Funny Video Forex Gadget Hi-tech

Funny Video Forex Gadget Hi-tech

Archive for the ‘youtube’ Category

Love it or hate it , there’s no doubt that “citizen journalism” the trend where ‘regular people’ record video, snap photos, and tweet live from breaking news events is quickly gaining steam. One of the biggest catalysts for the trend has been YouTube, which gives people an easy way to upload and share the video footage they shoot from the heat of the action. And while we’ve seen some media sites, like CNN’s iReport, attempt to take advantage of this user submitted content, many news sites haven’t found a good way to integrate it. Today, YouTube is launching a new application that looks to make this easy for all media organizations. Dubbed YouTube Direct, the new open source application will allow news orgs to integrate a video upload tool directly into their sites, where they can accept and review user uploaded footage. The new tool will allow news organizations to screen video uploads as they come in, and use the best clips for their broadcasts and on their websites. Of course, news organizations will still be responsible for actually curating the content to ensure that it’s accurate, which isa task that will require additional manpower for the more popular news sites. All video content uploaded through these tools will be available on YouTube proper as well. My biggest concern with this kind of reporting is always credibility oftentimes you’ll come across videos on YouTube that seem like they’re relevant to breaking news, but are unable to determine who uploaded the clip. Fortunately, as an open source tool YouTube Direct allows organizations to customize their submission process. Hopefully the more credible ones will require (or at least encourage) uploaders to leave their contact information, so that fact checkers can follow up on their video reports to ensure their validity. News organizations aren’t the only sites looking to accept user generated videos, eitherYouTube Direct will work that any site that wants to upload video content, so we should probably expect to see some more creative uses in the future. The feature is not live quite yet, but should be up by tomorrow morning. Update : You can see an example implementation at 7NEWS of Boston (scroll towards the bottom of the page). Image by quinn.anya Crunch Network : CrunchBase the free database of technology companies, people, and investors

afce97ccf8camera.png 150x112 YouTube Direct Gives News Orgs A Way To Accept User Submitted Videos

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YouTube Direct Gives News Orgs A Way To Accept User-Submitted Videos

I am currently in Miyazaki /Japan, attending the Infinity Ventures Summit (IVS), one of Asia’s most prestigious web industry events. Organizing VC company Infinity Venture Partners reserved some hours of the program to give a total of twelve 12 Japanese start-ups the chance to present their services onstage to a panel of judges and an international crowd of over 300 people. A speech recognition and transcribing service called Moji Moji TV was selected as “Best Startup” of the IVS Fall 2009 Launch Pad (that ended just now). Here are short profiles of all the services that demo’d at the event. (Please note some of the companies have yet to launch homepages in English, but some do offer globalized services, too.) One Winner and five runners-up: Moji Moji TV by Catalog (winner of the demo pad) Best of show went to Moji Moji TV , which appears to be a very powerful speech recognition and transcribing service for videos launched in private alpha last month. The engine supports Japanese only, but English and Chinese versions are in the works. Moji Moji extracts audio from a video (self-made movies, YouTube clips etc.) and automatically displays the spoken words as text, which then can be edited by the users. The text can be used to tag and sub movies, and it’s also possible to search for certain words or expressions within them. There’s also an iPhone app called Shabetter that automatically transcribes what you say into the iPhone mic and posts it to Twitter. More information on Moji Moji TV in English can be found here . This video (in English) shows how Moji Moji TV works: V-Sido by Wataru Yoshizaki (runner-up) Most robots used for entertainment, in research and other areas have one common problem: They can only move in a slow, mechanical and chopping motion. Developed by robot fanatic Wataru Yamazaki, V-Sido is a software-based, real-time control system for humanoids that helps make them move smoother. Spysee by Ohma (second runner-up) Spysee is a person search engine whose English version launched at TechCrunch 50 this year (Spysee was a demo pit company ). A Chinese version is in the works. The service pulls information and media on individuals from the web and presents them on a person-specific page (example: Barack Obama ). Spysee’s original Japanese version went live last year and has gone through several iterations since. One example is the way Spysee monetizes its service now: It allows users to donate real money to individuals who need help in funding their personal goals ( Cheering Spysee ), getting a cut of the donation in return. m-police by milog (third runner-up) m-police is a fully automatized site monitoring system that’s able to detect profanity, insults and “legally problematic” sentences on the web and subdivides relevant expressions into 16 different categories. The company says about 5% of all posts in the Japanese blogosphere can be regarded as being relevant for m-police, and 22% of those can be called potentially dangerous. Some Japanese social networks employ up to 300 “surveillance officers” to keep their sites clean. m-police can push down costs from 6 Yen (7 cent) per post monitored by human beings to 3 Yen. AEGISGUARD by KLab (fourth runner-up) AEGISGUARD is anti-virus software that’s not only free to download but also completely available in English. The main purpose of the program is to protect your important files and folders from viruses (of which more than 5 million exist today) and malware by granting only white-listed programs access to them. AEGISGUARD developer KLab says this way, unknown or new viruses are effectively fenced out. The solution can be installed with conventional, blacklist-based antivirus software on the same PC. Symphonic Motion by AITIA (fourth runner-up) Symphonic Motion is an augmented reality-based entertainment engine that’s not designed for mobile devices for a change but rather for large-sized displays (that can be several meters in diameter). The technology uses “physical” AR, meaning you can get in front of the camera and move CG elements you see on the screen around by moving your arms, for example. Maker AITIA is marketing the solution as interactive, fun digital signage applications to corporations, exhibitions and event organizers ( demo movie ). The six other demo companies: OpenSocial Host by HeartRails OpenSocial Host is an integrated platform for developing, distributing and managing OpenSocial applications, e.g. for sites like MySpace , hi5 or Japan’s biggest social network Mixi .(which opened its site for external developers back in September this year). OpenSocial Host supports mobile apps, offers paid and free options, but it’s Japanese only. Location Amplifier by Koozyt The key idea behind Location Amplifier is to “amplify” the real world by pushing “rich”, location-based content onto mobile phones, for example location-based games or guides. At IVS, maker Koozyt demonstrated how a person’s movements can be tracked even inside buildings (where GPS regularly fails). It’s also possible to use Location Amp to walk from exhibit to exhibit in a museum and let your mobile device tell you what you’re currently looking at ( demo movies ). The technology is based on PlaceEngine , a service that relies on Wi-Fi to estimate your location, even when there’s no GPS. Zeke CMS Social Game Kit by Ubiquitous Entertainment Ubiquitous Entertainment CEO Ryo Shimizu demo’d Zeke CMS Social Game Kit , a (Japanese-only) platform for developing games to be deployed in social networks like Facebook or Japan’s biggest social network Mixi . One of the games that was built using the system is called “Tokyo Treasure”, a scavenger hunt, which combines AR elements with the real world, using the iPhone camera (”It’s game over when you’re tagged!”). Droidget AR by GClue Droidget AR was described as the world’s first widget framework for augmented reality services on Android. These widgets can be “picked up” at the physical place where they’ve been left by other people and used instantly, without the user having to access the web. Example: When you’re in a restaurant, switch on the camera on your Android phone, point it at the door and click on the AR tag you see to instantly access the menu ( demo movies ). Jitsu Kuukan Toushi Keitai by KDDI au one Labs KDDI , Japans second biggest telecommunications company, presented an augmented reality application that launched in June this year for a limited number of Japanese cell phones. Their Jitsu Kuukan Toushi Keitai app (which roughly translates to: cell phone that allows real space transparency) works just like many of the other mobile AR apps out there. It uses GPS, the phone’s camera, 6-axis sensor and screen to locate where you are and point you to where you want to go through tags. But if you point the phone to a wall or a human being, you can also “see through” them, meaning the app will display tags located behind them. This video shows how Toushi Keitai’s “see-through” function works: Odette Solution by ORSO Odette Solution lets you create mobile Flash sites (nearly 100% of Japanese mobile phones have Flash Lite installed). The Japanese-only, cloud-based ASP service offers various templates whose elements you can edit in various ways, for example by drag and drop. But you can also create mobile web pages by putting together different elements. Odette Solution will be launched next spring. Crunch Network : CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

alt : http://www.aitia.co.jp/showcase/movie/restir.movhttp://www.aitia.co.jp/showcase/movie/restir.mov

89e8e2dd1bl 2009.jpg 150x112 Infinity Ventures Summit In Miyazaki, Japan: 12 Demos From Japanese Startups

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Infinity Ventures Summit In Miyazaki, Japan: 12 Demos From Japanese Startups

You can rail all you want at Joe Lieberman– we all do– but it’s like feeding a troll; he loves the attention and the sense of martyrdom. And getting the Democrats to kick him out of the caucus if he joins the Republican filibuster of health care? Fat chance. Mary Landrieu? As usual she’s more concerned about what her corporate donors and K Street lobbyist pals think than what her constituents want– especially when she’s not up for re-election for 5 years. Baucus? Nelson? Same thing. They each figure everyone’s attention span is short enough so that nothing will matter when they face the voters in Montana and Nebraska next… respectively in 2014 and 2012. No, as we’ve been telling you all year, there’s really only one weak link worth trying to beat into submission: Arkansas’ corrupt and reactionary– don’t those two terms always seem to find a way of cuddling up with each other?– senior senator, Blanche Lincoln. Blue America has run TV spots against Lincoln all summer and fall and she’s watched her re-elect numbers dwindle down to a place where if a serious opponent– i.e., one with big bucks to buy advertising– jumped into the race, she would lose. She may lose anyway, even though her current opponents would probably do better if they toured together as a carnival freak show. Yesterday the RNC started their own campaign against her , trying to push her to vote with Republicans– as she so often does– and against health care reform. This week Blue America and our friends at Cannonball Productions have a brand new ad for Arkansas voters to look at– the fourth in our series– and the message is very different from the Republicans’. By all means, be the first to view it– and please consider making a contribution of our Campaign for Health Care Choice page so we can run it deep and wide. More on Senate Races

20b58f6311incoln.jpg 150x102 Howie Klein: Can We Afford To Let Blanche Lincoln Stop Health Care Reform Dead In Its Tracks?

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Howie Klein: Can We Afford To Let Blanche Lincoln Stop Health Care Reform Dead In Its Tracks?

A few weeks ago, I had a horrifying PC moment. For the first time in twelve years of Internet surfing, a terrible virus oddly named Total Security disabled my computer. No programs would open. Total Security left me in a total mess. The price for excising the virus was $200. Since my XP computer was almost six years old, I thought that seemed excessive because I could get a new unit for about $700. During my initial panic, Geek Squad Guru Julio Sagastume of West Hollywood’s Best Buy kindly devoted lots of telephone time for free as I described my woes. Later he and colleague David McClay painstakingly advised me, and after shopping around I bought a Dell 3055 Inspiron computer. Julio and David also assured me all the files on my virus-laden XP computer would be transferred — disease free — for $99.99 Then I brought the new PC home, and suddenly there were problems. Understand, I’ve had computers for over twenty years, so I know how to set them up. However, Windows 7 didn’t accept my HP LaserJet 1012 printer or Creative Cam Live! Pro! webcam drivers, nor my Transparent Language WordAce! German dictionary and True Fonts program, all on CD. Oddly, it did embrace my Altec headset and Magic Spin DVD burner, both bought at the same time as my webcam in 2006. And the DVD burner CD driver said it was for Windows 98 ! Windows 7 also admitted my Movie Magic Screenwriter program, my Translation Language German tutorial and — hold onto your hats — my Microsoft ‘97 Office CD. Before I’m disparaged for not upgrading, I found no discernible difference in basic word processing over the so-called improved years, so my program suits me just fine. More about the need to “upgrade” equipment in a moment. Re the Windows 7 look itself, I was dismayed all my programs downloaded, including Mozilla , IE 8 , AOL 9.5 and Skype suddenly appeared in miniscule font size. As a comparison I turned on my newly cleansed XP computer and everything seemed fine. However, on Windows 7 if I changed display settings, some pages appeared better, while others’ data drifted off the screen. Plus websites had overlapping type or showed words meant to be on one line suddenly hanging orphaned onto another all by themselves. This occurred on my personal website (which looks fine on XP ) and also on professionally produced sites such as HuffPost . So, I called Dell and was pleasantly surprised their offshore employees were mostly helpful. I’m not xenophobic, but I’ve suffered over several years dealing with folks who don’t quite understand our language. Very polite but maddening to deal with. With Dell I got good support even with the 12 hour time difference. A wonderful supervisor took over my computer by remote control. He saw what I was dealing with and I asked: “Why should I keep this computer? It’s one thing to have to switch between the new one and XP for the occasional webcam use or printing, but Internet surfing is constant, and my other programs look horrible.” At first he seemed baffled, but then switched to the troubleshoot area of Windows 7 and found problems in “Add-ons” on Skype , AOL and Internet Explorer . Suddenly the fonts were better on my programs, but the Internet problems persisted. Explorer was far better than Mozilla , but neither pleased me. He determined in our 3-hour session it might be due to my machine’s 64-bit configuration. Haven’t a clue what he did, but he did something with Explorer and then affixed the Explorer rendering engine onto Mozilla . In short, I now have a small icon in the lower right of my screen, and if I don’t like the way a Mozilla page looks — 2/3 of the time — I click on the icon and it changes to the Explorer engine while staying on Mozilla , with its bookmarks and other tabs. Everything now looks great. Strangely, when I go onto Internet Explorer 8 directly there are still problems, and I have no idea what version of Explorer or what engine he used to fix Mozilla’s look. But it’s better than it was, and, while not perfect, I’m able to function with more power and speed, while still able to use the XP as a sturdy back-up. But why does this problem exist? Is there something wrong with Mozilla and Internet Explorer re Windows 7 ? Why does downloading major programs cause add-on issues that never presented themselves on XP ? And if you’re not having the same problem, why am I when all I did was turn on the machine only to confront this havoc? Added to this is my primary beef. I have an HP printer less than six years old, and though I know we live in an age of get the latest thing almost every year — read that to mean cell phones, cars and other gadgets — how many of us do that? How many of us — especially in these economic times — don’t hold onto products that still function well? Okay, if we want an improvement, such as an HDTV with mega-screen, that’s one thing. That’s something new. But my printer works fine, prints at 15 pages/minute and is still on its original toner cartridge. I even bought a standby cartridge and have yet to open the box. Yet, despite the Dell technician’s masterful attempts, he was not able to install the printer. The Hewlett-Packard website says it doesn’t support my printer on Windows 7 and directs me to buy a new one for over a hundred dollars that prints 17 pages/minute — hardly an upgrade when mine works perfectly. My webcam is only 3 years old. What’s Creative Cam ’s excuse? Why should I have to buy another one, simply because Microsoft doesn’t want to include within its software earlier recognition applications as it used to? On the one hand, it still recognizes old MS Word programs, but not many other programs that did a technological handshake with earlier versions of Windows . Yet in the old days, the first Windows program recognized DOS , and, at least through XP , would not render most hardware and software shamefully obsolete. My first laser printer ( Panasonic 4410 ), bought in 1993 and used with my DOS computer, transitioned beautifully to Windows 95 and continued to work with my XP computer through today (though I bought the HP in 2004 to gain greater speed and operating RAM). On the one hand, a printer can work for 16 years, but the other functions for less than 6 due to incompatibility, not work performance. What’s the cause? Is it Bill Gates’ fault for not incorporating into Windows 7 the driver information his company used to do in successive editions or is he in collusion with software and hardware manufacturers like HP , who also refuse to update drivers so that obsolescence becomes the order of the day and we are forced to buy things we really don’t need? If we get a new state of the art TV, we can still connect our old VCR. If we get a new CD or DVD player we can play our old disks. We can still use a dial telephone on a telephone system that has been transformed with fiber optics and satellite transmission. But a new computer forces you to discard perfectly good machinery. There ought to be a law preventing the computer hardware and software industry from shortchanging consumers so that we get the full use of our equipment as we do for non-computer related appliances and products. Anderson Cooper should do a “Keeping Them Honest” report on CNN , as should other commentators on NBC , CBS , ABC , MSNBC and Fox News . There should also be an uproar on YouTube , Facebook and Twitter . All in all this new computer experience has been disappointing, extremely stressful and a whole lot of needless hassle. Michael Russnow’s website is www.ramproductionsinternational.com . More on Fox News

f02848d4a4redone.jpg 150x150 Michael Russnow: Windows 7 Not so Great as Advertised and Has Compatibility Issues: Is Microsoft in Collusion With Manufacturers like HP?

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Michael Russnow: Windows 7 Not so Great as Advertised and Has Compatibility Issues: Is Microsoft in Collusion With Manufacturers like HP?

MTV Europe Music Awards 2009 Beyonce Sweet Dreams Live Performance MTV Europe Music Awards 2009 Beyonce Sweet Dreams Live Performance MTV Europe Music Awards 2009 Beyonce Sweet Dreams Live Performance MTV Europe Music Awards 2009 Beyonce Sweet Dreams Live Performance MTV Europe Music Awards 2009 Beyonce Sweet Dreams Live Performance MTV Europe Music Awards 2009 Beyonce Sweet Dreams Live Performance MTV Europe Music Awards 2009 Beyonce Sweet Dreams Live Performance…

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4c4b6241a82.jpg MTV Europe Music Awards 2009 Beyonce Sweet Dreams Live Performance

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MTV Europe Music Awards 2009 Beyonce Sweet Dreams Live Performance

50 Cent – Baby By Me: MTV Version, Closed Captioned

Posted by Giggi On November - 4 - 2009

Music video by 50 Cent performing Baby By Me: MTV Version, Closed Captioned with Chris Robinson [Video Director], Billy Parks [Video Producer] (C) 2009 Shady Records/Aftermath Records/Interscope Records

2 50 Cent   Baby By Me: MTV Version, Closed Captioned

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50 Cent – Baby By Me: MTV Version, Closed Captioned

It’s finally here… The birthday party scene! Enjoy ;) #29 – Top Favorited (Today) – Entertainment – [11/1] SUBSCRIBE to recieve Strictly Twilight videos =] PROPERTY OF SUMMIT ENTERTAINMENT. NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED All rights reserved to Summit Entertainment New Moon Copyright Summit Entertainment

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e4dd3c79ee2.jpg MTV ULALUME: New New Moon Clip   Bellas Papercut HD

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MTV ULALUME: New ‘New Moon’ Clip – Bella’s Papercut HD

MTV Ulalume Casts New Moon Interview

Posted by Giggi On October - 31 - 2009

kstewartsource.com MTV Ulalume Casts New Moon Interview

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MTV Ulalume Casts New Moon Interview

MTV Ulalume – Rob Pattinson and New Moon Cast

Posted by Giggi On October - 31 - 2009

No copyright infringement intended. New Moon cast, including Rob Pattinson at MTV Ulalume

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2 MTV Ulalume   Rob Pattinson and New Moon Cast

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MTV Ulalume – Rob Pattinson and New Moon Cast

Jay Z & Alicia Keys perform Empire State Of Mind live at the World Series 2009 Game 2 in the Yankee Stadium on October 29, 2009. Watch it in HD! … jay z. alicia keys empire state of mind live world series 2009 game 02 yankee stadium new york philiadelphia phillies baseball mlb music concert duet rap pop derek jeter funny

http://www.youtube.com/v/BiryjGi6wZQ?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

2 [HD] Jay Z & Alicia Keys   Empire State Of Mind (Live At World Series 2009 Game 2 Yankee Stadium)

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[HD] Jay Z & Alicia Keys – Empire State Of Mind (Live At World Series 2009 Game 2 Yankee Stadium)

Paul Weller – Town Called Malice: Video MTV Edit

Posted by Giggi On October - 28 - 2009

Music video by Paul Weller performing Town Called Malice: Video MTV Edit (C) 1982 Polydor Ltd. (UK)

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Paul Weller – Town Called Malice: Video MTV Edit

European MTV awards. Nominated

Posted by Giggi On October - 26 - 2009

You can vote this way: – www.mtvema.com – Click on Vote – Click on “Best European” – You can vote now MTV awards 2009

http://www.youtube.com/v/IdUiM10CfhE?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

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European MTV awards. Nominated

Stephanie Wei: What We Lost When We Lost Payne Stewart

Posted by Giggi On October - 26 - 2009

Today, October 25, 2009, marks the 10-year anniversary of the tragic plane crash that killed golfing great Payne Stewart, along with five others. It was merely four months after he won the US Open at Pinehurst. The image of his reaction — his fist pumped in the air and one foot kicked up behind him — when he sank the winning putt on the 72nd hole is one that will always resonate with us. Pure joy. At the time, I was 16, and when I heard the sad news, I remember feeling shocked to the point where I was speechless and then shedding some tears. I was also at the age where I couldn’t really grasp the death of someone famous in a freak accident. I didn’t know him. I didn’t really live through his era. But, I do remember some things that separated him from your average major champion golfer; he was a fantastic role model. In all the hoopla about it being 10 years, it’s interesting to think about why we all miss him so much. Not just about the way he died, it’s about the way he lived. He always had his priorities straight : Golf isn’t everything in my life. I mean, I have a beautiful family. I have a wonderful wife and two lovely children. If on the way home, something would happen and I couldn’t play golf again. Hey, I’ve had a wonderful career and I want to spend the rest of my life with my family. Moments after he beat the then perpetual bridesmaid, Phil Mickelson, at the US Open, he grabbed his face and said, “You’re going to love being a father.” He put things in perspective, too: If you can’t laugh at yourself, then how can you laugh at anybody else? I think people see the human side of you when you do that. I don’t think it’s healthy to take yourself too seriously. And of course, there were his clothes — the knickers, Tam O’Shanter cap, knee-high argyle socks, and the occasional tie and matching sweater vest — all a throwback to the classic Bobby Jones era. He wanted to, you know, stand out from the standard polo-shirt-and-khaki-trouser pro (so, he wore an old-school golf uniform). David Toms gave his take : I think he was the one guy that did something different with his attire and everything and presented himself in that way. More and more guys are doing that, trying to make a statement by what they’re wearing. He was one of the guys that started that. Everyone knows he was a true character. He oozed charm. He was sometimes a bit cocky. He was a fierce competitor. He was a prankster. After his good friend Paul Azinger beat him at the ‘93 Memorial Tournament, Payne still got the last laugh : He put bananas in my brand new pair of Zegna loafers,” Azinger said. “He peeled them and shoved big chunks in there. I left the tournament grounds that victory evening wearing only my socks! Given his good ol’ Missouri roots, he was very frank and open. He once said, “If somebody asks for my opinion, I tell them my opinion, whether it’s what they want to hear or not.” Translation: He was full of amazing zingers (press-friendly!), like this one (!): [The Ryder Cup] is for the game of golf, yeah, but trust me, the Europeans don’t have that mentality. They come over and want to whip us. And they don’t care about the betterment of the game of golf. Of course, we can’t forget his fluid, divine swing that screamed finesse — the one that carried him to 11 PGA Tour victories, including three majors. We must wonder how many more he would have won. He had a storied career, no doubt, but with that swing, he had several more glory moments left to be seen in the champion’s circle. He could have been one of the greatest golfers of all time. But, really, no point to harp on the shoulda, woulda, couldas, and it’s un-Payne like. In an interview, Payne was asked what he learned from Azinger’s battle with cancer. He imparted these strangely comforting words: “I’m going to a special place when I die, but I want to make sure my life is special while I’m here.” Now, brace yourselves before you watch this clip. Grab a tissue or two. It’s sad, but inspiring more than anything, not to mention a fitting tribute to the life, character and mystique of a man we lost 10 years ago. This post first appeared at Wei Under Par

3504f26ab0930333.jpg 119x150 Stephanie Wei: What We Lost When We Lost Payne Stewart

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Stephanie Wei: What We Lost When We Lost Payne Stewart

David Archuleta CFTH MTV Promotion

Posted by Giggi On October - 25 - 2009

After stalking the MTV channel for 8 hours, I finally got it! Enjoy!

http://www.youtube.com/v/xABVMYMb7wA?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

2 David Archuleta CFTH MTV Promotion

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David Archuleta CFTH MTV Promotion

-Don’t reupload this vid on your channel- I putted 3 cuts in one vid. 3 cuts credit : Shakizi – Ring Ding Dong ?

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2 [MTV Backstage cam/Full 749] 091020 Shinee Being cute&Preparing for stage

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[MTV Backstage cam/Full 7'49''] 091020 Shinee Being cute&Preparing for stage

Amy Goodman: Lt. Choi Won’t Lie for His Country

Posted by Giggi On October - 15 - 2009

Lt. Dan Choi doesn’t want to lie. Choi, an Iraq war veteran and a graduate of West Point, declared last March 19 on The Rachel Maddow Show , “I am gay.” Under the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” regulations, those three words are enough to get Choi kicked out of the military. Choi has become a vocal advocate for repealing the policy, having spoken before tens of thousands of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people and their allies at last Sunday’s National Equality March in Washington, D.C. Shortly after Choi’s public admission to being gay, the Department of the Army sent him a letter stating, in part, that “you admitted publicly that you are a homosexual which constitutes homosexual conduct. … Your actions negatively affected the good order and discipline of the New York Army National Guard.” Since “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” was signed into law by President Bill Clinton in 1993, 13,500 soldiers, sailors and Marines have been discharged from the military for similar alleged behavior. Choi could receive an “other than honorable” discharge, losing the health, retirement, educational and other benefits to which combat veterans are entitled. While Congress acts to remove the restrictions on health insurance for people with “pre-existing conditions,” Choi’s pre-existing conditions, being gay and being honest about it, may be enough to keep him out of the Veterans Affairs health care system for life. The night before Sunday’s march, President Barack Obama spoke to the Human Rights Campaign, the largest and wealthiest gay-advocacy group: “We should not be punishing patriotic Americans who have stepped forward to serve this country. … I will end ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.’ ” He laid out no timetable, however. After receiving the letter from the Army, Choi wrote an open letter to his commander in chief, Obama. He said: “I have personally served for a decade under Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell: an immoral law and policy that forces American soldiers to deceive and lie about their sexual orientation. Worse, it forces others to tolerate deception and lying.” U.S. troops in Afghanistan are serving side by side with NATO forces that include openly gay and lesbian troops. Longtime gay-rights activist Urvashi Vaid, author of “Virtual Equality: The Mainstreaming of Gay and Lesbian Liberation,” is opposed to war and militarism, but told me, “The military is a large employer, and has to commit to not being discriminatory.” She, too, was at the march Sunday, whose turnout surprised many of the mainstream gay organizations, as they hadn’t actively organized it. She said: “First, it’s a generational shift in the LGBT movement. There is a new wave of activism coming up. And it’s gay and straight. That’s a second big change … the third shift that’s happening in the LGBT movement is that it’s much more of a multi-issue agenda that is being carried by the people who are marching.” In addition to “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” the LGBT movement is also intent on repealing the Clinton-era Defense of Marriage Act, and on achieving marriage equality. This will be a hard fight, Vaid predicts, based on grass-roots activism in every congressional district. Challenging discriminatory laws couldn’t be more timely: On the day before Obama’s speech to the Human Rights Campaign, a gay man in New York City was taunted with anti-gay slurs and savagely beaten by two men. He is currently in a coma. Lt. Dan Choi is still technically a serving officer. Obama could halt proceedings against Choi. Activists contend Obama could stop active enforcement of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” through an executive order. Presidential or congressional action may not come in time to save Choi’s military career. If he loses his health benefits, he has a plan. Choi got a message from an Iraqi doctor whose hospital Choi helped to rebuild while he was there. He said the doctor is “in South Baghdad right now. And he’s seen some of the Internet, YouTube and CNN interviews and other appearances, and he said: ‘Brother, I know that you’re gay, but you’re still my brother, and you’re my friend. And if your country, that sent you to my country, if America, that sent you to Iraq, will discharge you such that you can’t get medical benefits, you can come to my hospital any day. You can come in, and I will give you treatment.’ ” Choi ended, “I hope that our country can learn from that Iraqi doctor.” Denis Moynihan contributed research to this column. Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 800 stations in North America. She is the author of “Breaking the Sound Barrier,” recently released in paperback. 2009 Amy Goodman More on Rachel Maddow

e9a1faa7a5n choi.jpg 127x150 Amy Goodman: Lt. Choi Wont Lie for His Country

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Amy Goodman: Lt. Choi Won’t Lie for His Country

Bruce Kluger: LettermanGate: One Week Later

Posted by Giggi On October - 8 - 2009

It is now nearly one week since LettermanGate first burst onto TV screens, front pages and Blackberrys nationwide, and the media remain in unapologetic full-throttle. Having already wrung every drop of dirty dishwater from this odd tale of sex, checks and affections, reporters continue to survey the outer fringes of the story’s seedy landscape, hoping to tap a fresh reservoir of bodice-ripping, scurrilous slime. Last weekend, The New York Post heavy-panted its way through a largely empty expose that dubbed Dave a “skirt-chasing funnyman” while depicting his private office at the Ed Sullivan Theater as a door-swinging sex-den, complete with fold-out couch. The Daily Beast unveiled the down-and-dirty on Joe Halderman, the “rogue” CBS News producer-turned-alleged extortionist, whose clumsy attempt to blow the lid off Dave’s randy past earned him a phony $2 million check and a very real bill for $200,000 in bail. And TMZ.com–ground zero for all that is knock-yer-socks-off-shocking–posted an interview with a heretofore unknown Letterman intern, complete with the usual unspectacular quotes (”I was madly in love with him”) and predictably blurry jpegs. And yet for all the ink and bytes devoted to this bizarre saga, here’s what I find most compelling: that David Letterman successfully navigated his way through three explosive crises–personal, professional and legal–by simply telling the truth. Unlike the similarly cornered Sens. John Edwards and John Ensign, Gov. Elliot Spitzer and (sigh) Bill Clinton, who initially body-blocked media inquires about their affairs with everything from finger-wagging resentment to faux-humility to flat-out denial, Letterman confessed to his past philandering instantly (”I have had sex with women who work for me on this show,” he revealed), and he did so proactively, rather than in the crouch of self-defense. Unlike the bathroom-cruising Sen. Larry (”I am not gay”) Craig, who responded to charges of “lewd conduct” at a Minneapolis airport by claiming that cops had simply misread a little innocent stall-footsie, Letterman approached authorities the moment he knew he was being shaken down, and even testified to the facts before a grand jury. And unlike Gov. Mark Sanford, who justified his 5000-mile field trip to rendezvous with his secret Argentine “soul mate” as something more spiritual than your typical sleazy tryst, Letterman copped to the all-too-ordinary sordidness of his office-fling history, even calling his own actions “creepy.” This is why David Letterman will be forgiven his workplace hanky-panky. Because, in the end, what people (and, should it go this far, juries) admire most is straight talk, and that is precisely what Dave dished out last Thursday evening–along with a few laughs, of course. Which brings up an interesting question: Did Letterman effectively duck more serious scrutiny of his trespasses by donning his customary goofball persona and beating the media to the punch by beating himself up first? Probably–but the fact is, this is wholly consistent with the Letterman America has been inviting into its bedrooms for more than a quarter-century. Not only has he routinely used his late-night forum as his own personal scrapbook–talking about his heart surgery, his speeding tickets, the birth of his son–he’s also been the first to bust himself for the occasional idiocy–such as mistakenly targeting the wrong daughter of Sarah Palin in an off-color joke last June. He apologized immediately. CBS and Worldwide Pants (Letterman’s production company) will undoubtedly continue to investigate this matter, if only to determine whether David Letterman crossed the line–or broke a law–by engaging in sex with subordinates. But unless something else erupts–and it would have to be something pretty big–you can file the story of Dave’s Deviant Dalliance where it belongs–as yesterday’s news. [This essay originally ran in the October 8th, 2009 edition of USA Today ; Bruce Kluger is co-author, with David Tabatsky, of the new book, Dear President Obama: Letters of Hope From Children Across America ] * * * NOW ON SALE! Dear President Obama: Letters of Hope From Children Across America (Beckham Publications Group, Inc.) By Bruce Kluger and David Tabatsky Foreword by Linda Ellerbee More on Mark Sanford

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Bruce Kluger: LettermanGate: One Week Later

Carleton Bryant: Scientists find mini-Stonehenge

Posted by Giggi On October - 4 - 2009

First published at washingtontimes.com Archeologists have found a smaller version of Stonehenge about a mile from the larger circle of rocks in Wiltshire, England, the BBC is reporting. Dubbed “Bluehenge,” the site has no rocks. But scientists say that, based on holes in the earth, 27 gigantic stones once formed a circle there — probably a mini-Stonehenge. Remnant bits of rock indicate the stones were blue. At first, I thought the archeologists had stumbled upon a old stage prop used by the rock group Spinal Tap. You know, the “Stonehenge monument on the stage that was in danger of being crushed by a dwarf.” The Druids are believed to have created Stonehenge, perhaps as a time-measuring device or some sort of monument to a deity. I suspect that their economy was tanking, and the Druids built Stonehenge as a public works project. “Hey, Charlie. Why are we moving these big old stones from Wales all the way to Wilshire?” “To maintain full employment during the economic downturn, Harry. Don’t you ever read the papers?” “What’s paper, Charlie?”

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Carleton Bryant: Scientists find mini-Stonehenge

Engadget Podcast 165 – 10.02.2009

Posted by Giggi On October - 3 - 2009

Look, an Engadget Podcast, delivered on schedule! That certainly hasn’t happened in a while — and to celebrate, the crew did another live show yesterday, running down a couple new Dell and HP laptops, some more Courier news, the PSP Go, and some phone news before a live (chat room audience). It’s all here, so get listening! Hosts: Joshua Topolsky, Nilay Patel, Paul Miller Producer: Trent Wolbe Song: California Girls Hear the podcast 00:03:34 – Dell’s Latitude Z 600 is a 16-inch thin-and-light, makes overcompensated CEOs out of us all (update: video!) 00:17:20 – HP Envy 13 unboxing and first impressions 00:32:26 – New Microsoft Courier video details tablet interface, exciting life of a shoe designer (Update: Windows 7 underneath, might run Microsoft hardware) 00:43:04 – PSP Go review 00:43:20 – Sony thinks its “aspirational” PSP Go might encourage an uptick in PSP-3000 purchases 00:56:15 – Garmin nuvifone G60 officially coming to AT&T: October 4th for $299 01:04:30 – Motorola CLIQ coming to T-Mobile next month for $200 on contract 01:13:51 – webOS 1.2 now available, brings support for app purchases 01:19:03 – Challenge: Make your own Natal demo video, get yourself on The Engadget Show Subscribe to the podcast [ iTunes ] Subscribe to the Podcast directly in iTunes (enhanced AAC). [ RSS MP3 ] Add the Engadget Podcast feed (in MP3) to your RSS aggregator and have the show delivered automatically

http://www.engadget.com/podcasts/Engadget_Podcast_165.mp3

2d700c30cfodcast.jpg 150x137 Engadget Podcast 165   10.02.2009

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Engadget Podcast 165 – 10.02.2009

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