Sunday, October 29, 2006

U.S. Economy: Growth Slows to 1.6% Rate as Homebuilding Slumps

The U.S. economy grew at a 1.6 percent annual rate last quarter, the slowest pace in more than three years and less than economists forecast, as housing slumped and the trade deficit widened.


The first estimate of the quarter's gross domestic product, the value of all goods and services produced in the U.S., compares with a 2.6 percent gain from April through June, the Commerce Department reported today in Washington. A gauge of inflation watched by the Federal Reserve eased.


Stocks declined and bonds advanced after the report, which showed homebuilding fell by the most in 15 years and the trade gap worsened as consumers bought more foreign-made goods. A drop in energy prices that gathered momentum late in the quarter is sustaining spending and restraining inflation, helping persuade Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke to leave interest rates alone.

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Tags: inflation | forecast | economy | Washington | U.S.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Get Firefox 2.0 early from Mozilla's FTP servers

A day before the scheduled public release of its long-awaited Firefox 2.0 Web browser, the Mozilla Foundation has posted the final versions of the software on its FTP servers in preparation for the public launch.

The official Firefox 2.0 public launch page has not been activated on the Mozilla site, but the new U.S. versions for Windows, Linux and Macintosh are available now, buried amid the data on the group’s FTP servers. Versions in other languages are also available at Mozilla’s FTP site.

On Friday, Mozilla had said it would make the new Firefox 2.0 browser available tomorrow. The last preview version of the browser, called Release Candidate 3, was posted for public download last Monday. The official Firefox Web page still offers version 1.5.0.7 of the browser for download, but is expected to be updated or replaced to allow downloads of Firefox 2.0.

source

Firefox 2.0 hits the web Firefox

Tags: Release | Browser | U.S. | mozilla | firefox

Hungary govt firm after riots, PM blames opposition

BUDAPEST, Oct 24 (Reuters) - Hungary's government pledged on Tuesday to stand by embattled Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany who blamed the opposition for riots that marred the 50th anniversary of the country's anti-Soviet uprising.


Gyurcsany and his coalition of Socialists and Free Democrats have come under attack since the leak last month of a tape in which the prime minister admitted lying about the parlous state of the economy to win a national election in April.


Anti-government protesters have staged daily demonstrations outside parliament demanding Gyurcsany step down amid the worst violence in Hungary since the fall of communism.


"Radical words have turned into radical actions. The leader of the opposition provided the ideology for the riots," Gyurcsany told parliament after receiving support from the coalition for budget deficit cuts.

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Tags: Gyurcsany Ferenc | Riot | Parliament | opposition | Government | coalition | hungary | budapest

Spencer Says "Ugly" Comments About Hillary Fabricated

Republican Senate candidate John Spencer is accusing a Daily News reporter of fabricating his comments about Senator Hillary Clinton that were published in the paper Monday.


The Daily News quoted Spencer as saying, "You ever see a picture of her back then? Whew. I don't know why Bill married her." He also said he was convinced Clinton had millions of dollars worth of plastic surgery.


Last night on Inside City Hall, Spencer denied making the "ugly" comments.

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Tags: surgery | senate | republican | Hillary Clinton | daily | Bill Clinton

Vista secures new enemies

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Microsoft Corp. is no stranger to antitrust skirmishes and complaints from rivals about unfair business practices.

But the latest fight over its coming Vista operating system pits Microsoft against an unlikely adversary: the security-software vendors that are some of its most intimate partners in protecting its notoriously vulnerable systems from attacks.

As Vista's planned release nears, the company is facing a backlash from such vendors as Symantec Corp. and McAfee Inc., which argue that even the concessions Microsoft recently made to appease European antitrust regulators won't do enough to help them best protect their customers.

source

Microsoft says Vista 'on target'

Tags: secures | McAfee Corp | business | Vista | San Jose | Microsoft | Calif.

Get Firefox 2.0 early from Mozilla's FTP servers

A day before the scheduled public release of its long-awaited Firefox 2.0 Web browser, the Mozilla Foundation has posted the final versions of the software on its FTP servers in preparation for the public launch.


The official Firefox 2.0 public launch page has not been activated on the Mozilla site, but the new U.S. versions for Windows, Linux and Macintosh are available now, buried amid the data on the group’s FTP servers. Versions in other languages are also available at Mozilla’s FTP site.


On Friday, Mozilla had said it would make the new Firefox 2.0 browser available tomorrow. The last preview version of the browser, called Release Candidate 3, was posted for public download last Monday. The official Firefox Web page still offers version 1.5.0.7 of the browser for download, but is expected to be updated or replaced to allow downloads of Firefox 2.0.

source

Tags: Release | Browser | U.S. | mozilla | firefox

Monday, October 23, 2006

Rubber bullets at Hungary protest

Police in Hungary have fired rubber bullets and tear gas to disperse protesters during commemorations of the 1956 uprising against Soviet rule.


Clashes took place with about 1,000 demonstrators close to parliament where officials had earlier laid flowers on the 50th anniversary of the revolt. Some protesters were in a tank they had taken from an uprising exhibition. Hungary has seen bitter political division since PM Ferenc Gyurcsány admitted he lied to win re-election. Some veterans of the uprising refused to shake hands with him. The latest clashes have been in Elizabeth and Deák squares, about 2 kilometers from parliament. The BBC's Nick Thorpe in Budapest said long lines of riot police were moving down streets and firing rubber bullets into crowds. BBC's correspondent said he saw one man being carried away with what looked like a head wound from a rubber bullet.


The disturbances were taking place on the edge of a much bigger, peaceful demonstration, he said, adding that the picture in Budapest was confusing with several groups marching through the city to events at different locations. It was difficult to tell whether the groups carrying Hungarian flags were marking 1956 or taking part in anti-government protests, our correspondent said. In one incident police rushed an unarmed tank - similar to one used by the Soviets to quash the rebellion - that was being driven among the protesters. At least one man was pulled from the tank. The possibility of clashes had prompted the government to close Kossuth square outside parliament and urge the media to stay away. Budapest's police chief said protest organizers had broken an agreement with them and there was a "considerable quantity" of knives and other weapons. The local MTI news agency said tear gas was also used at Budapest's Western Railway Station and that water cannon was used at another location. The agency said the protesters had been throwing rocks and pieces of metal at security forces. Protesters have been present outside parliament for weeks, but were forced back in the early hours of Monday to make way for the official ceremonies.

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Tags: rubber bullets | Western Railway Station | uprising | protest | Parliament | police | hungary | clashes | budapest

Hungary's Revolt Honored; Police Seal Off Parliament

Presidents from across former communist Europe are in Hungary today to mark the 50th anniversary of the region's biggest armed revolt against the regime, while police brace for more protests against the current government.


Streets leading into Budapest's Parliament square were closed off to the public with two cordons of wire fencing. Officers in riot gear formed lines across thoroughfares, forcing groups of flag-waving demonstrators to move to other parts of the capital.


Police bolstered their numbers in Budapest because of concern about an escalation of the protests seen in the capital in recent weeks. A demonstration involving thousands turned violent last month after revelations that Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany lied about the economy to win re-election. The clashes were the worst in Budapest since the 1956 uprising.

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Tags: Government | demonstration | Concern | communist | anniversary | police | Parliament | hungary | Europe | budapest

Riots mar Hungary uprising commemoration

Hungarian police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at thousands of anti-government protesters on Monday, marring commemorations of the 50th anniversary of the country's 1956 uprising against Soviet rule.


Police also used water cannon and some protesters lobbed stones and other missiles at them. The ambulance service said that 20-25 people had been injured, although no one was seriously hurt. One policeman was stabbed in the hand.


As police pushed the crowd of mostly far-right protesters back towards a rally by the main right of centre Fidesz opposition and further away from parliament, demonstrators seized a Soviet-era T-34 tank -- on show for the commemorations -- and drove it at police.

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Tags: rubber | Parliament | anti-government | Zagreb | Riots | police | hungary | budapest

Hungary's day of honour sapped by opposition

Fifty years ago Hungarians ripped the Communist hammer and sickle from their nation's flag as they rose against Soviet rule. Today in Budapest those flags fly again in ceremonies to honour the fallen of those 10 days of heady freedom that briefly blew through the iron curtain.


But most of them are being flown by the opposition, which has now been protesting for weeks against the Socialist-led government, angry at the prime minister's admission the party systematically lied during their successful re-election campaign.


Instead of a potent symbol of Hungary's desire to be independent the flags are mocking the Socialist's management of what should have been a day of national pride and unity. Instead many think the Socialists, inheritors of the defunct Communists, should not be at the commemoration at all.


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Tags: opposition | Honour | Government | freedom | hungary | budapest

Mozilla to release Firefox 2.0 tomorrow

23 October 2006 - Mozilla is release the new version of its Firefox browser, version 2.0, tomorrow on 24 October, just a few days after Microsoft launched Internet Explorer 7.


The browser is Microsoft's chief rival for surfing the web, and claims up to a 30% share in some markets, although across the board it hovers at just over 12%.


The updated Firefox incorporates a number of new features to make search easier and to protect users from scams. Tabs have been visually enhanced and a new “close” button added; in case of unexpected shut-down, Firefox keeps track of open tabs to restore them at restart.

source

Tags: version | Release | Browser | October | mozilla | Microsoft | internet | firefox

Thursday, October 19, 2006

McAfee Claims Foul on Vista Security Code

Microsoft last week said it is cooperating with anti-virus and security providers so that they can provide the same protection level as its own products, including OneCare Live. At least one big Microsoft partner and competitor, however, disputes those statements.


“Contrary to what it says publicly, Microsoft has not cooperated with the leading security providers,” Siobhan MacDermott, McAfee’s vice president of worldwide corporate communications, said in a statement. “To date, we have not had any cooperation from Microsoft and no response on McAfee's repeated requests to review the information.”


In a press briefing last Friday, Brad Smith, Microsoft senior vice president and general counsel announced that Windows Vista is on track to ship on schedule worldwide, beginning next month to corporate customers and in January for consumers.

source

Tags: Security | protection | Vista | Microsoft | McAfee | CODE

N Korea faces build-up of naval power

THE few Japanese fishing boats still present in North Korean waters have been ordered to leave, as prospects grow of a naval blockade to suppress the nuclear ambitions of Kim Jong-il.


The US, whose 7th Fleet is based in Japan, has mobilised vessels including the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk and its strike group for "exercises" in the region. Guided missile carriers and destroyers were also being deployed, the US Navy said.


The long-planned naval exercises involving the US fleet and ships from Japan's Self Defence Force are now taking place in an atmosphere of high tension.


United Nations sanctions authorise the boarding of North Korean vessels to search for contraband, but the North Korean leader has said he will treat any boarding as an act of war.

source

Tags: Defence strike | naval | aircraft | US | N Korea | JONG-IL | Japan | guided missile | FLEET

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Symantec Spurns Microsoft's Vista Security Proposal

Microsoft's plan to provide limited access to the Vista kernel in the 64-bit version of the upcoming OS is not enough, a Symantec executive said Tuesday.

"It's not enough at all," said Rowan Trollope, Symantec's vice president of consumer engineering, and the man in charge of the security company's Norton AntiVirus and Norton Internet Security products. "It leaves customers exposed to threats."

Trollope's rebuff is the latest in the increasingly antagonistic brawl between Microsoft and Symantec, which remains a partner of the Redmond, Wash.-based operating system giant. Since September, Symantec has publicly criticized Microsoft's PatchGuard, a technology it will deploy in the 64-bit version of Windows Vista that locks out all access to the kernel. PatchGuard is meant to stop both malicious code and third-party software from making changes at the kernel level, and has been touted by Microsoft as a defense against rootkits and other malware.

source

Microsoft unveils Windows Vista product lineup

Tags: Wash. | Trollope | Spurns | version | Security | kernel | access | Vista | Symantec | Redmond | proposal | Norton | Microsoft

Console War: Sony PS3, Nintendo Wii, Microsoft Xbox 360

And so the next-gen console wars will begin.

Sony PlayStation 3 will launch on Nov. 17 and will be available for a base price of $499; Nintendo will go live with Wii on Nov. 19 and it will sell for $249; and Microsoft offers its Xbox 360 for $299, the Times reports.

The three video game systems all include sleek design and a number of features unique to each, but the real war between the electronics titans will likely be waged on the Web, via the three systems’ online connectivity features, according to the Times.

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xboxfaceplate 003 Sony Playstation 3

Tags: video | XBOX | wii | times | sony | Playstation | ps | Nintendo | Microsoft | Japan | Console

Bush signs bill on detainee interrogation

WASHINGTON — President Bush signed legislation Tuesday establishing new rules for interrogating and trying suspected terrorists, but the fight over how to deal with detainees is far from over.


The new law is already under attack in court, and no one is likely to be brought to trial under the new rules anytime soon. Even some lawmakers who voted for the legislation questioned its constitutionality.


Although the law’s future is uncertain, critics and supporters agreed that its enactment marks a major shift in the nation’s approach to terrorism and some legal principles. Programs that Bush launched in secret now have the full support of Congress.

source

Tags: S.C. | terror | Signs | prosecution | legislation | INTERROGATION | DETAINEE | bill | Washington | tuesday | Graham | Bush

Symantec Spurns Microsoft's Vista Security Proposal

Microsoft's plan to provide limited access to the Vista kernel in the 64-bit version of the upcoming OS is not enough, a Symantec executive said Tuesday.


"It's not enough at all," said Rowan Trollope, Symantec's vice president of consumer engineering, and the man in charge of the security company's Norton AntiVirus and Norton Internet Security products. "It leaves customers exposed to threats."


Trollope's rebuff is the latest in the increasingly antagonistic brawl between Microsoft and Symantec, which remains a partner of the Redmond, Wash.-based operating system giant. Since September, Symantec has publicly criticized Microsoft's PatchGuard, a technology it will deploy in the 64-bit version of Windows Vista that locks out all access to the kernel. PatchGuard is meant to stop both malicious code and third-party software from making changes at the kernel level, and has been touted by Microsoft as a defense against rootkits and other malware.

source

Tags: Wash. | Trollope | Spurns | version | Security | kernel | access | Vista | Symantec | Redmond | proposal | Norton | Microsoft

Monday, October 16, 2006

U.S. urges China to enforce sanctions

Washington - One day after passage of a U.N. Security Council resolution punishing North Korea for its apparent test of a nuclear weapon, senior U.S. diplomats said Sunday that China must help enforce it and use economic leverage to compel Pyong yang to return to disarmament talks.


The resolution, passed unanimously, calls on states to prevent North Korea from selling or buying certain banned weapons and technology. But China said Saturday that Beijing would not inspect cargo entering or leaving North Korea, for fear of raising tensions in the region.


China's unwillingness to act against its longtime ally raises the stakes for Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's diplomatic mission to Asia this week. Ever since the current nuclear crisis with North Korea began in 2002, the Bush administration has relied heavily on China to use its influence with North Korea's leaders. But Beijing's caution has frequently disappointed U.S. officials.

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Tags: urges | Sanctions | Protesters | nuclear weapon | enforce | Washington | Security Council | North Korea | Korean | China

Saturday, October 14, 2006

Jennifer Aniston, No One Dumped Anyone

Although she never officially admitted she was dating Vince Vaughn in the first place, after rumors of her breakup from Vince Vaughn last week, the “Friends” actress claimed they are “still on”.

Jennifer Aniston never confirmed a romantic relationship between her and her “The Break-up” co-star, Vince Vaughn, but reports about their breakup made headlines last week. Shortly after that, the 37-year-old actress made her appearance on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” to promote a short film she co-directed, “Room 10,” and according to audience members, she dismissed rumors about the split.

People magazine quoted a source as saying: "The film said that relationships aren't luck, they're hard work, and I think that was really meaningful to people - Jen got a little teary-eyed when she was talking about it, too.

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Jennifer Aniston

Tags: Film | breakup | actress | Jennifer Aniston

Nintendo Wii Pre-Orders To Begin Friday

Nintendo fans willing to wait in long lines outside the retail stores EB Games or GameStop could get a chance to plunk down a $50 deposit to reserve a new Nintendo Wii console. The gaming retailers, which merged in 2005, begin taking preorders on Friday.


"Extremely limited supplies" could cause EB Games and GameStop to reach presale limits quickly -- "most likely in minute," according to a note posted on the Web.


Although purchases are limited to one console per household, not even a deposit guarantees receipt of a system, EB Games and GameStop said. A limited online pre-order program will be announced at a later date, after software and accessory availability details are confirmed.

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Tags: gaming | wii | pre-orders | Nintendo

Police to probe Jolie 'hit and run'

Police are to investigate claims by a man that he was hit by a car carrying Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie in India.

Mittal Rawat, 19, was riding his motorbike on a busy road in the city of Pune when he was hit by a car, which he alleges was ferrying the star.

He said: "I did not actually know if it was her (Jolie's) car but I saw it being chased by lots of reporters in their vehicles.

"One of them was even sitting backwards on his bike. So, I guess it was them - I saw Jolie's bodyguard in the car."

source

AngelinaJolie3

Tags: Mittal Rawat | probe | actress | US | PUNE | police | India | hollywood | Angelina Jolie

Impose sanctions on North Korea

The world in which we live didn't change Monday when North Korea's official news agency reported the regime had performed a successful underground nuclear test. But since then, U.S. officials have been scrambling to fashion an adequate response, especially by the U.N. Security Council, to keep North Korea's tyrannical ruler Kim Jong Il from pursuing his nuclear weapons program, which could upset the world nuclear balance forever.


The threat posed is not just that he could acquire the wherewithal to launch a nuclear missile attack on South Korea, Japan or even the U.S. mainland. His ambitions also could trigger a more dangerous arms race in the Pacific, and desperate as he always is for funds, he might also sell nukes to Iran, that other "axis of evil" state, or to terrorist groups. North Korea already has a track record for selling missiles and missile parts, and in July it rattled Pacific Rim nations by test-firing seven missiles into the waters between the Korean Peninsula and Japan.


Bush administration officials need to make clear to the U.N. Security Council and the American people that there should be no more delays in cutting off the North's access to heavy weaponry, nuclear materials, missile components and investment that can be diverted to militarily aggressive projects. A U.N. sanctions resolution could be passed as early as today. The U.S. had to soften its draft resolution several times to accommodate Russia and China, including added assurances that military action against North Korea would require a separate Security Council resolution.

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Tags: Sanctions | REGIME | agency | U.S. | South Korea | Security | Russia | peninsula | pacific | North Korea | Korea | Japan | Iran | China

More batteries recalled

Japanese electronics makers Sharp and Fujitsu announced plans to recall laptop batteries made by Sony Corp., adding to an already massive global recall of the batteries that are at risk of overheating and catching fire.


Sharp Corp. said it was recalling 28,000 Sony-made battery packs for seven laptop models, all sold for domestic Japanese use.


Another electronics maker, Fujitsu, also said that it was recalling more laptop batteries made by Sony following an initial recall earlier this month. Fujitsu recalled 51,000 batteries for 11 models, including nine that were also sold outside Japan.

source

Tags: Fujitsu Corp | Recall | Laptop | U.S. | sony | Japan

U.S., Japan Seek N. Korea Sanctions Vote

The U.S. and Japan said they want a vote Saturday by the U.N. Security Council on a resolution imposing punishing sanctions on North Korea for its claimed nuclear test and demanding the elimination of all its nuclear weapons. But last-minute changes sought by Russia and China could delay a vote.


The five permanent council members the U.S., Russia, China, Britain and France and Japan were to meet Saturday morning before the full 15-member council convenes to discuss the changes.


"I'm still ready to go for a vote, and we'll just have to see what the instructions are overnight, in particular from Moscow and China," U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said late Friday, adding the changes were essentially technical in nature.

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Tags: elimination | Vote | U.S. | Security | Sanctions | Russia | North Korea | New York | N Korea | Moscow | Japan | France | Council | China | Britain

U.S., Japan Seek N. Korea Sanctions Vote

The U.S. and Japan said they want a vote Saturday by the U.N. Security Council on a resolution imposing punishing sanctions on North Korea for its claimed nuclear test and demanding the elimination of all its nuclear weapons. But last-minute changes sought by Russia and China could delay a vote.


The five permanent council members the U.S., Russia, China, Britain and France and Japan were to meet Saturday morning before the full 15-member council convenes to discuss the changes.


"I'm still ready to go for a vote, and we'll just have to see what the instructions are overnight, in particular from Moscow and China," U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said late Friday, adding the changes were essentially technical in nature.

source

Tags: elimination | Vote | U.S. | Security | Sanctions | Russia | North Korea | New York | N Korea | Moscow | Japan | France | Council | China | Britain

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Oil prices slide

WORLD crude prices dropped below $US59 in New York trade overnight, as traders cast doubt on the likelihood of an output reduction by the OPEC oil cartel.


New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in November, lost $US1.01 to $US58.95 per barrel in pit trading.


In London, Brent North Sea crude for November delivery slumped 93 cents to $US59.61 per barrel in electronic deals.


The market shrugged off events in Nigeria - Africa's biggest producer of crude - where armed youths in the country's restive Niger Delta seized a flow station run by oil company Shell.

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Tags: Slide | prices | barrel | Nigeria | Niger Delta | New York | London | Africa

Another Killing in Moscow

Anna Politkovskaya, gunned down over the weekend in Moscow, was the 13th Russian journalist killed since Vladimir Putin became president - and one of the bravest. We may never know who killed her because politically motivated crimes have a way of never being solved in Mr. Putin's Russia.


There is no question about whom Ms. Politkovskaya held responsible in years of unflinching reporting from Chechnya: the Russian Army and Mr. Putin himself. When he finally got around to acknowledging her death yesterday it was in a cold-blooded statement that the authorities "will take every step to investigate objectively the tragic death of the journalist Politkovskaya."

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Tags: weekend | president | journalist | Russian | Russia | Moscow | Killing | CHECHNYA | Army

U.N. considers N.Korea sanctions

The U.N. Security Council is considering possible sanctions to impose on North Korea for its defiance of the world organization through its nuclear test.


The veto-wielding permanent five members met for a second day Tuesday as experts from the panel of 15 debated wording of proposed measures to be put in a formal draft resolution.


Ambassador John Bolton of the United States led the initiative, having circulated among council members a rough draft. He described meetings as showing "substantial areas of agreement."


Ambassador Wang Guangya of China, long an ally of Pyongyang, said "I think we need firm, constructive, appropriate but prudent responses to North Korea. I think there has to be some punitive action."

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Tags: Sanctions | DEFIANCE | United States | Security Council | Pyongyang | North Korea | China

The Brangelina Effect

I don’t know about you, but looking at Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie and their son Maddox caught by paparazzi travelling in a rickshaw in Monday’s papers left me with a distinct sense of unease.

You just had to see the pained expressions on the faces of the stars to realise what tension they were undergoing.

Think about it: with the kind of hysteria and feeding frenzy amongst the media that their visit has evoked, all you needed was one over-enthusiastic reporter giving chase in a car on Pune’s traffic congested roads for disaster to ensue.

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AngelinaJolie3 DSC_0688

Tags: unease | rickshaw | reporter | paparazzi | disaster | Chase | Monday | Maddox | Brangelina

Airbus reformer throws in towel

AIRBUS'S top executive has resigned abruptly, just three months after taking the helm in a previous management shake-up and less than a week after introducing a controversial restructuring plan.


Its parent, European Aeronautic Defense & Space Co, said it had accepted the resignation of Christian Streiff, the first outsider to hold the top post at the world's largest commercial jet maker. Co-chief executive Louis Gallois will replace him.


Mr Streiff's departure, which came after he ran foul of politicians in four countries, raised more questions about the future of Airbus and whether it can regain its competitive edge against arch-rival Boeing. With Airbus distracted by production woes, Boeing has been able to outpace Airbus in aircraft sales this year.

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Tags: reformer | Management | Boeing | Airbus

Paris and Nicole, Together Again

Paris and Nicole are together again. After 18 months of successfully hating on each other (and simultaneously collaborating on making lots of money) the hatchet has been quietly buried courtesy of a steak dinner and a sleepover.

"We are back!" the two said before driving away from Dan Tana's steakhouse Sunday night.

Although it's still unclear why the feud started in the first place, the back-and-forth sniping between the "Simple Life" co-stars became a staple of tabloid pages and the blogosphere for the past year-and-a-half. Perhaps the tension between the two was no longer necessary since Paris now has a real rival in the form of Shanna Moakler, who she claimed punched her last week at a Hollywood night club. Or maybe the reconciliation was "encouraged" by the producers of their reality show, so they wouldn't have to go through the hassle of filming them separately like they did last year.

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Paris Hilton Arrested for Drunk Driving

Tags: Paris Hilton | hollywood

Hubble observations confirm planet birth theory

The Hubble Space Telescope has provided definitive evidence for a long-predicted theory that planets form from debris disks around stars, astronomers said on Monday.

A team of astronomers reported for the first time the discovery of an exotic planet being aligned with its star's circumstellar disk of dust and gas. The planet, detected in the year 2000 and called Epsilon Eridani b, orbits the nearby Sun-like star Epsilon Eridani 10.5 light-years from Earth in the constellation Eridanus.

The planet's orbit is inclined 30 degrees to Earth, the same angle at which a disk of dust and gas also encircles the star, the astronomers said in the November issue of the Astronomical Journal.

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Supernova explosion (exclusive photos)

Tags: birth theory | observations | Evidence | confirm | Hubble

Tim Allen marries actress Jane Hadjuk

Comedy actor Tim Allen has married actress Jane Hadjuk at a ceremony in Colorado over the weekend.


The 53-year-old actor, best known for his role in the long-running television series 'Home Improvement', tied the knot at Grand Lake in Colorado, according to his spokesperson Marleah Leslie.

source

Tags: Tim Allen | Jane Hadjuk | marries | actress | actor | Colorado

Hands On: Windows Vista Release Candidate 2

The changes in Windows Vista Release Candidate 2 amount to refinements rather than significant innovations. Build 5744 of Vista contains no laundry list of new features and functions, but the release is significant nonetheless.

The new Media Center improves on its predecessor's ease of installation and performance, and reduces its bugginess. The new Sleep power management mode is another welcome enhancement. Vista continues to be exceptionally stable. There's no question that this new Windows is more reliable than XP.

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Microsoft unveils Windows Vista product lineup

Tags: performance | amount | windows | Vista | Release | Media | hands | CANDIDATE

Google Places Heavy Bet on YouTube

Google's (Nasdaq: GOOG) Latest News about Google US$1.65 billion purchase of video-sharing site YouTube Latest News about YouTube -- made official late Monday after several days of speculation -- could dramatically alter the playing field for competing Internet giants.

The YouTube acquisition is being hailed as a bold thrust that could turn two weaknesses in the Google empire -- video distribution and social networking -- into strengths that could keep the company growing rapidly for years to come. It could also change the way users connect with video online, as well as how content owners distribute it.

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Youtube eyeball magnet

Tags: video | Purchase | online | networking | YouTube | Places | news | internet | Google | GOOG | bet

Columbine copycat student in US school shooting scare

A MASKED teenager fired an assault rifle at the ceiling in school before the weapon jammed.


Police were called to the building in Joplin, Missouri, and arrested the youth.


They found a note in his bag in which he had made detailed plans on placing an explosive in the school.


Lieutenant Geoff Jones said the youth had been fascinated with the Columbine massacre.


Witnesses said the boy walked into school, yesterday, wearing a long green trenchcoat and had a T-shirt over his head with eye holes cut out.

source

Tags: copycat | assault rifle | youth | WEAPON | Shooting | scare | US | Missouri | Columbine

Friday, October 06, 2006

Hitachi becomes newest victim of Sony recall

Not wanting to feel left out, Hitachi announced today that 16,000 of their notebook computers are affected by the worldwide recall of Sony laptop batteries. This adds to the massive recall from multiple PC manufacturers that have faulty batteries made by Sony.

Hitachi spokesman Masayuki Takeuchi reportedly said that the number is so small that it will not have an impact on company earnings. Hitachi's announcement makes them the least hit from the recall.

source

What you need to know about potentially explosive notebooks

Tags: Takeuchi | Masayuki | worldwide | Victim | Recall | notebook | newest | Laptop | impact | becomes | sony | Hitachi

Engineers Find Hole in Space Shuttle

Oct. 6, 2006 — Engineers examining the Space Shuttle Atlantis after it landed have found something that stopped them in their tracks: a small hole in the radiator on one of the shuttle's payload bay doors.

The radiator is about an inch thick, and there is a space of about nine inches between the payload bay door and the radiator.

It's not a big hole — it's about one-tenth of an inch at entry and three-hundredths of an inch at exit — but it's big enough to be seen without a flashlight.

source

A Safe Landing After a Dramatic Flight

Tags: radiator | payload | Shuttle | engineers | Atlantis

Oil falls below $60, investors doubt OPEC

LONDON (Reuters) - Oil fell below $60 a barrel on Friday as investors doubted OPEC's resolve to carry out a planned supply cut and fuel inventories swelled in the United States, the world's top consumer.

U.S. crude settled 27 cents lower at $59.76 a barrel, off nearly $20 from its mid-July peak of $78.40. London Brent fell 17 cents to $59.83.

OPEC President Edmund Daukoru said on Friday he intended to secure a supply cut deal by Monday that would remove about 1 million barrels per day of crude from the market to slow the rapid decline in oil prices.

But investors were wary as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries group had yet to make an official statement on the planned cuts.

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Beryl Alpha

Tags: Resolve | Investors | falls | doubt | CRUDE | barrel | United States | U.S. | Reuters | OPEC | London | july | friday

U.S. Navy medic admits part in killing of Iraqi man

CAMP PENDLETON, California (Reuters) - A U.S. Navy medic admitted on Friday taking part in the kidnap of an Iraqi civilian killed by his squad and said the murder was prompted by his patrol leader's anger at the release of a suspected "terrorist" from Baghdad's Abu Ghraib prison.


Petty Officer Melson Bacos, 21, and the seven Marines he accompanied on an April patrol were charged with kidnapping Hashim Ibrahim Awad, 52, from his home, killing him and placing an AK-47 assault rifle, spent bullets and shovel next to his body to suggest he was trying to plant a roadside bomb.


The killing in the town of Hamdania was one in a series of incidents in which the conduct of American troops in Iraq have damaged the country's image worldwide.

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Tags: Melson | Hamdania | PATROL | MEDIC | Killing | admits | U.S. | navy | IRAQI | Iraq | GHRAIB | California | Baghdad

Springer's charm rates better than dancing on TV show

Jerry Springer's latest step into the spotlight -- honing his
moves on "Dancing with the Stars" -- has the public smitten with the
host known for his bawdy TV talk show.

Springer decided to appear on the ABC reality show to learn the waltz for his daughter's upcoming wedding. He and partner Kym Johnson have so charmed viewers that they've avoided elimination for the past two weeks.


"This is the first time I've done TV being myself," Springer told The Cincinnati Enquirer for a story published Tuesday. "My TV show isn't really me or about me. I just introduce the guests and let them go at it."

Springer acknowledged he's not a very good dancer. The judges ranked
his tango second-worst last week, but viewers liked him far better.
Half of the vote total comes from the public.

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Tags: southern Germany | Jerry Springer | Rates | charm | U.S. | tv | Munich | dancing

Republicans rally round Hastert in face of scandal

It was Newt Gingrich, the former speaker of the House and Republican leader, who best summarised his party's response to the scandal over a lawmaker's lewd internet messages to teenage interns. "There's a certain stench of hypocrisy," he said in reference to past sex scandals among Democrats.


For the time being, top Republicans are rallying behind Dennis Hastert, the current speaker, who on Thursday rejected calls to resign and who denied allegations that he knew of congressman Mark Foley's behaviour as early as 2003, when members of his staff on Capitol Hill were apparently informed.



But Mr Hastert also raised eyebrows when, by questioning the timing of the scandal, he hinted at a leftwing conspiracy to derail his party's mid-term election chances. The story hit the front pages last week, at a point when Republican chances appeared to be on the mend for the first time in more than a year.

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Tags: stench | speaker | scandal | Response | leader | HYPOCRISY | Republicans | newt | Hastert | Capitol Hill

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Women age faster than men!

It may seem that women make much ado about nothing at the first signs of wrinkles, but they do have reasons to get paranoid, as a research has demonstrated that women’s skin ages faster than men’s.


Researchers have now devised the first non-invasive test to measure skin aging. This new laser-based technique images the fabric of the deeper layers of the skin, combining methods for imaging collagen and elastin, whose degeneration causes the appearance of wrinkles and the progressive loss of skin smoothness.


The technique measures relative amounts of collagen and elastin by a single factor, which can be positive or negative, like temperatures. Higher values of the factor correspond to higher collagen content, and to lower elastin content. Previously, each of the imaging techniques had only been tested on tissue extracted from live patients.

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Tags: elastin | technique | imaging | faster | fabric | collagen | appearance

Sony to release Blu-ray recorders in Japan in December

A model equipped with a 500 gigabyte hard drive will hit stores Dec. 8 with a retail price of Y300,000, followed by a recorder with a 250 gigabyte hard drive on Dec. 16 for about Y250,000. Sony plans to produce 10,000 of the devices a month.


Blu-ray discs use formats based on blue lasers, which have shorter wavelengths than the red lasers used in existing DVDs. This allows discs to store the large amounts of data required for high-definition images and video.

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Electronics manufacturers hope the new technology will help lure buyers as television stations begin to broadcast programs via high-definition standards.


"Blu-ray will be the core of our products to (play and store) high-definition broadcasting, contents recorded by camcorders and (Blu-ray format) movies," said Sony Senior Vice President Kiyoshi Nishitani.

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Tags: gigabyte | Release | recorder | price | Model | tokyo | sony | Japan | electronics | December | CORP | blu-ray

The Paris-Shanna Smackdown?

Paris Hilton, who has lately been spotted cuddling up to the former Blink-182 drummer, and Barker's estranged wife, Dancing with the Stars' Shanna Moakler, both filed police reports early Wednesday morning, alleging they were assaulted at a Hollywood hot spot.

According to Officer Sandra Escalante of the Los Angeles Police Department, Hilton, 25, told police that she was the victim of a battery after getting into an unprovoked skirmish with Moakler at Hyde around 1:30 a.m.

Hilton's publicist, Elliott Mintz, said that Hilton showed up at the club about a half-hour before the alleged confrontation.

"Shortly after her arrival, apparently Shanna appeared and, according to a complaint that's just been filed, she struck Paris in her jaw with closed fists," he told TMZ.com, which first reported the incident. "Paris was hit. She immediately exited the club through the back door.

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New York Post-Page Six: HILTON'S CD IS INSTANT TANKER

Tags: skirmish | Paris-Shanna | drummer | BATTERY | smackdown | Shanna | police | Paris | hyde | hollywood | Hilton | Barker

Playstation 3 "gets too hot"

SHARES IN SONY fell after an analyst claimed its long awaited Playstation 3 console gets a bit too hot.

Sony had a few technical hitches at the Tokyo Game Show, according to the Washington Post. Macquarie Equities analyst David Gibson wrote that PS3 units on display at the show operated erratically and had to be repeatedly reset.

He was not sure why the PS3 would do this, but suspected it was due to over heating. Gibson was concerned that such a problem had occurred so close to full production and this was "clearly negative news for the company".

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PS3 bundle-palooza opens with $1,000-plus pack

Tags: reset | Macquarie | display | analyst | Washington | tokyo

IRA 'terror campaign is over'

Tony Blair said the path is clear to peace in Northern Ireland after a report claimed the IRA had severed its links with terrorism.


The Prime Minister's comments come in the wake of the latest report of the Independent Monitoring Commission, which is tasked with evaluating claims by the IRA that it has turned its back on terror.


The latest analysis of the IMC showed that "the IRA's campaign is over" and that it had "done what we asked it to", Mr Blair said in a statement at Downing Street.

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Tags: wake | terror | report | peace | campaign | Northern Ireland | monitoring | Minister | independent | IRA | Downing Street

Turkish hijacker was alone and unarmed

ROME, Oct 4 (Reuters) - A man who hijacked a Turkish Airlines flight on Tuesday was unarmed, working alone and threatened to blow himself up if the pilot did not divert the flight to Italy, Italian Interior Minister Giuliano Amato said.


All 107 passengers and six crew on the Boeing 737 were unharmed in the hijack which ended with the man's arrest in Brindisi airport in southern Italy. The 27-year-old Turk, Hakan Ekinci, has requested political asylum from Italy.


"The peculiar thing about this hijack was that it was done by a lone, unarmed man," Amato told Italy's Senate on Wednesday.


During the incident, the pilot reported that there were two hijackers and the Turkish Defence Ministry said there may be four or five of them. But checks on everyone on board after the plane had landed and Ekinci had given himself up showed he was alone.

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Tags: southern Italy | Brindisi | UNARMED | Pilot | Hijack | flight | crew | alone | TURKISH | tuesday | Reuters | Rome | Italy | ITALIAN | Interior

Breast-feeding has no impact on intelligence

LONDON (Reuters) - Breast-feeding has no impact on a child's intelligence, according to research published on Wednesday.


Although breast-feeding has many advantages for children including reducing infections, respiratory illnesses and diarrhoea, enhancing a child's intelligence does not appear to be among them.


"Breast-feeding has little or no effect on intelligence in children," Geoff Der of Britain's Medical Research Council, said in a report published online by the British Medical Journal.


The researchers found that although breast-fed children scored higher on IQ tests this was because their mothers tended be more intelligent, better educated and provided a more stimulating environment at home.

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Tags: diarrhoea | Breast-feeding | research | Intelligence | impact | Wednesday | Reuters | London | Britain

Two Dads for Anna Nicole Smith Baby?

In most boldface-name paternity disputes, men deny they're the baby-daddy. But in a he said/he said twist to the Anna Nicole Smith tabloid saga, two guys are claiming to be the father of her baby girl.


Smith's lawyer and boyfriend, Howard K. Stern, says he is the father of Dannie Lynn Hope, born Sept. 7. Smith and Stern have exchanged non-legal vows and say they plan to officially tie the knot.


But Smith's ex-boyfriend, photographer Larry Birkhead, says HE is the dad and has filed a lawsuit demanding that she and the baby return to California for DNA testing. He also wants the baby tested for drugs. Smith was served with court papers Monday in the Bahamas, Birkhead's attorney, Debra Opri, told The Associated Press.

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Tags: twist | saga | Paternity | LAWYER | BOYFRIEND | Smith | sept | nicole | dads | California | Bahamas | anna

Ozone layer hole grows

Before you head to Antarctica for vacation, you'll need to pack a lot of sunscreen.


The ozone "hole" over the South Pole is now close to being as big as ever according to two new reports. Both the World Meteorological Organization and the European Space Agency say the stratospheric ozone hole over the South Pole has just reached its annual peak. The WMO reports the hole will expand to near 10.8 million square miles over Antarctica -- the second-largest hole in history.


In a news release dated Oct. 2, the ESA reported measurements of the amount of ozone lost over this area now topple 40 million tons, breaking the previous record ozone loss of 39 million tons in 2000. The ESA's Envisat satellite records ozone in Dobson units, which measure both the area and depth of the ozone hole. The depth of the hole is around 100 Dobson units, near the record low values observed in 1998.

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Tags: South Pole | PEAK | OZONE | layer | grows | Organization | METEOROLOGICAL | EUROPEAN | Antarctica | agency

Testing Athletes' Hearts Saves Lives

If athletes' hearts are tested the number of sudden cardiac deaths related to sports can go down significantly, say researchers from the University of Padua Medical School, Italy. For the last 24 years, all athletes in Italy have had to undergo an electrocardiogram (EKG) test before engaging in competitive sports. Approximately 2% of people tested were found to have hidden heart problems and are kept from taking part in competitive sports.


The researchers looked at the prevalence of sudden death from heart problems among athletes and non-athletes, aged 12-35, in the Veneto region, Italy, between 1979 - 2004. Obligatory EKG screening started in 1982.


Even though the rate of sudden death from heart problems remained constant throughout the period, the rate for athletes fell by 89%.

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Tags: electrocardiogram | Padua | veneto | university | saves | lives | Italy | athletes

2 win Nobel for picture of backfire from Big Bang

Two physicists who obtained a satellite picture of the infant universe a mere 389,000 years after its explosive birth 13 billion years ago--a feat most scientists thought would never be achieved--have been awarded the 2006 Nobel Prize in physics.


Many consider their accomplishment the most important development in the field of cosmology, cementing the Big Bang theory as the best explanation for how the universe began, showing how stars and galaxies formed and providing scientists with a marvelous time machine for exploring the past and future of the cosmos.

For their measurement of cosmic
background radiation--the afterglow of the Big Bang--John Mather of
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland and George Smoot of the
University of California at Berkeley will share the $1.37 million prize
at a ceremony Dec. 10 in Stockholm, Nobel officials announced Tuesday.

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Tags: accomplishment | UNIVERSE | Satellite | Physics | explanation | Development | cosmology | backfire | nobel | BANG

2 win Nobel for picture of backfire from Big Bang

Two physicists who obtained a satellite picture of the infant universe a mere 389,000 years after its explosive birth 13 billion years ago--a feat most scientists thought would never be achieved--have been awarded the 2006 Nobel Prize in physics.


Many consider their accomplishment the most important development in the field of cosmology, cementing the Big Bang theory as the best explanation for how the universe began, showing how stars and galaxies formed and providing scientists with a marvelous time machine for exploring the past and future of the cosmos.

For their measurement of cosmic
background radiation--the afterglow of the Big Bang--John Mather of
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland and George Smoot of the
University of California at Berkeley will share the $1.37 million prize
at a ceremony Dec. 10 in Stockholm, Nobel officials announced Tuesday.

source

Tags: accomplishment | UNIVERSE | Satellite | Physics | explanation | Development | cosmology | backfire | nobel | BANG

Monday, October 02, 2006

Jackson brings another bonanza

Wellington could reap millions from Peter Jackson's move into the rich video game market with Microsoft boss Bill Gates.

Jackson has teamed up with the world's richest man to set up a video game company in Wellington called Wingnut Interactive.

It will develop new video games, including another chapter in the sci-fi series Halo, and original games for Microsoft's Xbox.

The video game industry made US$30 billion (NZ$45 billion) last year.

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Jackson brings another bonanza Jackson brings another bonanza

Tags: Microsoft | Jackson | us | video | Wellington | Boss | Halo | NZ | Wingnut | Xbox | bonanza | brings

Sunday, October 01, 2006

Xbox 360 price drop rumoured

IF ANYTHING COULD ensure the launch of the PS3 became a nightmare for Sony, a significant Xbox 360 price drop would be it.

A small price drop in Europe has already occurred, but this tiny adjustment to the Core SKU is hardly worth mentioning, and certainly won't affect the launch of Sony's new console. A more significant drop of around $100 would certainly cause further worrying at Sony HQ, and it seems Microsoft are pushing ahead with cost reductions in an attempt to make the price drop financially plausible.

Rumours of contract renegoiations with Microsoft from suppliers in Taiwan, state that "the total production cost [of the Xbox 360] can be reduced by 15-20% due to diminishing costs for most components along with increasing production scales and decreasing defect rates" - and this fits perfectly with similar sources stating back in July that a price drop late in 2006 was a target for Microsoft.

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xboxfaceplate 003 xbox

Tags: rumoured | adjustment | Sony HQ | price | NIGHTMARE | launch | XBOX | Taiwan | Microsoft | Europe

Numbers swell in Sony battery recall

Toshiba, Fujitsu and Dell recalled more Sony-made laptop batteries Friday, swelling the number of units involved in the massive global recall to more than seven million.


Early Friday, Sony Corp. formally asked manufacturers using its problem batteries to carry out a recall.


Sony has said the batteries could pose a risk of fire in rare cases when microscopic metal particles generated during manufacturing come into contact with other parts of the battery cell, leading to a short circuit.

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Tags: Recall | manufacturing | circuit | BATTERY | sony | Fujitsu | friday | Dell