Category: News

  • European Navy Watches As Pirates Slaughter Each Other Over Ransom Money

    Somali Pirates

    After the tanker company Maran Tankers Management paid a record $5.5 million to free one of its tankers taken hostage by Somali pirates, a fight broke out among the pirates over how to divide the spoils.

    The European Navy watched.

    NYT: But disputes over the delivery of the ransom and how to divide it touched off fighting among pirates, according to the European Union Naval Force and spokesmen for the pirates. Skiffs carrying rival bands of marauders traded fire on Sunday, even prompting one of the pirate groups to radio naval ships for help.

    “Of course, the European Union Naval Force would never intervene in a pirate fight,” said Cmdr. John Harbour, a spokesman for the naval force, which watched the gun battle from a safe distance. At least one pirate was reported killed in the exchange, but Commander Harbour said he could not confirm any deaths.

    Read more here >

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  • KT Editorial: Renewable Energy Avenues – Khaleej Times

    The growing global support for renewable and clean energy is heartening. The third preparatory session of the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) at its headquarters in Abu Dhabi received a further boost with Saudi Arabia joining the …


  • The Best Hamster Wheel Sand Printer I’ve Ever Seen [Summer]

    This is a tough category, but I’m very proud to announce that the award for Best Hamster Wheel Sand Printer goes to…this one!

    The wheel was created by Barcelona designer Tomás Silva Alonso, for his Zanadesign firm, and going by some of the expression on these kids’ faces, it’s the most fun anyone’s ever had at a beach. Check out the gallery. [Yatzer and MAKE]






  • #COMPLETED-Arad: “DOHAT ARAD PARK AND SANCTUARY”

    DOHAT ARAD PARK AND SANCTUARY IS A NATURAL SANCTUARY IT ATTRACTS LARGE NUMBERS OF SETTLING AND MIGRANT BIRDS. THESE BIRDS ARE ON THE HUNT FOR FOOD AND WARM WEATHER.


    تحتوي دوحة عراد علي مضمارللمشي بطول 3.300 كيلومترات، وبعرض 3 أمتار. كما ترتبط الدوحة بأربعة جسور، 2 منها لعبور المشاة، الأول يصل جنوب الدوحة بعراد، والثاني يصل غرب الدوحة إلى قرب حديقة المحرق الكبرى. وجسر داخلي يصل طرفي المضمار موازيا لجسر عراد-المحرق، وجسر داخلي آخر بقرب فندق موفنبيك. يعتبر مشروع دوحة عراد نموذجا فريدا وممتزج الأهداف والأغراض إذ يتكون من محمية بحرية من بيئات المد والجزر التي لها طبيعة خاصة وكائنات حية مهمة، تساهم بصورة فعالة في النظام البيئي البحري و في رمال وطين هذه البيئة الملايين من الكائنات الحية الصغيرة والدقيقة المهمة في بيئتنا البحرية. كما ستتم تنمية هذه المنطقة أيضا بأشجار القرم لكي تعطي المنطقة جمالا وتضيف قيمة وإنتاجية.

    وايضا تحتوي الدوحة على مسطحات خضراء ونخيل وأشجار، وألعاب للأطفال، وكراسي مظللة حول البحيرة، ونافورة كبيرة، وساحة رئيسية، ونوافير وشلالات صغيرة، وعيادة فحص للضغط والسكري وسيارة إسعاف، ومطاعم ومقاه ومحلات للتسوق، ومصلى رجال وآخر للنساء، ودورات مياه، ومواقف سيارات يتسع لـ 600 سيارة مقسمة على موقفين أحدهما يقع غرب الدوحة والآخر يقع شرقها.

  • A new NIMBY poll that needs your support

    Please vote YES to the poll in this news article !

    Canberra Times’ heavily loaded NIMBY poll
    (Thanks to deanh for the link that hides SSC as the referring website)

    It’s for a great building that Canberra desperately needs to help bring life back into the centre of the city. The Canberra Times article has a heavy NIMBY bias and contrary to the article this site IS NOT heritage unless you call a dirt carpark heritage. The lowrise nextdoor is the Diamant Hotel and it is heritage listed and will be protected, and rightly so.

    Here’s the SSC thread on the building –

    http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=1014121

  • Shareholders Wiped Out By ‘Too Japanese To Fail’ Shows How ‘Too Big To Fail’ Will End

    Sumo Japan

    As Japan Airlines faces bankruptcy, many of its shareholders have been shell-shocked by the prospect of being completely wiped out.

     

    That's because many Japanese companies have been considered 'Too Big To Fail' in the past, or more aptly 'Too Japanese To Fail.'

    WSJ: JAL is scheduled to file for bankruptcy following Tuesday's 3 p.m. Tokyo stock market close. Individual shareholders, who accounted for 60% of JAL's 2.73 billion outstanding common shares as of September, will be the hardest hit by the possible subsequent delisting of the airline's stock, which has plunged from a peak of 200 yen ($2.20) last January to a close of 5 yen on Monday.

    Hidetaka Miyai, 34 years old, works for a mobile-phone content provider and spent 500,000 yen to buy 1,000 shares at around 500 yen apiece several years ago. "My purpose to hold JAL shares was purely to get discount coupons," he said. Twice a year, the airline issues flight discount vouchers to shareholders, which make the stock attractive to individuals. "I just missed the timing to sell them," he said. "I didn't think JAL would be facing the risk of delisting because it's the national flag carrier, isn't it?"

    Support for 'national companies' extends far beyond Japan, even if Japan is an extreme example. China has droves of government controlled companies, and many investors put blind faith in the Chinese government's ability to protect them and boost share prices with asset injection hand-outs.

    Europe has its corporate holy cows as well. It's widely assumed Deutsche Bank would be supported by the German government for example. We barely need to mention the U.S. these days. The financial crisis unearthed a whole host of ultimately government-back-stopped companies.

    Now, for a long time the above assumption works. Private shareholders repeatedly dump their companies' mistakes onto the taxpayer and are saved by the public purse. But eventually, even governments have their spending limit, once debt burdens reach mammoth proportions.

    That's what's happening in Japan. Had it been better days, when the Japanese government had less debt, a JAL bailout would have been a done deal and easy to pass onto the taxpayer. Yet today even the historically docile Japanese taxpayer is growing intolerant of such irresponsible and unjust government behavior.

    Thus Japan is beginning to show us how the false assumption of Too Communist To Fail, Too Nationally-Endeared To Fail, or even just Too Big To Fail can unwind. Suddenly, all Japanese companies appear far less stable than previously assumed. Anyone who bets on government support for their investments pay heed -- As government debt around the world explodes ever higher, your days are numbered.

    Add my twitter feed: @vincefernando

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  • Nokia patent application points to flexible phone displays

    It may still be quite a ways from realizing its ambitious Morph concept, but it looks like Nokia has been toying around with the idea of flexible displays as of late, as evidenced by a just-published patent application (first filed back in 2008). Covering a “user interface, device and method for a physically flexible device,” the application details (among other things) how a flexible display might be used on a phone to do things other than make it more portable. Most interestingly, that includes bending the phone into a particular shape to perform a specific task — Nokia suggests rolling it into a can to search for a bar or pub, or bending it into a bowl to search for a restaurant. Not exactly the most imaginative examples, to be sure, although we’re sure Nokia will have plenty of time to come up with some more interesting uses before any such phones actually hit the market.

    [Thanks, Anand]

    Nokia patent application points to flexible phone displays originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 00:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Manage Your Verizon FiOS Account with Android App

    Those of you with Verizon FiOS accounts will be happy to learn of a new application for Android handsets. The free app offers similar functionality as the mobile website from Verizon such as parental controls, video on demand (VOD) browsing, program DVR remotely, search TV programming and much more!

    You can find Verizon FiOS Mobile in the Android Market today!

    Source: ZatzNotFunny

    Other Great AndroidGuys Posts


  • Solar Powered Bibles to keep alive the faith of Haiti victims

    bible

    International agencies are on their way to Haiti with food, water and medicine, but victims require something more to gather energy to start again. To keep alive the faith in God, a U.S. based group is sending Bibles to Haitians. These are not simple books, but are in the form of an audible device that runs on solar power. Called “Procalimer,” the holy book is essentially intended towards those who are not able to read. About 600 of these audible bibles are on the way to Haiti and more will be delivered soon.

    (more…)

  • Arizona to Close Most State Parks

    phpic1.jpg
    First California proposed closing state parks due to budge cuts, now Arizona has actually done it. 21 out of 30 Arizona state parks will be closed as a result of a unanimous vote by the Arizona State Parks Board. The Los Angeles Times reports:

    Wrestling with a multibillion-dollar budget deficit, Arizona decided Friday to close nearly all of its state parks, including the famed Tombstone Courthouse and Yuma Territorial Prison.

    The State Parks Board unanimously voted to close 13 parks by June 3. Eight others had already been closed, and the decision would leave nine open — but only if the board can raise $3 million this year.

    The action represents the largest closure of state parks in the nation, although several other states are considering similar moves.

    What happens to closed state parks? Are you people no longer able to visit them or are they simply not staffed? Are trails closed?

  • Asking Citizens What They Want Out Of Copyright Law Is Really Just A ‘Tactic To Confuse’?

    One of the more stunning realities that has become clear in watching the entertainment industry, as it responds to people who are actually impacted by ever more draconian copyright laws, is the fact that the industry doesn’t view other positions as worth hearing at all. To the industry, copyright law has one purpose and one purpose only: to protect the big players in the content making business. Everyone else is secondary. Unfortunately, those big industry players have powerful lobbyists. That’s why it was so nice to see Canada at least hold an open process to hear from the public. Of course, we were skeptical if those voices would really be heard, and stories about the industry itself stacking the deck at public gatherings did not bode well.

    Separately, with so much pressure coming from other countries, we wondered if Canada would be able to resist implementing ever more draconian copyright laws, which would be a serious drain on the Canadian economy. So far they have resisted, but the pressure from outside continues to be fierce. We recently noted that US lobbyists and lawyers were insisting that Canada needed to be dragged into the 21st century, and now European trade negotiators are pushing hard on Canada to change its copyright laws despite no actual evidence of any problem with existing laws.

    But what’s most troubling of all is that these trade reps don’t seem to care at all what Canadian citizens had to say. Despite receiving thousands of well-argued, well-thought-out statements concerning Canadian copyright law, EU trade negotiators are dismissing the whole process as “a tactic to confuse.” To confuse who? About what? Holding an open discussion with citizens, rather than just backroom deals to protect a small group of companies? I’d argue that’s the very opposite of a tactic to confuse, but rather it’s a tactic to enlighten.

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  • #U/C-Manama: “HYATT SHOPPING CENTRE”

    BD5m shopping centre
    By Mandeep Singh, Posted on » Tuesday, January 19, 2010

    A NEW BD5 million shopping centre will open in Manama in the next two years, it was revealed yesterday.

    The Hyatt Shopping Centre will be built in the Mahooz area under a deal signed by Alosra Supermarket, a subsidiary of Bahrain Maritime and Mercantile International BSC (BMMI), and Nasser Pharmacy.

    BMMI retail and distribution chief operating officer Mike Eastwood and Nasser Pharmacy managing director Dr Fadhel Al Arrayed signed the agreement at the Ritz-Carlton Bahrain Hotel and Spa yesterday.

    The shopping centre will be owned and operated by Nasser Pharmacy and is slated for completion by the first quarter of next year.

    The development will cover an area of 8,749sqm with Nasser Pharmacy and Alosra as anchor stores.

    "This is a great opportunity for us to expand our presence into the Capital Governorate," Mr Eastwood told a Press conference after the ceremony.

    He estimated that 100 jobs would be created, most of whom would be Bahrainis. Meanwhile, Dr Al Arrayed said the shopping centre would be supported by a selection of outlets including a food court.

  • Are You a Mom or Dad or Parent?

    One of my friends recently was criticized because she mentioned on her blog that she was a stay-at-home mom rather than stay-at-home parent.  Can’t she be a mom as well as a parent?  It seems this is taking “political correctness” to the extreme. 

    Parents & Child Image:sxc.hu

    Parents & Child Image:sxc.hu

    Apparently the blog reader felt stay-at-home dads were being neglected.

    However, since the blogger was writing about herself, a mom, and not dads, on this occasion, she certainly wasn’t neglecting dads.  Does this mean people feel slighted if we are gender specific?

    Abraham Lincoln is quoted as saying, “All that I am, all that I hope to be, I owe my angel mother.”  He didn’t say father or parent; he specifically mentioned his mother and went on to list her qualities.  He probably learned from his father, too.  But not the same as from his mother, who actually was his step-mother, as I recall.

    We learn from many people in our lives, but do we have to lump them together?  Can’t we praise each for their own qualities?  Can’t we be a specific person for our children instead of being lumped into a general category?

    Our lives have become too concerned about not categorizing people and not pointing out their qualities and talents and contributions.

    Let’s be a Mom, a Dad, a Grandma, a Grandpa, an Aunt, an Uncle….not just a person, any person!

    Post from: Blisstree

    Are You a Mom or Dad or Parent?

  • The Dollar Carry Trade Is Collapsing

    USD Chart

    Dollar strength at the end of 2009 sent the dollar carry trade (where by one borrows in dollars, then parks the proceeds in higher yielding assets) into a tailspin. This is why even small upward moves in the dollar could instigate substantial selling for 2009's star currencies. For example, for the Australian dollar shown to the right.

    Bloomberg: Funding the carry trade with the greenback lost money in December for the first time since February as the U.S. currency gained 4.8 percent against the euro amid growing confidence in the U.S. economy and expectations that the Federal Reserve will raise borrowing costs by June. Futures trading on Dec. 31 suggested a 62 percent chance the Fed would increase its benchmark to at least 0.5 percent by mid-year from a range of zero to 0.25 percent, up from 30 percent in November, Bloomberg data show. The Bank of Japan’s target rate is 0.1 percent.

    Buying and selling high- and low-yielding currencies to take maximum advantage of global rate moves gained 19 percent from February to November, the carry trade’s best nine months since 2003, a Royal Bank of Scotland Plc index shows. The index fell 0.9 percent in December.

    Few engaged in such an arbitrage will want to hang around should last year's prevailing weak-dollar expectations be substantially reversed by persistent dollar strength.

    Add my twitter feed: @vincefernando

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  • A Q&A with Majority Caucus Whip Terry Link

     Today we sit down with Majority Caucus Whip Terry Link to get his priorities and overview of the coming legislative session

  • Renault Duster: nouvelle video

    Voici la discrète vedette de ce site, c’est en effet lui qui capte le plus grand nombre de requête entrantes via les moteurs de recherche, preuve s’il en fallait de l’attente qu’il a créé dans le public. Il nous revient aujourd’hui sous forme de video.

    Le Duster sera présenté en mars au salon de Genève et commercialisé dans la foulée sous les marques Dacia ou Renault selon les marchés. Vous retrouverez ses caractéristiques ici. Dacia vient de présenter une seconde video promo (la première était vraiment minimale).

    Retrouvez également plus bas la galerie du Duster, et notamment les premières photos disponibles de l’intérieur.

  • A Little $18,000 Espresso Machine Called Slayer [Coffee]

    The hand-built Slayer espresso machine is not brandspankinew, but it is still exceedingly uncommon—fewer than 20 exist in coffee shops—and this one, residing at freshly opened RBC NYC, is the first east of Michigan. It costs $18,000.

    The reason coffee nerds are hyped about the Slayer isn’t just because it’s obscenely expensive, or because of the way wood meshes with contoured metal to create a hulking, beautiful gadget, but mostly because of the way it allows a barista to easily play with pressure to do some interesting things—like start with a low pressure extraction, ramp up to full pressure, then back it down to get different textures or flavors—using the wooden paddles on top of the groupheads that adjust the mechanical valves which control water flow, which is what’s unique about the machine. (More on the Slayer and pressure here, and more of our own espresso coverage and explainers here and here.)

    It’s somewhat finicky, and different from other espresso machines that RBC’s director of coffee (yes, that’s her title) said it took her two months to really master the machine. Interestingly, they’re testing out using the Slayer to do brewed coffee, to create something really different, but they’re not sure when they’re gonna offer it up. For now though, they’re pulling some of the best espresso shots in New York, at least judging by the two drinks I’ve had. [Slayer, RBC NYC, Full-Size Photos]






  • The Ultimate Cell Phone Plan Comparison

    Last week, Verizon instituted new pricing plans that discounted its voice plans. Its biggest rival, AT&T, then came out its own cheaper voice offers. The two were simply matching what Sprint and T-Mobile USA have already been selling — cheap voice.

    It’s becoming virtually impossible for an average consumer to keep track of all the various deals on offer. Thankfully, a Good Samaritan from BillShrink has put together a graphical overview of all the cell phone plans. Check it out, especially if you’re in the market for a new cell phone service or want to switch carriers.

  • Climate science on thin ice by Cameron Stewart, Associate editor The Australian

    Article Tags: Himalayan Glacier Data

    THE prediction, if true, was an apocalyptic one. The “rapid melting” of thousands of glaciers across the Himalayas would lead to deadly floods, followed by severe long-term water shortages across the food bowl of central Asia.

    The melting glaciers would cause havoc to water supplies feeding Asia’s nine largest rivers, including the Ganges, Mekong, Yangtze and Yellow rivers, affecting hundreds of millions of people.

    The result, according to a 2005 report by environmental group WWF, would be “massive eco and environmental problems for people in western China, Nepal and northern India”.

    The WWF’s claim the 2400km Himalayan range was experiencing a rapid retreat in its glaciers was supported in stronger terms only two years later by the peak UN body on climate change, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

    In its 2007 report, the IPCC concluded: “Glaciers in the Himalaya are receding faster than any other part of the world and, if the present rate continues, the likelihood of them disappearing by the year 2035 and perhaps sooner is very high if the earth keeps warming at the current rate.”

    Source: theaustralian.com.au

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Samsung Announces Ultraportable TL110 Digital Camera with 14.2 Megapixels

    samsung 300x218 Samsung Announces Ultraportable TL110 Digital Camera with 14.2 MegapixelsSamsung has announced the new TL110 with 14.2 megapixels, 2.7 inch LCD, 5x optical zoom and it is only 0.65 inches thin. Its super portable and the perfect compliment to any party dress as it comes in the colors orange, blue, black, and silver. Samsung’s TL110 features an improved 27mm wide-angle lens which is paired with Dual Image Stabilization (IS) to help reduce image blur by combining both Optical and Digital Image stabilizers to produce sharp images. New special effects include Fisheye and Lomo and HD video recording at a resolution of 720p / 30fps which is also an impressive addition. Expected availability of the Samsung TL110 will be in February however, pricing is TBD.