acts. Sheen will reportedly play the Nicholson role.

Three cable networks reportedly bid on the Sheen show, which will take the air alongside such edgy FX fare as the downbeat comedy "Louie" and the man-and-his-imaginary-talking-dog sitcom "Wilfred." Sheen's team will begin writing scripts and casting for the first 10 episodes right away, and if those initial shows do well, another 90 may be ordered.

Though Sheen famously clashed with Chuck Lorre, the veteran TV exec who ran "Men," Chuck Lorre, he will be working with another long-timer on his new project, show runner Bruce Helford, who has logged time on "Roseanne," "George Lopez" and "The Drew Carey Show."

"We think that Bruce Helford, [producer] Joe Roth and Charlie Sheen have come up with a wonderful, hilarious vehicle for Charlie's acting talents — and a character we are very much looking forward to seeing him play," John Landgraf, president and general manager of FX Networks, said in a statement announcing the deal on Thursday. " 'Two and a Half Men' has been an outstanding component of FX's schedule for the past 14 months, and we have every confidence that 'Anger Management' will soon be as well."

Sheen suffered a well-publicized hospitalization and brief return to rehab earlier this year and a subsequent jag of erratic, unhinged media appearances that resulted in his booting from "Men." But he has settled down as of late, appearing at a Comedy Central roast in his honor and offering kind words for his "Men" successor, Ashton Kutcher.

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1673333/charlie-sheen-show-anger-management-fx.jhtml

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

More Women With Breast Cancer Get Nipple-Sparing Surgery

Study Shows Nipple-Sparing Mastectomies Are Just as Safe as Conventional Surgery

Oct. 27, 2011 -- More women facing mastectomies are opting for surgeries that remove the breast tissue but not the skin, nipple, and areola.

Concerns that a procedure called nipple-sparing mastectomy could raise the risk of a return of cancer have kept the surgery from being widely adopted in the past. That is changing as more surgical centers offer the procedure.

Supporters say that in the right patients nipple-sparing mastectomies can be just as safe and successful as more conventional breast removal.

Now a new study from Georgetown University Medical Center appears to support the claim.

Checking for Return of Cancer

The analysis included data on 101 women who had the surgery at Georgetown University Medical Center between 1989 and 2010 to prevent or treat breast cancer.

Researchers reviewed results for all women receiving the surgery at the center over two decades. They found no evidence of the return of cancer in or near the nipple in close to 50 women with breast cancer over an average of 2 1/2 years of follow-up.

Georgetown chief of plastic surgery Scott L. Spear, MD, who led the research, says other small studies examining nipple-sparing surgery in breast cancer patients have shown the same thing.

But he adds that larger studies with longer follow-up times will be needed.

"I believe this procedure is safe for women with breast cancer and I believe the data will eventually prove that it is safe," he says. "But I would like to see larger, more robust studies."

Spear tells WebMD that he has been performing the surgery for more than a decade, mostly in women at high risk for breast cancer who are having mastectomies to keep from getting cancer.

He says it has only been in the last few years that nipple-sparing surgery has been considered an option for women with breast cancer.

"I spoke last year at a convention to a room with about 400 breast surgeons and I asked how many of them were doing nipple-sparing mastectomies," he says. "Virtually all of them raised their hands. If I had asked the question five years ago, maybe 2% would have been doing them."

Nipple-Sparing Surgery vs. Conventional Surgery

Nipple-sparing surgery is considered more challenging than radical mastectomy because the blood supply to the nipple and surrounding skin must be maintained to keep the tissue alive.

Of 162 breasts operated on in the 101 women in the study, 113 of the surgeries were done to prevent breast cancer and 49 were performed as treatment. Three nipples had to be removed later because of tissue death and four others had partial tissue death, requiring additional surgery.

Thirty-nine breast cancer patients in the analysis had biopsies at the time of their surgery. Four (10%) showed evidence of cancer cells in the nipple or surrounding areas, requiring additional surgery to remove the tissue.

The analysis appears in the November issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.

Cosmetic surgeon Scott Sullivan, MD, FACS, says the now-routine practice of performing biopsies on the nipple during surgery to determine if cancer cells are present had led to the wider acceptance of nipple-sparing mastectomy for the treatment of breast cancer.

Sullivan is co-founder of the Center for Restorative Breast Surgery in New Orleans. "No matter how good your reconstructive results are, if there is a recurrence of cancer the surgery is a failure," he tells WebMD.

The surgery is not appropriate for all breast cancer patients. Women with large tumors or tumors located close to the nipple are not candidates for nipple-sparing mastectomy.

Source: http://www.webmd.com/breast-cancer/news/20111027/more-women-with-breast-cancer-get-nipple-sparing-surgery

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New hybrid technology could bring 'quantum information systems'

ScienceDaily (Oct. 28, 2011) ? The merging of two technologies under development -- plasmonics and nanophotonics -- is promising the emergence of new "quantum information systems" far more powerful than today's computers.

The technology hinges on using single photons -- the tiny particles that make up light -- for switching and routing in future computers that might harness the exotic principles of quantum mechanics.

The quantum information processing technology would use structures called "metamaterials," artificial nanostructured media with exotic properties.

The metamaterials, when combined with tiny "optical emitters," could make possible a new hybrid technology that uses "quantum light" in future computers, said Vladimir Shalaev, scientific director of nanophotonics at Purdue University's Birck Nanotechnology Center and a distinguished professor of electrical and computer engineering.

The concept is described in an article published on October 28 in the journal Science. The article appeared in the magazine's Perspectives section and was written by Shalaev and Zubin Jacob, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Alberta, Canada.

"A seamless interface between plasmonics and nanophotonics could guarantee the use of light to overcome limitations in the operational speed of conventional integrated circuits," Shalaev said.

Researchers are proposing the use of "plasmon-mediated interactions," or devices that manipulate individual photons and quasiparticles called plasmons that combine electrons and photons.

One of the approaches, pioneered at Harvard University, is a tiny nanowire that couples individual photons and plasmons. Another approach is to use hyperbolic metamaterials, suggested by Jacob; Igor Smolyaninov, a visiting research scientist at the University of Maryland; and Evgenii Narimanov, an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at Purdue. Quantum-device applications using building blocks for such hyperbolic metamaterials have been demonstrated in Shalaev's group.

"We would like to record and read information with single photons, but we need a very efficient source of single photons," Shalaev said. "The challenge here is to increase the efficiency of generation of single photons in a broad spectrum, and that is where plasmonics and metamaterials come in."

Today's computers work by representing information as a series of ones and zeros, or binary digits called "bits."

Computers based on quantum physics would have quantum bits, or "qubits," that exist in both the on and off states simultaneously, dramatically increasing the computer's power and memory. Quantum computers would take advantage of a strange phenomenon described by quantum theory called "entanglement." Instead of only the states of one and zero, there are many possible "entangled quantum states" in between one and zero.

An obstacle in developing quantum information systems is finding a way to preserve the quantum information long enough to read and record it. One possible solution might be to use diamond with "nitrogen vacancies," defects that often occur naturally in the crystal lattice of diamonds but can also be produced by exposure to high-energy particles and heat.

"The nitrogen vacancy in diamond operates in a very broad spectral range and at room temperature, which is very important," Shalaev said.

The work is part of a new research field, called diamond photonics. Hyperbolic metamaterials integrated with nitrogen vacancies in diamond are expected to work as efficient "guns" of single photons generated in a broad spectral range, which could bring quantum information systems, he said.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Purdue University. The original article was written by Emil Venere.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Z. Jacob, V. M. Shalaev. Plasmonics Goes Quantum. Science, 2011; 334 (6055): 463 DOI: 10.1126/science.1211736

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

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

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111028142510.htm

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BlackBerry Bold 9900 And Curve 9360 Earn The MasterCard PayPass Cert, First SIM-Based Smartphones To Do So

MC_PayPass_only_4000The BlackBerry Bold 9900 and Curve 9360 have something to brag about: They are the first SIM-based smartphone to earn the MasterCard PayPass Certification. This states MasterCard feels the phones have the proper functionality and security to handle MasterCard's NFC-based PayPass payment system. MasterCard's contactless payment system rolled out years ago but the company announced earlier this year the system would hit SIM-based systems. Gemalto kickstarted the effort with its SIM cards, which also earned a nod from MasterCard. But now that the Bold 9900 and Curve 9360 are PayPass certified, any MasterCard PayPass-issuing bank can assign a PayPass account to the SIM card within the phones.

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

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Land swap would boost huge Ariz. copper mine (AP)

WASHINGTON ? House Republicans and the Obama administration are at odds over a GOP bill aimed at boosting a proposed Arizona copper mine that would be the largest in North America.

GOP lawmakers and business groups, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Mining Association, say the project would pump billions of dollars into the Arizona economy and help create nearly 4,000 mining-related jobs.

They are pushing a bill, up for a House vote Wednesday, that would approve a land exchange to clear the way for the mining project 70 miles southeast of Phoenix.

Under the plan, first proposed in 2005, about 5,300 acres of environmentally sensitive land throughout Arizona would be transferred to federal control, including 3,000 acres on the lower San Pedro River in southeastern Arizona and 940 acres to be added to the Appleton-Whittell Research Ranch southeast of Tucson. The land is controlled by Resolution Copper Co., a subsidiary of the giant global mining company Rio Tinto.

The Obama administration opposes the land swap, saying an environmental review should be completed before the exchange is made.

A review after the swap is completed would limit U.S. control over the project and make it harder to propose alternatives that could limit environmental damage, said Mary Wagner, associate chief of the U.S. Forest Service.

The $6 billion mining project near Superior, Ariz., is believed to be the third-largest undeveloped copper resource in the world and the largest in North America. The company says the project would create at least 1,400 jobs on site and more than 3,700 related jobs.

Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., the bill's sponsor, said there was no need for a full environmental review until after the swap is completed.

"It's just a land swap. It does not pre-empt anything like the Antiquities Act," the National Environmental Policy Act or other laws, he said.

Once the exchange is completed, "all the applicable laws follow," Gosar said.

Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., said the environmental review should be conducted now, when the U.S. government has the most leverage over the project. Once land that now is part of the Tonto National Forest is turned over to private control, "our ability to require (changes) and enforce the law is really limited at best," he said.

Grijalva and other Democrats also complained that under current law, the mining company will not have to pay any royalties to the U.S. government for mineral rights that could be worth tens of billions of dollars.

Grijalva called the mining proposal one of the most significant issues Congress has faced this year.

"A foreign-owned company doing business on U.S. public lands is basically getting a blank check on extraction (of copper) and a green light from Congress to go ahead and begin this without any return on the money," he said.

Jon Cherry, a vice president of Resolution Copper, said in a statement that he is optimistic the House will approve the land exchange. Over the life of the project, the mine could generate as much as $61 billion in economic benefit for Arizona "without the need for one dollar of federal stimulus," Cherry said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_go_co/us_arizona_copper_mine

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Tunisia's moderate Islamists win landmark vote (AP)

TUNIS, Tunisia ? Tunisia's moderate Islamist party Ennahda, banned for decades, emerged the official victor in the nation's first free elections, taking 41.47 percent of the vote and 90 of 217 seats in an assembly that will write a new constitution, the electoral commission announced.

The Thursday announcement of final results in the landmark vote capped an ebullient period for this small North African country, which inspired the Arab Spring as it moves toward democracy after more than a half-century under one-party systems.

However, protests linked to the party placing fourth in Sunday's voting erupted in and around Sidi Bouzid, the town where the uprising that drove this North African nation's strongman from power.

The leader of Areedha Chaabiya, or Popular Petition party, Hachemi Hamdi, announced on national television that he was withdrawing the 19 seats his party won after the electoral commission invalidated six of its lists.

The results carried other surprises, like the second place, and 30 seats, won by the Congress for the Republic party, founded in 2001 by noted human rights activist Moncef Marzouki, a doctor who had lived in exile in Paris.

The third-placed party was the center-left Ettakatol, or the Democratic Forum for Labor and Freedoms, led by Mustapha Ben Jaafar, also a doctor. It won 21 seats in the constituent assembly.

The final results remain provisional until after any appeals are studied, a process that could take up to two weeks, according to Ridha Torkhani, a member of the electoral commission.

In Sidi Bouzid, soldiers fired warning shots after hundreds of alleged supporters of Areedhya Chaabiya flooded the streets and burned tires, according to a witness reached by telephone, Attia Athmouni.

The official TAP news agency said people were angry over the invalidation of the six lists of Areedha Chaabiya.

However, earlier in the day, some residents had already expressed displeasure with reported remarks from an Ennahda official scolding the population for letting money sway their votes.

Areedha Chaabiya's leader, Hachemi Hamdi, a native son of Sidi Bouzid and owner of the Mustaqila satellite television channel based in London, had broadcast promises to give Tunisians free health care, new factories and thousands of jobs.

Electoral officials ultimately invalidated five lists tarnished by financing violations and one led by a former member of the ruling RCD party ? now banned.

Protests spread to nearby Menzel Bouzayane where more than 1,000 people demonstrated, union official Mohamed Fadhel said by telephone.In Meknassy, 50 kilometers from Sidi Bouzid, demonstrators set fire to Ennahda's party office, Fadhel said.

Ennahda's leading role in fashioning a new Tunisia was evident shortly after the vote. However, electoral authorities had said they were slow in announcing full results because they were taking care with counting and verifying.

Officials of the party have said they are seeking a broad-based coalition government to replace the interim team in charge of this small North African nation since protests forced President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali to flee in January. He took refuge in Saudi Arabia.

Ennahda has also vowed to wary Tunisians that democratic liberties such as gender equality will be respected in line with Muslim Tunisia's strong secular tradition.

International observers praised Tunisia for an exemplary election.

Tunisia's path forward is under scrutiny after it led the way for Arab neighbors in casting off dictators, in Egypt and later in Libya ? proclaimed liberated last Sunday as Tunisians went in droves to the polls.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_tunisia_elections

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Police arrest 75 protesters at Oakland's City Hall (AP)

OAKLAND, Calif. ? Police in riot gear cleared anti-Wall Street protesters from in front of Oakland's City Hall on Tuesday morning, leaving a sea of overturned tents, protest signs and trash strewn across the plaza.

Hundreds of officers and sheriff's deputies from more than a dozen agencies went into the two week-old encampment with tear gas and beanbag rounds at around 5 a.m., police said. Seventy-five people were arrested, mostly on suspicion of misdemeanor unlawful assembly and illegal camping.

About 170 protesters were at the site, but no one was injured, according to police.

"I'm very pleased with the way things went," Interim Oakland Police Chief Howard Jordan said at a news conference following the raid.

Television news footage showed protesters being taken away in plastic handcuffs without incident, though some protesters complained of rough handling by police.

Officers fired tear gas and bean bags when one group of demonstrators pelted officers with rocks and bottles near the camp's kitchen area, Jordan said.

"It was definitely chaos. People didn't want to get gassed," said protester Anthony Owens, 40, a computer programmer from Oakland who was at the scene when police moved in but was not arrested.

Some people in the camp left as word spread about possible police action, Owens said. Many of the remaining protesters locked arms and shouted as officers surrounded the plaza and moved in.

Witnesses reported seeing smoke rising from the area. The plaza was "contained" at around 5:30 a.m., city officials said.

The Oakland site was among numerous camps that have sprung up around the country, as protesters rally against what they see as corporate greed and a wide range of other economic issues. The protests have attracted a wide range of people, including college students looking for work and the homeless.

In Oakland, tensions between the city and protesters escalated last week as officials complained about what they described as deteriorating safety, sanitation and health issues at the site.

City officials had originally been supportive of protesters, with Oakland Mayor Jean Quan saying that sometimes "democracy is messy."

But the city later warned the protesters that they were breaking the law and couldn't stay in the encampment overnight. They cited concerns about rats, fire hazards, public urination and acts of violence at the site, which had grown to more than 150 tents and included areas for health care, child care and cooking.

"Many Oaklanders support the goals of the national Occupy Wall Street movement," Quan said in a statement on Tuesday. "However, over the last week it was apparent that neither the demonstrators nor the City could maintain safe or sanitary conditions or control the ongoing vandalism."

There were reports of a sex assault and a severe beating and fire and paramedics were denied access to the camp, according to city officials, who said they had also received numerous complaints of intimidating and threatening behavior.

Protesters disputed the city's claims about conditions at the camp. They said the protest was dominated by a spirit of cooperation that helped keep the site clean and allowed disputes to be resolved peacefully.

Lauren Richardson, a 24-year-old college student from Oakland, complained that the disheveled state of the camp following the police raid gave a false impression. She said volunteers collected garbage and recycling every six hours, that water was boiled before being used to wash dishes and that rats had infested the park long before the camp went up.

"It was very neat. It was very organized," Richardson said.

Volunteers at the medical tent erected on the site said paramedics had not been kept away.

On Thursday, the city ordered the protesters to vacate, though they did not set a deadline. Protesters said the number of people at the camp had steadily dwindled since the city posted the letter, while those who remained understood they would likely face a confrontation with police.

After Tuesday's raid, police maintained a heavy presence around downtown Oakland. Streets were closed off by police barricades, and at least two helicopters were in the air shining lights down. Dozens of officers were on the streets, and police in riot gear were seen facing off with shouting protesters, who briefly blocked traffic on a busy thoroughfare.

City officials advised downtown businesses to delay opening and city employees to come in late.

Police also cleared a smaller encampment from a park near the plaza on Tuesday morning.

The city said protesters would be allowed to return to the plaza after it was cleaned up and could stay between the hours of 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. but not overnight.

Many protesters said the raid had only served to strengthen their resolve that the protests would continue. A flier handed out along the police barricades at the edge of the plaza Tuesday morning asked Occupy Oakland demonstrators to reconvene at the city's public library in the afternoon.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_on_re_us/us_occupy_wall_street_oakland

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A Decade On, Windows XP Is Still the World's Most-Used Desktop OS [Techniversary]

Windows XP first went on sale ten years ago today. In that span, it has become the desktop OS of choice with a worldwide install base of as much as 80 percent. Here's looking at you XP. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/DfrPs7GCEx8/a-decade-on-windows-xp-is-still-the-worlds-most+used-desktop-os

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It's Official: Fungus Causes Bat-Killing White-Nose Syndrome

News | More Science

Experimental infections prove that Geomyces destructans is responsible for white-nose syndrome


little-brown-batLITTLE BROWN BAT: A fungus is responsible for the white-nose syndrome that has killed more than 1 million bats of various species, particularly the little brown bat pictured here. Image: ? Alan Hicks

Supplemental Material

  • MP3 file Audio Bat Die-Offs Affect Human Health and Economics

A fungus known as Geomyces destructans is indeed responsible for the dusting of white across bat noses and wings that has wiped out entire populations of the flying mammals, new research shows. By purposefully infecting healthy bats with the fungus?and confirming that seemingly healthy "control" bats from the same population did not get sick from a prior but hidden fungal infection?microbiologist David Blehert of the U.S. Geological Survey and his colleagues showed in a paper published online October 26 in Nature that G. destructans is in fact responsible for the disease known as white-nose syndrome (WNS), which has devastated bat populations across the northeastern U.S., killing an estimated one million of the animals. (Scientific American is part of Nature Publishing Group.)

"It is specifically during hibernation that bats are infected with this fungus," Blehert notes. "The greatest damage it does to bats is to wing membranes."

Such membranes, in addition to enabling flight, help control physiological functions such as water retention and blood flow, and even "release CO2 when the respiratory rate is just a couple of breaths per minute," Blehert says. At the same time, it is not clear why a skin infection with G. destructans would prove directly lethal to the animals?the bats in this controlled experiment had not died from the disease by the time the experiment ended after 102 days. Nor had the fungus invaded the bats' vital organs, the researchers found.

In addition, it appears that G. destructans has been a part of the European cave-scape for some time and it has been isolated from cave walls there as well as from bats roosting in those caves. Thus far, however, the fungus has not proved lethal for those species. "It could be that European bats have evolved over a longer period of time and are immune or have a different way of coping with the fungus during hibernation," says mycologist Vishnu Chaturvedi of the New York State Department of Health, who is also studying the fungus and disease, which he calls geomycosis, but was not involved in this study. "Or the fungus in the U.S. has subtle variations that we have not even started looking at."

The core problem seems to be that G. destructans is depleting the fat layers?and thus the body mass?of very small North American bat species, such as the little brown bats used in this experiment. Blehert speculates that the lack of mass mortality in Europe may derive from the fact that European bat species are generally larger in size or the fact that they tend to hibernate in much smaller groups. "In the northeastern U.S. there are many very large hibernaculums, with upwards of 1,000 bats," Blehert notes. "The bat is providing food for the fungus and serving as an amplification host."

In fact, Blehert's experiments show that bats are quite effective at spreading the destructive fungal disease to their neighbors. "Bats are very good agents of transmission of the disease," Chaturvedi says. And that?plus the European analysis?may suggest that G. destructans is an invasive species, according to Blehert, which possibly traveled to the U.S. on a European who visited a public cavern in New York State. WNS was first observed in a wild cave connected to that commercial cave complex near Albany, N.Y. Chaturvedi's work has shown that G. destructans in North America is genetically similar wherever it is found.

There is hope for the bats. Another experiment by Blehert and his colleagues showed that bats artificially removed from hibernation, put in a warm environment, and provided with food and water could recover from WNS. "Bats can rapidly clear the infection in just a matter of weeks," Blehert says. It may be that G. destructans relies on the turning down or shutting off of the bat's immune system during hibernation?as is common to most hibernating mammals?to wreak havoc. The fungus seems to grow best at cold temperatures between 4 and 15 degrees Celsius. "It could be that hibernation is the Achilles' heel that is predisposing bats to G. destructans infection," Blehert adds.

But keeping hundreds of thousands of bats from hibernating is hardly plausible. "You can't just wake them up and shoo them out," Blehert notes, nor is it possible to feed them in mass quantities to restore fat levels. Restricting human access to caves where susceptible bats hibernate?as has been done by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service?and following decontamination protocols when such access is necessary will at least reduce the risk of humans further spreading the disease, which has now spread to infect bats in 11 states and Canada. "Segregating healthy animals from diseased ones to the extent possible does seem to be able to control this infection," Chaturvedi adds.

Regardless, the G. destructans epidemic is just another example of fungal disease on the march: Chytridiomycosis is wiping out amphibians worldwide and fungi may be playing a role in the colony-collapse disorder plaguing honeybees. One effort to protect frogs from this fungal plague are so-called amphibian arks, where small populations are taken into captivity to ensure their survival. That approach may become necessary for certain endangered bat species as well to protect them from the white-nose syndrome caused by G. destructans. As Blehert and his colleagues wrote: "Fungal pathogens have the unique capacity to drive host populations to extinction because of their ability to survive in host-free environments."

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=fc9efc6e94c04cc620a6f80c48b4d17f

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"Tower Heist" Steals Into New York City (Fashion Wire Daily)

New York ? Eddie Murphy and his cinematic criminal cohorts joined forces to take over New York City on Monday, Oct. 24, as they gathered to premiere "Tower Heist" at the Ziegfeld Theatre. Murphy, who also produced the comedy caper flick, had an easy explanation for why he jumped into the project with both feet.

"I wanted to get out of the house and do some stuff," he said at an earlier press conference. "I'd been sitting around the house too long. So I was like, let me get out and do something. I hadn't done a film like this. And that's why it was, 'Hey, I want to do a movie and do something I haven't done.' So here we are."

The "we" of "Tower Heist" is a star-studded group, and most joined Murphy on the red carpet for the celebration, with Ben Stiller leading the gang. Having Stiller as his comedic foil was exactly what Murphy wanted when he started the process of putting "Tower Heist" together with famed producer Brian Grazer. "I'm a big fan of Ben's," Murphy declared. "And I've been wanting to work with him for years. So this all came together perfect for me. I'm very happy to be here."

Casey Affleck, Gabourey Sidibe, Judd Hirsch, Tea Leoni, Alan Alda and Matthew Broderick rounded out the smiling cast. Broderick brought his wife Sarah Jessica Parker and their son James, while Stiller escorted his spouse, actress Christine Taylor. Serena Williams, Sean Combs, Tracy Morgan, Paz de la Huerta and Donald Trump with his wife Melania also turned out for the premiere.

Brett Ratner, the film's director, was actually the night's real center of attention, perhaps because he's also the man tapped to produce the upcoming Academy Awards show. He's already chosen Eddie Murphy as the host, a fact that might worry a lesser performer. But it doesn't faze Murphy.

"I don't get nervous," the veteran comedian said with a chuckle. "The Oscars is just a fun thing to do. I mean the pressure involves a bunch of artists coming in and being honored. I've got a pretty easy job coming out, introduce people, stand up straight. You know, I may be in a couple of silly sketches or something. But I don't feel any pressure. I'm kind of looking forward to it."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/fashion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/fwd/20111025/en_fashion_fwd/towerheiststealsintonewyorkcity

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

US House votes to reject EU emissions control plan

(AP) ? The U.S. House of Representatives voted Monday to exclude U.S. airlines from an emissions cap-and-trade program that the European Union plans to impose on all airlines flying to and from the continent beginning next year.

With the legislation, which passed by voice vote, lawmakers joined the airline industry and the Obama administration in opposing the EU Emissions Trading Scheme scheduled to go into effect on Jan. 1. The bill now goes to the Senate, where there is currently no companion legislation.

The measure directs the transportation secretary to prohibit U.S. carriers from participating in the program if it is unilaterally imposed. It also tells other federal agencies to take steps necessary to ensure that U.S. carriers are not penalized by the emissions control scheme.

The EU program began in 2005 with the capping of carbon dioxide emissions from power plants, refineries, steel mills and other industrial producers. Next year it extends to airlines, which are said to be responsible for about 3 percent of greenhouse gases.

Under the program, similar to the cap-and-trade concept that President Barack Obama unsuccessfully tried to move through Congress, each airliner is issued permits to emit a certain amount of carbon dioxide. They can buy extra credits if they emit more than their allowed limit, or sell credits if they emit less. Payments would be made to the EU country to which they most frequently fly.

The EU says the costs to airlines will be modest and will have minimal impact on passenger fares. The U.S. aviation industry says the cost between 2012 and 2020 could hit $3.1 billion. It says it is unfair that a flight from the United States, for example from Los Angeles, would have to pay for emissions for all parts of flights to Europe, including time spent over the United States and the Atlantic.

"It's a tax grab by the European Union," the House's Republican Transportation Committee Chairman John Mica said. "The meter starts running the minute the plane departs from any point in the U.S. until it reaches Europe."

In 2009, American, United and Continental Airlines and the Air Transport Association of America filed suit in a case now before the European Court of Justice, arguing that the unilateral imposition of emissions rules violates international aviation agreements.

They received a setback this month when the court's advocate general, a legal adviser, said in a nonbinding statement that the EU emissions trading scheme is compatible with international law and urged the court to reject the U.S. challenge.

That drew fire from Krishna R. Urs, the U.S. deputy assistant secretary of State for transportation affairs, who repeated the U.S.'s "strong legal and policy objections to the inclusion of flights by non-EU carriers" in the EU program.

The Air Transport Association said that preliminary opinion "does not mark the end of this case" and noted that more than 20 countries, including Brazil, Russia, India, China and Japan, oppose the EU plan.

"It imposes an exorbitant tax that siphons away from aviation the very funds it needs to continue to invest in aircraft technology, sustainable alternative fuels and infrastructure advances," the ATA said.

Mica, who recently led a delegation to the International Civil Aviation Organization in Montreal, said ICAO member nations next month will approve overwhelmingly a measure opposing the EU's carbon trading system.

"This shouldn't lead to a trade war," Mica said. "It should lead to a resolution that does improve our environment."

One of the few voices of dissent came from Democratic Rep. Edward Markey, who said the United States also passes laws that dictate security and pollution standards for foreign ships and planes entering U.S. territory. "The Europeans are taking climate change seriously. We shouldn't undermine their efforts by legislating that our airlines break the law."

___

The bill is H.R. 2594

Online:

Congress: http://thomas.loc.gov

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-10-24-Congress-Airline%20Emissions/id-3cb6cd13765448e3aa122830bb4fe013

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AP Essay: Leaders, once mythic, reduced in death

FILE - In this file image made from amateur video provided by the Libya Youth Movement and filmed on Thursday, Oct. 20, 2011, Moammar Gadhafi, center, is surrounded by Libyan fighters in Sirte, Libya. Saddam Hussein, Osama bin Laden, Romania's Nicolae Ceausescu, Liberia's Samuel Doe, Benito Mussolini and, now, Gadhafi. No matter how much a powerful human being builds up a cult of personality in life, when an undignified death arrives _ the moments before it and the hours afterward _ the incontrovertible reality is hard to avoid: We are, in the end, merely lumps of flesh. What's different today is that sometimes the world gets to see it. (AP Photo/Libya Youth Movement via APTN, File)

FILE - In this file image made from amateur video provided by the Libya Youth Movement and filmed on Thursday, Oct. 20, 2011, Moammar Gadhafi, center, is surrounded by Libyan fighters in Sirte, Libya. Saddam Hussein, Osama bin Laden, Romania's Nicolae Ceausescu, Liberia's Samuel Doe, Benito Mussolini and, now, Gadhafi. No matter how much a powerful human being builds up a cult of personality in life, when an undignified death arrives _ the moments before it and the hours afterward _ the incontrovertible reality is hard to avoid: We are, in the end, merely lumps of flesh. What's different today is that sometimes the world gets to see it. (AP Photo/Libya Youth Movement via APTN, File)

FILE - In this Oct. 22, 2011 file photo, a man photographs the body of Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi on a mattress in a commercial freezer at a shopping center in Misrata, Libya, Saddam Hussein, Osama bin Laden, Romania's Nicolae Ceausescu, Liberia's Samuel Doe, Benito Mussolini and, now, Gadhafi. No matter how much a powerful human being builds up a cult of personality in life, when an undignified death arrives _ the moments before it and the hours afterward _ the incontrovertible reality is hard to avoid: We are, in the end, merely lumps of flesh. What's different today is that sometimes the world gets to see it. (AP Photo/David Sperry, File)

NEW YORK (AP) ? It may be true, it may be myth. But in 1967, when Che Guevara faced the Bolivian army sergeant who was about to execute him, history records the legendary revolutionary's final words like this: "Shoot, coward, you are only going to kill a man."

Saddam Hussein, Osama bin Laden, Romania's Nicolae Ceausescu, Liberia's Samuel Doe, Benito Mussolini and, now, Moammar Gadhafi. No matter how much a mythologized despot or mastermind builds up a cult of personality in life, when an undignified death arrives, the incontrovertible reality is hard to avoid: We are, in the end, merely lumps of flesh.

What's different today is that sometimes the world gets to see it.

Exhibit A: the surreal odyssey of Gadhafi's violent ending over the past few days. The ruthless strongman, who for four decades erected giant billboards and intricate mosaics to his own glory, exited the stage in a series of chaotic, deeply disturbing bursts of amateur video.

First we saw his battered corpse, enmeshed in the chaos of revolution's final throes in his hometown. Then video emerged of him alive, bloodied, mumbling, struggling to survive as revolutionaries splayed him upon a hood as a trophy. Finally, there he was laid out, shirtless, on a brown floral twin mattress in a shopping-mall freezer; his fellow Libyans lined up and gawked. A blusterer and preener for so many years, Gadhafi had been laid low, rendered small.

"When we captured him, he was like a child," said Hassan Doua, a commander in Libya whose fighters found Gadhafi in Sirte. "He hardly looked us in the eye. It was very hard for us to believe this man was the reason for all the killing."

Now, a new, unpredictable element has emerged. The potent combination of cellphone video and the social media network that transmits it around the world. As with the ghostly phone-cam images of Saddam Hussein's disorderly execution in late 2006, the emerging medium turned a despot's death and its aftermath into a globally distributed snuff film.

In death, these commanding figures are, at last, human ? no longer cocooned by the carefully calibrated facades that their power allowed them to create. It's like the American celeb-magazine features that find common ground between famous people and the rest of the world ? "Stars: They're Just Like Us." But in these leaders' cases, the twisted notoriety of their demises brought them down to size.

"Death is the ultimate take-down," says Mary Roach, author of "Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers."

"It's a powerful, visceral verification of that basic truth that we are all just flesh and blood, that even the most powerful and seemingly omnipotent among us are in fact as vulnerable as children," she says.

Which, of course, is how all humans encounter their own ends ? with no firsthand knowledge of what lies beyond. Images like those of Gadhafi before and after he died are a jarring reminder of death's informality, which humans often struggle to hide. It's also a weird intimacy: There is perhaps nothing more personal than the moments just before death and the hours after it. That we can be privy to these moments at all ? let alone the degrading expression of them, controlled and disseminated by one's enemies ? is visceral.

This notion holds true even with Osama bin Laden, whose death photos President Barack Obama decided not to release. "We don't trot out this stuff as trophies," Obama told CBS' "60 Minutes" afterward. But though no one beyond a small group saw the postmortem images of his body, even the loose contours of description ? shot dead in his bedroom at night, his wife by his side, porn found in nearby computers ? undercut the global-mastermind legend that al-Qaida's leader spent two decades crafting.

Sometimes, in more controlled circumstances, a mythic figure's body is used to amplify his reign rather than reduce it. Even after decades of decay, the preserved corpses of Lenin and Mao still lie on display in the lands they changed irrevocably. They serve as reminders that the human body is a malleable symbol for those who control it. Of course, in those two cases the leaders' governments survived them and endured for many years.

Whatever ultimately happens with Gadhafi's body, the impact of its visibility will endure. Christopher Hitchens, writing in Slate about his objections to the Libyan leader's end, nevertheless acknowledged the sentiment of many in the Arab world: "At the close of an obscene regime," he wrote, "it is natural for people to hope for something like an exorcism. It is satisfying to see the cadaver of the monster and be sure that he can't come back."

That's the very definition of "habeas corpus" ? "you have the body." And now, in an age when a device we keep in our pockets can reveal a dictator's demise, it has never been more relevant. Whether it's Saddam hanging from a rope, Nicolae Ceausescu dead in his suit and tie, or Gadhafi beaten and confused and then dead and gone, the sight of the body is one of the most powerful political and emotional totems of all.

Gadhafi's former subjects attested to that in the city of Misrata this weekend. In long lines curling around corners and into the street, they waited to enter a produce locker in a run-down shopping plaza. There, upon that blood-stained mattress, they saw a man they held responsible for years of misery and ruined lives.

They looked down upon his shirtless remains, his toupee gone, his slight pot belly visible, his oft-facelifted visage sagging. They smiled and they ogled and they wept. They were the ones who had the power now. The man who had carefully built himself into a curious myth was rendered unto those he once ruled as something diminished and frail, hurtling toward impermanence and irrelevance.

Great and terrible in life, in death these mythologized despots and masterminds are revealed at last as the much smaller men behind the curtain ? shorn of the outsized facades that frightened and mesmerized so many for so long. The stars, in the end, are just like us.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? Ted Anthony writes about American culture for The Associated Press. Follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/anthonyted

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-10-23-The%20Great%20Equalizer/id-f160e917c4f14868ac5cc450c4baf3b2

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Video: Understanding the ?08 financial collapse

Battling for gay rights, in Allah's name

Like other aspiring religious reformers before her, Ani Zonneveld takes positions that make her unpopular with her religion's spiritual leaders, in this case America's Islamic leaders, including advocating for gay Muslims. Msnbc.com's Kari Huus reports.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/45023311#45023311

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Monday, October 24, 2011

Irish dissident convicted in MI5 weapons sting (AP)

VILNIUS, Lithuania ? A Lithuanian judge found an Irish man guilty Friday of trying to buy weapons and explosives in a six-year sting orchestrated by Britain's domestic spy agency MI5 ? a case that drew attention to a hardcore Irish Republican Army splinter group's plans to spread terror to London.

Judge Arunas Kisielus of the Vilnius Regional Court sentenced Michael Campbell ? a 39-year-old with alleged links to the Real IRA group ? to 12 years in prison for weapons offenses and supporting a terrorist group.

Video footage and intercepted communications showed that Campbell paid some euro6,000 (about $8,300) for high-grade explosives, grenade launchers, detonators, AK-47s and a special assassin's rifle to Lithuanian agents posing as arms dealers.

In an audio recording, he is heard discussing how easy it would be with the type of equipment on offer to plant a bomb in London and escape.

"You can imagine us getting over to England ... You imagine, with a six-hour timer, we could be over to London and back," Campbell says in an audio clip after mulling over a price list for explosives and detonators. "Just tick, tick, tick, tick ... gone.

Kisielius sentenced Campbell to five years for weapons possession, six years for attempting to smuggle weaponry and explosives, and 12 years for supporting a terrorist group. However, Kisielius said the sentences on the weapons charges would be canceled since no harm was caused and that Campbell did not have prior convictions for similar offenses.

The case against Campbell was extraordinary in that an MI5 informant testified in open court ? evidence that is thought to have clinched the conviction.

His defense lawyer, Inga Botyriene, said she expected Campbell to appeal. He has 20 days to do so once he receives a translation of the verdict. The time Campbell has spent in detention since his 2008 arrest would be subtracted from his 12-year prison sentence.

"It's a not a big surprise," Botyriene said of the verdict. She argued that Campbell was a victim of entrapment by foreign agents, who lured Campbell to Lithuania, where the MI5 had a better chance of winning a conviction. "That's why the trial is in Lithuania," she said.

His arrest was part of an international sting operation aimed at incapacitating the Real IRA, which broke from the IRA in 1997 over the IRA's support for a peace deal. The group is regarded as a terrorist organization by the U.K. and the United States.

Real IRA, which vows to continue the armed fight for independence from British rule, has claimed responsibility for a number of recent attacks in Northern Ireland, including the murder of two British soldiers in March 2009. Most of their recent attacks have been unsuccessful ? due largely to a diminished or aging weapons stockpile.

"The evidence acquired during the investigation proves that the weapons and explosives would have been used for terrorist attacks and killing of innocent people in the United Kingdom," said Irmantas Mikelionis, chief prosecutor of Lithuania's Organized Crime and Corruption Investigations Department.

MI5's original hope had been to starve the group of needed cash and nab key figures in the process. The groups have raised funds through used bank robberies, welfare fraud, counterfeiting and cigarette or fuel smuggling.

"The conviction of Michael Campbell is the result of a successful joint operation between the Security Service and the Lithuanian authorities," said a senior British security official speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of his job. "They have put behind bars a senior member of the Real IRA whose intention was to kill innocent members of the public in Northern Ireland and in Britain."

It was the Real IRA's cigarette smuggling that led the spy agency to Eastern Europe.

Security officials came across an import-exporter in his mid-40s who had been smuggling cigarettes in the Baltics with three Irish dissidents. The man was recruited as an MI5 informant in 2002 and Lithuanian intelligence agents were brought into the sting operation.

But the sting took another twist in 2004.

The wife of one of the three Irish dissidents asked the smuggler-turned-informant if he could exploit his criminal contacts in Eastern Europe to acquire arms. In the two years that followed, she provided the informant with weapons wish lists and he introduced her to a Lithuanian agent posing as an arms dealer. Security officials believe others in the Real IRA were giving her instructions.

In 2007, the informant arranged a meeting between Campbell and the supposed arms dealer at his lodge in Lithuania.

Disappointed by those weapons, Campbell asked to meet another dealer.

Covert video surveillance shows Campbell inspecting weapons with the second Lithuanian agent, who probes Campbell about why he wants the weapons and who the intended targets are.

"Brits," Campbell says, before asking for armor-piecing rounds, which are often used against soldiers or police and their vehicles.

After exchanging more money and discussing transporting the weapons to Ireland, the Lithuanian agent presses Campbell about what organization he represents.

"IRA," Campbell says, shortly before Lithuanian agents swoop in and arrest him.

Campbell is the brother of Liam Campbell, who is also wanted by Lithuanian prosecutors. Liam, 47, co-founded the Real IRA with Michael McKevitt and was one of four leaders in the paramilitary group found liable by a civil court for a 1998 car bombing in Omagh, Northern Ireland, that killed 29 people.

One of the only other cases where an informant gave evidence in open court was American David Rupert ? a former FBI/British agent who provided testimony that led to the conviction of McKevitt.

Lithuanian authorities praised the bravery of agents and the informant, who has since been given a new identity.

"The danger of being disclosed, the danger of being accused for cooperation with secret services were hanging in the air each time they contacted the members of the terrorist group," Mikelionis said.

MI5 has battled with entrapment defenses in the past. Desmond Kearns, accused of smuggling guns for the Real IRA, walked free after a judge ruled that he had been wrongfully entrapped during a sting. He had been charged with attempting to smuggle arms and explosives from Europe in an alleged Real IRA arms operation.

Prosecutors in the Campbell case say undercover agents only got involved once it was clear that dissident groups wanted to buy weapons.

___

Dodds contributed to this report from London.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/terrorism/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111021/ap_on_re_eu/eu_lithuania_ira_dissident

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

US boosts pressure on Pakistan over terrorism (AP)

ISLAMABAD ? The Obama administration on Friday intensified pressure on Pakistan to do more to crack down on Islamist militants destabilizing Afghanistan, as U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton delivered a tough public message that extremists have been able to operate in and from Pakistan for too long.

For the second time in two days, Clinton pressed Pakistani authorities to step up efforts against the Haqqani militant network, which is based in the country's rugged tribal region, and is blamed for attacks both inside Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan.

After leading an unusually large and powerful U.S. delegation, including CIA director David Petraeus and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin Dempsey, for four hours of talks with Pakistani officials late Thursday, Clinton met Friday with Pakistan's president and foreign minister to make the case.

"We should be able to agree that for too long extremists have been able to operate here in Pakistan and from Pakistani soil," she said. "No one who targets innocent civilians, whether they be Pakistanis, Afghans, Americans or anyone else should be tolerated or protected."

The U.S. has grown increasingly impatient with Pakistan's refusal to take military action against the Taliban-linked Haqqani network and its ambivalence, if not hostility, to supporting Afghan attempts to reconcile Taliban fighters into society.

Clinton made clear that that was no longer acceptable while American officials warned that if Pakistan continued to balk, the U.S. would act unilaterally to end the militant threat.

"Pakistan has a critical role to play in supporting Afghan reconciliation and ending the conflict," Clinton told reporters at a joint press conference with Pakistani Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar. "We look to Pakistan to take strong steps to deny Afghan insurgents safe havens and to encourage the Taliban to enter negotiations in good faith."

The Haqqani group is considered the greatest threat to American troops in Afghanistan, and U.S. officials have accused Pakistan's military spy agency, the ISI, of providing it with support ? an allegation denied by Islamabad. Clinton noted that U.S. and Afghan forces had recently launched a successful operation against Haqqani safe havens in Afghanistan and that Pakistan must do the same. On Thursday in the Afghan capital, she said those who allow such safe havens to remain would pay "a very big price."

After the lengthy meeting with Pakistan's prime minister and army and intelligence chiefs on Thursday and Friday's talks with Kahr, Clinton said the U.S. delegation had asked "very specifically for greater cooperation from the Pakistan side to squeeze the Haqqani network and other terrorists because we know that trying to eliminate terrorists and safe havens from one side of the border is not going to work."

"It's like that old story: you can't keep snakes in your backyard and expect them only to bite your neighbors," she said.

Clinton made the same argument later in a town hall meeting with civic leaders.

"No policy that draws distinctions between good terrorists and bad terrorists can provide long-term security," she said.

She also acknowledged that U.S.-Pakistani ties were now badly strained. "Our relationship of late has not been an easy one," she said. "We have seen common interests give way to mutual suspicion."

For her part, Kahr repeated Pakistani denials of any government connection to the Haqqanis.

"There is no question of any support by any Pakistani institution to safe havens in Pakistan," she said.

And, she insisted that Pakistan and the U.S. shared the same goal.

"Pakistan takes the threat of terrorism seriously," she said, noting that thousands of Pakistanis had been killed by extremists over the past decade. "We are committed to this process, we would be willing to do whatever we can to be able to make this a success."

What is needed now, she said, is to try to agree on how to "operationalize" efforts to end the threat.

Clinton said the urgency of the situation required that that the operationalization take place "over the next days and weeks, not months and years."

Earlier this week, Pakistan's powerful army chief Gen. Ashfaq Kayani said a in a rare briefing to two parliamentary defense committees that the country has been getting mixed signals from the United States, with the Pentagon urging the military to focus on fighting militants and the State Department requesting help in negotiating with the insurgents, said a parliament member who attended the meeting.

Kayani said Washington needs to make up its mind because it won't work to attack them and try to negotiate with them at the same time, according to the lawmaker.

The large U.S. contingent was meant to display unity among the various U.S. agencies with an interest in Pakistan, including the CIA, Pentagon and State Department. Clinton arrived in Islamabad after saying In Kabul that she and the team would "push Pakistan very hard."

The Pakistani military has said it can't launch an offensive against the Haqqani network in its safe haven in the North Waziristan tribal area because its troops are stretched too thin by other operations against insurgents at war with the state.

But many analysts suspect the military is reluctant to target a group that is seen as an important potential ally in Afghanistan once foreign troops withdraw. Both the U.S. and Pakistani governments had close relations with the founder of the Haqqani network, Jalaluddin Haqqani, during the war against the Soviets in Afghanistan in the 1980s.

____

Associated Press writer Sebastian Abbot in Islamabad contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/terrorism/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111021/ap_on_re_as/as_us_pakistan

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Sony Ericsson bringing Ice Cream Sandwich to Xperia handsets

HTC may be busy pondering its Android 4.0 future, but Sony Ericsson is apparently ready to take a bite out of Google's Ice Cream Sandwich. Yesterday, in a post on its Facebook page, Sony Ericsson's Dutch branch stated that it will indeed upgrade its Xperia lineup to the latest Android OS, though it didn't offer any details on release dates. We reached out to the manufacturer for confirmation, and received the following statement:
Sony Ericsson is currently rolling out the upgrade to Gingerbread 2.3.4 across its entire 2011 Xperia smartphone portfolio. This software upgrade will be available through a phased roll out in select markets. Beyond Gingerbread 2.3.4, we plan to upgrade our 2011 Xperia smartphone portfolio to the next Android platform made available to us.
The company went on to say that all official software announcements will be posted on its blog, so we'll let you know as soon as we have more details.

Sony Ericsson bringing Ice Cream Sandwich to Xperia handsets originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Oct 2011 05:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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