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Archive for July, 2008

Uwec

posted by admin in 114

You’ll want to move into this posh joint

don’t be encourage off by the pretentious pre-eminence and dear postcode - this belgravia restaurant is an inimate, friendly and reasonably priced delight



Obama, McCain duel over celebrity ad, attacks
(Reuters)







Green-Brown Revolution - Shattered Dreams

some indians be green whirl is a killer daniel pepper, chronicle foreign worship army monday, july 28, 2008 jagdev singh has too much urea, a chemical fertilizer, in… a farmer sprays insecticides on a rice paddy, without pro… elementary seeds are distributed free, so long as farmers re… (07-28) 04:00 pdt jajjal, – india - in jail a hot, dun-colored courtyard, jagdev …
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Group tasks world over Darfur aid

posted by admin in cnn, news

NEW YORK (AP) — A Darfur advocacy group complained Wednesday that nations aren’t doing enough to help the U.N. peacekeeping mission for the stricken Sudanese region, urging them to provide helicopters and other equipment needed to protect civilians.

Without helicopters, the force’s ability to respond quickly to events and fulfill its mandate to protect civilians is severely compromised, said a report released by the Save Darfur Coalition.

The report, written by aviation expert Thomas Withington, said military powers like the U.S., Britain and France are tied down in wars and other peacekeeping operations.

But it singled out the Czech Republic, Italy, Romania, Spain, Ukraine and India, saying they have suitable aircraft needed for the mission.

The report came on the first anniversary of the U.N. Security Council resolution that authorized the Darfur peacekeeping mission, which is struggling to get enough troops and equipment. Council members are debating this week the mission’s renewal, which expires Thursday.

The peacekeeping force, a joint operation of the United Nations and African Union, has only about a third of its authorized 26,000 personnel.

A U.N. official in Darfur told The Associated Press the mission has only 27 transport helicopters, all commercially leased.

found here.

China asserts self on global trade

posted by admin in cnn, news

BEIJING, China (AP) — Richer and more confident, China is playing a higher-profile role in wrangling over global commerce, drawing criticism from U.S. officials who once prodded Beijing to be more active in international trade talks.

This week in Geneva, China took an unexpectedly prominent part in pressing, along with India, for import safeguards to shield poor farmers. U.S. officials blamed them for the collapse of global trade talks. China’s envoy countered by accusing the Americans of demanding too much.

Beijing’s unusually public stance reflects its status as an emerging power that is increasingly asserting itself on issues ranging from climate change to Africa, buoyed by the rapid expansion of the world’s fourth-largest economy.

China is practicing a kind of major power diplomacy. It expects its interests to be respected, said Joseph Cheng, chairman of the Contemporary China Research Center at City University of Hong Kong. On trade, he said, China intends to play a more active role as a Third World leader.

The trade clash highlighted China’s unusual economic mix of efficient, competitive exporters and a vast, poor countryside that is home to millions of farming families crowded onto tiny, inefficient plots.

China has been a major beneficiary of trade liberalization, which helped to guarantee market access abroad for its goods. But the United States, the European Union and other trading partners say Beijing is violating its free-trade commitments by hampering foreign competition in its banking, finance and other industries.

China’s imports of corn, soybeans and other commodities to feed its 1.3 billion people and growing numbers of farm animals are rising rapidly.

But Beijing is reluctant to do anything that might hurt its countryside, which has missed out on China’s three-decade-old boom. Thousands of rural protests are reported every year over poverty and other complaints. Communist leaders have made an official priority of improving rural life.

We need to import a lot of food. But if the amount of imports is too big, it will cause unemployment among farmers and social instability, said Shen Guobin, an associate professor at Fudan University’s Institute of the World Economy in Shanghai.

We have more bargaining power on the international stage than before, Shen said. It’s the good performance of our economy that supports our negotiators.

China remained in the background in global affairs for two decades after its 1979 opening and the launch of economic reform. But over the past decade, Beijing has stepped up its presence abroad with activities ranging from taking on a bigger role in U.N. peacekeeping to expanding political and commercial ties with Africa and Latin America.

China has pursued oil investments in Iran and Sudan, resisting foreign pressure to limit contact with their isolated governments.

The Geneva talks snagged on whether China, India and other countries should be allowed to impose higher tariffs to protect farmers against a sudden surge in imports or a drop in prices. U.S. and European negotiators rejected the proposed threshold to trigger such measures as too low. The U.S. trade representative, Susan Schwab, criticized the measure as blatant protectionism. Watch as she discusses how the talks failed

The conflict was a bitter irony after Schwab and other U.S. officials lobbied Beijing to help restart the global talks, urging China to act as a developing world champion of free trade. In 2006, Schwab told then-Commerce Minister Bo Xilai that it’s time for China to speak up more in the WTO.

China’s trade minister, Chen Deming, blamed Washington for the impasse, saying once their interests were guaranteed, the Americans demanded a sky-high price, Chinese business newspapers said Wednesday. Watch what’s at stake

found here.

Getting to grips with Google Earth

posted by admin in cnn, news

(CNN) — In the second Fantastic Four movie, a character called the Silver Surfer glides effortlessly over the Earth’s terrain on a gleaming trans-galactic surfboard.

Less well-traveled beings, in the form of researchers in Germany, are now doing something similar, only using Google Earth and the Wii Balance Board.

In their project, users stand on the board, which is placed before a large-screen projection of Google Earth.

To move forward or to the side, users simply lean on the board in the corresponding direction. The sensation, say the researchers, is indeed like being the Silver Surfer on his ride.

The Balance Board, of course, was never intended for this use. It’s sold by Nintendo as an accessory for the Wii console and used in skiing, fitness and other video games.

But for the researchers, the board is simply another interesting low-cost input device for enabling new user interactions, says Matthieu Deru.

Deru and his partner, Simon Bergweiler, work at the Advanced Tangible Interface Lab at the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence. They do all kinds of intriguing research there, but this particular project involves analyzing and interpreting the data of the Wii Balance Board and making the results usable.

The project is part of a broader trend: Innovative consumer hits, like the iPhone, Google Earth, Second Life, and the Wii remotes and accessories, are increasingly put to unexpected — and often unauthorized — uses by outside researchers and tinkerers.

Sometimes the experimenters combine these products. There’s no shortage of examples.

The Wiimote has been put to dozens of quirky uses, from corporate training programs in Second Life to turning the human body into a musical instrument.

Such experiments will likely increase in number after Nintendo releases its upcoming MotionPlus add-on adaptor, which will help the Wiimote detect an even greater range of motions (think sword play).

The German duo are also working on an intelligent touch-screen terminal for iPhones. Place the latter on the kiosk and the phone’s media files are displayed on the terminal screen. Users can then use gestures to, say, rotate or scale pictures.

Meanwhile Google Earth, though it works just fine with a regular mouse and keyboard, cries out for experimenters to devise cooler navigation techniques. After all, zooming and zipping around the planet deserves more than the same tools used for opening and closing windows.

The cry was answered partly by a new breed of mouse made specifically for navigating virtual worlds. 3D Connexion’s SpaceNavigator, for instance, features a knob you can push in any direction to fly around, with your speed depending on how hard you push.

But more interesting, if less accessible, ideas have cropped up. A startup called LM3LABS, based in Tokyo and France, has created a large, floating holographic version of Google Earth whereby users can spin the ghostly globe and use gestures to zoom in and out on it.

Founder Nicolas Loeillot describes the experience as being far more rich and tangible (despite the lack of touch) than the desktop experience. Stereo vision is used to track the finger in the air.

The company is working on something similar for computers, so you can, say, point and click your way around the screen without touching anything.

Museums are interested in the globe, says Loeillot, because no learning is required: Customers want slick and invisible technologies.

The globe set-up is not priced for consumers, though.

found here.

Getting to grips with Google Earth

posted by admin in cnn, news

(CNN) — In the second Fantastic Four movie, a character called the Silver Surfer glides effortlessly over the Earth’s terrain on a gleaming trans-galactic surfboard.

Less well-traveled beings, in the form of researchers in Germany, are now doing something similar, only using Google Earth and the Wii Balance Board.

In their project, users stand on the board, which is placed before a large-screen projection of Google Earth.

To move forward or to the side, users simply lean on the board in the corresponding direction. The sensation, say the researchers, is indeed like being the Silver Surfer on his ride.

The Balance Board, of course, was never intended for this use. It’s sold by Nintendo as an accessory for the Wii console and used in skiing, fitness and other video games.

But for the researchers, the board is simply another interesting low-cost input device for enabling new user interactions, says Matthieu Deru.

Deru and his partner, Simon Bergweiler, work at the Advanced Tangible Interface Lab at the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence. They do all kinds of intriguing research there, but this particular project involves analyzing and interpreting the data of the Wii Balance Board and making the results usable.

The project is part of a broader trend: Innovative consumer hits, like the iPhone, Google Earth, Second Life, and the Wii remotes and accessories, are increasingly put to unexpected — and often unauthorized — uses by outside researchers and tinkerers.

Sometimes the experimenters combine these products. There’s no shortage of examples.

The Wiimote has been put to dozens of quirky uses, from corporate training programs in Second Life to turning the human body into a musical instrument.

Such experiments will likely increase in number after Nintendo releases its upcoming MotionPlus add-on adaptor, which will help the Wiimote detect an even greater range of motions (think sword play).

The German duo are also working on an intelligent touch-screen terminal for iPhones. Place the latter on the kiosk and the phone’s media files are displayed on the terminal screen. Users can then use gestures to, say, rotate or scale pictures.

Meanwhile Google Earth, though it works just fine with a regular mouse and keyboard, cries out for experimenters to devise cooler navigation techniques. After all, zooming and zipping around the planet deserves more than the same tools used for opening and closing windows.

The cry was answered partly by a new breed of mouse made specifically for navigating virtual worlds. 3D Connexion’s SpaceNavigator, for instance, features a knob you can push in any direction to fly around, with your speed depending on how hard you push.

But more interesting, if less accessible, ideas have cropped up. A startup called LM3LABS, based in Tokyo and France, has created a large, floating holographic version of Google Earth whereby users can spin the ghostly globe and use gestures to zoom in and out on it.

Founder Nicolas Loeillot describes the experience as being far more rich and tangible (despite the lack of touch) than the desktop experience. Stereo vision is used to track the finger in the air.

The company is working on something similar for computers, so you can, say, point and click your way around the screen without touching anything.

Museums are interested in the globe, says Loeillot, because no learning is required: Customers want slick and invisible technologies.

The globe set-up is not priced for consumers, though.

found here.

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