Saturday, 2 April 2011

Japan disaster sparks social media innovation

Tokyo: As Japan grapples with an unprecedented triple disaster — earthquake, tsunami, nuclear crisis - the Web has spawned creativity and innovation online amid a collective desire to ease suffering.

Once the magnitude of the March 11 disaster became clear, the online world began asking, "How can we help?"

And for that, social media offered the ideal platform for good ideas to spread quickly, supplementing efforts launched by giants like Google and Facebook.

A British teacher living in Abiko city, just east of Tokyo, is leading a volunteer team of bloggers, writers and editors producing a collection of reflections and images of the earthquake that will be sold in the coming days as a digital publication.

Facebook sued for $1 billion over Intifada page

Washington: Facebook and co-founder Mark Zuckerberg have been hit with a lawsuit seeking more than $1 billion in damages over a page on the social network which called for a "Third Intifada" against Israel.

Facebook this week shut down the "Third Intifada" page, which had almost 500,000 fans, but the lawsuit filed in a court here claims that the social network showed "negligence" by not quickly responding to appeals to remove the page.

Besides awarding damages, the complaint calls on the court to bar Facebook "from allowing the Facebook page titled 'Third Palestinian Intifada,' and other related and similar sites, which advocate violence and death to Jews."

The suit, a copy of which was obtained by technology blog TechCrunch, was filed in DC Superior Court by Larry Klayman, who describes himself in the complaint as "an American citizen of Jewish origin" who is "active in matters concerning the security of Israel and all people."

Klayman also identifies himself as the founder of Freedom Watch, whose website describes it as a political advocacy group dedicated to protecting privacy, free speech and other rights and "our national sovereignty against the incompetent, terrorist state-controlled United Nations."

Facebook dismissed the case as "without merit" and said it would fight.

"While we haven't been served with a complaint, we believe the case is without merit and we will fight it vigorously," a Facebook spokesman said.



Facebook shut down the page on Tuesday, several days after Israeli Public Diplomacy Minister Yuli Edelstein sent a letter to Zuckerberg urging him to remove it.

Facebook said the page was initially tolerated because it "began as a call for peaceful protest" but direct calls for violence began appearing and the page was removed for violating Facebook's policies.

How Google fooled you

Washinngton: Google joined in the April Fool's pranks on Friday with the release of a new product called "Gmail Motion" that supposedly lets users send and receive emails using only gestures.

Gmail product manager Paul McDonald, in a deadpan explanatory video, said Gmail Motion uses a "language of movements that replaces type entirely" and ends reliance on "outdated technologies" like the keyboard and mouse.



"Using your computer's camera and a spacial tracking algorithm, Gmail Motion interprets physical movement and turns it into actionable commands," McDonald said. "The movements are designed to be intuitive, ergonomic and easy to do."

In the video, a "Googler" demonstrates how Gmail Motion works, pointing backwards with one thumb, for example, to reply to an email message and using two thumbs to "reply all." The video also includes an interview with a "Lorraine Klayman," presented as an "environmental movement specialist at Nevada Polytechnic College."

"Gmail Motion will free the regular user from the constraints that modern society and our interfaces with our machines have put on the human body," she says.

A link on Google's home page directs a user to the blog post explaining Gmail Motion, which promises to "turn your email into a true body of work."

Google is renowned for its April Fool's jokes, which over the years have included job applications for positions on the Moon and the revelation that its Internet search rankings are compiled by pigeons.

Software to transfer files by just touching screens

London: Transferring files from one computer to another is a major pain.

Now, you can just pick up stuff from one machine and put in the other - thanks to a programme developed by an Indian-origin scientist of the Media Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Pranav Mistry has developed a programme, called 'Sparsh', that lets you transfer files from one device to another by simply touching the screen.

"The user touches a data item they wish to copy from a device, conceptually saving it in the user's body," New Scientist quoted him as saying.

"Next, the user touches the other device to which they want to paste the saved content," he added.

The first touch copies the item to a temporary file in either a Dropbox or an FTP account. The second touch retrieves the data.

This requires both devices to be running the software and for a user to be signed into their Dropbox or FTP account.

The programme works for any type of data, be it a photo, an address or a link to a YouTube clip.

Currently, 'Sparsh' runs as an application on smartphones, tablets and other computers.

Mistry said the ideal home for 'Sparsh' is to be built into an OS so that it can provide the copy-paste feature across all applications.

NATO frets at report of civilian deaths in Libya raid

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Brega: NATO is looking into reports of civilian deaths in a coalition air strike near Brega after rebels claimed victory in the battle for the key Libyan oil town.

A rebel spokesman in the town of Misrata, 214 kilometres (132 miles) east of Tripoli, also reported fierce fighting there on Saturday.

Meanwhile, Scottish detectives and prosecutors plan to meet with Foreign Office officials on Monday to discuss Libyan foreign minister Mussa Kussa, who defected to Britain, as part of the Lockerbie bombing probe.

Southwest grounds 79 planes after scare


New York:  Southwest Airlines grounded 79 airplanes on Saturday after a piece of the fuselage on one of its Boeing 737s ripped open during a flight the day before, leaving a hole in the cabin ceiling and rapidly depressurizing the aircraft.

"We're taking them out of service to inspect them over the next few days," Whitney Eichinger, a Southwest spokeswoman, said Saturday. She said they would be "looking for the same type of aircraft skin fatigue."

In a news release, Southwest announced that it would cancel about 300 flights on Saturday because of inspections, and that customers should expect delays of up to two hours.

"The safety of our customers and employees is our primary concern," Mike Van de Ven, Southwest's chief operating officer, said in a statement. "We are working closely with Boeing to conduct these proactive inspections and support the investigation."

Kandahar: Nine killed, 81 injured in violent protests against Quran burning


Kandahar:  Violent protests over the burning of a Quran in Florida flared for a second straight day, with young men rampaging through the streets of this southern capital, flying Taliban flags and wielding sticks.

Nine people were killed and 81 injured in the disturbances, all from bullet wounds, according to Abdul Qayoum Pakhla, head of the provincial health department. One of the dead was a police officer. Kandahar has long been the heartland of the Taliban insurgency but has been relatively quiet in recent months since a surge of additional American troops arrived here.

The protests here came a day after a mob overran the headquarters of the United Nations in Mazar-i-Sharif Friday, killing 12 persons, seven of them international staff. The mob gathered after three mullahs at Friday Prayer urged action in response to the Quran burning by a pastor, Terry Jones, in Florida on March 20.

In Kandahar, several thousand young men, shouting slogans calling for death to Americans and to the Karzai government, were still rioting after several hours on Saturday, setting tires aflame throughout the city, burning cars and attacking journalists trying to cover the disorder.

Ivory Coast: Over 800 killed in communal violence


Johannesburg:  More than 800 people have been massacred in a western Ivory Coast town where hundreds of United Nations (U.N.) peacekeepers are based, the International Federation of the Red Cross said Saturday, but the U.N. military spokesman said he had no information about mass killings there.

The Roman Catholic charity Caritas put the toll at more than 1,000 dead, an estimate reached by its workers who visited the town of Duekoue on Wednesday.

Spokesman Patrick Nicholson said Caritas workers found the town's Carrefour neighborhood filled with bodies of victims who died from gunshot wounds or were hacked to death with machetes.

The government of internationally recognized President Alassane Ouattara meanwhile denied its forces were involved in any atrocities including in western Ivory Coast, without referring to the latest allegations. Previously, the United Nations put the death toll at 492 from four months of fighting to install rival leaders following disputed November elections.

AT&T raising prices Sunday on certain handsets purchased without a 2 year pact?

AT&T raising prices Sunday on certain handsets purchased without a 2 year pact?
A screenshot traced to AT&T reveals the carrier's intentions to raise prices starting Sunday on a variety of handsets, including the Apple iPhone, purchased with early upgrades, a 1 year contract or with no contract.

First of all, those using an early upgrade to buy an Apple iPhone will see the price rise $50. For example, a 8GB iPhone 3GS will go from $249 to $299. A 16GB Apple iPhone 4 will cost you $449 starting tomorrow, up from $399 today. And a 32GB version will go from $499 to $549 on Sunday.

Those signing a 1 year contract will find feature phones (known as Quick Messaging Phones or QMP at AT&T) $10 higher while smartphones (excluding the iPhone) will leap in price by $150. Those buying a handset with no commitment will find a $20 increase in the price of a feature phone while a smartphone (again, excluding the iPhone) will go up in price by $50.

There is no word on how rebates might help ease the pain to your wallet. But if you are looking to use an early upgrade to buy an AT&T branded iPhone, or want to buy another model phone besides Apple's handset using a 1 year contract (instead of the usual 2 years), or want to go without being tied up by a contract, you had better head down to AT&T today because once the clock strikes midnight, those prices will apparently go up.
Prices on handsets purchased using the usual 2 year contract do not appear to be affected.

source: AndroidCentral

AT&T raising prices Sunday on certain handsets purchased without a 2 year pact?

Web TV move may stop slide in Swedish crowds

STOCKHOLM - As a goalkeeper he was part of the Sweden squad which excelled to finish third at the 1994 World Cup and now Lars Eriksson hopes the Swedish domestic game can also flourish thanks to web television.
"Tomorrow's fans don't read about the next league match in the morning papers, they are looking at websites, on their phone, on Facebook," Eriksson told Reuters at the headquarters of TV production company Onside on Friday.
Onside is owned by the Swedish Football Association and is tasked with maximising exposure for the domestic game, with Eriksson leading a project to install TV studios at all 16 Swedish top-flight clubs so that daily news items are generated.
Eriksson believes the investment of 15 million Swedish crowns ($2.37 million) in web TV will bring new fans and new revenue streams, as well as keeping existing supporters happy.
"You can't create interest by putting an ad in the paper or putting posters up around town -- that time is long gone," said Eriksson, who hopes the increased exposure will help arrest the slide in attendances in recent years.
"That is an income in itself, because if they are not there (on the internet), the supporters don't come to matches because they don't know it's happening."
Eriksson was understudy to Thomas Ravelli in the Sweden squad that beat Bulgaria 4-0 to claim third place at USA 94, and still coaches the national team's current crop of goalkeepers in his spare time.
He retired in 2001 having won the Swedish league with Hammarby and is now using relationships built up over a career in Sweden, Belgium and Portugal to develop the domestic game.
"It (my career) does make it easier to open doors, but you still have to deliver the goods. It helps that I understand the different needs of different people in football," he said.
In return for building the studios and training club staff in how to use them, clubs produce content which Onside then packages and sells on to other media outlets.
"There is one condition, and that is that they provide us with one hour of material every day, which we then can put into other programme formats."
But one downside for the clubs is that if they lose their top-flight status, they also lose their studio.
"If you're in the Allsvenskan (Swedish first division), you get a studio -- if you get relegated, you lose it. That's how it is," said Eriksson.

Miniature lasers could open the door to new age of the Internet

Washington, : Scientists at the University of Central Florida have created a new laser device that could make high-speed computing faster and more reliable, opening the door to a new age of the Internet.
Professor Dennis Deppe's miniature laser diode emits more intense light than those currently used. The light emits at a single wavelength, making it ideal for use in compact disc players, laser pointers and optical mice for computers, in addition to high-speed data transmission.
The smaller size and elimination of non-semiconductor materials means the new devices could potentially be used in heavy data transmission, which is critical in developing the next generation of the Internet. By incorporating laser diodes into cables in the future, massive amounts of data could be moved across great distances almost instantaneously. By using the tiny lasers in optical clocks, the precision of GPS and high-speed wireless data communications also would increase.
"This is definitely a milestone," said Freisem, a senior research scientist who has been collaborating with Deppe for the past eight years. "The implications for the future are huge."
Deppe and Sabine Freisem presented their findings in January at the SPIE (formerly The International Society for Optical Engineering) Photonics West conference in San Francisco.

Google foe won't take 'no' on Buzz cash

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SAN FRANCISCO  - An internet privacy group that prodded U.S. regulators to scrutinize Google Inc is miffed about getting cut out of a class action settlement over the search behemoth's Buzz social network.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) objected to the settlement in a court filing this week, claiming Google and others decided to fund groups already benefiting from the company's largesse.
EPIC, led by prominent privacy advocate Marc Rotenberg, filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission last year, saying Buzz threatened the privacy of Gmail users. Google settled with the FTC on Wednesday and agreed to independent privacy audits.

Google to turn your smartphones into credit cards!

London : Web giant Google has masterminded a mobile phone that doubles as a wallet.
Instead holding up checkout queues as customers rifle through their purses to find the right card, they will simply swipe the phone past an electronic reader to pay.
And experts claim it is a safer method of payment than magnetic strip credit cards, reports the Daily Mail.
Google has teamed up with Citigroup and Mastercard to develop the mobile payment system specifically for the Android phone.
They have also consulted VeriFone Systems, which makes credit card readers for cash registers.
The phone will also store shopping habits and trends so that retailers and businesses can more efficiently target consumers with discounts and advertisements.
Google is not expected to get a cut of the transaction fees, according to Wall Street Journal.
Initially, holders of Citigroup-issued debit and credit cards would be allowed to pay for purchases by activating a mobile payment application developed for one current model and many coming models of Android phones, it said.
Experts have claimed that it is safer method of payment than the traditional credit card.
"Because it's contact-less there's a perception people can grab it from thin air, but it's actually a more sophisticated technology than credit cards with a magnetic stripe, making it more difficult to steal a consumer's payment information," said Nick Holland, a mobile-transactions analyst at Yankee Group.

Malicious attack hits a million Web pages

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SEATTLE  - More than one million website pages have been hit by a sophisticated hacking attack that injects code into sites that redirect users to a fraudulent software sales operation.
The so-called "mass-injection" attack, which experts say is the largest of its kind ever seen, has managed to insert malicious code into websites by gaining access to the servers running the databases behind the Internet, according to the technology security company that discovered it.
Websense, which first found evidence of the attack earlier this week, has called it 'LizaMoon,' after the site to which the malicious code first directed its researchers.
Users can see that they are being redirected when they attempt to visit an infected address, and can close the window with no ill effects, said Patrik Runald, a senior manager of security research at Websense.
The attack has largely affected small websites so far, he said, with no evidence that popular corporate or government websites have been compromised.

EXCLUSIVE - Snafus forced Twitter datacentre move - sources

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SAN FRANCISCO  - An ambitious plan to prevent "Fail Whales," the cartoon icon that greets frustrated Twitter users during network outages, turned into a fail whale of its own.
A new, custom-built facility in Utah meant to house computers that power the popular messaging service by the end of 2010 has been plagued with everything from leaky roofs to insufficient power capacity, people familiar with the plans told Reuters.
The botched move threatened new product development and forced Twitter -- whose user accounts have burgeoned to 200 million in just five years -- to seek another location despite committing significant investment to the facility.

Data breach hits JPMorgan, Kroger customers

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NEW YORK  - Personal information about some JPMorgan Chase & Co and Kroger Co customers was exposed as part of a data breach at a large online marketing vendor.
The data breach included some email addresses of JPMorgan Chase customers and names and email addresses of Kroger customers, the companies said in separate statements on Friday.
Epsilon, a unit of Alliance Data Systems Corp, said on Friday that a person outside the company hacked into some of its clients' customer files.
The vendor sends over 40 billion email ads and offers annually, usually to people who register for a company's website and or give their email addresses while shopping. Some of Epsilon's other clients include Verizon, Blackstone Group LP's Hilton Hotels, Kraft, and AstraZeneca.
Kroger, the biggest U.S. supermarket operator, said it told customers on Friday that the database storing their names and email addresses had been breached. No other personal information was exposed in the breach, Kroger said.

800 dead in western Ivorian town, Red Cross says

GENEVA  - At least 800 people were killed in intercommunal violence in the western Ivorian town of Duekoue this week, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said on Saturday.
"We have information that at least 800 persons were killed on March 29 (Tuesday) in Duekoue in intercommunal violence," ICRC spokeswoman Dorothea Krimitsas told Reuters.
ICRC officials visited the Carrefour area of Duekoue on Thursday and Friday to assess needs and gather testimony, a statement said. They evacuated 28 bodies to the local morgue and will continue in this work.
"Our colleagues saw hundreds of bodies ... We strongly suspect that was the result of intercommunal violence. Since Monday or so, tens of thousands of people have fled the area. This is not the first time there has been intercommunal violence in Duekoue," Krimitsas said.

G20 keeps up snail's pace of global monetary reform

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BEIJING  - Another month, another inconclusive meeting of G20 finance ministers: reform of the international monetary reform is proving a hard, thankless slog.
True, Thursday's seminar in the eastern city of Nanjing confirmed the consensus that changes are needed to put the world economy on a firmer financial footing, keep a closer eye on capital flows and ensure the global monetary order better reflects the clout of China and other emerging giants.
But the devil is in the detail, and, for all the ministerial proclamations of progress, the latest talks served mainly to show that French President Nicolas Sarkozy will have his work cut out to devise a reform blueprint in time for a summit in November.
France is this year's chair of the Group of 20 leading economies.
One analyst, Citi's Steven Englander, was struck by the Alice-in-Wonderland feel to Thursday's gathering.
"So there is this meeting in Nanjing where all countries but one are trying to figure out how to get rid of the dollar as the world's major reserve currency, one country is trying to keep its currency as the world's major reserve currency but have it depreciate against all the others, and one country wants its currency to become a reserve currency but doesn't want anyone to buy it without permission.
"The intended outcome is reform of the international monetary system," Englander said in a note.
The country trying to preserve its hegemony is, of course, the United States. The aspiring reserve-currency country that wants to have its cake and eat it, too, is China.

Libyan govt dismisses rebels' "mad" truce offer

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TRIPOLI/AJDABIYAH, Libya  - Muammar Gaddafi's government scorned rebel conditions for a nationwide ceasefire, and there was no sign of international diplomatic efforts cooling the Libyan conflict.
Western-led forces bombarded "civilian and military locations" late on Friday in the towns of Khoms, about 100 km (60 miles) east of Tripoli, and Arrujban, about 190 km to the southwest, state-controlled Libyan television said.
A rebel leader, speaking after talks with a U.N. envoy in Benghazi, earlier on Friday offered a truce on condition that Gaddafi left Libya and his forces quit cities now under government control.
"They are asking us to withdraw from our own cities .... If this is not mad then I don't know what this is. We will not leave our cities," government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim told reporters in Tripoli a few hours later.
Rebels speaking from Misrata said Gaddafi's forces had intensified their siege of the insurgents' last western enclave with an intense bombardment that was killing and maiming civilians.
"They used tanks, rocket-propelled grenades, mortar rounds and other projectiles to hit the city today. It was random and very intense bombardment," a spokesman called Sami told Reuters by telephone. "We no longer recognise the place. The destruction cannot be described."
Authorities do not allow journalists to report freely from the city.
Gaddafi's government in turn accused Western leaders of a "crime against humanity", saying allied warplanes had killed at least six civilians in a new attack. "Some mad and criminal prime ministers and presidents of Europe are leading a crusade against an Arab Muslim nation," Ibrahim said.

More violence rattles Afghanistan after UN killings

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MAZAR-I-SHARIF, Afghanistan  - A suicide attack hit Kabul and a violent demonstration against Koran-burning rattled the southern city of Kandahar the day after the worst ever attack on the United Nations in Afghanistan, which killed seven foreign staff.
The Taliban said they had no role in Friday's assault on the U.N. office in the usually peaceful northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif, after both the provincial governor and a senior U.N. official suggested provocateurs among the crowd had sparked or led the vicious attack.
"The Taliban had nothing to do with this, it was a pure act of responsible Muslims," spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said by phone from an undisclosed location.
"The foreigners brought the wrath of the Afghans on themselves by burning the Koran."
Thousands of demonstrators flooded into the streets of a city considered safe enough to be in the vanguard of a crucial security transition, after Friday prayers ended, and many headed straight for the U.N. mission.
There they overwhelmed security guards, burned parts of the compound and climbed blast walls to topple a guard tower. The throat of one of the dead foreigners was slit, the U.N. said.

Leak found in reactor pit, Japan PM tours disaster zone

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TOKYO  - Japan's prime minister made his first visit to the country's tsunami-devastated region on Saturday as the operator of the stricken Fukushima nuclear complex said it had found radioactive water leaking into the sea from a cracked concrete pit.
In a discovery regulators said might explain the radioactive water that has hobbled efforts to quell Japan's nuclear crisis, Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) said the radiation in the pit at its No.2 reactor in Fukushima measured 1,000 millisieverts per hour.
"With radiation levels rising in the seawater near the plant, we have been trying to confirm the reason why, and in that context, this could be one source," said Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy head of the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency.
He cautioned, however, "We can't really say for certain until we've studied the results."
TEPCO is preparing to pour concrete into the pit to stop the leak, added Nishiyama.
Prime Minister Naoto Kan spoke with refugees living in a makeshift camp in the fishing village of Rikuzentakata, levelled by the tsunamis which struck on March 11 when Japan was rocked by a massive earthquake, leaving 28,000 dead and missing.

Teacher sacked over Facebook comments

New York:  A first-grade teacher in Paterson, N.J., was suspended on Thursday after she posted on her Facebook page that she felt like a warden overseeing future criminals, district officials said.

The teacher, who has not been publicly identified, was suspended with pay from her position at School 21 after parents complained to the school and asked that their children be removed from her class, district officials told The Record of North Jersey.

Terry Corallo, a spokeswoman for the Paterson district, e-mailed a statement on Friday confirming that the teacher was on paid administrative leave, adding that "this matter is a personnel issue that is under investigation."

On Friday, the teacher declined through her lawyer, Nancy Oxfeld, to comment.

Polite robber who said 'please' gets 60-month sentence


Seattle:  Saying "please" and "thank you" is a virtue, but for a robber in Seattle, politeness went only so far.

After a surveillance video showing Gregory Paul Hess robbing a Shell station appeared on YouTube, he was nicknamed the "polite robber."

A judge on Friday sentenced Gregory Paul Hess to 60 months in state prison for robbing a Shell station in February, ignoring the recommendation of the prosecutor and defense attorney, who argued that Mr. Hess' civility should win him the shortest possible sentence: 51 months.

Mr. Hess had been nicknamed the "polite robber" after a video of the robbery appeared on YouTube.

Japan reactor leaking radioactive water into ocean


Tokyo:  Highly radioactive water is leaking directly into the sea from a damaged pit near a crippled reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, safety officials said Saturday, the latest setback in the increasingly messy bid to regain control of the reactors.

Although higher levels of radiation have been detected in the ocean waters near the plant, the breach discovered Saturday is the first identified direct leak of such high levels of radiation into the sea.

The leak, found at a maintenance pit near the plant's No. 2 reactor, is a fresh reminder of the dangerous consequences of the strategy to cool the reactors and spent fuel storage pools by pumping hundreds of tons of water a day into them. While much of that water has evaporated, a significant portion has also turned into runoff.

Three workers at the plant, operated by Tokyo Electric Power Company, have been injured by stepping into pools of contaminated water inside one reactor complex, while above-normal levels of radiation have been detected in seawater near the plant.

Deadly protests against Quran burning reach Kandahar

Kandahar:  Violent protests over the burning of a Koran in Florida flared for a second straight day, with young men rampaging through the streets of this southern capital, flying Taliban flags and wielding sticks.

Eight people were killed and 61 injured in the disturbances, according to Zalmai Ayoubi, spokesman for the provincial governor. Kandahar has long been the heartland of the Taliban insurgency but has been relatively quiet in recent months since a surge of additional American troops arrived here.

The protests here came a day after a mob overran the headquarters of the United Nations in Mazar-i-Sharif Friday, killing 12 persons, seven of them international staff. The mob gathered after three mullahs at Friday Prayer urged action in response to the Koran burning by a pastor, Terry Jones, in Florida on March 20.

In Kandahar, several thousand young men, shouting slogans calling for death to Americans and to the Karzai government, were still rampaging after several hours on Saturday, setting tires aflame throughout the city, burning cars and attacking journalists trying to cover the disorder. Shops and businesses were closed and most people stayed off the street. Many of the protesters were waving the white flag of the Taliban.

Gaddafi rubbishes ceasefire offer by rebels


Tripoli:  Libyan government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim on Friday dismissed a ceasefire offer made by the rebels saying it was a "trick" and accused western leaders of "crimes against humanity".

The rebels said from Benghazi, their de facto capital, that they will agree to a cease-fire if Libyan Leader Moammar Gaddafipulls his military forces out of cities and allows peaceful protests against his regime.

But Moussa, speaking to a news conference in Tripoli, said that the rebels were making "impossible demands".

"So, okay, I could come to the rebels and say: 'rebels, I offer peace, get out of Benghazi on a ship, this is my condition.' You can't do that," he said.

Whole new way to land and take off


Washington:  Imagine an air traffic system where planes would no longer have to wait in long rush-hour lines before taking off, or have to circle the skies before landing. In this world, planes would be able to fly more direct routes and land along smoother glide paths.

Those are the changes the Federal Aviation Administration has been promising for years through an ambitious program to modernize the nation's air traffic system, and replace radars on the ground with satellite technology. The problem is that this new system, called NextGen, will cost an estimated $30 billion to $42 billion to complete. So far, the airlines have been reluctant to put up their half of the money for a system that will not be operational for at least a decade.

But NextGen, which stands for the Next Generation Air Transportation System, received a boost on Friday with House passage of a $59.7 billion bill that finances the F.A.A. over the next four years, providing much-needed stability to the agency's flagship program. Since 2007, the F.A.A. bill had been repeatedly stalled and its budget temporarily extended 18 times.

The bill, which was approved 223 to 196, largely along party lines, also cuts overall spending on aviation by $4 billion and includes a provision that would curb the right of airline employees to unionize. The bill from the Republican-dominated House must still be reconciled with a vastly different version that the Senate, controlled by Democrats, approved in February. The White House has said it will veto a final bill that includes the labor provision.

Large hole tears into plane, 118 on board


Phoenix:  One passenger said it was a "real quick blast, like a gun." Another called it "pandemonium." Still another described watching a flight attendant and another passenger pass out, their heads striking the seats in front of them as they lost consciousness.

Federal officials said it was a "fuselage rupture" -- a large hole on the top of the Boeing 737 -- that led to a drop in cabin pressure and a terrifying descent from 36,000 feet to an emergency landing at a military base in the Arizona desert.

No serious injuries were reported among the 118 aboard, according to Southwest Airlines, and the FBI said it was a "mechanical failure," not an act of terror or other foul play. The cause of the hole was not immediately known.

Passenger Brenda Reese said Flight 812 had just left Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport for Sacramento, Calif., when a "gunshot-like sound" woke her up. She said oxygen masks then dropped for passengers and flight attendants as the plane dove.

Job growth suggests resilience of US recovery


New York:  The United States economy showed signs of kicking into gear in March, as the Labor Department reported Friday that it added 216,000 jobs and knocked the unemployment rate down another jot, to 8.8 percent.

Turmoil is found in many corners of the global economy, and oil prices have been rising, so economists waited to see if these storms would affect hiring. The answer, so far, appears to be no. The gain in jobs slightly exceeded economists' expectations.

Manufacturing continued what a few years ago would have been considered an unlikely -- if still modest -- revival, adding 17,000 jobs. Health care added 37,000 jobs, and professional and business services added another 78,000, although about 37 percent of that came from increases in temporary help. It was the 13th straight month of private-sector job growth.

March's numbers, however, also offered cautionary signs that the nation's economic ills are not entirely behind it. The number of long-term unemployed -- that is, those jobless for 27 weeks or more -- remained painfully high, at more than six million.

2 UN staff killed by Afghan mob were beheaded

Kabul:  Protesters angered by the burning of a Koran by a fringe American pastor in Florida mobbed offices of the United Nations in northern Afghanistan on Friday, killing ten foreign staff members and beheading two of the victims, according to an Afghan police spokesman. Five Afghans were also killed.

The attack began when hundreds of demonstrators, some of them armed, poured out of mosques after Friday Prayer and headed to the headquarters of the United Nations in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif. They disarmed the guards and overran the compound, according to Lal Mohammad Ahmadzai, spokesman for Gen. Daoud Daoud, the Afghan National Police commander for northern Afghanistan.

A spokesman for the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, Kieran Dwyer, said the attack had occurred during a demonstration. "We can confirm there have been casualties, including U.N. personnel, but the situation on the ground remains very confusing," he said. He added that Staffan de Mistura, the top United Nations official in Afghanistan, was en route to Mazar-i-Sharif.

Tolo TV news in Kabul reported that the head of the United Nations mission in the city was among the victims, but that could not be confirmed.

Mirwais Zabi, director of the public health hospital in Mazar-i-Sharif, said 24 wounded Afghan civilians and five dead Afghan civilians were brought to the hospital, with more wounded expected. Other reports said that the Afghan dead included some of the guards.

Mr. Ahmadzai, the police spokesman, said the crowd was angry about the burning of the Koran after a mock trial overseen by Pastor Terry Jones on Mar. 20. Mr. Jones had caused an international uproar by threatening to burn the Koran last Sept. 11, and demonstrations at the time led to deaths throughout Afghanistan, but on a small scale. Mr. Jones subsequently had publicly promised not to burn a Koran, but then went ahead last month, after holding a mock trial of the Koran at his fringe church in Gainesville, Fla.

After disarming the United Nations compound's guards, the crowd surged inside. Eight of the foreign staffers, whose nationalities were not known immediately, were killed by gunfire, and two others were captured and then beheaded, Mr. Ahmadzai said. He added that 15 people had so far been arrested for their part in the attack, and that the Afghan authorities had brought the situation under control.

Elsewhere in Afghanistan, six American soldiers have been killed in a single operation in eastern Afghanistan on Wednesday and Thursday, a spokesman for the international coalition said Friday.

"I can confirm that six coalition soldiers have been identified as US soldiers, and were all killed as part of the same operation, but in three separate incidents," said Maj. Tim James.

The operation, a helicopter-borne assault into a remote part of Kunar Province close to the Pakistani border, was ongoing. The area is frequently used to infiltrate fighters from Pakistan. The purpose of the operation, Major James said, was to "disrupt insurgent operations."

The governor of Kunar Province, Said Fazlullah Wahidi, said the operation began Wednesday as a joint Afghan and American air and ground operation in the districts of Sarkani and Marawara, close to the border of Pakistan. He said that 14 insurgents were killed and 10 wounded, but had no information about Afghan government casualties.

Rep training on Google Nexus S 4G to begin April 18th with consumer launch set for April 24th?

Rep training on Google Nexus S 4G to begin April 18th with consumer launch set for April 24th?
A photograph of what appears to be a publication for phone reps, shows an ad or notice from Samsung Mobile that the manufacturer will be launching the Google Nexus S 4G on Sprint April 18th for training purposes. The notice tells reps that if they take the training, pass the quiz on the first attempt and sell at least one Nexus S 4G, they will earn an extra $10.

According to a source for Android Central, the consumer launch of the handset is due one or two weeks after the April 18th training release with April 24th a very possible date. The WiMAX enabled version of the Google Nexus S has basically the same specs as the Nexus S with the added ability to connect to Sprint's 4G pipeline. That means it offers a 4 inch Super AMOLED display, a 1GHz Hummingbird processor and a front (.3MP) and rear facing (5MP) camera. Both models will have NFC support and of course, come with Android 2.3 right out of the box.

The Google Nexus S 4G is expected to be priced at $199.99 by Sprint, with a signed 2-year contract. If you're interested in using the phone's ability as a Mobile Hotspot, it will cost you an additional $29.99 to be able to hook up as many as 6 Wi-Fi enabled devices to Wi-Fi

source: AndroidCentral
Rep training on Google Nexus S 4G to begin April 18th with consumer launch set for April 24th?
With the Google Nexus S 4G expected to launch April 18th for rep training, the consumer rollout could come around April 24th

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