Wednesday, March 30, 2011

America's 'panic button' to wipe phones of democracy activists, perturb repressive governments

So, here's the scene. You're out at [insert city center here], completely neglecting any and all work duties, throwing Molotov cocktails at the building of the State you've grown to hate. It's a protest in every sense of the word, and you're rallying the troops via Twitter and Facebook. It's actually not an uncommon painting these days, and while America's not into promoting violence, it is into keeping the personal information of democracy activists secure. According to a fresh Reuters report, the US State Department is currently developing a software-based "panic button" that would wipe a phone's address book and beam out emergency alerts to fellow protesters if they were apprehended. The goal here is to protect the privacy of those captured while promoting their best interests, and to let others know that trouble is brewing. There's no clear indication of the status here, but something tells us that it'd be useful yesterday for a certain region of the globe.

America's 'panic button' to wipe phones of democracy activists, perturb repressive governments originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Mar 2011 23:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceReuters  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/03/29/americas-panic-button-to-wipe-phones-of-democracy-activists/

financial news news headline news science iPad iPhone

BBC website crashes for an hour

BBC error messageUsers were confronted with an error message for around an hour last night
Related Stories

Technical problems with the BBC website saw a total outage of the news site, iPlayer and other web services yesterday.

The disruption lasted for around an hour on Tuesday evening.

BBC bosses admitted that there had been a "major network problem" but no official explanation has yet been given.

The outage set Twitter alight with angry fans questioning how such a breakdown happened.

It led to speculation that the site had been attacked, while others blamed cutbacks.

Users trying to get on to the BBC website on Tuesday evening from around 11pm to midnight were confronted with an error message, showing the BBC's iconic test card.

"It's not often we get a message from the BBC's technical support teams saying 'total outage of all BBC websites'," blogged Steve Herrmann, editor of the BBC news website.

"We haven't had a full technical debrief, but it's clear it was a major network problem," he added.

Siemens, which provides the BBC's technical support, said network engineers were looking into the problems at sites in both Maidenhead, Berkshire and London Docklands.

In an e-mail to staff, the firm said engineers: "remotely powered down equipment at a second Internet connection at Telehouse Docklands. This got things back up and running again."

Or, in layman's terms, they turned it off and back on again.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/technology-12904586

technology financial news news headline news science iPad

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

VIDEO: Prince Harry joins Arctic team trek

Prince Harry has joined a group of disabled servicemen ahead of their attempt to walk unassisted to the North Pole.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-12902514

science

A garden of the mind

Burnet roseA family holiday can be evoked by a rose

With spring arriving, gardening shows are well and good, but amateur horticulturalists are pursuing a lofty ideal, creating a green space that stimulates emotions, writes botanist Phil Gates.

I've been gardening the same patch of ground, 60 paces long and 10 wide, for a quarter of a century.

Over more than half of my adult life, I've developed a sense of personal attachment to the garden that I could never have anticipated.

Ground that was rough grass and bare soil when we arrived now evokes the same emotions as a family photo album. The weeping pear, that was small enough to fit in a car boot when I brought it home, dominates the garden and is a reminder of the passing of time and of the sorely-missed friend who gave it to us.

I bought the lilac to celebrate the birth of our third child, the burnet rose with unusual magenta-flecked petals was a cutting taken on a memorable family holiday on the Northumberland coast, the sweet peas are seeds from the fragrant strain my grandmother nurtured on her allotment and the double-flowered daylilies came from the garden I grew up in.

But the emotional side of gardening is more than a wander down the horticultural equivalent of memory lane. There's the excitement and anticipation that comes from watching buds form and open in spring.

Right now I'm waiting for a bird of paradise (Strelitzia) flower bud to open. Thirty years ago, before we had a garden, I grew one from seed to the point of flowering on the window ledge of our flat, then our heating system failed while we were away and it had turned to mush when we returned.

Any day now I'll finally be able to watch one of these charismatic flower buds open.

As a garden matures, so does the sense of responsibility and accompanying anxiety for the wildlife that moves in.

Find out moreElegies From A Surburban Garden, presented by Phil Gates, starts on BBC Radio 4 on Monday 28 March at 1545 BSTCatch up via iPlayer after broadcast

The garden pond (dig one and amphibians will come) seethes with frogs in spring but two years ago a heron arrived and we watched the massacre in horror. Netting the pond is now an annual spring ritual.

Exasperation and disappointment are emotions that all gardeners have to cope with.

Impatient for early crops, I planted out our runner beans too soon last year and watched them collapse as the morning sun melted frost on their leaves.

CrocusSpring is a time of excitement for gardeners

I've watched rows of seedlings disappear overnight, with silvery slime trails at dawn revealing the culprit. I've cursed my clumsiness when I've snapped off an orchid flower spike at the point of flowering and watched over-watered cacti rot.

But for all the failures, there are more than enough moments of elation to compensate - like fingers stained from picking raspberries and blackcurrants, or harvesting the first aromatic sun-warmed strawberry, a far cry from the supermarket chiller-cabinet equivalents.

There's also the satisfaction - and, I guess, some slight redemption from the sense of guilt for being a polluting consumer - when wildlife moves in and shares the garden.

It was a thrill to discover that orange tip butterflies have a small breeding colony in our suburban garden.

Emotional plants

Herbs have lots of emotions associated with them.

Lavender induces sleep, beech promotes tolerance, clematis wistfulness, willow weeping, and vines assurance.

Violas are meant to have a flirty scent because their smell comes and goes.

Mown grass, chopped leaves and the sawdust of different woods have smells that can bring back memories of contentedness.

Cut grass reminds me of playing cricket.

There's joy to be had in the sense of trust when a robin takes mealworms from between your fingers and a real sense of privilege when something exotic - like the flock of waxwings that plundered the rotting crab apples in our garden this winter - pays you a visit.

Perhaps the best emotion, though, is to be had during an early summer evening at dusk when the gardening tools have been put away, the garden fills with scent of honeysuckle and the songs of blackbirds echo off the surrounding houses.

It's a simple feeling to have done something creative and worthwhile through hard physical work.

Today most of us could feed ourselves and satisfy our need for floral beauty with a Friday night trolley-dash around the supermarket shelves and a weekend trip to a florist or park, so why do so many of us toil over gardens?

LilacGrowing flowers is more enriching than popping to the garage

It would be foolish to claim that most of us can ever be self-sufficient in growing our own food, or that it's financially rewarding, but planting a few potatoes and raising some leeks and beans maintains an unbroken thread of experience that links us to the first hunter-gathers who settled to become farmers 10 millennia ago.

This spring, when I dig and plant, and watch the seedlings germinate and flourish, I'll share the smell of freshly-dug earth and the emotions that they felt ten millennia ago.

Later, when the leaves on the silver birch that I planted in garden hedge turn yellow and fall, as another gardening season ends, it will be time to reflect on the end of a cycle that most of us, if we're lucky, get to enjoy only around 70 times in a lifetime.

Every annual cycle is different - and more precious than the last. Television gardening programmes have done a great job at demonstrating how trips to the garden centre can turn a small suburban plot into a haven of beauty.

What they don't tell you is that once the gardening bug has bitten you may find yourself committed to an annual roller-coaster ride of emotions that can transport you from the heights of elation to the outer limits of exasperation and - along the way - deliver a reminder of what it is to be human.


Comments
 
All Comments (1) loading
1. GWTW

A lovely piece by Phil Gates that truly captures the joys of gardening and the experiences of an amateur gardener.. There was a sense of de ja vu in reading about how a flower, a plant or its fragrance can evoke memories of a moment, a time or a place. The most joyous fact about gardening is the sense of being close to nature and the process of creation. Thank you for this lovely piece.

 
 

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/magazine-12817415

iPhone New iPhone iPad 2 Gossip technology financial news

Russia 'kills Caucasus militants'

breaking news

Russian forces have killed 17 rebels during fighting in the volatile North Caucasus region, officials have said.

Clashes took place in Ingushetia, a small province next to Chechnya, Russia's national anti-terrorism committee said.

One report said three Russian police officers had also been killed.

Russia has been struggling to combat an Islamist insurgency in the North Caucasus, where insurgents want to create an Islamic state.

The Russian raid involved ground forces and an air strike, the RIA Novosti news agency reported.

"As a result of a pinpoint strike by the air force and a ground operation, a rebel base was destroyed," Nikolay Sentsov, a spokesman for the anti-terrorism committee was quoted as saying.

"Suicide bomber terrorists were being trained there, in particular for terrorist attacks in the republics of North Ossetia and Ingushetia," he added.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-europe-12884669

news headline news science iPad iPhone New iPhone

Kennedy and Miliband put AV case

Postal vote being pushed into a letter boxThe first UK-wide referendum since 1975 will take place on 5 May
Related Stories

Ed Miliband is to urge all "progressive forces" to come together to press for a new UK voting system as those seeking change launch their official campaign.

The Labour leader will join senior Lib Dem and Green Party figures in a cross-party push for a Yes vote in the 5 May referendum on the alternative vote.

But Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg, who also backs change, will not be at the event.

Meanwhile, four ex-foreign secretaries have said it would be a "grave error" to replace the system for electing MPs.

Voters will be asked on 5 May whether they want to keep the existing first-past-the-post system, where people select one candidate, or switch to the alternative vote where they are able to rank candidates in order of preference.

Mr Miliband, Lib Dem President Tim Farron, former Lib Dem leader Charles Kennedy and Green Party London Assembly member Darren Johnson are among those set to attend the launch of the official cross-party Yes to Fairer Votes campaign.

THE REFERENDUM CHOICE

At the moment MPs are elected by the first-past-the-post system, where the candidate getting the most votes in a constituency is elected.

On 5 May all registered UK voters will be able to vote Yes or No on whether to change the way MPs are elected to the alternative vote system.

Under the alternative vote system, voters rank candidates in their constituency in order of preference.

Anyone getting more than 50% of first-preference votes is elected.

If no-one gets 50% of votes, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated and their backers' second choices allocated to those remaining.

This process continues until one candidate has at least 50% of all votes in that round.

Q&A: alternative vote referendum AV poll: Where parties stand

But Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg is not expected to be present amid tensions between the deputy prime minister and senior Labour figures.

Mr Miliband has urged the Lib Dem leader to "lie low" on the issue and senior Labour figures have suggested his involvement in the campaign could threaten the chances of a yes victory given public anger with his party over student tuition fees and public sector cuts.

At Tuesday's event Mr Miliband will urge all those on the centre-left to unite behind the push for the alternative vote.

"The tragedy for progressive politics in Britain has been that division on the centre and left has handed a united right victory after victory," he is expected to say.

"For most of the last 80 years, there has been one Conservative Party - and others competing with Labour for progressive votes. The result, over the years, speak for themselves.

"No wonder the Tories back the current system. They know Britain is not a fundamentally Conservative country. But with first-past-the-post, they too often govern when progressive forces are divided. Britain deserves an electoral system that fairly reflects voters' views."

Launching their own cross-party campaign last month, the No to AV camp argued the alternative vote was a costly and complex system which could produce unfair results.

And, in a letter to the Times on Tuesday, four former foreign secretaries suggest that the principle of one person one vote in the current system was an example to other democracies.

"Those of us who have represented Britain internationally know one of the many reasons why we have always punched above our weight in the world is our simple and straightforward voting system, a system which everyone can understand," the signatories - including Margaret Beckett, Malcolm Rifkind, Lord Hurd, Lord Howe and current foreign secretary William Hague - argue.

"Today, billions of people elect their representatives through the system of one person, one vote... We believe it would be a grave error to abandon this principle."

While Conservative MPs largely support the status quo and Lib Dems back a switch to AV, Labour is divided on the issue with senior figures in each camp.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-politics-12888126

Gossip

Shocker! President Obama owns an iPad and computer, won't have to borrow yours (video)

Barack Obama is quite likely the most computer literate president (which isn't saying much) these united states have ever had. So it's really no surprise to hear that the BlackBerry wielding prez also owns an iPad and, gasp, his own computer -- except, perhaps, to Univision's Jorge Ramos. Obama's incredulous stare and jocular response to the questions are as hilarious as they are candid in their casual delivery. See for yourselves in the video after the break.

Continue reading Shocker! President Obama owns an iPad and computer, won't have to borrow yours (video)

Shocker! President Obama owns an iPad and computer, won't have to borrow yours (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Mar 2011 07:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TUAW  |  sourceCBSNewsOnline (YouTube)  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/03/29/shocker-president-obama-owns-an-ipad-and-computer-wont-have-t/

iPad iPhone New iPhone iPad 2 Gossip technology