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  • Last Day of Pac-Man 30th Anniversary! Enjoy While It Lasts

    Google celebrates the 30th anniversary of Pac-Man with free on-line Pac-Man gameConfirmed the Pac-Man 30th Anniversary! celebration at Google is ending today, so try to enjoy the logo based browser game from the search engine giant while it lasts. It’s nothing special but the old sweet pacman game with original sound and pacman have to eat the dots near the word google. Google made happy tons of users with this celebration anniversary party, this ended up with tons of playing office workers and other millions of worldwide google users.



    Play Pacman free instead of searching google, it’s fun and takes you back to your childhood when you played pacman with family’s first commondor 64, and this was the most awesome thing then to do. Try out the two player mode where you can control Pac-Man with W A S D.

    Google is improving, we see better and better Doodles but this one was the best till now. Have a great time and enjoy every minute of Pac-Man 30th Anniversary! and have fun with Google Logo based game today, and if you loved this then simply download a free pacman game and get it when you feel hungry for dots.

    Related posts:

    1. Pac-Man 30th Anniversary! Third Day With Playable Google Logo
    2. Pac-Man 30th Anniversary! Google Pacman Playable Logo… a Viral Game!
    3. Pac-Man 30th Anniversary: Play Pacman Free Online in “Google Pacman”

  • You Could Not Make It Up: Just a little ray of sunshine ended ice ages by Jonathan Leake

    Article Tags: Comment, You could not make it up

    This very silly report in the Times gives an insight how “cause and effect” have been mixed up so that CO2 drives the climate. I have extracted the following to show the struggle in making the analysis fit the facts i.e. the “effect is the cause”: These people call themselves scientists! Oh boy, oh boy, have they got it wrong!

    …..The British Isles are among the regions most strongly affected by ice ages. Over the past 700,000 years they have been deserted and resettled by humans about a dozen times, according to researchers at London’s Natural History Museum. Humans last returned only 11,500 years ago.

    Another puzzle is why ice ages started, but this is closer to resolution with massive changes in atmospheric CO2 levels being the main suspect. Last year scientists from the University of California, Los Angeles, used ocean sediments to plot CO2 levels over the past 20m years. They found that, at the start of that period, volcanic eruptions raised the levels of CO2 in the air to about 400 parts per million, pushing global temperatures up to several degrees higher than they are now. As CO2 levels fell to between 180ppm and 280ppm, the world cooled and the ice ages set in.

    Could Europe and North America once again be threatened by an ice age? In theory yes, but humanity’s greenhouse gas emissions have probably deferred such a freeze for many millenniums. CO2 levels are already close to those of 20m years ago and could be significantly higher within a few decades. Most climate scientists predict a global temperature increase of several degrees within the next century.

    Eric Wolff of the British Antarctic Survey commented yesterday: “The work by Larry Edwards and colleagues to put a precise date on the end of ice ages as seen in the Chinese caves is a great advance, because it lets us get a first look at the absolute timing of the different events at the end of ice ages. It gives very strong support to the idea that the orbital changes really do ‘pace’ the so-called ‘glacial terminations’.”

    There were still questions to be asked about the effects that changing levels of sunshine have on ice sheets, he said, but “we have made great strides in understanding this problem”. He added: “I think we can be very sure that, with CO2 levels already 30% higher than at any time in the previous 800,000 years, there is no chance of a new ice age any time soon.

    Read in full with comments »   


  • HTC Huashan and HTC Hengshan

    Thanks to Conflipper on Twitter, we know have some more information on two upcoming Windows Mobile based devices, the Huashan and Hengshan, that were previously leaked in the above image.

    What identifies both of these as windows mobile devices is:

    <prf:BrowserName>Microsoft Internet Explorer Mobile 6</prf:BrowserName>

    The Hengshan is a keyboard less HVGA Windows Phone.

    image

    The Huashan is a WVGA keyboard less Windows Phone.

    image

    There’s not a lot of info on the exact hardware, but we’ll be sure to post anything as and when it comes up.

    Huashan, Hengshan


  • UK forces accused of helping Taliban

    Via Prison Planet.com » World News

    Press TV
    May 23, 2010

    Most of the Regional Command in the South of Afghanistan will be shifted from the UK to the US, as British forces are accused of having links with the Taliban.

    Based on new arrangements, British forces in the south that includes Kandahar province will be placed under American control as part of a radical restructuring plan being drawn amid a new phase of war against the Taliban.

    US forces who are preparing themselves for a major strike on the Taliban in the volatile province of Kandahar are reluctant to see the British control the province.

    British newspaper, The Independent, said that command in southern Afghanistan will be split in half, with UK troops answering to a US general from June 1.

    According to some reports, the changes are made as the British have reportedly cooperated with the Taliban in recent years and allowed Afghan farmers to cultivate opium freely.

    UK forces accused of helping Taliban 150410banner1

    The reports say that the British forces were even involved in the process of drug trafficking itself.

    Mullah Abdul Salam, a former Taliban official who has joined the Afghan government, publicly accused the British of assisting the Taliban.

    He said the British command in the region at one point did not block a Taliban assault when they attacked Afghan forces under Abdul Salam’s command.

    The former Taliban member said that in 2008, Afghan President Hamid Karzai expelled two European diplomats from the country because of their links with the Taliban.

    The expulsion order was made after the pair — Michael Semple, an Irish EU official with extensive Taliban contacts, and Mervyn Patterson, a UN official from Northern Ireland — travelled to the town of Musa Qala in northern Helmand to meet Afghan powerbrokers, days after the Taliban fighters were driven out by British troops.

    A source in Kabul said that the accusation against the men was made after President Karzai of Afghanistan was told that the pair were attempting to broker a deal with the Taliban behind his back.

    Unnamed Afghan officials initially claimed that the pair had visited Taliban leaders, paid them, and may even have supported the militancy.

  • ‘Secret Ops’ cause of US deaths in Iraq

    Via Prison Planet.com » World News

    Press TV
    May 23, 2010

    An international anti-war organization, the War and Peace Foundation, says continued fatalities of US troops in Iraq is a sign of their involvement in secret operations.

    Speaking to Press TV on Saturday, Director of the War and Peace Foundation Kevin Sanders said the fact that the US soldiers are killed off-base in Iraq shows that the US is violating certain restrictions.

    Under an agreement signed between Washington and Baghdad in 2008, the movement of US troops is limited to their bases and all unilateral operations should have technically come to a halt in 2009.

    The remarks by Sanders were made about a recent US military statement, announcing that two of its soldiers were killed near Iraq’s northern city of Mosul on Thursday and Friday.

    Secret Ops cause of US deaths in Iraq 150410banner1

    “These are deaths occurred quite literally off-base and that is interesting. One assumes at any given time that the military is up to something that is not revealed… dark or secret operations,” he said.

    “Such operations are obviously continued in Iraq. This is my guess, because there is a complete lack of other information. But I think an informed and educated guess would suggest that it [the deaths] has something to do with oil,” Sanders added.

    “That is to say that at any given time, the US government wants to have its military or people active as close as possible to the centers of oil,” the director of the War and Peace Foundation concluded.

  • U.S. Implicates North Korean Leader in Attack

    Via Prison Planet.com » World News

    DAVID E. SANGER
    NY Times
    May 23, 2010

    WASHINGTON — A new American intelligence analysis of a deadly torpedo attack on a South Korean warship concludes that Kim Jong-il, the ailing leader of North Korea, must have authorized the torpedo assault, according to senior American officials who cautioned that the assessment was based on their sense of the political dynamics there rather than hard evidence.

    The officials said they were increasingly convinced that Mr. Kim ordered the sinking of the ship, the Cheonan, to help secure the succession of his youngest son.

    “We can’t say it is established fact,” said one senior American official who was involved in the highly classified assessment, based on information collected by many of the country’s 16 intelligence agencies. “But there is very little doubt, based on what we know about the current state of the North Korean leadership and the military.”

    Nonetheless, both the conclusion and the timing of the assessment could be useful to the United States as it seeks to rally support against North Korea.

    Full article here

    U.S. Implicates North Korean Leader in Attack 100210banner1

  • Max Keiser And Gerald Celente Deconstruct Financial Fraud

    Via Prison Planet.com » Commentary

    Zero Hedge
    May 23, 2010

    Max Keiser at his best, deconstructing the global ponzi with Gerald Celente, another very much outspoken critic of the broken financial system. Most ZH regulars will be quite familiar with the overriding themes exposing the mass corruption perpetrated by the kleptocratic oligarchy, yet Max as always delivers the message with his patented iconoclastic panache that just draws you in.

    Max Keiser And Gerald Celente Deconstruct Financial Fraud 100210banner1

  • Obama wins the right to detain people with no habeas review

    Via Prison Planet.com » Commentary

    Glenn Greenwald
    Salon
    May 23, 2010

    Few issues highlight Barack Obama’s extreme hypocrisy the way that Bagram does. As everyone knows, one of George Bush’s most extreme policies was abducting people from all over the world — far away from any battlefield — and then detaining them at Guantanamo with no legal rights of any kind, not even the most minimal right to a habeas review in a federal court.

     Back in the day, this was called “Bush’s legal black hole.”  In 2006, Congress codified that policy by enacting the Military Commissions Act, but in 2008, the Supreme Court, in Boumediene v. Bush, ruled that provision unconstitutional, holding that the Constitution grants habeas corpus rights even to foreign nationals held at Guantanamo.  Since then, detainees have won 35 out of 48 habeas hearings brought pursuant to Boumediene, on the ground that there was insufficient evidence to justify their detention.

    Immediately following Boumediene, the Bush administration argued that the decision was inapplicable to detainees at Bagram — including even those detained outside of Afghanistan but then flown to Afghanistan to be imprisoned.  Amazingly, the Bush DOJ — in a lawsuit brought by Bagram detainees seeking habeas review of their detention — contended that if they abduct someone and ship them to Guantanamo, then that person (under Boumediene) has the right to a habeas hearing, but if they instead ship them to Bagram, then the detainee has no rights of any kind.

    In other words, the detainee’s Constitutional rights depends on where the Government decides to drop them off to be encaged.  One of the first acts undertaken by the Obama DOJ that actually shocked civil libertarians was when, last February, as The New York Times put it, Obama lawyers “told a federal judge that military detainees in Afghanistan have no legal right to challenge their imprisonment there, embracing a key argument of former President Bush’s legal team.”

    But last April, John Bates, the Bush-43-appointed, right-wing judge overseeing the case, rejected the Bush/Obama position and held that Boumediene applies to detainees picked up outside of Afghanistan and then shipped to Bagram.  I reviewed that ruling here, in which Judge Bates explained that the Bagram detainees are “virtually identical to the detainees in Boumediene,” and that the Constitutional issue was exactly the same:  namely, “the concern that the President could move detainees physically beyond the reach of the Constitution and detain them indefinitely.”  

    Full article here

    Obama wins the right to detain people with no habeas review 100210banner1

  • Police keep secret files on 1,900 protesters

    Via Prison Planet.com » Prison Planet

    Jason Lewis
    UK Daily Mail
    May 23, 2010

    The police are keeping secret intelligence files and photographs of nearly 1,900 so-called domestic extremists, it can be revealed.

    Details of the intelligence and pictures gathered at marches and other demonstrations comes as the new Government questions whether civil liberties and the right to peaceful protest have been eroded by New Labour’s extension of police and anti-terrorist legislation.

    The information has been built up by the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO), Britain’s most powerful national policing body, whose future is in doubt after it was revealed that it was being run as a private company.

    After taking over MI5’s covert role watching groups such as the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, trade union activists and Left-wing journalists six years ago, ACPO’s National Coordinator for Domestic Extremism (NCDE) has now given a detailed description of its work for the first time.

    It says it is targeting domestic extremism ‘most commonly associated with “single-issue” protests, such as animal rights, environmentalism, anti-globalisation or anti-GM crops’.

    Full article here

    Police keep secret files on 1,900 protesters 150410banner7

  • Big Brother in the Sky: Drones and spy cams to watch over 2014 Olympics

    Via Prison Planet.com » Prison Planet

    Russia Today
    May 23, 2010

    Security levels at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics will be sky high – literally. Unmanned drones are keeping a bird’s eye view of the proceedings. It’s all part of the elaborate security system designed to protect the Black Sea resort from any threat.

    Big Brother in the Sky: Drones and spy cams to watch over 2014 Olympics  150410banner7

  • U.S. senate votes to maintain big pharma’s monopoly by blocking competitive imports

    Via Prison Planet.com » Sci Tech

    David Gutierrez
    Natural News
    May 23, 2010

    The United States Senate recently rejected two separate proposals that would have allowed the importation of cheaper medication from other countries, apparently in order to preserve a deal between the pharmaceutical industry and the White House.

    The proposals were part of a wider effort to reform the U.S. healthcare system, in large part by cutting unnecessary costs.

    Drug importation was first proposed by Sen. Byron Dorgan, a Democrat from North Dakota, in an amendment to the healthcare bill. The amendment would have allowed U.S. wholesale and retail drug distributors, including pharmacies, to import products from Australia, Canada, Europe, Japan or New Zealand, where price controls keep drug costs much lower than in the United States. The amendment eventually gained more than 24 sponsors from both major parties.

    “This issue isn’t rocket science,” Dorgan said. “The American people are charged the highest prices in the world. They want Congress to stand up for their interests and do something about it.”

    According to Dorgan and co-sponsor Sen. John McCain, a Republican from Arizona and former presidential candidate, drug importation could cut $80 billion off the country’s health spending over the next decade.

    The United States spends $2.5 trillion on health care every year.

    U.S. senate votes to maintain big pharmas monopoly by blocking competitive imports 260310banner2

    A vote on Dorgan’s proposal was blocked on December 10 by fellow Democratic Sen. Thomas R. Carper of Delaware, who expressed concerns over the safety of imported medications. Like the FDA and the White House, Carper objected that the quality of imported drugs could not be assured.

    “Senator Dorgan’s amendment could potentially allow unsafe, counterfeited drugs into the United States, contaminating our drug supply,” Carper said. “This is a complicated issue that affects people’s lives. We should make sure that the FDA says it’s safe before we reimport drugs from other countries.”

    “My amendment includes strong safeguards to prohibit drug counterfeiting and other practices that would put the consumer at risk,” Dorgan replied. “It applies only to FDA-approved prescription drugs produced in FDA-approved plants from countries with comparable safety standards.”

    Other Senators charged that the real motive behind the claim of safety concerns was to preserve a recent deal between the White House and the pharmaceutical industry, in which the Pharmaceutical Research & Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) agreed to fund $80 billion worth of health care reform by accepting higher taxes and price agreements. According to a number of congressional staffers and pharmaceutical industry lobbyists, the deal included a verbal promise by President Obama to not support drug importation.

    “There’s great dissension in the Democrat caucus over Senator Dorgan’s amendment,” McCain said. “If it passes, as it should, it breaks the agreement that the White House made with PhRMA. So the White House, as well as PhRMA, has been over here lobbying furiously.”

    PhRMA denied that it had made any such deal, but the group and the White House both made statements earlier in the year saying that drug importation will not be necessary if Congress approves a healthcare bill implementing lower prices on U.S.-made drugs.

    The $315 billion pharmaceutical industry has been the biggest healthcare-related industry to support the White House’s healthcare reform effort. It is also one of the most influential lobbies in the country.

    “People are walking on eggshells,” Dorgan said. “If we pass legislation allowing people freedom to import drugs, the pharmaceutical industry might not support the health care amendment.”

    In the end, Dorgan’s proposal, which needed 60 votes to be incorporated into the healthcare bill, failed 51-48. A separate amendment that would have allowed the importation of drugs specifically approved by the FDA also failed, 56-43.

    “The drug industry has a lot of clout in this town, and they demonstrated that tonight,” Dorgan said after the vote. “This is not over.”

  • Prepare for a bit of cooling predicts geologist by Dennis T. Avery

    Article Tags: Dennis T. Avery, Don Easterbrook

    “Global warming is over—at least for a few decades,” geologist Don Easterbrook, professor emeritus from Western Washington University told the Heartland Institute’s Fourth International Conference on Climate Change on May 19. He warned, however, us not to rejoice. Colder winters kill twice as many people as hot weather while crop production suffers from shorter growing seasons and weather-disrupted harvests.

    Dan Miller, climate expert with the Roda Group and ardent believer in Anthropogenic Global Warming, responded to Easterbrook at Fox News: “It’s absurd to talk about global cooling when global heating is with us and accelerating.” But Miller is referring to the current temperature spike from an El Nino in the Pacific Ocean—a short-term climate event already ending, according to Pacific sea surface temperatures. The key question now is where the temperatures will go after the El Nino fades.

    Easterbrook offered geological evidence that the earth has had ten big “recent” warmings that dwarf the 0.7 degree temperature increase estimated for the 20th century. Over the past 15,000 years, those temperature shifts drove the earth’s temperatures radically up or down by 9–15 degrees C within a single century. He also noted 60 sharp-but-smaller temperature changes in the past 5,000 years. All of these occurred before 1945, when the post-war Industrial Boom began to ramp up human-emitted CO2 levels.

    Source: canadafreepress.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • El Niño could make 2010 the hottest year ever

    Via Prison Planet.com » Sci Tech

    Jonathan Leake
    London Times
    May 23, 2010

    CLIMATE scientists have warned that 2010 could turn out to be the warmest year in recorded history.

    They have collated global surface temperature measurements showing that the world has experienced near-record highs between January and April.

    Researchers working independently at the Met Office and Nasa are soon to publish data that reveal the trend is likely to continue for the rest of the year.

    James Hansen, director of Nasa’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (Giss), a world centre for climate monitoring, said: “Global temperatures, averaged over the past 12 months, were the warmest for 130 years.

    […]

    Research suggests that the warming is also strongly linked to a temporary shift in Pacific currents, known as El Niño, which has caused the ocean to release large amounts of heat into the atmosphere.

    Kevin Trenberth, head of climate analysis at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Colorado, said: “We have seen rapid warming recently, but it is an example of natural variation that is associated with changes in the Pacific rather than climate change.

    Full article here

    El Niño could make 2010 the hottest year ever 260310banner2

  • Beekeepers lose one sixth of hives

    Via Prison Planet.com » Sci Tech

    Louise Gray
    London Telegraph
    May 23, 2010

    Beekeepers lost one in six hives last winter due to disease and cold weather, according to the latest statistics.

    The losses are much higher than the natural rate of up to 10 per cent and reflect growing concerns that bee numbers are falling in Britain.

    However, beekeepers are optimistic that colonies are in better shape than previous years, especially after such a harsh winter.

    In 2008/09 one in five hives were lost over the winter and a third died out the year before.

    The British Beekeepers’ Association (BBKA) said it was good news that 80 per cent of honey bee colonies made it through the coldest winter in 31 years. The highest losses of 26 per cent were recorded in the north of England, and lowest losses of 12.8 per cent were recorded in the south west of England.

    Full article here

    Beekeepers lose one sixth of hives 260310banner2

  • Rahm Emanuel in Israel for son’s bar mitzvah; may meet with Israeli officials

    Sunday morning update…..Ma’arivis reporting that Emanuel and his entourage traveled from Eilat to Jordan, en route to Petra.

    WASHINGTON — White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel is in Israel to celebrate the bar mitzvah of his son and a nephew. While there, he might meet with Israeli government officials, the White House told me Saturday night.

    His brothers, Ezekiel, a White house health policy advisor, and Ari, a Hollywood superagent, will also be in Israel for the ceremony. Ezekiel Emanuel told me the trip was a “family affair.”

    Tommy Vietor, an assistant press secretary, said Emanuel “is in Israel for his son’s bar mitzvah. He may have some meetings with Israeli government officials.”

    YDNet news, an Israeli outlet, said Rahm Emanuel arrived over the weekend and traveled to Eilat, a city in a popular resort area. YDNet also said he could meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    The bar mitzvah for Zach Emanuel — which the Jerusalem Post said would likely be at the Western Wall — has been tracked by the Israeli press because of Emanuel’s prominence and his Israeli background: His father, Benjamin, who lives in Wilmette, was born in Israel. There is also ongoing speculation about his exact role in shaping President Obama’s policy toward Israel.

    U.S.-Israeli relations have been strained at times. The Israelis object to White House pressure over Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Tensions increased in March when Vice President Joe Biden was in Israel and was confronted with a surprise announcement about building new housing in Jerusalem. George Mitchell, Obama’s Mideast envoy was just in the region for a round of “indirect” peace talks; Mitchell met with Netanyahu last week.

    The Jerusalem Post last week recalled that Emanuel, during an appearance last Nov. 10 at the General Assembly of the Jewish Federations of North America told the group “This Memorial break, I am taking my son, my nephew Noah with Ari my brother, so they can have their bar mitzva in Israel.”

  • PS Move to preempt Project Natal by launching in July?

    Could this be another preemptive strike from Sony against Microsoft? Project Natal still has a confused October/November 2010 release window, but according to BT Games, the PlayStation Move will be making an early move by July.
     
     
     

  • Pachter: "No chance in hell" will games be download-only anytime soon

    Talks of games soon being download-only, and so leading to the demise of retail stores has got Wedbush Morgan analyst Michale Pachter vehemently shaking his head in disagreement. “No chance in hell,” he said.
     
     
     
     

  • Help Fight Cancer

    American Cancer Society Relay for LifeThe American Cancer Society Relay for Life, that began last Saturday night, had raised just over $400,000 to help fight cancer. Usually, the Hillcrest hosts the relay at the football stadium, but the threat of rain prompted the organizers to conduct the said event to the Ozark Empire Fairgound E-Plex.

    Just before the Relay for Life had started a junior student name Darla Vance had cut her hair down her back. In an instant, the other participants also made up a decision to change their hairstyles. The hair that they had cut off is to be donated for it to be a wig for somebody who had lost its hair due to cancer.



    The students in the six teams of Hillcrest fields raised of about $9,000 in pledges, while the students in the 83-member group that had participated in the relay were asked to try to raise pledges of $100 each. Also, about $1,500 was raised by the students through a talent show and pie contest that ended with a school administrator taking one in the face.

    The pledges for the Relay for Life were at $417,000 during this week and the final tally was scheduled in two weeks.

    Related posts:

    1. Yoga Helps Cancer Survivors Sleep Better and Increase their Energy
    2. Ron Banks: Music Industry Has Lost a Legend
    3. John Forsythe dies at 92

  • LG Fathom priced at BestBuy, Snapdragon confirmed

    LG Fathom is coming to Best Buy at $99

    MobileCrunch has been sent this flyer from BestBuy, where the LG Fathom is expected to show up on the 27/5/2010. The 1Ghz handset will be priced at $99.99 with a two year contract, and $499.99 with no commitment.

    Of course the device will run Windows Mobile 6.5, but if one appreciates a multi-tasking operating system with free access to software and the underlying file system, and full control over your experience, this may be no hardship at all.

    Via MobileCrunch.com