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Xperia Play finally gets HD video capture, catches up with smartphone siblings

The Xperia Play’s incoming Android 2.3.4 update appears to add an extra nugget of functional goodness in the form of high-definition video-recording. What, the Xperia Play didn’t do so already? Nope, Sony Ericsson neglected to add that functionality to the phone’s five megapixel shooter from the start. Fortunately, the new software update rectifies this, so when you’re not blasting those PlayStation hits of yesteryear , you’ll be able to chronicle your pet’s adventures in crystal clear 720p. Courtesy of XDA Developers , see proof of the Play’s new HD recording abilities after the break. Continue reading Xperia Play finally gets HD video capture, catches up with smartphone siblings Xperia Play finally gets HD video capture, catches up with smartphone siblings originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Sep 2011 22:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Palestinian statehood goes to UN in key moment for peace process

Mahmoud Abbas will postpone security council vote but has broken US hegemony over peace talks, diplomats say Mahmoud Abbas submits his bid for recognition of Palestine as a state to the United Nations on Friday at the end of a week that has seen a dramatic shift in the diplomatic ground in the Palestinians’ favour even though their request to the security council is likely to fail. The Palestinian leader is expected to hand over the letter seeking to join the UN as a state shortly before he addresses the general assembly to plead the case for admission. The Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, is scheduled to speak shortly afterwards and is likely to denounce the Palestinian move as destabilising and a threat to the peace process, even though that is largely dormant. Abbas’s determination to press ahead in the face of strong US opposition has prompted the most serious attempt to revive the peace process in years as Washington, London and Paris seek to avoid a showdown in the security council that could severely damage their standing in a rapidly changing Middle East. The US said it would veto statehood, and Britain and France were likely to abstain. The days of diplomatic wrangling, much of it behind the scenes but some of it on the open stage of the UN general assembly, have resulted in a compromise. Abbas will submit his application but any vote will be put on hold to allow for fresh attempts to revive peace talks. While Abbas has climbed down from an immediate confrontation, some senior Palestinian officials and European diplomats believe he may have won a significant victory because the US grip on the oversight of the peace process, which has been decidedly in Israel’s favour, has been weakened and other countries now want to force the pace of peace negotiations. Washington’s claim to dominate mediation has not only been damaged by its unwavering threat to veto a Palestinian state in the security council, setting up a confrontation that alarmed Britain and France, but by Barack Obama’s speech to the UN, which was widely seen as openly partisan in favour of Israel and offered no new initiatives. That has opened the way for Europe to press for a greater role. The French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, in a speech to the UN openly questioned American leadership, describing it as years of failure. Diana Buttu, a former Palestinian negotiator who has since been critical of Abbas’s leadership, said his insistence on going to the security council had delivered a diplomatic victory of sorts. “Is this a coup for Abbas? Yes, absolutely,” she said. “This is the first time since 1974 that Palestine has been able to capture international attention at the United Nations in this way. He’s managed to get people discussing whether Palestine should be recognised as a state, whether it should get its independence immediately, how we get there. It’s been a brilliant move.” A European diplomat said Abbas had changed the diplomatic equation. “The ground has shifted. There’s been no peace process to speak of for years. Obama has tried and failed to push Netanyahu in to taking negotiations seriously. There’s a feeling that this crisis has created a moment to try a different way. “It’s still negotiations. It’s still up to the Israelis and Palestinians who have to do the deal. But we are all aware that the Arab Spring is changing everything and while the Americans are always going to play a major role we may be moving toward a place where they are not the only ones in the game.” Still, Abbas has been reminded of the blunt force of American power that no other country is likely to be able to wield. The Palestinian leader privately retreated from his pledge to seek an immediate security council vote in part because he is no longer sure of winning the necessary majority, which would have given the Palestinians a moral victory even if the US used its veto as threatened. Palestinian sources say they believe Washington has bullied several security council members into withdrawing their support for the Palestinian move, including Portugal by threatening to withhold support in financial institutions for its stricken economy, and Bosnia over its opposition to Kosovo being admitted to the UN. Palestinian officials believe Nigeria is no longer certain to vote in their favour. There are also questions about the position of Gabon and Colombia. One senior Palestinian official said the Americans were “playing a really nasty game”. Abbas was also under pressure from European leaders who are keen to avoid abstaining in a security council vote on the issue. Abstention would be widely interpreted in the Arab world as implicit support for Israel, although the leaders recognise the need for Abbas to submit the statehood request in order to retain his political credibility at home. Britain pressed the Palestinian leader to back away from a showdown. Sarkozy met Abbas and pleaded with him to accept a delay in the vote in return for a promise that the French president would work to revive peace talks. Sarkozy in his UN speech said American leadership on the peace process had failed and pressed for greater involvement of European and Arab states in negotiations. “Let us stop believing that a single country or small group of countries can resolve so complex a problem. Too many crucial players have been sidelined,” he said. “After so many failures, who still believes that the peace process can succeed without Europe? “Who still believes that it can succeed without the involvement of the Arab states that have already chosen peace? Who does not see that a collective approach is now indispensable to create trust and offer real guarantees to each of the parties?” Sarkozy proposed negotiations that would adhere to a strict timetable intended to strike an agreement ending occupation and creating an independent Palestine within a year. The French president’s position is in line with proposals put forward by Tony Blair as envoy of the Middle East Quartet of the UN, EU, US and Russia to allow Abbas to fulfil his pledge to go to the security council but defer a vote. Abbas could then claim a victory for the Palestinians by saying he has achieved his principal goal at the UN of breaking the stalemate around the peace process. Buttu said the challenge now for Abbas was to ensure the momentum created this week continued in the Palestinians’ favour. “I think the old negotiations process has completely run its tired course. You’ve got countries around the world recognising that you can’t just have this process of endless negotiations with the so-called honest broker who’s not so honest at all. This has put the final nail in the coffin of the United States being the honest broker,” she said. “Now it’s being seen for what it actually is, which is Israel’s lawyer. The next step depends on what Abbas does. Is he going to continue to pander to the Americans? Or is he really going to try to build up an international coalition that will deal with this in a very different way to how it’s been dealt with in the past?” Palestinian territories Middle East United Nations Israel US foreign policy Mahmoud Abbas Barack Obama Nicolas Sarkozy Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk

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Toronto has a message for puppy mills: piss off. In a unanimous vote, the city council has banned pet stores from selling any cat or dog that does not come from a humane society, shelter, or rescue group. They believe the move will achieve two ends: Cut down on the…

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Mark Zuckerberg announced more massive changes to Facebook at its f8 event today, starting with a complete reinvention of its profile page into something called “Timeline,” which Zuckerberg described as “the story of your life.” Friends will now be able to see years worth of your posts, or sort them…

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Wikileaks Chief Julian Assange Claims ‘I Am No Rapist’ After Released Autobiography

LONDON — WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says in a new memoir that he did not sexually assault two women who have accused him of rape, and he claims he was warned the U.S government was trying to entrap him. “Julian Assange: The Unauthorized Autobiography” went on sale in Britain Thursday – against the wishes of Assange, who condemned his publisher for releasing it. In the book – written by a ghostwriter who conducted 50 hours of interviews with the WikiLeaks chief – Assange says “I may be a chauvinist pig of some sort but I am no rapist.” He calls the rape allegations “ludicrous and sinister” and says his two accusers “each had sex with me willingly and were happy to hang out with me afterwards.” Assange, 40, claims a Western intelligence contact warned him that the American government, angered by WikiLeaks’ release of secret documents, was considering dealing with him “illegally” through rigged drug or sex allegations. But he also says the sex charges may be the result of “a terrible misunderstanding that was stoked up” between his accusers. WikiLeaks and its silver-haired frontman shot to worldwide prominence with a series of spectacular leaks of secret U.S. material, including the publication of about 250,000 classified State Department cables. Assange has also become enmeshed in financial and legal woes, including the allegations of rape and sexual misconduct made last year by two Swedish women. Assange was arrested and briefly jailed over the allegations in Britain in December. He is currently out on bail and living at a supporter’s mansion in eastern England as he awaits a judge’s decision on whether he will be extradited to Sweden. A ruling is expected within weeks. The book, for which Assange says he agreed to advances of more than $1 million, was intended to help salvage WikiLeaks’ precarious finances. But after seeing the first draft, Assange got cold feet. Attempts to renegotiate the book deal were unsuccessful. Assange accused his British publisher, Canongate, of “opportunism and duplicity” for publishing the unfinished book without his approval. In a statement released to The Associated Press, he said the publisher had acted “in breach of contract, in breach of confidence, in breach of my creative rights and in breach of personal assurances.” Canongate said that since Assange had not repaid his advance – which was handed over to lawyers to help pay his legal fees – it had decided to publish the book. Assange’s U.S. publisher, Alfred A. Knopf, said it had canceled its contract with Assange and would not be releasing the memoir. Canongate said it used extensive secrecy measures, including encrypted laptops and a ban on Internet communication, to ensure the news did not leak. Retailers were only told about the book a day in advance, and Assange said he was unaware it was being published until Wednesday afternoon. “We have had books delivered under a level of security before, but not to this height,” said Jon Howells, spokesman for the Waterstone’s book store chain. “In publishing terms this is real ‘Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy’ stuff.” The book traces Assange’s life from his Australian childhood as the son of roving puppeteers through his time as a teenage computer hacker to the founding of the secret-spilling website and its release of war logs from Iraq and Afghanistan and other secret documents. It also recounts Assange’s fallout with media partners including The Guardian and New York Times newspapers, which had helped edit and publish the site’s trove of secret documents. News York Times editor Bill Keller, Assange says, turned from “hungry collaborator to ungrateful avenger.” The Guardian staff are described as “lily-livered gits hiding in their glass offices.” Assange notes angrily that WikiLeaks’ former media partners “thought of us as a bunch of weird hackers and sexual delinquents.” The book includes an account of Assange’s nine days in London’s Wandsworth Prison in December, where he reads Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and muses about prison predecessor Oscar Wilde while enduring “a Kafkaesque miasma of passive aggression and hindrance.” Canongate publishing director Nick Davies defended the book as a “nuanced and balanced portrait” of a complex individual. “He has been portrayed as this Bond villain or a character from a Stieg Larsson novel … but what comes through here is this very human portrait of Julian, warts and all,” he said. _____ Sylvia Hui and Raphael G. Satter contributed to this report. _____ Jill Lawless can be reached at: http://twitter.com/JillLawless

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Wikileaks Chief Julian Assange Claims ‘I Am No Rapist’ After Released Autobiography

LONDON — WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says in a new memoir that he did not sexually assault two women who have accused him of rape, and he claims he was warned the U.S government was trying to entrap him. “Julian Assange: The Unauthorized Autobiography” went on sale in Britain Thursday – against the wishes of Assange, who condemned his publisher for releasing it. In the book – written by a ghostwriter who conducted 50 hours of interviews with the WikiLeaks chief – Assange says “I may be a chauvinist pig of some sort but I am no rapist.” He calls the rape allegations “ludicrous and sinister” and says his two accusers “each had sex with me willingly and were happy to hang out with me afterwards.” Assange, 40, claims a Western intelligence contact warned him that the American government, angered by WikiLeaks’ release of secret documents, was considering dealing with him “illegally” through rigged drug or sex allegations. But he also says the sex charges may be the result of “a terrible misunderstanding that was stoked up” between his accusers. WikiLeaks and its silver-haired frontman shot to worldwide prominence with a series of spectacular leaks of secret U.S. material, including the publication of about 250,000 classified State Department cables. Assange has also become enmeshed in financial and legal woes, including the allegations of rape and sexual misconduct made last year by two Swedish women. Assange was arrested and briefly jailed over the allegations in Britain in December. He is currently out on bail and living at a supporter’s mansion in eastern England as he awaits a judge’s decision on whether he will be extradited to Sweden. A ruling is expected within weeks. The book, for which Assange says he agreed to advances of more than $1 million, was intended to help salvage WikiLeaks’ precarious finances. But after seeing the first draft, Assange got cold feet. Attempts to renegotiate the book deal were unsuccessful. Assange accused his British publisher, Canongate, of “opportunism and duplicity” for publishing the unfinished book without his approval. In a statement released to The Associated Press, he said the publisher had acted “in breach of contract, in breach of confidence, in breach of my creative rights and in breach of personal assurances.” Canongate said that since Assange had not repaid his advance – which was handed over to lawyers to help pay his legal fees – it had decided to publish the book. Assange’s U.S. publisher, Alfred A. Knopf, said it had canceled its contract with Assange and would not be releasing the memoir. Canongate said it used extensive secrecy measures, including encrypted laptops and a ban on Internet communication, to ensure the news did not leak. Retailers were only told about the book a day in advance, and Assange said he was unaware it was being published until Wednesday afternoon. “We have had books delivered under a level of security before, but not to this height,” said Jon Howells, spokesman for the Waterstone’s book store chain. “In publishing terms this is real ‘Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy’ stuff.” The book traces Assange’s life from his Australian childhood as the son of roving puppeteers through his time as a teenage computer hacker to the founding of the secret-spilling website and its release of war logs from Iraq and Afghanistan and other secret documents. It also recounts Assange’s fallout with media partners including The Guardian and New York Times newspapers, which had helped edit and publish the site’s trove of secret documents. News York Times editor Bill Keller, Assange says, turned from “hungry collaborator to ungrateful avenger.” The Guardian staff are described as “lily-livered gits hiding in their glass offices.” Assange notes angrily that WikiLeaks’ former media partners “thought of us as a bunch of weird hackers and sexual delinquents.” The book includes an account of Assange’s nine days in London’s Wandsworth Prison in December, where he reads Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and muses about prison predecessor Oscar Wilde while enduring “a Kafkaesque miasma of passive aggression and hindrance.” Canongate publishing director Nick Davies defended the book as a “nuanced and balanced portrait” of a complex individual. “He has been portrayed as this Bond villain or a character from a Stieg Larsson novel … but what comes through here is this very human portrait of Julian, warts and all,” he said. _____ Sylvia Hui and Raphael G. Satter contributed to this report. _____ Jill Lawless can be reached at: http://twitter.com/JillLawless

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Wikileaks Chief Julian Assange Claims ‘I Am No Rapist’ After Released Autobiography

LONDON — WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says in a new memoir that he did not sexually assault two women who have accused him of rape, and he claims he was warned the U.S government was trying to entrap him. “Julian Assange: The Unauthorized Autobiography” went on sale in Britain Thursday – against the wishes of Assange, who condemned his publisher for releasing it. In the book – written by a ghostwriter who conducted 50 hours of interviews with the WikiLeaks chief – Assange says “I may be a chauvinist pig of some sort but I am no rapist.” He calls the rape allegations “ludicrous and sinister” and says his two accusers “each had sex with me willingly and were happy to hang out with me afterwards.” Assange, 40, claims a Western intelligence contact warned him that the American government, angered by WikiLeaks’ release of secret documents, was considering dealing with him “illegally” through rigged drug or sex allegations. But he also says the sex charges may be the result of “a terrible misunderstanding that was stoked up” between his accusers. WikiLeaks and its silver-haired frontman shot to worldwide prominence with a series of spectacular leaks of secret U.S. material, including the publication of about 250,000 classified State Department cables. Assange has also become enmeshed in financial and legal woes, including the allegations of rape and sexual misconduct made last year by two Swedish women. Assange was arrested and briefly jailed over the allegations in Britain in December. He is currently out on bail and living at a supporter’s mansion in eastern England as he awaits a judge’s decision on whether he will be extradited to Sweden. A ruling is expected within weeks. The book, for which Assange says he agreed to advances of more than $1 million, was intended to help salvage WikiLeaks’ precarious finances. But after seeing the first draft, Assange got cold feet. Attempts to renegotiate the book deal were unsuccessful. Assange accused his British publisher, Canongate, of “opportunism and duplicity” for publishing the unfinished book without his approval. In a statement released to The Associated Press, he said the publisher had acted “in breach of contract, in breach of confidence, in breach of my creative rights and in breach of personal assurances.” Canongate said that since Assange had not repaid his advance – which was handed over to lawyers to help pay his legal fees – it had decided to publish the book. Assange’s U.S. publisher, Alfred A. Knopf, said it had canceled its contract with Assange and would not be releasing the memoir. Canongate said it used extensive secrecy measures, including encrypted laptops and a ban on Internet communication, to ensure the news did not leak. Retailers were only told about the book a day in advance, and Assange said he was unaware it was being published until Wednesday afternoon. “We have had books delivered under a level of security before, but not to this height,” said Jon Howells, spokesman for the Waterstone’s book store chain. “In publishing terms this is real ‘Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy’ stuff.” The book traces Assange’s life from his Australian childhood as the son of roving puppeteers through his time as a teenage computer hacker to the founding of the secret-spilling website and its release of war logs from Iraq and Afghanistan and other secret documents. It also recounts Assange’s fallout with media partners including The Guardian and New York Times newspapers, which had helped edit and publish the site’s trove of secret documents. News York Times editor Bill Keller, Assange says, turned from “hungry collaborator to ungrateful avenger.” The Guardian staff are described as “lily-livered gits hiding in their glass offices.” Assange notes angrily that WikiLeaks’ former media partners “thought of us as a bunch of weird hackers and sexual delinquents.” The book includes an account of Assange’s nine days in London’s Wandsworth Prison in December, where he reads Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and muses about prison predecessor Oscar Wilde while enduring “a Kafkaesque miasma of passive aggression and hindrance.” Canongate publishing director Nick Davies defended the book as a “nuanced and balanced portrait” of a complex individual. “He has been portrayed as this Bond villain or a character from a Stieg Larsson novel … but what comes through here is this very human portrait of Julian, warts and all,” he said. _____ Sylvia Hui and Raphael G. Satter contributed to this report. _____ Jill Lawless can be reached at: http://twitter.com/JillLawless

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Wikileaks Chief Julian Assange Claims ‘I Am No Rapist’ After Released Autobiography

LONDON — WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says in a new memoir that he did not sexually assault two women who have accused him of rape, and he claims he was warned the U.S government was trying to entrap him. “Julian Assange: The Unauthorized Autobiography” went on sale in Britain Thursday – against the wishes of Assange, who condemned his publisher for releasing it. In the book – written by a ghostwriter who conducted 50 hours of interviews with the WikiLeaks chief – Assange says “I may be a chauvinist pig of some sort but I am no rapist.” He calls the rape allegations “ludicrous and sinister” and says his two accusers “each had sex with me willingly and were happy to hang out with me afterwards.” Assange, 40, claims a Western intelligence contact warned him that the American government, angered by WikiLeaks’ release of secret documents, was considering dealing with him “illegally” through rigged drug or sex allegations. But he also says the sex charges may be the result of “a terrible misunderstanding that was stoked up” between his accusers. WikiLeaks and its silver-haired frontman shot to worldwide prominence with a series of spectacular leaks of secret U.S. material, including the publication of about 250,000 classified State Department cables. Assange has also become enmeshed in financial and legal woes, including the allegations of rape and sexual misconduct made last year by two Swedish women. Assange was arrested and briefly jailed over the allegations in Britain in December. He is currently out on bail and living at a supporter’s mansion in eastern England as he awaits a judge’s decision on whether he will be extradited to Sweden. A ruling is expected within weeks. The book, for which Assange says he agreed to advances of more than $1 million, was intended to help salvage WikiLeaks’ precarious finances. But after seeing the first draft, Assange got cold feet. Attempts to renegotiate the book deal were unsuccessful. Assange accused his British publisher, Canongate, of “opportunism and duplicity” for publishing the unfinished book without his approval. In a statement released to The Associated Press, he said the publisher had acted “in breach of contract, in breach of confidence, in breach of my creative rights and in breach of personal assurances.” Canongate said that since Assange had not repaid his advance – which was handed over to lawyers to help pay his legal fees – it had decided to publish the book. Assange’s U.S. publisher, Alfred A. Knopf, said it had canceled its contract with Assange and would not be releasing the memoir. Canongate said it used extensive secrecy measures, including encrypted laptops and a ban on Internet communication, to ensure the news did not leak. Retailers were only told about the book a day in advance, and Assange said he was unaware it was being published until Wednesday afternoon. “We have had books delivered under a level of security before, but not to this height,” said Jon Howells, spokesman for the Waterstone’s book store chain. “In publishing terms this is real ‘Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy’ stuff.” The book traces Assange’s life from his Australian childhood as the son of roving puppeteers through his time as a teenage computer hacker to the founding of the secret-spilling website and its release of war logs from Iraq and Afghanistan and other secret documents. It also recounts Assange’s fallout with media partners including The Guardian and New York Times newspapers, which had helped edit and publish the site’s trove of secret documents. News York Times editor Bill Keller, Assange says, turned from “hungry collaborator to ungrateful avenger.” The Guardian staff are described as “lily-livered gits hiding in their glass offices.” Assange notes angrily that WikiLeaks’ former media partners “thought of us as a bunch of weird hackers and sexual delinquents.” The book includes an account of Assange’s nine days in London’s Wandsworth Prison in December, where he reads Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and muses about prison predecessor Oscar Wilde while enduring “a Kafkaesque miasma of passive aggression and hindrance.” Canongate publishing director Nick Davies defended the book as a “nuanced and balanced portrait” of a complex individual. “He has been portrayed as this Bond villain or a character from a Stieg Larsson novel … but what comes through here is this very human portrait of Julian, warts and all,” he said. _____ Sylvia Hui and Raphael G. Satter contributed to this report. _____ Jill Lawless can be reached at: http://twitter.com/JillLawless

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Hulu Plus cracks one million paying subscribers, but what’s next?

It’s almost the official end of summer and just as CEO Jason Kilar forecasted back in July , Hulu has signed up more than 1,000,000 paying Plus subscribers. He made the announcement at a Goldman Sachs investor conference while also mentioning plans to invest $375 million in content this year, even as the questions of who will buy Hulu (if its owners actually follow through with a sale ) and Kilar’s own fate as its head continue to hang in the air. Hitting the projected numbers, rolling out service internationally and popping up at the f8 Facebook event are all signs Hulu is still making plans for its future, even if we don’t know yet where that future will be. Hulu Plus cracks one million paying subscribers, but what’s next? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Sep 2011 17:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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WATCH: ‘The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo’ Trailer Is Now Out

The new, extended trailer for David Fincher’s The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo has arrived and it looks… good. The long-anticipated by some, absolutely reviled by others, remake of the 2009 Swedish movie based on the best-selling Stieg Larsson trilogy, is due out December 21 and there isn’t really any doubt that this movie will

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