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Kyocera Duramax is in the batter’s box, launching with Sprint Direct Connect October 2nd

Is there still any lingering doubt that something big’s getting cooked up in Overland Park in time for October 2nd? We’ve already seen leaked screenshots showing that Sprint’s aiming to launch its CDMA-based Direct Connect service that day, as well as a Sprint-backed vid of the Motorola Admiral , the first smartphone to sport the new feature. Courtesy of SprintFeed , another gem has been unearthed: the Direct Connect -compatible Kyocera Duramax. Said to start at $100 with a two-year agreement, the rugged clamshell bears a great deal of resemblance to a large number of legacy iDEN handsets. It’s nothing to write home about, but it still sports the proper military specs to keep it protected, as well as a 3 megapixel camera and a non-slip surface. Anyone who isn’t looking for a smartphone but is in need of a Direct Connect device will want to keep a close eye on this one as we get closer to the day of destiny. Oh, and Sprint? The cat’s out of the bag — perhaps it’s time to make it real. Kyocera Duramax is in the batter’s box, launching with Sprint Direct Connect October 2nd originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Sep 2011 09:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Kyocera Duramax is in the batter’s box, launching with Sprint Direct Connect October 2nd

Is there still any lingering doubt that something big’s getting cooked up in Overland Park in time for October 2nd? We’ve already seen leaked screenshots showing that Sprint’s aiming to launch its CDMA-based Direct Connect service that day, as well as a Sprint-backed vid of the Motorola Admiral , the first smartphone to sport the new feature. Courtesy of SprintFeed , another gem has been unearthed: the Direct Connect -compatible Kyocera Duramax. Said to start at $100 with a two-year agreement, the rugged clamshell bears a great deal of resemblance to a large number of legacy iDEN handsets. It’s nothing to write home about, but it still sports the proper military specs to keep it protected, as well as a 3 megapixel camera and a non-slip surface. Anyone who isn’t looking for a smartphone but is in need of a Direct Connect device will want to keep a close eye on this one as we get closer to the day of destiny. Oh, and Sprint? The cat’s out of the bag — perhaps it’s time to make it real. Kyocera Duramax is in the batter’s box, launching with Sprint Direct Connect October 2nd originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Sep 2011 09:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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75 Years of Jim Henson

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75 Years of Jim Henson

(YouTube link) Muppet creator (and the most renowned puppeteer ever) Jim Henson was born on September 24, 1936, which would make him 75 years old if he were with us today. In honor of the occasion, the Google Doodle features a group of Henson’s monsters -and you can act as the Muppeteer! Link to Google. Link to a Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Neatorama Discovery Date : 24/09/2011 04:18 Number of articles : 4

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West Bank tensions grow as Jewish women settlers learn how to use guns

The quest for Palestinian statehood at the UN has worsened a climate of fear on the ground in the Occupied Territories The settlers come down the hill from the outpost, mostly on foot, but occasionally on horseback or in tractors or 4x4s. They carry Israeli flags, and sometimes bring guns, shovels and dogs. There may be as few as three or as many as 40. They taunt the local villagers and sometimes attack them. Often the Israeli army arrives and trains its weapons on the villagers. In Qusra, deep among the terraced hills of the West Bank, fear is on the rise. “The settlers are provoking us continuously,” said Hani Abu Reidi, head of the village council. “They uproot olive trees, kill our sheep, burn our mosques and curse our prophet. They want to drag us into the sphere of violence. We do not want to go there.” As the Palestinian quest for statehood looks set to be mired in diplomatic back rooms for weeks or months, tension on the ground is mounting. Both Palestinian villagers and Jewish settlers say each other is responsible for a spike in attacks over the past fortnight; mostly small-scale incidents such as throwing stones, molotov cocktails and insults. Both sides claim the other is preparing to invade their communities and attack their people. It has created an edgy climate of fear and menace, and is a forewarning of potential battles to come if the struggle for the land moves up a gear with impending Palestinian statehood. The request by the Palestinians to be admitted to the United Nations as a full member state, formally submitted on Friday, will now be considered by the security council for an undefined period, during which efforts to get both sides back to the negotiating table will intensify. If no progress is made, the Palestinians will press for a vote at the security council, a move the US has pledged to veto. The Palestinians would then have the option of asking the 193-member general assembly for enhanced status, albeit short of full statehood. As this process inches forward, anger on the ground is rising. On Friday, a routine stand-off between settlers from the outpost of Esh Kodesh and Qusra villagers ended in a haze of teargas and a hail of live bullets fired at the villagers by Israeli troops, two of which struck Issam Odeh, 33, killing the father-of-eight. Qusra set up a defence committee earlier this month after one of the village’s four mosques was vandalised in a settler attack condemned by the US and the European Union. Up to 20 unarmed men patrol the mosques from 8pm to 6am every night, and Abu Reidi claims they have already foiled at least one attack. Other Palestinian villages have followed suit. On the hilltops, preparations for clashes have also been under way for weeks. Security around settlements and outposts has been reinforced with extra barbed wire, CCTV cameras, security guards and trained attack dogs. And the settlers themselves are armed and primed in anticipation of what they believe will be incursions by Palestinians intent on making their hoped-for state a reality on the ground. This week, photographs were published on a pro-settler news website, Arutz Sheva , showing women from Pnei Kedem, an outpost south of Bethlehem, learning to shoot. In Shimon Hatzadik, a hardline Jewish enclave in the midst of the the Palestinian neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah, in east Jerusalem, settlers are preparing to invoke a law allowing self-defence against intruders. “We are talking about shooting at their legs and if that doesn’t work, and our lives are in danger, we won’t be afraid to shoot straight at them. Most of the residents here are armed,” spokesman Yehonatan Yosef told parliamentarians two weeks ago. Activists in the settlement of Qiryat Arba, on the edge of Hebron, have distributed clubs, helmets and teargas to nearby outposts. “They’ve been given all of the tools we could provide for them in order to protect themselves,” Bentzi Gopstein, a member of Qiryat Arba’s council, told the Ynet news website. “But we must remember that the best defence is offence. We can’t stay close to our fences. If the Arabs can come to us, they must learn we can come to them.” The settlers believe Israeli soldiers will be hampered by restraints imposed by commanders fearful of negative publicity. “They are not receiving the right orders,” said radical activist Itamar Ben-Gvir from Qiryat Arba. “There’s no state in the world that would allow the enemy to cross its lines and enter its communities. If the IDF will not act properly, we will have to defend ourselves.” Women and children would take part in defensive action, he said. “We want to present an equation: women against women; children against children. The Arabs are intending to use their children and we will not sit still.” Shaul Goldstein, mayor of the Gush Etzion settlement bloc south of Bethlehem, expects the focus in the coming weeks to “move from hypothetical issues in New York to practical terror here in Judaea and Samaria [the biblical term for the West Bank]“. Gush Etzion had a comparatively good relationship with its Palestinian neighbours, he said. “We are trying to talk to them to reduce friction and tension. But if the Palestinians march towards the settlements, there is a red line. If they try to cross, to penetrate our communities, it will be a big problem.” As well as fighting on the ground, many settlers believe they must also wage a political battle against the Israeli government. “Netanyahu is a weak leader, not standing for the values he was elected for,” said Goldstein. “The [settlement] construction freeze was the first in history – and this from a rightwinger. So we have to push him, to press him, to keep him to hold the line.” The settlers are not just fighting to hold on to the land they already occupy; they intend to expand and grow – as they see it, reclaiming the land that has been willed to them by God. “Our purpose is to build new towns and communities, new outposts in Judaea and Samaria,” said veteran activist Daniella Weiss. “It’s our role as Jews to build the land of the Jews.” In Qusra, Abu Reidi agreed the land is at the heart of confrontations between Jewish settlers and Palestinian villagers. “Their ultimate goal is to drive us from our land,” he said. “Defending the land is a holy task. If we let them succeed, they will take more and more.” Palestinian territories Israel United Nations Middle East Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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UBS jobs in peril as CEO quits over alleged rogue trader scandal

Fears for staff at Swiss bank as Oswald Grübel resigns over allegations Kweku Adoboli lost £1.5bn in unauthorised trades Fears for hundreds of City jobs were raised on Saturday after the dramatic resignation of the boss of UBS, who fell on his sword following the $2.3bn (£1.5bn) alleged rogue trading scandal that has engulfed the Swiss bank and raised calls for a sweeping overhaul of the “casino” investment banking industry. With Kweku Adoboli, the 31-year-old alleged rogue trader facing four charges of fraud and false accounting still in custody, Oswald Grübel resigned to “bear full responsibility for what occurs” at the bank, which employs 6,000 people in the UK. Grübel, hauled out of retirement in 2009 when the bank was crippled by the credit crunch, issued a heartfelt farewell message to staff to explain his resignation, although only a week ago he insisted he did not feel the need to quit. “That it was possible for one of our traders in London to inflict a multibillion loss on our bank through unauthorised trading shocked me, as it did everyone else, deeply,” he said. Adoboli is yet to enter a plea to the charges – which date back to 2008 – that he faces and is next due in the City of London magistrates court on 20 October. A trader on the so-called “delta one” desk, he has not applied for bail. “This incident has worldwide repercussions, including political ones. I did not take the step of resigning lightly,” Grübel said. The bank was adamant that the 67-year-old German would leave with pay for the six months he has worked this year and no more, which amounts to around SFR 1.5m (£1.1m). Grübel’s acknowledgement of the worldwide repercussions comes amid calls for investment banks to split off from high street banking operations and the need for investment banks to become less like “casinos” and more focused on their clients. Politicians in the UK have already used the incident as a reason to implement the recommendations by the Independent Commission on Banking, chaired by Sir John Vickers, to “ringfence” high street banks from investment banks. On Saturday, UBS pledged to adopt a more “client-centric strategy” and accelerate an ongoing review of its investment banking activities, which could create more jobs in the City. Some 3,500 cuts had been announced across the group even before the trading loss emerged. Other senior bankers are expected to follow Grübel out of the door once the internal investigation into the incident – which will drive the bank to a loss in the third quarter and caused anxiety among insiders about their bonuses — is completed in the next 10 days or so, Chairman Kaspar Villiger, who stressed his “regret” at the incident, acknowledged the need for change to adopt to the “new paradigm” in financial markets. The search is now on for a permanent successor at the bank which had just begun to restore some confidence among investors after $50bn of losses during the credit crunch and a row with the US tax authorities. Sergio Ermotti, already a director, is to take over for the time being. Careful not to predict the impact on jobs, UBS admitted that “certain business areas” needed to be reviewed . But the board of the bank, which had met in Singapore ahead of the Grand Prix of which UBS is a major sponsor, rejected calls for a full-scale break up and stressed the detail will be presented on 17 November at an investor meeting in New York. Villiger said: “In the future, the investment bank will be less complex, carry less risk and use less capital to produce reliable returns and contribute more optimally to UBS’s overall objectives.” In a memo to staff, Villiger urged them to remain focused. “Please do not allow yourselves to get involved in speculation,” he wrote. He revealed that the board had tried to convince Grübel, a veteran and highly regarded banker, not to quit until the annual meeting next year but Villiger said Grübel would not stay. “It is testimony to his uncompromising principles and integrity,” he said of the former chief executive who has now returned to Zurich after the meeting in Singapore where he was mobbed by reporters asking him if he intended to quit when he left the nine-hour marathon session on Friday night. UBS Banking European banks Kweku Adoboli Crime Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk

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Weekly GOP Address: Damaging Gov’t Regulations

In the weekly Republican message, Sen. Susan Collins of Maine is calling for a “timeout” on federal regulations that many in her party say are hurting the economy. Collins promoted ideas for taming what she called a “regulatory behemoth.” (Sept. 24)

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Isn’t that interesting. You’d almost have to wonder if the deeply dishonorable Wisconsin governor is guilty of something: Gov. Scott Walker’s spokesman is one of three witnesses who have been granted immunity in an ongoing John Doe investigation that includes allegations of campaign law violations , according to records obtained by WisPolitics.com . The spokesman, Cullen Werwie, also served as deputy communications director for Walker’s gubernatorial campaign. Rose Ann Dieck, a retired teacher and Milwaukee County Republican party activist, and Kenneth Lucht, a lobbyist for the Wisconsin & Southern Railroad, have also been granted immunity in matters “still under inquiry” through the secret probe , according to the judge overseeing the case. The judge stressed that a grant of immunity “does not necessarily mean, imply or infer that those witnesses are suspected of, or guilty of, any criminal wrongdoing.” Werwie said he had no comment. Dieck and Lucht could not immediately be reached. Werwie joined Walker’s campaign last fall after working on Republican Brett Davis’ lt. guv bid, which ended after in a GOP primary loss. He later joined Walker’s transition team before going to work in the governor’s office in January as Walker’s spokesman. A source with knowledge of the investigation described Dieck as a volunteer at the Milwaukee County Republican Party who was a frequent contact for former Walker county aide Darlene Wink. Wink served as Walker’s constituent services coordinator, but left the job in spring 2010 after news broke that she was posting comments to online stories and blogs praising her boss. Wink, who also previously served as first vice-chair of the Milwaukee County Republican Party, had her computer seized, and her home was searched as part of the probe. The source said part of the John Doe has included looking at emails Wink sent county GOP contacts about various fundraisers. The source added Wink was likely in frequent contact with Dieck because of their positions with the county party. Wink is no longer an officer with the Milwaukee County GOP, according to its website. Dieck is listed as one of six branch chairs with the party as well as chair of its Membership Committee.

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Libya fighters push into Gaddafi bastion

Fighters aligned with Libya’s National Transitional Council

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Emily Baldry, 5, Discovers 160 Million-Year-Old Fossil While On Dig With Father

A 5-year-old British girl born long after Jurassic Park made its theater debut uncovered a 160-million-year old fossil dating back to that very period. Emily Baldry, now 6, dug up the fossil while on a dig with her father in Gloucestershire last year. Baldry’s discovery is thought to be the first whole Rieneckia odysseus fossil found in Britain, according to geologist Neville Hollingworth, the Escapist magazine reports. The sea creature, with its sharp-pricked shell, roamed the ocean when dinosaurs roamed the earth. After the dig, Baldry and her father turned their discovery, which Baldry has affectionately nicknamed “Spike”, over to Hollingworth for restoration, and now the Jurassic-era sea creature will go on display at the Gateway Information Centre, according to the Sun. Baldry is excited to go on future digs, her mother told the Gazette and Herald after the find. “This was the first dig she has been on and she has done another one since she found the big fossil and she now has a collection of small ammonites,” she told the Gazette and Herald. “Even on the beach on holiday she is always looking out for them.” For more on Baldry’s historic find, watch the video above. Clarification: An earlier version of this story referred to the dig in the Cotswolds as an “archaeological” dig, following our sources. We have clarified the language to reflect the fact that Baldry’s discovery was not itself “archaeological.”

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