Monday, October 31, 2011

Gaza violence simmers after truce announced (Reuters)

GAZA (Reuters) ? Violence between Israel and Gaza militants flared anew Sunday after Egypt said it had brokered a truce to end attacks that have killed 10 Palestinian gunmen and an Israeli civilian in the past five days.

A ceasefire had appeared to be taking hold, with the frontier quiet for some eight hours, until Israeli aircraft attacked Palestinian militants who the military said were about to fire rockets from the southern Gaza Strip.

Medical officials in the enclave said one man was killed and another wounded, identifying them as members of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a group that rarely launches attacks against Israel.

Islamic Jihad and two smaller factions have claimed responsibility for rocket strikes against Israel since Wednesday. Islamic Jihad has close ties with Iran and has chafed at the rule of rival Hamas Islamists in the Gaza Strip.

An Islamic Jihad source, speaking several hours after the ceasefire was announced by Egyptian officials, said the group welcomed Cairo's efforts.

"If the (Israeli) aggression is stopped, we will abide by the calm," said Abu Ahmed, leader of Islamic Jihad's armed wing said.

Israel and Palestinian militants have used such language in the past in ceasing fire while stopping short of acknowledging any formal truce agreement.

"If someone rises up to kill you, kill him first," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in public remarks several hours before the latest air strike.

But he said Israel was "not eager for escalation."

DEADLY ATTACKS

The current round of cross-border violence began when residents of Israeli suburbs in the southern approaches to Tel Aviv were jolted awake Wednesday night by sirens usually sounded in towns and villages closer to the Gaza Strip.

The alert was triggered by what Israeli security sources said was an upgraded long-range Grad rocket that struck harmlessly near the Israeli port of Ashdod, leading to an Israeli air strike Saturday that killed five top Islamic Jihad militants in a Gaza training camp.

Five other militants have died in subsequent air attacks.

One of some 30 rockets and mortar bombs fired at Israel killed an Israeli man in the city of Ashkelon. Two other people were wounded.

"My interpretation is that these guys (Islamic Jihad) are keen to show off their clout, which has been built up recently," Yosef Kupperwasser, director-general of Israel's Strategic Affairs Ministry, told Reuters.

Israel kept schools shut in its southern region Sunday as a precaution against further rocket fire, while hundreds of thousands of civilians within 40 km (25 miles) of Gaza were urged to stay indoors.

Islamic Jihad released images of what it said was the firing by its men of a truck-mounted multiple rocket-launcher, a platform not previously seen in Gaza.

Israel says Gaza arsenals have been boosted by gun-running from Libya since the fall of its ruler, Muammar Gaddafi.

The violence erupted after weeks of a relative lull surrounding a prisoner swap on October 18 in which Israel released 477 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier held by Hamas since 2006.

(Writing by Jeffrey Heller and Allyn Fisher-Ilan, Additional reporting by Dan Williams, editing by Rosalind Russell)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111030/wl_nm/us_palestinians_israel_violence

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Boy pulled uninjured from Turkey's quake wreckage (AP)

ERCIS, Turkey ? A 13-year-old boy was pulled from a collapsed building without injury on Friday, five days after Turkey's powerful earthquake struck, and state-run TV said he survived by drinking rain water that seeped through cracks in the wreckage around him.

The boy, Ferhat Tokay, also used shoes under his head as a pillow and peered through a tiny gap in the wreckage to see when it was day or night outside, his uncle said.

Tokay was discovered early Friday morning, soon after rescue workers from Azerbaijan had sent the uncle and other relatives away from the site to get some rest, saying there was no chance of finding the missing boy alive.

"He didn't even have a scratch on him!" the uncle, Sahin Tokay, told NTV television. "He was hungry on the first day, but the hunger pangs later disappeared."

The 7.2 magnitude quake leveled about 2,000 buildings in eastern Turkey on Sunday, killing at least 575 people and leaving about 2,500 injured and thousands of homeless.

Authorities say another 5,700 buildings are now unfit for habitation.

The government's crisis management center said 187 people have been freed from the rubble alive.

Interior Minister Idris Naim Sahin said search and rescue efforts were continuing "in small sections" of Ercis, the hardest-hit area. "Hopefully we will be successful in pulling out survivors there too," he told reporters.

But news from one of those sites was gloomy. Rescuers recovered the body of a missing father whose 2-week-old baby girl had been pulled alive from the rubble with her mother and grandmother on Tuesday.

Ferhat Tokay was working in a shoe shop on the ground floor of a multistory building in the town when the quake hit. State-run Anatolia news agency said he kept alive by drinking water that reached him in the wreckage during heavy rains.

Turkey is mostly Muslim, and in Ercis on Friday many people held traditional Muslim prayers outdoors, in parks or in streets strewn with rubble from the earthquake.

Others prayed in tents or in the few mosques still standing, Anatolia said.

One of them was the Seyid Muhammed mosque. Its only damage is a gaping crack at the foot of its minaret.

As men entered it to pray Friday, its imam, Selahattin Tasdemir, said: "It wouldn't have been considered a sin to not pray today because these people are victims and in a difficult situation."

"But their conscience wouldn't allow it. They're used to praying, so we prayed," he said in an interview with Associated Press Television News.

The 213-person Azerbaijani rescue team that saved Tokay on Friday is equipped with sniffer dogs and it has saved nine other people from the wreckage since Sunday night.

On Thursday, the team pulled 18-year-old Imdat Padak from another destroyed building in Ercis. During that effort, rubble hit one of its sniffer dogs, Cip, while it was searching a narrow gap, seriously injuring its paws.

Meanwhile, aid workers delivered tents, prefabricated homes, blankets and heaters from a dozen other countries to the desolate and cold areas hit by the quake.

Survivors complained about a shortage of tents following the quake and the government acknowledged initial difficulties in sending aid. Officials also have said some aid trucks have been looted before reaching Ercis.

Sahin, the interior minister, said the shortage of tents had largely been overcome by Friday.

___

Fraser reported from Ankara, Turkey.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_re_eu/eu_turkey_quake

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Now showing: Anatomy of a disaster in 3-D

In the chaotic aftermath of a natural disaster, recording the devastation in minute detail might seem like a macabre pursuit. But researchers are increasingly doing just that with laser technology that, they say, can help them better understand the colossal forces at work, and can help better prepare communities for the next catastrophe.

Research teams are documenting the effects, both large and small, of natural disasters from earthquakes to tsunamis to wildfires with astonishing precision ? and producing some impressive visuals along the way.

LiDAR, which stands for Light Detection And Ranging, allows researchers to move into the field right after a calamity and, in the space of a few hours, gather data that reveal a disaster's footprint ? much like detectives photographing a crime scene, but in 3-D and with centimeter-level detail.

After returning to the safety of a computer lab, researchers process their data and can produce an animated reconstruction of the disaster site.

"The idea is that it's a virtual world you can explore without being physically present in that dangerous environment. You can move through it in the software," said Oregon State University assistant professor Michael Olsen, an engineer who presented work on the use of LiDAR in disaster areas at the recent Geological Society of America meeting in Minneapolis.

Laser beams, in 3-D!
Instead of relying on light in the environment to reflect off a surface, like a traditional camera, a LiDAR scanner sends out its own "light" ? a laser ? and, by measuring the time it takes for the laser to bounce back to the device, it can layer distance into an image.

Olsen said the ground-based LiDAR systems he uses, which take roughly 100,000 data points per second, scan up and down and rotate 360 degrees. Once the system is set up on its tripod, a single scan takes about two minutes.

"It's line of sight, so whatever you see is what you get," he explained. Imaging a large area requires multiples scans, Olsen told OurAmazingPlanet.

Olsen led a team from OSU and the University of Hawaii that went to Chile to survey damage from the massive earthquake that struck in February 2010. The magnitude 8.8 quake sent a devastating tsunami crashing ashore, and Olsen's group visited some of the most-affected towns and villages along the coast.

The team arrived about two months after the catastrophe. "The ideal is to be there about a week after," Olsen said. "If you go too soon, search and rescue is going on and you don't want to be in the way," but if you go too late, cleanup efforts will have washed away some of the disaster's fingerprints, he said.

The research team also used LiDAR to document the aftermath of Japan's devastating earthquake and tsunami.

"We want to capture the perishable data," Olsen said. Seemingly minute details such as cracks in a building, or the way rivers of mud flow around a foundation, offer clues for earth scientists who are piecing together the anatomy of a tsunami wave or an earthquake.

In addition, those details help engineers and architects figure out how various parts of a building hold up during and immediately after a natural disaster.

"Ultimately, it translates back to better building codes," Olsen said. "The thing we always learn after these reconnaissance efforts is where we're overdesigning ? spending too much money or too much material in a certain spot that isn't really making a difference ? (compared) to areas where we're underdesigning."

One animation Olsen's team put together takes a viewer through the tsunami-battered town of Dichato, Chile. It took three or four hours and 20 different scan positions to gather the data, then two weeks back in the lab, running the scans, along with digital photographs and GPS data, through computer programs, to produce the sequence, which has the look of a post-apocalyptic video game.

Before disaster strikes
Although post-disaster LiDAR scans are helpful, before-and-after disaster images are even more helpful, researchers said, because the scans can mathematically alert an observer to minute changes.

Federal entities such as the U.S. Geological Survey and the Federal Emergency Management Agency and various state agencies have begun to use aircraft-mounted LiDAR to map everything from flood plains to earthquake-prone regions to provide baseline pictures that can be used for comparison when an emergency does hit.

"In a flood, you can see, 'Oh, this channel eroded 1 centimeter.' You can make that measurement from these data, literally at the centimeter level. That's why earth scientists are so excited about it," said geologist Stephen DeLong, an assistant research professor at the University of Arizona who uses LiDAR.

DeLong uses ground-based LiDAR to look at the after-effects of wildfires ? specifically, how fairly minor rainstorms can lead to major flooding when they hit a burned-out landscape. He presented research at the GSA meeting on this year's infamous Horseshoe Two wildfire in Arizona, based on LiDAR scans of mountainous regions before and after the disaster.

"There have been fires this year and last year in Arizona where the floods after the fires were more destructive than the fires themselves, to humans and to property," DeLong told OurAmazingPlanet.

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DeLong said LiDAR mapping can help land-management agencies predict where floods and debris flows will land after wildfires.

"Last year in Flagstaff, Ariz., all these people who lived downstream of the fires had their homes destroyed by floods and sediment, so the public needs to know about these things," DeLong said.

As a fairly new tool for the earth science community, LiDAR presents some challenges, DeLong said. The technology was developed more for civil engineers, and has been used more frequently to image the sharp-angled constructions made by humans, as opposed to the undulating profile of a cliff wall or a hilly forest.

But LiDAR scanning means that even the most subtle effects of a natural disaster can no longer escape notice.

"We're making these very detailed maps of how landscapes are changing as a result of floods or landslides or earthquakes," DeLong said. "This allows you to work in three dimensions. You need a three-dimensional method to look at how three-dimensional landforms change."

You can follow OurAmazingPlanet staff writer Andrea Mustain on Twitter:@andreamustain. Follow OurAmazingPlanet for the latest in Earth science and exploration news on Twitter @OAPlanet and on Facebook.

? 2011 OurAmazingPlanet. All rights reserved. More from OurAmazingPlanet.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45081755/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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NASA to launch new Earth-observing satellite (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? After a five-year delay, an Earth-observing satellite will be launched to test new technologies aimed at improving weather forecasts and monitoring climate change.

The $1.5 billion NASA mission comes in a year of weather extremes from the Midwest tornado outbreak to the Southwest wildfires to hurricane-caused flooding in New England.

"We've already had 10 separate weather events, each inflicting at least $1 billion in damages," said Louis Uccellini of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The satellite will lift off before dawn Friday from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., aboard a Delta 2 rocket that will boost it into an orbit some 500 miles high.

The space agency already has a fleet of satellites circling the Earth, taking measurements of the atmosphere, clouds and oceans. But many are aging and need replacement.

The latest ? about the size of a small school bus ? is more sophisticated. It carries five different types of instruments to collect environmental data, including four that never before have flown into space.

One of the satellite's main jobs is to test key technologies that will be used by next-generation satellites set to launch in a few years.

NOAA meteorologists plan to feed the observations into their weather models to better anticipate and track hurricanes, tornadoes and other extreme weather.

The information will "help us understand what tomorrow will bring," whether it's the next-day forecast or long-term climate change, said Andrew Carson, the mission's program executive at NASA headquarters.

The satellite is part of a bigger program with a troubled history. Originally envisioned as a joint civil-military weather satellite project, ballooning costs and schedule delays caused the White House last year to dissolve the partnership.

Under the restructuring, the Defense Department is building its own military satellites while NASA is developing a new generation of research satellites for NOAA. Friday's launch is considered the first step toward that goal.

The satellite was supposed to fly in 2006, but problems during the development of several instruments forced a delay. NASA invested about $895 million in the mission while NOAA and the Air Force contributed $677 million.

For the launch, NASA invited 20 of its Twitter followers to Vandenberg, where they will receive front-row seats to view the liftoff.

Once in orbit, the satellite, built by Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. in Boulder, Colo., will spend the next five years circling the Earth from pole to pole about a dozen times a day. Data will be transmitted to a ground station in Norway and routed to the United States via fiber optic cable. NASA will manage the mission for the first three months before turning it over to NOAA.

___

Online:

Mission details: http://www.nasa.gov/npp

___

Follow Alicia Chang's coverage at http://twitter.com/SciWriAlicia

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_sc/us_sci_earth_satellite

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

UN: Leaded fuel to be gone by 2013

UNITED NATIONS (AP) ? Leaded gasoline, once so widespread it was sold at U.S. pumps as "regular" fuel, is expected to be eradicated globally within two years, the United Nations Environment Program announced Thursday.

With the end of leaded gasoline in sight, public health and environmental advocates are claiming victory in a fight that stretches all the way back to when it was first added to gasoline in the 1920s.

Leaded gasoline is still used in six nations. Afghanistan, Algeria, Iraq, North Korea, Myanmar and Yemen are expected to complete the phase-out by 2013, said the U.N., which is assisting those nations.

The elimination of leaded gasoline has increased IQ scores, lowered lead-in-blood levels by up to 90 percent and prevented the premature deaths of more than 1.2 million people annually, according to a new study by Thomas Hatfield, chairman of California State University, Northridge's department of environmental and occupational health.

"We live in a time when politicians and lobbyists make sport out of pitting the economy against public health," said Peter Lehner, executive director of the Natural Resources Defense Council. "This study flies in the face of those petty politics."

In 2002, the NRDC and the U.N. Environmental Program began a final push to eradicate leaded fuel by founding the Partnership for Clean Fuels and Vehicles, which helps developing nations with the switch to unleaded gasoline.

Most of the six nations still using leaded gasoline are only using small amounts, said Jim Sniffen, a U.N. Environment Program spokesman. They are working with the U.N. and partner agencies to conduct blood testing for lead levels and develop plans to phase out leaded fuel, he said.

Lead became the gasoline additive of choice in the 1920s, after General Motors, DuPont and Standard Oil of New Jersey, the forerunner of Exxon, chose it over clean-burning ethanol and other alternatives as a way to make engines run better. It became universal despite warnings from public health advocates and a scandal over the deaths in 1924 of six refinery workers in Newark, New Jersey, who were poisoned while manufacturing it and "were led away in straitjackets," said Bill Kovarik, a journalist and communication professor at Radford University who researched the history of leaded gasoline.

"Historically, there are only a handful of major environmental victories like this," Kovarik said. "It took 90 years to eradicate what was always a well-known poison from a product that everyone uses. It's a great achievement, but it really says something about how public health works globally, that it took so long ... Benjamin Franklin complained about lead poisoning in print shops."

The industry falsely claimed that there were no alternatives to lead, which was more profitable, and gained control over the government's scientific study of it, Kovarik said.

Eventually, exposure to airborne lead was found to cause brain, kidney and cardiovascular damage. In children, it was found to lower IQ levels and shorten attention spans.

A public health crisis again erupted around lead in the 1960s as the environmental movement bloomed. A lawsuit filed by the NRDC in 1973 lead to the Environmental Protection Agency regulating lead in gasoline and finally banning it as an additive in 1986.

"This is an environmental issue that was rediscovered and it was finally phased out, but it could have been done early on with even the slightest precaution, because everyone knew about lead poisonings," Kovarik said.

"As we look to some future of environmental sanity, this is a great example of where we could have done better. We have to learn from this."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2011-10-27-UN-UN-Leaded-Fuels/id-a3aa04fed24d436aacaf82055f623d87

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Dropbox


Dropbox (free to $19.99 per month) is the simplest, most elegant file-synchronization tool we've ever used. The premise behind Dropbox is it gives you access to your files no matter what computer or device you have at hand. The service stores files with strong encryption on multiple servers and lets you get at your files quickly, easily, and for the most part elegantly from virtually any Internet-enabled device. Dropbox is both a downloadable product, with a version for every major operating system?Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS, Android, BlackBerry?and every user also gets a Web account with file access, too, just in case you're on a computer that doesn't have Dropbox installed.

Dropbox works equally smoothly on Windows, Mac, Linux, as well as mobile devices (see our review of Dropbox for iPad, for example). Dropbox synchronizes only files stored in a single dedicated folder, so if you prefer to synchronize folders you already have on your system, or if you want to keep several folders fully synchronized between multiple machines, Dropbox may not be for you. But its smooth and hassle-free operation make it our Editors' Choice for file-sharing and backup solutions.

?

As a freemium service, Dropbox offers a few different pricing levels. First, there's Dropbox Basic, which gives you 2GB of storage at no cost. Second, if you need more space, you can pay $9.95 per month for 50GB or $19.99 per month for 100GB for Dropbox Pro 50 and Dropbox Pro 100, respectively. Finally, a tier for small businesses is also available, called Dropbox Teams, for $795 per year, which provides up to 1 terabyte of storage for five users, and includes telephone tech support, too.?

How to Get Dropbox
Dropbox is available as a download from the company's website. Don't look too hard for it in the Mac App Store because it's not there. The iOS version is in Apple's mobile app market (as it must be), and the Android and BlackBerry apps are in their respective marketplaces, too.

When you download and install the client program, you'll also have to create a new account or sign into an existing one if you have it. Next, the program will create a new folder called "Dropbox" for you; you'll have the option of choosing where to install it, or let it go to the default location (you can always move it later). A shortcut icon also appears (top menu bar in Mac, system tray in Windows) that lets you open your Dropbox folder with just a double click. From this same icon, you can also reach other preference settings, such as the folder's location and throttles on upload and download speeds. Another nice option on the pop-up menu is the "Forums" item, which opens a browser window on Dropbox's user support forum; you'll find the dialogue between users and developers livelier than on most competing services' sites.

Like its rival services, Dropbox stores synchronized files in the cloud so they're available at any machine on which you've installed Dropbox. You can also reach your files through a Web interface from any Internet-connected system. Dropbox's storage preserves copies of earlier versions of the files in My Dropbox, so you always have the most current copy on your computers. We like that you can still access older versions (or files you deleted or moved) with just an Internet connection. One attractive feature (also available in SugarSync) is Dropbox's bandwidth-saving ability to upload and download only the parts of files that change during revisions. We made changes in a 125MB file and found that Dropbox only needed to transfer 2 to 3MB of data to update the file. That's a decent bandwidth savings.?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/V2wZkSIoCQk/0,2817,2343852,00.asp

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Witness in NY arms case recalls key Moscow meeting (AP)

NEW YORK ? The star government witness against a former Soviet military officer dubbed the Merchant of Death took center stage at his federal conspiracy trial on Wednesday, recounting a key Moscow meeting prosecutors say set up negotiations with informants posing as South American terrorists.

Andrew Smulian, a South African business associate arrested with defendant Viktor Bout in Bangkok in March 2008 at the end of a sting operation by U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents, described a rapid succession of phone calls, emails and text messages with the Russian after they met for three days at his Moscow office and home.

Smulian testified that after his arrest he quickly agreed to cooperate in the Bout investigation and pleaded guilty in July 2008 to charges of conspiring to kill Americans, provide missiles and aid a terrorist group, the charges now facing Bout, who has pleaded not guilty. Smulian, 70, said he has met with investigators and prosecutors more than 75 times since his arrest, hoping his cooperation will win a reduced prison sentence.

Hunched on the witness stand, Smulian, a white-haired figure with a thick moustache, testified Wednesday that he flew to Moscow and met with Bout in January 2008. Over three days, he said, they discussed plans to arrange the delivery of anti-aircraft missile systems and other weapons to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, a terrorist group known for using cocaine deals to support terrorist operations.

Neither man knew at the time that the two FARC officials they were dealing with were undercover informants working for the DEA.

At first, Bout dismissed the idea of a deal, Smulian testified.

"He said he didn't deal with drug dealers," Smulian said.

But when Smulian urged Bout to research the FARC's ideological stance as a "left-leaning or Communist organization," the Russian appeared to grow more interested, the witness said.

According to Smulian, Bout said he would favor a deal "if the FARC were genuine in their interest." And he added that "because they were Communists, the defendant could offer them assistance."

Smulian testified that when he told Bout that the two FARC officials urgently wanted anti-aircraft missile systems, the Russian interrupted him by grabbing a telephone and talking for several minutes in his native language. Hanging up, Bout told him "100 pieces were available," Smulian testified. He said that Bout was referring to 100 Igla anti-missile launchers capable of destroying combat helicopters in midair.

The two men also discussed massive quantities of assault rifles, ammunition and grenades for the FARC, Smulian said. He said when he asked about a price for the weaponry, Bout "told me the costs were very high" but did not specify costs.

Bout says he's a legitimate businessman. His lawyer said during opening statements this month that he played along with the men posing as members of FARC so he could try to sell them two planes he had left over from when he operated a transport business before the United Nations restricted his travel in 2004. If convicted of conspiracy charges, Bout, 44, could face life in prison.

Smulian said he had known Bout since the late 1990s, when they met in South Africa while they were in the air cargo business. Smulian said he aided Bout in basing some of his cargo planes at a little-used airfield in a town called Pietersburg and helped him in business dealings in Zambia and Swaziland.

Smulian also said he was a source for South African military intelligence but insisted he saw no evidence at the time of any Bout planes loaded with weapons. But in 1998, he testified, Bout took him along on a trip to a major international defense exhibition in Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates.

At the event, Smulian testified, Bout introduced him to a man he identified as a major Bulgarian arms manufacturer who often supplied the Russian in weapons deals. Smulian said Bout also introduced him to Mikhail Kalashnikov, the inventor of the AK-47 assault rifle, a Russian model known for its use around the world.

The two men stayed only in social touch after Bout moved his air operations to the Central African Republic in 1998, but in early 2007 Smulian reengaged the Russian in business when he was in desperate financial straits. He said he tried to interest Bout in a possible deal to supply weapons to Rwanda's defense force but when the possibility of selling arms to the FARC emerged they jumped at the opportunity.

Under questioning Wednesday from prosecutor Anjan Sahni, Smulian verified a dizzying cascade of phone calls, emails and text messages between him and Bout as the Russian defendant watched him impassively from the defense table.

Many of the conversations were coded, government witnesses have said, with the two men referring to weapons as "stuff" and to the men they thought were FARC officials as "our friends." And both men used cellphones with SIM cards, portable memory chips that make it difficult to track the user. But neither man knew at the time that their communications were all being recorded by U.S. and allied authorities, Smulian testified.

Smulian told Bout that the FARC people were balking at the arrangements of the proposed deal, insisting he needed to stay with them until the weapons were delivered. When he told Bout of their concerns, Bout dismissed them tersely.

"No problem, Andrew," Bout said on the wiretapped phone conversation. "We're not crooks."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/terrorism/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_re_us/us_arms_suspect

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Romanian film, theater director Liviu Ciulei dies (AP)

BUCHAREST, Romania ? Liviu Ciulei, a Romanian film and theater director whose career spanned 50 years and included a top award at the Cannes Film Festival, has died. He was 88.

Ciulei ? who also served as the artistic director of the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis and taught at universities in New York ? died on Monday night at a hospital in Munich, the German city where he lived, said Romanian actor Ion Caramitru.

"An era has died! A genius had died!" said Caramitru, who heads Romania's UNITER theater union. "Without Liviu Ciulei, there would be no Romanian theater."

No cause of death was given.

As an actor, director and set designer, Ciulei was the most influential figure of Romanian theater and film in a generation. He won the Palme d'Or award at Cannes in 1965 for the film "The Forest of the Hanged," and he made more than 20 movies, both as an actor and a director.

Romanian President Traian Basescu paid homage to Ciulei on Tuesday, saying he belonged to an "elite generation" that created a "valuable and original" drama school, both in Romania and abroad. He called Ciulei's artistic vision "classic and modern, extremely clear and contemporary."

Ciulei studied theater and architecture in Bucharest and began his acting career in 1946 as the character Puck in "A Midsummer Night's Dream." He began to direct in 1957.

For 10 years he was artistic director at Bucharest's prestigious Bulandra Theater.

From 1980 to 1985, he held the same position at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis. In 1982, the theater received a Tony Award for its outstanding contribution to the American Theater. Ciulei drew national and international attention to the theater and its productions, the organization says on its website.

After that, Ciulei taught at Columbia University and New York University.

He is survived by his son, Thomas Ciulei, and wife, Helga Reiter-Ciulei.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_en_mo/eu_romania_obit_ciulei

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Steven Tyler falls in bathroom, taken to hospital

Steven Tyler, the lead singer of rock band Aerosmith, had a "small accident" on Tuesday that forced him to postpone a planned show in Paraguay by one day, a spokesman for the local concert organizers said.

Tyler received stitches and had emergency dental work done during a nearly four-hour stay at the La Costa medical center in Paraguay's capital, according to a hospital statement. He was in good condition when discharged.

The 63-year-old frontman reportedly suffered cuts to his face and lost two of his teeth after falling in his hotel bathroom, the country's largest newspaper ABC said.

Aerosmith planned to perform in the South American nation of Paraguay on Tuesday during a tour through Latin America.

"Mr. Tyler had a small accident that prevents him from staging the concert tonight," Marcelo Antunez, a spokesman for the local concert organizers, told reporters.

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"He is fine, he's in his hotel but he's not able to do the concert," Antunez said, adding the show would be postponed until Wednesday.

Nicolas Garzia, whose firm organized the Paraguay gig, said via Twitter that Tyler had been dehydrated and was suffering gastrointestinal problems.

A man who identified himself as Gustavo Perez, a bellboy at the Bourbon hotel near Asuncion, told local radio that Tyler slipped when he was taking a shower and "had a nasty fall."

Two years ago, Tyler broke his shoulder after falling off the stage during a concert in South Dakota, forcing the group to scrap the rest of its North American tour that summer and aggravating tensions within the band.

Tyler has signed up for a second season as a judge on the singing talent show "American Idol," and he published a memoir this year called "Does this Noise in My Head Bother You?"

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45037757/ns/today-entertainment/

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Apple granted patent on slide to unlock, even though it existed 2 years before they invented it

Slide to unlock

The software patent system is totally askew.  We need to look no further to see this than the recent news that Apple was granted a patent on sliding to unlock a mobile device.  It's bad enough that a governing body somewhere actually believes that you or I aren't smart enough to come to the natural conclusion on our own (that's basically what a patent means -- it's a unique idea or process), but the fact that it existed on an old Windows CE device in 2005 was totally overlooked.

I present the Neonode N1m, as reviewed by none other than Tnkgrl.


Youtube link for mobile viewing

Jump to 4:00 if you're impatient.  Now you might ask two things -- why was this patent granted, and does "prior art" really mean anything?  The first is an easy answer, the folks who granted the patent probably never heard of the Neonode N1m (but I'm sure Apple did).  You can't blame them if they didn't know, even if they should have.  The second question is a bit more tricky.  Usually, if prior art can be proven, a patent is invalidated.  Proven is a tough word that means more than one thing to different people.  It should be easy to interpret, but that's not how the legal system in the US works. 

It did work as expected in the Netherlands though, and Samsung has already brought the lowly Neonode N1m in front of the court there -- and had Apple's claims over slide to unlock determined to be "trivial and likely invalid", and the court refused to consider them.  I'm sure HTC and Motorola, who are being sued over multiple gesture patents in the US, already have this particular Youtube video bookmarked.  If this patent stands, we all should just go back to this.

The good old days

More: 9to5Mac; Fosspatents


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/0CnwGZuYxWs/apple-granted-patent-slide-unlock-even-though-it-existed-2-years-they-invented-it

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Fiance saves woman from beneath quake's rubble

A fiance's love saved 25-year-old teacher Gul Karacoban from being left to die under the rubble of a restaurant she was eating at when a deadly earthquake struck eastern Turkey.

Brought out alive on Monday along with two colleagues, after 18 hours pinned under a mound of concrete and masonry, she was stretchered into an ambulance while paramedics assured her desperate fiance she would be all right.

"All I want is for her to live, I don't care if she injured or not. It doesn't matter, I just want her alive," air force Lieutenant Onur Eryasar told a Reuters photographer before climbing into the ambulance.

When the quake struck, Eryasar rushed from his base in Van to the town of Ercis some 60 miles away to find Karacoban, and by talking with her friends and colleagues he learnt where she had gone to lunch.

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Finding the restaurant in the dark, he shouted out her name. Hearing the voices of other people trapped in the collapsed building he persuaded one of the rescue teams to begin digging.

By late Monday morning his perseverance was rewarded as the young woman was carried out, alive and conscious.

At least 264 people died in Sunday's 7.2 magnitude earthquake that struck the cities of Van and Ercis, but hundreds more were feared dead and trapped beneath collapsed buildings.

Story: Tears of joy and sorrow: Survivors rescued, bodies recovered after Turkey quake

Elsewhere in Ercis, a town of 100,000, a rescue worker stepped carefully down the heap of dust and rubble that had once been an internet cafe, cradling a tiny boy of maybe three years old.

His neck protected by a brace, the boy was crying as he was carried in his rescuer's arms to a waiting ambulance.

Another man emerged stunned, looking round in disbelief as he sat on the debris that he'd been buried under overnight in the bitter cold. Assisted down to the road, he stumbled away into the crowd.

A Reuters photographer saw a woman and her daughter being freed from beneath a concrete slab in the wreckage of a building that had once been six stories tall.

PhotoBlog: Rescue workers find survivors in collapsed buildings

"I'm here, I'm here," the woman, named Fidan, called out in a hoarse voice. Talking to her regularly while working for more than two hours to find a way through, the rescuers cut through the slab, first sighting the daughter's foot, before finally freeing them.

They were alive, but their bodies were badly swollen. Four dead bodies were pulled from the same building.

Distraught relatives continued their vigil in quake-stricken towns and villages.

'Our grief is huge'
In Van, the provincial capital of 1 million people on the shores of Turkey's largest lake, fewer buildings collapsed.

But the quake destroyed a seven-story apartment block, home to around 40 families.

"Our grief is huge. My uncle's wife and her children are under the rubble," said one woman watching heavy lifting machinery trying to remove the slabs of fallen concrete.

"All our houses are damaged. We are staying in the youth sports center," she said, before breaking down in tears.

Another woman told Reuters her aunt and little cousin were buried somewhere in a concertina of concrete slabs. At another site a mother said her 24-year-old son, a veterinarian student, was also missing under the rubble.

Emergency workers from half a dozen rescue teams worked frantically to clear debris from a collapsed four-story building that had housed eight apartments, fearful rising smoke meant there was a fire burning somewhere down below.

Nobody, either dead or alive, had been brought out of the wrecked building so far, though one woman told a rescue worker she had spoken to a friend, Hatice Hasimoglu, on her mobile phone six hours after the quake and she was trapped inside.

The 24-year-old pre-school teacher had been living on the first floor of the building.

"She called me to say that she's alive and she's stuck in the rubble near the stairs of the building," said her friend, a fellow teacher. "She told me she was wearing red pajamas," she said, standing with relatives begging the rescue workers to hurry.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45015029/ns/world_news-europe/

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Monday, October 24, 2011

Pete Seeger enters 9th decade as an activist


Essential News from The Associated Press

? ?Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-10-24-Music-Pete%20Seeger/id-b8b0e71c21c24b0fab54dfbd591d36bd

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The 10 biggest TV flops of the last 5 years

On Friday, Drew Barrymore?s ?Charlie?s Angels? became the latest television tragedy as ABC canceled the heavily promoted, but not-very-well-received drama.

Despite a slew of hot, nubile young actresses (like Minka Kelly) and a Miami twist, the show ? a reboot of the 1970s classic ? didn?t get the pulses of America racing.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: TV?s Biggest Flops Of The Last Five Years

?Charlie?s Angels? has joined a rapidly growing list of Fall 2011 shows that were canned by their networks, including CBS comedy ?How to Be a Gentleman? (with Kevin Dillon), The CW reality show ?H8R,? NBC?s remake of the British comedy of the same name, ?Free Agents? (the original is airing on BBC America on Saturday nights), and one of the most talked about programs of the season, ?The Playboy Club.?

With shows dropping like flies, AccessHollywood.com takes a look back at 10 of the biggest flops of the last five years that failed to last for a full season.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: Shows & Stars of Fall Television 2011

10. ?Kings,? 2009 (NBC)
Brit Ian McShane brought his icy stares and weighty presence as King Silas Benjamin to NBC in the big budget series ?Kings? in 2009. Also starring newcomer Aussie Christopher Egan, and eventual ?Gossip Girl? guy Sebastian Stan, the high-on-effects drama ? about loyalty, politics and betrayal went from hot to just plain lukewarm with the viewers who dipped off as the weeks rolled on between March and April. NBC took a break from the show after its first five outings, running seven more in the summer of 2009 before saying goodbye for good.

9. ?Day Break,? 2006 (ABC)
?Day Break? made its premiere outing on ABC?s primetime schedule in 2006. Like a serious ?Groundhog Day,? the series followed the story of Detective Brett Hopper (Taye Diggs), who was trapped repeating the same 24-hour cycle, as he attempted to figure out who set him up for murder. The supporting cast included Moon Bloodgood as Rita Shelten ? Hopper?s girlfriend ? and ?The X Files? star Mitch Pileggi as a fellow detective, but audiences decided not to revisit the past, and changed the channel. Ramon Rodriguez, of the newly canceled ?Charlie?s Angels,? was also a part of the cast.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: The Latest Star Sightings

8. ?New Amsterdam,? 2008 (FOX)
Danish actor Nikolaj Coster-Waldau rode a wave of hype stateside as John Amsterdam, a NYPD homicide detective stuck living an immortal life, following a brave act in the 1600?s. A cancellation meant fans never got to see John find true love ? the one thing that would break the spell, but these days the actor has found life again as Jamie Lannister on HBO?s ?Game of Thrones.?

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      Get the latest TV and reality TV news by following?our blog?on Facebook and Twitter!

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7. ?The Bionic Woman,? 2007 (NBC)
Sci-fi American drama ?The Bionic Woman? crashed into NBC?s primetime lineup in 2007, propelled by some super-powered hype. Brit Michelle Ryan played Jamie Sommers, who was saved from death after surgically receiving bionics ? bionics she was asked to use by those who brought her back from the brink. The reboot?s premiere ? in September 2007 ? packed a punch, beating the Season 3 premiere of ?Grey?s Anatomy.? But, ratings plummeted by November, just as the Writers Guild of America strike began, putting the show on hiatus. While the strike ended, ?The Bionic Woman? stayed permanently on ice.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: Hollywood?s Hottest Stars Kissing & Smooching!

6. ?Six Degrees,? 2006 (ABC)
An American drama series, ?Six Degrees? had a nice lead in, following ?Grey?s Anatomy? in 2006. Starring Erika Christensen, a post-?Hostel? Jay Hernandez and ?Sex and The City?s? Bridget Moynahan, the plots were various, but connections between the characters worked in. It exited screens in November 2006 after low ratings, but came back for one more (dismal) try in March 2007 before it was canceled for good.

5. ?Lone Star,? 2010 (FOX)
It seemed like a Texas-sized treat ? with lots of big oil drama ? when ?Lone Star? made its debut on FOX in 2010. The show centered around a handsome conman who led a secret double life, pulling jobs in two different towns ? and on two different women. Unfortunately, while series star James Wolk was being touted as a young George Clooney, it ran out gas with TV watchers after two low-rated episodes.

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Story: Low-rated 'Charlie's Angels' grounded by ABC

4. ?The Beautiful Life: TBL,? 2009 (The CW)
?The O.C.?s? Mischa Barton retuned to The CW as messed up supermodel Sonja Stone on ?The Beautiful Life: TBL.? Aside from Mischa?s character, the project ? from executive producer Ashton Kutcher ? also focused on a group of male and female models sharing a residence in New York City as they tried to make it. The show itself didn?t, drawing just 1.38 million viewers before it got a designer boot after just two episodes.

3. ?Viva Laughlin,? 2007 (CBS)
They double downed, combing a storyline about a guy trying to jump start a casino in a locale that isn?t Las Vegas, with pre-?Glee? musical numbers, but ?Viva Laughlin? ? even with Hugh Jackman on board as an executive producer and guest star ? bombed, and CBS yanked the series after just two episodes.

2. ?Emily?s Reasons Why Not,? 2006 (ABC)
After a charming run as Dr. Molly Clock on NBC?s ?Scrubs,? Heather Graham got her own comedy in 2006 with the ?Sex and the City?-styled ?Emily?s Reasons Why Not.? Focusing on Emily (Graham), a successful author of self-help books who was less successful at dating, ?ERWN? was heavily promoted by ABC, but yanked after its premiere. ?We felt like, unfortunately, it was not going to get better,? ABC?s then-network president, Stephen McPherson, told reporters at the time.

1. ?Cavemen,? 2007 (ABC)
Inspired by a popular series of GEICO insurance ads, ?Cavemen? rode a prehistoric wave to ABC in 2007. The show, centered around three Cro-Magnon men who were trying to make their way through dating in the modern world ? without their trusty clubs ? piqued the interest of more than 9 million viewers in its premiere outing. Viewers, however, went the way of the dinosaurs, and ABC axed the show after six episodes.

Which new show of the last few years do you think was the biggest flop? Share your thoughts on the Facebook page for our TV blog, The Clicker.

Copyright 2011 by NBC. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/44934822/ns/today-entertainment/

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Dodgeball tournament a hit (San Jose Mercury News)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/152079443?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Quad-core automotive SoC adds real-time engine for augmented ...

Quad-core automotive SoC adds real-time engine for augmented reality
By?Eric Brown


Renesas announced a new member of its R-Car series of automotive systems on chip (SoCs). The R-Car H1 has four ARM Cortex-A9 cores clocked at 1GHz, offering up to 11,650 Dhrystone MIPS (DMIPS) performance, plus a Imagination Technologies' SGX-543-MP2 graphics processing unit (GPU) and an optional real-time multimedia engine (MME) based on Renesas' SH4A core.

The R-Car H1 SoC is designed for the high-end car navigation market. With its four 1GHz cores, it's claimed to offer 11,650 Dhrystone MIPS (DMIPS) -- or over four times the performance of the earlier dual-core M1 model (see later for background).

The R-Car H1 enables features such as quick-boot, backup camera support, as well as media processing, says the company. It supports operating systems including Linux, Windows Automotive Embedded, and QNX.


R-Car H1 block diagram

(Click to enlarge)
The R-Car H1 SoC is equipped with Imagination's dual-core SGX-543-MP2 GPU, which helps the SoC deliver up to 40 gigaflops per second (Gflops/s) graphics throughput. The GPU supports OpenGL ES 2.0 and OpenVG 1.1 graphics and video technologies, says Renesas.

Video and audio hardware accelerators are also available, helping the SoC achieve 1080p video playback at 60 frames per second (fps), says the company. A Renesas 2D graphics accelerator is also said to be available.

Real-time multimedia engine supports augmented reality

The R-Car H1 SoC is available with an optional dedicated multimedia engine (MME) built around Renesas' IMP-X3 processor. This 800MHz processor is, in turn, based on Renesas' RISC-based SH4A core.

The real-time IMP-X3 image processing unit supports augmented-reality applications, says Renesas. The R-Car H1 is said to make use of the IMP-X3 core to support up to four independent input camera channels, enabling 360-degree camera views and sign recognition, among other applications.

The R-Car H1 SoC offers two independent DDR3 32-bit interfaces "that allow access to different content simultaneously," says Renesas. Peripherals are said to include Ethernet, three USB 2.0 ports with PHY, I2C and serial interfaces, as well as dual CAN channels. Storage and expansion are handled via an SD host interface, a multimedia card interface, PATA and SATA interfaces, and PCI Express expansion, says the company.

Camera and TV tuner interfaces are available, as well as an optional GPS baseband engine, presumably the same CSR SiRF-based package used in the earlier reference platform. In addition, the SoC supports two independent display controllers, and a MOST-150 DTCP audio interface, among other I/O (see spec list below).

Specifications listed by Renesas for the R-Car H1:

Power supply voltage3.3 V (IO), 1.5 V (DDR3), 1.2 V (Core), 2.5 V (PCIe, MLB), 1.8 V (SDIF UHS-I)
CPU coresARM Cortex-A9
SH-4A
Maximum operating frequency1000 MHz800 MHz
Processing performance10000 DMIPS1760 DMIPS, 5600 MFLOPS
Cache memoryInstruction cache: 32 KB
Operand cache: 32 KB
Instruction cache: 32 KB
Operand cache: 32 KB
External memoryDDR3-SDRAM (DDR)
Maximum operating frequency: 500 MHz
Data bus width: 32 bits ? 2 channel (4 GB/s ? 2 ch)
Expansion busFlash ROM and SRAM,
Data bus width: 8 or 16 bits
PCI Express 2.0 (1 lane)
GraphicsPowerVR SGX543MP2 (3D)
Renesas graphics processor (2D)
VideoDisplay out ? 2 ch (RGB888)
Video input x 2 ch
Video decode processor (H.264/AVC, MPEG-4, VC-1)
Media RAM
JPEG acceralator
TS interface
Video image processing (color conversion, image expansion, reduction, filter processing)
Distortion compensation module (image renderer) ? 4 ch
Image recognition processor
AudioSound processing unit ? 2 ch
Sampling rate converter ? 10 ch
Sound serial interface ? 10 ch
MOST DTCP
Storage interfacesUSB 2.0 host interface ? 3 ports (w/ PHY)
SD host interface ? 4 ch
Multimedia card interface
Serial ATA interface
In-car network automotive peripheralsMedia local bus (MLB) interface ? 1 ch (6-pin / 3-pin interface selectable)
CAN Interface ? 2 ch
IEBus interface
GPS baseband module
SecurityCrypto engine (AES, DES, Hash, RSA)
Secure RAM
Other peripheralsDMA controller
LBSC DMAC: 3 ch / SuperHyway-DMAC: 4 ch / HPB DMAC: 39 ch
32-bit timer ? 9 ch
PWM timer ? 7ch
I2C bus interface ? 4 ch
Serial communication interface (SCIF) ? 8 ch
Serial peripheral interface (HSPI) ? 3 ch
Ethernet controller (IEEE802.3u, RMII, without PHY)
Interrupt controller (INTC)
Clock generator (CPG) with built-in PLL
On-chip debugger interface
Low power modeDPS/VS (CPU core, PowerVR SGX543MP2, VPU, IMP)
AVS (adaptive voltage scaling) function
DDR-SDRAM power supply backup mode
Package832-pin FCBGA (27 ? 27 mm)

Background

A previously announced dual-core Cortex-A9 "M1" version of the R-Car SoC is one of the early support targets for MontaVista Software's new Genivi-compliant MontaVista Automotive Technology Platform (ATP) development platform. ATP is compliant with the open source Linux Genivi In-Vehicle Automotive (IVI) spec.

Renesas used that SoC in a Genivi-compliant IVI reference platform unveiled in June, which incorporates CSR's location and connectivity products, including SiRF GPS chipsets.

That dual-core R-Car SoC offered 2500 MIPS performance at 533MHz, and integrated an Imagination Technologies SGX 530 2D/3D graphics engine. The SoC appears to be based on the R-Car M1 SoC announced in February, which incorporates dual Renesas SH-4A cores. The R-Car M1 can be considered a specialized, automotive-specific cousin of Renesas' dual-core, Cortex-A9-based SH-Mobile APE5R SoC and to a lesser degree, the earlier EMMA Mobile EV0 SoCs.

Availability

Samples of Renesas' R-Car H1 SoC will be be ready in November, equipped in an 832-pin FCBGA (flip-chip ball-grid array) package. Mass production is scheduled to begin in December 2012, and is expected to reach a cumulative 100,000 units per month in December 2013, says Renesas.

More information may be found in this Renesas' R-Car H1 spec sheet, as well as at this separate R-Car H1 product page.


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High Availability Messaging Solution Using AXIGEN, Heartbeat and DRBD
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Will open source pay off? Open source is becoming standard within enterprises, often because of cost savings. Find out how much of a financial impact it can have on your organization. Get this methodology and calculator now, compliments of JBoss.

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This paper provides an overview of the network-centric computing model, data distribution services, and distributed data management. It then describes how the SkyBoard integration and synchronization service, coupled with an implementation of the OMG?s Data Distribution Service (DDS) standard, can be used to create an efficient data distribution, storage, and retrieval system.

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Source: http://www.linuxfordevices.com/c/a/News/Renesas-RCar-H1/

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Santorum says Cain misleads voters on abortion

Republican presidential candidate former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum speaks during a Republican presidential debate Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

Republican presidential candidate former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum speaks during a Republican presidential debate Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2011, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

(AP) ? Republican presidential hopeful Rick Santorum pounced on rival Herman Cain's position on abortion Thursday, saying it mirrors the views of abortion-rights supporters and shows that Cain is not a true conservative.

In an interview Wednesday with CNN, Cain said he believes life begins at conception. "And abortion under no circumstances," he added. But Cain also said "it's not the government's role or anybody else's role to make that decision," according to a CNN transcript.

Asked whether his personal views would become a "directive to the nation," should he become president, Cain said they wouldn't.

"I can have an opinion on an issue without it being a directive on the nation," he said. "The government shouldn't be trying to tell people everything to do, especially when it comes to social decisions that they need to make."

Campaigning in New Hampshire on Thursday, Santorum accused Cain of misleading voters about his conservative credentials.

"It's basically the position that just about every pro-choice politician has in America," Santorum told The Associated Press. "I don't know too many pro-choice politicians who are for abortion, who want more abortions ... but they say the decision is a choice the government shouldn't be involved in."

Santorum added: "That is Herman Cain's position, which does not make him pro-life. That is the quintessential pro-choice position on abortion."

Santorum said Cain's comments are further proof that Cain hasn't been tested as a candidate.

"This is what you get when folks haven't run for office before ? you get someone who says what he is personally, and no one .... asks the question of whether it applies to his public policy," Santorum said. "And obviously it does not."

A spokesman for Cain's campaign did not respond to a phone message.

Santorum, a former U.S. senator from Pennsylvania, has been campaigning aggressively in early voting Iowa, where he gets high marks from conservative activists but registers little support in public polls. Cain, meanwhile, has been rising in the polls, both in New Hampshire and nationally.

Santorum kept up his criticism of Cain later Thursday, when he filed paperwork with the New Hampshire secretary of state's office to get on the ballot for the yet-to-be scheduled presidential primary. Cain did not file in person; he had a staffer sign him up earlier Thursday.

"I'm not selling any books today," Santorum said, referring to a book tour Cain recently launched that fueled speculation that he was more interested in profiting from his growing national profile than winning the election.

Santorum said it's possible "viral candidates and virtual candidates" can win but that he believes retail politics, particularly in the early voting states of Iowa and New Hampshire, still matter.

"Had Herman been up here doing town hall meetings for a few months we'd know a lot more about him than we do now," he said. "You may not agree with the positions I hold, but you know the positions I hold. And they're very clear, and they're very consistent."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-10-20-US-Santorum-Cain-Abortion/id-9edb969910c9443590203f18b87abd12

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