Monday, October 31, 2011

Can Kodak rescue itself via a patent bonanza? (AP)

ROCHESTER, N.Y. ? Picture this: Kodak ? the company that invented the first digital camera in 1975, and developed the photo technology inside most cellphones and digital devices ? is in the midst of the worst crisis in its 131-year history.

Now, caught between ruin and revival, Eastman Kodak Co. is reaching ever more deeply into its intellectual treasure chest, betting that a big cash infusion from the sale of 1,100 digital-imaging inventions will see it through a transition that has raised the specter of bankruptcy.

Kodak popularized photography over a century ago. It marketed the world's first flexible roll film in 1888 and transformed picture-taking into a mass commodity with the $1 Brownie camera in 1900. But for too long the world's biggest film manufacturer stayed firmly focused on its 20th-century cash cow, and failed to capitalize quickly on its new-wave know-how in digital photography.

As a result, Kodak has been playing catch-up. Pummeled by Wall Street over its dwindling cash reserves ? and its stumbling attempts to reinvent itself as a profitable player in digital imaging and printing ? Kodak has been hawking the digital patents since July. Many financial analysts foresee the portfolio fetching $2 billion to $3 billion.

But others think Kodak can haul in far more than that ? and carry it off within a few months. That's because patents have become highly valuable to digital device makers who want to protect themselves from intellectual property lawsuits. In July, an alliance made up of Apple and Microsoft purchased a raft of patents from Nortel Networks for $4.5 billion. A month later, Google bought Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion, in part, to gain hold of the company's 17,000 patents.

"The size of the (Kodak) deal could blow your socks off," predicts Los Angeles money manager Ken Luskin, whose Intrinsic Value Asset Management owns 3.8 million Kodak shares.

"It's pocket change for Google and Apple to go pay $3-or-$4-or-$5 billion for these patents," concurs Christopher Marlett, chief executive of MDB Capital, an investment bank based in Santa Monica, Calif., that specializes in intellectual property. "There is an all-out nuclear war right now for global dominance in smartphones, tablets and mobile devices, and Kodak has one of the largest cache of weapons sitting there." Marlett says he owns Kodak stock, but wouldn't disclose how much.

Even a hefty return, skeptics counter, won't solve Kodak's struggle to close out a nearly decade-long transformation and return to profitability in 2012 after running up losses in six of the last seven years.

"All the extra cash does is give you a lifeline for a short period. And then, poof, you're back in the same position without the assets to sell," says analyst Shannon Cross of Cross Research in Livingston, N.J. "If you're burning cash and not finding a way to generate recurring earnings, it doesn't matter."

Kodak's grim financial picture should become clearer when it reports third-quarter results Thursday.

Agitated investors will likely focus on the company's latest borrowing activities and cash woes ? it had $957 million in cash in June, down from $1.6 billion in January. They will also want to know what kind of progress Kodak made in the July-September period in building up a high-margin ink business to replace shriveling film sales.

Kodak has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into new lines of inkjet printers that are finally on the verge of turning a profit. Home photo printers, high-speed commercial inkjet presses, workflow software and packaging are viewed as the company's new core. Kodak projects that sales from those four businesses will double to nearly $2 billion in revenue in 2013, accounting for 25 percent of all sales.

In the meantime, Kodak needs to tap other sources of revenue before those areas have time to pay off ? and mining its inventions has become indispensable.

Kodak's chief executive, Antonio Perez, has signed confidentiality agreements with potential buyers but hasn't given a time frame for a deal. The patents for capturing, storing, organizing, editing and sharing digital images do not apply to the four core businesses, Kodak spokesman Gerard Meuchner says.

"One thing I would stress is: It is our intention to retain a license to any of the intellectual property we sell," Meuchner says. "It's like you sell the property but still get to live in the house."

A sale represents a sharp tactical shift. Kodak picked up just $27 million in patent-licensing fees in the first half of 2011 after amassing nearly $2 billion in the previous three years.

In the heated environment for patents, "it makes more sense for us to sell the portfolio than it does to license it company by company, which takes lots of time and expense and can involve litigation," Meuchner says.

Michael Fitzgerald, chief executive of Next Techs Technologies, a patent buying-and-selling intermediary in Houston, says that while the portfolio is valuable, "I just don't view it necessarily as a `strategic' acquisition that multiple players will fall all over themselves on."

Investor fears sent Kodak stock tumbling to an all-time closing low of 78 cents a share on Sept. 30 after it hired Jones Day, a major restructuring law firm, as an adviser. Kodak insisted it had no intention of filing for bankruptcy protection.

Kodak is also involved in a royalty dispute with iPhone behemoth Apple and BlackBerry maker Research in Motion Ltd. The case centers on a 2001 patent now on the auction block ? a method that enables a camera to preview low-resolution versions of a moving image while recording still images at higher resolutions.

The 21-month-old battle before the U.S. International Trade Commission, a trade-dispute arbiter in Washington, D.C., was due to be revisited on Monday, but was recently shelved until December 30.

Chief Executive Antonio Perez thinks a favorable ruling could enable Kodak to draw up to $1 billion in fees from its deep-pocketed rivals. In 2009, the commission ruled that South Korean mobile phone makers Samsung Electronics and LG Electronics infringed the same patent, resulting in $964 million in payouts.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111030/ap_on_hi_te/us_kodak_s_patent_push

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Jackpot for office worker on "Kaun Banega Crorepati" (Reuters)

MUMBAI (Reuters) ? An office worker too poor to own a television set has won an unprecedented $1 million on TV game show "Kaun Banega Crorepati".

Sushil Kumar's win this week drew comparisons with the plot of 2008 Oscar-winning film "Slumdog Millionaire" and, like its fictional protagonist Jamal, the 27-year-old also watched the TV show as an escape from penury.

This is the first time a contestant has won a million dollars on the popular TV show hosted by Amitabh Bachchan. The episode will be broadcast next week and Kumar takes home 3.5 crore rupees (about $720,000) after tax.

Kumar, who watched the show at a neighbour's house because his family was too poor to afford a television set, said he had not made any grand plans for the money, a fortune in a country with a per capita income of $1,265.

"I'm going to repair my house, fulfil a few basic needs and then move to Delhi to study for the civil service exams," he told Reuters in a telephone interview.

Kumar works as a computer operator in a government office in the impoverished eastern state of Bihar and earns 6,000 rupees (around $120) per month.

"Our house has almost broken down and we have a lot of loans that have to be repaid," he said.

"If it hadn't been for this money, I would have gotten old before I sorted out my life."

"I've been getting a lot of suggestions about what to do with the money, but right now I can only think about my dream of getting through the civil services exam," he said.

"Slumdog Millionaire", shot in the teeming slums of Mumbai, tells the story of a young orphan who wins the TV game show against all odds.

(Editing by Tony Tharakan; and Louise Ireland)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/india/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111029/india_nm/india601849

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Brain gene activity changes through life

Human brains all work pretty much the same and use roughly the same genes in the same way to build and maintain the infrastructure that makes people who they are, two new studies show. And by charting the brain?s genetic activity from before birth to old age, the studies reveal that the brain continually remodels itself in predictable ways throughout life.

In addition to uncovering details of how the brain grows and ages, the results may help scientists better understand what goes awry in brain disorders such as schizophrenia and autism.

?The complexity is mind-numbing,? says neuroscientist Stephen Ginsberg of the Nathan Kline Institute and New York University Langone Medical Center, who wasn?t involved in the studies. ?It puts the brain in rarefied air.?

In the studies, published in the Oct. 27 Nature, researchers focused not on DNA ? virtually every cell?s raw genetic material is identical ? but on when, where and for how long each gene is turned on over the course of a person?s life. To do this, the researchers measured levels of mRNA, a molecule whose appearance marks one of the first steps in executing the orders contained in a gene, in postmortem samples of donated brains that ranged in age from weeks after conception to old age.

These different patterns of mRNA levels distinguish the brain from a heart, for instance, and a human from a mouse, too, says Nenad ?estan of Yale University School of Medicine and coauthor of one of the studies. ?Essentially, we carry the same genes as mice,? he says. ?However, in us, these genes are up to something quite different.?

To see what those genes were up to, ?estan?s study examined mRNA levels of different genes in 57 brain samples. The team divided the brain tissue up by region, so they were also able to get an idea of genes? behavior in different parts of the brain. A parallel study, headed by Joel Kleinman of the National Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda, looked at gene behavior in 269 brain samples from a single region called the prefrontal cortex that also spanned the lifetime.

This approach allowed the researchers to get access to the brain that had previously been impossible.

?One of the limitations in studying human brain development is that you cannot do experiments,? ?estan says. ?It?s very hard to understand when things happen.?

Both studies found lots of variation in gene behavior at different life stages, but one particular period stood out: The prenatal brain had massive changes in gene activity. Many genes there were pumping out big quantities of mRNA, and this production abruptly slowed after birth. ?Prenatally, things are changing faster than they change at any other time,? says Carlo Colantuoni of the Lieber Institute for Brain Development at Johns Hopkins University Medical Center, and coauthor on one paper. ?Things are happening fast in there.??

Kleinman and his colleagues turned up a curious finding: Many of the genes that slow down right after birth show a surge of activity as a person gets older. ?The biggest changes that are going on occur fetally,? he says. ?And then they drop off until mid-life, and then in the 50s to 70s, expression changes pick up again and become quite dramatic.?

Researchers don?t yet know what to make of this reversal, says Colantuoni. ?We have just scratched the surface of what it means.?

Genes involved with building new brain cells were highly active early on, and then this activity quickly fell after birth. As these genes grew less active, genes involved in linking up nerve cells took on a greater role and became busier.

What?s more, the differences in gene behavior between male and female brains were greatest at early stages of development. Some of the genes found to be busier in male brains have been linked to schizophrenia, autism and other disorders that are known to be more prevalent among males, the researchers report. These disease-associated genes are very active early on in development and less so as a person ages, the researchers found, suggesting that something goes wrong very early in these conditions.

The scientists don?t know exactly which cells are responsible for these gene behavior differences. Figuring out whether gene behavior changes in all kinds of cells in the brain ? neurons and glia, for instance ? is the next step, says Ginsberg. ?That?s going to be really important, especially for neuropsychiatric disorders.?

Although gene behavior is incredibly dynamic, the results suggest that brains are more alike than different. Despite millions of differences in DNA, brains have a common biochemical shape, Kleinman says. Two people who have very different DNA make-up don?t necessarily have very different gene behavior in the brain. ?These individual genetic variations, they do matter ? no question,? he says. But overall, genes behave similarly from person to person. ?And that?s a really cool thing. It means that we?re much more alike than we are different.?

Many more studies are needed before scientists fully understand how the brain is built. Both teams plan on boosting the number of brain samples and studying the brains of people with disorders such as schizophrenia and autism. But the work is a major step forward, says geneticist Christopher Mason of Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University in New York City. ?This is extraordinary work,? he says. ?This is the beginning of telling us what the whole brain looks like.?


Found in: Body & Brain

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/335629/title/Brain_gene_activity_changes_through_life

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Friday, October 28, 2011

W. Va. mine ex-security chief convicted in deadly disaster case (Reuters)

CHARLESTON, West Virginia (Reuters) ? The former security chief at a mine where 29 miners died last year was convicted of two felonies on Wednesday, the U.S. Attorney's office said.

Hughie Elbert Stover, 60, of Clear Fork, West Virginia, was convicted by a federal jury of making false statements to federal agents and obstructing a federal investigation.

Stover was charged in February with giving false statements to FBI and Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) investigators, and with obstructing a federal investigation into the cause of the Upper Big Branch disaster.

An explosion at the mine, owned by the now-defunct Massey Energy, killed 29 miners in April 2010.

During the investigation Stover allegedly told FBI and MSHA investigators that mine security guards did not warn mine personnel when MSHA inspectors were on their way to the mine.

Investigators discovered that Stover himself warned mine personnel when inspectors were on their way. Stover also allegedly instructed another person to destroy thousands of Massey Energy documents related to the UBB mine.

"Today's verdict sends a clear message that when a person obstructs an investigation, especially an investigation as important as this one, there will be consequences," said U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin.

Sentencing for Stover will take place February 29, 2012, in Beckley, West Virginia.

Another former Massey employee, Thomas Harrah, pleaded guilty in April to making false statements on documents and making false statements to FBI and MSHA investigators after passing himself off as a mine foreman, though he failed the foreman's exam. Both are felonies.

Massey was bought by Alpha Natural Resources earlier this year. Three reports, including a preliminary report by MSHA and a report released on Tuesday by the United Mine Workers of America blame Massey for disaster by allowing unsafe conditions in the mine.

(Editing by Jerry Norton)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111027/us_nm/us_westvirginia_mines_verdict

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Nokia Lumia 800 shipping in November for $585, available for pre-order now

Nokia has just announced that its recently unveiled Lumia 800 will begin shipping in November to select markets, for around €420, or about $585. It'll roll out next month across France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and the UK, before making its way to Hong Kong, India, Russia, Singapore and Taiwan, by the close of 2011. The Lumia 710, meanwhile, is priced at €270 (around $376), and will be available in Hong Kong, India, Russia, Singapore and Taiwan by the end of this year. Early birds, however, can pre-order the Lumia 800 now -- just click the source link below for more details.

Nokia Lumia 800 shipping in November for $585, available for pre-order now originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Oct 2011 05:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/_BC4hvJJ-2w/

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Cancer patients require extra workplace support | NOLA.com

Lisa Tighe was sitting in her law firm office when her doctor called with test results. She insisted he give her the information over the phone. "You have breast cancer," he said. Before absorbing what he said, she marched over to her supervisor's office and told him the news. He responded just how she expected: "You have our total support."

"From that minute on," Tighe said, "He has given me whatever I wanted or needed."

With more than 2.5 million breast cancer survivors in the United States and about 230,480 new cases of invasive breast cancer a year, employer reaction to a diagnosis has been mixed. Some respond like Tighe's firm, Greenspoon Marder, helping their employees balance work and medical treatment; Greenspoon Marder even gave Tighe's daughter, who works at the firm, paid time off to help her mother. Others, though, talk their employees into leaving, dock pay during treatment, refuse to give flexibility or move the women into more menial positions.

Those diagnosed say employer response can make all the difference in their health. "The support you get from management and from co-workers can actually get you in a better frame of mind so you can come back faster from treatments," said Tighe, 52.

Cancer and the workplace

  • Check the amount of leave you're entitled to in your personnel policy. Employers are not obligated to provide unlimited leave.
  • Consider the timing of your treatment. Plan your work and your days off around treatment days.
  • Talk to co-workers who might be affected by your taking time off.
  • Speak directly to your supervisor about time off for medical treatments and tasks you can do from home.
  • Talk with your employer about reasonable accommodations in work hours if you're fatigued upon return.
  • Pay your health insurance premium on time. Do not risk losing coverage.
  • Disability coverage varies by insurer. Read your policy very carefully.

Those women whose workplaces respond in a less supportive manner say they feel like they are blown a double whammy. Jan Elledge, a 50-year-old Fort Lauderdale, Fla., day-care worker, lost her job, her insurance and her outlet for mental distraction when she learned breast cancer returned after a two-year remission. Elledge realized it would be difficult to keep her job. She explained to her boss she wouldn't be able to come in after surgery because she couldn't lift the children or be exposed to germs. "They said they had to replace me because they couldn't go without a (caregiver) in the classroom."

A difficult part of healing, Elledge said, is the feeling of being unproductive. "It's frustrating sitting around not being able to work." With no income or health insurance, Elledge has relied on government assistance and American Cancer Society programs to keep her afloat.

Some women who feel they lost their jobs over their disease have taken their cases to court.

Earlier this month, law firm Proskauer Rose LLP was hit with a $10 million gender discrimination suit by its former chief financial officer, Elly Rosenthal. She claims the firm demoted her after her medical leave for breast cancer treatment, denied her pay increases and eventually fired her. The firm says the case, filed in Manhattan, is meritless and that it has steadfastly supported colleagues who have suffered illnesses.

And then there's Pamela Fink, who rushed to have a genetic test after discovering her two sisters had breast cancer. When she learned she did have a predisposition, she decided to have a preventative double mastectomy. She said when she returned to work, the Connecticut-based company began giving her fewer responsibilities, then demoted her and ultimately fired her. She filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, one of the first claiming illegal dismissal under a new federal law that prohibits employers from considering someone's genetic background in firings or promotions.

As the country celebrates National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, breast cancer patients battling the disease face an emotional tidal wave that often carries into their workplace. Some patients want to focus their energy on their treatment program and take time off work. But others want or need their jobs for income and health insurance. Their days are about fighting fatigue and difficulty concentrating, trying to do their jobs and stay part of the team.

In this economic climate, businesses often find themselves torn on how to handle an employee who needs treatment. Many want to support their workers who need time off, but they are operating with bare-bones staff and need to keep their companies on track. Some situations may only need a temporary patch ? letting other employees fill in while someone gets treatment.

Other situations may require a longer-term solution, hiring a temporary worker or consultant to fill in. Most women say what they need most at work is flexibility and what they cherish most is co-worker and management support.

"The ones who do get support are the ones who are less stressed," said Bobbi Meyers, executive director for the Miami/Ft. Lauderdale affiliate of the Susan G. Komen for the Cure. "You never want to put your health in jeopardy because of the stress of how to manage everything."

As CFO of Greenspoon Marder, Kathryn Bass, 56, understands the challenges for an employer. But she knows firsthand that balancing work and cancer treatment demands workplace support. Bass learned she had breast cancer only two months after she divorced and moved closer to her office. Some days, she would lie on her couch, feeling too nauseous or weak to drive three miles to work. Other days, she would go in for a few hours, leave and finish up at night.

"The staff was incredible what they took on for me," she said. Not only would they pitch in with work needs, her co-workers went grocery shopping for her, drove her to medical appointments and always made the extra effort to keep her in the loop.

Both Bass and Tighe are back at work full time and say they feel fortunate and even more dedicated to their employer and co-workers.

They believe their experiences have helped with firm recruiting and retention: "It showed everyone else who work here how well they treat employees," Tighe said.

Source: http://www.nola.com/breast-cancer/index.ssf/2011/10/cancer_patients_require_extra.html

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Insurance firm agrees to pay Joplin survivor | The Associated Press ...

AP Photo/The Joplin Globe, T. Rob Brown, File

FILE - In this Oct. 3, 2011 file photo, Mark Lindquist, of Joplin, Mo., reacts after being released from the Missouri Rehabilitation Center in Mount Vernon, Mo. Lindquist, an underpaid social worker who nearly gave his life trying to save three developmentally disabled adults from the Joplin tornado, has been honored by both houses of the Missouri legislature, the Senate resolution calling him "a true hero and inspiration to others."

An insurance company that initially refused to pay the medical bills of a man injured in the Joplin tornado while he tried to save three residents of a group home where he worked has now agreed to pay the claim, the company said Monday.
Mark Lindquist was in a coma for nearly two months, broke every rib, lost most of his teeth and suffered other catastrophic injuries in the May 22 tornado. He had placed three middle-aged men with Down syndrome beneath mattresses, then climbed atop one of the mattresses, to try and protect them.
The men died. Lindquist survived but ran up medical bills in excess of $2.5 million. He worked in a job paying barely above minimum wage and couldn't afford medical insurance.
He sought workers' compensation, claiming he was injured on the job. His company's workers' compensation provider, Accident Fund Insurance Company of America, denied the claim in June "based on the fact that there was no greater risk than the general public at the time you were involved in the Joplin tornado," according to a letter from a claims adjuster.
But on Monday, a day after an Associated Press story, Accident Fund Insurance Company of America agreed to pay.
"Upon further review of the case, and receiving additional information on the facts involved in this situation, Accident Fund believes the appropriate decision is to honor Mr. Mark Lindquist's claim for worker's compensation benefits," Mike Britt, president of the Lansing, Mich.-based insurance company, said. "We are committed to working with Mr. Lindquist to ensure he receives all the benefits to which he is entitled and helping him to recover from his injuries."
Lindquist, 51, did not have a phone listing but his sister, Linda Lindquist Baldwin, said the family still plans to meet with an attorney to consider all options before accepting the payment. But she said the family was overwhelmed by the turnaround.
"What it's going to mean for Mark is long-term help and medical care for him," Baldwin said, adding that Accident Fund has agreed to pay all past and future medical bills related to his injuries. "My only concern is that Mark's cared for. He's younger than I am and will probably outlive me, and I want to make sure he is cared for his entire life."

Source: http://www.sfexaminer.com/news/2011/10/insurance-firm-agrees-pay-joplin-survivor

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Monday, October 24, 2011

George Clooney: What's His Best Look?


While George Clooney has been hopping - okay, flying first class in a private jet - from red carpet to red carpet over the last few weeks, most eyes have been trained on the woman on his arm. And for good reason:

Stacy Keibler is far from unattractive.

But the actor has also given fans multiple looks at various events honoring his two latest movies, The Ides of March and The Descendants. Below, we're asking readers to compare his cool and casual look at a photo call in London... with his jacket/no-tie outfit at the London Film Festival... with his grey suit at the NYC premiere of the former film. Vote now!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/10/george-clooney-whats-his-best-look/

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Turkey keeps up military strikes on Kurdish rebels

CIZRE, Turkey: Turkey on Saturday kept up a major offensive against Kurdish rebels on its border and in northern Iraq on the third day of operations after deadly attacks which killed 24 Turkish soldiers.

The military activity continued on both sides of the border, said an AFP photographer in the southeastern town of Cizre, less than 40 miles (70 kilometres) from the Iraqi frontier.

Local residents saw a convoy of 43 military trucks returning from the north of Iraq where members of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) are holed up, he added.

The operation was continuing in Kazan valley in Hakkari province in the southeast, private NTV television reported.

Turkish helicopters dropped soldiers and several Kurdish rebels were killed in clashes, it added.

PKK guerrillas last Wednesday killed 24 soldiers and wounded 18 in the mainly Kurdish southeast along the Iraqi border, the army's biggest losses since 1993.

The simultaneous attacks prompted the Turkish military to launch air and land operations against bases of the PKK, listed as a terrorist organisation by Turkey and much of the international community.

Some 10,000 troops on the ground are involved in Turkey's operations, backed by jets and helicopters.

In a statement on its website on Friday, the military said the majority of the land and air operations are in Turkey, mainly in the Cukurca region -- the combat zone of the latest PKK attacks.

It did not specify how many troops, composed of commando units, gendarmerie and special forces, had entered Iraq.

Turkey is seeking support from its neighbours and Europe for its military campaign.

"The PKK is not only Turkey's enemy but also Europe's," Turkey's EU Affairs Minister Egemen Bagis was quoted as saying by the Anatolia news agency on Saturday.

"The security of Paris, Brussels, London begins from Sirnak, Hakkari" provinces in Turkey's southeast, said Bagis.

"We must fight against terrorism all together."

The attacks by Kurdish rebels have also mobilised Turkey's civil society.

Representatives of non-governmental organisations, business associations and professional chambers across Turkey are readying to meet with the president, prime minister and opposition party leaders, Turkish media reported.

Others in the southeast are expected to go to the Qandil mountains in an attempt to convince the PKK to lay down arms, it added.

Clashes between the PKK and the army have escalated since the summer.

The PKK took up arms for Kurdish independence in southeastern Turkey in 1984, sparking a conflict that has claimed some 45,000 lives.

Turkey's last ground incursion into northern Iraq, an autonomous Kurdish region, was in February 2008, when the army struck against the Zap region.

Source: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Middle-East/2011/Oct-22/151964-turkey-keeps-up-military-strikes-on-kurdish-rebels.ashx

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Five Reasons To See 'Paranormal Activity 3'

After three October releases in a row, "Paranormal Activity" has set itself up as the new yearly Halloween-time scary movie. On the third go around, the franchise has picked up some interesting features. "Paranormal Activity 3" is directed by Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman, the directors of the still-controversial maybe-documentary "Catfish." The third film also [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2011/10/21/paranormal-activity-3-review/

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Flick Soccer for Android now available in the Android Market

Flick Soccer

Full Fat Games is back after having launched the popular Flick Golf. They've taken up a different sport this time around -- Soccer. Flick Soccer has been released for Android and is now available worldwide on the Android Market bringing one of the most feature rich soccer games to the platform.

Features:

  • Full Fat Flick Controls mean everyone can play?
  • Shoot for insane scores in Quickshot mode, it's you vs the keeper
  • Take it to the limit in Endurance mode, set piece action with bonus items?
  • Try out Challenge mode for the ultimate skill contest?
  • Have you got the accuracy to hit the bar? Find out in Crossbar mode
  • Smash It! breaking glass panels against the clock?
  • Unbelievably accurate flick controls for stunning top-corner shots?
  • The most realistic goalkeeper on the Android Market
  • Interactive defenders will jump and react to shots
  • Gorgeous visuals and immersive sound

That's quite a bit of gaming action to choose from. If soccer is your gaming sport of choice Flick Soccer may be something to look into. It's reasonably priced and supported on device Android 2.1 and up. Download link is past the break for you all -- leave some comments if you grab it. I'm interested in knowing how well it plays versus that of Flick Golf which I loved.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/mUwJmRqAeoU/flick-soccer-android-now-available-android-market

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Gaddafi unburied as Libyans face test of new era (Reuters)

MISRATA, Libya (Reuters) ? As Muammar Gaddafi lay still unburied, Libya's outgoing premier said the coming days posed a crucial test of resolve for the new men of power, who are wrangling over the body, and about a formal end to the war.

Mahmoud Jibril confirmed he would step down on Saturday after seven months as prime minister of the Western-backed rebel government now that the legal declaration of "liberation" was expected on Sunday following Gaddafi's killing on Thursday.

But in a parting shot from an international business forum in Jordan, the former expatriate academic who has many critics in the motley coalition that ousted Gaddafi two months ago, warned that now was not a time for in-fighting if Libyans were to keep to a plan to hold their first free election next year.

Leaders required "resolve," he said, "in the next few days."

In Misrata, the once besieged city whose rebel fighters are pushing claims for a big stake in a "reborn," oil-rich Libya, the curious and the relieved filed for a second day through a market cold store to view the fallen strongman, whose surprise capture and killing in his home town of Sirte sparked joy - and renewed jockeying for influence - across the country.

Visitors wore surgical masks against the stench, an image that may trouble some Muslims, for whom swift burial is a holy duty - even if few Libyans share unease among their Western allies over what seems increasingly likely to have been a summary execution of the former leader by his Misratan captors.

Jibril said progress for Libya would need great resolution, both by interim leaders on the National Transitional Council and by six million war-weary people: "First," he said, "What kind of resolve the NTC will show in the next few days.

"And the other thing depends mainly on the Libyan people - whether they differentiate between the past and the future."

Urging a vision to diversify the economy away from oil, and a rejection of exploiting energy contracts for political ends, he added: "I am counting on them to look ahead and remember the kind of agony they went through in the last 42 years."

He said: "We need to seize this very limited opportunity."

"LIBERATION"

The formal declaration of an end to eight months of war and of "liberation" from four decades of living at the whim of Colonel Gaddafi was expected to be made by NTC chairman Mustafa Abdel Jalil on Sunday in the eastern city of Benghazi, the seat of the revolt which was inspired by the fall of Arab autocrats in neighboring Tunisia and Egypt.

But amid regional rivalries for honors from Tripoli, the capital which fell in August, and from the third city, Misrata, whose long siege has made it a symbol of resistance, there have been several delays in the announcement. It will set a clock ticking on a plan for a new government and constitutional assembly leading to full democracy in 2013.

Jibril reaffirmed the plan was for elections to the body that will draft a constitution to be held in eight months.

For now, though, there is little sign of an end to the anarchic energy that is a defining characteristic of the disparate, grass-roots rebel movement that has brawled with Gaddafi's better armed forces for eight months across vast tracts of desert, helped by NATO air strikes.

In Misrata, where Gaddafi's body lay, bearing bullet wounds that many assume were inflicted by fighters from the city who hauled him from a storm drain in his home town of Sirte, one field commander voiced his concern that trouble was brewing:

"The fear now is what is going to happen next," he said, speaking to Reuters privately, as ordinary Libyans, some taking historic pictures for family albums, filed in under armed guard to see for themselves that the man they feared was truly dead.

"There is going to be regional in-fighting. You have Zintan and Misrata on one side and then Benghazi and the east," the guerrilla said. "There is in-fighting even inside the army.

"The cake is now, and everybody wants a piece."

DIVISIONS

For some, there are encouraging signs, notably that the two-month gap between the fall of Tripoli and the death of Gaddafi has not seen fighting between different factions. Comparisons with Iraq after Saddam Hussein are tempered by the absence of the sectarian divide which has ravaged that country.

However, as in Iraq, there are vast energy resources at stake and a host of international powers keen to exploit them.

In a thinly populated country that was only united in the 1930s under Italian colonial rule, regional enmities thrive, as well as differences between Islamists and secularists and among those who once served Gaddafi - like NTC head Abdel Jalil - and others. There is also ethnic tension between Arabs and Berbers.

For Misratans in particular, who endured months of bloody siege but fought off Gaddafi's army and played an important role in taking Tripoli, the body of the fallen strongman is only the latest trophy of war to be brought back to the city.

Gaddafi's surviving family, in exile, have asked that his body, and that of his son Mo'tassim, be handed over to tribal kinsmen from Sirte. NTC officials said they were trying to arrange a secret resting place to avoid loyalist supporters making it a shrine. A tribal burial would echo the fate of Saddam and his sons, though their graves are known.

Unlike on Friday, Gaddafi's body was covered by a blanket that left only his head exposed, hiding bruises on his torso and scratch marks on his chest that had earlier been visible.

Crucially, a Reuters reporter who viewed the body said, Gaddafi's head had been turned to the left. That meant a bullet hole that earlier could be seen on the left side of his face, just in front of his ear, could no longer be seen.

SUMMARY EXECUTION?

Gaddafi's family and international human rights groups have urged an inquiry into how Gaddafi, 69, was killed, since gory cellphone video footage showed him alive but being beaten and taunted by his captors. Jibril said on the day that Gaddafi was killed in "crossfire" in an ambulance taking him to hospital.

But an ambulance driver in Sirte told Reuters Gaddafi was already dead by the time he picked him up, and a local military commander in Misrata said "over-enthusiastic" fighters had taken matters into their own hands:

"We wanted to keep him alive. But the young guys...," he told Reuters. "Things went out of control."

The International Criminal Court at The Hague had wanted to try Gaddafi for war crimes and may yet be able to try his son Saif al-Islam if he is found. NTC officials believe he escaped from the last redoubt in Sirte, after French jets had scattered a convoy of dozens of vehicles trying to flee with his father.

Intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi, the third man wanted by the ICC, managed to reach Niger, officials have said.

Libyans also want to try some of the old guard at home.

Despite the qualms of some abroad, few compatriots spare much of a thought for how Gaddafi met a bloody end that was captured, in random snatches, in clips of cellphone video broadcast around the world while Libyans rejoiced.

"People in the West don't understand the agony and pain that the people went through during the past 42 years," said Jibril, who added he felt "reborn" when he heard the news.

Abdulatif, a pilot, who came to see the body in Misrata, asked: "What would he tell the mother whose children were killed or the girls who were raped? If he lived and was killed a thousand times that would still only be a trifle.

Hassen al-Setini, 32, said the ICC would have been too lenient: "It is better that he died ... "If he stayed alive to be tried, his supporters would continue fighting.

Nonetheless, some Libyans have expressed unease at the way his body has been treated - Muslim custom dictates it should have been buried by sundown on Thursday - and at other aspects that touch on matters of religion and respect for the dead.

Gaddafi's daughter Aisha, her mother and two of her brothers fled to Algeria after the fall of Tripoli. Aisha gave birth on the day she arrived. The government in Algiers angered the NTC by refusing to send them back. But an Algerian newspaper on Saturday quoted official sources saying that, following the death of the head of the family, they might now reconsider.

(Additional reporting by Taha Zargoun in Sirte, Barry Malone, Yasmine Saleh and Jessica Donati in Tripoli, Brian Rohan in Benghazi, Jon Hemming and Andrew Hammond in Tunis, Samia Nakhoul in Amman, Christian Lowe in Tunis, Tom Pfeiffer at Dead Sea, Jordan, David Brunnstrom in Brussels and Lamine Chikhi in Algiers; Writing by Alastair Macdonald)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111022/wl_nm/us_libya

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'Paranormal Activity 3': 10 Secrets Revealed

Directors Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman tease some things to look out for in the horror threequel.
By Eric Ditzian


"Paranormal Activity 3"
Photo: Paramount Pictures

Last October, on the day "Paranormal Activity 2" hit theaters, director Tod Williams stopped by the MTV Newsroom to reveal five secrets about the horror sequel -- everything from the best way to break a person's leg to why the baby in the film is possibly the greatest actor in all of Hollywood.

Another year, another "PA" flick -- and even more secrets revealed. The morning after a raucous screening in New York City, "Paranormal Activity 3" directors Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman paid us a visit and gave up the goods. Read on for 10 "Paranormal" secrets, then check back on Monday for their answers to a ton of our burning questions -- queries that were simply too spoiler-filled to reveal before fans have had a chance to see the film for themselves (be aware, though, that there are mild spoilers below).

The Fan Camera
A key issue in any found-footage movie is finding creative ways for characters to film the action. That issue becomes especially thorny three pictures into a franchise. How do you keep things fresh in a "Paranormal" flick, a series that largely confines each story to one house, the demon-haunting action captured with camcorders set up in various rooms? Joost and Schulman, along with screenwriter Christopher B. Landon, came up with a new technique that opens up an entirely new way of viewing events that is at once simple and totally scare-inducing: a camera mounted on the base of a swiveling fan.

The idea was one Joost and Schulman used when they first discussed the gig with Paramount. "It's like, 'How would we do it if there were a ghost in our office and we only had one camera? How would we capture the whole thing?' " explained Joost. "We were like, 'Would we put it on a model train and have it go around the house?' We would put up mirrors to see stuff, or this fan idea. It turned out Chris Landon, the writer of the movie, had basically the same idea, independently of us. So when we got together for this first time, it was like, 'Oh great, you want to do that too!' "

The Sex Tape
For "PA3," it wasn't just about new ways of capturing the action, but of new action to capture. That's why you'll see the making of the first-ever sex tape in the new "Paranormal," one between the two central adults in the film, mother Julie (Lauren Bittner) and live-in boyfriend Dennis (Christopher Nicholas Smith).

"The president of Paramount [Adam Goodman] was like, 'I want to do a sex tape this time,' " Schulman said. "They always tease it in the 'Paranormal' movies, and at this point, everyone's inclined to think they're not going to do it. [Dennis] is going to ask her to film it and she's going to say no and they're going to turn the camera off, or she'll say yes and they'll turn it off right away. [Goodman] was like, 'I want to take it there.' It gets pretty uncomfortable. It's like a real sex tape, which is awkward."

The Filmmaker Cameos
Though they spent the great majority of their time behind the scenes, Joost and Schulman actually make cameos in the film -- though you'd never be able to tell unless they hadn't revealed the secret to us. Without diving too much into spoilers, let's just say that at one point you see what might be a young girl or a demon hiding under a white sheet -- that old clichéd Halloween costume. In actuality, it was neither a demon nor a young girl, but Schulman. Why'd he choose that role for himself? "Catlike reflexes," he cracked. "Very agile."

Joost's cameo is similarly mysterious, though at least part of his body is visible -- even if you can't tell it's his. "I operated [the camera] for a bunch of awesome shots," he said, adding that in one climactic scene that we won't spoil, "My hand is in the film. I just slammed the stuntwoman with the camera. It was fun. She was like, 'Hit me as hard as you can!' I was like, 'I don't want to hurt you!' "

The First Scare
Now, we're not going to ruin the first big scare moment for you (what'd be the fun in that?), but Joost and Schulman did explain their thinking about that all-important initial jump-out-of-your-seat moment and why it occurs exactly when it does.

"We have to get a lot of exposition across first, because once the scare happens, the rollercoaster ride really sets in and it's hard to move the plot forward," Schulman said. "So we need time to establish the characters and what the heck is going on."

Added Joost: "I think there is also a moment in the movie where it wins you over. Prior to that, everyone's sitting there with their arms crossed and they're like, 'OK, let's see if this is any good.' And you need a moment like that, early in a movie, just to let all the tension out of the room and let people relax and settle in."

The Teddy Ruxpin
Set in the fall of 1988, "PA3" incorporates all sorts of pop-culture references from that era, the most prominent of which is Teddy Ruxpin, the talking bear that was a favorite toy of so many kids back in the day. Again, we won't tell you exactly how Ruxpin fits into the story, only that the filmmakers had some other ideas for the toy that they couldn't quite pull off.

"Teddy Ruxpin was on our original list of ideas," Schulman said. "We had a bunch of crazy ideas for Teddy Ruxpin but had legal issues. He plays audio cassettes and you can put other ones in there, like a Metallica tape, and just have him rage, which is really creepy. You can also set him to record, so we wanted him to record the demon at night if the camera turned off. Lot of legal issues with Teddy Ruxpin!"

The Pop Culture References
Keep your eyes and ears peeled throughout (if you can), because the film is littered with other '80s callbacks. There's a reference to "Back to the Future" at one point, but as Schulman let us know, "You can't say 'Back to the Future,' so instead [Dennis and his friend are] just having an argument about what it should have been called. 'Back to the Present.' 'Back to the Past.' "

"Dennis also wears one of my old Swatches from 1984," he added. "There's a Lite Brite in the kids' room. And one of the kids calls out [former NBA dunk-contest champion] Spud Webb. Kids love Spud Webb because he's small."

The Famous Katie Photo
It's no spoiler to say "PA3" takes place before the events of the first two films, following two sisters Katie and Julie from adulthood back into childhood. In both of the original films, there's one important photo of Katie as a child displayed at certain times. In "PA3," we see the moment that photo was taken.

"We were thinking about the hard-core fans on every decision. So we thought, 'What's the coolest way to bring back that famous photo?' " Schulman said. "Well, how about the taking of the photo?

"There are a lot of [references to the earlier films] you'll pick up on the second viewing," Joost added. "Why that scene is there, lines of dialogue, things like that."

The Timeline
The film takes place in September 1988, with certain dates highlighted graphically. One highlighted date is 9/10/88, but then the events skip ahead past 9/11, a storytelling decision that was very important to the filmmakers. "Out of respect," Joost said. "Never gonna do that."

The Demon's Name
The demon that has been haunting Katie and Julie finally gets a name in "PA3": He is Toby, Julie's supposedly imaginary friend. So why that name?

"Toby is the name of our [assistant director's] dog," Joost said.

"No, the writer's neighbor's dog," Schulman corrected.

"And our A.D.'s dog," Joost laughed.

The Loose Tooth
Early on in the film, young Julie shows off a gruesomely loose tooth -- a simple, creepy scene that hints at the violence to come. So was this some fancy special effect? Hardly. More like the luck of having a young actress on set.

"Little girl shows up on set and says that she's got a loose tooth," Schulman said. "We say, 'Film it, work it into the scene.' Can't fake that."

Check out everything we've got on "Paranormal Activity 3."

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.

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Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1672928/paranormal-activity-3-secrets.jhtml

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Friday, October 21, 2011

Tanier: Sparano latest overmatched coach

Many assistants lack communication skills, management abilities and non-football smarts

Image: Sparano Reuters

The Dolphins are among the NFL's worst teams. Does this mean Tony Sparano is just another former assistant who's overmatched as a head coach?

ANALYSIS

updated 10:40 p.m. ET Oct. 18, 2011

Mike Tanier

Tony Sparano isn?t cutting it. The Dolphins stumbled through an embarrassing Monday night loss to the Jets, looking listless, directionless, and unfocused. Team owner Steve Ross gave Sparano a vote of confidence two weeks ago, but we all know how much votes of confidence are worth: add 99 cents to them, and you can buy from the Extra Value menu.

Todd Haley isn?t cutting it. His Chiefs looked like the worst team in professional sports through the first three games, though a two-game winning streak has taken a little heat off. Rumors are swirling that Chiefs president Scott Pioli was ready to fire Haley during the bye, but Pioli stayed his hand. The reprieve may be brief ? Haley made disastrous decisions during the preseason, including exposing starters to injury in order to win the final exhibition game, and he is one bad decision away from exciting new employment opportunities elsewhere.

Sparano and Haley are once-promising assistant coaches who are flunking their first trial as head coaches.

They are not alone.

Steve Spagnuolo and Ken Whisenhunt are in the same boat. Recent history is filled with assistants who did not just fail, but failed spectacularly: Josh McDaniels in Denver, Scott Linehan in St. Louis, Eric Mangini in Cleveland. These guys dragged their organizations down with them, dividing locker rooms and, in some cases, embarrassing their franchises with power plays and political intrigues.

A bad coach can waste a few years trying to build his program. A terrible one set a team back for a whole decade. With stakes so high, NFL owners and executives have to ask themselves an important question: How do you tell whether a rising star is the Next Great Coach or a nightmare waiting to tear your franchise apart?

There is no right answer to that question, but there is one absolutely wrong one. You can?t determine a coordinator?s potential from his stats.

Wrong tools for the job
Chances are, the company you work for has a technical department or a research and development staff. The people who work in those departments are brilliant; they design new products, make important repairs, or know how to network the computers, copiers, and coffee machines together so everything runs smoothly.

These people are the offensive and defensive coordinators of your company. They are creative, innovative, and indispensable. And there is no way in this world they will ever get promoted to Chief Executive Officer, because they lack expertise in sales, marketing, shipping, production, purchasing, and the rest of the enchilada. Plus, their people skills probably aren?t great.

The corporate world understands the difference between a prized technician and a leader with real managerial tools and talent. Unfortunately, NFL owners and execs often do not. ?As head coach, you are the CEO of a multi-billion dollar operation,? said Ted Sundquist, former general manager of the Broncos and editor of TheFootballEducator.com. ?Yet guys are thrust into the job with no training whatsoever because their defense was ranked second in yards allowed last year.?

Head coaches have to do much more than draw up gameplans and make locker room speeches. ?He must communicate with the business people, communicate with marketing, communicate with the media,? Sundquist explained. A head coach?s job is filled with meetings, discussions, and compromises. The difference between coordinator and coach is almost as big as the difference between software engineer and Vice President of Production.

The lack of managerial training becomes a bigger problem when coaches like McDaniels get major influence over personnel matters. Scouting is a year-round job, yet some young coaches believe they can dabble in it. Handling the salary cap is also a full-time occupation, and it?s the head coach who first learns what is and isn?t possible under the constraints of the team budget. When wunderkind coaches fail to grasp the economics and resource allocations that go into finding, developing, and compensating talent, they do nutty things, like trading away star players over personality conflicts or leaving Matt Cassel in the fourth preseason game.

Of course, many successful coaches have made the leap from the assistant ranks. It takes a special kind of person to do so, and where that individual?s offense or defense ranked the previous year is not really relevant.

Personality, Maturity, Quality
Sundquist points to Tony Dungy as the ideal example of an assistant who achieved success as a head coach, and the Tampa-2 defense had nothing to do with it. ?He?s a man of character. Teams need that mature individual.?

Maturity was a problem for the petulant McDaniels. It also may be an issue for Haley, whose decision process never seems to extend beyond the next quarter. Character was a major problem for Mangini, who treated bottom-of-the-roster players like indentured servants.

Character alone does not guarantee success. Sparano is a peach. ?I hate that the Dolphins? terrible 0-5 start is roosting directly in the doorstep of Sparano, a good man and a good coach.? wrote Armondo Salguero in the Miami Herald this week. Sparano is also no young whippersnapper with a cocky attitude. He has a long r?sum? as an NFL assistant and a college head coach.

Part of Sparano?s problem may be his personality. Some coaches are all bluster and brimstone speeches. Others, like Sparano, are lower-key. The tough guys, like Mike Singletary, produce short-term results but can grind players and co-workers down if they do not sometimes dial it down. Alex Smith looks like a better quarterback now that there is no perma-fire under his rear end. The low-key guys, like Wade Phillips, can exasperate both fans and superiors when they don?t display any rage after a tough loss. Salguero?s column makes it clear that Ross has tired of his head coach, perhaps because the stay-the-course approach isn?t reaching troublesome stars like Brandon Marshall.

The most successful coaches can modulate their personalities, which is another trait coordinators don?t need to master (the head coach has the emotions, the coordinator has a dry erase board). An Andy Reid can be soft-spoken, like Dungy, but wield authority behind the scenes. A Tom Coughlin or Mike Tomlin can come across as gruff and angry in press conferences but approachable and fair-minded in the locker room or staff meetings. ?A coach has to know when to kick butt and when to take his foot off the pedal,? Sundquist said. Many assistants only know one or the other, or neither.


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For once, it's fun to be Bengals fan

Collinsworth: Trading Carson Palmer once seemed to be something the Bengals simply wouldn't do. So to get a bounty in return for nothing is a fabulous turn of events.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/44953324/ns/sports-nfl/

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

PIC: George Clooney, Stacy Keibler Pack on PDA in Paris (omg!)

Testimony to resume in Jackson doctor's trial ANTHONY McCARTNEY - AP Entertainment Writer - AP - 6 hours ago

The trial of the doctor charged in Michael Jackson's death will resume Wednesday after days of delay, with jurors hearing from a leading expert on the powerful anesthetic?? More??Testimony to resume in Jackson doctor's trial

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/http___omg_yahoo_com_news74931/43311090/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/pic-george-clooney-stacy-keibler-pack-on-pda-in-paris/74931

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FIFA to introduce amnesty for match-fixers

By ROB HARRIS

updated 10:51 a.m. ET Oct. 17, 2011

LONDON - FIFA says whistle-blowers will be offered financial rewards and amnesty for information on match-fixing and other corruption in soccer.

The sport's governing body has cited mounting evidence that international and club matches are being targeted by gangs who bribe players and referees.

FIFA security chief Chris Eaton told a conference in London on Monday that starting in January he will begin a "rewards program" for those willing to talk about corruption in the game.

Eaton says there will be a hotline and amnesty for those players, officials and administrators who may have been involved in fixing games.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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10-man Man United wins

Wayne Rooney made two penalty kicks Tuesday to lead 10-man Manchester United a 2-0 road victory over the Romanian club Otelul Galati in the Champions League.

Relegation end?

Some of the Premier League's foreign owners want to abolish the relegation system, an English soccer executive said Monday, while United manager Alex Ferguson disagreed.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/44930711/ns/sports-soccer/

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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

HBT: Lester, others were irresponsible, reckless

Earlier today self-proclaimed ?grown-ass man? Jon Lester spoke with the Globe?s Pete Abraham about L?affaire Fried Chicken and the ouster of Terry Francona. ?For the most part Lester has been given props for being frank and open and, well, grown-ass about it. ?But two sources tell Mike Giardi of CSNNE.com that Lester?s downplaying of it all is disingenuous:

However, two sources I spoke to ? one inside the clubhouse and one in management ? said Lester?s comments only told part of the story. Their feeling is that the behavior of Lester, Josh Beckett, John Lackey and, on occasion, Clay Buchholz was irresponsible, occasionally reckless, and disrespectful to manager Terry Francona ???It was the guys who should know better, the guys who have been here and often benefited from Tito?s softer hand. I mean, how many times [did] Tito defend you to the press or stick by you, and this is how [you] repay him? It?s bull?-?

Well, glad to see that clubhouse strife is all straightened out. Nope, the new Sox manager isn?t gonna have any problems on his hands when he gets to Ft. Myers next February. No siree.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/10/17/sox-source-jon-lesters-comments-today-only-told-part-of-the-story/related/

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Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Boy survives 3-story drop from burning building

A 6-alarm arson fire tore through a large apartment building, including the apartment of a couple on the third floor who dropped their young grandson into the arms of a waiting firefighter, officials said.

A man who came to a hospital with burns and claimed he started the fire was arrested, police said.

Firefighters rescued at least 15 people, including the 6-year-old grandson of Herbert and Judith Lamb, who live on the third floor of the apartment building and said they were woken by an explosion and smoke.

The Lambs broke a window and dropped their 6-year-old grandson, Xavier, into the arms of waiting Boston firefighters.

"I had to drop him out the window," Judith Lamb told The Boston Globe. "The firemen caught him."

Boston Fire Lieutenant Glenn McGillivray told the newspaper he was the one who caught Xavier Lamb.

"I knew she wouldn't be able to hold him until we got help, so they dropped him, and I caught him in my arms from the third floor," McGillivray said. "Thank God I caught him. I've never had to do that before, and I hope I never have to do it again."

He said firefighters used a ladder to rescue Judith Lamb.

The blaze damaged or destroyed more than two dozen apartments in the large, U-shaped building on Wardman Road in the city's Roxbury neighborhood.

Residents who escaped said they heard an explosion at about 1 a.m.

Confession?
A short time later, fire department spokesman Steve MacDonald told the Associated Press a man showed up at a hospital and said he started the fire.

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"He walked into Boston Medical Center with burns and admitted certain things to investigators, so he was placed under arrest for arson of a dwelling," MacDonald said.

The man's name was not immediately released. It was not clear if he lived in the building or was visiting, MacDonald said, and no motive was known.

NBC affiliate WHDH reported that the suspect was charged with arson of a dwelling and multiple counts of attempted murder. Damage to the building was said to be about $3 million.

MacDonald said the windows and frame were blown out in one corner of the building and bricks were littering the street.

Ten residents of the building were taken to hospitals, most suffering from smoke inhalation. Two firefighters and a police officer were also treated for what were believed to be minor injuries, MacDonald said.

Firefighters said all residents were accounted for, though MacDonald cautioned that crews had not yet been able to enter the building.

About 160 firefighters were called to the scene and they were still pouring water on the building several hours after the blaze started.

A temporary shelter was set up in the city for residents displaced by the blaze.

MacDonald could not immediately confirm initial reports that the fire may have been started after a gas line to a stove was cut.

The Associated Press and WHDH contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44928811/ns/us_news-life/

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Sean Parker: Facebook Power Users Have Gone to Twitter or Google+ (Mashable)

Spotify investor and former Facebook President Sean Parker had some harsh words for his favorite social network: its problem isn't privacy, it's that some of its most active users are leaving for other services. ""The threat to Facebook is that power users have gone to Twitter or Google+," Parker told the Web 2.0 Summit -- because, he says, Facebook isn't giving them enough ways to manage a glut of information.

[More from Mashable: WATCH: Sean Parker, Twitter and 4chan Speak at Web 2.0 Summit [LIVE]]

Parker also defended Spotify's decision to integrate the music service with Facebook, requiring users to sign up with a Facebook account. "It gives Spotify access to Facebook's roughly 800 million users," he said in an interview with Federated Media's John Battelle.

Battelle continued on the Facebook line, asking Parker what he thinks of the argument that Facebook is perceived as being a "little creepy." After attempting to dodge the question -- and pointing out that he is a major Facebook shareholder -- Parker offered this immortal answer. "Look: there's good creepy and there's bad creepy," he said. "Today's creepy is tomorrow's necessity."

[More from Mashable: The Perks of Working at Google, Facebook, Twitter and More [INFOGRAPHIC]]

SEE ALSO: Sean Parker Joins Twitter, With Apology to Mark Zuckerberg

Parker also had some harsh words for the record labels, arguing that bands can simply bypass them. "You can now be a master of your own destiny," he said. "I'm not sure why you would sign up with a record label."

Unless they desperately need an advance, Parker believes, bands are better off on their own. He apologized to his friends in the recording industry, but offered the slow-to-grow success of indie band Foster The People as a prime example.

Parker's argument: the digital revolution have removed barriers to sharing music. It doesn't cost extra to create another copy of a song anymore and it's easier than ever to get recommendations for music from friends. The result is that labels are lagging behind because they have layers of bureaucracy and protocols they no longer need. Bands are responding by using other distribution mediums (such as Spotify) in order to take charge of their own destinies.

Finally, Parker attempted to clarify the controversy over whether he was a co-founder of Napster or just an early employee. "I was a co-founder," he said in a response to a question from Mashable. He explained that was one of three people with founding shares when the company was first incorporated.

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111017/tc_mashable/sean_parker_facebook_power_users_have_gone_to_twitter_or_google

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[OOC] Never Forget Never Forgive

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Monday, October 17, 2011

North Korea and U.S. to meet in Geneva next week: report (Reuters)

SEOUL (Reuters) ? North Korea and the United States will hold a second round of talks in Geneva next week to discuss ways to restart regional talks on disabling North Korea's nuclear weapons program, South Korean media reported Monday.

Yonhap news agency quoted a diplomatic source in Seoul as saying that the two sides would meet in Geneva, possibly on October 26, amid recent diplomatic activity which has seen the secretive state brought in from the cold.

North Korea conducted its first nuclear test in 2006 and tested a second device in 2009.

Tension has eased on the peninsula this year, and a series of bilateral meetings between the Koreas and the United States and North Korea has raised hopes that nuclear talks could be reconvened after a nearly three-year hiatus.

"I have learned that a high-level dialogue between North Korea and the U.S. will be held in Geneva," Yonhap quoted the diplomatic source as saying.

Seoul's Unification Ministry, which deals with inter-Korean affairs, said it did not know anything about the report.

North Korea said last month it was eager for a second meeting with the United States.

In July, U.S. envoy Stephen Bosworth held two days of talks with veteran North Korean nuclear negotiator Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye-gwan in New York, their first such interaction since 2009.

Last month in Beijing, the two Koreas' nuclear envoys met for a second time in two months to discuss restarting the six-party talks, which also involve the United States, China, Russia and Japan.

In further signs of engagement, North Korean and U.S. military officials are due to meet in Bangkok this week to discuss resuming the search for the remains of Americans killed during the 1950-53 Korean War.

Delegates from North Korea will also travel to the United States this month for two separate unofficial conferences designed to breathe life into the six-party talks.

NUCLEAR TEST WORRY

While the two Koreas and the United States say their talks have been constructive, they have failed to agree on a starting point for a new round of the six-party talks.

Seoul and Washington insist that Pyongyang must first halt its nuclear activities, including its uranium enrichment program, and allow the return of international nuclear inspectors before talks can restart.

The North, with Beijing and Moscow's support, says that six-party talks should be held without preconditions.

Most experts say the mercurial North is unlikely to ever give up its pursuit of nuclear weapons, but the six-party process is useful as it serves to contain the North's nuclear program and hinders proliferation.

A South Korean government official has also expressed concerns that if no there is progress in restarting six-party talks, Pyongyang could carry out another "provocation" such as a nuclear test.

Analysts say the destitute North is feeling the strain of sanctions, imposed for conducting the nuclear and missile tests, and wants to restart the talks to get economic aid.

Ties between the two Koreas have been frosty since 2008 when South Korea linked aid to progress on North Korean nuclear disarmament. Relations deteriorated further after the North's attacks on the South last year -- the sinking of a South Korean warship and the shelling of an island that killed 50 people.

(Reporting by Jeremy Laurence; Editing by Robert Birsel)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111017/wl_nm/us_korea_north_usa

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Force India announce Sahara partnership


Force India became the Asian country's first Formula One team when they made their debut in 2008.

(CNN) ? Sports promoter Sahara India Pariwar have purchased a 42.5 per cent stake in Formula One team Force India, it was announced Wednesday.

The deal will see Sahara, who were founded in 1975, invest $100 million in the Indian team which is ran by team principal and managing director Dr Vijay Mallya.

Mallya has retained an equal 42.5 per cent share in the team, with the remaining 15 per cent in the possession of Dutch businessman Michiel Mol and his family. The agreement will also see the marque renamed Sahara Force India F1.

?India is reaching new heights in all spheres, including sports,? Subrata Roy Sahara, managing worker and chairman of Sahara, said in a statement on Force India?s website.

Vettel finishes third to retain world title

?Formula One car racing has always remained a bastion of the western world. The advent of India in this exciting sport has remained a matter of pride for all our countrymen.

?I feel doubly proud that Sahara is the co-owner of India?s only F1 team and I am sure that through the Sahara Force India F1 Team, we will together bring pride and laurels to our beloved nation.?

Mallya echoed Sahara?s sentiments, claiming the deal was the latest step in establishing India in the elite division of motorsport.

?It has indeed been a matter of pride for me to put India on the F1 map with Force India and raise the performance of the team to its current levels,? said Mallya.

?The Sahara Group has played a very important role in the development of sport in the country and is an ideal partner to take the Force India F1 Team to greater success in the Formula One world championship?.

Force India have scored 49 points so far this season through their driver pairing of Scotland?s Paul di Resta and German Adrian Sutil.

The team?s best race finish of the season is sixth position, with Di Resta achieving the mark in Singapore and Sutil collecting eight points at his home grand prix in Germany.

F1 will make its debut in India later this month, when New Delhi hosts the country?s inaugural race on October 30.


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