People around Manila were tackling a massive clean-up Wednesday after Typhoon Nesat battered the Philippine capital and areas to the north. The deadly storm is due to slam China’s Hainan Island next. (Sept. 28)
Continue reading …Health officials say as many as 16 people have died from possible listeria illnesses traced to Colorado cantaloupes, the deadliest food outbreak in more than a decade. (Sept. 28)
Continue reading …On Thursday, Washington Post media reporter Paul Farhi honored commentator Fred Fiske of Washington’s NPR station WAMU as he retired in his 90s like Andy Rooney. Farhi helped Fiske chronicle “his absurdly lengthy career as an announcer, pop-music DJ, talk-show host and gently insistent, moderately liberal commentator.” Later in the piece, he said Fiske offered “what he describes as ‘moderate’ opinions.” NewsBusters readers might recall a less-than-moderate Fiske, in tone and content. In a January 2010 commentary on WAMU, Fiske called the Rush Limbaugh show “Excrement in Broadcasting” and cited Jon Stewart attacking Limbaugh: “I think I know the cause of your heart trouble. You don’t have one.” He said Limbaugh said “baseless, bigoted, and hateful” things, worse than the anti-Semitic Father Coughlin radio show of the 1930s. That's neither “gently insistent” or “moderate,” not even “moderately liberal.” No one can quote Jon Stewart's leftist character-assassinating cracks and be called “moderately liberal.” We organized a rebuttal by MRC president Brent Bozell soon afterward that aired on WAMU, that said this in part: Fiske wasn’t shouting. But grade-school dirty-toilet insults don’t exactly match the image of calm sophistication that public radio presents to its listeners. Fiske claimed he didn’t despise Rush Limbaugh – “any more.” But nasty invective suggests that the hatred has never ended. Fiske denounced Rush as heartless and bigoted – as if he’s ever spent an hour with this man to able to pass such a personal judgment All this came because, said Fiske, Rush had told his listeners that they should not donate their money to the victims of the earthquake in Haiti. That is simply untrue. Rush did boast that Americans are the most generous donors in the world, while anti-American countries like Cuba and Venezuela wouldn’t match our help. That is true. Rush did suggest that despite decades of American aid, Haiti continues to be the economic wasteland of the Caribbean. That is also unquestionable. Rush certainly insinuated that the Haiti crisis would be seen as a political opportunity inside the White House. Ask any conservative about how thoroughly liberals exploited the crisis of Hurricane Katrina, using it for political purposes, casting President Bush as a racist. Limbaugh’s argument, again, is defensible. At no point did he ever call on Americans not to supply humanitarian aid. Period. How many time must the left be exposed for flat-out inventing things Limbaugh has supposedly said, only later to learn he never said any such thing? I’m Brent Bozell. Some of us who've been at MRC for more than 20 years remember a Saturday morning interview that MRC's Brent Baker did with Fiske late in the George H.W. Bush years, when Fiske told him he had friends that killed themselves over Joe McCarthy's investigations of communism in the federal government. Fiske may be gentle enough to take a paycheck from an NPR station, but he's not going to be seen as gentle by conservatives on the other end of his attacks.
Continue reading …Michael Jackson Death Photo Shown in Conrad Murray Trial – Sept. 27th 2011 Michael Jackson Death Photo Opens Trial [Shocking Pic] Michael Jackson death photo shown to jury in Conrad Murray Trial lettermenger says: NYdailynews: Michael Jackson death photo shown to jury during opening statements in Dr. Conrad.. http://t.co/1oZfBJmy
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Continue reading …We’ve been keeping an optimistic eye on the progress of Ferroelectric Random Access Memory (FeRAM) for a few years now, not least because it offers the tantalizing promise of 1.6GB/s read and write speeds and crazy data densities . But researchers at Purdue University reckon we’ve been looking in the wrong place this whole time: the real action is with their development of FeTRAM, which adds an all-important ‘T’ for ‘Transistor’. Made by combining silicon nanowires with a ferroelectric polymer, Purdue’s material holds onto its 0 or 1 polarity even after being read, whereas readouts from capacitor-based FeRAM are destructive. Although still at the experimental stage, this new type of memory could boost speeds while also reducing power consumption by 99 percent. Quick, somebody file a patent. Oh, they already did. Ferroelectric transistor memory could run on 99% less power than flash originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Sep 2011 07:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Huge publicity last week managed to generate only very modest sales for his ‘Unauthorised Autobiography’ Despite acres of publicity and buckets of scandal, Julian Assange’s unauthorised autobiography sold just 644 copies last week. Created with Assange’s cooperation (according to its publisher Canongate the Wikileaks founder spent more than 50 hours being interviewed for it) but published against his wishes, the book went on sale last Thursday amid widespread coverage and serialisation in the Independent. But in spite of the controversy surrounding the claims and counterclaims flung by Assange and his publisher , figures from book sales monitor Nielsen BookScan reveal that Julian Assange: The Unauthorised Autobiography sold just 644 copies in its first three days in shops. “It was only the 50th bestselling hardback non-fiction book of the week, and only the 537th bestselling book overall, sitting directly behind Julia Donaldson’s Freddie and the Fairy (Macmillan) and Sharon Kendrick’s Satisfaction (Mills & Boon), a £6.99 collection of three short stories featuring ‘three of her sexiest, most intense Greek heroes and glamorous heroines’,” said Philip Stone, charts editor at the Bookseller . But Canongate publishing director Nick Davies told the book trade magazine that the autobiography’s performance was “a marathon and not a sprint”, and that the publisher had “never made any big predictions about the sales of the Assange book – particularly on the first three days of sale”. “There was no build-up for the trade, the media or with the reading public. But we’re proud of the way we handled what has been a difficult and unusual launch, and we are extremely proud of the book,” he said. “Fortunately, the conversation now seems to be moving away from the ‘publishing story’ and focusing on the quality of the book itself. The early reviews – with the exception of a predictable whitewash in the Guardian – have been very positive, particularly in the Times and Independent with many more lead reviews lined up for this weekend. And the early customer reviews on Amazon are extremely positive too.” So far the Assange autobiography has attracted two five-star reviews on Amazon, one saying that the book “was a long long way from the negative view of him presented by a media I now see have an agenda”, the other that it painted “a vivid picture of a man on a mission to make the world a better – a more just – place”. It currently sits in 766th place overall on Amazon’s bestseller charts, and in 70th position on the internet bookseller’s biography list. Whether Assange will be pleased or disappointed by the numbers remains to be seen: although the Wikileaks founder said that Canongate’s publication was “about old-fashioned opportunism and duplicity — screwing people over to make a buck” , the publisher has promised to pay him royalties once it earns back its advance . Publishing Biography Julian Assange Booksellers Alison Flood guardian.co.uk
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Continue reading …Deputy head of human rights organisation, who became ill after being detained by security officials, convicted by court in Tehran A prominent Iranian human rights activist who was taken seriously ill after being detained by the authorities has been sentenced to 11 years in jail. Narges Mohammadi, 39, the deputy head of Iran’s Defenders of Human Rights Centre (DHRC), a rights organisation presided over by the Nobel peace laureate Shirin Ebadi, was picked up last year by security officials who raided her house in middle of the night without a warrant for her arrest. She was taken to Tehran’s Evin prison where she was kept in solitary confinement but was released after a month and taken to hospital. Mohammadi, a mother of two and winner of the 2009 Alexander Langer award for her human rights activities, has since developed an undiagnosed epilepsy-like disease which causes her to lose control over her muscles temporarily duringthe day. It emerged on Tuesday that a court in Tehran has now convicted her on three charges: acting against the national security, membership of the DHRC and propaganda against the regime, for which she has received an 11-year sentence in total. “I’m not involved in politics, I’m only a human rights activist,” Mohammadi said by phone from Tehran. “I was informed of the 11-year sentence through my lawyers, who were given an unprecedented 23-page judgment issued by the court in which they repeatedly likened my human rights activities to attempts to topple the regime.” Mohammadi, who is also a member of Iran’s National Peace Council, said she would appeal against the sentence. In March, the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, a US-based non-governmental organisation, reported that security forces had stolen Mohammadi’s medical records from the hospital. Her husband, Taghi Rahmani, a political activist, has spent a third of his life in jail. Ebadi said Mohammadi’s conviction showed Iran’s judiciary was manipulated by intelligence and security officials. “Whilst in jail, Mohammadi was threatened by her interrogator that she would be given at least 10 years if she did not cease her activities and now we see that the interrogator’s prediction has come true,” she said. The British Foreign Office called on the Iranian government to overturn her “harsh” sentence . “[Her conviction] is another sad example of the Iranian authorities’ attempts to silence brave human rights defenders,” the FCO said. “She has done nothing but work for a human rights NGO under difficult circumstances to fight for the legitimate rights of the Iranian people.” Amnesty International also reacted with outrage to Mohammadi’s conviction. “The verdict claims that Narges Mohammadi is a liar and has tarnished the image of Iran,” said Drewery Dyke, Amnesty’s researcher on Iran. “However, this latest verdict regrettably does exactly that by showing what Iran’s judiciary thinks of the government’s so-called commitment to uphold human rights in the country and indeed exactly how it deals with those advocating international human rights standards.” According to Amnesty, Mohammadi has campaigned for an end to death penalty for those convicted under the age of 18, for which she has long been targeted by the authorities. Other human rights activists in Iran have also been sentenced to lengthy prison terms, including women’s rights activist Shiva Nazar Ahari and lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh, whose 11-year sentence was reduced to six years in an appeals court two weeks ago. Iran Middle East Human rights Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk
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