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Thousands escape Egypt prisons

Egypt’s anti-government uprising has also seen lawlessness and looting in several cities. As the police abandoned their posts, thousands of prisoners were set free across the country, in a series of mass jailbreaks. More in this report from the Abu Zaabal prison, on the outskirts of Cairo.

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Pot Meets Pop in New Marijuana Soda

A California entrepreneur is marketing a new line of medical marijuana soft drinks. Canna Cola contains THC, the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, and will only be sold in legal pot clubs. (Feb. 1)

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Ala. Prisoners Turn to Meditation for Peace

Deep inside Alabama’s toughest prison, an overcrowded lockup with a reputation for mayhem, convicted murderers, robbers and sex offenders gather in a small room. Eyes closed, they sit silently with their thoughts and consciences. (Feb. 1)

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Google, SayNow, and Twitter team up to make Tweeting from Egypt possible via voicemail

Google’s announced on its official blog a small project they’ve quickly cobbled together to help Egyptians (who –in the midst of protests — are having serious connectivity issues) communicate via Twitter . With almost no connection to the internet through normal channels, Google has made it possible for anyone to send a Tweet simply by dialing one of several international phone numbers (+16504194196, +390662207294 or +97316199855) and leaving a voicemail. What happens next? The service Tweets the message using the hashtag #egypt via the Speak to Tweet account. [Thanks to everyone who sent this in] Google, SayNow, and Twitter team up to make Tweeting from Egypt possible via voicemail originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Feb 2011 06:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Myanmar paramount leader not nominated for president: MPs

NAYPYITAW, Myanmar (Reuters) – Myanmar's reclusive paramount leader Than Shwe is not among a list of presidential candidates to be nominated by parliament, lawmakers said on Tuesday, signaling an end to his 18 years of direct rule. The country's new parliament is expected to vote on Thursday to elect the country's first civilian president after nearly half a century of military rule. Assembly members told Reuters that the…

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Empire – Obama 2.0

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Empire – Obama 2.0

Two years after an historic victory that saw the first African-American elected president of the US, Barack Obama has come under pressure. Empire discusses the failures and successes of Barack Obama’s presidency.

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The Island of Sark is the Best Place to See the Stars

Photo: sarkinfo : Sark by night You may have never heard of a “dark sky island” before, but welcome to Sark, if you want to visit one. It’s a hard-won designation from the International Dark Sky Association which is an organisation devoted to preserving the darkest and most beautiful night skies on earth. The small island of Sark, 80 miles off the coast of England has just won the award…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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We hope our popular, young, peaceable, democratic movement is allowed to develop a vision of how Egypt can be run Yesterday the call went out for a million people to gather today in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, the main focal point of the pro-democracy demonstrations. I will be one of them. The regime of President Hosni Mubarak is fighting for its life in Egypt . But shape-shift as it may, it cannot satisfy the demands of the Egyptian people. As today’s gathering will show, they will not be fooled by the swearing-in of a new government that resembles 99% of the old one. Nor will they be put off by the regime’s strategy of cutting off the country’s communications – our internet access, emails, mobile phones and, at the weekend, al-Jazeera. Today we have rejected the passivity our rulers have been imposing on us. Our country’s security is being provided by its citizenry. People have automatically taken over the running of their neighbourhoods. On the streets there is unfailing courtesy. The atmosphere in the square sit-ins is celebratory and inclusive. The events of this past week prove what many of us have believed for a long time: the Egyptian people do not deserve the regime that has been visited on them for the last 30 years. We want Mubarak and his clique to go, and what happens after that will be a question for the people as a whole. There is no one group leading the protests. Everyone is insistent on that. Instead, the young people providing most of the energy and organisation behind the protests come from across the political and social spectrum and they are in touch with respected public figures who are giving their expertise. The cry from the protesters is for free and fair elections, and for a representative government to be formed. We will also need the space to debate the reforms to our constitution that need to happen: for example, does Egypt need a presidential or a parliamentary system? We will be looking to the expertise of our senior judiciary and those politicians who are still respected. We want our politics to be inclusive, not exclusive. So it is right, for example, that the Muslim Brotherhood is represented alongside everyone else. It is not for those voices representing the traditional outside powers in this region to be dictating who we can and cannot give our backing to. In a makeshift field hospital in a tiny mosque next to Tahrir Square at the weekend, men were being carried in with horrific facial wounds. The Egyptian government was shooting its peaceful citizens with rubber bullets, with scatter pellet guns and with live ammunition. “See,” the young men showed me, “Made in the USA. This is what reaches us of American aid.” The west, which honours the Tiananmen protests in Beijing, should similarly honour Tahrir, where funeral prayers have been held over the bodies of our martyrs. Where will all this lead? No one can give a specific answer. But what we hope is that our popular, young, peaceable, democratic, grassroots movement is allowed to develop a vision of how our country can be run for its people and their friends. In order to frighten America and Europe, the regime is saying this is the work of Islamists. But it is not; it is beyond party. This is the young people of Egypt seizing their future. Egypt Middle East Ahdaf Soueif guardian.co.uk

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Cowon D3 Plenue priced at $370, or $100 per inch of AMOLED

Want yourself a “Prestige” portable media player to make even legit smartphones blush in envy? Then the D3 Plenue from Cowon might just be for you, what with its 1080p video playback, 32GB of storage, Android 2.1 OS, and 3.7-inch, 800 x 480 AMOLED display. It’s just that today we’re finding the Prestige label also extends to its price, which Amazon has set at a mighty $370. That’s not terrible when contrasted against unsubsidized pricing for comparable smartphones, but then this isn’t a smartphone. Availability of the D3 Plenue is limited to an undated pre-order for the moment, giving you at least a little more time to deliberate on the value this souped-up PMP represents. Cowon D3 Plenue priced at $370, or $100 per inch of AMOLED originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Feb 2011 05:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Almost a century after Tsar Nicholas II was overthrown, Russians are once again grumbling about their leaders’ palaces. The Russian regime doesn’t provide information on leaders’ residences, but Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev are believed to have at least two dozen palaces, villas, and mansions between them,…

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