The BlackBerry Storm3 looks pretty awesome, in fact, it looks like what the first and second Storm devices should have been. It looks like RIM has canceled SurePress too, which is great because a touchscreen device doesn’t really need it. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : BlackBerryCool Discovery Date : 19/02/2011 01:28 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …The BlackBerry Storm3 looks pretty awesome, in fact, it looks like what the first and second Storm devices should have been. It looks like RIM has canceled SurePress too, which is great because a touchscreen device doesn’t really need it. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : BlackBerryCool Discovery Date : 19/02/2011 01:28 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …The BlackBerry Storm3 looks pretty awesome, in fact, it looks like what the first and second Storm devices should have been. It looks like RIM has canceled SurePress too, which is great because a touchscreen device doesn’t really need it. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : BlackBerryCool Discovery Date : 19/02/2011 01:28 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …The coffin of John Paul II will be exhumed for his beatification ceremony in May, reports Reuters . It will remain closed, but the faithful will be able to pray before it at the Vatican. About a million people are expected at the ceremony—which will bring John Paul one step…
Continue reading …The echo of Egypt’s revolution is rocking despotic regimes from Algiers to Damascus It is just one extraordinary week since the fall of the Egyptian president. For 30 years Hosni Mubarak had been the region’s representative figure of the west’s way of doing business. Like the ocean after an earthquake, the shock waves of his fall have grown in violence until now they are rocking despotic regimes from Algiers to Damascus. Some of the UK’s closest allies – old friends in Gulf states like Bahrain and new ones like Libya’s Colonel Gaddafi – are brutally repressing protests, potentially using teargas and other material legitimately imported from British companies. This looks like a street-level Arab revolt, each uprising different in origin but all sharing the common denominator of youth and the inspiration of Tunis and Cairo relayed by text message and internet. The protesters are confronting rulers who have been courted by generations of western politicians. The result is an almost unprecedented challenge to postwar foreign policy. It demands a response which recognises that there will be no return to business as usual, and that the conversation can no longer be restricted to a narrow elite. It is time to substitute a new era of shared values for the old one of national interest. It is too soon to try to say how that response should be framed. At least the foreign secretary, William Hague, and his minister Alistair Burt have promised that export licences will be closely scrutinised from now on. They have rightly called on Arab leaders to show restraint and reform, but the real power lies in Washington, where the dilemma of how far and how fast to withdraw support is visibly straining the administration. All the same, the events of the past month have once again drawn attention to the seamier side of the realpolitik that has always shaped Britain’s approach to the Middle East. As the former foreign office minister Kim Howells has argued, the flip side of supporting stability is repressing democracy. Focused on the threat of Islam, we have, it appears, been too slow to appreciate the simmering secular unrest, let alone to try to pre-empt it. If it is too soon to be prescriptive, however, one thing is clear. It is barely a month since the BBC announced that its Arabic short-wave service would, with Russian language services, bear the brunt of overseas cuts. Happily, it is a decision it is not too late to reverse . Meanwhile, tough new controls on the number of overseas students will mean fewer young people able to take advantage of higher education in the UK. The British Council faces cuts too. Yet we can no longer sustain our strategic interests through the barrel of a gun. Britain is in a unique position to project soft power. It is only part of the answer. But it has to be a reasonable starting point for a new Middle East policy. Egypt Middle East Arab and Middle East protests Bahrain Yemen Libya BBC Foreign policy guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Despite receiving the backing of 14 out of 15 members of the United Nations’ security council, an Arab-sponsored UN resolution branding Israeli settlements illegal was vetoed by the United States. Instead, the US defended a weaker, non-binding presidential statement that effectively rejects the legitimacy of Israel’s settlements. Al Jazeera spoke with Susan Rice, the US ambassador to the United Nations, about the Obama administration’s first veto casted in the United Nations security council.
Continue reading …It’s perhaps a little too little and a little too late, but Qualcomm can now use the word “smartbook” to describe low end smartphone/laptop hybrids — the sort of machine the company’s CEO have been all but killed off by tablets . The unfortunate legal action initiated by Smartbook AG way back in 2009 has now been deemed invalid by the German Patent and Trademark Office. The combination of the words word “smart” and “book” are no longer covered by German trademark law, which seemingly leaves Smartbook AG in a rather more vulnerable position than it was in before. Not as vulnerable as the poor smartbook platform, though. Qualcomm fends off Smartbook AG, can legally write ‘smartbook’ on the platform’s tombstone originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Feb 2011 19:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …“TRUTH OR POLITICS” with host: Darlene Fitzgerald Price(4/4) “TRUTH OR POLITICS” with host: Darlene Fitzgerald Price(3/4) “TRUTH OR POLITICS” with host: Darlene Fitzgerald Price(2/4) UK Sports Info » Karen Sypher Sentenced In what I’m sure seemed like a good idea at the time, Karen Sypher’s decision to try and extort Rick Pitino ended very badly (for her) today. Sypher appeared in federal court today to get what should be her ultimate judgment. … Breaking News: Karen Sypher Sentenced to 87 Months in Extortion Case AllKyHoops.com: Breaking News: Karen Sypher Sentenced to 87 Months in Extortion Case,College, high school and professional basketball in the state of Kentucky. Karen Sypher Sentencing at 1:30 Today AllKyHoops.com: Karen Sypher Sentencing at 1:30 Today,College, high school and professional basketball in the state of Kentucky. On Sentencing Eve, Karen Sypher Tries To Get A New Trial [Reckoning] Rick Pitino’s one-night sidepiece of an extortonist Karen Cunagin Sypher is scheduled to be sentenced Friday. In a last-ditch effort to stave off punishment, her legal team filed a motion calling for a new trial Thursday. SportsThat: Karen Sypher Sentencing 1:30pm Karen Sypher , who in case you forgot was a mistress of current head coach of the Louisville Men’s Basketball team that was found guilty of extortion in federal court, will learn her fate today. Sypher’s sentencing takes place at 1:30pm … TimJohnson27 says: RT @NotJerryTipton For every second she had sex with Rick Pitino, Karen Sypher will spend 176 days in prison.
Continue reading …The Midwest, pummeled by snow this winter, is expected to get a nasty follow-up in the spring: major flooding. Again. Weather experts say the winter has left a “thick snowpack in much of the upper Midwest,” leading them to expect serious flooding when it melts, reports USA Today . The flooding…
Continue reading …CAIRO (AP) — Libyan security forces waged an escalating crackdown on protesters demanding the ouster of leader Moammar Gadhafi in several eastern cities. In the country’s second largest city, a stream of 35 bodies was brought to one hospital Friday, reportedly of protesters shot while trying to march on one of Gadhafi’s residences, a doctor said. The deaths took place in the city of Benghazi after funerals for more than a dozen protesters shot to death a day earlier. The doctor in Benghazi’s al-Jalaa hospital said survivors of Friday’s clashes said that after the burials, protesters tried to rally outside the Katiba, a military compound where Ghadafi stays when he visits. Security forces…
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