6/13/2012

Pakistan singing legend Mehdi Hassan dies


Tributes have been paid to Pakistani singing legend Mehdi Hassan who has died of multiple organ failure aged 84.

The singer, hugely popular in India as well, was admitted to the Agha Khan Hospital in the southern port city of Karachi a few days ago.

Hassan's career spanned 50 years. He came to be known as "king of ghazals", traditional laments for lost love.

Ghazal, a genre of music specific to South Asia and parts of the Middle East, has been around for more than 400 years.

Hassan - whose funeral will be on Friday - also achieved huge commercial success, providing music for many South Asian films.

Legendary Indian singer Lata Mangeshkar once likened his songs to the "voice of god".

On learning of his death, Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani called Hassan "an icon who mesmerised music lovers" in Pakistan and the sub-continent for decades, AFP news agency reports.

'End of an era'
Hassan was born into a family of traditional musicians in 1927 at Luna village in the Indian state of Rajasthan.

His family migrated to Pakistan in 1947 at the time of partition.

He started out as a bicycle and auto mechanic before entering the music industry. His big break came several years later, in 1957, when he got his first opportunity on Radio Pakistan as a classical "thumri" singer.

During the next three decades, he sang hundreds of songs for the Pakistani movies, scoring dozens of hits that were popular in Pakistan and across South Asia.

Subsequently, music circles in Pakistan were to discover his talent for ghazal singing.

Hassan was interviewed in 1989 by the BBC Hindi service. He told them about the history of ghazal singing in his family.

"We belong to the traditional Kalamt family and mine is the 16th generation which is into ghazal," he said.

"My ancestors use to regale the Royals of Jaipur, Rajasthan in India. We still have remains of our home around the Amber Fort. And my earlier generations were gifted by the princely state of Jaipur to another royal household called Jhunjhunu in the faraway desert.

"But be it then or now, India or Pakistan, our music is the same, full of devotion."

Hassan became a Pakistani cultural ambassador who visited India.

He cut back on his performances in the late 1980s due to illness, which included a serious lung condition. The severity of his illness forced him to give up all singing by the late-1990s.

In 2010, however, he recorded a duet with Lata Mangeshkar, a long-time admirer, for an album called Sarhadein (Borders), which was released in 2011.

Mehdi Hassan recorded his part of the song in Karachi, while Lata Mangeshkar's part was recorded in Mumbai.

The Press Trust of India said an era of ghazal singing had come to an end with his death.

"The demise of the India-born Pakistani ghazal maestro was a huge loss to the world of music and left a void that can never be filled," it reported.   (BBC.co.uk)

Germany faces €15bln lawsuits for nuclear exit

German energy firms are suing the government for €15 billion in damages over the decision to shut down all the country’s nuclear reactors by 2022.
The country's largest power utility E.ON is demanding 8 billion euros for the enforced shutdown of its nuclear power stations, the German daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported. The company expects the German constitutional court would prevail, E.ON’s spokesman said.
The German government already faces a series of lawsuits against its policy to abandon atomic energy. The country’s second biggest power company RWE has also filed a complaint against nuclear exit decision, arguing it violated the company’s proprietary rights. Last year RWE sued the Government over a nuclear-fuel tax, saying it would cost RWE between €300 million and €400 million per year.
Swedish energy provider Vattenfall is also considering a suit, according to FAZ. Vattenfall has a 66.7% stake in the Brunsbüttel nuclear plant, and 50% of the Kruemmel nuclear plant, both near Hamburg.
Energy companies say their complaints were not about the nuclear energy exit as it is largely supported in Germany, but about the lack of compensation for the companies affected by the “green’ shift in Germany’s energy policy.
Germany decided to switch off its eight oldest reactors in March 2011 after the Fukushima disaster in Japan. The other nine rectors currently operating are expected to be closed by 2022. The shift to green energy is estimated to cost German taxpayers as much as 20 billion euros over the next decade, according to the study presented by the country’s electricity distribution operators last month.  (rt.com)

Producers push for fruit juice delivery at schools


Turkey’s Fruit Juice Industry Association (MEYED) General Secretary Ebru Akdağ wants the government to start a campaign to distribute fruit juice in Turkish schools, as it has been doing recently with milk.

The average fruit juice consumption in Turkey per person per year is 9 liters compared with 26 liters for milk, according to MEYED.

Akdağ said fruit juice consumption in Turkey lagged behind the Eurooean Union (EU) and other developed markets and that fruit, vegetable and fruit juice consumption was very beneficial to one’s health.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the average person needs to consume five servings of fruits and vegetables per day, said Akdağ. According to her, one glass of 100 percent fruit juice is equivalent to one serving of fruit.

Akdağ said there were currently no government incentives for the production of fruit juice like there are in other sectors. Although there are incentives for fruit production, these fall far below the incentives applied to other sectors like livestock.

Meanwhile, milk consumption in Turkey in April was registered at 727,499 tons, according to Turkish Statistical Institute (TÜİK) data released yesterday.

This was a 1.8 percent increase from the previous month. In April 2011, Turkish milk consumption was 646,642 tons.

The government recently embarked on a campaign to distribute milk throughout elementary schools in Turkey prompting MEYED to request the same.

Nobel Prize shrinks by 20% due to crisis


The Stockholm-based Nobel Foundation has slashed the value of the 2012 prize due to the economic difficulties it has faced in the crisis.
The money given to Nobel winners this year will be 8 million Swedish kronor (around $1.1 million) each, against 10 million, kronor or $1.4 million in the past. The measure comes as an effort to safeguard the long-term capital according to the organization.
The Prize’s capital is based on a donation by 19th century philanthropist and inventor Alfred Nobel. It needs smart management in the crisis in order to secure the prestigious award’s future, the Nobel Foundation executive director Lars Heikensten says.
"The Nobel Foundation is responsible for ensuring that the prize sum can be maintained at a high level in the long term. We have made the assessment that it is important to implement necessary measures in good time," Heikensten says.
The last time the Nobel Prize lowered the sum of the prize was in 1949.
This year The Nobel Foundation will traditionally awards people in six categories, including the Peace Prize, Literature and Chemistry.

Stem cell scientist wins Millennium Technology Award


Japanese stem cell scientist Dr Shinya Yamanaka has been awarded the Millennium Technology Prize.
His award is for discovering how to reprogram human cells to mimic embryonic stem cells, which can become any cell in the body.
Called induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, these now aid research into regenerative medicine.
He was joint-winner with Linus Torvalds, who created a new open source operating system for computers.
This is the first time the prize has been shared by two scientists - they will split the 1.2m euros ($1.3m; £800,000) award.


The President of the Republic of Finland, Sauli Niinisto, presented the prize at the Finnish National Opera in Helsinki.
Dr Ainomija Haarla, President of Technology Academy Finland - the foundation which awards the prize every two years - said: "The International Selection Committee has to judge whether an innovation has had a favourable impact on people's lives and assess its potential for further development to benefit humanity in the future.
"The innovations of both this year's winners embody that principle.
"Dr Shinya Yamanaka's discovery of a new method to develop pluripotent stem cells for medical research could help combat intractable disease."

Ethical barriers
In 2007 Dr Yamanaka's team announced that, by using four genes, they had successfully reprogrammed human adult skin cells into the equivalent of human embryonic stem cells - which are potentially capable of becoming any other cell type including neurons, heart muscle cells and bone cells.
This means stem cell research into currently incurable diseases and regenerative medicine is possible without the controversial use of human embryos.

iPS cells also have the potential to help solve the problems associated with cell transplant rejection.
Dr Shinya Yamanaka said: "My mission now is to advance iPS cell research in cooperation with many researchers around the world and bring the technology to medicine as soon as possible.

"My goals over the decade include to develop new drugs to treat intractable diseases by using iPS cell technology and to conduct clinical trials using it on a few patients with Parkinson's diseases, diabetes or blood diseases."

Check out this $450 pizza


There seems to be a never-ending amount of crazy expensive restaurant dishes. Just weeks ago, we were introduced to a $295 burger, claimed to be the most expensive by the Guinness Book of World Records (actually, it's not).

It's not just burgers that are getting adorned with expensive ingredients, though. Stevenson Pizza Co., a small chain of pizzerias in British Columbia, Canada offers a $450 pizza with a thermidor of lobster, black Alaskan cod and a side of Russian Osetra caviar. If customers are interested in the pricey pie, they need to order it one day ahead of time. Not surprisingly, only one customer has ordered it.

"The idea was to make a culinary statement,'' owner Nader Hatami told Canada.com.

This "statement" is in fact not the most expensive pizza one can buy. Margo's Pizzeria in Malta sells a pie with white truffles and 24-carat gold leaf for a mere $2,400. Or, there's this $1,000 pizza with caviar. Or, for $8,200, you can get a pizza sprinkled with diamonds.

We're not sure which trend is worse -- these ridiculously expensive pizzas, or these frightening displays of gluttony, in the form of hamburgers baked into pizza crust.  (Huffingtonpost.com)

Chilean student leaders call for national strike over profiteering

Chilean students on strike in June 2011
Students across the country are planning to stage a national strike on June 28 to protest profiteering within academic institutions. The Confederation of Chilean Students (Confech) announced the strike after holding a meeting over the weekend.


The meeting, consisting of student representatives from more than 25 major Chilean universities, took place in the midst of an ongoing student takeover at the embattled Universidad del Mar. The takeover resulted from the recent discovery of financial irregularities at the university and has pushed the debate over whether schools in Chile should be allowed to profit back into the forefront of the national discussion on education.

Gabriel Boric, Confech spokesperson and president of the Student Federation of the Universidad de Chile (Fech) denounced this profiteering.

“It is public knowledge the businessmen of education steal from students, families, school employees and teachers, as seen in the case of Universidad del Mar” he said after the weekend meeting.

The strike will come a little more than a year after the beginning of the “Chilean Winter,” a series of student protests and takeovers that swept the country in 2011. Confech called for a day of remembrance for June 20, the first day of strikes last year.

In response to the threat of a national strike, Education Minister Harald Beyer said the government was already working hard to tackle the country’s most pressing educational concerns.

“The students have every right to express themselves, but I want to remind them that we are working on four points of reform,” he told La Tercera.

However, many student leaders, including Felipe Ramírez, secretary general of Fech, feel that the ministry has not taken an active enough role in combating corruption, and that the strike is necessary to send a message to both the individual institutions and the government.

“Government reform has not advanced in the past year,” Ramírez told the Santiago Times. “Our demands are against profiteering and for the democratization of the university.”

By Andrew Chow (andrewchow@santiagotimes.cl)
Copyright 2012 – The Santiago Times

Internet Preparing For Massive Upgrade


NEW YORK — Proposals for Internet addresses ending in ".pizza," ".space" and ".auto" are among the nearly 2,000 submitted as part of the largest expansion in the online address system.

Apple Inc., Sony Corp. and American Express Co. are among companies that are seeking names with their brands. Google Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. sought dozens of names, including ".app," and ".play." The wine company Gallo Vineyards Inc. wants ".barefoot."

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers announced the proposals for Internet suffixes, the ".com" part of an Internet address, in London on Wednesday. They now go through a review process that could take months or years.

"The Internet is about to change forever," ICANN CEO Rod Beckstrom declared, adding that new innovations could find homes in the new addresses.

There were 1,930 proposals for 1,409 different suffixes. The bulk came from North America and Europe.

If approved, the new suffixes would rival ".com" and about 300 others now in use. Companies would be able to create separate websites and separate addresses for each of their products and brands, even as they keep their existing ".com" name. Businesses that joined the Internet late, and found desirable ".com" names taken, would have alternatives.


Read Complete News Here

Headline June 14th, 2012 / The New Great Game


"The New Great Game"




On August 2, 2007, two 26 foot long Russian submersibles, Mir-I and Mir-2, descended through a hole in the ice at the North Pole. The Arctic, which has been losing almost 10 percent of its ice per decade, since 1953, was in the middle of its biggest summer melt back on record, but the ice at the pole was still five feet thick, and the hole had to be opened by the Nuclear icebreaker Rossiya. 

Once below the surface, the submersibles, sank more than two and a half miles down, to the Ocean floor. At the helm of Mir-1 was Anatoly Sagalevich, head of the Deep Manned Submersibles Laboratory at the Russian Academy of Science's P.P: Shirshov Institute of Oceanology. Although they officially belonged to the academy, the two Mirs were Sagalevich's babies. 

Later in Moscow, Sagalevich recalled being inside the cockpit and watched the hole above him grow smaller and smaller until it finally disappeared. The ships spent about eight and so hours underwater, and 90 minutes at the bottom. 

Using a Robotic arm attached to the submersible, Sagalevich collected geologic samples and planted a titanium Russian flag in the murky sediment. The pressure at this depth would have compressed him to the size of a mouse had he ventured outside. With their mission accomplished, the two Mirs headed back to the surface. 

This was the trickiest part: finding the hole in the ice, which in addition to being two-thirds frozen over, had already drifted at least a mile from where it was when they went down. The Arctic icepack is constantly moving, at a rate of six miles or so per day. Sagalevich had to calculate not only the speed of thee ice but also the effect of currents beneath it while manoeuvring the ascending submersibles. 

There were other notable figures aboard the two vessels. The great Polar Scientist Artur Chilingarov, who also happens to be the vice speaker of the Duma -Russia's largely cosmetic parliament- was on Mir-I. With him was an oligarch Vladmir Gruzdev, who has an estimated net worth of over 800 million dollars. He's in the Duma too but had to pay to join the expedition. 

Along for the mission, according to press accounts, were other paying explorers: Swedish businessman Frederik Paulsen; Ibrahim Sharaf, a Sheikh from UAE, and Australian adventurer Mike McDowel, who paid  a reported 3million dollars. The two submersibles were plastered with the logos of eight sponsors, and the Kremlin was 100 percent behind this expedition, in every way except its funding. 

So, see ya all as the suspense of this research from !WOW! gets razor sharp. 

Good Night And God Bless

SAM Daily Times - The Voice Of The Voiceless


Research delegation strengthens links with Malaysia


A delegation of research leaders from an Australian network known as the Innovative Research Universities began a week-long visit to Malaysia on Monday aimed at forging new research collaborations and strengthening existing relationships.

The 20-member delegation from the group of seven comprehensive universities have been meeting with government officials and academic heads from Malaysian universities.

Chair of the group, Professor Ian O’Connor, is vice-chancellor of Griffith University in Brisbane. He said universities in the group recognised that research and innovation were at the heart of the successful development of countries across the world.

To access the international world of research effectively, Australia and Malaysia needed to link researchers around the globe to the benefit of all involved.

“We wish to lay the basis for research linkages and partnerships between IRU members and Malaysian universities," O’Connor said.

"In this we align with Australian government objectives and with the objectives of Malaysia's Higher Education Strategic Plan which seeks to encourage collaboration with foreign universities to support joint research and development.

“The creation of such linkages will act to strengthen the research capacity of both our countries." He and his colleagues were delighted to have the opportunity to visit their counterparts in Malaysia and to strengthen existing relationships and create new ties with Malaysian universities, O’Connor said.

The delegation has been meeting with officials from the Ministry of Higher Education and attended an “Australia-Malaysia Research and Innovation Forum”, hosted by the Australian High Commission on Tuesday.

Participants from a wide range of Malaysian universities explored developments in research in Australia and Malaysia. The Australians have also been visiting the five Malaysian research universities to identify potential research links between universities in the two countries.

The visit follows the signing last month of a Malaysia-Australia Free Trade Agreement by Mustapa Mohamed, Malaysia's Minister for International Trade and Industry, and Dr Craig Emerson, Australia's Minister for Trade and Competitiveness, in Kuala Lumpur.

The IRU network comprises Charles Darwin, Flinders, Griffith, James Cook, La Trobe and Murdoch universities, and the University of Newcastle.

Original source here.

Maths A-level exam paper scrapped



A maths A-level exam paper due to be taken next week has been scrapped because of fears of a security breach. Edexcel says that its maths paper due to be taken on 21 June will now be substituted by another paper.

There were fears that copies of the planned maths paper had been made accidentally available to schools preparing for exams in Egypt. "We are confident that no student will be unfairly advantaged or disadvantaged," says the exam board.

The exam board says it will be contacting schools on Wednesday. A statement from Edexcel said: "On Monday, we were made aware of a potential security breach relating to some of our exam papers.

"The British Council, which is responsible for administering Edexcel exams in Egypt, had accidentally sent a small number of live exam papers to schools, inside sealed packets of past exam papers."‪

Newsweek Ranks Albright in Top 25 Most Artistic Schools


Newsweek’s College Rankings 2011 rated Albright in the top 25 colleges in the country for artistic students. “Most artistic” colleges were selected from colleges across the country “based on how imaginative their student body is, as well as how much the college fosters a creative atmosphere. We considered two metrics that quantify both: the percentage of students majoring in visual or performing arts and the number of official campus clubs devoted to artistic pursuits. We only looked at four-year schools that admit less than 50 percent of applicants, to screen for the most selective of the creative colleges,” Newsweek noted.

The Newsweek college rankings note that choosing a college isn’t a “one-size-fits-all decision” and list top colleges and universities in categories such as artistic, activists and brainiacs, among others.

Founded in 1856, Albright College is a nationally ranked, private college with a rigorous liberal arts curriculum with an interdisciplinary focus. The College’s hallmarks are connecting fields of learning, collaborative teaching and learning, and a flexible curriculum that allows students to create an individualized education. More than half of students have dual/individualized majors in as many as 200 different combinations annually. Albright enrolls about 1,660 undergraduates in traditional programs, another 800 adult students in accelerated degree programs, and 100 students in the master’s program in education. Albright College is located in Reading, Pennsylvania, about 60 miles west of Philadelphia.

University Press Release here.

The Impact of Black Soldiers and Amherst College on the Civil Rights Movement



Khary Polk, the Robert E. Keiter 1957 Postdoctoral Fellow and visiting assistant professor of black studies at Amherst completed his doctoral dissertation on the African-American soldier at New York University last summer and is currently adapting the dissertation into book form. We recently spoke with Polk about the upcoming work, which he said will examine “how discourses of race and sexuality intersected within the figure of the African American soldier in the 20th century, and how black soldiers, in particular, found senses of embattled agency through their military travels outside of the United States.”


While the racial integration of the U.S. military is sometimes presented as an outcome of the civil rights movement, Polk argues that in many ways it was the black American soldier who fought on the front lines for equality, to bring home the freedom he was sworn to protect. Along the way in his research, Polk uncovered Amherst's connections to the civil rights movement in the military and beyond.

Legal Options Limited for Alumni Who Told of Abuse at Horace Mann


As former students and prosecutors turn to the courts to deal with reports of widespread sexual abuse at the Horace Mann School, lawyers have begun to conclude that New York’s current restrictive statute of limitations laws are likely to block any effort to hold the prestigious private school legally accountable for the allegations, some of which are decades old.

The Horace Mann School in the Bronx. New York’s current laws are likely to block any effort to hold the school accountable for allegations of child sexual abuse, some of which are decades old.


The Bronx district attorney, Robert T. Johnson, set up a special hot line on Tuesday for former students to report episodes of sexual misconduct. He has acknowledged that cases may not fall within the statute of limitations, a situation that would prevent a criminal prosecution. Mr. Johnson has added that it is not clear whether private schools are covered by laws that require school administrators to report child abuse, as public schools are.

“Despite the statute of limitations issues, information about past conduct can be helpful in assessing the current situation,” said Steven Reed, a spokesman for the district attorney’s office, on Tuesday. The passage of time may also complicate any civil suits. Michael G. Dowd, a New York lawyer who has represented victims of sexual abuse for years, said former Horace Mann students had asked him to review their cases, but most suits would be barred by the state’s statute of limitations.

“I’m disgusted,” Mr. Dowd said in an interview. “When you have to tell someone who was injured as a child that there is no justice for them, it makes you appalled and sick as a human being.”

In the days since they were first described in an article in The New York Times Magazine, the accounts of abuse by several now-dead Horace Mann teachers have put a sharp new focus on state laws that make New York among the most restrictive in limiting legal recourse in child sexual abuse cases. For years, efforts in Albany to liberalize the laws have failed, often encountering fierce resistance from the Roman Catholic Church and other institutions that feared financially devastating lawsuits. “New York is one of the worst states in the country for child sex abuse victims,” said Marci A. Hamilton, a professor at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University who specializes in sexual abuse law.

For civil suits and many criminal charges, New York law requires that allegations be made in court by the time a victim is 23 years old. With the most recent Horace Mann accounts dating from the 1990s, the courts would be likely to bar most cases against the school, its administrators or its teachers, legal experts said.

Around the country, as they have responded to evidence of abuse that often dates from decades ago in the Catholic Church, several states have amended their laws to permit suits many years after the episodes. Connecticut, California and Delaware are among the states that have liberalized their approach. Several states have lifted restrictions on when a lawsuit could be filed, while others allow victims to begin lawsuits at whatever point they come to understand the harm done to them by childhood abuse, no matter how old they are, like when a connection is made between adult depression and a childhood sexual assault.

But New York has remained among the most restrictive states, along with Michigan, Illinois and Ohio, said Jeff Anderson, a St. Paul lawyer who has handled thousands of suits against the Catholic Church.

Margaret M. Markey, a Queens assemblywoman, has repeatedly sponsored a bill to change the law to permit civil suits by victims until they are 28, and which would provide a one-year period during which the courts would consider old abuse claims.

Assemblywoman Markey, a Democrat, said the Horace Mann assertions seemed to have changed the political landscape, in part by shifting the focus from the Catholic Church. She said the accounts showed, “It can happen to anyone.”

But Dennis Poust, the communications director of the New York State Catholic Conference, noted that one important goal of any statute of limitations was to keep the courts from getting involved in lawsuits based on long-ago incidents, when, he said, it is often difficult to get to the truth.

“We believe,” Mr. Poust said, “it is impossible to defend against claims that are decades old when the abusers are dead or infirm, and the people who supervised them are dead.”

New York judges have sometimes seemed frustrated that the state’s statutes of limitations barred the suits. In 2006, the state’s highest court said the existing law did not permit suits against the Catholic Church based on old claims. “However reprehensible the conduct alleged,” the court said, “these actions are subject to the time limits created by the Legislature.”

With varying degrees of success, victims’ lawyers have tried novel strategies to keep sex abuse suits alive. Some have tried suing under state or federal laws that permit action against racketeering enterprises, but such laws are often geared toward financial damage, not an emotionally scarring experience. A federal-court case now under way in New York involving claims of sexual abuse at another private school, Poly Prep, in Brooklyn, is testing that legal approach.

Other cases have been based on claims that cover-ups and conspiracies continued through the years. Such a position can remove any statute of limitations issue because such cases are effectively about the conspiracy, not the original sexual assault.

Horace Mann has called the allegations of sexual abuse abhorrent, but declined to respond to specific allegations “upon advice of counsel.”

Ms. Hamilton, the Cardozo law professor, said that as prosecutors and civil lawyers evaluate potential cases they will focus on whether those who currently run the school have had knowledge of any sex abuse allegations.“The question with Horace Mann,” she said, “is whether or not there is an ongoing conspiracy.”

Original source here.

Sprint has Google Wallet alternative in works, report says

Another report has surfaced saying Sprint is currently working on a near-field communication payment platform it'll call Touch Wallet.




Sprint is working on a mobile-payment service that could take on Google Wallet and countless other competitors in the marketplace, according to a new report.

Android Central yesterday posted two images it claims show how Sprint's mobile-payment service will work. Based on the images in the slides, the service will force users to enter a pass code to access their wallet, input information, and make payments. In addition to credit card support, the images seem to indicate that the service, called Touch Wallet, according to Android Central, will support "loyalty cards."

Android Central's report comes just a couple of days after NFC Times cited its own sources who said that Sprint would launch its mobile-payment platform as early as this summer. However, that report claims the app will only be called "Touch."

For its part, Sprint has stayed tight-lipped on its plans, but did tell NFC Times earlier this week that it's "actively working" in the mobile-payment space.

"In keeping with our open approach, Sprint is actively working with others in the mobile payment ecosystem," the company said in a statement. "We will continue to bring practical, easy-to-use mobile payment solutions to customers on Sprint devices, however, we do not have any news to share at this time."

Sprint is in desperate need of a mobile-payment solution. The carrier's competitors, AT&T, T-Mobile USA, and Verizon Wireless, have all teamed up to build their own mobile-payment platform, called Isis. Google has come out in full force in the space with its Wallet application, though that service has yet to come anywhere near dominating the market. A host of other companies, including PayPal, are also actively targeting the mobile-payments space.

Source: cnet

Yahoo, CNBC form content-sharing partnership

Yahoo and CNBC have formed a new partnership to jointly distribute content and programming across their networks, the companies announced today.

The deal will give Yahoo Finance greater access to real-time financial reporting as well analysis and interviews from CNBC, TV's biggest business news channel. The two companies will also partner on creating co-branded, original videos that will appear on Yahoo Finance and CNBC.com.

Together, the companies aim to reach an unduplicated online audience of more than 40 million U.S. viewers each month.

"Our mission is to create the richest and most powerful experiences for users each and every day," Ross Levinsohn, interim CEO of Yahoo, said in a statement announcing the partnership. "Partnering with CNBC will allow Yahoo Finance to expand its offerings instantly and enhance its position as the most viewed and utilized finance site in the world."

The partnership promises to prominently promote CNBC content across a variety of Yahoo network properties, as well as give Yahoo Finance reporters greater exposure via CNBC's broadcast platform.

"This collaboration is about two leaders in their respective spaces coming together," CNBC CEO Mark Hoffman said in a statement. "With CNBC taking a central role on the biggest business news site in the world, we now have the ability to provide real-time news, analysis and information to a larger audience and offer unmatched advertising solutions for marketers looking for access across multiple platforms."

The companies did not reveal any financial details of the multi-year deal.


Source: cnet

Google reveals what's hot in user searches

The Web giant revamps its "Hot Searches" in Google Trends -- rolling out related searches, a more visual display, and extra information on all trending queries.




If you go to Google's "Hot Searches" list, you'll find that the top three searches today were Apple, Robin Roberts, and the LA Kings. You'll also see how many times each has been Googled; for example, Apple had more than half a million searches in the past few hours.

All of these features are new with Google's revamp of its U.S. Hot Searches, which it rolled out today.

"With Hot Searches in Google Trends, you can see a list of the fastest rising search terms in the U.S. for a snapshot of what's on the public's collective mind," Google software engineer Nimrod Tamir wrote in a blog post. "Now, Hot Searches has gotten a refresh that makes the list of searches more visual, groups related rising search terms together and lets you see more information about those searches."

Similar to trending topics on Twitter, users can catch a glimpse at what is happening in national dialog or find breaking news. To figure out which topics users are gravitating toward, Google uses an algorithm that analyzes million of searches and then classifies them. Hot Searches is updated hourly.

Tamir outlines all of the new Hot Searches features here:


Unlike the previous version of Hot Searches, which always provided 20 daily results, the new page introduces a filtering system that helps us make sure that the list includes only the truly hottest news stories of the day. Also, when a few of the fastest rising search terms refer to the same news story, such as [tony awards 2012] and [audra mcdonald], they're now aggregated into one entry, which lists all the "Related searches" that go along with the main story. Lastly, the new list also provides an indication of how many searches have been conducted for each topic in the 24 hour period when it was trending.


Source: cnet

Coventry launches electric bus services


Electric buses that can be charged in 30 minutes are being launched in Coventry later.

The three vehicles, owned by family firm Travel De Courcey, will operate park and ride routes in the city.

The £1m scheme has been part-funded by the government and transport minister Norman Baker is due to launch the buses at lunchtime.

Coventry City Council said it was the first rapid recharge system to operate in the UK.

Owner Mike De Courcey said the 30 minutes recharge time, thanks to recent advances in battery technology, made the services "viable".

Previously, similar electric vehicles would have taken six to seven hours to charge, he said.

The new buses, which can carry up to 40 passengers at a time, also recharge their batteries under braking, similar to technology used in Formula 1 cars.

Mr De Courcey said each bus would save about £120 per day in fuel.

Despite that, he described them as "a gamble", saying that if the 200 batteries lasted less than the expected five years "it won't pay off".
 
The buses, which are expected to operate in the city from next week, have also been part funded by Coventry City Council, Cenex and Centro. (BBC)

Facebook members desert Zynga's Farmville and Cityville

Millions of Facebook members have abandoned the top social games of last year, with titles like Farmville and Cityville losing up to half of their regular players. 

In December last year, over 10 million people were playing Cityville daily, and more than seven million logging on to Farmville every day, according to AppData, a traffic tracking firm.
But six months later an exodus has hit both virtual worlds, with June's numbers showing a drop of almost six million daily players for Cityville and three million for Farmville.
While other popular Facebook games such as Words With Friends and Texas HoldEm Poker have shown slow but steady growth in 2012, it seems that the widely-reproduced "-ville" formula, based on players making improvements to a virtual town or home and inviting their friends to help via the social network, has lost its charm.
The company behind the games, Zynga, was floated on the stock market at the height of its success in December and valued at $10bn.
It used some of the cash raised to expand, adding original new titles like Bubble Safari and purchasing the company behind Draw Something, a hugely popular Pictionary-like game for smartphones, for $183 million in March.
Since the acqusition, Draw Something has entered a decline of its own, losing almost four million daily players in three months.
Combined with Zynga's close association with Facebook, which has suffered its own share price fall since its flotation, it has driven the gaming company's valuation down by almost half. Its share price now sands at around half the initial $9.50 asking price.
Four of Zynga's games are still in the top 10 most-used Facebook apps, but it faces the same challenge from smartphones as the social network that helped it become a multibillion-dollar public company.
"We believe that interest in Facebook-based gaming may have reached a negative inflection point as more casual gamers migrate to mobile platforms,” said Doug Creutz, an analyst at Cowen & Co. He wrote a report this week entitled "Facebook Gaming in Accelerating User Tailspin", which helped drive Zynga's stok under $5 for the first time.

 

ATMs to operate without a card

New technology to enable people to withdraw money from cash machines using their smartphone has been unveiled.
Customers who use the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) or NatWest mobile banking app can now request cash, up to £100, via their smartphone.
They are given a six-digit code to enter into an ATM to release the cash.
A similar system has been developed by cash machine operator NCR. This requires users to scan a barcode to withdraw the money.
The services are the latest developments in a long-predicted move towards the smartphone becoming a digital wallet.
'Simple and secure' RBS said that its new system would help customers who had forgotten their bank cards, or who wished to send cash to family members in a hurry.
It would also allow the people to leave their wallets at home in favour of taking a mobile phone, it suggested.
"It is a really simple and secure way to help our customers get cash whenever and wherever they need it," said Ben Green, head of mobile at RBS and NatWest.
The service is available to customers who have downloaded the bank's free app and use the 8,000 RBS, NatWest or Tesco branded ATMs in the UK. Some 2.6 million people have installed it on their smartphone so far, the bank said.
At present, customers using a card can withdraw up to £300. Initially the limit on the cardless withdrawal will be £100.
Hidden code Access to the app requires a password, and the withdrawal code will be hidden until the user taps the screen. This is aimed at preventing thieves from looking over the user's shoulder to steal the code.
The system is an extension of a RBS service that allowed people whose card had been stolen to access emergency cash from an ATM.
The bank is also unveiling a system which allows customers to make charity donations at its ATMs.
In a separate development, NCR has announced that it has developed software that allows people to scan a barcode on their smartphone at an ATM to release an amount entered in their smartphone.
It is looking for banks and building societies to adopt the software. (bbc)

Switzerland’s summer secrets

With pristine waters, cute local beaches and an impressive network of walking trails, the picturesque wine-growing region of Lavaux is one of Europe's best-kept secrets.


Situated in French-speaking western Switzerland between Lausanne and Vevey on the northern shores of Lake Geneva, Lavaux has all the beauty of the Italian lakes but a low-key sense of chic and zero pollution problems. Its microclimate gives it an almost-Mediterranean feel in during the summer months, when locals don swimmers, shades and sandals to revel in the best backyard in central Europe.

Local wines
On the shores of Lake Geneva, 800-year-old vineyard terraces – a UnescoWorld Heritage Site -- rise from the lakefront to the hills behind, peppered with picture-perfect medieval towns and plenty of walking trails.
The golden glow that seems to infuse the area is not a figment of your imagination. Locals say that there are three suns at work in the vineyards of Lavaux: the actual sun; its reflection on the lake; and the stones that trap its heat and keep the vines warm at night.
Lavaux wines rarely feature on lists outside Switzerland, due to the relatively small size of the area, the strong Swiss franc and the locals’ tendency to keep vintages to themselves. Local whites tend to be fruity and vigorous, with chasselas being the most produced, and the fine, well-balanced local pinot noir is also popular.
To sample the region’s best wines, the many caveaux (wine cellars) of the villages in Lavaux should not be missed. The Caveau des vignerons de Lutry in the lakefront town of Lutry, five kilometres east of Lausanne, is a popular choice, and Rivaz's Lavaux Vinorama offers the region’s largest selection of local wines for tasting and sale.
The jewel in the Lavaux crown, though, is the stunningly pretty Saint-Saphorin which lies 15km southeast of Lausanne. Visit the lakeside village’s Auberge de l’Onde, a 475-year-old inn that is perched on the small town square. Its high-end restaurant and casual pinte (cafe-bistro) are loved by locals and out-of-towners alike. Expect to find high-end French-influenced cuisine in the restaurant and delicious cakes and tarts in the pinte.
Golden walks
Exploring Lavaux on foot is as easy or hard as you choose to make it. The simple vineyard stroll from Lutry to the village of Cully is slightly more than five kilometres and takes about 90 minutes. The “Grande Traversée de Lavaux”, with its perfect panoramas of the lake, covers 36km from the majestic Château de Chillon to Lausanne and takes eight hours. The 11.5km uphill trek from Cully to Chexbres village (give yourself about four hours) reward the effort with heart-breaking views.
Signs and multilingual information panels posted throughout the region detail how long it will take to walk (or cycle) between towns, and provide information about the local wine-production process.
Secret beaches
The pristine (but admittedly bracing) waters of Lake Geneva, with its casual plages (beaches), make swimming and sunbathing obvious activities. Plus, the town of Evian, France is just on the other side of the lake, so you can actually swim in Evian water.
For a social vibe, head five kilometres east of Lausanne to the village of Lutry, home to a bustling pebble beach, a grass lawn swarming with bronzed locals and its own funky little buvette (drinking spot) that doles out drinks, great grills and fondue.
For a more incognito swim, St-Saphorin's postage-stamp of a plage is worth the search. From the train station, head on foot back in the direction of Lausanne, cross over the train tracks via the little footbridge and descend the stairs to the diminutive beach, complete with diving board, change rooms and space for only a handful of people. Cully is another good spot for peaceful lake swimming in the calm, deep waters.
Party time
Locals like to let their hair down in the summer, and the town of Montreux, a quick 27km southeast of Lausanne, remains very much the place to be when the sun goes down. The town is best known for its famous Montreux Jazz Festival (from 29 June to 14 July this year), a mix of rock royalty, jazz luminaries and up-and-comers. You will want to book ahead for big-name gigs, but a roster of free open-air concerts keeps things democratic.
Practicalities
Travelling in Switzerland is a well-ordered affair, whether by car, train, boat or on foot. Saint-Saphorin lies on the train route between Lausanne and Montreux. All other towns mentioned above can be accessed by train and/or bus from Lausanne or Montreux (from Geneva, change trains at Lausanne).
By car, take the coast road, known as the Route du Lac, from Lausanne.
If you want to arrive by boat, Compagnie Générale de Navigation has services in summer to/between lakeside towns in both Switzerland and France.
There is a wide range of accommodation in Lausanne and Montreux, plus small inns throughout the area. The brand-new Hotel Lavaux in Cully has 180-degree views of the lake. (BBC)

Spider-Man swings into Tokyo for "Amazing" premiere

Andrew Garfield and the stars of "The Amazing Spider-Man" swung into Tokyo on Wednesday, bringing the comic book crime-fighter back to the big screen in the world premiere of one of the summer's most anticipated movies.
Fans swarmed around the red carpet in Tokyo's posh Roppongi Hills area for a glimpse of Garfield, co-star Emma Stone and other cast members as a stuntman dressed as Spider-Man swung over the crowd, then scaled a wall into a large "web."
Garfield, who plays Peter Parker said the role had appealed for many reasons.
"Spider-Man has always been the only teenage superhero, and the most human one in my humble opinion, and that's just one of the things that sets him apart," he told Reuters.
"He's all too human, that's what's wonderful about him."
The Amazing Spider-Man, which opens on limited release in Japan on June 23 and hits North American theaters on July 3, reboots the franchise that started in 2002 with Tobey Maguire in the lead role.
Now it is Garfield, 28, who dons Spider-Man's famous red-and-blue suit in a story that explores the origins of teenager Peter Parker and how he became a superhero.
Stone, who portrays Gwen Stacy, Parker's first love interest and has been linked romantically with Garfield off-screen, said the change offered fresh perspective on the tale.
"New love interest, the story of Peter's life, there's a lot of stuff to learn about Peter Parker," said Stone, 23, who wore a burgundy dress.
"He's a real underdog, and he's bullied, and I think everyone can relate ... He's an incredibly inspirational character."
Among the changes was the use of 3D, made possible due to recent advances in technology, said producer Matt Tolmach at a news conference earlier in the day.
"In so many ways, what's magical about Spider-Man is that we all identify with this character - he's all of us, he's everyman. So what would it feel like if you could experience flight, and sailing through the city, what it feels like to swing on a web through New York?" he said.
"It was very, very clear to all of us that this is a movie that was meant to be told in 3D. 3D is a form of storytelling, not just a way to sell the movie to audiences."
Japan has proved to be a strong draw for the Spider-Man movies. It was the top overseas market for the first two movies, according to Box Office Mojo, and Spider-Man 3 premiered in Tokyo in 2007.
"I came to see Emma, she's gorgeous," said Keita Fukushima, 23, who said he was interested in seeing the new Gwen Stacy role. Mary Jane Watson had been Parker's girlfriend in the other movies.
But eight-year-old Yu Suguro, who wore a red Spider-Man costume, was there for his hero. "I love Spider-Man," he said.
Though Garfield said at the news conference that being named Spider-Man gave him "the purest joy you could ever feel," he added that the role was not without difficulties.
"When I put on the suit, I got very itchy and uncomfortable, and it took me a long time to go to the restroom."

The Guardian (2006)

The Guardian is a 2006 action-adventure drama film starring Kevin Costner, Ashton Kutcher, and Melissa Sagemiller. The film was released on September 29, 2006, and was directed by Andrew Davis, director of The Fugitive. The setting for the film is the United States Coast Guard and their Aviation Survival Technician (AST) program.

Plot: Ben Randall (Kevin Costner) is the top rescue swimmer at the United States Coast Guard's Aviation Survival Technician (AST) program, who continues to work against regulation past the age of 40. Jake Fischer (Ashton Kutcher) is a hot-shot candidate for AST who was ranked as a top competitive swimmer in high school with scholarships to every Ivy league college, but opted to enlist in the Coast Guard. The film's title is introduced by a mythic tale: people lost at sea often claim they feel a presence lifting them to the surface, breathing life into their bodies while they are waiting for help to arrive. They call this presence "The Guardian."

Ben is confronted by his wife, asking for a separation due to his frequent time at work. He receives a page for an immediate rescue. Out at sea, he loses his rescue team in an HH-60J Jayhawk helicopter crash and while waiting in a survival raft, his best friend, Chief Petty Officer Carl Billings (Omari Hardwick), dies. Shaken, he is forced to either retire or teach at a Coast Guard training school; he reluctantly chooses the latter. Here, Jake arrives as a hopeful AST candidate at "A" school, where Ben is considered a legend with a countless number of saves.

During the training, Jake meets a local schoolteacher, Emily Thomas, and they begin a "casual" relationship, as they both know their time together is limited. Once the initial weeks of training are over and most of the students dropped out, detailed instruction begins at the academy. After sleeping at Emily’s house, Jake arrives late to class and is confronted by Ben. Although Jake is not dropped, he is punished for his tardiness. Ben tries to force Jake into quitting, but he later sees his persistence and dedication. Meeting Emily in a bar, Jake tells her about him beating all of his instructor Ben Randall's records. However, Maggie the barkeep (Bonnie Bramlett), an old friend of Ben's, tells Jake of an unbreakable record, in which a rescue at a ship fire, Ben worked tirelessly to save all the victims. With one man left and a broken winch, Randall held the man by his fingertips for the entire flight to land, resulting in extensive injuries to his hand and shoulder.

Under the Never Sky (Under the Never Sky, #1) by Veronica Rossi

Since she'd been on the outside, she'd survived an Aether storm, she'd had a knife held to her throat, and she'd seen men murdered. This was worse.

Exiled from her home, the enclosed city of Reverie, Aria knows her chances of surviving in the outer wasteland - known as The Death Shop - are slim. If the cannibals don't get her, the violent, electrified energy storms will. She's been taught that the very air she breathes can kill her. Then Aria meets an Outsider named Perry. He's wild - a savage - and her only hope of staying alive.

A hunter for his tribe in a merciless landscape, Perry views Aria as sheltered and fragile - everything he would expect from a Dweller. But he needs Aria's help too; she alone holds the key to his redemption. Opposites in nearly every way, Aria and Perry must accept each other to survive. Their unlikely alliance forges a bond that will determine the fate of all who live under the never sky.

Guess by Marciano calls on blogger Elin Kling for capsule collection

Clothing brand Guess by Marciano is collaborating with famous Swedish blogger Elin Kling who writes fashion blog Style by Kling for the creation of a collection of clothes for women.

The new line will be sold as a limited edition in Guess by Marciano stores, select Guess stores and a few multibrand spaces, as well as on the brand's e-commerce site, starting this November.

An icon of the street style scene, Elin Kling worked with Guess by Marciano on a capsule collection with some Spanish references, composed of dresses, pieces in denim and leather and shirts.

"When I met Elin, we connected right away. She has style, she has personality, and she is typically our customer. She is feminine, she is sexy, she is super confident and I really love how she perceived the brand. It isn't just that she is a blogger - what drove me first was her. It was Elin. And that is what is important for us," outlined Paul Marciano.

Kling is the first guest collaborator for the brand.

Gayle will be hungry - Pollard


Kieron Pollard

Chris Gayle will have enough "hunger and desire" when he returns to West Indies colours for the first time in 15 months against England. That is the opinion of Gayle's West Indies team-mate Kieron Pollard, who said that Gayle's return only means West Indies would be well-equipped to face England in the three-match ODI series followed by a solitary Twenty20.

"Obviously it is a boost. Chris is a world-class. He has proven himself over the years," Pollard said on the eve of West Indies' tour match against Middlesex at Lord's. "I am a youngster and have seen Chris on television and I get the opportunity to play alongside him in the same team. It is fantastic. He has been out for a while so he will be hungry to go out there and perform."

Gayle last played for West Indies last March during the 2011 World Cup when West Indies lost to Pakistan in the quarter-finals. He was included in the 15-man squad for the England ODI series but subsequently got embroiled in a bitter dispute with the WICB, which was resolved on the eve of the squad announcement.

Gayle kept himself match-fit in the time away from the West Indies dressing room in various Twenty20 domestic leagues around the world. He has topped the run charts in the last two editions of the IPL, which Pollard says can only be a positive now for West Indies.

"He has been doing well in IPL and all over," Pollard said. "It is now a matter of transforming it to West Indies cricket. And I am sure he is willing and ready to do that so hopefully we can go out there as a team and do well."

Pollard, who is one of the seven ODI players to join the squad, said West Indies would definitely prove to be a tough challenge for England. "We are a very good team. We have a wealth of experience with Chris back at the top of the order. He is one of the most explosive batsman in the world and an experienced former captain. Then we have Marlon Samuels, who has been around for a while along with Dwayne Bravo and Denesh Ramdin and myself so we have a very experienced team. The days of just competing in ODIs are over. It is a matter of performing on the field."


© ESPN EMEA Ltd.

Spectacular goal gives Poles night to remember


(Reuters) - Poland's 1-1 draw with Russia on Tuesday will soon become a mere Euro 2012 footnote but for everyone crammed into to national stadium and millions more watching on TV it was an occasion that will live long in the memory.

Indelibly seared into the collective Polish memory will be the stunning left-footed drive by captain Jakub Blaszczykowski that cancelled out Alan Dzagoyev's 37th-minute header which had looked set to send the Russians through with two wins out of two in Group A.

Captain "Kuba" ensured that what always looked the tightest of groups will go to the final round of fixtures when, after a length-of-the field counter-attack, he cut in from the right and unleashed a spectacular shot into the top corner that would have lifted the stadium roof, had it not been left open this time.

The goal was worthy of the deafening roar that greeted it and raised Polish spirits after the gloom that had settled on the capital hours earlier following clashes between rival fans and police that left at least 10 people injured and led to around 100 arrests.

The politically-charged fixture had always been marked as the most likely to produce trouble and it duly arrived as local fans took exception to thousands of Russian fans joining a set-piece march towards the stadium on their Independence Day.

Thankfully there was no hint of trouble inside the stadium, where supporters sat side by side segregated by no more than a row of empty seats. Instead it was handshakes all round after a breathless match ended with honours even.


DRIVING SEAT

Russia remain in the driving seat in the group with four points, going into their final match against Greece. The Czech Republic, who beat Greece 2-1 earlier on Tuesday have three points, Poland two and the Greeks one. A point for Russia would be enough to guarantee their place in the quarter-finals but Poland have to beat the Czechs to advance.

"With the sort of support we had here today from the fans, we are capable of achieving a lot," Blaszczykowski said. "I believe that we can secure a historic advance to the quarter finals against the Czechs in Wroclaw."

Onavo Count to track Android data usage

Onavo Count will make sure that you're not overpaying for data on your Android.

As more wireless carriers switch to tiered, capped, and throttled data plans, it's becoming more important to be aware of your data consumption. By knowing just how much data you need when mobile it becomes easier to select a plan that fits your needs. After all, the prices of unlimited data plans have gone up, and even the medium tier plans can cost a pretty penny. So how can you find out which apps are eating all your data and ultimately pick the right plan?

Onavo, mostly known for its work in data compression on iOS, offers an app that will help answer your data questions. Unlike a lot of the carrier-loaded apps for monitoring data, this app features a clean and easy-to-use UI along with alert features for when you approach your data limits. You can also see how much data each app is using.

245 rhinos killed in South Africa this year


THE slaughter of rhinos is continuing at a record pace with 245 killed in South Africa since January, authorities say.

The country's largest game reserve, the Kruger Park, has been the hardest hit, losing 60 per cent of the national toll, the Department of Environmental Affairs said today.

With roughly 20,000 rhino, South Africa is home to about 75 per cent of the world population.

Poachers killed 448 animals last year, compared with 333 in 2010. In 2007 only 13 were killed by illegal hunters.

The animals' distinctive horns are hacked off to be smuggled to the lucrative Asian black market, where the fingernail-like substance is falsely believed to have powerful healing properties.

On the black market, the horns fetch almost 50,000 euros ($63,000) each, or the same price by weight as gold.

Efforts to curb the killings include the deployment of soldiers in the Kruger Park and specialist investigators.

Police have arrested 161 suspects, including 138 poachers, since the start of the year, the ministry said.