Sunday, 25 December 2011

Samsung Galaxy S II Duos Headed to China with Dual GSM/CDMA Support

Samsung Galaxy S II Duos Headed to China with Dual GSM/CDMA Support
Samsung Galaxy S II Duos Headed to China with Dual GSM/CDMA Support After revealing a duo of dual-SIM handsets yesterday in the form of the Galaxy Y Duos and Galaxy Y Pro Duos, Samsung will add to their lineup of handsets with expanded radio capabilities. A new variation on the Samsung Galaxy S II is headed to China and will support both GSM and CDMA2000. The phone is known as ? you guessed it Read complete Samsung Galaxy S II Duos Headed to China with Dual GSM/CDMA Support >>

Samsung Galaxy S II Duos Headed to Chine with Dual GSM/CDMA Support
Samsung Galaxy S II Duos Headed to Chine with Dual GSM/CDMA Support December 23, 2011

Samsung Galaxy S II Duos Headed to Chine with Dual GSM/CDMA Support After revealing a duo of dual-SIM handsets yesterday in the form of the Galaxy Y Duos and Galaxy Y Pro Duos, Samsung will add to their lineup of handsets with expanded radio capabilities. A new variation on the Samsung Galaxy S [...]

Samsung Announces Dual-SIM Galaxy Y Duos and Galaxy Y Pro Duos
Samsung Announces Dual-SIM Galaxy Y Duos and Galaxy Y Pro Duos December 22, 2011

Samsung Announces Dual-SIM Galaxy Y Duos and Galaxy Y Pro Duos Take the Samsung Galaxy Y and Galaxy Y Pro, slap on dual-SIM support, and you have the pair of handsets announced by the Korean manufacturer today. Just with the original lineup of Galaxy Y phones, the new handsets feature 830MHz [...]

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Samsung GT-B7722 Unboxing Video - Phone in Stock at www.welectronics.com

Source: http://wwdn.org/samsung-galaxy-s-ii-duos-headed-to-china-with-dual-gsmcdma-support.html

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Considering Consumer Credit Counseling and Debt Management Options

Banking and Finance

SkyNewswire.com

http://www.skynewswire.com/register.php

(SkyNewswire.com) Consumer credit counseling debt management services are a wonderful means of assisting customers with managing their overwhelming debt. Unfortunately, many individuals rely heavily on credit cards to pay for monthly living expenses because salaries cannot meet their needs. Unemployment is forcing many people to live on unemployment pay and most jobs that are available are only part time.

Debt Counselor Help

These are tough financial times and changing your financial system of bill paying needs to be considered. Consumer counseling agencies and debt management services have been assisting clients for decades with wonderful outcomes. Relax and fill out a preliminary application online to begin the process and receive their services.

Struggling to pay bills each month is very taxing when there is not enough money, hence the need for effective debt solutions. People become discouraged and confused about where to go for help. Rely on the financial experts at Consumer credit counseling and debt management services to be your advocate, and address your creditors concerning your plan of debt repayment. Each counselor will contact creditors to get the best pay off amount on each account.


Credit Counselng Non Profit

While not exactly a credit card bailout, they will also negotiate to remove late fees and penalties. They are working on your behalf, and are not carrying around the emotional burden that their clients feel. As soon as the negotiation process with creditors has been completed, a meeting will take place to discuss the total amount of indebtedness, the amount of each monthly payment, and the schedule and length of repayment time.

Notwithstanding the American Jobs Act, the benefits of using a Consumer credit counseling or debt management service are many. Making one payment directly to the agency, is a real plus when bill paying time rolls around. No longer will you need to miss payments or make partial payments. Begin the process today and trust the experts to send you on the path to financial recovery and debt relief. By researching and comparing the best credit counseling services in the market, you will determine the one that meets your very specific financial situation. Debt resolution can be yours.

National Debt Relief offers a free debt analysis which can be taken advantage of at their website:

www.nationaldebtreliefprogram.org

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/reriani4/~3/YsBh9GBejYg/article.php

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Saturday, 24 December 2011

East Africa famine: Somali prime minister denies food shortage

The United Nations says that 250,000 Somalis are suffering from famine in three regions including Mogadishu, a fact that Abdiweli Mohammed Ali, who leads Somalia?s officially recognised government, has denied.

"I don?t believe there?s a famine in Mogadishu. Absolutely no," he told The Daily Telegraph. "You know the aid agencies became an entrenched interest group and they say all kind of things that they want to say.?

Mr Ali leads a government that depends almost completely on outside donations. Our reporter visited a UN feeding centre in the city, where he found hundreds of starving women with their children seeking food.

Despite the prime minister's claims, Britain today announced it will be providing more than 9,000 tonnes of food supplies and medicines to drought-ravaged regions in the Horn of Africa this Christmas.

Source: http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/569076/s/1b300546/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cnews0Cworldnews0Cafricaandindianocean0Csomalia0C89726370CEast0EAfrica0Efamine0ESomali0Eprime0Eminister0Edenies0Efood0Eshortage0Bhtml/story01.htm

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Friday, 2 December 2011

3 Broadway shows hum happily after Grammy nods (AP)

NEW YORK ? Move over Adele, Kanye West and Bon Iver. One of the livelier contests at next year's Grammy Awards will pit Harry Potter, Cole Porter and a pair of Mormon missionaries.

The cast recordings of "The Book of Mormon," "Anything Goes" and "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" ? an eclectic group of shows still going strong on Broadway ? each earned Grammy nominations Wednesday night.

"We're in very rarified company," said Kathleen Marshall, who directed and choreographed the Porter-driven "Anything Goes," which stars Sutton Foster and Joel Grey and features such songs as "I Get a Kick Out of You" and "You're the Top."

Robert Lopez, who together with "South Park" creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone created "The Book of Mormon," was generous in his praise for his rivals. "I've seen them both and I thought they were great," he said. "They're two big classics and they did a really good job casting and remounting them."

"The Book of Mormon" goes into the Grammy contest as the favorite, having already captured the best musical Tony Award among its haul of nine awards. Its cast album also hit the top 10 on Billboard's pop charts, which hasn't happened in decades.

But Lopez, who was last nominated for "Avenue Q," isn't predicting victory quite yet.

"I don't make any assumptions," he said. "I thought we were in good shape going in with `Avenue Q' and we got smoked by `Wicked.'"

Only three shows were nominated this year, a quirk of the process.

Only 25 cast albums were submitted, meaning only three nominations were allowed. If 24 were submitted, the whole category would have been passed over. If 26 albums were turned in, five nomination slots would have been created. In one of the biggest shocks, "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark," with songs by U2's Bono and The Edge, did not get a Grammy nod.

For Robert Sher, the record producer who put together the cast album for "How to Succeed," getting a Grammy nomination is familiar territory. He's earned six over his career and has now gotten one four years in a row.

When recording the album featuring John Larroquette and former wizard Daniel Radcliffe, Sher said he wanted to avoid having a studio sound to his CD, which he finds cold and impersonal.

"When I do a show, I think about the period it's set in and I try to get that feeling of period on the album because you don't have the visuals," said Sher, who hopes this year will mark his first Grammy victory. "The idea is to inject the theatricality of the proceedings in a dynamic way."

One funny twist this year is that "The Book of Mormon" CD comes with warning stickers on the cover due to expletives and vulgarity. Marshall laughs that one its songwriting rivals, Cole Porter, hardly needs any parental cautions.

"He's naughty but in a much more innocent way," she said. "He relies on the double entendre and lets us use our imagination."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111201/ap_en_mu/us_grammy_nominations_theater

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Thursday, 1 December 2011

New thinking required on wildlife disease, experts say

ScienceDaily (Nov. 29, 2011) ? A University of Adelaide scientist says much more could be done to predict the likelihood and spread of serious disease -- such as tuberculosis (TB) or foot-and-mouth disease -- in Australian wildlife and commercial stock.

Professor Corey Bradshaw and colleagues have evaluated freely available software tools that provide a realistic prediction of the spread of disease among animals.

They used a combination of models to look at the possible spread of TB among feral water buffalo in the Northern Territory.

Buffalo can harbour bovine tuberculosis, which poses a threat to commercial cattle livestock. They were introduced to northern Australia in the 1800s from Timor-Leste. In the 1980s and 1990s the government of the time began a broad-scale culling program, culling tens of thousands of buffalo.

"The cull successfully reduced or eradicated buffalo from major pastoral lands in the Northern Territory, taking tuberculosis with it, but since then there has been no major follow-up culling. The buffalo population is re-invading the formerly culled areas," says Professor Bradshaw, who is Director of Ecological Modelling at the University of Adelaide's Environment Institute.

"Although Australia now trades its livestock under the `TB-free' banner, the disease is prevalent throughout Africa, southern Europe, the Middle East and parts of Asia. Realistically, it's only a matter of time before it rears its ugly head again here. If it does, it could potentially cost our cattle industry billions of dollars."

Professor Bradshaw says Australia needs to implement tools such as those combining disease and population models to help plan the response to any potential return of TB -- or other, nastier diseases, such as foot-and-mouth.

"We found that the probability of detecting a disease as well known as TB in buffalo was extremely small, even for thousands of `sentinel' animals culled each year. Current monitoring programs by the Northern Australia Quarantine Strategy (part of the Australian Quarantine and Inspection Service -- AQIS) could definitely benefit from the use of these software tools, which are freely available for anyone to download," Professor Bradshaw says.

"If the goal of culling programs is to reduce prevalence of TB to near-zero, our prediction is that somewhere between 30-50% of the current buffalo population would have to be culled each year for about 15 years. That's a lot of buffalo -- at least 100,000 killed over the first five years."

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Journal Reference:

  1. Corey J. A. Bradshaw, Clive R. McMahon, Philip S. Miller, Robert C. Lacy, Michael J. Watts, Michelle L. Verant, John P. Pollak, Damien A. Fordham, Thomas A. A. Prowse, Barry W. Brook. Novel coupling of individual-based epidemiological and demographic models predicts realistic dynamics of tuberculosis in alien buffalo. Journal of Applied Ecology, 2011; DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2664.2011.02081.x

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/11/111129112345.htm

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MF Global trustee seeks to pay out $2.1 billion more (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? The trustee liquidating MF Global Holdings Ltd's broker-dealer unit asked a federal bankruptcy judge to authorize the distribution of another $2.1 billion to former commodities customers, roughly doubling the total payout to $4.1 billion.

James Giddens, the trustee for MF Global Inc, said the increased payout should restore at least two-thirds of U.S. segregated customer property pro rata to the former customers.

Giddens said the latest transfer could take two to four weeks and would require help from CME Group Inc's Chicago Mercantile Exchange and other derivative clearing organizations.

The payout requires approval by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Martin Glenn in Manhattan, who authorized two transfers this month. A hearing is set for December 9, court records show.

Once run by former New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine, MF Global filed for Chapter 11 protection on October 31 after the New York-based company revealed a $6.3 billion bet on European sovereign debt. That worried investors, credit rating agencies and trading partners, and spurred a liquidity shortfall.

Former FBI director Louis Freeh was asked on Friday to become the trustee for the MF Global parent company. He would also work to return money to creditors, and coordinate with investigators looking for missing customer funds.

Giddens' has estimated that this shortfall could total $1.2 billion, and on Tuesday said the amount remains uncertain.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York, editing by Gerald E. McCormick)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111129/bs_nm/us_mfglobal_trustee

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Clinton offers Myanmar first rewards for political reform (Reuters)

YANGON (Reuters) ? Secretary of State Hillary Clinton offered Myanmar the first rewards for reform on Thursday, saying the United States would back more aid for the reclusive country and consider returning an ambassador after an absence of some two decades.

Clinton said she had "candid, productive" conversations with President Thein Sein and other Myanmar ministers, and told them Washington stood ready to support further reforms, and possibly lift sanctions, as the country seeks to emerge from decades of authoritarian military rule.

But she also urged Myanmar to take further steps to release political prisoners and end ethnic conflicts, and said better U.S. ties would be impossible unless Myanmar halts its illicit dealings with North Korea, which has repeatedly set alarm bells ringing across Asia with its renegade nuclear program.

"The president told me he hopes to build on these steps, and I assured him that these reforms have our support," Clinton told a news conference after her talks in Myanmar's remote capital, Naypyitaw.

"I also made clear that, while the measures already taken may be unprecedented and welcomed, they are just the beginning."

Clinton's landmark visit to the country also known as Burma marks a tentative rapprochement after more than 50 years of estrangement from the West.

She traveled later to the commercial capital of Yangon where she went barefoot in line with Buddhist tradition to tour one of Myanmar's most revered shrines, the Shwedagon Pagoda.

She later held the first of two meetings with veteran pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

"BEGINNING STEPS"

Following meetings with Thein Sein and other officials in Naypyitaw, Clinton unveiled several incremental steps to improve ties and said the United States would consider returning an ambassador to the country.

The United States downgraded its representation in Myanmar to a charge d'affaires in response to the military's brutal 1988 crackdown on pro-democracy protests and voiding of 1990 elections swept by Suu Kyi's party.

"This could become an important channel to air concerns, monitor and support progress, and build trust," Clinton said. "These are beginning steps, and we are prepared to go further if reforms maintain momentum."

The United States would consider easing sanctions if it saw concrete reforms, she said.

"I told the leadership we will certainly consider the easing and elimination of sanctions as we go forward in this process together ... It has to be not theoretical or rhetorical, it has to be very real, on the ground, that can be evaluated."

Clinton also said the United States would support new World Bank and International Monetary Fund assessment missions to help Myanmar jumpstart its feeble economy and new U.N. counter-narcotics and health cooperation programs.

Seeking to pull Myanmar more closely into a region increasingly united by its wariness over regional heavyweight China, Clinton invited Myanmar to become an observer to the Lower Mekong Initiative, a U.S.-backed grouping aimed at discussing the future of Southeast Asia's major waterway.

But she dismissed any suggestion that engagement with Myanmar was driven by competition with China.

"We are not about opposing any other country. We're about supporting this country," she said, adding that the United States regularly consulted China on its engagement in Asia, including Myanmar.

Clinton also said the United States and Myanmar would discuss a joint effort to recover the remains of Americans killed during the building of the "Burma Road" during World War Two -- echoing steps taken with Vietnam as Washington and Hanoi sought to put their differences behind them.

Rights groups and some lawmakers in the U.S. Congress have been concerned that Washington may be moving too swiftly to endorse the new leadership, and Clinton made clear that the United States needed to see more progress.

"It is encouraging that political prisoners have been released, but over 1,000 are still not free," Clinton said.

"Let me say publicly what I said privately earlier today: no person in any country should be detained for exercising universal freedoms of expression, assembly and conscience."

A U.S. official who sat in on the talks cited Thein Sein as saying the government considered the release of such prisoners "part of the effort of having an inclusive political process" and it was looking at the possibility of more releases.

Clinton also said it would "be difficult to begin a new chapter" until Myanmar began forging peace with ethnic minority rebels and started allowing humanitarian groups, human rights monitors and journalists into conflict areas.

Underscoring a key U.S. diplomatic objective, Clinton pressed Myanmar to halt what U.S. officials say are illicit contacts with North Korea, including trade in missile technology, and to honor U.N. sanctions imposed on Pyongyang because of its renegade nuclear program.

"Better relations with the United States will only be possible if the entire government respects the international consensus against the spread of nuclear weapons," she said. "We look to Naypyitaw to honor U.N. Security Council Resolutions 1718 and 1874 and sever illicit ties with North Korea."

Clinton said she received "strong assurances" regarding Myanmar's commitments to U.N. Security Council resolutions on North Korea and its obligations on non-proliferation. U.S. officials have played down fear Myanmar's ties with North Korea had broadened to include a nuclear program.

SUU KYI BACKS U.S. ENGAGEMENT

Suu Kyi said on Wednesday she fully backed Washington's effort to gauge Myanmar's reforms since the military nominally gave up power to civilian leaders following elections last year.

"I think we have to be prepared to take risk. Nothing is guaranteed," Suu Kyi told reporters in Washington in a public video call from her home in Yangon, where she was held in detention for 15 of the last 21 years before being released in November last year.

But Suu Kyi -- a Nobel peace laureate and towering figure for Myanmar's embattled democracy movement -- said the United States must remain watchful that the army-backed government did not halt or roll back reforms, and "speak out loud and clear" if people engaging in politics were arrested.

Suu Kyi confirmed she would run in upcoming by-elections, ending a boycott of Myanmar's political system.

Clinton's trip follows a decision by President Barack Obama last month to open the door to expanded ties, saying he saw "flickers of progress." Clinton said it was up to Myanmar's leaders to decide what came next.

"We know from history that flickers can die out. They can be stamped out," she said.

(Editing by Jason Szep and Robert Birsel)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111201/wl_nm/us_myanmar

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The worst iPhone games of 2011 (Appolicious)

When a game app isn?t bad because it?s unplayable or impossibly broken but because you can see its potential squandered right in front of your eyes, it can be hard to take. A game that?s broken is easily discarded, but a game that?s disappointingly incomplete keeps calling you back only to disappoint you repeatedly until you?ve finally had enough. Here are five games that did that to me in 2011.

I don?t even dislike DoubleDragon, really. It?s about as close as you can get to playing the original DoubleDragon on your iPhone, which I guess is cool if you?re not looking for even the slightest hint of a worthwhile gameplay addition. Sure, the environments got a little visual makeover, but so what?

DoubleDragon isn?t short enough to beat in a single sitting but isn?t long enough to last more than a couple of hours, which puts it in a strange position considering you can?t save your progress in the middle of the game. DoubleDragon is a retro app that doesn?t feel nostalgic, it just feels dated.

Playing Mazeus is like playing through a tech demo for a small part of a much larger, more interesting experience. Except the larger experience never comes and you?re left running a ball through a maze over a black background.

There are plenty of interesting Labyrinth style games on the iPhone, so it?s not exactly the lack of a story that feels like wasted potential, but rather it feels like there wasn?t even a hint of thought put into the game that wasn?t maze related. Even offering up a few varied backgrounds would make Mazeus feel more like a complete experience.

Let?s make a pact right now to not create any more games on the iPhone where a major gameplay element will involve your entire finger obstructing the screen. Unlike a Fruit Ninja style app where you?re constantly sliding your finger across the screen and therefore not limiting your view, Time Crisis 2nd Strike has you tapping over enemies in over to shoot them.

Great in theory, but tapping an enemy only to inadvertently touch another enemy who suddenly is firing away at you is beyond irritating. There?s simply no great way to recreate the sights in a light gun-oriented game on the iPhone. Plenty of people have criticized SEGA for not putting out a House of the Dead app but I think a quick look at Time Crisis 2nd Strike shows why it?s probably wise to stay away.

Remember when I just praised SEGA for staying away from a genre when they knew better? Well, in Virtua Fighter 2, they took a concept, iPhone fighting games, that could?ve (and has been) executed fairly well before, and essentially messed it up right out of the gate. It?s not a surprise they?d want to bring their storied fighting franchise to the mobile arena, but why Virtua Fighter 2? Why a 2-D SEGA Genesis version in 2011?

The iPhone can handle some pretty tricky visuals these days, and even if Sega would have had to dumb-down a SEGA Saturn version of Virtua Fighter slightly to work on the mobile platform, that would seem preferable to the ugly mess that is Virtua Fighter 2.

The Galaga 30th Collection commemorates an historic achievement in time for one of the most storied games in history not by offering up some cool literature on the making of the game, or some videos with the game?s original developers, or any other information at all. ?Instead, players get to play the original version of Galaxian, the true, original iteration of Galaga, for free. They can then purchase Galaga or its two subsequent sequels for nominal fees.

Setting aside the amazing bait-and-switch of calling your app Galaga but not actually offering up Galaga to play for free, Galaga 30th Collection doesn?t have the feel of a tribute or celebration at all. If someone in real life celebrated a 30th anniversary of anything else so carelessly, they?d never get to see a 31st anniversary.

Love iPhone games? Create a list of your favorites here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/appolicious_rss/rss_appolicious_tc/http___www_appolicious_com_articles10306_the_worst_iphone_games_of_2011/43749700/SIG=12gvfr97q/*http%3A//www.appolicious.com/games/articles/10306-the-worst-iphone-games-of-2011

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Video: Ferrari's Business Strategy

Sharing the strategy behind Ferrari's record revenues, and Italy's debt crisis, with Luca di Montezemolo, Ferrari chairman.

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Business & financial news headlines from msnbc.com

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45475315/

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