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Friday, July 8, 2011

Pioneer Adds Computer Speakers


By Lisa Johnston -- TWICE, 7/7/2011

S-MM751RU

The S-MM751RU has a $129 suggested retail.


Long Beach, Calif. - Pioneer Electronics entered the computer speaker market with two products on Thursday.
The manufacturer introduced a 2.0 system (the S-MM301 for $49) and a 2.1 system (the S-MM751RU for $129).

The S-MM301 features triple-coil drivers, USB connectivity, metal grilles, built-in controls and a compact design meant for travel, while the S-MM751RU adds a dedicated subwoofer and more power.

"Our goal with these speakers is to bring that same Ăą€˜larger-than-life' Pioneer home audio experience onto the desktop," said Chris Walker, A/V marketing and product planning director for Pioneer's home entertainment division. "These new computer speakers bring that experience closer for those consumers who love to listen to their music collection from their laptops and home computers."

The S-MM751RU comes with a control puck that enables users to control the volume and play/pause/rewind/forward. It uses Maxx Bass Dynamic Sound technology, Pioneer said, with DSP Bass Enhancement to increase dynamic range. The system is rated to handle a total of 40 watts (20 watt subwoofer, 10 watts for each satellite).

Other features of the 2.1 system include an SD card slot, USB port and a line-in input.

Both are currently available

Bangladesh Opposition Leads 2nd Day of Strikes


Police arrest an activist of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) during a protest in Dhaka. A 48-hour countrywide strike called by the main opposition BNP and its ally Jamaat-e-Islami, a radical Islamist group, continues on Thursday, July 7, 2011
Police arrest an activist of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) during a protest in Dhaka. A 48-hour countrywide strike called by the main opposition BNP and its ally Jamaat-e-Islami, a radical Islamist group, continues on Thursday, July 7, 2011
An anti-government strike has continued for a second day in Bangladesh, where opposition members are protesting a constitutional amendment they say will unfairly help the ruling party stay in power.

Schools and businesses remained closed across the country Thursday, and the strike continued to affect transportation.

In the capital, Dhaka, 12,000 security personnel were deployed a day after police say they arrested at least 21 protesters.

At least 20 people were injured Wednesday as security personnel and demonstrators clashed in several parts of the country.  A senior leader of the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party, Zainal Abdin Farooque, was hospitalized with head injuries, and police arrested several BNP members.

Home Minister Sahara Khatun has warned the government will do whatever is necessary to maintain order.

The BNP and its allies, including the Islamist group Jamaat-e-Islami, are protesting last month's parliamentary approval of a constitutional amendment that scraps a system of holding national elections under a non-partisan caretaker government.

Lawmakers from Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's ruling Awami League party passed the amendment in a June 30 vote boycotted by the BNP.

Opposition members accuse Hasina of amending the constitution to keep her party in power through fraud, rather than allowing non-partisan technocrats to oversee Bangladesh's next elections.

The country's supreme court has ruled the system of installing 90-day interim administrators to supervise elections is unconstitutional.
Some information for this report was provided by AP and AFP.

Hrithik Roshan abused online!

Hrithik Roshan Bollywood actor Hrithik Roshan arrives at the International Indian Film Academy Awards (IIFAs) at the Sheffield Hallam Arena on June 9, 2007 in Sheffield, England.


Published: Friday, Jul 8, 2011, 11:14 IST 
By Soumyadipta Banerjee | Place: Mumbai | Agency: DNA




Most celebrities when abused onlinego into a shell or get into a verbal tu tu main main with the haters or trolls (nicknames for those who indulge in abusing online), but actor Hrithik Roshan is probably the first Bollywood actor to respond to an abuse in an unique way on Twitter.
One of his followers, who’s known to post abusive messages at celebrities, called the actor ‘dumba$$’ in response to an interview that was put up online. ‘Ek adha emotion apni acting me bhi laa dumbass!’ the follower posted on Hrithik’s page. The actor instantly acknowledged it by retweeting it and said, ‘Am trying. Will try harder...love.’
This development was unlike any of Bollywood celebrities in the past. Most chose to go offline when faced with asituation like that, the recent being actor Shah Rukh Khan.
When contacted, Roshan admitted that he has been subjected to abuses online, but decided to face it instead of resorting to knee-jerk reactions. “There are some people who might not say things that you like. Some might be a little too harsh. But how you choose to react to a situation is completely in your hands. I am a very non-reactive person that way. It is very hard to get me to react harshly to anybody,” says Roshan.
The star says that it is really hard to get him angry. “It hurts, but that doesn’t mean that you hurt people back. Nor do I think that fighting or getting angry solves any problem.One needs to think logical when you want to solvea problem,” he adds.
It is the same belief that holds him in stead during extreme criticism. “You need to accept criticism with a smile. People criticise you because they love you and they want you to do better. If you want to do well in life this is one thing that you must take positively. Criticism has always prompted me to strive better and outdo myself,” he says.

Fans, stars, Hollywood say farewell to Harry Potter

LONDON | Fri Jul 8, 2011 5:06am EDT

(Reuters) - Thousands of fans braved rain and battled security restrictions in London's Trafalgar Square on Thursday to say farewell to the boy wizard Harry Potter at the world premiere of the final movie in the record-breaking series.
"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2" is the eighth instalment -- and the first in 3D -- of a franchise that has generated more public excitement and media hype than any other in living memory.
The silver screen adventures of Harry, Ron and Hermione have been a magic pot of gold for Hollywood studio Warner Bros, with the seven films released so far grossing $6.4 billion in ticket sales and billions more from DVDs and merchandise.
For a generation of Potter fans, the movies have extended the wizarding world created by British author J.K. Rowling in her seven-book saga which began in 1997 and concluded in 2007.
More than 400 million copies have been sold around the globe, making Rowling the first billionaire author and providing a huge support base upon which the films were built.
Six-foot-high fences blocked off entrance to Trafalgar Square for hundreds who arrived too late to get their hands on the red wristbands, which allowed access to where stars walked the red carpet among thousands of screaming Pottermaniacs.
"I'm just going to stand here all night on this little ledge," said 16-year-old Lauren Kent, who arrived too late to acquire one of the prized wristbands and was perched at the base of a column across from the square.
Thousands of die-hard fans lucky enough to make it into the packed square -- some in full regalia from the fictional Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry -- screamed out the names of characters and those of stars such as Daniel Radcliffe as they walked the red carpet past a giant TV screen to a raised platform where the main cast spoke to cheering fans.
"We've grown up in the Harry Potter generation -- I read the first book when I was five so now it's weird that it's coming to an end... like the end of childhood," said Rhys, an 18-year-old who braved the rain in the central London square watched over by the towering statue of British naval hero Admiral Nelson.
The young actors strolled among the fans, hundreds of journalists and cameras and made an emotional appearance on the platform in front of the throng of admirers.
"I don't think the end of the story happens tonight," Radcliffe said to cheers and later tears from the crowd.
Rowling joked that Thursday's premiere was the closest she's come to considering penning another Potter novel.
The actors told Reuters that -- like their fans -- they too have struggled to come to grips with a post-Potter world, despite being A-list stars with huge fortunes.
"I'll just miss being Hermione and getting to live her life and in that world and getting to bring to life a set of books that I myself loved so much," a short-haired Emma Watson told Reuters television after strolling the red carpet in a champagne-coloured gown with a sheer top.
The actors who were cast in their roles aged between nine and 11, have all agonized over breaking with the Potter films.
The 22-year-old Rupert Grint, who plays Potter's sidekick Ron Weasley, felt he was stepping into the real world from a kind of bubble that has enveloped a portion of his life.
"It's hard for me to remember life before this and for it to come down to this two-hour and 10 minute film...I don't know -- it's very strange for me," he told Reuters television.
DEATH AND DESTRUCTION
Consistent with the gradual trend toward darker content as the franchise progressed, "Deathly Hallows - Part 2" climaxes with an intense battle at Hogwarts between good and evil.
Buildings are flattened, wizards and witches die and Harry steels himself for the final showdown with his evil nemesis Lord Voldemort, played by a snake-like Ralph Fiennes who called his character a "high definition villain."
Radcliffe, 21, who has played Harry Potter throughout the last decade and is now working on Broadway, appeared on the red carpet dressed in a tailored grey suit. He told Reuters TV that the splashy London premiere was a "fitting send off. It feels right. It feels like we're doing justice not only to what is a fantastic film but a fantastic series.
"It's like I'm a different actor in it," Radcliffe said of the movie. "It's the only time I've watched a 'Harry Potter' film and gone: 'Yes, I'm pleased with my performance'."
Whether critics agree remains to be seen, with most reviews coming out after the premiere.
The Daily Telegraph, however, featured an article by Philip Womack which described Deathly Hallows - Part 2 as "monumental cinema, awash with gorgeous tones, and carrying an ultimate message that will resonate with every viewer, young or old: there is darkness in all of us, but we can overcome it."
The movie opens in some countries on July 13, and in the key British and U.S. markets on July 15.
Rowling's wizarding world will not disappear altogether, however. She recently unveiled Pottermore, a website allowing fans to interact with the characters and storylines, and will finally retail the stories as ebooks exclusively on the site.
Perhaps British actor Alan Rickman -- who has played sneering Professor Severus Snape since the very first film -- summed up the Potter phenomenon best on the night.
"This thing has a beginning, a middle and an end. That's why it's a good story and this is the end.

Sri Lankan Premier League Postponed



The Sri Lankan Premier League Twenty20 cricket tournament has been postponed and will be replaced by a provincial tournament featuring six local teams, an official from Sri Lanka Cricket said Friday.
The buildup to the SLPL, which was scheduled for July 19 to August 4, was dogged by problems, ranging from India’s refusal to let its national players participate to the dissolution of the Sri Lankan cricket administration last Friday.
“We are not playing the SLPL,” said Yamuna Pitigala, Sri Lanka Cricket’s public relations and marketing secretary.
She said the event could be played in August, but added that even this was unlikely. It certainly is, given that the Australian team is set to tour Sri Lanka from August 6 to mid-September.
Ms. Pitigala said the premier league would be replaced by a tournament starting on July 20 and involving only local players. International stars including Pakistan’s Shahid Afridi and Chris Gayle of the West Indies had previously been slated to play in the SLPL. The winner of the provincial tournament will go on to play in the September qualifiers for the Champions League T20 in Hyderabad, India, Ms. Pitigala said. It was initially planned that the winner of the SLPL would go to the qualifiers for the CLT20.
Ms. Pitigala didn’t say why the Sri Lankan version of the glitzy four-year-old Indian Premier League  had been postponed, but Sri Lankan cricket has come under heavy fire in recent weeks, and not just from outside the country. Wicket-keeper batsman and former captain Kumar Sangakkara, who is currently touring with the national team in England, launched a scathing attack on Sri Lanka’s cricket administrators during an impassioned speech at Lord’s on Monday.
But the main cause behind the derailment of the league came from Sri Lanka’s powerful northern neighbor, India, after cricket administrators there refused to allow 12 national players – including Munaf Patel, R. Ashwin and Irfan Pathan – to join the tournament.
There were reports that the Board of Control for Cricket in India believed its bĂȘte noir, Lalit Modi, was connected to the SLPL through the event’s marketing partner – Singapore-based Somerset Entertainment Ventures – but the  BCCI hasn’t issued an official statement on the matter.
Mr. Modi, the former commissioner of the IPL, has been at loggerheads with India’s cricket authorities since he was ousted from his post amid allegations of tax avoidance and misappropriation of funds. He denies the charges and also says he has no connection with the SLPL.
Whatever the BCCI’s reasons, the Sri Lankan league was doomed without the involvement of Indian players — the gateway for broadcasters to the Indian market — and was left without a major broadcaster.
The BCCI has been criticized for not releasing players, especially as Sri Lankan stars have been heavily involved in the Indian Premier League. But the SLPL is a far cry from the IPL, the world’s leading annual T20 cricket event.
Given the problems that Mr. Sangakkara highlighted in his Lord’s speech, along with Channel 4’s recently broadcast “Killing Fields” documentary showing footage of horrific crimes allegedly carried out by government forces during the civil war, Sri Lanka needs to address far more pressing matters than a second-rate T20 tournament in an already over-crowded cricket calendar.

HP fires back at Oracle as companies wrangle over confidentiality

Updated: 07/07/2011 10:21:19 PM PDT



Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) returned fire at a major tech rival Thursday, filing court papers that accused Oracle (ORCL) of grandstanding and declared HP's willingness to air previously sealed details of a lawsuit over Oracle's decision to stop making software for an HP computer system.
HP also made it clear that a legal settlement with former CEO Mark Hurd will be
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a key point in the case, adding that his "credibility" will be "very much at issue." Hurd, who was forced to resign from HP last summer, now is co-president at Oracle.
The companies seem to be daring each other to reveal terms of HP's confidential settlement with Hurd, negotiated after HP filed an earlier suit alleging that Hurd's knowledge of HP's corporate secrets might be an unfair advantage in his new job.
In its court filing, HP told a Santa Clara County judge that it is "more than willing" to disclose provisions of the Hurd settlement related to the current dispute. But HP also argued that both companies had unspecified reasons to keep other portions secret.
Oracle responded by urging the full settlement to be revealed.
"Oracle is not interested in withholding anything from the public," it said in a statement.
The two tech giants worked closely together for years, sharing thousands of customers who bought Oracle's business software to run on HP computer systems. They became bitter rivals after Oracle entered the hardware business by buying computer maker Sun Microsystems last year.
Their latest fight was sparked by Oracle's announcement that it will no longer provide new versions of software for HP server computers that use the Intel(INTC) processor Itanium. Oracle says it believes Intel plans to discontinue the chip, which both Intel and HP deny.
HP is arguing in court that Oracle has a legal obligation to continue making software for Itanium, under provisions of the Hurd settlement that committed the companies to continue previous cooperative efforts. In court papers last week, Oracle argued that the settlement did not impose any obligations regarding Itanium. Oracle's papers, which attacked HP for filing some of its arguments under seal, also contained a recounting of recent sore points between the companies, including Hurd's departure.
Oracle's filing was a "cheap shot" and filled with "misleading and inflammatory accusations," HP attorney Robert Cooper wrote in response. He also complained that Oracle's filing sought to belittle what he called Hurd's "serious misconduct" and HP's handling of his resignation.
Hurd resigned after a contractor accused him of sexual harassment; HP said the accusation was unsubstantiated but it found irregularities in Hurd's expenses.

Apple's app downloads race ahead, surpass 15 bln

A new in-store app is seen on an iPhone at the Apple store in New York May 23, 2011. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

A new in-store app is seen on an iPhone at the Apple store in New York May 23, 2011.
Credit: Reuters/Shannon Stapleton

(Reuters) - Apple Inc (AAPL.O) customers downloaded more than 15 billion applications in the past three years, the company said on Thursday, releasing figures that suggest the rate of downloads is sharply accelerating.
The latest figures from Apple show that customers have downloaded around 5 billion apps so far this year, considering the company said in January that it had just passed the 10 billion download mark.
It took roughly 2-1/2 years to reach 10 billion downloads -- but much of the period was spent without the popular iPad tablet, which has driven the demand for apps.
Apple has paid developers more than $2.5 billion to develop for its online store, which currently contains around 425,000 apps for iPads, iPhones and iPod touches, it said. (Reporting by Paul Thomasch; Editing by Derek Caney)

 
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