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Video Released From Inside D.C. Monument During East Coast Quake

The National Park Service has posted online scary footage of visitors on the observation deck of the Washington Monument when the August 23 earthquake shook and damaged the popular attraction. The tremors – which registered 5.8 on the Richter Scale with the epicenter 84 miles southwest of Washington, D.C. – has temporarily closed the monument

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Nokia Siemens makes multi-carrier HSPA+ hurtle at 336Mbps

It’s easy to shrug off technical achievements like this while real-world data speeds still lag so far behind. Nevertheless, the adrenalin junkies at Nokia Siemens Services insist their latest HSPA+ platform will be commercially available to carriers by the end of next year and, to prove it actually works, they’ve been demoing at PT Expo Comm in Beijing. The technology uses the latest 3GPP standardization to hog eight 42Mbps frequency channels at the same time, delivering a peak throughput of 336Mbps. Sure, it doesn’t come close to the 1Gbps speeds we’ve seen from Ericsson with LTE-Advanced , but if it gets here first we’ll have it. [Thanks, Alan] Continue reading Nokia Siemens makes multi-carrier HSPA+ hurtle at 336Mbps Filed under: Cellphones Nokia Siemens makes multi-carrier HSPA+ hurtle at 336Mbps originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Sep 2011 17:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Richard Desmond’s Health Lottery branded a ‘disgrace’

Health Lottery set up by media tycoon Richard Desmond has been criticised for not giving enough money to charity Express newspapers chief Richard Desmond has been urged to increase the amount of cash his new “health lottery”, launched on Tuesday, will raise for good causes after the sweepstake was branded a “disgraceful development” by a leading charity figure. The new lottery – run by Desmond’s Northern & Shell, which also owns Channel 5 – offers a £100,000 top prize for matching five numbers out of 50. Tickets will cost £1, with 20.3p of the price going back into local health projects across the country. Charity organisations warned that this was the bare minimum that a lottery provider could donate from ticket sales – whereas the National Lottery gives 28p in every pound to good causes. Sir Stephen Bubb of the Association of Chief Executives of Voluntary Organisations told the Guardian it was a “disgraceful new development”. He pointed out that the operator would raise only £50m a year – compared with National Lottery operator Camelot, which gave £270m to health causes a few years ago. Given that Camelot announced record ticket sales of £5.8bn last year, it is estimated the amount going to health charities is now closer to £350m. “This whole thing is deeply unhelpful,” said Bubb. “[Richard Desmond] is giving less to charity and also can make a profit from people who think they are giving to charity. They will force charities to duplicate a whole bureaucracy that has grown up after 17 years of the National Lottery. It will just take away business from Camelot’s lottery which gives more money to health.” Ben Kernighan, the deputy chief executive at the National Council for Voluntary Organisations , said that he “understood that when a lottery starts up there are upfront costs. Once you reach a certain volume of sales those costs are not there and we would expect providers to maximise the amount going to good causes.” He added that Desmond was “offering just above the legal minimum in terms of contribution. We’d like that to increase over time. Really the best way to give to charities is to do so directly”. Desmond’s company argues that the new lottery will grow the market – with the live draw to be shown on ITV1 and Channel 5 each Saturday from 8 October. Players matching three numbers will win £50 and those with four numbers will get £500. Martin Hall, chief executive of the new venture said: “The health lottery game is a fresh new alternative which has one single good cause at its heart – health. “We will be offering people the opportunity to win a life-changing amount of money while at the same time contributing to tackling real health issues in their own communities. “It is an exciting new launch which will benefit every community in Britain.” Richard Desmond Express Newspapers National Lottery Newspapers & magazines Health Randeep Ramesh guardian.co.uk

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Richard Desmond’s Health Lottery branded a ‘disgrace’

Health Lottery set up by media tycoon Richard Desmond has been criticised for not giving enough money to charity Express newspapers chief Richard Desmond has been urged to increase the amount of cash his new “health lottery”, launched on Tuesday, will raise for good causes after the sweepstake was branded a “disgraceful development” by a leading charity figure. The new lottery – run by Desmond’s Northern & Shell, which also owns Channel 5 – offers a £100,000 top prize for matching five numbers out of 50. Tickets will cost £1, with 20.3p of the price going back into local health projects across the country. Charity organisations warned that this was the bare minimum that a lottery provider could donate from ticket sales – whereas the National Lottery gives 28p in every pound to good causes. Sir Stephen Bubb of the Association of Chief Executives of Voluntary Organisations told the Guardian it was a “disgraceful new development”. He pointed out that the operator would raise only £50m a year – compared with National Lottery operator Camelot, which gave £270m to health causes a few years ago. Given that Camelot announced record ticket sales of £5.8bn last year, it is estimated the amount going to health charities is now closer to £350m. “This whole thing is deeply unhelpful,” said Bubb. “[Richard Desmond] is giving less to charity and also can make a profit from people who think they are giving to charity. They will force charities to duplicate a whole bureaucracy that has grown up after 17 years of the National Lottery. It will just take away business from Camelot’s lottery which gives more money to health.” Ben Kernighan, the deputy chief executive at the National Council for Voluntary Organisations , said that he “understood that when a lottery starts up there are upfront costs. Once you reach a certain volume of sales those costs are not there and we would expect providers to maximise the amount going to good causes.” He added that Desmond was “offering just above the legal minimum in terms of contribution. We’d like that to increase over time. Really the best way to give to charities is to do so directly”. Desmond’s company argues that the new lottery will grow the market – with the live draw to be shown on ITV1 and Channel 5 each Saturday from 8 October. Players matching three numbers will win £50 and those with four numbers will get £500. Martin Hall, chief executive of the new venture said: “The health lottery game is a fresh new alternative which has one single good cause at its heart – health. “We will be offering people the opportunity to win a life-changing amount of money while at the same time contributing to tackling real health issues in their own communities. “It is an exciting new launch which will benefit every community in Britain.” Richard Desmond Express Newspapers National Lottery Newspapers & magazines Health Randeep Ramesh guardian.co.uk

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Coca-Cola CEO Muhtar Kent thinks US corporations are at a disadvantage compared to those based elsewhere thanks to America’s labyrinthine tax code, he told the Financial Times in an interview published late last night. “I believe the US owes itself to create a 21st-century tax policy,” Kent opined. His biggest…

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Appeal court criticises judge’s  approach to  riot sentencing

Lord chief justice says if other crown courts had circulated alternative tariffs it would have been a ‘recipe for chaos’ A Manchester judge who made influential comments on sentencing offenders in the immediate aftermath of the August riots has been criticised by the appeal court. If other crown courts had circulated alternative tariffs for various crimes it would have been a “recipe for chaos” in the judicial system, the lord chief justice, Lord Judge, warned. Disapproval of the comments by Judge Andrew Gilbart QC, the recorder of Manchester, came from all three judges sitting in the appeal court on Tuesday as they began considering the first cases to come before them from the summer disturbances. The hearing follows concerns expressed last month by senior legal figures that some prison terms imposed on rioters were unduly harsh. The former director of public prosecutions, Lord Macdonald, cautioned that the courts risked being swept up in a “collective loss of proportion”. Opening the appeal cases, the judges – Lord Judge, Lord Justice Thomas and Lord Justice Leveson, said they would view BBC television news coverage of the riots before they decided whether any of the sentences handed down were disproportionate; they would only watch material already broadcast. Nine men and one woman are appealing against what their lawyers allege was the “manifestly excessive” length of their custodial sentences. None are challenging their convictions. Only three of the appellants – Lorriane McGrane, a 19-year old Territorial Army soldier, from Peckham, south-east London, Enrico Vanasco, a 25-year-old chef from Manchester and Hassan Koyuncu, an 18-year-old from north London – appeared in court. Two of the appellants, Jordan Blackshaw, 20, from Northwich, Cheshire, and Perry Sutcliffe-Keenan, 22, from Warrington, Cheshire, had posted notices on Facebook inviting people to participate in riots in their home towns. Both received four years in prison. Their lawyers told the court that what their clients had done was “monumentally foolish”, “hugely stupid” and “hugely shortsighted”. Gareth Roberts, representing Blackshaw, said the judge imposing the sentence “had failed to consider the leading authorities in relation to riot sentences [set] following the Bradford riots [in 2001] where sentences of four years were given to those carrying crossbows and wielding scaffolding poles.” But the lord chief justice implied that the appeal court viewed this summer’s disturbances as more serious because they were far more widespread. “[The Bradford cases] are not guideline cases,” he said. “The Bradford riots were confined to Bradford. One of our concerns is that these were nationwide. At the moment we are inclined to consider that we should take that into consideration.” Addressing the ‘guidelines’ formulated by Gilbart in Manchester as the courts began to process offenders, the appeal court justices were equally dismissive. Leveson, who is also chairman of the Sentencing Council, said: “What concerns me is that the judge … started to give sentence ranges … for offences with which he was not concerned. That’s not even something this court does.” Gilbart has previously said that he did not disregard sentencing guidelines. Thomas described the tariffs for offences set out as “wholly alien to the common law” and a new departure. The riots were not “unprecedented”, the appeal court judges added, citing the 1981 Toxteth disturbances which sparked copycat riots in other English cities. Among the 10 cases before the appeal court is that of Stephen Carter, 26, of Salford, who received 16 months for picking up a bag of clothes hidden in bushes during Manchester’s riots. The clothes had been looted from nearby shops. He had committed the offence, his counsel, Helen Richardson said, within the sight of police officers. Sentencing for offences of dishonesty were “disproportionately enhanced,” she told the court. “The premium added for offences of dishonesty [as opposed to violence] was too high in the circumstances.” Another appellant, David Beswick, 31, a coach driver from Eccles, is appealing against his 18 month sentence. He had been caught with a TV in his car. He told the police at the time that if his vehicle had not run out of petrol, it “might have been a different story”. David Perry, QC, for the crown, acknowledged that it was not the function of a crown court judge to formulate guidelines but he said: “Underlying [Judge Gilbart's] concerns was consistency. The problem facing the judges was extremely difficult. “It wasn’t an easy sentencing exercise. … There was a structural problem. There’s a tension between consistency at the time of sentencing and afterwards when the court of appeal first has an opportunity to see what is the right approach.” According to figures released by the ministry of justice, three-quarters of those appearing in court for riot-related offences had criminal records. Judgment on the 10 appeals is expected next week. UK riots Court of appeal Crime Police Manchester Lord Justice Leveson Facebook Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk

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Phone-hacking: NoW reporter Neville Thurlbeck takes publisher to tribunal

NoW’s former chief reporter taking defunct tabloid’s publishers to an employment tribunal, claiming he was a whistleblower A News of the World reporter at the heart of the phone-hacking scandal is taking the defunct tabloid’s publishers to an employment tribunal, claiming he was a whistleblower. Neville Thurlbeck, the paper’s former chief reporter, is claiming that he was unfairly dismissed by Rupert Murdoch’s News Interrnational. There is scheduled to be a preliminary employment tribunal hearing in east London this Friday. It has only just come to light that Thurlbeck – who had been behind a string of high-profile exclusives at the News of the World – had been fired by the company. News International said: “We will vigorously contest this case.” Thurlbeck was arrested in April on suspicion of unlawfully intercepting mobile phone voicemail messages but remained on the payroll of the paper until recently, possibly this month. Thurlbeck has been a key figure in the phone-hacking scandal – his name appeared on an email sent to private investigator Glenn Mulcaire which contained a transcript of messages left on a mobile phone belonging to professional footballers association chief executive Gordon Taylor. This “for Neville” email took centre stage in July when Rupert Murdoch and his son James appeared before MPs who believed it was evidence they knew phone hacking was not limited to one “rogue reporter” at the paper. Both the Murdochs denied this was the case. Employment law experts say it is only possible to use the Public Interest Disclosures Act – which protects whistleblowers from losing their jobs – in particular circumstances. Ruth Neil, of employment law firm Stone Joseph, said that there are “very specific rules” in terms of what an individual whistleblower can claim under the act. She said to use it as a defence it was necessary to have reported any alleged wrongdoing to another person in authority, such as a police officer or other public servant. A source familiar with the matter said Thurlbeck’s use of the whistleblower’s defence was “an extraordinary tactic to deploy”. Neil said that it can be used as a defence if confidential information is disclosed about an employer, which is normally a breach of common law. If he wins his case it will also entitle him to unlimited damages. Normally compensation for unfair dismissals are capped at £68,400. The sums involved in whistleblowers’ cases can be enormous by comparison. An NHS manager unfairly dismissed “as a whistleblower” over plans to relocate cancer services out of his county was awarded £1.2m in compensation. Last week Thurlbeck was at the centre of a privacy action in France relating to a 2008 “exclusive” concerning Formula one boss Mosley who was awarded £60,000 in 2008 after winning his privacy action against the Sunday tabloid in the UK. In a separate development, Thurlbeck answered police bail along with two former News of the World journalists, Ian Edmondon, the paper’s former assistant editor (news) and reporter James Weatherup. Thurlbeck and Edmondson were bailed until March. Thurlbeck could not be reached for comment. Phone hacking News of the World National newspapers Newspapers Rupert Murdoch Newspapers & magazines Employment tribunals Work & careers Lisa O’Carroll guardian.co.uk

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Sound Cloud Aims to Amplify the Web

A Berlin based web company is hoping to do for sound recordings what Flickr did for photos, what Twitter did for text and what YouTube did for video. (Sept. 27)

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Frank Luntz really is great at conning the American public with words. He’s the king of conservative catch phrases which are most excellent when you try to fool swaths of people with false narratives.You’ve probably heard the term ” right to work ” state. To the ordinary person it might sound like a participating state is guarantying their constituents cushy jobs with pensions, health care benefits, free barbecue and two weeks of vacation time to start. They also might think it’s the 28th amendment to the Constitution of the United States. Anyway, all the braggadocio you hear on Fox and Fox Business about how totally awesome it is if you reside in a “right to work” state because you’ll be gainfully employed and then those nasty unions can’t destroy your lives and corrupt your children’s morals. So how’s that working out for them now? thereisnospoon: Right To Work One of the favored conservative talking points during this prolonged recession (and yes, it is one long continuous downturn for most Americans, regardless of how GDP-obsessed economists cook the growth numbers) has been that unemployment in mostly Southern, so-called “right to work” states has been stronger, while unemployment in more progressive states has been higher. These talking points, of course, have totally ignored the myriad factors involved in creating those statistics, including that most of those jobs tend to be near minimum wage; that low real estate prices, not business-friendly and jobs-friendly policies, are often driving growth in those areas; that many of the gains in these states are due to energy-related booms rather than core economic successes; and that the comparative lack of social safety nets in many of those states often makes life more difficult even for those who have been lucky enough duckies to get one of those low-wage jobs. But even with those advantages, it looks like the “economic miracle” in the right-to-work states won’t be a conservative talking point much longer : When the unemployment rate rose in most states last month, it underscored the extent to which the deep recession, the anemic recovery and the lingering crisis of joblessness are beginning to reshape the nation’s economic map. The once-booming South, which entered the recession with the lowest unemployment rate in the nation, is now struggling with some of the highest rates, recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show. Several Southern states — including South Carolina, whose 11.1 percent unemployment rate is the fourth highest in the nation — have higher unemployment rates than they did a year ago. Unemployment in the South is now higher than it is in the Northeast and the Midwest, which include Rust Belt states that were struggling even before the recession. For decades, the nation’s economic landscape consisted of a prospering Sun Belt and a struggling Rust Belt. Since the recession hit, though, that is no longer the case. Unemployment remains high across much of the country — the national rate is 9.1 percent — but the regions have recovered at different speeds. Now, with the concentration of the highest unemployment rates in the South and the West, some economists and researchers wonder if it is an anomaly of the uneven recovery or a harbinger of things to come… read on Unfortunately, truth doesn’t matter to conservative operatives, he beltway media and Roger Ailes so you won’t hear anything about the struggles of these “right to work” states in context with their policies of banning unions which creates lower paying jobs. Bill O’Reilly has been opining this sentiment all year long: ‘ Even though the country is in dire economic trouble, largely because of liberal policies, they simply will not acknowledge that .’ See, it’s our fault even when it isn’t. We can’t handle the truth. In Conservative-ville, Ronald Regan never tripled the federal debt , George Bush left America with a surplus, Obama raised federal taxes to historic levels and Al Gore attacked Iraq.

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Emma Coronel

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Emma Coronel

TanitaLuvsTicos says: RT @ ThinkMexican : If El #Chapo Guzmán is one of the most wanted men in the world, why wasn’t his wife arrested? http://ow.ly/6FHW9 That’s very suspicious.

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