-novelty & Character Phones - Cell phones and patient safety - (5/18/2012)

Does your doctor telephone prescriptions over a cell phone? we asked pharmacists if they had ever experienced a “case of bad cellular” when receiving telephone orders via cell phones. over 40 percent responded that they did and all clearly felt that the opportunity for a medication error exists.

Here’s what we learned. Physicians made cellular calls most frequently after office hours, on weekends, while in cars, at home or at social events. often they seemed to be in a hurry to return to their previous activity and may not have given the prescribing task their full attention. Poor transmission clarity and failed connections requiring callbacks were cited as frequent problems.

Factors such as make and model of the phone, wireless carrier, calling area transmission, handset vs. speakerphone use, and general background noise from the road, home or social events all posed threats to accurate transmission of prescription information. this is especially true if a message is left on the pharmacy voice mail. If follow-up calls were needed for clarification, the pharmacist often did not have the physician’s cell phone number. also, since physicians often did not have access to the patient’s medical records, they could not answer questions about allergies, weight, or other medications. likewise, the medications prescribed were less likely to be documented in the patient’s record, since it was not available. that could obviously cause problems later on, due to the missing medical information.

Most pharmacists reported difficulty recognizing the physician’s voice on the phone and verifying their identity. some reported that it was especially difficult when the consumer initiated the call to the physician while at the pharmacy counter. in many cases pharmacists will ask the prescriber to call the pharmacy back using an office phone line. For obvious reasons, many pharmacists will not accept certain prescriptions at all via a cell phone call that is initiated by a patient at the counter.

Because confidentiality cannot be assured, calls should never be made in the presence of others. another problem cited in our survey was possible breach of patient confidentiality through inadvertent or purposeful eavesdropping from people close by or even through insecure cellular phone lines.

Although it may seem obvious, we recommend that physicians refrain from using cell phones for patient care purposes while in the office. instead, they should communicate prescriptions using a landline, fax machine, electronically, or hand a prescription to the patient. If cell phones must be used out of the office, we advise pharmacists to have the prescriber spell the patient’s name, drug name, and designate the dose clearly. 

While I’m at it, let me remind you that you shouldn’t be using a cell phone anyway when you come to the pharmacy to pick up your prescription. One pharmacist told us about a patient who was on the phone while picking up a prescription when he called out her name. “Is your last name Smith?” she answered yes, but wasn’t really paying attention to the pharmacist at all. instead it was a response to a question on the phone. the patient signed for the prescription and walked away with the wrong prescription bag. Conversational interaction can obviously be impaired when the patient is using a cell phone at the time of prescription counseling or purchase. 

There is one thing you should do about your cell phone. in one case reported to us a patient was accidentally given another patient’s medications. later, when a pharmacist realized the mistake, he attempted to reach the patient by phone. however, the patient did not answer. the pharmacist kept trying but did not get through until later that evening. By that time, the patient had already taken medication for a kidney transplant patient who needed an immunosuppressant. instead, she was supposed to be getting a new prescription for Zestril, for high blood pressure.

Pharmacists most often ask new patients for their home phone and maybe their business line, but not necessarily their cell phone numbers or email addresses. it makes sense to provide these other modes of contact for emergencies like the one described.

To check out more Check Up items go to philly.com/checkup

HARDOCP – Introduction – MSI Z77A-GD65 LGA1155 Motherboard Review

MSI Z77A-GD65 LGA1155 Motherboard Review

MSI has been on a roll with its motherboards as of late. It’s because of this that our expectations for MSI’s foray into the world of Z77 chipset based motherboards are so high. MSI’s “GD65″ series of motherboards have been an especially solid value and the Z77A-GD65 looks to be no different.

MSI is a well known motherboard manufacturer. We’ve seen a ton of its products over the years. While MSI occasionally drops the ball, it usually produces a solid product. Lately the company has been on a roll as nearly everything we’ve looked at has stacked up well in terms of build and value. The GD65 series of motherboards have always been particularly strong overclockers at its price point and offer a compelling feature set as well.

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The MSI Z77A-GD65 is based on Intel’s latest and greatest chipset offering, the Z77 Express. To be succinct, the Z77 Express Chipset isn’t functionally a lot different than the Z68 Express Chipset that precedes it. The chipset is still limited to only supporting 2 SATA 3 devices. USB 3.0 is now officially supported, so that’s a welcome change, but honestly gives little advantage given how strong the USB 3.0 add-on logic has become. RST has had a slight improvement. PCIe 3.0 support via Ivy Bridge CPUs is now official, but it is hard to point to immediate gains. You also have slightly more flexibility in PCIe lane allocation. instead of being limited to a single x16 connector or dual x8 slots, motherboard manufacturers can now opt for an 8x4x4 configuration. Finally legacy PCI support is gone and has to be provided by third party adapter interfaces.

The Z77A-GD65 is what MSI’s marketing team likes to call Military Class III. in other words it’s built to the military’s MIL-STD-810G standard and has been certified as such. It features DrMOS II MOSFETs, low ESR Hi-c CAPs, solid electrolytic capacitors, and super ferrite chokes. It also features an 8-phase power design.

one thing that caught my eye on the MSI web page for this board was the “Gaming Device Port.” I’m going to guess that the MSI PR team has been hanging out with the guys at Monster Cable or something. MSI advertise increased thickness of the gold layers in the 2-in-1 PS/2 mouse and keyboard port as well as the USB connectors on the board’s back plane. This is tantamount to the nonsense about high priced HDMI cables being superior to $5 Monoprice cables. The reality is this isn’t remotely true. Digital connections are a transmission of 0s and 1s. If all the 0s and 1s aren’t transferred across things simply don’t work. This wouldn’t have bothered me outside of the fact that MSI claims this enhances mouse sensitivity in games. Ordinarily I cut board makers some slack with regard to creative marketing terms for features every brand shares. Often features that come from the CPU or chipset which isn’t made by the builder anyway.

But this claim is total nonsense. My Logitech G9x felt exactly the same connected to this board as any other. and I should know, I’ve played hundreds of hours of the Mass Effect series alone on this mouse. If somehow it were actually better with some added gold plating, I’d have noticed. MSI’s blurb on the website even says: “Besides enhancing mouse sensitivity in games, these improved interfaces deliver a longer lifespan and better stability of connectors and total solution for e-sports mouse control in UEFI BIOS.” I can tell you this for sure, the added gold plating didn’t make using the mouse in the Click BIOS II UEFI any less unpleasant than it usually is. we just felt we needed to call BS on this nonsense.

The board does have a solid feature set. THX TruStudio PRO is supported, Lucid’s VirtuMVP, active phase switching, and HDMI 1.4 is supported as well. The board even boasts certification for both NVIDIA’s SLI and AMD’s CrossFireX technologies.

Main Specifications Overview:

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Detailed Specifications Overview:

The board ships in the usual style cardboard container. Our sample arrived free of damage with all accessories accounted for. inside the box you’ll find enough paperwork to choke a rhino. You have your overclocking guide, certificate of quality and stability, user guide, software & application guide, and a quick installation guide. Non-paper accessories include SATA cables, I/O shield, driver disc, SLI Bridge, and probe leads for voltage monitoring.

The Z77A-GD65 board layout is quite good. I’ve one minor complaint with the placement of the third PCIe x16 slot, but this slot is only usable with an Ivy Bridge CPU installed. there is even a warning sticker to this effect which you have to pull off that slot. (Which I did for the photos.) otherwise the board is free of any glaring layout flaws.

The CPU socket area is standard issue for the LGA1155 socket and Z77 platform. there is enough room for most cooling solutions, but large air coolers could run into two problems. The MOSFET cooling hardware is on the tall side and clearance could be a problem depending on your cooling solution. The memory slots are also too close to the CPU socket and as a result you may block slots with some coolers. now, this isn’t MSI’s fault as all boards which are compatible with CPUs that feature integrated memory controllers suffer from this same issue.

The Z77A-GD65 has four DDR3 DIMM slots which allow up to 32GB of RAM to be installed. The DIMM slots are color coded to signify which need to be populated for proper dual channel mode operation. As stated earlier, these are located very close to the CPU socket area, but that is unavoidable with this chipset. other than that we find no issues with this area of the board.

Being a unified design, and given that many traditional north bridge functions are now handled by the CPU directly, the Z77 Express chipset is a single chip which is located where the south bridge was located in days past. It is cooled by a flat and passive heat sink. Directly in front of that are the boards 8 SATA ports. Just right of that is the USB 3.0 header. MSI used right angled SATA connectors and nothing is truly in the way here. Even with a GTX 580 installed I was able to reach all the SATA ports easily. I can’t say that for a lot of boards.

The expansion slot area is good. I’d have preferred the last PCIe x16 slot to be a little higher up, but realistically this isn’t a 3-Way SLI or CrossFireX board. You’d most likely use the other PCIe x16 slots for graphics cards. so I’ll give MSI a pass here as I really can’t envision a need for any changes to this area.

The rear I/O panel is pretty crowded. We’ve got “only” 6 USB ports back here, 2 of which are USB 3.0 ports. six mini-stereo jacks for audio, RJ-45 for LAN, S/PDIF and optical output, clear CMOS and our combination PS/2 keyboard and mouse port. That’s all normal. Then we get to the video input options. we have HDMI which is fine, and DVI-D which makes sense. But we also have D-SUB / VGA. I don’t know why that’s there honestly. Go DVI-I and include the DVI-VGA adapter and be done with it. a display port to DVI adapter would have cleaned things up nicely as well. we saw a nicer and cleaner solution on the Sabertooth Z77 but that board also had the exhaust fan for the thermal armor which it had to accommodate. since this board has nothing like that MSI could have filled it with USB ports or something more useful than antique monitor connections.

I’m sure the connectivity options here can be appreciated by many out there. so I won’t ding MSI for making this choice. At this price point I can see the merits of both lines of thinking. On a high end board I’d slam them hard for these types of choices. Moving on?..

-torx Screwdrivers - Sea Otter 2012: Zipp release new alloy and carbon aero bars - (5/17/2012)

By Ben Delaney in Monterey, California, USA | Tuesday, Apr 24, 2012 11.30am

The Vuka Alumina system has numerous fit-adjustment options. Here, Ski Tip extensions are mounted beneath the base bar, with the arm rests somewhat close together (Ben Delaney/BikeRadar)

Atthe Sea Otter Classic, Zipp showed a few variations of their new Vuka Aluminaaluminum aero bar system, and also displayed four new Carbon Vuka extensionbars, including one that integrates SRAM or Zipp shifters.

VukaAlumina is a highly adjustable modular setup, with some smartdetails like Torx bolts at the crucial junctions and internal cable routingwithout tight angles. Consistingof a base bar, two types of extensions, adjustable arm-rest clips and threeheights of riser stacks, the pieces can be used as a system orwith other companies’ products, as the extensions are the industry-standard22.2mm and the base bar and arm-clip clamps are the standard 31.8mm.

Similarly,the new Carbon Vuka extensions can be used with Zipp’s carbon VukaBull bar,the Vuka Aluminum bar or any other 31.6mm base bar. the most interesting CarbonVuka extension is the VukaShift ($200, €141), which integrates an anchor that SRAM or Zippshifters can bolt onto, instead of the traditional design of sliding a shifterbody into the end of the extension. the system is only compatible with SRAM 900TT, 500 TT and R2C Aero shifters, plus Zipp’s VukaR2Cs. Zipp claim this design “brings theshifter closer by almost an inch”, but the same position could beachieved by cutting a standard extension.

Other CarbonVuka extension options include Straight (shaped as it sounds), Ski Tip (a straightbar with a sharp bend) and Vuka race (an S-bend design). Each of those three costs $130/€92. the Aluminaextensions are $55/€39 and come in Straight and race. TheVuka Alumina base bar, made of 6066 aluminum, is $80/€56, and the arm-rest clips are $120/€85. Riser kits, which come in 10mm, 25mm and 50mm increments,are available for $25/€18 per pair. Addingfit options, the extensions can be mounted above or below the base bar. All of the new products will be available in May.

Allof the Vuka pieces use Torx bolts. Zipp product manager Nathan Schickeltold BikeRadar: “Aerobars are notorious for stripping bolts, as people over-tighten small bolts tryingto get the security they need. the Allen head is designed tocontrol torque through cam’ing out the head if you over-torque it. the Torxbolt, on the other hand, is designed to be used with a torque wrench to controltorque, and therefore can be tightened much more securely without fear ofstripping out the head.” Speakingof torque, Zipp recommend 7n/m on the base bar clamp and 4n/m on theextension clamp. 

An exploded view of all the new vuka alumina options (plus the already-out zipp r2c shifters and sram tt brake levers): base bar, two types of extensions, arm-rest clips and three heights of riser kits:

An exploded view of all the new Vuka Alumina options (plus the already-out Zipp R2C shifters and SRAM TT brake levers): base bar, two types of extensions, arm-rest clips and three heights of riser kits

You can follow BikeRadar on Twitter at twitter.com/bikeradar and on Facebook at facebook.com/BikeRadar.

-adaptors Sim Cards - Acer Iconia A510 Review: A Quad-Core Powerhouse - (5/13/2012)

Acer Iconia A510

Reviewer Rating:

Review Summary:

Thanks to premium features like a quad-core, Tegra 3 processor and Dolby Digital Plus audio, the A510 offers a high-end experience that satisfies despite minor flaws.

Pros

  • Very good performance
  • Top-of-the-line NVIDA Tegra 3 and Android ICS
  • Dolby Digital Plus audio
  • Excellent battery life

Cons

  • Slow cold boot
  • Considerable screen glare
  • Not currently available in a Broadband (cellular) 3G/4G model

 

Overview

It’s been just over two years since Apple introduced its first iPad. Initially, there were numerous jokes about the name, and serious concerns about the viability of the device’s form factor. But now, it’s estimated that at the end of 2011, more than 67 million iPads have been sold. That’s no laughing matter unless you’re Apple, who’s been chuckling all the way to the bank. And when a class of device is an overwhelming success, you can bet that other vendors are going to want a piece of the pie.

So there’s no way that Acer wasn’t going to offer a tablet. in fact, the Iconia A510 I looked at is Acer’s fourth offering in the US market, following the original Iconia A500, the A200, and the 7-inch A100. With an affordable price, the latest CPU, and the newest Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich operating system, the Iconia A510 is going to appeal to a wide market that doesn’t want the new iPad, and isn’t satisfied with the new low-end Kindle Fire or Barnes & Noble Nook.

Build & DesignLet’s face it – one tablet looks pretty much like another. the function is generic, and form usually follows function. That’s why so many users jazz up their notebooks and tablets with skins and fancy cases.

The Iconia A510 doesn’t wander far from the mode. It’s got a modest black bezel, edge-to-edge glass and the Acer name on the bottom front with the Iconia Tab label on the top right of the front panel. Also at the top of the front bezel is the front-facing 1-megapixel camera and light sensor. Finally, the front contains the screen itself, a 10.1 inch 1280 x 800 capacitive touchscreen.

The back is a textured rubber-like material, making the tablet more secure to hang onto even if your hands are slightly damp. At the top of the back panel is the camera lens, with no flash. This does impact the low-light performance somewhat, but there’s no set light level where you can predict how the image will be affected. you just need to take the photo, and see how it comes out.

The rear panel also contains the speaker grilles, which for the most part aims the sound downward rather than outward. the other noticeable items on the rear panel are all logos: the Acer logo, the five-ring Olympic logo (Acer is one of the sponsors of the upcoming London Olympics), and down at the bottom, a label for the Dolby Digital Plus sound enhancement technology. All of this labeling seems somewhat unnecessary to me, but it certainly doesn’t hurt anything or affect performance or use of the device.

The rubber-like backing extends to the very top and bottom of the A510. on the top of the tablet, from left to right, are the volume control, the screen lock button, and a just barely visible hole not much larger than a pin-prick which covers the microphone. as small as this opening is, it did not seem to affect the tablet’s ability to pick up sounds, record voices or music (though the fidelity was nowhere near as good as when using an external mic), and respond to voice commands. the bottom of the unit contains slots on the left and right sides which channels some of the sound (the grilles are actually on the back panel), the microUSB jack which also serves as the power connector, and a tiny hole for accessing the system reset (which requires a very thin paper clip or similar wire). Packed in the box are a standard 5-volt power supply, and a microUSB to full-sized USB adapter plug, which I thought was a nice touch.

The sides of the tablet are an attractive brushed metal, and provide a nice accent to the device. the left side panel contains the power switch and standard 3.5mm headphone jack, while the right side has a microHDMI connector and a card slot cover that protects slots for a microSD card and a second slot for SIM card should one of the major carriers start supporting the Iconia. the Iconia Tab comes with 32GB of built-in storage, but if you plan on having a lot of media, plan on buying a large microSD card as well.

Comparing the A510 to most other tablets, one thing that’s pretty noticeable is weight. on our lab scale, the A510 came in at 23.8 ounces, just about a pound-and-a-half of tablet goodness. And there are some new Ultrabooks that weigh only about another pound and provide a larger screen, keyboard, and more storage. to be honest, though, the slight extra heft isn’t going to really make much of a difference except when you need to hold the tablet for an extended period of time, like reading or watching video in bed. otherwise, an easel/folder style case can keep the A510 at an angle without the slightest strain on your wrist or arms.

Screen and SpeakersWhen you purchase a desktop, you get to be really picky about the display. That’s less practical with a laptop and you have even less choice with a tablet. you can control the brightness, but that’s about all you can do. the color accuracy and saturation are at the mercy of what the manufacturer thinks it should be. the Iconia Tab A510 tends to slightly oversaturate some colors. It’s most noticeable on the reds, but unless you know what the image is actually supposed to look like, you probably wouldn’t catch it. if color accuracy of the displayed image is really that important to you, you can always use the microHDMI output to put the image up on a stand-alone monitor which can be calibrated or has adjustments for saturation and hue. However, I doubt that many people will bother.

More noticeable is the problem that most tablets suffer from — screen glare. the Iconia Tab A510 suffers from it, but it’s pretty much endemic to the form factor. most tablets, the A510 among them, use a highly polished glass faceplate. And the high polish reflects light very efficiently, causing considerable glare depending on the angle you’re holding it at and the location of light sources. Plastic film screen protectors sometimes help cut glare, but they often also cut down on screen sensitivity to touch controls, especially with capacitive screens like the one on the A510. the glare sometimes can be compensated for by adjusting the viewing angle.

Aside from the same glare problem that pretty much every other tablet suffers from, the A510’s screen is one of the better ones. Touch response is very good. when there’s a lag, it’s usually the fault of the application being run. Gestures such as swiping, pinching, zooming and scrolling are fast and accurate. Depending on the setting, you can enable or disable haptic (vibrational) feedback. the default keyboard is the English Android keyboard, which will be familiar to anyone who owns an Android phone. you can also specify Google voice typing or XT9 Text Input.

Response during a video chat application such as Skype is much more dependent on the Internet bandwidth you have available than the processor and screen response, but watching a movie stored on internal memory is a pleasant experience even if it contains considerable movement. Contrast, for the most part, is good in both video and photo applications, though details tend to disappear in dark areas of a photo or video.

The A510’s speakers are located at the bottom rather than the more common location of the sides of the unit, and the grilles are faced slightly downward, though there are slots at the bottommost edge. I can’t see this being a problem, though if the tablet is placed on a very sound absorbent surface, such as a blanket, the output might be slightly muffled. the Iconia A510 incorporates Dolby Digital Plus sound enhancement, but sound quality from the speakers in any tablet is, at best, only going to be acceptable, not exceptional. the Dolby Digital Plus does give the A510’s audio output somewhat more crispness and clarity.

But the real benefit of the Dolby audio emerges when you plug in a good set of headphones or earphones. under these conditions, using both Sennheiser headphones and Ultimate Ears earphones, the Dolby Digital Plus provided a noticeable improvement over several other tablets I’ve tested that lacked this audio enhancement. After listening to a variety of different music genres, I’d definitely have my playlists stored on the A510. the Dolby enhancement is also very obvious when watching and listening to stored video on a good quality HDMI display and speaker set using the micro HDMI output.

Acer Iconia A510 specs:

-cameras - Scout of Africa - (5/12/2012)

North African and Middle East countries are said to be considering a revolutionary aircraft for multi-role missions – one that is designed and manufactured in Africa.

The advanced high performance reconnaissance light aircraft (Ahrlac) is the initiative of South African defence and aerospace giant Paramount Group together with technical partner Aerosud, South Africa’s largest aeronautical engineering company.

The companies say this is the first time in Africa’s history that the continent has independently designed and manufactured its own aircraft. The market potential of the aircraft could add up to half a billion US dollars to the industrial output of the South African economy.

Ivor Ichikowitz, executive chairman of the Paramount Group said: “We are anticipating strong interest in Ahrlac from governments across North Africa and the Middle East, primarily because the aircraft meets many of the unique security challenges that these regions face.

“Whether it is patrolling long desert borders, monitoring isolated strategic installations, such as oil pipelines, or taking action against terrorist groups, Ahrlac provides an innovative and cost-effective solution. with countries across the region looking to modernise their forces, I am confident many will regard Ahrlac as a very competitive and attractive solution.”

Ichikowitz described Ahrlac as a cost-effective, flexible, multi-role aviation platform that “bridges the gap between manned and unmanned aircraft”.

Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) have become increasingly popular over the last few years due to the absence of serious aerial threats in conflicts like Afghanistan and Iraq. Ichikowitz said these platforms are complex and expensive, lack multi-role flexibility and situational awareness, which could result in collateral damage.

He said: “Ahrlac is a huge technological triumph for South Africa. The reality is that the technology behind UAVs has being oversold and that Ahrlac provides a far more comprehensive solution. For example, Ahrlac has strong defensive capabilities, which mean that it can operate in hostile airspace, as well as the ability to carry out operations in domestic airspace because it is piloted.

“This makes it ideally suited to some of the long-term security issues facing the world, such as drug trafficking control, piracy, patrol of exclusive economic zones, protection of fisheries and rainforests, coast guard and border surveillance and the monitoring of strategic installations such as oil pipelines.”

Paramount expects Ahrlac to make an impact in countries which may not have immediate access to purchase or support equipment from the main Western OEMs.

“The new category of aircraft will challenge the dominant Western manufacturers because of its low acquisition cost, reduced requirement for back-end support, extensive operational capabilities and greater degree of pilot situational awareness,” said Ichikowitz.

The Ahrlac airframe uses a mixture of metal and composite construction and provides maximum visibility for the crew. It is designed to carry an internal 20mm cannon, with additional hardpoints for carrying weapons mounted under the wings, including rocket pods, unguided bombs, and both air-to-surface and air-to-air missiles.

The lower fuselage consists of a variety of interchangeable conformal modular units fitted with a variety of sensor systems, such as infrared and optical cameras, synthetic aperture radar, electronic intelligence gathering and electronic warfare equipment.

-irish Sim Cards - International News Roundup: Cronenbergs in Cannes; Norwegian Killer on Trial; Julian Assange, Talk Show Host - (5/12/2012)

CRONENBERG, SENIOR AND JUNIOR, HEAD TO CANNES

David Cronenberg and his son Brandon have booked their tickets to Cannes for the 65th fest. Cronenberg senior’s Cosmopolis, starring Robert Pattinson, will screen in Competition, alongside Walter Salles’ on The Road, The Paperboy from Lee Daniels and Michael Haneke’s Amour.

Antiviral, the debut feature from Cronenberg Junior, will premiere in Cannes’ un Certain Regard sidebar. Other high-profile un Certain titles include Sundance winner Beasts of the Southern Wild and Sylvie Verheyde’s Confession d’un enfant du siecle, starring the unlikely screen duo of Charlotte Gainsbourg and rock bad boy Pete Doherty.

NORWEGIAN KILLER ON TRIAL

Norway braced for its trial of the century as Anders Behring Brievik, the man who massacred 77 people in a one-day rampage last year, took the stand. The trail began with a mini scandal, as the court dismissed one of the assigned lay judges after it was revealed he had posted a comment on Facebook last year calling for the killer to be executed. The first week was taken up by Brievik’s testimony, in which he defended the attacks as a political action necessary to defend Norway against multi-culturalism. The prosecution depicted Brievik as a loner and loser who spent a full year online playing World of Warcraft.

MURDER ROCKS BOLLYWOOD, BEIJING

Bollywood fans where shocked and horrified by the kidnapping and beheading of actress Meenakshi Thapar. Thapar was reportedly kidnapped by two other actors who then killed her on the set of her latest movie. The two actors confessed after police caught them with the SIM card to Thapar's phone.

In China, the controversy surrounding the death of British businessman Neil Heywood continues to dominate the Beijing blogosphere. The scandal surrounding Heywood’s murder has already cost rising political star Bo Xilai his job and micro-bloggers continue to evade state censorship laws to break news and rumors about the case.

MURDOCHS RETURN TO STAND

News Corp. chairman and CEO Rupert Murdoch and his son, deputy COO James Murdoch, will again give evidence to the U.K. government’s Levenson inquiry into phone hacking at News Corp.'s U.K. newspaper unit News International. James Murdoch is set to face questioning on Tuesday, April 24. His father on Wednesday, April 25 and, if needed, Thursday, April 25.

Meanwhile, the lawsuits against News International continue to pile up. A wave of plaintants, including VIPs such as soccer stars Wayne Rooney and Peter Crouch and

British member of parliament Tom Watson and journalist Martin Hickmann added fuel to the fire surrounding the Murdochs with the launch of their new book, Dial M for Murdoch in which they claim News Corp. has exerted a “malign and corrupting influence” on British public life.

SKY SCORES GERMAN SOCCER, SONY BUYS EMI

But in a rare bit of good news for News Corp., it’s German pay-TV group Sky Deutschland beat out competitor Deutsche Telekom to score live rights to the Bundesliga soccer league. Sky will pay $2.5 billion for rights to the 2013 through 2017 Bundeliga seasons, a major price hike on its current deal. The German Football League is the big winner in the rights auction, and stands to earn $820 million a season, an increase of more than 50 per cent.

And another struggling media giant, Sony Corp., got some welcome good news this week when European anti-trust regulators approved its planned acquisition of EMI Group’s music publishing division. Sony will still have to sell off some of its music publishing assets to secure approval but the $2.2 billion deal can now go ahead.

FORGET THOSE GLEE AND WILL AND GRACE RERUNS

More bad news for human rights in Malaysia, where the government has banned TV shows featuring gay characters. The ban, initially imposed on state-owned TV and radio stations, is expected to be extended to commercially-owned channels and satellite TV providers. For foreign productions, the Censorship Board said they will remove individual episodes from TV shows currently on air and ban movies with gay characters from being screened locally. The Malaysian culture minister said gay characters go “against the norm of a religious.

NETFLIX AVOIDS CANADIAN REGULATION, AS DO AUSSIE ISPs

Mixed messages on global online regulation this week. Canada’s TV watchdog, the CRTC, decided for a second time not to regulate Netflix Canada as it does traditional Canadian TV channels, but let the online video market sort itself out.

In Australia, the Hollywood studios lost a landmark case when the Aussie High Court ruled that Internet service providers aren’t liable for their customers’ copyright infringement.

But in Germany, YouTube lost its case against rights collection group GEMA, with a Hamburg court deciding the Google subsidiary has to do more to find, and remove, copyright-protected content on its site.

ASSANGE MEETS HEZBOLLAH

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange launched his new talk show The World Tomorrow on English-language Russian network RT this week with a guest guaranteed to generate maximum controversy: the leader of Lebanon’s Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah. Assange, who has been under house arrest in the U.K., did the interview via computer video link.

IRON MAN HEADS TO CHINA, WOLVERINE GOES DOWN UNDER

In a bid to tap the booming Chinese box office, Disney, its Marvel Studios and Beijing-based DMG Entertainment said Monday that they are teaming to co-produce Iron Man 3 in China. By partnering with DMG, which enjoys close working ties with the state-run China Film Group, Disney and Marvel should be able to work around Beijing’s tight film-import quota, which restricts the domestic market to just 20 foreign features, plus an additional 14 foreign 3D or Imax titles, per year.

Meanwhile 20th Century Fox’s The Wolverine is set for an August shoot in Sydney, Australia, the hometown of star Huge Jackman. Fox Studios Australia will host the production of the sixth film in X-Men franchise, although The Wolverine, which James Mangold will direct, is set in Japan.

OLYMPIC COUNTDOWN, ROYAL WORRIES

And finally, Britain is whipping itself into a media frenzy with just 100 days to go until the 2012 London Summer Olympics. Slumdog Millionaire director Danny Boyle will direct the opening ceremonies and organizers plan to erect 22 big screens across the country to carry live coverage of the event. 

But unions at pubcaster BBC warn they may sabotage the other big Brit event this summer: the Queen’s 60th-year diamond jubilee anniversary celebrates this June. A trio of broadcasting unions this week warned they would strike to target the BBC’s coverage of the jubilee, which includes the broadcast of a free concert featuring Elton John, Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder, if the Beeb does not meet their salary demands.

-batteries For Nokia - Top 10 GSM Phones that "Really" Matter - (5/8/2012)

It started small, but today cellular phones have got the interest of nearly anyone in our society. With thousands of models to choose from and hundreds of different combination of features and price, it has become really tricky to spend money “properly” on buying a new phone. In this article I’ll go through top 10 phones based on my experience, surveys and reviews all around the globe.

#10: Nokia 6310i: Switch back to the days when people used to buy phones to use it as a phone; and still today there are plenty of people among us, who rely on solid performance of cell phones; and that’s why Nokia still manufactures this 4 year old gem. its looks and performs like an 80’s muscle car. it comes with Bluetooth, IrDA, GPRS, 500 (x3 numbers) entries, Timed Profiles, 150 SMS Storage etc. but what makes it a must have is it’s extremely powerful Tri Band Antenna which gives you the best signal reception barely available even in the latest phones and an ultra slim Li-Ion 1050mAh battery, which has a stunning record breaking standby time of 17 days. the phone is purely meant for professionals seeking features related to a phone and staying linked to everyone no matter which part of the country or planet they travel to. the phone is very rare and uncommon, but sold widely abroad. It’s price seems a bit high for a Black & White screen phone – but regarding its reception and in-call performance, the price is still justified. you really can’t play games, use multimedia, watch video, or control your microwave oven with it – you do what you were supposed to do with a proper phone: talk without worries.

#09: Nokia 6101: Nokia 6101 evokes mysterious feelings in people. it is a middle-class phone with a brilliant equipment and attractive design – can be considered as the best charm-shell phone ever produced by Nokia. This moderately priced phone provides all the basic features of a color phone with a touch of a nice VGA camera and executive looks. the phone has Nokia’s renowned standards for good battery life, reception quality and excellent built quality. it also features EDGE, GPRS, polyphonic ring tones, short duration video recording, IrDA etc. the lack of Bluetooth is indeed shocking for this phone. Of course, the phone has a very formal outlook, and a fresh and clean design that’s rarely seen in phone these days, and could be more attractive to people who wants a nice built phone with a modest amount of extra features.

#08: Motorola MPx220: Can be considered as the best looking Windows Mobile OS powered charm-shell. Equipped with 1.3 mega pixel camera, mini-SD card support, GPRS, Bluetooth, IrDA, USB and 65k colors screen – this phone can be considered the best feature rich, and nice looking charm-shell phone. the phone also features MS Pocket Outlook, Windows Media Player, Internet, E-Mail and 25 MB built-in memory. the phone also features a good battery life and reception quality. the quad-band world phone priced around $300 is a perfect tool for fashion conscious business class people.

#07: Nokia N70: the best Symbian and multimedia combined phone ever created. the N70 is among the top of the lines in features and also has an attractive look. With its 2MP camera, excellent screen, good MP3 support, this can currently be said to be the best feature rich multimedia phone available from Nokia. however, its extremely high price tag doesn’t equal to the phones performance, as even being filled with features it doesn’t have best in class. for example, the over size heavy N70 doesn’t really boast the best in 2MP camera, neither doest it have the best sound quality in MP3 playback and sometimes irritating with some old unsolved bugs of firmware. since Nokia is charging so much for the phone, they should have made it more perfect to justify the phone. still in respect of overall quality, this should be the best made feature rich Nokia phone to date.

#06: Samsung X150: if a few phone calls are all that’s needed, and you’re on a tight budget, then this is exactly what’s needed. it can be said to be the best value phone currently available on market. Groups looking for a basic phone with simple features, and trying to avoid low build quality should definitely look for this model. Priced around $80-$90 the Samsung X150 is a justified entry level phone. the received signal strength and sound quality is average, the vibration is good enough if kept in pocket, and it ads a sophisticated appearance. the phone features a nice color screen, monophonic ring-tones, SMS, calendar, voice memo, calculator support, and a simple yet nice looking design. It’s a quality phone and it doesn’t look low-priced. People really can’t ask for more at this price range.

#05: Sony Ericsson K700: This phone is the best bargain for its price. the phone has the finest VGA camera, and a very top class display. it also features flash, 42MB of internal memory, MP3 support, GPRS, Bluetooth, IrDA, Email, tone composer, 40 channels polyphonic ring tones, extra theme support and gorgeous designer class looks. It’s a small sized, fashionable phone with good features.

#04: Nokia 8910/8910i: there are some objects in this world which set a class of their own. the highly durable titanium made Nokia 8910/8910i is such a phone – which is a legend itself. Undoubtedly the best looking phone ever designed – is a sign of elegance and pure passion. the phone is still rare in our crowd which gives a pride in carrying this phone. but, looks are not all that matters – even in reception quality and in call performance it equips itself with the best in class. the phone uses same receiver performance as found in the Nokia 6310i. Camera, games, multimedia – these are excluded to make this phone exclusive for people with choice and attitude – who wants to stand out form the crowd, and carry gadgets that defines the pinnacle in rank.

#03: Motorola RAZR V3: less in features, more in performance and design – the slim is definitely in fashion: the most popular phone in world, “Moto RAZR” came in market with a never before seen or expected design and slimness. Don’t be deceived by looks, the phone has the best reception among all GSM phones in the world. With its excellent quad-band powerful antenna and good call quality, it easily ranks among the top of every list. It’s also equipped by a fine looking screens you’ll hardly see in a phone at this range; however the quality is not good under direct sunlight. the limited edition versions of these phones (which are not quite limited anymore anyway) also feature ability to record videos. the recent price drop to less than $200 of this phone makes it a must have. I myself have tested the phone among one of the worst reception areas, and where all other phones failed, it did kept it signal good enough. but the extremely limited memory space as well as too much popularity makes this phone stop from going to number one. the RAZR lacks in features, but boasts in call quality. the phone can be a marvel for style conscious budget limited teenagers and older people who are less interested in extra features and more into design and performance. although the phone’s not exactly easy to use but don’t be confused with its durability because of the slimness, beauty isn’t really skin-deep: the aircraft grade aluminum body is a very muscular metal which protects the phone well as well as adds a special feeling in skin while holding it.

#02: Sony Ericsson K750i: you just can’t beat Sony Ericsson in price-feature comparisons. Can be said to be the best camera phone in the world (until their K800 comes out); its 2MP camera beats the quality of any other camera phone with auto focus, excellent lens, and flash. the phone’s MP3 player’s sound quality no less if not better than any MP3 player, and can be compared to the quality of iPod. if you want more music features, simply get the W800i (with better battery life for playback, 512MB card and higher quality headphones). it comes with 38MB internal memory and support for 2GB of memory card (64MB provided for k750i), the K750i simply can’t be beaten. it even has a FM radio with RDS tuner. K750i also features display superior than any other phone on market and a solid build quality. the phones fast in response, good in call quality and justified in current price. only its outlook (although are not bad) doesn’t make it look like a phone of this high class, and that’s why may be it can’t be the number one phone in the list. Users looking for good camera, video recording, MP3 should absolutely go for this remarkable phone. This phone is also enormously parallel to W800i and D750i.

#01: Sony Ericsson P990: the apex of all phones, in both killer looks and wide range of applications. This is the best smart phone that ever entered the GSM market. It’s big, but its heavy duty looks, speaks of its quality and smartness. Equipped with high quality touch screen, state of the art Wireless LAN (with VoIP support) as well as all standard smart phone support and a stunning 2MP camera, this phone is built with only a sole purpose on mind – to be on top of everything else. the tri-band phone has 80MB internal memory with memory card support of 4GB, and standard office application as well as support for download and installation of tens of thousands of Symbian applications, MP3/video player, FM Radio, Email, Opera 8 browser, handwriting recognition and 3G UMTS support. the P990 is posh but not overpriced. This phone is made for industry leading professionals who need every tool and best communication capability regardless of the price tag.

Hope this review will help you get your next cell phone and happy shopping

(By M Saquib Hussain)

priceplunge – Home – Cell Phone Accessory Charges and…Cleans?

You can wash your hands all you want, but that’s not going to stop the many germs that have constant access to your cell phone – to which you, in turn, have constant access.  Bacteria hiding out on smartphones should take notice, however – like many things we didn’t know we needed, Kickstarter has the solution for germy cell phones as well.  That solution, very aptly named, is PhoneSoap.

The PhoneSoap is both charger and sanitizer – a unique mobile accessory that uses a UV-C light to get rid of up to 99.9 percent of the pesky bacteria and viruses that thrive on a warm cell phone.  you won’t be able to use your phone while the PhoneSoap does its sanitizing job, but you can still charge it, making it possible to both clean and power your phone overnight.

Even better news is that the PhoneSoap has reached its Kickstarter goal of $18,000.  Pre-ordering your very own PhoneSoap takes a pledge of $39 or more through the Kickstarter page.

(Story and Image via Tom’s Guide)

-t Mobile Sim Cards - Four-Run Eighth Inning Drives Third Straight Augusta GreenJackets Win - (5/5/2012)

Kannapolis, NC —

The Augusta GreenJackets started the month of May on the right foot with a come-from-behind 9-6 win over the Kannapolis Intimidators in a series and road trip opener on Wednesday night.Trailing 6-5 in the eighth inning, the GreenJackets had runners at first and second after Shawn Payne led off with a single and was followed by a Ben Thomas walk. with Brett Krill at the plate in a bunt situation – and Kannapolis in a bunt defense – manager Lipso Nava elected to take the bunt sign off in a move that paid immediate dividends. with the wheel play on, Krill stroked a single up the wide-open middle to plate Payne and tie the game at six. After a walk loaded the bases, Eric Sim’s RBI single put the GreenJackets ahead 7-6. Later in the inning, Carlos Willoughby singled home a run and Kelby Tomlinson drew a bases-loaded walk to extend the Augusta lead to 9-6.the Intimidators mounted an eighth inning rally of their own, loading the bases with a single and two walks off Derek Law in the inning. Closer Cody Hall came in and used six pitches to strike Ross Wilson out on a called third strike to end the inning. In the ninth, Hall struck out two more and gave up two hits, but got a fly out to end the game with the tying run at the plate. with his sixth save, Hall extended his league lead in the category.Augusta and Kannapolis both scored multiple runs in the first inning thanks to two-out errors that extended both halves of the frame. with two on in the top of the first, Krill’s fly ball to right was dropped – resulting in two runs to give the GreenJackets the first lead. Michael Mergenthaler followed with an RBI single to push that lead to 3-0. Kannapolis answered by getting a man on with two outs on a dropped fly ball in their half of the first. Leighton Pangilinan made the GreenJackets pay by drilling a two-run homer to cut Augusta’s lead to 3-2.Kannapolis tied the game at three in the second inning when mark Haddow tripled and later scored on Collin Kuhn’s one-out RBI single. the GreenJackets went back on top in the fourth on Carlos Willoughby’s RBI double and stretched the lead to 5-3 when Kelby Tomlinson singled home a second run in the inning. the Intimidators got a run back in the bottom of the fourth with a bases loaded groundout, but Edwin Escobar bounced back to strikeout out Wilson with the bases loaded to preserve a one-run lead.Escobar allowed four runs – two earned – on seven hits and a walk in the no decision, striking out four. Augusta has only had a starter last five innings or more six times this year and Escobar has done it in three of his four starts.the 5-4 Augusta lead held until the seventh when Wilson’s RBI triple to center tied the game at five. on the next pitch, Grant Buckner’s RBI single to left gave the Intimidators their first lead of the night at 6-5, though it would be a short-lived one.Kevin Couture (1-1) allowed two runs in two innings of work, but struck out three and earned the win. Daniel Webb (0-5) allowed four runs in three innings for Kannapolis and was tagged for the loss.Clayton Blackburn (0-1, 2.95) takes the ball for the GreenJackets on Thursday in search of Augusta’s fourth straight win. He’ll face Myles Jaye in his first start of the year for the Intimidators. first pitch from Kannapolis comes at 7:05 p.m. with radio pregame coverage beginning at 6:50 p.m. on ESPN Radio 1340 AM and online at greenjacketsbaseball.com. the GreenJackets return home on Thursday May 10th to open a series with the Greenville Drive on the second Thirsty Thursday of the year, presented by the Library, with dollar soft drinks and draft beers available.Single-game tickets for any GreenJackets home game are currently available by calling the GreenJackets front office at 706-922-WINS and online at greenjacketsbaseball.com.

-leads & Cables - Rangers power play fizzles when it matters - (4/21/2012)

KANATA, Ont. — it was far from a miracle, but last night at Scotiabank place the Rangers power play managed to raise itself from the dead.

In the Game 4 3-2 overtime loss to the Senators, the Rangers power play went 2-for-7, the formerly dormant man-advantage showing signs of life.

For a unit that was 1-for-11 during the first three games, the power play got the Rangers a 2-0 lead just over six minutes into the game, converting on their first two chances. yet they couldn’t get one when it mattered most, failing on their final five opportunities. They saw their lead slip away and the series get tied 2-2, with Game 5 set for Saturday at the Garden.

“That’s good to get two,” said Brad Richards, who assisted on both goals. “With the amount we had [last night] and the situations, it would’ve been nice to get that third. Maybe 3-0 or 3-1 lead instead of letting them get back to 2-2.”

In what was a very tightly called game, the Rangers got their first chance 39 seconds in, after Zach Smith was called for boarding Ryan McDonagh in the corner. Just 10 seconds after the face-off, Richards fired a shot from the right circle that was stopped by goalie Craig Anderson. but Anderson couldn’t control the rebound, and the puck ended up on the blade of Anton Stralman, who ripped a wrist shot just inside the left post, his second power-play goal in the past three games, giving the Rangers a 1-0 lead.

“It’s a game of momentum,” Brandon Dubinsky said. “They had it at times; we had it at times.”

The Rangers’ power play has been the most inconsistent aspect of their game all season, finishing the regular season ranked 23rd (15.7 percent) in the league. to try to spark them, Coach John Tortorella added Stralman to the top unit, moving Derek Stepan down to the second group.

Tortorella said it was to “create more balance” in the two groups, but Richards explained it as their need to shoot more, Stralman playing the point with a quick trigger while Stepan is more of a puck possessor.

It was that same top unit — consisting of Stralman and Michael Del Zotto up top, and Marian Gaborik, Ryan Callahan and Richards up front — that was always sent out first, including on the second chance six minutes into the game. In that instance, Gaborik tried to get a shot through traffic and the puck was blocked, eventually sliding to the far post.

Luckily for the Rangers, that’s where Callahan was camped out alone, the captain tapping it in for a 2-0 lead.

“Anytime you have a lead, you don’t want to lose it,” Richards said. “We’ll look at it and build on the stuff we need to improve.”

After not being able to generate a lot in their next four chances — and while the Senators tied the score 2-2 — the Rangers came out for a big power play with just more than five minutes remaining in the game. They couldn’t get a shot on net, and it went to overtime, where Kyle Turris ended it.

“They got some momentum,” Richards said. “now we’re going home to win a game.”