Home » Archives by category » News (Page 439)

Ios 5 Release Date

No Comment
Ios 5 Release Date

Official iOS 5 release date iOS 5 release date oct 12 ios 5 Release Date Features October 12 Cyndiixfut says: RT @ theDENNISfactor : The iOS 5 release date needs to come NOW

Continue reading …

Amanda Knox Home

No Comment
Amanda Knox Home

Amanda Knox guilty of murder killing her roommate by Italian Jury Home Video marcptr01 says: Amanda Knox returns home after four-year ordeal: A plane carrying Amanda Knox home landed in Seattle on Tuesday,… http://t.co/ZmN6EFPO

Continue reading …
Camera or camcorder? JVC’s hybrid GC-PX10 wants to be both

This curiously shaped fellow, with its long-barreled lens attached to a svelte body, might look familiar . It’s JVC ‘s GC-PX10, the camcorder that’s also a camera. Or the camera that’s also a camcorder. We’re not quite sure, but here’s what we do know: it’ll shoot 1080p video at 60 fps, writing to SDXC or 32GB of internal memory. And it can also capture 8.3-megapixel stills at 60 fps without dropping out of video mode. If you’ve got the time and the inclination, you can switch into still-shooting mode, giving you full 12-megapixel pictures at 30 fps for two seconds. Exhausted by the possibilities yet? But wait, there’s more. If slow motion’s your game, you can fire away in 640 x 360 resolution — at 300 fps — for up to 2 hours. Now how much would you pay for such a plethora of pictorial options? Well, JVC’s asking $900 when this ships later in October, so you’ve got some time to think about it. Camera or camcorder? JVC’s hybrid GC-PX10 wants to be both originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Oct 2011 03:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …

Iphone 4s Video

No Comment
Iphone 4s Video

iPhone 4S Video (Official review) (HD) iPhone 4s video.mp4 Official Apple iPhone 4S Video w00k3y says: So I send my dad the iPhone 4s video . He emails me back and says: nice. Do you want to maybe get it for ur birthday and I get ur old one?

Continue reading …
Samsung provides a glimpse of Google’s Nexus Prime handset in new teaser video

Just hours after Apple unveiled the new iPhone 4S, Samsung has put live a new video on its YouTube account, providing the first official look at the next Android smartphone collaboration between the Korean manufacturer and Google; the Nexus Prime. The video is associated with another of Samsung’s ‘Unpacked’ events, labelled the ‘Google Episode’, scheduled Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Next Web Discovery Date : 05/10/2011 06:14 Number of articles : 3

Continue reading …
Body of former Venezuela president Carlos Andrés Pérez repatriated

Remains of ex-leader arrive in Caracas nine months after his death in Miami sparked family feud over his final resting place The remains of former president Carlos Andrés Pérez has arrived in Venezuela, nine months after his death in Miami set off a bitter family feud over his final resting place. The embalmed body of Venezuela’s former leader had remained in limbo, kept for a time in cold storage in a Miami mortuary then in a Florida mausoleum, while the families of his wife and his longtime mistress battled in court over whether he should be buried in Venezuela or the United States. Edgar Zambrano, one of Pérez’s former confidants, said a casket bearing the remains arrived on a plane that departed from Atlanta, Georgia. Caracas mayor Antonio Ledezma, a one-time friend of Pérez who escorted the casket to Venezuela, said: “It’s a burdensome mission: retrieving a friend who left us. We must understand that friendship does not die along with the men who leave us physically.” Pérez died on 25 December aged 88. Dozens of relatives, friends and politicians, many of whom wore black suits and dresses, sang Venezuela’s national anthem as the coffin was carried from the airport to a hearse that transported the ex-president’s body to the headquarters of the Democratic Action political party in central Caracas. Henry Ramos, secretary-general of Democratic Action, praised Pérez for “his great achievements” and “contribution to Venezuela’s democracy.” Pérez will be buried on Thursday following a funeral mass, Ramos said. His estranged wife, Blanca Rodriguez de Pérez, insisted she had the right under Florida law as surviving spouse to bring her husband’s body home. But his longtime companion in Miami, Cecilia Matos, contended that Pérez had vowed repeatedly never to return as long as political arch-nemesis Hugo Chávez was president. After months of negotiations, a confidential settlement was reached in August that led to sending Pérez back to his homeland. The settlement also covered papers, computer files, memorabilia and other presidential artifacts that Pérez had in Miami when he died. A court-appointed curator has been cataloguing all of the material, but no details have been released on where it will end up. Pérez was president from 1974-1979 and from 1989-1993, surviving two failed coup attempts, including one led by Chavéz. He left the country in 2000, facing the threat of arrest on corruption accusations, and did not return. Alex Gonzalez, attorney for Pérez’s wife and family in Venezuela, said on Monday that a public viewing is scheduled for Wednesday. There are no plans for Venezuelan government involvement or any kind of state funeral. Pérez was born on 27 October, 1922, near the town of Rubio in western Tachira state. He started his political career as a youth leader and founder of Democratic Action, a centre-left party that dominated politics for decades before Chavéz’s rise to power in 1999. In his first term in the 1970s, Pérez won popularity by nationalising Venezuela’s oil industry, paying off foreign oil companies and then capitalising on a period of prosperity that allowed his government to build subway lines and bankroll new social programmes. He became one of Latin America’s most prominent political leaders, popularly known after his initials as “CAP.” Venezuelans elected him for a second time in 1988, hoping for a return to good times after a decade of economic decline. But his popularity plunged when he tried to push through an economic austerity programme that included increasing the subsidised prices of petrol. Anger among the poor boiled over in riots in 1989 and more than 300 people were killed in the unrest known as the Caracazo. Venezuela United States guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
NHS will not fund some operations, patients told

York GPs offer to carry out minor surgical procedures for a fee in unprecedented step for NHS care GPs at a health centre in York have written to patients saying the NHS will no longer fund minor operations and instead offering to carry out the procedures for a fee, an unprecedented step in the health service. In a letter obtained by the website nhsmanagers.net, patients are advised that for a number of minor surgical procedures, such as ingrowing toenails, mole removal and chopping out warts and cysts, they would have to go private. It says: “We are holding your details on a list of patients who require a minor surgical procedure that is no longer paid for by the NHS.” The letter identifies four “local service providers who offer the procedure privately”, including HBG Ltd, which it admits is “a company that is wholly owned by the practice”. The price list of treatments range from £56 to remove a skin tag to £243 for lipomas. The letter from John McEvoy, managing partner at Haxby and Wigginton health centre, which serves more than 20,000 patients, claims the NHS will no longer fund some operations. “As a result I am writing to make you aware of some of the options that you have to have the procedure completed as a private patient.” Experts said this exposed a conflict of interest under the government’s NHS reforms. “This is a massive conflict of interest here. The GP is earning money potentially from referring the NHS patient to his own private practice,” John Appleby, chief economist at the King’s Fund, said. Appleby also questioned whether any GP could claim that the local primary care trust could have “a blanket ban” on procedures. “A GP can always challenge these things,” he said. “You cannot ban something – it has to be done on a case-by-case basis.” When contacted by the Guardian, McEvoy said that because the NHS was looking to save £20bn from its budget, the effect on the ground was that health trusts were no longer prepared to fund treatments – so patients had to reach into their own pockets or go without. “We waited for [the primary care trust] to tell us that the NHS would be funding these operations, but they said no it was over … so we have 30 patients who were waiting for surgery and decided to write to them explaining they could get it done privately. We were not promoting ourselves. Patients want this service.” He said little or no profit was made on the procedures offered by the GPs in their private clinic. Campaigners have long been concerned that as GPs are more involved in commissioning care under government reform plans, they would be able to reduce NHS provision to increase their private income. The PCT said it had not been seeking to cut operations to save money but merely asked GPs to make the clinical case for patients. It also said it had serious concerns over the case. Dr David Geddes, medical director of NHS North Yorkshire and York, said: “We have some concerns about the activities of the Haxby and Wigginton health centre in York and we will be discussing these issues with them directly as a matter of urgency. “These concerns are around possible breaches of the Data Protection Act and the accuracy of the information sent to patients. For example, of the eight procedures they list, three are routinely funded by NHS North Yorkshire and York and should be made freely available.” NHS Health Randeep Ramesh guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …

The “welcome home” signs are out around Seattle, and Amanda Knox will see them in person soon, reports the Seattle Post-Intelligencer . Knox flew out of Rome a day after her murder conviction was reversed and landed at Seattle’s Sea-Tac Airport about 5pm local time. Hordes of media were in attendance,…

Continue reading …
18 Deaths, 100 Cases in Listeria/Cantaloupe Outbreak

The toll from the ongoing outbreak of listeria in cantaloupe has reached 18 deaths among 100 cases in 30 states.

Continue reading …
Secret of the Taliban’s success

Ten years ago, Taliban fighters in their thousands abandoned power, fled their military posts and melted away into the countryside, allowing Western-led forces to capture Afghanistan without a fight. Today, that…

Continue reading …