Wednesday, June 30, 2010

White people for rent in China

In China, white people can be rented.

For a day, a weekend, a week, up to even a month or two, Chinese companies are willing to pay high prices for fair-faced foreigners to join them as fake employees or business partners.

Some call it "White Guy Window Dressing." To others, it's known as the "White Guy in a Tie" events, "The Token White Guy Gig," or, simply, a "Face Job."

And it is, essentially, all about the age-old Chinese concept of face. To have a few foreigners hanging around means a company has prestige, money and the increasingly crucial connections -- real or not -- to businesses abroad.

"Face, we say in China, is more important than life itself," said Zhang Haihua, author of "Think Like Chinese." "Because Western countries are so developed, people think they are more well off, so people think that if a company can hire foreigners, it must have a lot of money and have very important connections overseas. So when they really want to impress someone, they may roll out a foreigner."

Or rent one.

Last year, Jonathan Zatkin, an American actor who lives in Beijing, posed as the vice president of an Italian jewelry company that had, allegedly, been in a partnership with a Chinese jewelry chain for a decade.

When is being foreign a career advantage?

Zatkin was paid 2,000 yuan (about $300) to fly, along with a couple of Russian models, to a small city in the central province of Henan where he delivered a speech for the grand opening ceremony of a jewelry store there.

"I was up on stage with the mayor of the town, and I made a speech about how wonderful it was to work with the company for 10 years and how we were so proud of all of the work they had done for us in China," Zatkin said. "They put up a big bandstand and the whole town was there and some other local muckety-mucks."

The requirements for these jobs are simple. 1. Be white. 2. Do not speak any Chinese, or really speak at all, unless asked. 3. Pretend like you just got off of an airplane yesterday.

Those who go for such gigs tend to be unemployed actors or models, part-time English teachers or other expats looking to earn a few extra bucks. Often they are jobs at a second- or third-tier city, where the presence of pale-faced foreigners is needed to impress local officials, secure a contract or simply to fulfill a claim of being international.

"Occasionally companies want a foreign face to go to meetings and conferences or to go to dinners and lunches and smile at the clients and shake people's hands," read an ad posted by a company called Rent A Laowai (Chinese for "foreigner") on the online classified site thebeijinger.com.

It continued: "There are job opportunities for girls who are pretty and for men who can look good in a suit."

People like Brad Smith. When Smith -- the nom de plume of the Beijing-based American actor -- answered CNN's phone call on a recent morning, he was standing outside a meeting room at a Ramada Inn in Hangzhou, a city about 100 miles outside of Shanghai. Today's job: Pretend to be an architect from New York and give design plans for a new museum to local officials.

"They have not told me what my name is today. I think it is Lawrence or something," said Smith -- unlike some jobs, no fake business cards were given to hand out.

Earlier that morning he went over his script with his Chinese "business partners" at a Kentucky Fried Chicken. "It says, 'Good morning distinguished leaders. It is my privilege to participate in this program'," said Smith, who asked that his real name not be used for fear it could jeopardize future jobs.

If Smith is asked a question, he is told to pretend to answer as his "translator" pretends to understand.

Occasionally, these jobs can go awry. Smith said 18 months ago Beijing police showed up at his apartment after a financial company he worked at for a couple of months in Xi'an, a city in western China, allegedly swindled millions of yuan out of clients.

"That company said I was the guy in charge," he said. "I didn't even remember the company's name. After that, I decided I was never going to use my passport again with these fake companies. The small gigs are much less dangerous." Sometimes companies will hire Caucasians simply to sit in the office a few hours a day near the window where clients and customers can see them.

White women are also a hot commodity, sometimes to pose as phony foreign girlfriends, or, in the case of Vicky Mohieddeen, to pretend to be an oil tycoon.

Mohieddeen, who is Scottish, took a job in 2008 to attend what she describes as some sort of "oil drilling conference" in Shandong province for 300 yuan ($44). Several busloads of foreigners, with nationalities ranging from Pakistani to Nigerian, were trucked to the event, she said. They were greeted by brass bands and feted with a sumptuous dinner.

"I was like, 'Yeah, we have a lot of oil in Scotland.' I didn't know what to say. It was a bit nerve-racking. We were guests of honor of the vice mayor. We were put in a nice hotel. It was quite fancy."

For Mohieddeen, who had just arrived in Beijing at the time, the experience, albeit bizarre, was an introduction to a side of China most foreigners will never see.

"It is part of what China is all about, you know," Mohieddeen said. "There is quite an elaborate fantasy world going on here where if everyone buys into it, it does not matter if it is the truth. Those kinds of experiences give me a fuller understanding of the way the culture works."


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DWC-Al Maktoum International - World's largest airport

Debt-laden Dubai opened its second airport yesterday, three weeks after its flagship carrier Emirates placed a major order for Airbus 380 superjumbos, enforcing its status as an air transport hub.

The first plane landed on the sole runway of the Dubai World Central-Al Maktoum International Airport -- named after the emirate's ruling family, Dubai Airports said in a statement.

Three air freight companies have begun operations from the new airport with 12 others due to follow, it said.

The first phase be confined to freight traffic, with a capacity to handle 250,000 tonnes annually while passenger traffic was scheduled to begin in March 2011, with an annual capacity of five million passengers.

"We have achieved another important step towards completing" the airport, said Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed al-Maktoum, the head of the Dubai Civil Aviation Authority.

Situated on the desert outskirts of Dubai and close to the Jebel Ali port and its large free zone, DWC-Al Maktoum International is touted to become the world's largest airport when completed at an undisclosed date.

But authorities said that when it is all up and running the new airport will be able to handle 160 million passengers and 12 million tonnes of cargo, and have five runways.

Dubai, a city of around two million people, already boasts the biggest airport in the Middle East, which handled 42 million passengers in 2009 -- a figure expected to surge to 100 million by 2020, said Jamal al-Hai, Dubai Airports Senior Vice President for Strategic Affairs.

"Our development follows a strategy aimed at turning Dubai into the centre of the new silk route," linking east to west, he said.

Thanks to the strategic location and developed infrastructure of Dubai, which has established itself as a popular tourist destination and a regional business hub, air transport accounts for over 25 per cent of the emirate's gross domestic product, Hai said.

He said that the capacity of the current Dubai airport stands at 65 million passengers, and should increase to 75 million in 2012 with the completion of the third concourse that will be exclusively used by the A380 superjumbos.

Emirates, the largest Middle East carrier, had earlier this month reinforced its status as the largest single customer of the Airbus A380, by placing a new order for 32 units worth $US11.5 billion ($A13.1. billion)

The order made in Berlin brought Emirates' total orders of the superjumbo jet to 90 units, 10 of which are already in service.

"Emirates will be announcing new aircraft orders at the Farnborough Airshow" in England, which opens on July 19, an Emirates spokesman said.

The company is also the largest single operator of the Boeing 777 with 85 units in service and 21 on order.

The once bustling city state of Dubai was badly hit by the global financial crisis that forced Dubai World, the biggest state-owned conglomerate, to seek restructuring of $US23.5 billion of debt.

But Dubai's ruler Sheikh Mohammad bin Rashed al-Maktoum justified this week Emirates' new order by the "growth" in Dubai's airport infrastructure, the number of passengers and tourists visiting the emirate.

"The worst is over and Dubai is looking for new opportunities for growth," he said in an interview with CNN.

Emirates announced in May a whopping 416-per cent surge in annual net profit which reached $US964 million in the past financial year, bucking the global trend in the airline industry.

Recommended reading:
* 818 metres Burj Dubai now open
* No more massage parlours licenses for Dubai
* Dubai Property Crash 2009

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Tuesday, June 29, 2010

How do you hold your iPhone?

Depending on how you hold your iPhone 4 during calls you may or may not notice your reception drop. Some haven't seen it at all, but many have definitely experienced it while browsing, emailing or using apps. We think it has a bit to do with your initial reception and people in stronger coverage areas are affected less. But we're also pretty sure — and Apple confirms it — that touching the antenna does affect things — whether or not it has the final result of killing calls or speed of data connection.

This is how Apple explained it:

"Gripping any mobile phone will result in some attenuation of its antenna performance, with certain places being worse than others depending on the placement of the antennas. This is a fact of life for every wireless phone.

With our past devices, the antenna performance when the phone was held in a certain way didn't seem to be an issue or stand out in particular. But with the iPhone 4 we're definitely seeing an effect, particularly when using data or tapping away on our on-screen keyboards."

Stop holding it wrong

Apple has explained that the iPhone 4 reception issues end when people just plain stop holding their devices the wrong way. DON'T LISTEN TO APPLE.

Hold your iPhone like any NOKIA Phone

Read more at How do you hold your Nokia? The key function on any Nokia device is its ability to make phone calls. After all, that’s why we know them universally as mobile phones (or smart phones, feature phones or mobile computers – though the same grip styles work for those, too). One of the main things we’ve found about the 1 billion plus Nokia devices that are in use today is that when making a phone call, people generally tend to hold their phone like a…. well, like a phone. Providing a wide range of methods and grips for people to hold their phones, without interfering with the antennae, has been an essential feature of every device Nokia has built.

Of course, feel free to ignore all of the above because realistically, you’re free to hold your Nokia device any way you like. And you won’t suffer any signal loss.

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HIGH 5 "Jom Rasa & Menang" Contest July 2010

HIGH 5 Silver Bird Group Berhad just launched their HIGH 5 "Jom Rasa & Menang" Contest. The contest start from July 01, 2010 until August 31, 2010. Silver Bird Group is offering 10x Apple iPad 16G, 15x RM1,000 shopping vouchers and 35x RM200 shopping vouchers as prizes.

To participate in this simple contest, you must down the contest form and complete the entry with proof of purchase (i.e. a barcode sticker from the bread products).


Great chance to get free iPad, eh.

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American pilot killed in helicopter crashes in Malaysia

Erickson Sky Crane loggingMalaysian state of Sarawak holds the dubious record of having the most number of helicopter crashes in the country in the past seven years, which saw 23 people perished in the flames.The latest incident involved an Erickson Sky Crane, which was used for carrying logs, last Saturday.

Its American pilot William Charles Scott died in the aerial logging mishap which took place about 50 miles south of Long Akah in Ulu Baram.

Fellow American co-worker, David William Bergin, survived the nightmare with spinal injuries, bruises and knocks.

Following this incident, The Borneo Post decided to take a look back at helicopter mishaps in the state over the years – starting with the crash of a Bell helicopter at Mt Murud on July 17, 2003.

That ill-fated Bell 206 helicopter crashed within minutes after taking off from a timber camp located some three and a half hours drive by road from Lawas town.

The pilot and the president of SIB Sarawak Kalib Besar were killed.

Then on July 12 the following year, seven individuals, including Dato Dr Judson Sakai Tagal, Marcos Raja and senior officers of Sesco, died when the Bell 206 L 4 helicopter they were in plunged into a mountain.

On August 16 the same year, a Nuri helicopter belonging to the RMAF went down 15km North West of Mt Murud while ferrying troops from 20 RAMD to Ba Kelalan.

Three people on board were killed while seven were injured.

Not long after that incident, another Bell 206 helicopter crashed in Kuching division, killing all four on board.

Among those killed were the bodyguard of Tan Sri Adenan Satem and the political secretary to Deputy Chief Minister Datuk Patinggi Tan Sri Alfred Jabu Numpang.

On June 18, 2005, an MHS Super Puma plunged into the sea after it crashed landed in the South China Sea while ferrying 11 SHELL and contractor’s staff to the B11 gas production platform in Bintulu.

Luckily, all on board survived the incident to tell the tale of their ordeal and how their aircraft sunk to the bottom within minutes.

A month later, a Bell L-4 helicopter crashed in the mountainous region near Long Singgut, Ulu Baleh, killing three while one survived.

The crash site was a day’s journey upriver from Kapit.

More grim news followed on Sept 3, 2005, when a logging helicopter crashed and burst into flames in Kapit Division during heavy rain, killing three Russian nationals on board.

The ill-fated helicopter, of the KAMOV KA-32 model, was believed to be involved in winching logs which would be transferred to waiting lorries.

Those who died were the pilot, an engineer and a mechanic.

In Jan 2007, a Super Puma L-2 helicopter belonging to the Malaysian Helicopter Services plunged into the rough South China Sea with eight offshore crews and two pilots. The helicopter went down at about 2.30 pm between the D-35 and Bayan platform.

One passenger was reported missing while the rest were rescued, about 80km from Bintulu.

Recommended reading:
* AC313 - China made large civilian helicopter
* Word's First Flying Luxury Hotel - Hotelicopter
* Michael Robert Dacre, Jetpod inventor died

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Malware worms tops list of PC threats

Malware (malicious software) continues to be the No 1 threat to personal computers, according to Security Intelligence Report version 8 (SIRv8), released by Microsoft Corp.

It showed that software worms accounted for 27.8% of all infected computer systems, followed by trojan software (16.6%), with miscellaneous other potentially dangerous software (including browser modifiers and remote-control programs) at 13.8%.

Jacqueline Peterson-Jarvis, Microsoft Asia-Pacific's regional security and privacy lead, said SIRv8 revealed that four out of every 1,000 computers scanned in Malaysia were infected by malware during the second half of last year.

"Although, this figure is significantly lower than the worldwide average of seven out of every 1,000 PCs, it is still cause for concern," she said.

Peterson-Jarvis said the infamous Win32/Conficker worm was the top threat in Malaysia between July and December last year.

"It infects other computers across a network (and) by spreading via removable drives, exploiting weak passwords or vulnerability in the Windows Server operating system," she said.

The report also showed that enterprise networks continue to be susceptible to worms while the computers of home users are more exposed to malware and social-engineering threats.

"419 scams (such as the Nigerian letter scam via e-mail) continue to increase significantly and rogue security software posing as a legitimate security application to deceive users, are issues for home users," said Peterson-Jarvis.

Application loopholes continue to account for a large majority of all vulnerabilities, compared to operating system and browser vulnerabilities, according to SIRv8.

"This is because third-party applications have not been updated regularly and therefore are exposed to online threats," she said.

She recommended users protect their computer systems by updating all software regularly, running antivirus software from a trusted vendor and keeping it updated, and using a secure web browser.

SIRv8 provides a comprehensive view of global online-threats in 26 countries from July to December 2009. It also contains guidelines on how to develop in-depth defence strategies to combat the online threats.

The data for the report was collected through Microsoft's various security products and services, including Windows' Malicious Software Removal Tool, Forefront Online Protection for Exchange and Forefront Client Security, Microsoft Security Essentials, Windows Live Hotmail and Bing.

SIRv8 can be downloaded at www.microsoft.com/sir.

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Monday, June 28, 2010

Your Android based devices are totally under Google's control

Did you know that Google developed technologies and processes to remotely remove an installed application from devices such as a mobile phone. Or any devices running Android. The remote application removal feature is one of many security controls Android possesses to help protect users from malicious applications.

In case of an emergency, a dangerous application could be removed from active circulation in a rapid and scalable manner to prevent further exposure to users. While Google hope to not have to use it, they know that they have the capability to take swift action on behalf of users’ safety when needed.

All these remote updating is called Over-The-Air update system and if Google can remove malicious applications from your devices they can also planted their own malicious applications. Now, that is a dangerous possibility. Your Android based devices are totally under Google's control.

Recommended reading:
* Eclair - The droolworthy Android 2.0
* Google released Android Froyo

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Sunday, June 27, 2010

What Jorge Larrionda saw

Frank Lampard never scored in last night England-Germany WC 2010 game. See below, the ball dropped before the line.



Recommended reading:
* Jorge Larrionda help Germany humiliate England

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150 million Bangladeshi guzzled tainted groundwater

Hanufa Bibi stoops in a worn sari and mismatched flip-flops to work the hand pump on her backyard well. Spurts of clear water wash grains of rice from her hands, but she can never get them clean.

Thick black warts tattoo her palms and fingers, the result of drinking arsenic-laced well water for years. It's a legacy that new research has linked to one in five deaths among those exposed in Bangladesh — an impoverished country where up to half of its 150 million people have guzzled tainted groundwater.

The World Health Organization has called it "the largest mass poisoning of a population in history," as countless new wells continue to be dug here daily without testing the water for toxins.

"The magnitude of the arsenic problem is 50 times worse than Chernobyl," said Richard Wilson, president of the nonprofit Arsenic Foundation and a physics professor emeritus at Harvard University who was not involved in the study. "But it doesn't have 50 times the attention paid to it."

The issue surfaced about two decades ago, after some 10 million shallow hand-pump wells like Bibi's were sunk across the country in the 1970s with money from international donors.

The wells were meant to provide clean drinking water to help prevent deadly waterborne diseases, such as cholera. But they unintentionally tapped into arsenic deposits in the ground, releasing the odorless, colorless and tasteless toxin into water used for drinking and cooking. Arsenic has been linked to cancers, liver ailments, skin diseases, heart problems and other health issues.

The new research, funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health and published online June 19 in The Lancet medical journal, is the first to examine how drinking arsenic-contaminated water over time shaves years off lives.

For the nearly 12,000 people followed over 10 years in the country's Araihazar region east of the capital, researchers found that even low doses of arsenic in drinking water could increase the chances of early death. The study also found that damage on all levels appears to be permanent.

"It's similar to tobacco smoking. Once you smoke for 20 years and then you stop smoking, your risk of getting tobacco-induced cancer over the next decade will still be high," co-author Habibul Ahsan from the University of Chicago's Center for Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention said by phone. "Even if, say, for some miracle all the individuals are provided arsenic-free water from tomorrow, these people will also be at a higher risk of dying for many years to come."

More than 75 percent of those studied drank arsenic-contaminated water above WHO's recommended safe limits. About a quarter of deaths from chronic illnesses and a fifth of the total 407 adult deaths were attributed to arsenic.

About half of the 10,000 people living in Bibi's tropical village, which was not part of the study, are drinking arsenic. Victims get sick slowly, and it takes years to develop tiny black or white dots peppering the skin. Most people exposed never develop these classic symptoms at all.

All the tubewells in Chandipur village are contaminated. Red paint once coated every pump's handle as a warning of the danger lurking inside, but the color and message have long faded. None of the tiny palm-shaded shacks have indoor plumbing, and some villagers like Bibi use the well water to avoid walking long distances in the heat to draw foul-tasting surface water from stagnant ponds used for bathing or watering livestock.

"I knew before marriage that there was arsenic in the tubewell, but I decided to take it," says Bibi, who's been drinking the water nearly 20 years. "The water quality of this tubewell is much better than others."

Arsenic poisoning affects some 70 countries, including the U.S., Chile, Vietnam and Cambodia. But the biggest problem by far is in Bangladesh, a country roughly the size of Iowa with about half the U.S. population crammed into it.

It is one of the world's poorest nations, where half the people live on just $1 a day. Few can afford to dig deep wells that draw safe water from aquifers below arsenic-contaminated layers. Filters are expensive or difficult to maintain, and there has been no concerted effort to harness rainwater for daily use. The number of new wells doubled every five years during the study.

Some argue that the international community must help fix the problem created by the wells they first dug.

"They've known about it for at least 20 years, so we expected them to be much more aggressive on this issue," said Dr. Mahmuder Rahman, a retired professor at Dhaka National Medical College and Hospital, who has worked for years on the arsenic issue. "They've got a moral responsibility to do it. Time is running out."

In March, the United Nations and Bangladesh's government announced a plan to provide safe drinking water to all by next year. But the report identified only about 20 million people still drinking high levels of arsenic. It did not address the tens of millions more exposed to lower concentrations.

It also said more research was needed to determine whether arsenic is entering the food chain through rice irrigated with tainted water, and how the poison affects pregnancies and children.

Back in Bibi's village, she digs at her burning hands and the soles of her feet with a razor blade, ripping at the blackened calluses until they bleed. She complains of fevers and constant fatigue, and the 40-year-old's face sags as she shuffles into her small house like a woman twice her age.

She has never seen a doctor. She's more concerned about the damage the arsenic has done to her family's social standing. Her two teenage daughters were recently forced to marry men considered beneath them because of the stigma surrounding the arsenic-infected family.

She worries that if her husband cannot make good on the dowry he promised, the girls will be sent back home forever damaged, like another young woman in the village blighted by arsenic.

"People don't want to eat anything from my hands. They are afraid," Bibi says softly, looking down in shame, her head covered by the red flowered sari. "No one wants to touch me."

Recommended reading:
* 1 Billion People Lack Access To Clean Water
* Safe Reusable Water Bottles
* Bottled Water vs Tap Water
* Facebook banned in Bangladesh
* Bangladeshi rape victim get 101 lashes

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Jorge Larrionda help Germany humiliate England

Germany inflicted England's record World Cup finals defeat on Sunday after a 4-1 victory in their Last 16 match that was overshadowed by one of the worst refereeing mistakes in the tournament's history.

Photo: The England's goal that never was.

Germany's superior movement and ruthless finishing made them worthy winners on an afternoon when England's defending was shockingly sub-standard and their talisman, Wayne Rooney, once again failed to deliver on the game's biggest stage.

But there is no saying what would have happened if England had not been denied a goal that would have levelled the match at 2-2 just before half-time, when a Frank Lampard shot bounced off the underside of the bar and landed a yard over the goal-line. With all the available technologies, FIFA still opts for visual judgement from the referee.

Matthew Upson had just headed England back into the match after Miroslav Klose and Lukas Podolski had given Germany a two-goal advantage.

Two second-half goals for Thomas Mueller enabled the Germans to run up their most convincing win against their biggest rivals, but they were both scored on the counter-attack as England sought an equaliser they should not have been obliged to chase.

Referee Jorge Larrionda's misjudgement was all the more inexplicable because he was well-placed to see the incident. Yet, after looking across at his linesman, he waved play on.

England coach Fabio Capello said that the Lampard moment was the turning point.

"The Lampard incident was one of the most important in the match," said Capello.

"The referee made one of the biggest mistakes, but Germany are a great team, we were caught out on the counter-attack.

"This is football. Little things make all the difference."

The controversy over the incident will rumble on but England will also have to ask themselves some hard questions after what was, at times, a shambolic display.

Klose was delighted with his team's efforts.

"We were aggressive from the first minute, unlike in the Ghana game (which Germany won 1-0). The win was highly deserved," said Klose.

"We have always said our goal is the semi-finals at least. That's what we want to reach."

England's vulnerability at the back had been exposed early on and, after goalkeeper David James had denied Mueller, Klose exploited it to get on the end of goalkeeper Manuel Neuer's upfield punt to give Germany the lead.

John Terry allowed the ball to fly over his head and Klose outmuscled and outpaced Upson before flicking the ball past James with the outside of his boot.

Mueller did the damage for Germany's second. Taking Klose's first-time pass, the Bayern Munich midfielder broke into the box before switching the ball to Podolski, who beat James at his near post from a tight angle.

Neuer pulled off a superb reflex save at close range to prevent Lampard finishing off James Milner's low cross just before Upson gave England a lifeline.

Germany's goalkeeper had been impressive up to then but his lack of experience showed when he charged off his line and got nowhere near the cross from Steven Gerrard that the West Ham defender nodded in.

Lampard himself came agonisingly close to an equaliser seven minutes after the restart, hammering a free-kick from nearly 40 yards against the bar with Neuer struggling to cover.

Germany centreback Arne Friedrich, who had already been booked, was fortunate to stay on the pitch after a cynical body check on Rooney.

The resulting free-kick was blocked by the German wall and Germany immediately swept upfield to claim their third goal.

Bastian Schweinsteiger did most of the leg work through the inside left channel before switching the ball to Mueller who beat James at his near post with a fiercely struck drive from 12 yards.

The fourth was virtually a carbon copy, although this time it was Mesut Ozil who wreaked havoc after latching on to a punted clearance towards the left touchline.

The Werder Bremen star powered away from Gareth Barry with ease before cutting in to the box to present Mueller with the simplest of a tap-ins.

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Saturday, June 26, 2010

Vuvuzela can spread germs

Vuvuzelas aren't just buzzing loud and annoying but they can spread germs too, a South African clinic has warned.

The clinic urged fans to keep their lips on their own horns to avoid catching colds.

"A fan instrument such as the much-loved vuvuzela can unfortunately blow spittle and germs from infected individuals on to other people in crowded areas and may be a health risk for infectious illnesses such as flu," Netcare Travel Clinics doctor Pete Vincent said.

He also warned that sharing vuvuzelas can spread germs, while blowing too hard can damage the throat.

The warning comes after a woman in Cape Town ruptured her throat during a trumpet-blowing competition.

The din from the tuneless plastic trumpets have become the defining sound of South Africa's World Cup, leaving television networks hunting for ways to tune out the constant buzz from their broadcasts.

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xxx Porn Domain

xxx Porn DomainThe company that oversees web addresses is expected to give the go-ahead today for the creation of a .xxx suffix for websites with pornographic content, company officials indicated .

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), which oversees the internet on behalf of the US government, has in the past resisted creating a .xxx generic domain name system akin to those for .com and .net.

It has in recent years repeatedly rejected a request by US company ICM Registry to sign off on the .xxx domain.

But members of ICANN's board have argued that in order to maintain neutrality in dealing with domain name assignations, it should create .xxx and allow websites with sexually explicit content to start using the suffix on a voluntary basis.

"If expedited due diligence results are successful, then staff will proceed into contract negotiations with ICM [over .xxx]," ICANN's general counsel John Jeffrey told delegates at a week-long ICANN meeting in Brussels on Thursday.

Online pornography is a vast industry. Figures collated by Internet Pornography Statistics suggest more than $US3000 ($3460) is spent on internet pornography every second, with "sex" the number one search term in the world, accounting for 25 per cent of all internet searches.

With an estimated 370 million pornographic websites on the internet, .xxx could become one of the largest domain name repositories, as big if not bigger than .com.

But some members of the adult entertainment industry oppose .xxx, saying it will invite censorship and harm their business. Members of the American religious right also oppose its creation on moral grounds.

ICANN is expected to make a formal announcement on its decision on Friday.

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Friday, June 25, 2010

Rape-aXe - Anti-rape female condoms

Rape-aXe - Anti-rape female condomsSouth African Dr. Sonnet Ehlers was on call one night four decades ago when a devastated rape victim walked in. Her eyes were lifeless; she was like a breathing corpse.

Read also Nation of rapist - South Africa.

"She looked at me and said, 'If only I had teeth down there,'" recalled Ehlers, who was a 20-year-old medical researcher at the time. "I promised her I'd do something to help people like her one day."

Forty years later, Rape-aXe was born.

Ehlers is distributing the female condoms in the various South African cities where the World Cup soccer games are taking place.

The woman inserts the latex condom like a tampon. Jagged rows of teeth-like hooks line its inside and attach on a man's penis during penetration, Ehlers said.

Once it lodges, only a doctor can remove it -- a procedure Ehlers hopes will be done with authorities on standby to make an arrest.

"It hurts, he cannot pee and walk when it's on," she said. "If he tries to remove it, it will clasp even tighter... however, it doesn't break the skin, and there's no danger of fluid exposure."

Ehlers said she sold her house and car to launch the project, and she planned to distribute 30,000 free devices under supervision during the World Cup period.

"I consulted engineers, gynecologists and psychologists to help in the design and make sure it was safe," she said.

After the trial period, they'll be available for about $2 a piece. She hopes the women will report back to her.

"The ideal situation would be for a woman to wear this when she's going out on some kind of blind date ... or to an area she's not comfortable with," she said.

The mother of two daughters said she visited prisons and talked to convicted rapists to find out whether such a device would have made them rethink their actions.

Some said it would have, Ehlers said.

Critics say the female condom is not a long-term solution and makes women vulnerable to more violence from men trapped by the device.

It's also a form of "enslavement," said Victoria Kajja, a fellow for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the east African country of Uganda. "The fears surrounding the victim, the act of wearing the condom in anticipation of being assaulted all represent enslavement that no woman should be subjected to."

Kajja said the device constantly reminds women of their vulnerability.

"It not only presents the victim with a false sense of security, but psychological trauma," she added. "It also does not help with the psychological problems that manifest after assaults."

However, its one advantage is it allows justice to be served, she said.

Various rights organizations that work in South Africa declined to comment, including Human Rights Watch and Care International.

South Africa has one of the highest rape rates in the world, Human Rights Watch says on its website. A 2009 report by the nation's Medical Research Council found that 28 percent of men surveyed had raped a woman or girl, with one in 20 saying they had raped in the past year, according to Human Rights Watch.

In most African countries, rape convictions are not common. Affected women don't get immediate access to medical care, and DNA tests to provide evidence are unaffordable.
"Women and girls who experience these violations are denied justice, factors that contribute to the normalization of rape and violence in South African society," Human Rights Watch says.

Women take drastic measures to prevent rape in South Africa, Ehlers said, with some wearing extra tight biker shorts and others inserting razor blades wrapped in sponges in their private parts.

Critics have accused her of developing a medieval device to fight rape.

"Yes, my device may be a medieval, but it's for a medieval deed that has been around for decades," she said. "I believe something's got to be done ... and this will make some men rethink before they assault a woman."

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Thursday, June 24, 2010

Google released Android Froyo

Android FroyoEvery day 160,000 Android-powered devices are activated -- that’s nearly two devices every second, used for the first time by people from New York to New Zealand.

Android started with one simple idea: Provide a powerful, open mobile platform to drive faster innovation for the benefit of consumers. This idea has come to life around the world. Today, there are 60 compatible Android devices, delivered via a global partnership network of 21 OEMs and 59 carriers in 49 countries. The volume and variety of Android devices continues to exceed even our most optimistic expectations. In some instances, Android devices are selling faster than they can be manufactured.

With that, Google announced that they are open-sourcing the new 2.2 version of Android, which they called Froyo, to their partners who manufacture Android devices around the world. Customers will enjoy great new features and improved browser performance. And developers will benefit from new tools such as Android cloud-to-device messaging (which makes it easier for mobile applications to sync data).

Related links:
* Android 2.2 and developers goodies

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Bring the vuvuzela noise to your home page

What's the latest buzz or controversy about the FIFA World Cup 2010? It's more of a buzzing sound, and it's coming from thousands of soccer enthusiasts blowing on their vuvuzelas.

These plastic stadium horns are wildly popular in South Africa and are used to motivate the soccer team. It's a similar phenomenon to team chants or songs. While a single vuvuzela sounds like an "elephant trumpeting," several hundred vuvuzelas sound like a swarm of angry bees.

This deafening drone has become the unofficial soundtrack to the 2010 World Cup. Since FIFA decided not to ban the horns, they have also become the center of a worldwide controversy.

For those who can stand the sound, there's a site called Vuvuzela Time that brings the noise of a World Cup match right to your web browser. Not only can you search Google to the tune of South Africa's most famous sound, but you can also open your favorite pages and check your email as if you had brought your laptop to a World Cup match. Just type in "http://www.vuvuzela-time.co.uk/" followed by the URL of the website you'd like to vuvuzela-ize into your browser.

For example: http://www.vuvuzela-time.co.uk/www.blogtactic.com will give you BlogTactic on vuvuzelas.

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Improved Gmail for iPad

If you've been using the web-based version of Gmail on the iPad, you may have noticed that yesterday you started to have a big, full screen compose window for writing messages. Instead of splitting the screen between your inbox and the compose view, Google has updated the interface to hide the inbox messages on the side and make more of the text you're working on visible at once.



For more info, head to New Compose Interface for Gmail on iPad as well as More room to compose messages in Gmail on the iPad.

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Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Human Communication redefined by Google Voice

What is possible when you combine your regular phone service with the latest web technology. It’s even more amazing to think about how far communication has come over the last couple hundred years. To put things in context, Google has created this infographic to visualize some recent history of human communication and how Google Voice uses the web to help people communicate in more ways than ever before.

Human Communication redefined by Google Voice

Google Voice anyone?

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Boehringer Ingelheim - Female Viagra rejected

A "pink pill" to boost women's sex drive remains elusive after a decade of searching by some of the world's biggest drugmakers. Forget about the pink pill or the blue pill, just eat pork to spice up your sex life.

A panel of health experts on Friday rejected the latest offering submitted for federal approval: an antidepressant drug that failed to increase sexual desire in two studies.

The Food and Drug Administration's panel of reproductive advisers voted unanimously that the benefits of the pill from Boehringer Ingelheim did not outweigh side effects, including fatigue, depression and fainting spells.

"I am convinced that women's sexual health is important and that many women suffer from sexual dysfunction, but I'm not convinced of a clinically meaningful benefit for this drug," said panelist Paula Hillard, a gynecologist from Stanford University School of Medicine.

The FDA will make its own decision on the drug in coming months, though it usually follows the advice of its panelists.

The drug flibanerin, which acts on serotonin and other brain chemicals, was originally studied as a depression therapy, but then repurposed as a libido pill after women reported unusually high levels of sexual satisfaction.

Despite a modest uptick in sexually satisfying events reported in the studies, panelists said the drug's benefits were not strong enough to warrant approval as a daily pill for women.

The attempt to trigger sexual interest through brain chemistry is the drug industry's latest approach to find a female equivalent to the blockbuster success of Pfizer's erectile dysfunction drug, Viagra.

Since that drug's 1998 launch, more than two dozen experimental therapies have been studied for so-called "female sexual dysfunction," a market worth an estimated $2 billion.

Initially, Pfizer tested Viagra on women, hoping that the drug's ability to increase blood flow to the genitals would increase libido. When that didn't work, drugmakers turned to hormones, including testosterone.

In 2004, an FDA panel rejected Procter & Gamble's testosterone patch, Intrinsa, due to unknown risks from long-term use. Two years earlier a massive government study found that hormone replacement therapy in postmenopausal women increased heart disease and breast cancer, raising concerns about the safety of all hormones.

Decision Resources analyst Alasdair Milton says that after years of disappointing results, the search for "female Viagra" may be winding down.

"In this day and age, are you really going to spend a significant amount of money developing these compounds if you're not going to get a return on your investment?" Milton asked.

But experts who have watched the drug industry's dogged pursuit of a female dysfunction drug are not convinced the end is in sight.

Dr. Leonore Tiefer, a psychiatry professor at New York University who runs a private sex therapy practice, said drug companies may target narrower groups of women to find an effective therapy, but won't give up the search anytime soon.

"I don't see that there's any incentive for the companies to stop, the market is just too big," said Tiefer.

Drug companies frequently cite a 1999 survey in the Journal of the American Medical Association that found 43 percent of U.S. women had some type of sexual dysfunction, though more rigorous, in-depth surveys have put the figure closer to 10 percent.

The field of potential competitors in the market has narrowed considerably over the years. Currently the only company with a drug in late-stage development is BioSante Pharmaceuticals Inc., a small specialty drugmaker developing a testosterone gel called LibiGel.

According to company executives, more than 1.8 million women received prescriptions for men's testosterone gel last year, suggesting a significant market. While currently marketed testosterone gels are designed to treat low hormone levels in men, doctors are free to prescribe them for alternate uses.

"That shows you doctors are willing to write prescriptions for testosterone off-label and women are willing to take it," said BioSante Chief Financial Officer Phil Donenberg.

But FDA approval of the company's LibiGel is far from certain. After lengthy discussions with the agency, the company has agreed to track over 3,000 women for more than a year to detect potential side effects.

Even if the gel turns out to be safe, Emory University Professor Kim Wallen said it's unlikely to prove effective.

"There have probably now been 50 studies on different kinds of testosterone regimens, and they all produce minimal or no effect" on sexual desire, according to Wallen. "This is a case where the pharmaceutical industry is looking in the wrong place."

Wallen still believes there could be pharmaceutical solutions to low sexual desire, possibly with other hormones like estrogen.

But he says the industry's search for a magic pill oversimplifies the problem. Sexuality is influenced by so many factors – including physical health, quality of relationships and lifestyle – that it's unrealistic to assume a drug could address millions of different cases of low libido.

"There are lots of reasons that people, both men and women, experience low sexual desire," Wallen said. "And to lump every individual into this group as potentially being amenable to drug therapy seems ill-advised."

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Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Facebook free forever

Millions of Facebook addicts worldwide worry that someday soon they'll have to pay to use the site.

If you go to Facebook.com and search for the terms "Facebook free" or "Facebook charge," you'll find hundreds of groups with names like, "If 1 Million People Join Before 9th July 2010 Facebook Will Stay Free!" or "If Facebook Charges A Fee We Will Discontinue Using It." Some of these groups have dozens of users, others have thousands.

During a recent press conference, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said while Facebook users do care about privacy, the question of whether or not Facebook will eventually charge for its service is actually a much bigger concern among the site's 500 million users. Read FaceBook Statistics 2010.

But are these fears justified?

No! Facebook will never charge you to be a member and use the site.

Don't take it from me. Here's Facebook spokesman Larry Yu on the issue:
"We have absolutely no plans to charge for the basic service of using Facebook."

He continues: "Last year we saw a similar rumor circulating that Facebook was going to begin charging $1.99 to use the site, but this year we're hearing that fee increased to $14.99 with the spread of this rumor. We look forward to hearing what Facebook might be rumored to cost for use next year." Read How to make money online with Facebook.

If you press Facebook employees on this, they will tell you the reason they will never charge for access is that putting up a paywall runs counter to the company's mission to make the world more open and connected.

But even if you don't buy that idealistic hoopla, you should understand Facebook has a deep profit motive to never charge you for access.

Why?

Because Facebook makes its money bringing together as big of an audience as possible and then selling that audience's attention to advertisers. It's a business that works. Facebook should bring in as much as $2 billion in revenue this year. That's more than twice as much as Facebook brought in last year. If Facebook started charging users, its membership would start shrinking fast -- and so would its revenues.

So while Facebook may charge you for certain bonus features, such as gifts for your friends, or credits to play games like Farmville, it will never charge for basic access to the site.

Why then do people worry Facebook might start charging soon? Probably because Facebook users feel like they're getting something valuable for free, and everybody knows there's no such thing as a free lunch.

Just remember: The fact that you keep coming back to Facebook makes it easier for Facebook to sell more ads -- and make more money.

Your lunch isn't free, it's sponsored.

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Monday, June 21, 2010

Toshiba dual-screen Libretto W100 tablet

Toshiba unveiled the Libretto W100 at a lavish event in Tokyo that also marked a quarter century since it launched the world's first laptop in 1985, though its personal computer division made an 8.8 billion yen ($110 million) loss in the year to March 2010.

The company expects its PC division to break even in the year to March 2011.

The new touch-screen gadget, which also faces potential competition from Sony Corp will not shake up the e-book reader market at this point, because the company has yet to draw up any agreements with content providers.

But executives were keen to emphasize that the Libretto, which they expect to retail for about 120,000 yen ($US1,320) in Japan, compared with $US489 for the larger of Amazon's Kindle devices, or $US499 for the cheapest iPad, offers more than a passive "consumption" experience.

"Apple's iPad is probably creating a new market in terms of consuming information, browsing and reading books," Masahiko Fukakushi, president and CEO of Toshiba's digital products and network unit, told reporters.

"But when it comes to creation or production ... what we have been doing still has a lot of value. We want to continue to do both."

Toshiba dual-screen Libretto W100 tablet

Toshiba is the world's fourth biggest notebook PC vendor after HP, Acer and Dell. Industry-wide shipments of notebook computers jumped 43 percent in the January-March quarter, their highest year-on-year growth in eight years, according to industry tracker Gartner.

Toshiba is targeting global PC shipments of 25 million units in the year to March 2011.

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How not to lose your money in the stock market

You don't have to be a genius to work out that if only we could avoid the losses, we would all be winners. The first rule of making it is not losing it. So here are the top 10 tips on not losing money according to Marcus Today.

1 Inside information. A colleague has professionally traded all his life. It's what he does. He says: ''If I had never been given any inside information … I would be a million pounds better off than I am today.''

2 IPOs. The golden rule of IPOs is that if it's any good, it won't be offered to you. If you get offered it … then you don't want it.

3 Pretending to be Warren Buffett. The concept that Buffett can be emulated has cost investors more than it has ever made them. No one has ever managed to replicate his performance. The idea that you can is the biggest drawcard the equity market has and it is a lie. We all keep buying the dream.

4 Gurus. Go to any rainforest, discover any tribe and you will find them huddling under some concept of god and creed. It is a human need to be able to answer the unanswerable questions and we do it by deifying someone or something. In our search for answers to the stockmarket's unanswerable questions, we credit our commentators with vastly more powers than they could possibly deserve or possess. And dangerously, he who guesses the boldest guesses the longest.

5 Greed. The biggest killer of them all. Approaching the stockmarket with greed is like running onto a battlefield in bright orange. We'll get you.

6 Leverage. The mechanism of greed. Leverage is marketed one way, but it works both ways. You lose much faster as well. That means it only works for some of the time and not all of the time.

It only works when you are right. And with average equity returns after interest, transaction costs, inflation and tax of less than zero, man, you had better be right, and right at the right time. You cannot habitually use leverage to ''invest''. Only trade and trade at the right time, not all the time. That's a big ask for someone with a day job.

7 Confidence. What's the core skill of the finance industry?

I'll tell you: it's marketing. And oh, do we have some material to work with. The finance industry is never short of a success story to free your wallet from your pocket. But we cannot all be successful, and of course we aren't. But the concept of success from mere participation in the financial markets is sold and endures because of one convenient fact of life. Crappy cars and small houses don't attract attention. The winners stay, and we raise them up. The losers, conveniently, go away. Thank goodness for that. Imagine how much product we'd sell if we raised them up.

8 Expectations. The root of all happiness. The root of all unhappiness. Expect the unexpectable and expect the inevitable. Best you expect the expectable.

9 Laziness. The nucleus of many of the stockmarket's very large and public losses. There has been more money lost through laziness than through effort - in particular, from putting your future in the hands of financial products you haven't taken the time to understand (Opes Prime, Storm Financial), from ''investing'' without investigating (otherwise known as gambling), from relying on someone else's grand declaration rather than taking responsibility yourself. Let's get this straight. There is no easy route to riches in the stockmarket and there is no free lunch, so participation without effort is not enough .

10 Life. My mum used to say there are three foundations for spiritual and financial happiness and success: your relationship, your job and where you live. Get one of those wrong, and all three will go wrong. Note there's no mention of the stockmarket in there. The stockmarket is not life. It is a side issue. The biggest financial decisions you will make in your life have nothing to do with the stockmarket - such as getting married, getting divorced, having kids, investing in your home, committing to your career or your business. These are the biggest financial decisions you'll ever make. Focus on them. The stockmarket is not a priority.

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Sunday, June 20, 2010

Pearl River Necklace Bridge

If Dutch firm NL Architects gets its way, we may soon be adding Pearl River Necklace to the list of famous bridges.

Pearl River Necklace Bridge

Part of a proposal for a new border-crossing facility between Hong Kong and mainland China, the dramatic-looking bridge is as clever as it is spectacular.

One of the biggest problems faced by cars commuting between Hong Kong and China is that they drive on different sides of the road.

Dubbed "The Flipper" by the architects, the Pearl River Necklace twists as it crosses the water.

That means the traffic is able to swap from one side to the other, so the cars coming from both directions emerge on the correct side of the road.

The company claims the Flipper helps to "celebrate" the switch to driving on the opposite side of the road.

But the bridge is just one part of the firm's master plan. It also wants to construct a series of artificial islands to house the border-crossing terminal.

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Saturday, June 19, 2010

Tea is bad for you

It was good, but now tea's bad for you, says new study. Drinking a lot of tea increases the risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis, US researchers said on Friday.

A US study on more than 76,000 women found consuming tea raised the risk while drinking coffee had no impact.

Tea lovers who enjoyed more than four cups a day had the highest risk - being 78 per cent more likely to develop rheumatoid arthritis than those who drank none.

But drinking any amount of tea increased the chance by 40 per cent, compared with people who never drank tea.

The findings were presented at the Annual Congress of the European League Against Rheumatism in Rome.

Professor Christopher Collins, from Georgetown University Medical Centre in the US, said he was surprised by the differences between coffee and tea.

He said: "We set out to determine whether tea or coffee consumption, or the method of preparation of the drinks was associated with an increased risk of (rheumatoid arthritis).

"It is surprising that we saw such differences in results between tea and coffee drinkers.

"This does make us wonder what it is in tea, or in the method of preparation of tea that causes the significant increase in risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis."

The researchers also examined whether filtered coffee versus unfiltered coffee affected the results, and also looked at the impact of caffeinated and decaffeinated coffee.

However, they found no significant associations with rheumatoid arthritis or the autoimmune disease systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).

The women in the study were aged 50 to 79 and filled in questionnaires on their daily intake of coffee and tea.

Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic, progressive and disabling auto-immune disease which affects millions around the world.

Three times more women get it than men and it usually starts between the ages of 40 and 60.

The disease can cause swelling and damage to the cartilage and bone around the joints, most commonly the hands, feet and wrists.

Children under the age of 16 have the juvenile form of the disease.

Prof Collins said he did not recommend that people change their tea-drinking habits based on the research.

"This was an unusual and complex finding but, from the data we have, there is a relationship between tea and the disease.

"There have been other studies which have either stated that tea has no effect on risk of arthritis, and one study which found tea had a protective effect."

He said the team had looked for supporting information that could explain their own findings.

"We found a study which said that an increased intake of flavonoids - which are in tea - from various sources resulted in an increased risk of rheumatoid arthritis."

The team had analysed data on caffeine separately and had found no link, suggesting it was something specific to tea, he added.

"It's definitely an association but the risk is very small.

"Nevertheless, when you look at enough people, a very small relationship can still be meaningful."

Prof Collins said women were only asked about their consumption of tea, and so no detail was available on whether they had drunk black tea, tea with milk or herbal teas.

His team analysed the results to find out how many women who were tea drinkers had developed rheumatoid arthritis during the course of the study.

"We did not ask if they had been lifelong tea drinkers," he said.

"Some may infer that if they drank four cups at that point in time, they may have done so in the past."

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Friday, June 18, 2010

World’s most popular players are well-connected

According to Google's Searching for football connections, the world’s most popular players are well-connected. How so? Based on Google popular World Cup search queries, it turns out that people who search for one player frequently follow that immediately with a query for another player.

Below is the illustrated data from Google's observation:
The highest paid footballer Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal) is tightly connected to other popular players including Lionel Messi (Argentina), Fernando Torres (Spain), Wayne Rooney (England) and Didier Drogba (Côte d'Ivoire). These players form a nucleus connecting all the other players.

This lead to the same concept when applying it to blogging whereby you can drive more traffic to your blog by offering more keywords and similar topics. We are talking about blog links here. And this blog linking practice may also improve your blog keyword ranking. It pays to link to your other posts that have important keywords or relevant subjects. If you don't link to your other posts, nobody will.

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* How to Rank #1 in Google Search Page?

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Top 10 Most Annoying Sounds

The use of vuvuzelas — a long plastic horn popular with South African soccer fans — at the World Cup has sparked debate about the level of tolerable noise at a sporting event. Here's a look at some other sounds that are not music to our ears.

1. Vuvuzela (or lepatata)

Vuvuzelas have been all the buzz at the 2010 World Cup, but not in a good way. The incessant beehive sound created by the long plastic instruments has saturated entire stadiums, indiscriminately drowning out players trying to coordinate strategy, sportscasters trying to call plays and fans trying to cheer on their team.

2. Emergency Broadcast System

It has probably happened in the middle of your favorite show. Right at the most exciting part, the television flashes to a rainbow bar graph and all sound halts. Three ear-splattering screeches grab your attention and hold it with a full 15 seconds of blaring tone. If you're lucky, you'll hear, "This is only a test." If not, the Emergency Alert System will notify you of a flood, an earthquake or a nuclear accident.

3. Gilbert Gottfried

The stand-up comedian has made his loud, grating voice his trademark, but that doesn't make it any less annoying. Still, he has parlayed his headache-inducing sound into numerous movie and television roles, including that of adoption agent Igor Peabody in the Problem Child movies, Iago the parrot in the Aladdin films and television series, and the voice of insurance company Aflac's signature duck.

4. Nails on a Chalkboard

Class nuisances and exasperated teachers have been using the old nails-on-a-chalkboard trick for ages.

5. Car Alarms

Not only is the sound of a car alarm annoying, but the alarm itself is increasingly ineffective. Because some car-alarm systems are sensitive to even the slightest nearby provocation, they can go off multiple times depending on how highly trafficked the area is. The more they go off, the less people pay attention to them.

6. Dial-Up Modem

Before DSL and the cable modem made broadband Internet a household commodity, the dial-up modem reigned supreme. In this dark age of bandwidth, connecting to the Internet was not only painfully slow but also took up your land line. Worst of all, it was annoyingly loud.

7. The Hum

A low, rumbling noise people compare to an idling diesel engine, the hum might infuriate one person, while the man standing next to him hears nothing at all. It occurs the world over: there's the "Bristol Hum" in Great Britain, the "Bondi Hum" in Australia and the "Taos Hum" in New Mexico

8. Snoring

A snoring kitten is cute; snoring that sounds like Darth Vader choking on an Ewok is not. The result of obstructed airflow in a sleeping person trying to breathe, snoring not only affects the sleep quality of the snorer at large but also makes all those within hearing distance lose sleep as well.

9. Cicadas

he next time your tone-deaf significant other brings you out to a drunken night of karaoke, consider yourself lucky that you're not listening to a cicada mating song instead. Every 13 or 17 years, periodical cicadas of the Magicicada genus emerge en masse in eastern North America to sing, mate and drive locals into fitful bouts of insomnia. The males (much like their human counterparts) are the primary culprits, producing their deafening love "song" with timbals, an accordion-like membrane built into their exoskeleton.

10. Jim Carrey in Dumb and Dumber

"Hey, wanna hear the most annoying sound in the world?" Jim Carrey doesn't give you, or his hapless hitchhiker, much of an option. The sound, a mixture of a car suddenly braking and a Wookie howling, is a lesson for all those who would hitchhike on a van decorated to look like a shaggy dog — just say no, or you may be going on the auditory ride of your life.

Source: Time.com


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Thursday, June 17, 2010

Presidential kill switch to shutdown the Internet

The US is toying with an idea to allow their president to shutdown the Internet, or at least part of it. I can't imagine the president is allow to nuke the Internet because by doing that both "enemies", the citizens and businesses will be in total Internet darkness.

A new Senate bill, sponsored by Senator Joseph Lieberman, proposes to give the president the authority "to seize control of or even shut down portions of the Internet," according to CNET.

The authority granted to the government in the bill, known as the Protecting Cyberspace as a National Asset Act (PCNAA), has been likened to an Internet "kill switch."

The bill would require that private companies--such as "broadband providers, search engines, or software firms," CNET explains--"immediately comply with any emergency measure or action" put in place by the Department of Homeland Security, or else face fines.

It would also see the creation of a new agency within the Department of Homeland Security, the National Center for Cybersecurity and Communications (NCCC). Any private company reliant on "the Internet, the telephone system, or any other component of the U.S. 'information infrastructure'" would be "subject to command" by the NCCC, and some would be required to engage in "information sharing" with the agency, says CBS4.

Numerous groups, such as TechAmerica, have criticized the bill, warning of the "potential for absolute power" and expressing reservations about the "unintended consequences that would result from the legislation's regulatory approach."

Liberman recently defended the PCNAA, arguing that it was imperative the president had the ability to "say to an electric company or to say to Verizon, in the national interest, 'There's an attack about to come, and I hereby order you to put a patch on this, or put your network down on this part, or stop accepting any incoming from country A.'"

He added that the bill is necessary for it would reduce the liability of companies that may need to resort to extreme measures in an emergency situation. Companies might have to "do things in a normal business sense you'd be hesitant to do but national security requires you to do," Lieberman explained, adding "We protect them from that because the action the government is ordering them to take is in national security or economic interest."

CNET notes an Internet "kill switch" has been proposed before:
A draft Senate proposal that CNET obtained in August allowed the White House to "declare a cybersecurity emergency," and another from Sens. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.V.) and Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) would have explicitly given the government the power to "order the disconnection" of certain networks or Web sites.

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Maybank Account Phishing by mbbsecured-activation.com

I just received an email about Maybank Account being temporarily disabled. The email was sent from contact@maybank-online2.com. Obviously this is a phishing email sent to unsuspected users to steal their Maybank2u user id and password. Do not click on the link in that email.

Anyway, mbbsecured-activation.com has been marked by Google as suspected phishing site.

-----------------------------------

Dear Customer,

Maybank recognizes the importance of protecting your personal information and financial transactions. We blocked your account for security reasons after noticing several errors.

You are hereby required to immediately secure your account as unsecured accounts will be terminated.

Activate Now
http://www.mbbsecured-activation.com/maybank/M2ULogin.htm

Maybank Berhad

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Easier video editing with YouTube Video Editor

With software installations and complicated instructions, editing video can be a hassle—but Google think it should be easy. Today, Google’s introducing YouTube’s new online video editor, which makes editing your video a cinch. It’s available in TestTube, where YouTube engineers and developers test out new tools and get feedback on how they’re doing.

With this new editor, you can:
* Combine multiple videos you’ve uploaded to create a new longer video
* Trim the beginning and/or ending of your videos
* Add soundtracks from our AudioSwap library of tens of thousands of songs
* Create new videos without worrying about file formats and publish them to YouTube * with one click—no upload necessary

All that, and you don’t need to install any extra software.

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The never ending vuvuzela buzz

vuvuzela buzzHost Broadcast Services, the company that provides the broadcast feed for the World Cup, says it has doubled its audio filters to reduce the constant blaring buzz of vuvuzelas.

TV viewers around the globe have complained that the sound from the plastic horns is stinging their ears.

"Despite HBS' core philosophy, which is to provide 'realistic' host broadcast coverage reflecting the ambiance in the stadiums, additional audio filtering has been implemented," the daily newsletter given to rights holders said.

The filters will also minimise other crowd noise in the stadiums, such as chants and cheers. HBS said it had increased the level in the ball microphones to provide some balance.

Several broadcasters have already taken their own measures to reduce the drone. French broadcaster TF1 changed its microphones after the opening match between Mexico and host South Africa, replacing them with microphones commentators hold close to their mouths that better filter sound.

The BBC, which had received 545 complaints from viewers as of Tuesday morning, said it was considering giving viewers the option of muting ambient noise while maintaining game commentary through its "red button" digital service. Viewers would push a red button on their remote control to receive the quieter broadcast on a separate channel.

"We have already taken steps to minimise the noise and are continuing to monitor the situation," the BBC said in a statement.

"If the vuvuzela continues to impact on audience enjoyment, we will look at what other options we can take to reduce the volume further."

SBS, the official broadcaster of the World Cup games in Australia, said there was "little else" the station could do "short of us broadcasting away from the stadium".

"SBS has taken all measures possible to minimise the impact of the noise from vevuzelas. The noise is affecting broadcasters all over the globe," an SBS spokeswoman said.

"Short of us broadcasting away from the stadium, where there would be no background noise at all - no goal reaction, no atmosphere, no kick of the ball - there is little else we - or any other broadcaster - can do."

The noise of the vuvuzelas has been the talk of the World Cup, so much so that British bookmaker William Hill is now taking bets on whether the horns will be banned at Premier League stadiums next season.

"The vuvuzela certainly polarises opinion, and we suspect that individual clubs will want to put a rule in place to enable them to ban them should they threaten to become widespread," William Hill spokesman Graham Sharpe said.

William Hill is also taking bets that the vuvuzelas will be banned by the end of the World Cup. But FIFA president Sepp Blatter has strongly backed the use of the horns since they were introduced to the wider football world at the Confederations Cup in South Africa last year, and he said again on Monday they're here to stay. The vuvuzelas are something African, and Blatter said he was not about to ban the music traditions of fans in their own country.

Several players said the din of the horns was having an impact on the field. Netherlands striker Robin van Persie avoided a second yellow card - and a ban from the next game - by blaming the vuvuzelas for failing to hear an offside whistle. Argentina striker Carlos Tevez said the din of vuvuzelas made it hard for players to communicate with each other on the field.

"Those sirens or trumpets - I don't know what they are - make it very difficult to speak on the field," Tevez said after Argentina's training session on Tuesday at the University of Pretoria. "You have to shout and sometimes you run out of breath, you get a bit more tired. They are extremely bothersome."

But Van Persie said he did not want to see vuvuzelas banned.

"I think we have to respect it, because we are in South Africa, and we need to respect where we are," the Dutchman said. "This is their tradition. This belongs to them."

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Wednesday, June 16, 2010

The biggest shock of WC2010

The first big shock in the ongoing FIFA World Cup 2010 tournament. Little Switzerland created a history by beating Spain, the champion of Europe in their first WC2010 games in Durban. Spain NIL, Switzerland one. The game shock was delivered by Gelson Fernandes after a horrible defense by the Spaniards.

Expect all newspapers and online medias to publish this shocking defeat. For Spain, David Villa will need to improve. He had little impact here.

Switzerland deserves this win. They keep going and going and their defense were push to the limit no matter how much pressure were thrown to them by the Spanish forward.

Congratulation to the Swiss team.

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N8 signal Nokia frays into smartphone monopoly

Nokia has vowed to defend its number one position in the lucrative smartphone business, despite fierce pressure from the iPhone and Research in Motion's Blackberry.

The Finnish giant's latest top-end device, the touch-screen N8, was unveiled at its annual Asian trade event in Singapore yesterday. It was first announced in late April.

The regional launch of the N8 comes exactly one week after Apple chief executive Steve Jobs unveiled an upgraded version of the phenomenally successful iPhone in San Franciso.

Smartphones are advanced handsets capable of internet surfing, video recording and other multimedia functions on top of voice and text messaging. The N8 is based on the company's updated Symbian operation system.

"Nokia's leadership has been questioned in recent months," Jo Harlow, senior vice president for smartphones, said in an opening speech at the event.

"However, it is often overlooked that we continue to have the largest market share in mobile devices and the largest share in smartphones, which is the fastest growing segment," she said.

Nokia is still the world's top mobile phone maker but the company has struggled to find an answer to the iPhone and Blackberry in the smartphone sector, where profit margins are much higher.

In April, Nokia announced it managed to grow the company's smartphone market share to 41 per cent from an estimated 40 per cent in October-December 2009.

In absolute figures, it meant Nokia sold 21.5 million of the 52.6 million smartphones sold globally during the first quarter.

"The mobile telecom business as we once knew it, no longer exists," said Harlow.

"Today's smartphones are capable of doing things that were considered impossible not long ago."

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Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Vuvuzelas - World Cup 2010 Controversy

Beside a few histories being made, the ongoing World Cup 2010 games in South Africa have one noticable trait. The buzzing, hooting or the droning of the stadium caused by the Vuvuzelas. The blaring sounds do irriate most TV viewers. The stadium atmosphere is also lost because of the monotone Vuvuzelas sound.

The loud trumpets called vuvuzelas will continue to be allowed for the time being at the World Cup, despite complaints from some international broadcasters, players and fans, the tournament’s organizing committee said Monday.

On Sunday, Danny Jordaan, the chief World Cup organizer, told the British Broadcasting Corporation that use of the trumpets was “something we are evaluating on an ongoing basis.” He said he would consider banning the horns “if there are grounds to do so.”

Some broadcasters have been complaining since last June’s Confederations Cup here that the vuvuzelas are too disruptive to the international television feeds, subduing announcers’ voices and irritating viewers.

Patrice Evra, France’s captain, complained to Agence France-Presse that the horns played a role in his team’s lackluster 0-0 draw with Uruguay on Friday, saying, “We can’t hear one another on the pitch because of them.”

Evra also said that the horns were disrupting the French players’ sleep and awakening them as early as 6 a.m. at the team hotel.

Banning the trumpets, though, would undoubtedly unleash a fierce response from South Africans, who see the vuvuzelas as an indispensable part of their soccer culture. Sepp Blatter, the president of FIFA, soccer’s world governing body, has supported the trumpets, saying Europeans must adjust to African traditions.

In a statement on Monday, Rich Mkhondo, a spokesman for the World Cup organizing committee, reiterated that “the vuvuzela will continue to be allowed during the tournament and the status quo has not changed,” adding that complaints had been isolated.

The organizing committee will continue to evaluate the use of vuvuzelas, the statement said, and will not tolerate “any vuvuzelas landing on the field of play during matches or being used in a threatening manner at the stadiums, which has never before been the case.”

The organizing committee said that fans had heeded requests to refrain from blowing the vuvuzelas during national anthems and stadium announcements.

Jordaan told the BBC he would prefer singing and chanting instead of the vuvuzelas, saying that in the days of struggle against apartheid “we were singing all through our history.”

“It’s our ability to sing that inspired and drove the emotions,” Jordaan said.

What is a Vuvuzelas

The vuvuzela (English pronunciation: /vuːvuːˈzeɪlə/) , sometimes called a "lepatata" (its Tswana name) or a stadium horn, is a blowing horn up to approximately 1 m (3 ft 3 in) in length. It is commonly blown by fans at football matches in South Africa. The instrument requires some lip and lung strength to blow and emits (from the standard shorter horn of 60–65 cm) a loud monotone (B♭3). A similar instrument (known as corneta in Brazil and other Latin American countries) is used by football fans in South America.

Vuvuzelas have been controversial. They have been associated with permanent noise-induced hearing loss, cited as a possible safety risk when spectators cannot hear evacuation announcements, and potentially spread colds and flu viruses on a greater scale than coughing or shouting. Vuvuzelas have also been blamed for drowning the sound and atmosphere of football games.

Commentators have described the sound as "annoying" and "satanic" and compared it with "a stampede of noisy elephants", "a deafening swarm of locusts", "a goat on the way to slaughter", and "a giant hive full of very angry bees".

Recommended reading:
* Jabulani - World Cup 2010 ball Controversy

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The return of Hayabusa

THE Falcon became a fiery phoenix last night. After a seven-year odyssey in space, the unmanned Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa, or Falcon, burnt up in the atmosphere, making it the first probe to land on an asteroid and return to Earth.

But its legacy could live on, perhaps helping protect the planet from asteroid impacts, if dust from the space rock it visited can be retrieved from the spacecraft's cargo capsule.

The basketball-sized cargo capsule was released from the spacecraft just before 9pm and was set to land by parachute at Woomera Prohibited Area about midnight last night. In preparation for the touch down, the Stuart Highway was blocked from just south of Coober Pedy to the north of Glendambo.

Hayabusa was launched in May 2003 and touched down twice in November 2005 on Itokawa, a 540-metre long asteroid about 300 million kilometres away, twice as far as the Sun.

Fuel leakages, engine breakdowns and loss of communication delayed its return by three years. But the Japanese team was able to combine parts still working on two engines to bring the crippled craft home.

The Parliamentary Secretary for Innovation and Industry, Richard Marles, said it was a huge technological achievement. ''If you've got any affection for the little Aussie battler, you've got to love the Hayabusa spacecraft.''

The associate executive director of the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency, Yoshiyuki Hasegawa, said yesterday he was nervous but excited about the return. ''Today is the greatest moment for us.''

Japanese, NASA and Australian scientists flying in a specially equipped Douglas DC-8 aircraft were hoping to capture pictures and make measurements of the re-entry, with the aim of designing better heat shields for future space probes.

With the capsule travelling at more than 12 kilometres a second on re-entry, its carbon heat shield would have experienced temperatures of more than 2800 degrees, while the gas surrounding the capsule would have been hotter than the surface of the Sun, at about 7200 degrees.

The Japanese team will check on the capsule's condition this morning and Aboriginal landowners will be among the first to see it.

Understanding asteroids will be necessary if we need to deflect one coming our way.

Recommended reading:
* South Korea's first space program failed
* Naro-1 rocket crashed

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