Archive for April, 2010

meegologogm

MeeGo: Nokia and Intel merge Maemo and Moblin

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ttg inteltungrameegooschomtgancore 1 MeeGo: Nokia and Intel merge Maemo and Moblin

Intel and Nokia Merge Software Platforms for Future Computing Devices MeeGo* enables an open ecosystem for rapid development of exciting new user experiences

NEWS HIGHLIGHTS:

• Global leaders Intel Corporation and Nokia merge Moblin and Maemo to create MeeGo*, a Linux-based software platform that will support multiple hardware architectures across the broadest range of device segments, including pocketable mobile computers, netbooks, tablets, mediaphones, connected TVs and in-vehicle infotainment systems.
• MeeGo offers the Qt application development environment, and builds on the Moblin core operating system and reference user experiences. Using Qt, developers can write once to create applications for a variety of devices and platforms, and market them through Nokia’s Ovi Store and Intel AppUpSM Center.
• MeeGo will be hosted by the Linux Foundation and governed using the best practices of the open source development model. The first release of MeeGo is expected in the second quarter of 2010 with devices launching later in the year.
• Nokia and Intel expect MeeGo to be adopted widely by global device manufacturers, network operators, semiconductor companies, software vendors and developers.

ESPOO, FINLAND, and SANTA CLARA, CALIF., Feb. 15, 2010 – In a significant development in the convergence of communications and computing, Intel Corporation and Nokia are merging their popular Moblin and Maemo software platforms. This will create a unified Linux-based platform that will run on multiple hardware platforms across a wide range of computing devices, including pocketable mobile computers, netbooks, tablets, mediaphones, connected TVs and in-vehicle infotainment systems. Called MeeGo, the open software platform will accelerate industry innovation and time-to-market for a wealth of new Internet-based applications and services and exciting user experiences. MeeGo-based devices from Nokia and other manufacturers are expected to be launched later this year.

This announcement strengthens the Nokia and Intel relationship, and builds on the companies’ broad strategic collaboration announced in June 2009. Intel and Nokia now invite participation in MeeGo from existing Maemo and Moblin global communities and across the communications and computing industries.

“Our vision for seamlessly communicating between computing devices from the home, auto, office or your pocket is taking a big step forward today with the introduction of MeeGo,” said Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini. “This is a foundational step in our evolving relationship with Nokia. The merging of these two important assets into an open source platform is critical toward providing a terrific experience across a variety of devices and gaining cross- industry support.”

“MeeGo will drive an even wider range of Internet computing and communication experiences for consumers, on new types of mobile devices,” said Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, CEO, Nokia. “Through open innovation, MeeGo will create an ecosystem that is second to none, drawing in players from different industries. It will support a range of business models across the value chain, building on the experience and expertise of Nokia, Intel and all those who will join us. Simply put, MeeGo heralds a new era of mobile computing.”

MeeGo blends the best of Maemo with the best of Moblin to create an open platform for multiple processor architectures. MeeGo builds on the capabilities of the Moblin core OS and its support for a wide range of device types and reference user experiences, combined with the momentum of Maemo in the mobile industry and the broadly adopted Qt application and UI framework for software developers.

MeeGo also unites the robust worldwide Maemo and Moblin applications ecosystems and open source communities. For developers, MeeGo extends the range of target device segments for their applications. Using Qt for application development means that they can write applications once and easily deploy them on MeeGo and across other platforms, for example, on Symbian.

The Ovi Store will be the channel to market for apps and content for all Nokia devices, including MeeGo and Symbian-based, with Forum Nokia providing developer support across all Nokia device platforms. The Intel AppUpSM Center will be the path to market for Intel-based MeeGo devices from other device manufacturers, with the Intel® AtomTM Developer Program providing support for applications targeting devices in a variety of categories.

The MeeGo software platform, running on high-performance devices, will deliver a range of Internet, computing and communication experiences, with visually rich graphics, multitasking and multimedia capabilities and the best application performance. Since MeeGo runs on multiple device types, people can keep their favorite applications when they change devices, so they are not locked into one kind of device or those from any individual manufacturer.

MeeGo Hosted by the Linux Foundation

The MeeGo software platform will be hosted by the Linux Foundation as a fully open source project, encouraging community participation in line with the best practices of the open source development model. Intel and Nokia invite the respective members of Maemo.org and Moblin.org to join the combined community at MeeGo.com, as well as encouraging wider participation from the communications, computing and related industries. Developers can begin writing applications for MeeGo in Qt immediately. The first release of MeeGo is targeted for the second quarter of this year.

Green home focuses on efficient exterior

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Wendy Koch’s green home uses passive solar design to maximize solar gain and well-insulated walls and windows to minimize energy needs. It will also have recycled materials, Energy Star appliances, CFL/LED light fixtures, dual-flush toilets, low-flow faucets, xeriscaping and a cistern for reusing water.

Source: Ralph Cunningham, FAIA, Cunningham/Quill Architects
Graphic By Frank Pompa, USA TODAY

Idol Gives Back results: The summary

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TimAndRyanx large Idol Gives Back results: The summary

Tim Urban has seen Better Days, but he won’t see any more of them on American Idol. After showing two weeks of improvement, the apparently Teflon one finally had the effects of a bad performance stick to him. Viewers didn’t find his Goo Goo Dolls cover very inspiring, and he was sent home.

Told you my 8-year-old was going to cry.

The two-hour Idol Gives Back special – which broadcast from the Idol theater as well as the Pasadena Civic Center and featured performances by Carrie Underwood, Elton John, the Black Eyed Peas, Jeff Beck and Joss Stone, Annie Lennox (stuck in London because of the Icelandic volcano) and Mary J. Blige, who sang Stairway to Heaven with a band that included Steve Vai, Orianthi, Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker and Randy Jackson – raised more than $15 million dollars.

Casey James’ flatline version of Don’t Stop earned him his first trip to the bottom three, where he was joined by Aaron Kelly. Next week, guest judge Shania Twain returns to mentor six contestants who’ll sing her songs.

How volcano chaos unfolded: in graphics

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The ash cloud produced by the eruption of a sub-glacial volcano in Iceland has brought chaos to the European air industry. Here we explain how and why the crisis developed.

slide 1 How volcano chaos unfolded: in graphics

Iceland is a country of fire and ice, home to several volcanoes and straddling two tectonic plates. The Eyjafjallajokull volcano began erupting in March. On 14 April, the eruption entered a new explosive phase which was to bring European airspace to a standstill.

slide 2 How volcano chaos unfolded: in graphics

The eruption threw thousands of tonnes of mineral ash into the air – forced higher by steam plumes created as glacial ice melted. Most of it was very fine particles which formed an ash cloud, rising 6-10km (20,000-35,000 feet) into the atmosphere.

slide 3 How volcano chaos unfolded: in graphics

Ash clouds pose great danger to aircraft and can lead to engine failure. The fine, abrasive particles erode metal, clog fuel and cooling systems and melt to form glassy deposits. Flight instruments, windows, lights, wings and cabin air supply can also be affected.

slide 4 How volcano chaos unfolded: in graphics

As the ash cloud spread south and east, air traffic controllers responded by closing airspace due to safety fears. First Scottish airspace closed, then the whole of UK airspace, then most of northern European airspace. It was the biggest disruption to flights since 9/11.

slide 5 How volcano chaos unfolded: in graphics

The cloud moved with the weather systems, some of it drifting over the Atlantic. Test flights allowed aviation authorities to identify safe thresholds of ash concentration in the atmosphere and most flights were given the all clear to resume on 21 April.

slide 6 How volcano chaos unfolded: in graphics

The knock-on effects have been huge: thousands of passengers have had to make their way home overland, air operators have lost millions of pounds a day and some trade sectors have ground to a halt. It is unclear for how long the volcano will continue to erupt.

Eurozone makes $40B Greek promise

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By Joshua Chaffin, Stanley Pignal and Kerin Hope, FT.com

partner.logo Eurozone makes $40B Greek promise

t1larg Eurozone makes $40B Greek promise

The Parthenon sits atop the Acropolis in Greece. Finance ministers from 16 countries unted under the euro currency pledged on Sunday to help prop the Greek economy from mounting debt.

(FT) — Eurozone members have made a commitment to providing up to €30bn in loans to Greece over the next year to help stave off a debt crisis that has roiled financial markets and posed the most serious challenge to the euro in its history.

Those funds were agreed during an extraordinary teleconference of eurozone finance ministers on Sunday and would be supplemented by contributions from the International Monetary Fund that could yield an additional €15bn (£13.2bn, $20.2bn) according to European officials.

The rates charged to Athens would be around 5 per cent for a three-year fixed loan — above the IMF’s standard lending rate but below those currently demanded by jittery investors. Two-year Greek bonds were last week trading at 7.45 per cent.

At a press conference in Brussels on Sunday, European officials presented the three-year package as the detailed commitment that financial markets have been demanding after a series of vague communiqués failed to ease the crisis.

“This is the step of clarification the markets are waiting for,” said Jean-Claude Juncker, the Luxembourg prime minister and eurogroup president. “It shows there is money behind this.”

IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said the eurozone agreement marked “an important step”, adding that the IMF was ready to contribute financing when necessary and would hold talks in Brussels Monday with the Commission and Greek authorities.

In Athens, George Papaconstantinou, Greek finance minister, made clear that the government had not yet asked for the money, and expressed confidence that the very existence of the package would allow his country to access debt markets at sustainable rates.

“We believe we can continue to borrow on the [international capital markets] without obstacles,” Mr Papaconstantinou said.

A key test of market sentiment will come on Monday, when Greece will attempt to raise €1.2bn through the sale of three and six-month paper.

Details of the rescue package were the result of months of sparring among eurozone members that revealed deep divisions about how to address the immediate crisis as well as broader disputes over economic governance.

One of the most contentious issues was interest rates, with Germany insisting that Greece pay “market rates” and France and other eurozone members pushing for easier terms.

Olli Rehn, Europe’s commissioner for economic and monetary affairs, insisted that the pricing agreed by the 16 eurozone members did not constitute a subsidy for Greece. Their contributions to any rescue would be proportional to their capital commitments to the European Central Bank, leaving Germany with the largest share.

Representatives from the Commission, the ECB and the Greek government will meet with the IMF on Monday to negotiate additional features of the package, including conditions that would be imposed on Athens and the exact size of the IMF contribution.

In Pakistani school, nuanced views for new nuclear balance

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By Paula Newton, CNN

story.beacon.house.school.cnn In Pakistani school, nuanced views for new nuclear balance

Students at a Pakistani school watch a 1980s film about a fictional nuclear attack. Would it change their perceptions?

Rawalpini, Pakistan (CNN) — As she set the stage for this week’s nuclear security summit, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made a clear and considered statement on India and Pakistan’s nuclear arsenals, saying they had “upset the balance of nuclear deterrent.”

But at Beacon House Middle School in Rawalpini, Pakistan, that new nuclear balance is a point of pride: Pakistan is one of only nine countries in the nuclear club. It can defend itself.

So, we wondered how Beacon House students would react to an old but influential film that President Reagan said helped persuade him to pursue nuclear peace. We invited them to watch “The Day After,” a 27-year-old film about a nuclear attack that changed the way a generation of Americans perceived the threat. Reagan said the movie depressed him, and now President Obama has carried on with Reagan’s legacy, making nuclear peace the centerpiece of his security summit in Washington.

Before they screened the movie, we asked these adolescents, the majority of whom are the daughters and sons of military officers, about their views on nuclear weapons.

Curious and attentive, 13-year-old Fatima Ahmed was the first to utter categorically that having nuclear weapons was “important for every country” and that she was gratified Pakistan had already developed them.

“If some country declares war on us, they will not declare war because they know that we have nuclear weapons,” added her 11-year-old classmate, Zakaria Amjad.

As the movie rolled, the students were riveted, especially as the nuclear missiles were launched from American bunkers in a thunderous chorus. They took in every minute, just like ten of millions of students had in classrooms throughout North America in the 1980s. As doomsday loomed in the U.S., the Beacon House students recoiled, their reaction seemingly no different than the generation before them.

Some said the movie had changed their minds about nuclear weapons.

“Before, I used to think that it did have many advantages, but now after watching all the destruction in this movie, I think that nuclear aren’t that good,” said Lyba Khan, 13.

“I thought that it could be used for defense, but after I saw the movie, I think it wreaks havoc with the country,” said Sultana Bassi, 13.

So far, so predictable. But following those comments, there were insightful calculations made and expressed by some of the other students.

“Nobody wins, it’s a lose-lose situation,” said Saadullah Zia, 13. But when asked whether Pakistan should keep its nuclear weapons, he added: “Some of the countries right now have it, so if we give it up, nothing will happen. Instead, India will be more powerful than us.”

These students have grasped all too well the dilemma of the nuclear arms race. The Cold War might as well be the Ice Age to these Pakistani students. The political and strategic calculations have changed dramatically, just as Clinton had noted.

These students are barely teenagers, but they are the future leaders of Pakistan, and they offered some remarkable reflections on the movie.

“It’s waking us up. It’s telling us that we can all die, in a glimpse of an eye if one atomic bomb is used in our country,” said Fatima Taj, 13, before adding that she still would not like to see Pakistan give up its nuclear weapons.

Academics write about it, but here, these students are living it: The nuclear surge. It’s the tipping point where for all the best intentions of advocates or a thought-provoking film, the balance of nuclear terror has changed.

As 13-year-old Anam Minto honestly and bluntly observed, “I don’t think that this movie changed my opinion, and it made me think that we should have nuclear weapons.”

Obama hosts two-day summit on nuclear security

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By the CNN Wire Staff

story.obama.afp.gi Obama hosts two day summit on nuclear security

President Obama’s nuclear strategy has been criticized by Republicans as too weak.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Summit is centerpiece of Obama objective to prevent spread of nuclear weapons
  • Leaders from 46 countries are coming to Washington for the two-day summit
  • Obama signed treaty with Russia last week to reduce nuclear stockpiles of both
  • Obama holding meetings with some of the visiting heads of state starting Sunday

(CNN) — President Obama hosts leaders from 46 countries for a two-day nuclear security summit starting Monday that will focus on how to better safeguard weapons materials, both old and new, to keep them out of the hands of terrorists.

The gathering at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in the nation’s capital is considered an unprecedented effort to rally global action on securing vulnerable nuclear materials.

It also is the centerpiece of a major Obama objective aimed at preventing the spread of nuclear weapons and technology.

As the summit begins, the United States is negotiating with the four other permanent members of the United Nations Security Council on tougher sanctions against Iran over its nuclear ambitions.

“The central focus of this nuclear summit is the fact that the single biggest threat to U.S. security, both short term, medium term and long term, would be the possibility of a terrorist organization obtaining a nuclear weapon,” Obama said Sunday, appearing with South African President Jacob Zuma in Washington.

“This is something that could change the security landscape in this country and around the world for years to come,” Obama said. “If there was ever a detonation in New York City, or London, or Johannesburg, the ramifications — economically, politically and from a security perspective — would be devastating. We know that organizations like al Qaeda are in the process of trying to secure nuclear weapons or other weapons of mass destruction and would have no compunction at using them.”

Obama signed a new treaty with Russia last week to reduce the nuclear stockpiles of both nations, and his administration issued a revised U.S. nuclear arms strategy intended to reinforce the nation’s nuclear deterrent while isolating terrorists and rogue states that fail to comply with international regulations.

It all fits together as an ambitious effort to mobilize a unified global effort against nuclear proliferation, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Defense Secretary Robert Gates said in interviews broadcast Sunday.

“We want to get the world’s attention focused where we think it needs to be, with these continuing efforts by al Qaeda and others to get just enough nuclear material to cause terrible havoc, destruction, and loss of life somewhere in the world,” Clinton told the ABC program “This Week.”

Of particular concern are older nuclear weapons and materials that aren’t safeguarded as well as they should be, particularly in Russia and other states of the former Soviet Union, Clinton said on the NBC program “Meet the Press.”

It used to be considered a U.S.-Soviet issue, Clinton said, rather than the high international priority “we intend to make it in the coming week.”

“Unfortunately, we have a situation in which there is a lot of loose nuclear material around the world,” Obama said Sunday. “And so the central focus of this summit is getting the international community on a path in which we are locking down that nuclear material in a very specific time frame, with a specific work plan.”

South Africa, he said, is a moral leader on the nuclear issue, since it began and then dismantled a nuclear program.

The summit’s goal is to get an agreement and working plan on how each of the participating countries will control nuclear materials or otherwise prevent their spread, Clinton said on the CBS program “Face the Nation.”

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs announced last week that nations participating in the summit would be Algeria, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, the Czech Republic, Egypt, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, India, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway, Pakistan, Philippines, Poland, the Republic of Korea, the Russian Federation, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Switzerland, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Thailand, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, Ukraine and Vietnam.

In addition, the United Nations, the European Union and the International Atomic Energy Agency will be represented at the summit, Gibbs said.

Obama also is holding bilateral meetings with some of the visiting heads of state, which started Sunday afternoon with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, followed by President Nursultan Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan, South African President Jacob Zuma, Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani of Pakistan and acting President Goodluck Jonathan of Nigeria.

Obama’s nuclear strategy has been criticized by Republicans as too weak in the face of threats and defiance by Iran and North Korea.

“While the treaty [with Russia] may be in the right direction and the nuclear summit that’s coming to town may be an impressive group of people, the nuclear posture statement that the president put out is troublesome to me,” Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee said on the “Fox News Sunday” program. ” I mean, it takes away the ambiguity about our use of nuclear power. Ambiguity in foreign policy is sometimes very useful.”

On Sunday, Iran’s state-run Islamic Republic News Agency reported that Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said the Obama administration “poses a threat to international peace” and is “wicked and untrustworthy.”

Khamenei made the remarks Sunday in a meeting with the Armed Forces chief of staff and other top military officials, according to IRNA. According to the news agency, Khamenei said Obama had recently threatened Iran with nuclear weapons and called for Iran’s military to prepare itself.

Khamenei apparently was referring to last week’s announced shift in U.S. nuclear strategy, in which the administration said it would swear off developing new generations of nuclear weapons and would not use its existing arsenal to attack non-nuclear states that are in compliance with nonproliferation agreements.

Gates made clear Sunday that the new policy left Iran vulnerable to a U.S. nuclear attack because Iran refuses to comply with nonproliferation agreements.

“All options are on the table” regarding Iran and North Korea, which also defies international regulations, Gates said on the CBS program.

Clinton defended the Obama administration’s policy of seeking a unified international response to Iran’s nuclear ambitions, including stronger U.N. sanctions.

The policy, which broke with President George W. Bush’s nonnegotiation stance, has exposed Iran’s intransigence, Clinton said on the NBC program.

Now, with the U.N. negotiations on tougher sanctions, “the Iranians have been beating down the doors of every country in the world to try to avoid” a new sanctions resolution, Clinton said.

However, when asked whether Iran had the capability now to develop a nuclear weapon, Clinton avoided a direct answer, saying it was unclear.

Gates had no hesitation, declaring immediately that “it’s our judgment here they are not nuclear capable.”

“We’re doing everything we can to try and keep Iran from developing nuclear weapons,” Gates said, adding that there probably would be another Security Council resolution with tougher sanctions on Iran.

He called such a resolution important on its own and as a legal platform for others to take their own steps.

“At the end of the day, Iran has to decide that not having nuclear weapons is a better defense strategy than having them,” Gates said.

DATING TIPS FOR MEN – WHAT DO YOU SAY?

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MoneyAndLawOfAttraction3D DATING TIPS FOR MEN – WHAT DO YOU SAY?

One area that most people find it challenging when it comes to attracting women, you know exactly what to say to a woman to feel attraction. Too many men kill any possibility that you may have with a woman, simply because they do not know what to say. You should be able to talk to women in a way that not only gets her attention, but is also based attraction for YOU. So, what are some things to say to a woman 1. asked what she does for fun. This is a great way to a relationship of attraction and how you can find at least one thing in common you have with her. Then you can start on its employees have a good time, he explains what he does for fun and tell you how to do the same. 2. I ask for a little bit 'of good memories. Now, this sentence is not possible as you want. But her memory will be given a good feeling well at that time. And how you feel unwell at the moment, it is with you. This willlt; strong> 3. Ask what the worst pick-up line ever heard. This is a fun, because you're the guys who try and, consequently, the distances that kind husband. Using this is a great way to introduce humor into the conversation, while at the same time, making her feel as if you are not one of those men who simply try to score. These are just suggestions based on what you said one woman. You really know how to use the conversation your favor if you want to succeed with women. The more time you spend working on this area of your life, the better the results. Want to know more about talk to women Get Your FREE Report that the details of the 7 main concepts need to know attract and seduce . Learn how to get the girl and

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