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Knox’s appeal team scores a point

Key prosecution witness gives contradictory testimony over murder of British student Meredith Kercher Lawyers appealing against the convictions of Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito for murdering British student Meredith Kercher have claimed an important victory in court, as a key witness for the prosecution gave confusing and contradictory testimony. Antonio Curatolo, a homeless drug addict living in Perugia, close to where Kercher was murdered, on 1

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As predicted, Beck goes full-bore Bircher with hour-long promotion of Griffin’s anti-Fed conspiracy tome

Click here to view this media We warned this was coming : On Friday, Glenn Beck devoted his entire hour to promoting the conspiracy theories of G. Edward Griffin, a John Bircher and 9/11 truther whose book, The Creature from Jekyll Island , attacks the Federal Reserve as a nefarious cabal intent on enslaving and destroying America. It was quite a performance: Among other things we learned from Griffin was that he believes there is no actual gold at Fort Knox (maybe Goldfinger rendered it radioactive, eh?) and that there is a real inflation rate of around 20 percent right now. Well, as we explained already : Beck, as we all know, has previously demonstrated a fondness for the Birch Society, and this is consistent with that: Griffin, after all, was a close personal friend and longtime associate of Birch Society founder Robert Welch, and wrote a popular Birch book published in 1964, The Fearful Master: A Second Look at the United Nations. The Creature from Jekyll Island is in many ways a compendium of previous works claiming that the Federal Reserve is a fundamentally illegitimate — and therefore deeply nefarious — organization. Most of these theories were deeply anti-Semitic in nature, since they depicted the Fed’s bankers as part of a Jewish cabal intent on destroying white American society. What sets Griffin’s work apart is that — like most Birch texts, which assiduously avoided anti-Semitism — he manages to scrub out the anti-Semitic elements while keeping the paranoid conspiracist elements intact. Since its publication in 1994, Griffin’s book has become a popular text for a large number of right-wing extremists, particularly tax protesters and Patriot movement believers. Griffin himself was involved in organizing a gathering on Jekyll Island last year that the Southern Poverty Law Center credits with helping revive the militia movement . It has been debunked thoroughly, of course — probably most notably by historian Gerry Rough, whose three-part series on the origins of the Fed, “Another Twist on the Jacksonian Bank War,” pretty thoroughly reveal just how fraudulent Griffin’s text really is. You can read it here: Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3. [Rough has debunked Griffin further in other essays as well: here, here, and here. ] Media Matters has more background on Griffin : Griffin, in addition to spinning conspiracy theories about the Fed, is also a 9-11 truther and has written extensively about the U.S. government’s “facilitation” of the attacks. In April 2008, Griffin appeared on the radio program of conspiracist Alex Jones and claimed that he predicted just days after 9-11 that “the FBI and the intelligence agencies of the federal government had advance knowledge of this attack but did nothing to stop it,” and that he was proven right. He also is — or, at least, was — a member of the ultra-right wing John Birch Society. He wrote a 1970 pamphlet entitled “This is the John Birch Society: An Invitation to Join,” and a 1975 book entitled The Life and Words of Robert Welch: Founder of the John Birch Society. Another terrific debunking of far-right Federal Reserve theories generally, including Griffin’s texts, was provided by Edward Flaherty at Public Eye. From the first part : Following the near catastrophic financial disaster of 1907, the movement for banking reform picked up steam among Wall Street bankers, Republicans, and eastern Democrats. However, much of the country was still distrustful of bankers and of banking in general, especially after 1907. After two decades of minority status, Democrats regained control of Congress in 1910 and were able to block several Republican attempts at reform, even though they recognized the need for some kind of currency and banking changes. In 1912 Woodrow Wilson won the Democratic party’s nomination for President, and in his populist-friendly acceptance speech he warned against the “money trusts,” and advised that “a concentration of the control of credit … may at any time become infinitely dangerous to free enterprise.”3 Also in 1910, Senator Nelson Aldrich, Frank Vanderlip of National City (today know as Citibank), Henry Davison of Morgan Bank, and Paul Warburg of the Kuhn, Loeb Investment House met secretly at Jeckyll Island, a resort island off the coast of Georgia, to discuss and formulate banking reform, including plans for a form of central banking. The meeting was held in secret because the participants knew that any plan they generated would be rejected automatically in the House of Representatives if it were associated with Wall Street. Because it was secret and because it involved Wall Street, the Jekyll Island affair has always been a favorite source of conspiracy theories. However, the movement toward significant banking and monetary reform was well-known.3 It is hardly surprising that given the real possibility of substantial reform, the banking industry would want some sort of input into the nature of the reforms. The Aldrich Plan which the secret meeting produced was even defeated in the House, so even if the Jekyll Island affair was a genuine conspiracy, it clearly failed. The Aldrich Plan called for a system of fifteen regional central banks, called National Reserve Associations, whose actions would be coordinated by a national board of commercial bankers. The Reserve Association would make emergency loans to member banks, create money to provide an elastic currency that could be exchanged equally for demand deposits, and would act as a fiscal agent for the federal government. Although it was defeated, the Aldrich Plan served as an outline for the bill that eventually was adopted. 5 The problem with the Aldrich Plan was that the regional banks would be controlled individually and nationally by bankers, a prospect that did not sit well with the populist Democratic party or with Wilson. As the debate began to take shape in the spring of 1913, Congressman Arsene Pujo provided good evidence that the nation’s credit markets were under the tight control of a handful of banks – the “money trusts” against which Wilson warned.1 Wilson and the Democrats wanted a reform measure which would decentralize control away from the money trusts. The legislation that eventually emerged was the Federal Reserve Act, also known at the time as the Currency Bill, or the Owen-Glass Act. The bill called for a system of eight to twelve mostly autonomous regional Reserve Banks that would be owned by the banks in their region and whose actions would be coordinated by a Federal Reserve Board appointed by the President. The Board’s members originally included the Secretary of the Treasury, the Comptroller of the Currency, and other officials appointed by the President to represent public interests. The proposed Federal Reserve System would therefore be privately owned, but publicly controlled. Wilson signed the bill on December 23, 1913 and the Federal Reserve System was born.6 Conspiracy theorists have long viewed the Federal Reserve Act as a means of giving control of the banking system to the money trusts, when in reality the intent and effect was to wrestle control away from them. History clearly demonstrates that in the decades prior to the Federal Reserve Act the decisions of a few large New York banks had, at times, enormous repercussions for banks throughout the country and the economy in general. Following the return to central banking, at least some measure of control was removed from them and placed with the Federal Reserve. Ben Dimiero at Media Matters observes: Among many, many other bizarre conspiracies, Griffin has written a book alleging that cancer can be cured by the B-17 vitamin, but this has been covered up due to “the hidden economic and power agenda of those who dominate the medical establishment.” Oh, and according to Griffin’s website, Glenn Beck’s dismissal of birthers is evidence that Beck’s “role as a controlled opposition leader is becoming more obvious.” Yet as you can see, Beck practically scrapes at Griffin’s feet, treating each of his words as golden nuggets of truth: Click here to view this media Click here to view this media Griffin is a clever hoaxter, in large part because he’s able to tap into the circular far-right informational bubble, wherein conspiracy theorists cite each other endlessly as “evidence” of their own outlandish ideas. Gerry Rough has an interesting essay explaining how this works : What happens with conspiracy theories is that author “A” will write a passage in his text, place a footnote or endnote as a reference source for the passage, then move on with the conspiratorial narrative. This is no different than any other work of non-fiction: this is merely standard operating procedure. Author “B” on the other hand, will assume that the passage is correct, cite the same passage, and never bother to check to see if the passage had anything at all to do with a verifiable conspiracy. It is here where conspiracy theories are patently different than other works of non-fiction. *At no point ever* do conspiracy theorists verify the authenticity of the original passage, nor is there any attempt to verify context. So, if a passage turns out to be fabricated or grossly distorted, precisely as *all three examples* in part 3 of this debate, no conspiracy theorist will ever likely have knowledge of it. In other words, they breathe their own exhaust and convince each other it’s fresh air. And as Rough explains, Griffin is noted for playing a key role in this circle-jerk by giving other conspiracy theorists “authoritative” quotations that in fact are bogus in nature: This is much more likely the scenario that happened with Flynn’s research. In point of fact, G. Edward Griffin, a well known author and editor of John Birch Society publications, deliberately lied about the passage in question, then Flynn simply passed on the lie all too willingly while citing Griffin as the original source. In the case of Griffin’s research, there are no other options: Griffin did not cite another author as the source for the passage that his text quoted. In failing to do so, the ultimate responsibility for lying stops at the desk of Griffin alone. But lets not let Flynn and other conspiracy theorists off the hook so easily either. All who write this conspiracy theory nonsense had at one point a responsibility to verify any given passage in question. They willingly shunned that public responsibility and aided a lie by way of omission. If this were an intellectual crime it would be likely classified as criminal negligence. And then when you have a popular TV host with an audience of millions treating this kind of fraud as a factual representation of history … well, it’s no wonder people can’t pass a damned citizenship exam.

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The secret of happiness

What could be more delightful than kneeling in the mud, pulling out weeds, with the soft spring sunshine on your back? Novelist Julie Myerson explains the intense joy that gardening has brought her, while other keen amateurs share their passion I opened my eyes to gardening when I turned 39. More than a decade earlier we had moved into

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Athens

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Athens

Bruce Thornton Advocates Hard Line on Islamic Extremists 100 Ansonborough Drive, Unit 309, Athens, GA 3 BD/2.5 BA Luxury Townhome METALLICA-NOTHING ELSE MATTERS(Live Sonisphere Greece 2010) SUSPECTED COP KILLER TAKES NINE HOSTAGES IN ATHENS – Channel 6 News ATHENS , GEORGIA (BNO NEWS) — A suspected cop killer has taken at least nine hostages, including a baby, in a neighborhood north of downtown Athens , Georgia, CBS Atlanta reports. (Copyright 2011 by BNO News B.V. All rights reserved. … Channel 6 News » Reports: Suspected cop killer takes 9 hostages in … ATHENS , GEORGIA (BNO NEWS) — A suspected cop killer took at least nine hostages in a neighborhood of Athens , Georgia on Friday afternoon, local media reported. WGCL-TV and WSB-TV both reported that Jamie Hood, 33, had taken at least … Jamie Hood, Cop Killer Live Athens Twitter Stream (#jamiehood) Get live updates about the hunt for Jamie Hood on the Athens Twitter stream below – this updates in real time and consists of tweets from in and around Athens . Anything mentioned on Twitter in and around Athens will show here: new TWTR. The Athens Double-Barrelled Cannon – Athens , Georgia The famed Athens Double-Barrelled Cannon now rests on the grounds of City Hall in the North Georgia city and – besides the Georgia Bulldogs – is perhaps the most photographed attraction in Athens . … Reports: Suspected cop killer takes 9 hostages in Athens , Georgia … ATHENS , GEORGIA (BNO NEWS) — A suspected cop killer took at least nine hostages in a neighborhood of Athens , Georgia on Friday afternoon, local media. athens_hotels says: Nafsika Hotel ( Athens Center) (***) on various dates for €34: . Excluding breakfast. Only 55 yards from Metaxourghio Me.. http://dld.bz/TCHd

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Glenn Beck Show Hilariously Mocks Alex Jones Fawning Over Charlie Sheen

Almost lost in the public astonishment over the meltdown of Charlie Sheen on the radio show of fellow 9-11 Truther, Alex Jones, was the incredibly bizarre fawning over Sheen by the radio host. I say “almost lost” because today Glenn Beck and his radio crew produced absolute comedy gold by goofing on Jones' groupie-like fawning over Sheen. It started off as just a few throwaway lines but Glenn and his crew continued building up their impersonations of Jones to a comedy crescendo that just might be the funniest radio bit ever. A word of warning: The routine is a bit risqu

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Canadian Government

Canadian Government Falls after Vote of No Confidence Friday March 25, 2011 The Agonist Vocalist Alissa White-Gluz Speaks Up For Seal Stephen Harper on Globalism Follow The Fall Of The Canadian Government Live | eWallstreeter The no confidence vote in Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Canadian government is expected to start momentarily. Just like two days ago when Portugal fell, this event will likely be seen as a buying opportunity of both the USDCAD and the … The Louis Riel Trail: Canadian Government is Falling Canadian Government is Falling. The Globe and Mail is live blogging the non-confidence motion in the House of Commons today. Follow the process at this link. Posted by LRT at 10:58 AM – Recommend this Post – -. Email This BlogThis! … Follow The Fall Of The Canadian Government Live : Truth is Contagious The no confidence vote in Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Canadian government is expected to start momentarily. Just like two days ago when Portugal fell, this event will likely be seen as a buying opportunity of both the USDCAD and the … p2pnet news » Blog Archive » Canadian government expected to fall … Canadian government expected to fall today. p2pnet view Politics:- Today’s the day. Will Canada be once again embroiled in an election with no chance of any kind of genuine government reform or upgrade, whatever the ultimate result? … Canadian Government expected to fall : Deadline Live With Jack Blood Canadian Government expected to fall. March 25, 2011 by Kristen Filed under North America · Leave a Comment. The federal government is expected to fall from power Friday afternoon, with opposition MPs saying they’ll vote to show they’ve … psamakesnoise says: RT @stevehuff : Apparently the Canadian Government has just fallen. Reports coming in to U.S. press of rampant & violent frowning & sighing in the streets.

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Vermont is the first state who may actually have single payer health insurance become a reality. The Vermont House has passed a single payer bill which might actually get through the Vermont Senate, too. Boston.com : “This bill takes our state one step closer to a system that ensures that all Vermonters have access to the care they deserve and contains costs,” House Speaker Shap Smith said shortly after the House passed the bill 92-49. The measure now goes to the Senate, where it is expected to pass, but with some possible changes. Gov. Peter Shumlin, who made single-payer health care a centerpiece of his gubernatorial campaign last year, also praised the legislation. He said it would make Vermont “the first state in the country to make the first substantive step to deliver a health care system where health care will be a right and not a privilege, where health care will follow the individual, not be a requirement of the employer, and where we’ll have an affordable system that contains costs.” Under the proposed plan, Vermont would create a state-run insurance exchange which would then be converted to the single-payer model in 2013. Despite Republican efforts to exempt some businesses who self-insure their health benefits, the Democrats remained united and passed it without those exemptions. This is how it will happen. One state at a time. Watch Vermont to see how it’s done.

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Capello defends captaincy saga

• ‘It was time for John Terry to return,’ says Fabio Capello • Irritated Capello admits Ferdinand turned down meeting Fabio Capello has defended his decision to take the England captaincy off Rio Ferdinand and replace him with John Terry, but admits he has regret at how the situation was handled. Terry’s return as captain following a 13-month exile after allegations about his private life has dominated the headlines in the buildup to Saturday’s game with Wales, while it has been reported that Capello did not tell Ferdinand that he was being replaced as captain before the story emerged in the media. “Look it could have been done something better but it is the past,” Capello said. “I respect the players, I respect all the people and sometime I regret what really happened, but it’s possible to do something better.” Ferdinand’s absence through injury, plus that of the vice-captain Steven Gerrard, meant that Capello had a captaincy decision to make, and he believes he has made the right choice. “Something happened in my mind when I saw the armband being passed around during our game in Copenhagen [against Denmark],” he said. “We changed it in the second half and it was unfair for John Terry to see this. I thought that it was time for John Terry, after punishment, to return and be captain. “I know that Rio Ferdinand and Steven Gerrard are not fit. I knew it was the moment, with one game which is so important, to have one captain like John Terry.” Capello said he attempted to discuss the situation with Ferdinand when he attended Manchester United’s Champions League match against Marseille on 15 March but the defender rejected to chance to meet the England manager. “I tried to meet him [Ferdinand] when Manchester United played against Marseille but he told me no. I can understand everything, but I need to make decisions. I think I will be happy and will meet him [Ferdinand] in the future.” When pressed as to whether or not he had spoken to Ferdinand at any stage a visible irritated Capello responded defensively. “It didn’t happen, he didn’t come. It’s a question for him, not for me. I was in the directors’ box. You have to ask him, OK?” Capello said he consulted several players before reinstating Terry as captain. “I spoke with the players and personally with some players, and I spoke with the squad before I decided that John Terry will be the captain, and all the players were happy because John Terry was always a very important leader on the pitch and to the team.” Fabio Capello England John Terry Rio Ferdinand guardian.co.uk

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Apple iPad 2: review

Apple remains ahead of the pack with the iPad 2, which offers faster web browsing, better graphics – and a really clever cover Apple chief Steve Jobs made a point of knocking rivals’ “copycat” tablet computers at the iPad 2 launch earlier this month. Samsung, RIM and Motorola “aren’t even catching up with the first iPad”, he said. Apple didn’t need to launch a second-generation iPad. The original commands around 80% of the US tablet market. It is less than a year out of the box. But when Jobs can improve on one of Apple’s products, you can rest assured that he will. Thinner, lighter and faster than its predecessor, the iPad 2 has a smaller footprint than the original – plus two cameras and extra software such as GarageBand. At 241mm tall, 186mm wide and 8.6mm thick, Apple’s iPad 2 is the sleekest tablet computer on the market. Its minimalist outer shell is complemented by a new “smart cover” that removes all the smears that come with thumbing and prodding the screen. Unlike its older brother, the iPad 2 has rounded edges, meaning it can be held more comfortably for longer. And at 100g lighter, it is noticeably more comfortable to hold than its predecessor, which could become uncomfortable if held in the same position for more than 10 minutes. The greatest departure from the original iPad is its speed. Apple claims that loading apps, playing games and browsing the internet are up to up to twice as fast as on the original. Certainly, internet browsing is the most striking difference. Fixtures on the average internet page tend to load all at once – Flash excepted, of course – and sometimes five or six seconds ahead of the original iPad. As an owner of the original iPad, I’ve never felt that performance was lagging (then again, I also own a 20-month-old iPhone 3G), but the iPad 2′s A5 dual core processor makes it much more responsive to touch. The graphics upgrade is really only noticeable when playing £5.99 shoot-em-up games or streaming long-form programming such as the iPlayer. For most people, I suspect the greatest immediate draw to the iPad 2 will be the cameras. Apple was slammed when it didn’t include them in its first edition and later claimed it to be users’ most-wanted function. Sadly, the cameras on this device are left wanting. Leaving aside the question of whether people really want to wave a 10inch x 7inch computer around in public, the VGA-quality front and rear-facing cameras – for video and stills – are pixel-poor and not flattered by the iPad’s high-quality screen. The rear-facing camera is put to best use with FaceTime, Apple’s video-calling function. Which leads us to software. The iPad 2 includes a string of media apps which first-generation owners won’t ever get a look at. Apple’s popular music-making software GarageBand (which iPad 1 users can get if they upgrade to iOS 4.3) is great fun and a boon for those with rambunctious young kids knocking about the house. Warning: it doesn’t come with headphones so don’t turn the volume up too loud. Apple’s movie-making app, iMovie, also finds a new home on the iPad 2. Precision editing was never one of the iPad’s strong points – writers bemoan spending hours hovering over misspelt words before the cursor would respond to the change – so the iPad seems an unnatural home for iMovie. Frankly, uploading to the web or to a synced Mac is so painless that iMovie could happily gather dust for most users. (A new hall-of-mirrors-style app called Photo Booth is so pointless it wastes good real estate – it can’t be deleted.) Despite the faster processor and enhanced graphics, the iPad 2′s battery life is on a par with the original; long-life performance is one of the device’s strongest selling points. My one qualm has to be the amount of time it takes for the iPad to charge – inordinately long compared with drain time. Apple’s attention to detail shines through with the new “Smart Cover”. At the iPad 2 launch, Jobs spent so much time demonstrating this magically magnetic clip-on sheath that I thought it would inevitably be a flop. In fact, the Smart Cover promises to shut out all the third-party manufacturers that churned out dog-eared cases for the iPad 1. Overall, the iPad 2 offers a string of incremental but important improvements on its predecessor. It remains a stretch ahead of the pack – though not quite “lapping the competition”, as Apple would like to make out – and it is hard to find any serious shortcomings with the second-generation tablet. However owners of the original iPad should not feel too sore about the upgrade: you don’t need to buy a new tablet. Those waiting to buy their first tablet could do much worse than the iPad 2. iPad Tablet computers Apple Computing Digital media Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk

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Apple iPad 2: review

Apple remains ahead of the pack with the iPad 2, which offers faster web browsing, better graphics – and a really clever cover Apple chief Steve Jobs made a point of knocking rivals’ “copycat” tablet computers at the iPad 2 launch earlier this month. Samsung, RIM and Motorola “aren’t even catching up with the first iPad”, he said. Apple didn’t need to launch a second-generation iPad. The original commands around 80% of the US tablet market. It is less than a year out of the box. But when Jobs can improve on one of Apple’s products, you can rest assured that he will. Thinner, lighter and faster than its predecessor, the iPad 2 has a smaller footprint than the original – plus two cameras and extra software such as GarageBand. At 241mm tall, 186mm wide and 8.6mm thick, Apple’s iPad 2 is the sleekest tablet computer on the market. Its minimalist outer shell is complemented by a new “smart cover” that removes all the smears that come with thumbing and prodding the screen. Unlike its older brother, the iPad 2 has rounded edges, meaning it can be held more comfortably for longer. And at 100g lighter, it is noticeably more comfortable to hold than its predecessor, which could become uncomfortable if held in the same position for more than 10 minutes. The greatest departure from the original iPad is its speed. Apple claims that loading apps, playing games and browsing the internet are up to up to twice as fast as on the original. Certainly, internet browsing is the most striking difference. Fixtures on the average internet page tend to load all at once – Flash excepted, of course – and sometimes five or six seconds ahead of the original iPad. As an owner of the original iPad, I’ve never felt that performance was lagging (then again, I also own a 20-month-old iPhone 3G), but the iPad 2′s A5 dual core processor makes it much more responsive to touch. The graphics upgrade is really only noticeable when playing £5.99 shoot-em-up games or streaming long-form programming such as the iPlayer. For most people, I suspect the greatest immediate draw to the iPad 2 will be the cameras. Apple was slammed when it didn’t include them in its first edition and later claimed it to be users’ most-wanted function. Sadly, the cameras on this device are left wanting. Leaving aside the question of whether people really want to wave a 10inch x 7inch computer around in public, the VGA-quality front and rear-facing cameras – for video and stills – are pixel-poor and not flattered by the iPad’s high-quality screen. The rear-facing camera is put to best use with FaceTime, Apple’s video-calling function. Which leads us to software. The iPad 2 includes a string of media apps which first-generation owners won’t ever get a look at. Apple’s popular music-making software GarageBand (which iPad 1 users can get if they upgrade to iOS 4.3) is great fun and a boon for those with rambunctious young kids knocking about the house. Warning: it doesn’t come with headphones so don’t turn the volume up too loud. Apple’s movie-making app, iMovie, also finds a new home on the iPad 2. Precision editing was never one of the iPad’s strong points – writers bemoan spending hours hovering over misspelt words before the cursor would respond to the change – so the iPad seems an unnatural home for iMovie. Frankly, uploading to the web or to a synced Mac is so painless that iMovie could happily gather dust for most users. (A new hall-of-mirrors-style app called Photo Booth is so pointless it wastes good real estate – it can’t be deleted.) Despite the faster processor and enhanced graphics, the iPad 2′s battery life is on a par with the original; long-life performance is one of the device’s strongest selling points. My one qualm has to be the amount of time it takes for the iPad to charge – inordinately long compared with drain time. Apple’s attention to detail shines through with the new “Smart Cover”. At the iPad 2 launch, Jobs spent so much time demonstrating this magically magnetic clip-on sheath that I thought it would inevitably be a flop. In fact, the Smart Cover promises to shut out all the third-party manufacturers that churned out dog-eared cases for the iPad 1. Overall, the iPad 2 offers a string of incremental but important improvements on its predecessor. It remains a stretch ahead of the pack – though not quite “lapping the competition”, as Apple would like to make out – and it is hard to find any serious shortcomings with the second-generation tablet. However owners of the original iPad should not feel too sore about the upgrade: you don’t need to buy a new tablet. Those waiting to buy their first tablet could do much worse than the iPad 2. iPad Tablet computers Apple Computing Digital media Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk

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