Thursday, December 30, 2010

Share Rules Could Push Offering by Facebook

Facebook likes big numbers — it now has more than 500 million users, each one of whom can have as many as 5,000 friends. Yet as a privately held company, its ownership base must remain small, or it will have to disclose publicly its financial results.

A surging shadow market in the privately held shares of Facebook is making such restraint difficult and could spur the company to go public — even
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2010/12/28/focus-on-private-shares-could-push-a-public-offering/?partner=rss&emc=rss

South Korea's Lee says talks imperative for North's denuclearization

BEIJING - South Korean President Lee Myung-bak on Wednesday described international talks as the necessary means of coaxing North Korea to abandon its nuclear program, opening a narrow window for the resumption of long-dormant negotiations.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/29/AR2010122903699.html

Obama moves toward center, but will he stay there?

(CNN) -- In the aftermath of the midterms, President Obama acknowledged the "shellacking" handed to him and his party.

"I've got to take direct responsibility for the fact that we have not made as much progress as we need to make," he said the day after the GOP slapped Democrats with the worst congressional beating in more than half a century.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/12/29/obama.review/index.html

Online holiday shopping: $30.8 billion spent

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Holiday shopping online was strong right through Christmas, with consumers spending a record $30.8 billion for the season, according to a research firm report issued Wednesday.

Online sales for the 56 days ended Dec। 27 rose 13% from the same period in 2009, according to Reston, Va,-based comScore. There was a 17% year-over-year surge in the week that ended Dec. 26 -- the day after
http://money.cnn.com/2010/12/29/technology/online_holiday_shopping/index.htm

Kuwait bill would allow military beards

KUWAIT CITY - The Kuwaiti parliament adopted a bill on Wednesday that scraps government restrictions on military and police personnel from growing beards.

The vote was 21-13, with all cabinet ministers voting against the measure and two MPs abstaining.

The government can reject the law within 30 days. However, parliament is dominated by Islamist and tribal conservatives who want the beard, and it could override that with a two-third majority vote.

http://en.news.maktoob.com/20090000541836/Kuwait_bill_would_allow_military_beards/Article.htm

Union leaders predict surge in strike

Leaders of trade unions expect large numbers of public and private sector workers to take to the picket lines early next year in action that could affect the royal wedding

nएवस from
http://www।guardian।co.uk/politics/2010/dec/30/union-leaders-surge-strike-action-next-year

Monday, December 20, 2010

Seoul, South Korea (CNN

-- South Korea's live-fire military exercise has ended, the country's defense ministry said Monday.

The drill started about two hours earlier Monday afternoon, and fighter jets took to the sky in preparation for possible retaliation by North Korea.

North Korea had said the drill could ignite a war and that it would respond militarily to the exercise, but the country did not act immediately on Monday.


http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/12/20/koreas.tensions/

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Chicago takes home robust 2-0 series lead




Blackhawks followed their own script to the letter Tuesday night and also borrowed a bit from the Sharks' game plan.

They did almost everything right, outplayed San Jose in most facets, and, with a 4-2 victory at HP Pavilion, the road-emperor Blackhawks took a robust 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven Western Conference finals, with the series now heading back to Chicago for Games 3 and 4

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article?f=/c/a/2010/05/19/SPE11DGOJQ.DTL&o=0

European Stock-Index Futures Drop on German Short-Selling Ban

May 19 (Bloomberg) -- European stock-index futures slid after Germany’s ban on some bets against government bonds and financial institutions sparked investor concern that regulation will increase. U.S. futures and Asian equities fell.

Financial shares may decline after German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government rattled investors by raising concerns they won’t be able to hedge their European holdings or sell assets as the region’s debt crisis worsens. Bayerische Motoren Werke AG may drop after BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research downgraded the world’s largest luxury-car maker.
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-05-19/european-stock-index-futures-drop-on-german-short-selling-ban.html

Wizards get No. 1 pick in NBA draft

Washington moved up from the No. 5 spot to earn the top pick in next month's draft, in which it likely will choose between Kentucky freshman John Wall and national player of the year Evan Turner of Ohio State.
The Philadelphia 76ers, another disappointment this season, moved up from the sixth spot to grab the No। 2 pick. The New Jersey Nets continued the run of failure by teams with the best chance of winning, falling to the third
http://www.freep.com/article/20100519/SPORTS03/5190344/1051/SPORTS/Wizards-get-No.-1-pick-in-NBA-draft

Study: Postpartum depression affects fathers too

The study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Assn।, found that 10.4% of men experienced serious depression at some point between his partner's first trimester and one year after childbirth, more than double the depression rate for men in general. American men were more likely to experience prenatal or postpartum depression compared with men in other countries, 14.1% in the U.S. compared with 8.2% internationally.

http://www.latimes.com/features/health/mentalhealth/la-sci-postpartum-fathers-20100519,0,3479195.story

Friday, May 7, 2010

WASHINGTON — Federal investigators are looking at a farm in Yuma, Ariz., as a possible source of a widespread E. coli outbreak in romaine lettuce, according to the distributor.

Freshway Foods of Sidney, Ohio, said Thursday it recalled lettuce sold in 23 states and the District of Columbia because of a possible link to an E. coli outbreak that has sickened at least 19 people — three with life-threatening illness.

College students at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Ohio State in Columbus and Daemen College in Amherst, N.Y., are among those affected by the outbreak, according to health departments in those states.

Vice president Devon Beer said Freshway Foods worked with the Food and Drug Administration to trace the contaminated lettuce to a Yuma grower, whom he did not identify।

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hEnc00D5YgQjLxbZqLLkjOw_fwzgD9FI4HN80

Sunday, May 2, 2010

The Worst Cities for Jobs

In this least good year in decades someone has to sit at the bottom. For the most part, the denizens are made up of "usual suspects" from the long-devastated Rust Belt region around the Great Lakes. But as in last year's survey, there's also a fair-sized contingent of former hot spots that now seem to resemble something closer to black holes.

Two sectors have particularly suffered worst from the recession, according to a recent study by the New America Foundation: construction, where employment has dropped by nearly 25%
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/worst-cities-jobs/story?id=10510368

U.S., Britain issue Mumbai warnings

New Delhi, India (CNN) -- The U.S. Embassy and the British Foreign Office warned their citizens about the possibility of terror attacks in India.

"There are increased indications that terrorists are planning imminent attacks in New Delhi," the U।S. alert said Saturday. "Terrorists have targeted places in the past where U.S. citizens or Westerners are known to congregate or visit."
http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/asiapcf/05/02/india.terror/index.html?hpt=T2

Cameroon panic as elephants escape Dja Faunal Reserve


Wildlife officials in Cameroon are hunting for scores of elephants, who escaped from a nature reserve, sparking panic in nearby villages.

The elephants wandered out of the Dja Faunal Reserve - a World Heritage site - and trampled over houses and fields.

A wildlife official told the BBC that the elephants had fled after being attacked by poachers.

The reserve's curator blamed locals for the poaching and said they were responsible for their own misfortune.

But Cameroon's wildlife director Tabi Philipe Tako-Eta told the BBC's Randy Jo Sa'ah that he was trying to get the law changed so that local people could get compensation for the damage caused by the marauding elephants.

The Dja Reserve was set up in 1950 and became a World Heritage site in 1987।

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8651620.stm

Oil slick closes on U.S. coast, BP pressed to act


VENICE, Louisiana (Reuters) – A huge wind-driven oil slick bore down on the U.S. Gulf coast on Sunday, threatening an environmental catastrophe, and the Obama administration heaped pressure on BP Plc to halt the uncontrolled spill from its ruptured Gulf of Mexico well.

Since the explosion and sinking last week of the Deepwater Horizon rig, a disaster scenario has emerged with hundreds of thousands of gallons of crude oil spewing unchecked into the Gulf and moving inexorably northward to the coast.

The spreading black tide threatens wildlife, beaches and one of the world's most fertile fishing grounds in an area stretching across four states, from Louisiana to Florida.

President Barack Obama, seeking to deflect criticism that his government was slow in responding to what looks like the biggest oil spill in U।S. history, was traveling on Sunday morning to Louisiana.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20100502/ts_nm/us_usa_rig_leak

Does Online Banking Need its Own iPad App?



First Apple came out with the iPhone and it changed the landscape for mobile devices. People began to see the power of TIME (technology, information, media, and entertainment) converging in a device that could fit in their pocket.

Developers latched onto the popularity and now there is pretty much an application that will do anything from calculating nutritional values at fast food restaurants,
http://www.pcworld.com/article/195380/does_online_banking_need_its_own_ipad_app.html

Friday, April 2, 2010

CDC: New England tops in swine flu vaccinations



By MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer Mike Stobbe, Ap Medical Writer – Thu Apr 1, 4:21 pm ET
ATLANTA – New England leads the nation in swine flu vaccinations, while the South has the lowest rates, U.S. health officials said Thursday in the first state-by-state report on turnout.

Tiny Rhode Island has the highest rate of about 39 percent — three times higher than Mississippi, which has the lowest percentage of residents vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention।

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100401/ap_on_he_me/us_med_swine_flu_vaccine;_ylt=AgH7qiPH0XTAcvvtTCYZhZXVJRIF;_ylu=X3oDMTJwNXB2anNvBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwNDAxL3VzX21lZF9zd2luZV9mbHVfdmFjY2luZQRjcG9zAzIEcG9zAzUEc2VjA3luX3RvcF9zdG9yeQRzbGsDY2RjbmV3ZW5nbGFu

Obama to 'ratchet up' Iran pressure over nuclear plans

US President Barack Obama has vowed to "ratchet up the pressure" on Iran over its controversial nuclear programme.

Mr Obama told CBS television Iran was becoming increasingly isolated and the US wanted to enlist the help of "a unified international community".

Amid talk of new sanctions, he earlier telephoned Chinese President Hu Jintao to seek China's co-operation।

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8600805.stm

Their talks came as Iran's top nuclear official, Saeed Jalili, said in China that sanctions were "not effective".

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Health law will make calorie counts hard to ignore

WASHINGTON – That Caesar salad you're about to eat? It's 800 calories, and that's without the croutons. The fettuccine alfredo? A whopping 1,220 calories. You may choose to ignore the numbers, but soon it's going to be tough to deny you saw them.

A requirement tucked into the nation's massive health care bill will make calorie counts impossible for thousands of restaurants to hide and difficult for consumers to ignore। More than 200,000 fast food and other chain restaurants will have to include calorie counts on menus, menu boards and even drive-throughs.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100323/ap_on_he_me/us_calories_on_menus;_ylt=Auh8mWwv2Q.fxeMEhVsnAajVJRIF;_ylu=X3oDMTJsZ2t1MmpyBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwMzIzL3VzX2NhbG9yaWVzX29uX21lbnVzBGNwb3MDMQRwb3MDMgRzZWMDeW5fdG9wX3N0b3J5BHNsawNoZWFsdGhsYXd3aWw-

Google's action angers China, divides Web users

BEIJING – Google Inc.'s partial withdrawal from China brought condemnation and signs of pressure from the government Tuesday while leaving Chinese Web surfers to wonder whether the company's new offshore search engine site would be blocked by censors.
Google's decision to move most of its China-based search functions from the mainland to Hong Kong opened a new phase in a two-month-long fracas pitting the world's most powerful Internet company against a government that tightly restricts the Web in the planet's most populous market।



http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100323/ap_on_hi_te/as_china_google;_ylt=Ah9Qi5kQRhJd6WpDMGQ1B7IjtBAF;_ylu=X3oDMTJnM2plZXJsBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwMzIzL2FzX2NoaW5hX2dvb2dsZQRjcG9zAzEEcG9zAzIEc2VjA3luX3RvcF9zdG9yeQRzbGsDZ29vZ2xlc2FjdGlv

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Microsoft offers first Google Android mobile phone app


Microsoft has made an application that works with Google's Android phone.
Called Tag, the free software uses a handset's camera to turn it into a mobile barcode reader.
It is the first application Microsoft has made for the Android operating system - one of the key rivals to Windows Mobile.
Android is among the last to get the Tag application which is available on Windows phones, the iPhone, Blackberry and Symbian handsets.

How to save money on health care

When Heather Staples' 6-year-old daughter, Sophia, fell and cut her eyebrow, Staples knew her daughter might need stitches. But instead of running straight to an emergency room, Staples took a few minutes to compare prices at nearby emergency rooms.
"I have a high-deductible plan, so I knew that I would be paying for the charges out of [my own] pocket completely," Staples says. "Price was definitely a concern of mine."
Using a New Hampshire state Web site, she realized the closest emergency room would cost $500 more than an emergency room 20 minutes away। Since Sophia wasn't in immediate danger, Staples made the drive, spending $1,200 instead of $1,700 to treat her daughter.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/HEALTH/03/04/medical.waste/index.html?hpt=Sbin

Greece offers key new bond issue


ATHENS, Greece – Greece launched a critical 10-year bond issue on Thursday, a key test of its ability to raise funds to pay off expiring debts — and dig out of a financial crisis that has shaken the European Union.
The bond was already oversubscribed — meaning more takers than there were bonds available — within an hour of the book opening, with euro7 billion ($9.5 billion) in offers received. The government was seeking a maximum of euro5 billion ($6.8 billion), said the chief of Greece's debt management agency, Petros Christodoulou.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Gaga for Google Broadband

Jared Starkey is going all out for Google broadband. The day after Google (GOOG) said it would provide high-speed Internet access to as many as 500,000 people around the U।S., Starkey set up a Facebook page to lobby Google to bring the service to his hometown, Topeka, Kan. Since then, Starkey has passed out bright-orange necklaces made of the kind of fiber-optic cable used to deliver fast Web connections and rallied 100 people to show up at a downtown redevelopment meeting wearing T-shirts that play on Google's motto for the broadband plan. "I've been talking to absolutely everybody about this," says Starkey, owner of a small Web-design company.
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/mar2010/tc2010032_027253.htm

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Hyping H1N1: Did It Create A Dangerous Flu Fatigue?

(Feb। 27) -- With the World Health Organization warning yet again this week that the H1N1 virus has yet to reach its peak, a flu season that's milder than average hardly seems that way. Now, the nearly yearlong coverage of H1N1 has left some worried that future influenza outbreaks will be met with ambivalent flu fatigue among the public. "It's inevitable that there's H1N1 fatigue," Dr. Robert Daum, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Chicago Medical Center, told AOL
http://www.aolnews.com/health/article/did-hyping-h1n1-create-a-dangerous-flu-fatigue/19371651

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Obama urges consensus as US leaders debate healthcare

Differences have emerged as President Barack Obama urged top Republicans and Democrats to focus on agreements at a six-hour televised healthcare summit.

He urged 40 congressional Democrats and Republicans in Washington DC to avoid political theatre, as part of a fresh bid to save his troubled reform plans.

For the first time, Mr Obama offered his own version of a healthcare plan on Monday.

But Republicans say the plan is not acceptable and a fresh start is needed.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8536469.stm

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Government was told of Toyota claims in ’04

DETROIT/LOS ANGELES - The largest U।S. auto insurer alerted regulators earlier than first believed about a worrying trend of accidents involving Toyota Motor Corp vehicles, while the Obama administration's top transportation official said on Friday he would not relax pressure on the carmaker.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35488499/ns/business-autos/

Friday, February 19, 2010

Microsoft offers web browser choice to IE users


Millions of European Internet Explorer (IE) users will have the option to choose an alternative browser from 1 March, Microsoft has announced.
It follows a legal agreement between Microsoft and Europe's Competition Commission in December 2009.
Microsoft committed to letting Windows PC users across Europe install the web browser of their choice, rather than having Microsoft IE as a default.
Figures suggest that over half the world's internet users have IE.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Blame game over giddy China savings takes a twist

BEIJING (Reuters) - Greece's big budget deficit has plunged the euro zone into crisis, while rating agencies wonder whether Washington's fiscal profligacy could one day cost the United States its AAA rating।
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE61E31Z20100215

Monday, February 15, 2010

Belgian train crash: Eighteen people dead in Halle


Eighteen people have been killed in a head-on collision between two passenger trains in Belgium, although the death toll could rise.
Railway officials said the trains collided during the morning rush hour at Halle, south-west of Brussels. One reportedly missed a stop signal.
"The devastation is enormous," said an official, as bloodied passengers were helped from the wrecked carriages.
Rail services to south-western Belgium, Paris and London were cancelled.

Oil industry cautious on future

LONDON – The oil industry expects a difficult road ahead as it struggles to recover from the global economic downturn and is forced to juggle rising demand from developing countries against requirements for cleaner energy.
Oil executives and analysts meeting in London on Monday said the industry was at a crossroads as it emerges out of a rout that sent crude prices tumbling from a record high of $150 in July 2008 to under $40 a barrel at the peak of the financial turmoil।
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100215/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_britain_oil_outlook;_ylt=As6JcCiMStJLNURFOUeJdHGyBhIF;_ylu=X3oDMTJuZHAzdGVyBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwMjE1L2V1X2JyaXRhaW5fb2lsX291dGxvb2sEY3BvcwMyBHBvcwM2BHNlYwN5bl90b3Bfc3RvcnkEc2xrA29pbGluZHVzdHJ5Yw--

Oil industry cautious on future

LONDON – The oil industry expects a difficult road ahead as it struggles to recover from the global economic downturn and is forced to juggle rising demand from developing countries against requirements for cleaner energy.
Oil executives and analysts meeting in London on Monday said the industry was at a crossroads as it emerges out of a rout that sent crude prices tumbling from a record high of $150 in July 2008 to under $40 a barrel at the peak of the financial turmoil।
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100215/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_britain_oil_outlook;_ylt=As6JcCiMStJLNURFOUeJdHGyBhIF;_ylu=X3oDMTJuZHAzdGVyBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwMjE1L2V1X2JyaXRhaW5fb2lsX291dGxvb2sEY3BvcwMyBHBvcwM2BHNlYwN5bl90b3Bfc3RvcnkEc2xrA29pbGluZHVzdHJ5Yw--

Windows Phone 7 Partners Congratulate Microsoft

BARCELONA—Microsoft seemed to drag everyone they could find into their Windows Phone 7 announcement, including all four U.S. carriers and a slew of manufacturers. We asked some of them for their self-congratulatory quotes about the new platform, and a few रेस्पोंदेद
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2359364,00.asp

Windows Phone 7 Partners Congratulate Microsoft

BARCELONA—Microsoft seemed to drag everyone they could find into their Windows Phone 7 announcement, including all four U.S. carriers and a slew of manufacturers. We asked some of them for their self-congratulatory quotes about the new platform, and a few रेस्पोंदेद
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2359364,00.asp

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Astronauts Take 2nd Spacewalk to Hook up Plumbing

pair of spacewalking astronauts hooked up plumbing on the newest room of the International Space Station, enabling it to come alive with power Sunday.

In this image provided by NASA the Tranquility module is transferred late Thursday evening Feb. 11,...
In this image provided by NASA the Tranquility module is transferred late Thursday evening Feb. 11, 2010 from its stowage position in space shuttle Endeavour's payload bay in the grasp of the station's Canadarm2 to position it on the port side of the Unity node of the International Space Station. Tranquility was locked in place with 16 remotely-controlled bolts. Earth's horizon and the blackness of space provide the backdrop for the scene. (AP Photo/NASA) (AP)
It was the second excursion in three days for Robert Behnken and Nicholas Patrick. They have one more spacewalk to finish installing the Tranquility room and its attached observation deck, the last major building blocks of the 11-year-old space station. Endeavour carried up the pieces last week.
With the throw of a few switches, Behnken and Patrick got ammonia coolant flowing through the hoses, midway through their spacewalk. That, in turn, got Tranquility surging with power; most of its systems could not be turned without a way to get rid of the heat generated by the equipment inside.
It was unwieldy work because of the extra-long hoses and potentially hazardous because of the ammonia coolant.
In fact, frozen bits of ammonia shot out at Patrick as he undid अ
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=9832314

Health Department offering free H1N1 vaccines today in the mall


The Cascade City-County Health Department will offer the vaccinations for free from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today at the Holiday Village Mall at the bottom of the Scheels escalator.
This has been an unusual year for the flu, according to health officials

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Enough already: Snow breaks mid-Atlantic records


WASHINGTON – Worst winter ever? The second blizzard in less than a week buried the most populous stretch of the East Coast under nearly a foot of snow Wednesday, breaking records for the snowiest winter and demoralizing millions of people still trying to dig out from the previous storm.
Conditions in the nation's capital were so bad that even plows were advised to get off the roads, and forecasters were eyeing a third storm that could be brewing for next week.

Google to build ultra-high-speed Internet networks

Trying to speed up Internet service across the nation, Google said Wednesday that it plans to develop an experimental broadband system in one or more communities that would stream Web-based content more than 100 times faster than what is commonly available to Americans today.
The company was vague about many details of the plan, including when it might be built and how much a customer might have to pay, saying only that "we plan to offer service at a competitive price to at least 50,000 and potentially up to 500,000 people।"
http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_14373150

Google takes on Facebook and Twitter with network site


Google has taken the wraps off its latest social network known as Buzz.
The service - integrated directly with its e-mail service Gmail - allows users to post status updates, share content and read and comment on friends' posts.
The site pitches Google directly against rival networks such as Facebook, which has amassed nearly 400 million users since its launch in 2004.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Coca-Cola Profit Rises as Sales Gain in India, China (Update1)

By Duane D. Stanford
Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Coca-Cola Co., the world’s largest soft-drink maker, said fourth-quarter profit gained 55 percent as volume sales grew in markets including China and India. The shares rose in early U.S. trading.
Net income increased to $1।54 billion, or 66 cents a share, from $995 million, or 43 cents, a year earlier, the Atlanta- based company said today in a statement. Earnings per share equaled the average of nine analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-02-09/coca-cola-profit-meets-estimates-as-sales-gain-in-india-china.html

Toyota recalls thousands of Prius cars worldwide


Toyota has announced the recall of about 436,000 hybrid vehicles worldwide, including its latest Prius model, to fix brake problems.
It includes more than 200,000 Prius cars sold in Japan and 8,500 cars in the UK.
"We have decided to recall as we regard safety for our customers as our foremost priority," the firm said.
The company has already recalled eight million vehicles because of accelerator and floor mat problems.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Abstinence ed, minus the morals, may work

CHICAGO - An experimental abstinence-only program without a moralistic tone can delay teens from having sex, a provocative study found.
Billed as the first rigorous research to show long-term success with an abstinence-only approach, the study differed from traditional programs that have lost federal and state support in recent years। The classes didn’t preach saving sex until marriage or disparage condom use.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35186417/ns/health-sexual_health/

France Concorde crash trial set to begin

US airline Continental and five individuals go on trial in France later over the crash of an Air France Concorde nearly 10 years ago.
The jet took off in flames from Paris Charles de Gaulle airport and crashed minutes later, killing 113 people.
An official report said Concorde had hit a metal strip from a Continental plane that had taken off earlier.
But Continental's lawyers say they can prove the supersonic jet caught fire before it struck the titanium strip.
The stricken Concorde flight 4590 crashed in the town of Gonesse in July 2000, hitting a hotel and killing four people there as well as all 109 on board।
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8492561.stm

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Vaccine 'could cut HIV TB deaths'


A vaccine could cut tuberculosis cases among HIV-positive Africans by almost two-fifths, a US study suggests.
The lung infection is the most common cause of death among HIV patients in the continent.
Journal Aids reports that Dartmouth Medical School research involving 2,000 people found significantly fewer TB cases in vaccinated patients.
Comment on the news after the effort, patience and hard work to reach doctors treat tuberculosis

Change in space for NASA: Renting the Right Stuff


The Obama administration on Monday will propose in its new budget spending billions of dollars to encourage private companies to build, launch and operate spacecraft for NASA and others. Uncle Sam would buy its astronauts a ride into space just like hopping in a taxi.
The idea is that getting astronauts into orbit, which NASA has been doing for 49 years, is getting to be so old hat that someone other than the government can do it. It's no longer really the Right Stuff. Going private would free the space agency to do other things, such as explore beyond Earth's orbit, do more research and study the Earth with better satellites. And it would spur a new generation of private companies — even some with Internet roots — to innovate.
News seeking comment on the Obama administration to privatize NASA and opening the door to private companies to enter the area and gain increased competition and research

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Japan not as worried about US Toyota recalls

TOKYO – American Toyota owners are understandably alarmed about ballooning recalls over faulty gas pedals and floor mats. In Japan, the automaker's home market, where there have been no such recalls, the reaction is — also understandably — muted.
Some of the same Toyota Motor Corp। models recalled in the U.S., Europe and China are on Japanese roads. But they use a different parts supplier than CTS Corp., the American parts-maker which has been rushing to fix the faulty parts behind the massive recalls.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100130/ap_on_bi_ge/toyota_recall;_ylt=Aieul_..HHjXA9qA3XLMF.OyBhIF;_ylu=X3oDMTJlcGVma2Q0BGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwMTMwL3RveW90YV9yZWNhbGwEY3BvcwMyBHBvcwM3BHNlYwN5bl90b3Bfc3RvcnkEc2xrA2phcGFubm90YXN3bw--
Comment on the news Asera burning to get the highest sales and highest profit and fierce competition forced producers to innovate and produce the best product in terms of form and content, as well as competitive price, and diligence of all

Friday, January 29, 2010

Holiday toy sales boost Mattel 4th-quarter profit

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. – Barbie maker Mattel Inc. said Friday that better sales of its classic toys over the holidays and cost-cutting helped its fourth-quarter profit rise 86 percent.
The No। 1 U.S. toy maker said sales of Barbie products rose 12 percent and Hot Wheels items were up 16 percent around the globe.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100129/ap_on_bi_ge/us_earns_mattel;_ylt=AulebK3lJWsl95CH5oN27DSyBhIF;_ylu=X3oDMTJnMDFrOGRjBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwMTI5L3VzX2Vhcm5zX21hdHRlbARjcG9zAzIEcG9zAzYEc2VjA3luX3RvcF9zdG9yeQRzbGsDaG9saWRheXRveXNh

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Apple unveils its iPad computer

Apple has put an end to weeks of fevered speculation by unveiling its long-awaited tablet PC, which it has called the iPad.
Steve Jobs, Apple's chief executive unveiled the touchscreen device at the Yerba Buena Center in San Francisco.
Mr Jobs described the tablet as a "third category" between smartphones and laptops.
The device, which looks like a large iPhone, can be used to watch films, play games and browse the web।
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8483654.stm
Comment on the news every moment there are people replaced with hard effort and patience to reach the highest technologies to provide tools when used properly will get you an abundance of capital this device that can track your business with ease

Runners, baring your soles makes you well-heeled

WASHINGTON – Harvard biologist and runner Daniel Lieberman had a simple question: "How did people run without shoes?"
The answer he got is: Much better.
At least running barefoot seems better for the feet, producing far less impact stress compared to feet shod in fancy, expensive running shoes, according to a study by Lieberman in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature. The study concludes that people seem to be born to run — barefoot.
The research was funded in part by a company that makes minimalist running shoes that try to mimic barefoot running। But Lieberman, who disclosed the grant, said the company had no say in the design of the study and didn't influence the outcome.

http://news।yahoo.com/s/ap/20100127/ap_on_sp_ot/us_sci_barefoot_running;_ylt=AofVYdjSMbKo4GoW2OaFarMPLBIF;_ylu=X3oDMTJvNGJmMnBpBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwMTI3L3VzX3NjaV9iYXJlZm9vdF9ydW5uaW5nBGNwb3MDMgRwb3MDMwRzZWMDeW5fdG9wX3N0b3J5BHNsawNydW5uZXJzYmFyaW4-
Comment on the news trying to reach an invention of science to arrive at the best and look to nature and learn from walking barefoot or shoe to the body provides a simple things like unloading Almaidp to the ground, but this is a civil form or style of living is so, will we get science of health and I hope Heakp

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Toyota Motor Sales USA Inc. said Tuesday it is asking dealers to temporarily suspend sales of eight models.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Toyota Motor Sales USA Inc. said Tuesday it is asking dealers to temporarily suspend sales of eight models.
The company's sales suspension is part of a recall announced last week to correct a problem that could cause the accelerator pedal to stick।

http://money.cnn.com/2010/01/26/news/companies/toyota_recall/
Comment at the newsPost Alazmemp vernacular usually companies cars to starred and competition and produce best techniques from within major these companies company Toyota in insists Ali that forefront highest sales Ali level market cars

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

WHO defends its swine flu warning

The World Health Organization (WHO) has defended its handling of the swine flu pandemic last year, after the Council of Europe cast doubt on its actions.
Countries rushed to order thousands of vaccine doses when the pandemic was declared in June, but the virus proved to be relatively mild.
The WHO's links to drug companies were questioned at a hearing by the Council of Europe's health committee.
A WHO flu expert denied there had been improper influence from drug firms।
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8481211.stm

Google negotiating ways to keep presence in China

BEIJING – Even if Google's stand against censorship leads it to close its search engine in China, the company still hopes to maintain other key operations in the world's most populous Internet market.
Google Inc. is in delicate negotiations with the Chinese government to keep its research center in China, an advertising sales team that generates most of the company's revenue in the country and a fledgling mobile phone business.
Both sides are torn by conflicting objectives.
Google says it's no longer willing to acquiesce to the Chinese government's demands for censored search results, yet it still wants access to the country's engineering talent and steadily growing online advertising and mobile phone markets।
http://news।yahoo.com/s/ap/20100126/ap_on_hi_te/as_tec_china_google_strategy;_ylt=Alx46D5g3CBX451uRZ9N3gEjtBAF;_ylu=X3oDMTJ0YzdpM3ZzBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwMTI2L2FzX3RlY19jaGluYV9nb29nbGVfc3RyYXRlZ3kEY3BvcwMxBHBvcwMyBHNlYwN5bl90b3Bfc3RvcnkEc2xrA2dvb2dsZW5lZ290aQ--
Comment on the Google News is a strong company in the search engines and search engine support in many areas takes you to the information required in a very short time which is very important in electronic commerce

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Oil spilled at east Texas port as ships collide


PORT ARTHUR, Texas – A crude oil spill in a southeast Texas port that happened when a tanker and towing vessel collided Saturday was not expected to spread beyond a two-mile area, the U.S. Coast Guard said.
It was unclear exactly how much oil spilled into the water, but the Coast Guard said it could have been as much as 450,000 gallons.
No one was injured when the 800-foot tanker carrying oil collided with a towing vessel pushing two barges, but the Port of Port Arthur was closed and some nearby residents were evacuated for about seven hours. The Coast Guard said the crash left a 15-by-8-foot hole in the tanker and damaged one of its oil tanks, resulting in the spill.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100124/ap_on_re_us/us_oil_spill;_ylt=A0wNdOfU9FtL3fEAhhes0NUE;_ylu=क्ष३ओद्म्त्न्ज्म्ग्त्र्न्मेय्ब्ग्फ़्ज़्क२व०अ२फ़्व्ल्ज़िव्म्तव्म्ति०ल३व्ज़्क्ष२९प्ब्फ़९ज़्क्ग्ल्स्बर्ज्य२९क्ज़्क़्न्त्ब३न०क्ग९व्द्व्क्ष्ह्क्ग्र्ज्क्ग९ज़ज़िएक्ग९ज़ज़्केच्क़्दग९त्ज़्व९ज्ब२त्ल्भ्न्ल्य्व्न५ब्ल९०ब३ब्फ़्क३र्व्क्न्केक२क्ष्र२९प्भ्न्वव्क्ष्स्ज़्व्र्ह्द
Comment on the news of the diversion of oil in water Shi Musav too often happened in addition to material loss Allpt output of oil on aquatic life such as Asaml and jealousy in the future I hope there are no such disaster

Thursday, January 21, 2010

oogle rides rising online ad sales to big 4Q


SAN FRANCISCO – Google Inc. revved up its fourth-quarter Internet advertising sales to approach $2 billion in quarterly profit for the first time, providing the strongest sign yet that Internet search leader has shaken off the recession's दोल्दृम्स

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Microsoft Cuts IP Address Storage to 6 Months

Microsoft Corp. said Tuesday it would shorten the time it stores Internet users' addresses from Web search queries from 18 months to six months following a request from a European Union data privacy panel.
It said the change would make its Bing search a better choice for privacy-conscious users than the world's leading search engine Google Inc., because Microsoft will delete the entire Internet Protocol address from search queries — the string of numbers that shows a computer's लोकेशन

http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=9601993

Google scraps cell phone launch in China

BEIJING - Google on Tuesday postponed the launch of its mobile phone in China, adding to the potential commercial fallout of its dispute with Beijing over Internet censorship and e-mail


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34935750/ns/technology_and_science-security/

Monday, January 18, 2010

Google China insiders may have helped with attack

Google is looking into whether employees in its China office were involved in the attacks on its network that led to theft of intellectual property, according to CNET sources and news reports.
Sources familiar with the investigation told CNET last week that Google was looking into whether insiders at the company were involved in the attacks, but additional details were not known at the time।

http://news.cnet.com/8301-27080_3-10436618-245.html?tag=newsLeadStoriesArea.1

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Alibaba says Yahoo 'reckless' on Google stance


BEIJING – China's e-commerce giant Alibaba turned on major shareholder Yahoo Inc. on Saturday, calling the American company's support of Google in its standoff with China "reckless."
Google has promised to stop censoring its search results in China, threatening to pull out of the country altogether if it can't operate an unfiltered search engine. Yahoo has said it was "aligned" with Google's position, though it's not clear what that means.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

U.N. official on Haiti aid: It takes time

CNN) -- A top United Nations official acknowledged Friday that the earthquake relief operation in Haiti was not progressing fast enough.
"You can't snap your fingers and make it happen just by magic," U।N. Emergency Relief Coordinator John Holmes said. But he promised, "We will do it, slowly and surely."


http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/01/15/haiti.earthquake.un.relief.amanpour/index.html

New strategies may cut screening errors, says US study

US scientists have found a way they believe may cut the number of mistakes made by medical staff looking for breast and cervical cancers.
Writing in the journal Current Biology, the researchers say that people in all walks of life looking for rare events often miss थेम


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8459308.stm

Friday, January 15, 2010

AP Exclusive: Network flaw causes scary Web


SAN FRANCISCO – A Georgia mother and her two daughters logged onto Facebook from mobile phones last weekend and wound up in a startling place: strangers' accounts with full access to troves of private information.
The glitch — the result of a routing problem at the family's wireless carrier, AT&T — revealed a little known security flaw with far reaching implications for everyone on the Internet, not just Facebook users

Thursday, January 14, 2010

China tells Web companies to obey controls


BEIJING – In China's first official response to Google's threat to leave the country, the government Thursday said foreign Internet companies are welcome but must obey the law and gave no hint of a possible compromise over Web censorship.
Foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu, without mentioning Google by name, said Beijing prohibits e-mail hacking, another issue cited by the company. She was responding to questions about Google at a regular ministry briefing.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

No lines, no waiting, for swine flu vaccine


Maybe it’s the weather that’s been keeping people from getting swine flu vaccine.
Maybe it’s just human nature: We want something more when it’s hard to get.
Last fall, when supplies of H1N1 vaccine were short, clinic lines were long. But now that the nation is virtually swimming in vaccine, health officials worry that interest in the shots and snorts may be fading just as we should be preparing for the possibility of another swine-flu surge.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Google to end China censorship after e-mail breach

SAN FRANCISCO – Google Inc. will stop censoring its search results in China and may pull out of the country completely after discovering that computer hackers had tricked human-rights activists into exposing their e-mail accounts to outsiders.
The change of heart announced Tuesday heralds a major shift for the Internet's search leader, which has repeatedly said it will obey Chinese laws requiring some politically and socially sensitive issues to be blocked from search results available in other countries। The acquiescence had outraged free-speech advocates and even some shareholders, who argued Google's cooperation with China violated the company's "don't be evil" motto.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_tec_google_china;_ylt=AjAV2_mfUDcGxphd6FjZNHOs0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTNqOTBnamxyBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwMTEzL3VzX3RlY19nb29nbGVfY2hpbmEEY2NvZGUDbW9zdHBvcHVsYXIEY3BvcwMyBHBvcwM5BHB0A2hvbWVfY29rZQRzZWMDeW5fdG9wX3N0b3J5BHNsawNnb29nbGV0b2VuZGM-

Food industry 'too secretive' over nanotechnology

The food industry has been criticised for being secretive about its use of nanotechnology by the UK's House of Lords Science and Technology Committee.
Lord Krebs, chairman of the inquiry, said the industry "wants to keep a low profile" to avoid कोन्त्रोवेर्स्य


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8446704.stm

Shifting demand suggests a future of endless oil

Not many people think of the Netherlands as oil country, but a billion-barrel field lies under a nine-mile strip of grazing land along the Dutch-German border. When oil prices cratered in the 1990s, Royal Dutch Shell and ExxonMobil shut the Schoonebeek field down. Company executives reckoned that its thick, hard-to-extract crude wasn't worth the trouble, even though only about 25 percent of Schoonebeek's oil had been produced. The main evidence of the town's petroleum past was an old-fashioned bobbing oil pump, known as a nodding donkey, which still stands in a parking lot near a बकरी

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34770285/ns/business-oil_and_energy/

November trade deficit increases to $36.4 billion

WASHINGTON – The U.S. trade deficit jumped to the highest level in 10 months as an improving U.S. economy pushed up demand for imports. However, exports rose as well, boosted by a weaker dollar, supporting the view that American manufacturers will be helped by a rebounding global economy.
The Commerce Department reported Tuesday that the trade deficit jumped 9.7 percent to $36.4 billion in November, a bigger imbalance than the $34.5 billion deficit economists had forecast.

More than 5,000 doses H1N1 administered in Jefferson County

More than 5,000 doses of H1N1 flu vaccine were administered in Jefferson County during the last three months of 2009। The vaccine is now widely available for anyone wanting to be immunized, according to Jean Baldwin, director of Jefferson County Public Health.

http://www.ptleader.com/main.asp?SectionID=36&SubSectionID=55&ArticleID=26028

Camera showdown: Nexus One vs. iPhone 3GS

Rumors cropped up last week that Apple had put down a big order for LED flashes, something useful for one thing, and one thing only: a digital camera. It doesn't take much to figure that the next iteration of the iPhone is likely to be packing one of these, since many of the latest cell phones--including HTC's recently released Nexus One, now have them included.
That got me thinking: how does the Nexus One's 5-megapixel camera and its eye-searing flash stack up against the 3।2-megapixel, flashless camera module of the now-aging iPhone 3GS? Is the ability to take bigger, and better-lit photos worth touting as the end-all, be-all feature among smartphone cameras? The easiest way to figure that out is to run

http://news.cnet.com/8301-27076_3-10431279-248.html

Monday, January 11, 2010

2011 Lincoln MKX - Auto Shows


Mid-cycle vehicle updates usually mean new headlights, a reworked bumper, and a fresh set of wheels, but Ford’s been taking the mid-cycle thing a bit further lately. Indeed, while its cars aren’t using all-new platforms or mechanicals, the company’s most recent mid-cycle changes are thorough enough to convince most people that the vehicles are all-new. The 2010 iterations of the Fusion and Mustang went beyond simple sheetmetal restyling to include vast interior improvements and effective engineering enhancements, and next up on a very special episode of Ford’s “Extreme Makeover, Mid-Cycle Edition” is the 2011 Lincoln MKX. It’s debuting at the 2010 Detroit auto show and bringing with it not just sweeping changes but also the first “buttonless” automobile interior.

But first, there’s the new bod. The current MKX was always a handsome, if forgettable, crossover. But thanks to all-new sheetmetal from the A-pillar forward and a new rear end, the MKX has become quite the looker for 2011. Unlike the hearse-like MKT, the MKX starts with innately tidy proportions and short overhangs, and has now artfully adopted the Lincoln dual-port grille. The front fenders now rise to accentuate the wheel arch, and there are new lower rocker moldings, too. The rear end—previously an unremarkable arrangement of rectangles—looks decidedly spicier now that the taillamps have gone from full-width to split, angular LED units.

Controls by Microsoft, Ergonomics by Apple?

The transformation continues inside, where occupants can luxuriate on new leather seats, which, along with the door panels and many other surfaces, are rendered in upgraded materials. “Tuxedo-stripe” stitching is a Lincoln first, and will soon join tunneled electroluminescent gauges, available THX stereos, and white dash illumination in the brand’s gene pool. There are seven selectable ambient-lighting colors, with five levels of intensity. The patina-look interior trim seen first in the MKT appears here, too, and while it certainly looks better than the satin-look junk in many Ford interiors of yore, we wonder how owners might feel about it after a few years.

But the most newsworthy aspect of the 2011 MKX is its debut of the awkwardly named but highly futuristic “MyLincoln Touch” interface, which essentially ditches conventional buttons and knobs for a network of capacitive-touch controls (think iPod or iPhone) spread about the neatly designed dashboard. Particularly cool are the two shiny horizontal spears which at first seem merely decorative but in fact are the controls for stereo volume and HVAC fan speed, actuated by sliding one’s finger across them. The latest voice-activated Ford/Microsoft Sync system comes standard and operates through an eight-inch LCD touch screen with handy color-coded menus. New this year for Sync is factory-installed HD radio, as well as the capability to tag a song you might want to download later. Also added are a pair of 4.2-inch LCD screens in the instrument cluster; they’re accessed by five-position toggles on the steering wheel. The screen on the left side displays basic vehicle data such as trip information and fuel economy, while the one on the right can be used to interface with multimedia devices.

Power and Torque Go Up, Fuel Economy Stays Flat

Less dramatic but equally significant (to us, anyway) are changes that you can’t run your finger along but which should be noticeable from the driver’s seat. The MKX’s standard 3.5-liter V-6 has been replaced by the new 3.7-liter unit shared with the 2011 Ford Mustang. Featuring variable cam timing, horsepower gets a 15-percent bump to 305, while torque climbs 12 percent to 280 lb-ft. The standard six-speed automatic transmission also now features manual-shift capability. Ford did not release fuel-economy estimates, but claims that the 2011 will match the front-wheel-drive 2010 model’s 25-mpg highway fuel-economy rating. City fuel economy for the 2010 model is 18 mpg, while all-wheel-drive versions are rated at 17/23.

Considerable revisions to the brakes are said to increase both feel and response, things we’ve rarely expected—or experienced—in a Lincoln but would definitely appreciate. Newly available driver aids include hill-start assist, trailer-sway control, adaptive cruise control, blind-spot detection, and cross-traffic alert for backing out of parking spots.

Late Fall Arrival

The 2011 Lincoln MKX arrives in dealerships in late summer, with base prices expected to stay near the current model’s $40K price of entry. Beyond Cadillac’s new-for-2010 SRX, the Lexus RX will be in this Lincoln’s crosshairs. We also expect Ford to roll out an updated 2011 Edge crossover (the MKX’s twin) around the same time. Why isn’t the Edge debuting in Detroit? Well, the Ford stand is already action-packed with the 2012 Focus and emboldened 2011 Mustang GT “5.0,” so the sharpened Edge probably wouldn’t get much play. The MKX, then, should get its fair share of attention—attention, it seems

Ford Fusion Hybrid wins 2010 car of year award


DETROIT – Ford Motor Co. has won the 2010 North American Car and Truck of the Year awards.

The Ford Fusion Hybrid midsize sedan took the car of the year award, while the Ford Transit Connect captured the truck of the year at the Detroit auto show on Monday.

Forty-nine auto journalists made the picks. Finalists for the car award included the Buick LaCrosse and Volkswagen Golf GTI. The Chevrolet Equinox and Subaru Outback were finalists for the truck award.

The awards, given annually by journalists who test cars throughout the year, are often used by automakers in advertising. Vehicles are judged on innovation, design, safety, handling, driver satisfaction and value.

The awards were presented Monday morning on the first day of media previews for the show.

Last year's winners were the Hyundai Genesis luxury sedan and the Ford F-150 pickup.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Asian stocks rise on China export recovery


HONG KONG – Asian stock markets rose Monday as news of a surprisingly strong rebound in China's exports last month offset a dismal U.S. jobs report.

Hong Kong and Shanghai markets led the region after the government announced exports jumped nearly 18 percent in December after 13 months of declines, buoying confidence in Asia's prospects as Western economies struggle.

Expectations of greater Chinese demand helped lift commodities. Oil prices neared $84 a barrel while gold topped $1,150 an ounce.

The dollar, meanwhile, weakened against the yen and the euro as investors bet the U.S. government would stick to its looser monetary policies after a bleak employment report showed Friday the world's largest economy shed 85,000 jobs last month, far more than the 8,000 analysts expected. The unemployment rate held at 10 percent.

In greater China, Hong Kong's Hang Seng benchmark climbed 304.64 points, or 1.4 percent, to 22,601.39 and Shanghai's main index added 27.58 points, or 0.9 percent, to 3,223.33. Chinese markets were also supported by news regulators were moving ahead with plans for stock futures and other trading products that could make the market more attractive to investors.

Japan's stock market was closed for a holiday.

Elsewhere, South Korea's benchmark gained 1.26 points, or 0.1 percent, to 1,696.16. India's market added 0.5 percent, Singapore's market rose 0.6 percent and Australia's index was up 0.8 percent.

Friday on Wall Street, the Dow rose 11.33, or 0.1 percent, to 10,618.19.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 3.29, or 0.3 percent, to 1,144.98, its fifth straight advance. The Dow and the S&P 500 index ended at their highest levels since Oct. 1, 2008.

The Nasdaq composite index rose 17.12, or 0.7 percent, to 2,317.17.

Oil prices jumped in Asia amid signs of strong Chinese demand for crude and rebel attacks on Nigerian supplies. Benchmark crude for February delivery was up 80 cents to $83.55; the contract rose 9 cents Friday.

The dollar slid to 92.24 yen from 92.54 yen. The euro strengthened to $1.4522 from 1.4430.

Egypt discovers new workers' tombs near pyramids


CAIRO – Egypt's antiquities authority has announced the discovery of a new set of tombs for the workers who built the great pyramids.

Zahi Hawass, the director of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities, says the tombs are significant because they show that the pyramids were not built by slaves, but rather free workers.

Worker tombs were first discovered in the area in the 1990s and shed new light on the daily lives of those who built some of antiquities most famous monuments.

Evidence from the site, according to Sunday's statement, revealed that farmers in Egypt sent 21 buffalo and 23 sheep every day to feed the workers.

Hawass estimated that 10,000 people toiled on the pyramids.

Schwarzenegger says health care bill a 'rip-off'


WASHINGTON – California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger says concessions made to Nebraska Sen. Ben Nelson to win his vote on the health care overhaul bill were a "rip-off" for his state and is urging California lawmakers to vote against it.

In an interview airing Sunday on NBC's Meet the Press, Schwarzenegger says giving extra Medicaid benefits to Nebraska to secure Nelson's vote, critical to Senate passage of the measure, was "like buying a vote." In Sacramento, he says, "it is illegal to do that, to buy votes."

Schwarzenegger was one of the few Republicans to express support for health care reform, but last week protested the deal that gave Nebraska more Medicaid money but not other states.

Nelson said he is asking the Democratic leadership to extend to all states the extra Medicaid money Nebraska would receive under the bill. The House and Senate are now negotiating the final version.

China overtakes Germany as biggest exporter


BEIJING – China overtook Germany as the world's top exporter after December exports jumped 17.7 percent for their first increase in 14 months, data showed Sunday, in another sign of China's rise as a global economic force.

Exports for the last month of 2009 were $130.7 billion, data from the General Administration of Customs showed. That raised total 2009 exports to $1.2 trillion, ahead of the 816 billion euros ($1.17 trillion) for Germany forecast by its foreign trade organization, BGA.

China's new status is largely symbolic but reflects the ability of its resilient, low-cost manufacturers to keep selling abroad despite a slump in global consumer demand due to the financial crisis.

December's rebound was an "important turning point" for exporters, a customs agency economist, Huang Guohua, said on state television, CCTV.

"We can say that China's export enterprises have completely emerged from their all-time low in exports," Huang said.

Stronger foreign sales of Chinese goods could help to drive the country's recovery after demand plunged in 2008, forcing thousands of factories to close and throwing millions of laborers out of work.

Boosted by a 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus, China's economic expansion accelerated to 8.9 percent for the third quarter of 2009 and the government says full-year growth should be 8.3 percent.

Economists and Germany's national chamber of commerce said earlier the country was likely to lose its longtime crown as top exporter.

China is best known as a supplier of shoes, toys, furniture and other low-tech goods, while Germany exports machinery and other higher-value products. German commentators note that their country supplies the factory equipment used by top Chinese manufacturers.

China surpassed the United States as the biggest auto market in 2009 and is on track to replace Japan as the world's second-largest economy soon. China passed Germany as the third-largest economy in 2007.

China's trade surplus shrank by 34.2 percent in 2009 to $196.07 billion, the customs agency said. That reflected China's stronger demand for imported raw materials and consumer goods while the United States and other economies are struggling and demand is weak.

The United States and other governments complain that part of China's export success is based on currency controls and improper subsidies that give its exporters an unfair advantage against foreign rivals.

Washington has imposed anti-dumping duties on imports of Chinese-made steel pipes and some other goods, while the European Union has imposed curbs on Chinese shoes.

The U.S. and other governments also complain that Beijing keeps its currency, the yuan, undervalued. Beijing broke the yuan's link to the dollar in 2005 and it rose gradually until late 2008, but has been frozen since then against the U.S. currency in what economists say is an effort by Beijing to keep its exporters competitive.

The dollar's weakness against the euro and some other currencies pulls down the yuan in markets that use them and makes Chinese goods even more attractive there, adding to China's trade surplus.

Even though China overtook Germany as top exporter, the customs agency said total 2009 Chinese trade fell 13.9 percent from 2008.

Commodities were among China's key imports, the agency said, with the country bringing in 630 million tons of iron ore last year, up 41.6 percent from the previous year, and 200 million tons of crude oil, an increase of 13.9 percent, as prices for both commodities fell.

Economists say China has been rushing to build up stockpiles at bargain prices since crude oil and other commodity prices plunged in 2008. That motive, more than a revival in actual industrial demand, has driven its recent import boom of oil, copper and other metals.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Government health insurance option appears doomed


WASHINGTON – Senior House Democrats have largely abandoned hopes of including a government-run insurance option in the final compromise health care bill taking shape, according to several officials, and are pushing for other measures to rein in private insurers.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other senior Democrats told President Barack Obama in recent meetings they want the legislation to strip the insurance industry of a long-standing exemption from federal antitrust laws, officials said. That provision is in the House-passed measure, but was omitted from the bill that the Senate passed on Christmas Eve.

They also want the final measure to include a House-passed proposal for a nationwide insurance exchange, to be regulated by the federal government, where consumers could shop for private coverage. The Senate bill calls for a state-based system of exchanges.

Additionally, House Democrats want to require insurers to spend a minimum amount of premium income on benefits, thereby limiting what is available for salaries, bonuses, advertising and other items. The House bill sets the floor at 85 percent; the Senate-passed measure lowers it to 80 percent for policies sold to small groups and individuals.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the negotiations are private.

The maneuvering comes as the White House and majority Democrats intensify efforts to agree on a final measure, possibly before Obama delivers his State of the Union address late this month or early in February.

Government intervention into the insurance market is one of the most contentious issues to be settled. Others include the fate of a Senate-passed tax on high-cost insurance plans, bitterly opposed by some labor unions; the extent to which abortions could be covered by insurance to be sold in the new exchanges; and the amount of money available to help lower-income families purchase coverage.

Liberals long have pressed to include a government-run insurance option in the legislation, arguing it would create competition for private companies and place a brake on costs.

House Democrats included it in their legislation. In the Senate, it drew opposition from Democratic moderates whose votes are essential to the bill's fate. Even attempts to include an expansion of Medicare for uninsured individuals as young as age 55 — widely viewed as a face-saving proposal for liberals — had to be jettisoned.

Given the opposition in the Senate, Pelosi, D-Calif., signaled late last year she did not view a public option as a requirement for a final compromise. Asked in an interview Dec. 16 whether she could support legislation without it, she said, "It depends what else is in the bill."

More recently, she listed her goals for a House-Senate compromise without mentioning the provision she long has backed.

"We are optimistic that there is much that we have in common in both of our bills and that we will resolve or reconcile this legislation in a way that is a triple A rating: affordability for the middle class, accountability for the insurance companies, and accessibility to many more people in our country to quality, affordable health care," she said.

While Obama favors a government option, he has said repeatedly it is only a small part of his overall effort to remake the health care system, and is not essential.

Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., have expressed optimism about chances for a swift agreement, but there appears to be relatively little maneuvering room. That is particularly true in the Senate, where 60 votes will be needed to overcome a Republican filibuster, and any change carries the risk of alienating a Democrat whose vote is crucial.

The bill's future is further complicated by a scheduled Jan. 19 election in Massachusetts. Some polls show Democrat Martha Coakley in a closer-than-expected race against Republican Scott Brown and an independent contender. The winner will replace Sen. Paul Kirk, who became the 60th member of the Democratic caucus when he was named to his seat as successor to the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy.

A Republican upset would deprive Democrats of their 60th vote.

Some House Democrats say the proposed government insurance option remains alive, although they speak publicly of its possible demise as long as insurance companies aren't let off the hook.

California Rep. Xavier Becerra, who's on the leadership team, said House members would only be willing to abandon the public plan if they were certain the final bill achieves the goals they want, as Pelosi described.

"We're willing to give up what's good for America as long as we get something good back," he said.

Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, also a member of the leadership, agreed.

"I think the House is very much of a view that before they'd consider dropping the public option" they have to be assured of a bill that achieves the goals they wanted the public option to meet.

But officials said little if any time has been spent in White House meetings on the issue, and there was scant discussion of it during a conference call for members of the Democratic rank and file earlier this week.