the world as we write it

smiley status'

    eat my Twitter?

    The Black Rider

    authentic since 1981 'welcome to my bomboclot mind'

    Sunday, May 4, 2008

    CNN - Hundreds feared dead in Myanmar cyclone

    Sent from bombastic4000@gmail.com's mobile device from http://www.cnn.com.

    Hundreds feared dead in Myanmar cyclone


    Hundreds of people are feared dead after a tropical cyclone with winds up to 150 miles (241 km) per hour slammed into Myanmar over the weekend.

    "We believe hundreds of people are dead," said Khin Maung Win with the Democratic Voice of Burma -- a broadcast media group run by opposition expatriates.

    "The entire lower Burma is affected. In some areas, entire villages disappeared."

    The ruling military junta put the death toll at about 200, according to media reports.

    The activist group opposed the military rule in Myanmar, formerly known as Burma.

    The ruling junta declared a state of emergency in five regions: the city of Yangon, Irrawaddy, Pegu and the states of Karen and Mon. All flights to Yangon, the former capital, were canceled.

    Cyclone Nargis tore off roofs, uprooted trees and downed power lines.

    The storm ripped through the sprawling river delta city of Yangon for more than 10 hours -- from Friday night until Saturday noon, said Burma Democratic Concern (BDC).

    By Sunday, many parts of the city were without electricity. Phone connections were also down in most areas, making it difficult to assess the extent of the damage.

    "Most Burmese with whom we've been in touch report they lost their roofs, although so far everyone we have been able to contact reports that they and their families are safe," said a Yangon-based diplomat who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

    Pictures from inside the country showed a cyclone-ravaged region with tin huts crushed under the weight of trees. Bicyclists navigated around large branches that littered the deserted roads.

    A man with his pant legs rolled up waded through knee-deep water and strained to clear massive limbs that were blocking the entrance to a house.

    "The cleanup is beginning, but this will take a long time," the diplomat said. "The damage around town is intense."

    "Fuel is not easily available. International emergency assistance would be needed within seven days. There is no food for eating," said Win of the Democratic Voice of Burma.

    The junta has scheduled a May 10 referendum on a new constitution for the country, which came under sharp criticism from many nations for using force to suppress pro-democracy protests last year.

    Saturday, May 3, 2008

    CNN - Microsoft withdraws bid for Yahoo

    Sent from bombastic400?@gmail.com's mobile device from http://www.cnn.com.

    Microsoft withdraws bid for Yahoo


    Microsoft Corp.'s pursuit of Yahoo Inc. ended abruptly Saturday when the world's largest software maker withdrew a sweetened $46 billion offer and said it would not make a hostile bid for the Internet company.

    Microsoft said the breakdown came despite having raised the bid to $33 a share, or $5 billion above what it said was the current value of the offer and a 70% premium compared to its original offer.

    The offer was valued at $31 a share when it was made in January. Yahoo stock closed Friday at $28.67 a share.

    "After careful consideration, we believe the economics demanded by Yahoo do not make sense for us," said Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer.

    In a letter to Yahoo Chief Executive Jerry Yang, Ballmer said that Yahoo wanted at least another $4 a share, or $5 billion in value, added to the deal, bringing it to at least $37 a share.

    Read Ballmer's letter to Yang

    Ballmer also told Yang that taking the offer directly to shareholders would not be "sensible."

    "This approach would necessarily involve a protracted proxy contest and eventually an exchange offer," Ballmer wrote. "Our discussions with you have led us to conclude that, in the interim, you would take steps that would make Yahoo undesirable as an acquisition for Microsoft."

    Ballmer said he was concerned that a further collaboration between Yahoo and Google - which he called "the dominant search provider" - would make an acquisition undesirable for several reasons.

    Yahoo officials indicated their pleasure with the end of the Microsoft bid.

    "Our independent board and our management have been steadfast in our belief that Microsoft's offer undervalued the company and we are pleased that so many of our shareholders in expressing that view," Yahoo chairman Roy Bostock said.

    Yang, in the same statement, called the Microsoft bid a "distraction" and said that Yahoo will now focus "on executing the most important transition in our history so that we can maximize our potential."

    Microsoft: We'll do it without Yahoo

    Microsoft indicated that it will proceed with a Web advertising strategy.

    "We have a talented team in place and a compelling plan to grow our business through innovative new services and strategic transactions with other business partners," Ballmer said. "While Yahoo would have accelerated our strategy, I am confident that we can continue to move forward toward our goals."

    Both Microsoft and Yahoo have struggled to compete with Google for billions of advertising dollars shifting to the Web.

    A marriage between Microsoft and Yahoo had been widely considered by analysts as inevitable. "As we have indicated since 2/1, we think MSFT will eventually acquire YHOO at a price not materially above the value of its initial offer," wrote Scott Kessler, an analyst with Standard & Poor's, in a report earlier this week.

    Microsoft fears that Google's acquisition of DoubleClick - the world's biggest online ad server company and big player in the increasingly lucrative market for online display ads - will allow the search giant to seize an even bigger portion of the ad market as Microsoft's MSN falls further behind.

    Microsoft made a public offer to buy Yahoo on Jan. 31, two days after the Internet portal reported weak quarterly earnings and a disappointing outlook for 2008.

    Yahoo was an impressive target. It is one of the last independent Internet companies with massive scale. In March, it was the top-ranked site in the United States with 139 million unique visitors, according to comScore, which tracks Web audiences. Google was second and Microsoft was third.

    What might have been

    A Microsoft-Yahoo combo could have offered even greater scale and attracted more advertisers.

    None of that persuaded Yahoo, however. Though the value of the company's stock has risen more than 40% since Microsoft made its offer, its board said the proposal "substantially undervalues" the company.

    Throughout the past three months, Yahoo had said it was not opposed to a merger if Microsoft offered the right price. But it also sought alternatives. When no white knights came to the rescue, Yahoo in recent months pursued other tieups with Time Warner (parent of CNNMoney.com), News Corp. and Google.

    But any involvement with Google could raise antitrust issues.

    Yahoo's two-week test running Google's search ads caught the attention of the U.S. Justice Department. Microsoft General Counsel Brad Smith said a Yahoo-Google collaboration would "consolidate over 90% of the search advertising market in Google's hand."

    Sen. Herbert Kohl, D-Wis., the chairman of Senate Judiciary Committee's antitrust panel, said last month that "should there be moves to make this agreement permanent, we will examine it closely ... to ensure that it does not harm competition."

    On Saturday, Ballmer struck a generally cordial tone with Yang, even as he criticized Yahoo for rejecting Microsoft's offer.

    "I still believe even today that our offer remains the only alternative put forward that provides your stockholders full and fair value for their shares," Ballmer wrote. "By failing to reach an agreement with us, you and your stockholders have left significant value on the table."

    "But clearly a deal is not to be," Ballmer added. "Thank you again for the time we have spent together discussing this."

    Scott Moritz and Yi-Wyn Yen of Fortune contributed to this article.

    Friday, May 2, 2008

    Storms in the midwest

    Tragedy

    USA TODAY - Storms leave death, destruction in central USA

    This story has been sent from the mobile device of Bombastic4000@gmail.com. For real-time mobile news, go to m.usatoday.com.



    From staff and wire reports

    Severe weather battered the nation's midsection Friday killing at least seven people in Arkansas, injuring dozens others and damaging hundreds of homes and businesses.

    In the last 24 hours, tornadoes, hail and hurricane-force winds ripped through Arkansas and seven other states, including Texas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Illinois, South Dakota and Kansas.

    Police said a 15-year-old girl was killed Friday when a tree fell through a bedroom where she was sleeping at her home in Siloam Springs in north Arkansas. Arkansas Department of Emergency Management spokesman Tommy Jackson also confirmed two deaths in Conway County; three in Van Buren County; and one death in Pulaski County.

    WEATHER GUYS BLOG: Tornado season peaks in MayLOCAL COVERAGE: KTHV-TV, Little Rock

    The agency also reported 13 injuries.The storms damaged property and blew out electric service to nearly 6,000 homes and businesses.

    In Damascus, Ark., property damage was extensive.

    Randy Payne, 38, hid in a hallway at his aunt and uncle's house.

    "It sounded like all hell was breaking loose," Payne said.

    Hurricane-force winds, hail and heavy rain moved through Missouri leaving hundreds of homes and businesses damaged.

    Fire officials say several people were injured in the storms late Thursday and early Friday.

    Authorities in the Kansas City area say the worst damage is in the city's northern and eastern suburbs. The National Weather Service reported that winds reached 80 mph.

    Kansas City Mayor Mark Funkhouser said Friday that 100 homes suffered significant damage in the city alone.

    In northeast Kansas City, trees were knocked from their roots and laying along the roads and in ditches.

    Dozens of homes had chunks of their roofs missing. Some had their fences toppled. Police blocked off roads surrounding damaged neighborhoods Friday.

    At least three tornadoes raked across central and northern Oklahoma, including one in Osage County near Tulsa that was an estimated 100 yards wide.

    In Owasso, also near Tulsa, straight-line winds destroyed the $4.7 million TownPlace Suites Hotel, authorities said.

    In other parts of the country a river that flooded parts of northern Maine dropped much faster than expected, allowing residents who fled their homes to return and assess the damage, officials said Friday.

    The St. John River dipped below flood stage Friday, just two days after upward of 1,000 people were evacuated as the river reached the highest levels ever recorded. As many as 140 area homes were flooded.

    The river's drop came as Gov. John Baldacci traveled to the region Friday for his second visit to get a firsthand look and talk to local residents.

    A team from the Maine Department of Transportation and an inspector from Canada planned to get their first look at the International Bridge between Fort Kent and Clair, New Brunswick, Saturday morning to make sure that the two-lane bridge wasn?t moved from its supports by the fast-moving waters, said Mark Latti, a Maine transportation agency spokesman.

    Meanwhile, three Texans were charged Thursday with starting a fire that has charred more than 2,000 acres near Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona.

    The two men and a woman were camping Tuesday in the Kaibab National Forest when they left their campfire unattended after running out of water, according to a criminal complaint filed in federal court in Flagstaff.

    A second straight day of fierce wind Thursday hampered firefighters battling a blaze in central New Mexico's Manzano Mountains.

    Fire officials estimated the acreage at 13,000, or about 20 square miles, by Thursday night. Peter D'Aquanni, a U.S. Forest Service public information officer, said crews tried to go in several times to get a count of what had been destroyed but were pushed back each time. Wind kept air drops of water and fire retardant grounded Thursday.

    "We're pretty much going to have a carbon copy of yesterday again today," D'Aquanni said Thursday. Conditions are expected to be the same Friday, he said.

    At least seven wildfires, two of which consumed more than 20,000 acres each, burned across Texas on Thursday, threatening homes, a wind farm and a $10 million vineyard, officials said.

    A 21,000-acre blaze in western Texas neared a $280 million wind farm and an 800-acre vineyard, said Jeanne Eastham, a spokeswoman for the Texas Forest Service. The service had a mandatory evacuation for one ranch in the fire's path.

    Cities along the Mississippi River valley are expected to get bad storms Friday, according to Tom Moore, lead meteorologist at The Weather Channel.

    Moore said some areas along the Black Hills in South Dakota could receive up to 3 feet of snow and Rapid City may get up to a foot.

    "It should be an active day from the Great Lakes all the way down," Moore said.

    The storm system should ease up by Saturday, but will continue pouring rain from New York to the Southeast. And that, Moore said, could make for a soggy day at the Kentucky Derby.

    "It's going to rain there in the morning for sure," Moore said. "But it should break up by midday."

    Contributing: Alan Gomez in McLean, Va.; Associated Press

    Website address: http://www.usatoday.com/weather/storms/2008-05-02-storms_N.htm

    USA TODAY - Scientists call in the mechanical squirrels for research

    This story has been sent from the mobile device of Bombastic4000@gmail.com. For real-time mobile news, go to m.usatoday.com.



    AMHERST, Mass.
    By Stephanie Reitz, Associated Press

    One gray squirrel, its bushy tail twitching, barked a warning as another scrounged for food nearby.

    It was an ordinary spring day at Hampshire College, except that the rodent issuing the warning was powered by amps, not acorns.

    Dubbed "Rocky" after the cartoon character, the robo-squirrel is working its way into Hampshire's live-squirrel clique, controlled by researchers several yards away with a laptop computer and binoculars.

    Sarah Partan, an assistant professor in animal behavior at Hampshire, hopes that by capturing a close-up view of squirrels in nature, Rocky will help her team decode squirrels' communication techniques, social cues and survival instincts.

    Rocky is among many robotic critters worldwide helping researchers observe animals in their natural environments rather than in labs. The research could let scientists better understand how animals work in groups, court, intimidate rivals and warn allies of danger.

    In Indiana, for instance, a fake lizard shows off its machismo as researchers assess which actions intimidate and which attract real lizards. Pheromone-soaked cockroach counterfeits in Brussels, meanwhile, exert peer pressure on real roaches to move out of protective darkness. In California, a tiny video camera inside a fake female sage grouse records close-up details as it's wooed and more by the breed's unusually promiscuous males.

    The research may even help explain similar instinctive behaviors in humans, researchers say.

    "Animals and humans are all affected by behaviors, body postures and signals from each other that we may not be aware of," Partan said.

    The use of fake critters to infiltrate real groups of animals is so new that few companies build or sell such tools to researchers.

    Many of the scientists using animal doppelgangers have modified toy animals or, like Partan and her students, cobbled together their own with fake fur, small motors, circuits and other material. Partan, who created Rocky a few years ago with students when she taught at the University of South Florida, is constantly refining its actions and updating its technology.

    Rocky's movement is controlled by basic computer programs, and it has tiny speakers inside that play recordings Partan purchased from an animal-sounds library at Cornell University.

    One recent afternoon, she and students Maya Gounard, 20, and Andrew Fulmer, 19, brought Rocky out for field testing and placed him near real squirrels. Mounted on a board, he was shielded by a camouflage hood and a long cord connected him to the researchers' laptop.

    After the computer's program flipped the hood open, Rocky went into a sequence of tail-flagging, barking and other motions squirrels recognize as warnings of danger.

    The most successful experiments are when the real squirrels respond by "flagging" their own tail, halting their foraging to check for danger, scamper up a tree or take other actions that show they picked up on the signals, Partan said.

    "We watch for a trade-off in their behavior," she said, pointing out a squirrel that jerked to its hind legs and froze, its eyes scanning the area as it heard Rocky's barks. "He gave up foraging to focus on being vigilant, so that's something we'd note as a discernible response."

    They focus on whether squirrels react more strongly to Rocky's noises or movements or a combination that researchers call multi-modal signals.

    Although animal behavior has been studied for years, much remains unknown about instinctive responses.

    A particular sound may be the courting equivalent of, "Come over here, you sexy beast." But a tiny change can alter the message entirely, making it something akin to, "You're about to be torn to shreds if you don't get out of my territory."

    "Whether it's a bunch of squirrels in a field or humans in a mall, there are general principles of behavior that seem to hold up across species lines," said Greg Demas, director of Indiana University's Center for the Integrative Study of Animal Behavior and an associate professor of biology.

    Robot critters also can help researchers discover how far a species can be pushed beyond its survival instincts.

    Researchers at the Free University of Brussels, for instance, found that fake roaches doused in familiar pheromones became so accepted among their cockroach compatriots that the real bugs succumbed to the interlopers' peer pressure to move out of dark areas into the light.

    In other experiments, a robotic lizard developed by Indiana University researcher Emilia Martins uses energetic push-ups to trigger similar displays of courtship, power and machismo among real lizards.

    Depending on the fake lizard's prompting, the real critters react as if they're being taunted, threatened or titillated all of which gives researchers a chance to study the tiniest movements of their legs, eye flaps and other quirks.

    "There's been the old, classic trade-off for years between the ecological relevance you get (researching) in the field, versus those studies in the lab where you can control the environment while knowing they're not going to react as much," Demas said. "Having these models out in the field is taking us to the next steps of the research."

    Researchers say the applicability of fake animals in research can depend on the intelligence, size, eyesight and sense of smell in the real species.

    "The bigger the animal is and the more complicated it is, the harder it is to have a proper robot that mimics the signals and has the right visual cues," said Cornell ornithology professor Jack Bradbury.

    Bradbury's research has ranged from vocal mimicry in wild parrots to the sexual choices of hermaphroditic sea slugs. He hasn't used robots but does use sound cues emanating from speakers hidden in bushes to manipulate animals in the wild by "talking" with them or playing noises they recognize.

    "Wild parrots are pretty smart, but I've gone on for hours interacting with them that way," he said. "They come up to the bush and look at it and don't see the birds, but they keep communicating with the belief there's another parrot in there somewhere."

    He said mechanical animals aren't used "just to be clever."

    "The real issue from a scientist's point of view is, 'Can I come up with a robot that will help me answer a question that I couldn't answer otherwise?'"

    Website address: http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/robotics/2008-05-02-robot-research_N.htm

    Reuters - IBM launches "green energy" tools for data centers

    This article was sent to you from Bombastic4000@gmail.com, who uses Reuters Mobile Site to get news and information on the go. To access Reuters on your mobile phone, go to:
    http://mobile.reuters.com

    IBM launches "green energy" tools for data centers

    Wednesday, Apr 30, 2008 11:33PM UTC

    By Philipp Gollner

    SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - International Business Machines Corp <IBM.N> on Wednesday launched tools to reduce computer energy consumption as IBM hopes to boost its business of selling power-saving technologies.

    The products, announced at an IBM business-partner conference in Los Angeles, are designed to measure power consumption and reduction across energy-hungry computer data centers that run corporate networks and Web sites.

    The world's largest technology services company is offering software that tracks and caps data-center energy consumption, including power for air conditioning to cool server computers.

    IBM is also extending to 27 more countries a program begun in seven countries last year that lets companies earn and trade certificates awarded for verified energy savings.

    "Energy efficiency has become a critical business metric, like product reliability and customer satisfaction," William Zeitler, head of IBM's systems and technology group, said in an interview with Reuters.

    IBM is expanding in so-called green data centers as it looks for new growth areas in developed regions such as Western Europe as well as in developing countries that are spending heavily on new technology infrastructure.

    "The opportunity for us is to go to clients -- there are an enormous number who are either transforming their data centers or will have to transform them," Zeitler said. "This is a critically important problem in the industry."

    IBM's green data center initiative has already begun to pay off a year after it was launched. It generated nearly $200 million of technology-services contract signings in the first quarter and about $300 million in the fourth, Chief Financial Officer Mark Loughridge said in recent earnings presentations.

    Many of the countries added to the certificate program are in emerging markets in Asia and the Middle East, where Armonk, New York-based IBM has been generating double-digit percentage revenue growth from building technology infrastructure in telecoms, transportation and energy, among other areas.

    Growth is also strong in North America and Western Europe, where banks, for example, are trying to rein in energy costs from running massive volumes of financial transactions on their computers. Banks are among IBM's biggest customers.

    "It's really taken off in North America in particular and Western Europe," said Joe Clabby, president and industry research analyst at Clabby Analytics. "Countries that are not energy self-sufficient are jumping on this initiative."

    (Editing by Braden Reddall)

    Reuters - Lego's latest brick trick: a virtual world

    This article was sent to you from bombastic4000@gmail.com, who uses Reuters Mobile Site to get news and information on the go. To access Reuters on your mobile phone, go to:
    http://mobile.reuters.com

    Lego's latest brick trick: a virtual world

    Thursday, May 01, 2008 7:41PM UTC

    By Reed Stevenson

    BILLUND, Denmark (Reuters) - Millions of children pick up Lego bricks each year to spend hours -- 5 billion, in fact -- creating their own imaginary worlds.

    Now the manufacturer of the little plastic playing blocks wants to take them online to "Lego Universe," a virtual world for fans of the ubiquitous toy.

    Lego Universe joins an established trend where toys and video games are cross-promoted, such as Nintendo Co Ltd's Pokemon TV show, game card, toys and video game franchise, and Mattel Inc's Barbie online shopping and gaming portal at barbie.com.

    To launch next year as a massively multiplayer online game, or MMOG to those in the gaming community, Lego Universe will let players create online versions of themselves and interact with each other.

    "We want to make the connection between digital play and physical play," said Mark William Hansen who is in charge of Lego Universe. "The physical experience is our core, the digital experience will never replace the physical experience, but it's a nice add-on."

    Hansen, speaking at the headquarters of Europe's largest toymaker, said he had been working on his doctoral thesis with Lego Group on mass customization and ended up joining the family-owned company to create the game.

    Lego Universe will blend real-world style environments with characters and buildings made of digital plastic pieces. A forest would have less bricks in the background, while a city would lend itself to being made nearly entirely with bricks.

    Each player's avatar, or online persona, will be a customizable digital version of Lego minifigures, the tiny characters included with most Lego kits that also feature in existing Lego video games such as Lego Star Wars.

    That's not surprising. Lego employees are just as likely to pull out a Lego figure of themselves, with name, phone number and e-mail address rather than a traditional business card.

    Lego Universe will initially launch as a PC game, available in stores or as a download, and may eventually be available on other gaming platforms. It will operate as a pay-as-you-go subscription service at a "competitive price", Hansen said.

    Most social online worlds have their own currency or monetary system, and Lego Universe will also require users to spend virtual money to buy virtual bricks. But rather than winning or beating an opponent, players build capital by spending time in the game.

    "The more a child plays, they collect more coins and more bricks. The more you play, the more you get to build things," Hansen said.

    The other crucial element of Lego Universe, like other MMOGs, is that users will be encouraged to interact with each other, to build and play with virtual Lego bricks as they would on a carpet littered with real Lego pieces.

    "We want kids to come and play together," Hansen said.

    BRICK-BY-BRICK

    Lego Universe is part of a bigger plan by the company to revitalize itself after a near-collapse five years ago, when the company founded in 1932 posted its first loss.

    Lego executives say the company lost its way by branching into non-core areas like television shows and toys that required less building and weren't customizable like the core Lego bricks.

    "It was a near-death experience," said Henrik Lorensen, vice president of business development at Lego.

    Lorensen said Lego was distracted from its main area of expertise of providing toys children could use to build their own worlds and unleash their imagination, or as he says, "the joy of building, of creation, that you have when you play."

    Lorensen says the approach of "making good, classic products in the right way" is reflected in Lego Universe.

    About two dozen people at Lego are working on the game while an additional group of nearly 70 are working to create the online world in Denver, Colorado, where game developer and Lego partner NetDevil is based.

    The digital efforts fit in with Lego's popular video game franchise and also with Lego Factory, a digital design system that allows users to build Lego designs and then order the necessary components in one package from Lego.

    Through such efforts, Lego believes it can reach even more people than the 400 million who play with Lego bricks every year. Lego has expanded its line to include kits tailored for girls, featuring princesses and horses and castles.

    Lego Universe, the company believes, will encompass all of that and more, as the name suggests. Users will be able to create, destroy, enact battles, or just fiddle with bricks in a world of their own.

    It will also give the company the ability to reintroduce bricks that are no longer made in Lego factories and potentially offer all the 6,000 types of bricks made by Lego.

    But there will always be a link back to the physical world.

    Just like with Lego Factory, users will also be able to order the physical versions of their online creations and have them delivered to their door.

    (Editing by Tim Dobbyn)

    Tuesday, April 29, 2008

    CNN - High-tech pirates are no romantic figures

    Sent from bombastic4000@gmail.com's mobile device from http://www.cnn.com.

    High-tech pirates are no romantic figures


    A French yacht. A Japanese tanker. A Spanish fishing boat. After several years of decline, pirates are striking with increasing frequency on the high seas.

    Attacks in the first three months of this year were up 20 percent compared with the same period in 2007, analysts say. Last year saw more pirate attacks than the year before.

    And although the motive is still money, today's pirates are a far cry from the eye-patched, peg-legged swashbucklers of Hollywood.

    "The only thing today's pirates have in common with the romantic vision people have of pirates is that they are ruthless criminals who exploit very vulnerable people at sea," said Pottengal Mukundan of the International Maritime Bureau, which monitors shipping crime.

    Today's maritime muggers don night-vision goggles, carry rocket launchers and navigate with global positioning devices.

    With the ransoms they collect, pirates can earn up to $40,000 a year, analysts say. That's a fortune for someone from an impoverished country.

    A spate of well-publicized attacks this month has cast the problem in sharp relief.

    On April 4, suspected Somali pirates seized a French luxury yacht and held its crew of 30 for a week. Then, in a scene straight out of a Hollywood movie, French troops chased the hijackers into the desert before the hijackers could make off with the reported $2 million in ransom.

    Last week, suspected pirates shot at a Japanese tanker in the waters off the Horn of Africa.

    And over the weekend, pirates released a Spanish fishing boat off the coast of Somalia -- but only after they received a reported $1.2 million in ransom.

    Assailants have also attacked ships carrying food and relief supplies to war-torn regions.

    The International Maritime Bureau says 49 attacks were reported in the first three months of 2008, compared with 41 for the same period last year. It recorded 263 pirate attacks last year, up from 239 the year before and the first increase in three years.

    Worse still, analysts estimate that the numbers are underreported by as much as 30 percent.

    A piracy case raises insurance rates for ship owners, said Ioannis Michaletos, security analyst for Greece-based Research Institute for European and American Studies.

    So, "unless there's a death, many ship owners won't report it," he said.

    Why the rise in piracy

    Since the days of Blackbeard, who sailed the seas in the early 18th century in a period known as the Golden Age of Piracy, countries with coastlines beefed up their navies and generally routed the robbers.

    Yet analysts say two recent trends have led to a rise in piracy: access and opportunity.

    As global commerce picks up, more and more of the world's fuels, minerals and other crucial commodities travel by ship. Ninety-five percent of America's foreign trade, for instance, moves by water, according to the U.S. Maritime Administration.

    That cargo is an easy target for robbers in countries that lack the resources to secure their shorelines. Analysts say the waters off Nigeria and off Somalia, where no central government has existed since the early '90s, rank at the top of the global hotspots of pirate activity.

    Terrifying few minutes

    Bruce Meadows, an American cruise-ship singer, found this out firsthand.

    The captain's voice over the loudspeaker woke Meadows up before dawn one Saturday three years ago. Their 400-foot luxury liner was under attack.

    Meadows, who lives near Atlanta, Georgia, said he looked out the window and saw two white boats trailing along either side of the Seabourn Spirit as it sailed in the Indian Ocean off the Somali coast.

    The men, clad in dark clothes, waved machine guns and fired toward the deck and staterooms. One man lifted a rocket-propelled grenade launcher to his right shoulder and pulled the trigger.

    " 'This is not happening.' Literally, that is what I said," Meadows said shortly after the ordeal. "I was kind of fearful for what I was going to see potentially. Maybe friends of mine were going to be injured or hurt, and how I was going to deal with this, and what I was supposed to do in that capacity."

    In many respects, it was a typical pirate attack.

    Many pirates are trained fighters; others are young thugs enlisted for the job. Experts say they often sail out to sea in a mother ship and wait for a target.

    When they find one, the pirates board smaller boats and move in, typically with five to seven armed hijackers per boat.

    "We're talking about people in small, fast boats; people wearing combat fatigues; people armed with guns -- machine guns," said Lee Adamson of the International Maritime Organization, a United Nations agency responsible for improving ship safety.

    Andrew Mwangura of the Kenya-based Seafarers Assistance Program said the pirates work with conspirators who bankroll the operations.

    "These contacts give them details about the movement of the ships. These contacts help them buy arms," he said. "And when they negotiate, the negotiations are not carried out in Somalia. These contacts do them."

    Meadows was fortunate: The cruise ship changed course and outran the pirates. No one was hurt.

    But about 75 percent of the time, pirates succeed in boarding their targets, analysts say. Then they often sail back into their host country's waters -- away from the clutches of foreign police, whose jurisdiction is limited to international waters.

    That may soon change.

    U.N. resolution drafted

    The United States and France introduced a draft resolution Monday at the U.N. Security Council that would allow foreign governments to pursue pirate vessels into Somalia's territorial waters and make arrests.

    It noted that Somalia's transitional government welcomes international assistance.

    Maritime groups say they hope the resolution is adopted and expanded to other waters.

    Many see piracy cases going up as the global economy goes down.

    "There's a humanitarian crisis. There's a food crisis," said Michaletos, the security analyst. "You have people who are desperate, and this is an easy way to supplement their income.

    "I am not optimistic for the future."

    Reuters - Industry leaders join push for home media networks

    This article was sent to you from bombastic4000@gmail.com, who uses Reuters Mobile Site to get news and information on the go. To access Reuters on your mobile phone, go to:
    http://mobile.reuters.com

    Industry leaders join push for home media networks

    Tuesday, Apr 29, 2008 4:54PM UTC

    FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Chip and electronics makers Intel <INTC.O>, Infineon <IFXGn.DE>, Texas Instruments <TXN.N> and Panasonic <6752.T> have formed an alliance to promote home networks for movies, music and pictures using domestic wiring.

    The four leading chip and electronics makers will help market and test a standard to wire together computers, TVs and entertainment systems using electricity, phone and coaxial cable lines that already exist in most homes, they said on Tuesday.

    They hope the first products using the new standard will be on the market in about a year.

    Consumer electronics and computer makers have long talked of the so-called digital home, in which entertainment appliances and PCs are linked and typically controlled from the computer, making it easy to share digital media content between devices.

    But a lack of common standards between makers of these devices has held back progress.

    There is already a common wireless standard to link home devices using Wi-Fi. Wired networks often have the advantage of being more stable and having more capacity, and the building blocks for the infrastructure already exist in most homes.

    "Powerline is the most ubiquitous technology in the world. You have powerlines to almost every house in the world," Intel's Matt Theall, president of the new HomeGrid Forum (homegridforum.org) said on a conference call.

    "There's a huge market potentially for this type of technology. It can be embedded in DVD players, TVs, PCs, speakers -- any home entertainment device."

    The four leading members of the HomeGrid Forum (homegridforum.org) said they would work with the International Telecommunications Union to promote, test and contribute to a standard the ITU is already working on, called ITU-T G.hn.

    Their role will be similar to that played by the Wi-Fi Alliance, which helped promote an IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) wireless standard and has certified thousands of products for wireless local area networks (WLANs).

    The HomeGrid Forum has seven other founding members: Aware <AWRE.O>, DS2, Pulse Link, Ikanos <IKAN.O>, Sigma Designs <SIGM.O>, Westell <WSTL.O> and Gigle Semiconductor.

    Intel, Infineon, Texas Instruments and Panasonic -- who will serve on the board of directors -- said they were recruiting additional members among chipmakers, service providers and makers of consumer electronics and personal computers.

    (Reporting by Georgina Prodhan; Editing by David Cowell)

    Sunday, April 27, 2008

    Reuters - Urban miners look for precious metals in cell phones

    This article was sent to you from bombastic4000@gmail.com, who uses Reuters Mobile Site to get news and information on the go. To access Reuters on your mobile phone, go to:
    http://mobile.reuters.com

    Urban miners look for precious metals in cell phones

    Sunday, Apr 27, 2008 7:30AM UTC

    By Miho Yoshikawa

    HONJO, Japan (Reuters) - Thinking of throwing out your old cell phone? Think again. Maybe you should mine it first for gold, silver, copper and a host of other metals embedded in the electronics -- many of which are enjoying near-record prices.

    It's called "urban mining", scavenging through the scrap metal in old electronic products in search of such gems as iridium and gold, and it is a growth industry around the world as metal prices skyrocket.

    The materials recovered are reused in new electronics parts and the gold and other precious metals are melted down and sold as ingots to jewelers and investors as well as back to manufacturers who use gold in the circuit boards of mobile phones because gold conducts electricity even better than copper.

    "It can be precious or minor metals, we want to recycle whatever we can," said Tadahiko Sekigawa, president of Eco-System Recycling Co which is owned by Dowa Holdings Co Ltd.

    A tonne of ore from a gold mine produces just 5 grams (0.18 ounce) of gold on average, whereas a tonne of discarded mobile phones can yield 150 grams (5.3 ounce) or more, according to a study by Yokohama Metal Co Ltd, another recycling firm.

    The same volume of discarded mobile phones also contains around 100 kg (220 lb) of copper and 3 kg (6.6 lb) of silver, among other metals.

    Recycling has gained in importance as metals prices hit record highs. Gold is trading at around $890 an ounce, after hitting a historic high of $1,030.80 in March.

    Copper and tin are also around record highs and silver prices are well above long term averages.

    RECYCLING METALS

    Recycling electronics makes sense for Japan which has few natural resources to feed its billion dollar electronics industry but does have tens of millions of old cell phones and other obsolete consumer electronic gadgets thrown away every year.

    "To some it's just a mountain of garbage, but for others it's a gold mine," said Nozomu Yamanaka, manager of the Eco-Systems recycling plant where mounds of discarded cell phones and other electronics gadgets are taken apart for their metal value.

    At the factory in Honjo, 80 km (50 miles) southwest of Tokyo, 34-year-old Susumu Arai harvests some of that bounty.

    A ribbon of molten gold flows into a mould where it sizzles and spits fire for a few minutes before solidifying into a dull yellow slab, on its way to becoming a 3 kg (6.6 lb) gold bar, worth around $90,000 at current prices.

    Wearing plastic goggles to protect his eyes while he works, Arai said he was awestruck when he started his job two years ago.

    "Now I find it fun being able to recover not just gold, but all sorts of metals," he said.

    The scrap electronics and other industrial waste is first sorted and dismantled by hand. It is then immersed in chemicals to dissolve unwanted materials and the remaining metal is refined.

    Eco-System, established 20 years ago near Tokyo, typically produces about 200-300 kg (440-660 lb) of gold bars a month with a 99.99 percent purity, worth about $5.9 million to $8.8 million.

    That's about the same output as a small gold mine.

    Eco-System also recovers metals from old memory chips, cables and even black ink which contain silver and palladium.

    RECYCLING CELL PHONES

    But despite growing interest in the environment and recycling, the industry struggles to get enough old mobile phones to feed its recycling plants.

    Japan's 128 million population uses their cell phones for an average of two years and eight months.

    That's a lot of cell phone phones discarded every year, yet only 10-20 percent are recycled as people often opt to store them in their cupboards due to concerns about the personal data on their phones, said Yoshinori Yajima, a director at Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry.

    Just 558 tonnes of old phones were collected for recycling in the year to March 2007, down a third from three years earlier, industry figures show.

    As metals prices rise, the Japanese industry faces growing competition for scrap, which is pushing up prices.

    "We are seeing more competition from Chinese firms, and naturally the goods go where the money is," Dowa's Takashi Morise said.

    In response, Japanese firms are importing used circuit boards from Singapore and Indonesia, as they also contain valuable minor metals that Japan is particularly eager to recover.

    These minor metals such as indium, a vital component in the production of flat panel televisions and computer screens, antimony and bismuth are indispensable for producing many high-tech products.

    However, they are often not easy to acquire as China has tightened export controls, making it harder for Japanese manufacturers to buy these metals.

    That's where the "urban miners" step in.

    "Our wish is to be able to help Japanese manufacturers that need these metals," Eco-System President Sekigawa said.

    (Editing by Nick Trevethan and Megan Goldin)

    ($1=101.96 Yen)

    About Me

    My photo
    If you know me then you know my name. I am The Black Rider and the world is my Flame. The rider writes, observes, creates, produces, and learns the world around him. Ride on. Ride on!

    The Remnants

    Powered By Blogger