31 Ocak 2011 Pazartesi

Cosmopolitan-owner Hearst buys Lagardиre titles for Ј560m

Cosmopolitan-owner Hearst buys Lagard titles for #560m

Hearst, the owner of Cosmopolitan magazine, has bought the international magazines business of Elle-owner Lagardère for £560m.

London Mayor Boris Johnson on the cover of fashion magazine Elle

Lagard will continue to own the Elle trademark and will grant a licence to Hearst, receiving a yearly fee Photo: Getty Images

Amanda Andrews

By Amanda Andrews 11:00PM GMT 31 Jan 2011

Comments

The cash deal will include titles Psychologies and Inside Soap, as well as a licence for Elle.

The offer includes the sale of 102 titles across 15 countries – the UK, US, Russia, Ukraine, Italy, Spain, China, Japan, the Netherlands, Czech Republic, Hong Kong, Mexico, Taiwan, Canada and Germany.

Lagardère will continue to own the Elle trademark and will grant a licence to Hearst, receiving a yearly fee linked to the international sales of the business.

As part of the licensing deal, which does not include merchandising, Lagardère will receive an estimated €8m annual royalty payment from Hearst.

The agreement will make Hearst the second-largest US magazine publisher by circulation, behind Time Inc, and the largest publisher in the world by number of editions.

Lagardère said that it expects the international magazine division it is selling to Hearst to have revenues of €774m in 2010.

Hearst's offer is subject to regulatory approvals in some countries, so the deal will not close until the second half of the year.

getty images, royalty payment, international magazines, china japan, cosmopolitan magazine, psychologies, magazine publisher, hearst, regulatory approvals, czech republic, time inc, 8m, amanda, circulation, soap, second half, hong kong, russia, netherlands, ukraine

Telegraph.co.uk

30 Ocak 2011 Pazar

Saltwick Nab

photo

Saltwick Nab

Saltwick Nab & Rocks.
One of my first shots of the day, not too sure about this one has there’s not much water blur on the foreground rocks. I was a little bit too late getting to this point.
Best viewed large.

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foreground rocks, nab, blur, little bit, amp, online

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agiewniki Forest

photo

agiewniki Forest

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GPI_4285.NEF - Amsterdam, Holland

photo

GPI_4285.nef - Amsterdam, Holland

A collection of photos of the canals in Amsterdam, Holland.

Originals at: www.geneinman.com/canals

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Canals

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Holland

Nikon

D700

Europe

Travel

www.GeneInman.com

amsterdam holland, gpi, hollanda, nef, canals, photos

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Le Village Buffet, Paris Hotel, Pas Vegas

photo

Le Village Buffet, Paris Hotel, Pas Vegas

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Architecture

City

City Of Sin

Cityscape

Entertament

Las Vegas

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Strip

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29 Ocak 2011 Cumartesi

OMG - what a view!

photo

OMG - what a view!

Peeping out my LA hotel window at 5.30 am.

View upon West 7th street from the 14th floor of the Historic Mayfair Hotel.

LA, CA, USA

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LA

Los Angeles

Mayfair Hotel

suite

hotel

view

WEst 7th street

CA

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dawn

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28 Ocak 2011 Cuma

Endlose Kerze in Weiss

photo

Endlose Kerze in Weiss

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Torre em Brugge

photo

Torre em Brugge

Ponto de referncia em Brugge. Dezembro 2010.

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belgium

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skyqtdz
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27 Ocak 2011 Perşembe

Tangled directors on the latest Disney animation

Tangled directors on the latest Disney animation

Nathan Greno and Byron Howard talk to Marc Lee about animating the new version of Rapunzel with hair that's 70 feet long.

400

227

TelegraphPlayer-8282630

Link to this video

Marc Lee

By Marc Lee 6:32PM GMT 27 Jan 2011

Comments

Tangled is the 50th Disney animation. Did you feel any extra pressure on you to come up with something special?

NG: Without a doubt it was ton of pressure for a number of reasons. Usually you get four to five years to make one of these movies, and we had only two years: there was already a release date in place.

On top of that we were working with John Lasseter, who runs Pixar and also runs our studio. He’s an incredible guy, but also he’s very tough on us and on the film because he expects a very high level of quality, which is great; we love that, we want the same. But it just makes the whole process even more pressured working with John.

Lee Unkrich, who directed Toy Story 3, told me he used to wake up in a sweat fearful that he was making the first Pixar flop. Did you have a similar experience?

BH: Nathan and I really care about Disney, and we love the legacy of this place. We love the fact that we work across the street the street from the building where they animated Peter Pan and Sleeping Beauty.

There aren’t a lot of these big classic fairy tales left and usually what happens with a Disney film, when they make a classic tale, that version of the story becomes the definitive version. For instance, when you think of the Little Mermaid now, you think of [Disney animator] Glen Keane’s version of Ariel. Aladdin, Beauty and the Beast – the same thing.

Our goal with Tangled was to make a very contemporary film that was very smart, but at the same time we wanted it to be timeless enough so that 200 years from now it will be the definitive version of Rapunzel.

The Rapunzel story has been in the Disney works since the Forties. That’s a long development period: why hasn’t it been made until now?

NG: Our best guess is that when you look at what the original classic story is, it’s this story about this passive girl, sitting in a tower waiting to be rescued. It’s a very short story, a very small story that just sort of takes place in a room. So I think that was what held the idea back.

It was really a question of how to make that story work, especially now that movies just keep getting bigger and bigger and more sophisticated. You can’t do a big box-office film with a single passive character that all takes place in one room.

So what we did to finally crack the story was to get her out of the tower, send her off on an adventure.

We’re creating role models here in a very real way, so we wanted to make Rapunzel a very smart, strong girl. We wanted a lot of girl power – you know, have her use her hair like a bullwhip, have her tie people up with it, swing from cliff to cliff… Doing all those things finally opened up it up into a movie that could be made.

Her hair is 70 feet long. That must have been a challenge to animate...

BH: It really was another character in the movie. Usually in movies like this, you have separate teams working on each character; with Rapunzel we had a full crew just working on the hair.

That hair was so challenging and technically nearly impossible to pull off. It just hasn’t been done before

Apparently, the way Flynn looks took a lot of research…

BH: You’re referring to the infamous “Hot Man” meeting. Since Nathan and I are men, we didn’t think we were the best judges of male beauty, so we asked a lot of women in the studio, about 30 of them, to come in tell us what they considered attractive in a guy – what makes a man hot.

They showed up with hundreds of images of every handsome man you could imagine. Every hunk in the world was on the wall from Clark Gable to David Beckham.

Then they started using Nathan and me as examples of what not to do. It was very humbling to be a couple of guys in that meeting, but ultimately it got us the very handsome Flynn Rider, and we’re very happy with how he turned out.

Tangled is out now

classic fairy tales, rapunzel story, disney animator, john lasseter, glen keane, who directed toy story, toy story 3, disney animation, marc lee, little mermaid, disney film, beauty and the beast, definitive version, lee unkrich, development period, extra pressure, s 70, pixar, forties, sleeping beauty
qtdz
Telegraph.co.uk

Me on TV - self portrait

photo

Me on TV - self portrait

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instagram app

square

square format

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Flickr.com

26 Ocak 2011 Çarşamba

The Blue Hour Rocks!

photo

The Blue Hour Rocks!

Facebook| Imagekind| Twitter| HDR| Vancouver HDR| My HDR Tutorial| Blue Hour HDR

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Technique
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-Sony a300 w/ Tamron 10-24 lens
-Tripod
-10mm
-ISO 100
-F8
-3.2 seconds
-Tonemapped using a single RAW exposure in Photomatix Pro 4.0. File>Open
-Contrast adjustment, Vibrance Boost, and Unsharp Mask in Photoshop CS5

I did take multiple exposures for this shot, but when I blended them in Photomatix, the details of the water and clouds disappeared. By using just one exposure, I kept all the details that I wanted.

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The Story
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I captured this shot at Portside aka Crab Park on my meet-up with Eyesplash.
Here is his series from the same night.

If you're in the Southern British Columbia area, there will be a BIG flickr meet up in downtown Vancouver on February 12th. The one year anniversary of Vancouver's Olympics. If you didn't get to experience the games in person. This is your last chance to for a taste of what it was like. The streets will be shut down, the cauldron will be lit, and there will be events with some of the medalists in Robson Square.

To sign up and receive updates on where we'll be meeting, just tag yourself in this photo.

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Permissions
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© 2011 Brandon Godfrey

Not for profit bloggers are welcome. I can always use the free publicity.

I do not use Getty Images. If you would like to licence a full resolution version of any of my photos. Please contact me by flickr mail, or email. Which can be found on my profile. Why pay a middle man 80%? Save money by going straight to the artist.

Posters, framed, and canvas prints can be purchased on my Imagekind. I only have a few select photos on the site, so If you have a certain one of my flickr photos in mind. Again, just contact me by either flickrmail, or regular email, and I'll upload it there for you.

Thank You

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british columbia area, sony a300, southern british columbia, technique sony, crab park, multiple exposures, photo permissions, downtown vancouver, free publicity, contrast adjustment, blue hour, twitter, hdr, cauldron, tamron, last chance, bloggers, mask, olympics, tripod
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25 Ocak 2011 Salı

Seaside View

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Seaside View

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f/3.5-5.6g

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Lake Louise Snow Cross

photo

Lake Louise Snow Cross

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24 Ocak 2011 Pazartesi

A Lawyer

photo

A Lawyer

24|2011
Palcio da justia - Coimbra - Portugal

© All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal

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Europe

Portugal

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Law Court

Lawyer

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Arte Colombiana Cartagena

photo

arte Colombiana Cartagena

Arte Colombiana

Cartagena de Indias - Bolivar - Colombia

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Dandry Gorge Aboriginal Area

photo

Dandry Gorge Aboriginal Area

Dandry Gorge within the Pilliga area

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A google goner

The babysitter is leaving the corner office.

After a decade leading google from a barely known startup into the world's No. 1 search engine with sales of $29 billion and 24,000 people on the payroll, CEO Eric Schmidt is handing over the keys and the day-to-day management of the company to co-founder Larry Page, 37.

Schmidt, 55, was brought aboard the Mountain View, Calif., company in 2001 from Novell to provide steady, seasoned management as Google worked toward its 2004 initial public offering. That role has run its course now that both Page and co-founder Sergey Brin, also 37, have a decade of experience under their belts.

Google co-founder Larry Page (left) will take over day to day operations as CEO Eric Schmidt announced he'll be stepping down in April.

Google co-founder Larry Page (left) will take over day to day operations as CEO Eric Schmidt announced he'll be stepping down in April.

"Day-to-day adult supervision no longer needed," Schmidt tweeted yesterday.

Page, who Schmidt said is "ready to lead," will take over on April 4.

"Larry is looking to take a more active role in day-to-day operations, seeing as he's ready to step up to that CEO role," said Aaron Kessler, an analyst with ThinkEquity. "Larry was relatively young when he founded Google. Young entrepreneurs aren't ready to assume a CEO position at that point."

Ken Sena, a director at Evercore Partners, said the leadership change will give the company a fresher face, like its Silicon Valley peer Facebook, which is led by 26-year-old Mark Zuckerberg.

"When you look at Mark Zuckerberg and how he has been recognized as being on the forefront of where tech is headed, it's no wonder they want Sergey and Larry back at the helm," Sena said.

The changing of the guard overshadowed the news that Google's fourth-quarter profit soared 29 percent, to $2.54 billion, well above Wall Street estimates. Revenue, excluding commissions paid to marketing partners, beat forecasts, topped out at $6.37 billion, a 29 percent jump.

Company officials attributed the gains in large part to strength in the company's core search product, which continued to dominate the market and ratchet up ad sales. According to comScore, Google had 66.6 percent share of the US search market in December 2010.

While Page takes control as CEO, co-founder Brin's role will be to focus on pet projects and innovations.

Brin did indicate Google would continue to develop social components to its services even though the company admitted its failures of last year such as Google Wave, a social Gmail feature that never took off. The company killed Wave and another not-so-hot offering, its Nexus One phone, Schmidt said.

While by most measures Schmidt has been wildly successful as CEO, he has taken heat for not having the tech chops of Google's founders. Also, privacy groups have sniped that he has turned a deaf ear to their concerns as Google amasses personal -- if not identifiable -- information on people who use its services.

Google also reported that it had $35 billion on hand in cash that will be tapped in the year ahead. Shares rose 1.6 percent to $637 in after-hours trading.

gsloane@nypost.com

founder sergey brin, ceo eric schmidt, sergey brin, jump company, ceo role, page and co, ceo position, initial public offering, adult supervision, evercore partners, facebook, leadership change, google, mark zuckerberg, thinkequity, april day, eric schmidt, silicon valley, larry page, marketing partners
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Nypost.com

23 Ocak 2011 Pazar

Corfu Channel

photo

Corfu Channel

Albanian coast seen across the Corfu Channel from the Old fortress in Corfu Town.

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Flickr.com

22 Ocak 2011 Cumartesi

Manchester United 5 Birmingham City 0: match report

Manchester United 5 Birmingham City 0: match report

Read a full match report of the Premier League game between Manchester United and Birmingham City at Old Trafford on Saturday Jan 22 2011.

PREVIEW

LIVE

REPORT

MAN UTD

5 - 0

FT

BIRMINGHAM

Saturday, January 22 15:00

Premier League

Old Trafford

berbatov (2, 31, 53)

Giggs (45+2)

Nani (76)

(HT 3-0)

ATT: 75,326

Manchester United 5 Birmingham City 0: match report

Hat-trick hero: Dimitar Berbatov proves too hot to handle for Birmingham's defence Photo: AFP

Mark Ogden

By Mark Ogden 5:00PM GMT 22 Jan 2011

Mark's Twitter

Dimitar Berbatov scored his third hat-trick of the season as Manchester United routed Birmingham City at Old Trafford.

The Bulgarian striker took his Premier League goal tally to 17 for the season as goals from Ryan Giggs and Nani completed a 5-0 victory.

United manager Sir Alex Ferguson was even able to rest first-teamers such as Rio Ferdinand, Darren Fletcher and the fit-again Paul Scholes ahead of Tuesday’s clash with Blackpool at Bloomfield Road in a game that proved routine for the league leaders.

Birmingham, who face West Ham in the second-leg of their Carling Cup semi-final at St Andrews on Wednesday, held United to a 1-1 draw on home turf last month thanks to a late Lee Bowyer goal.

But once Berbatov opened the scoring for United after just 96 seconds, it was clear that Birmingham were not going to emerge from Old Trafford with another point to show for their efforts.

Perhaps McLeish’s team were subconsciously thinking ahead to the date with Avram Grant’s men because their minds were clearly not focused on stopping United. It was all too easy for the home side.

Berbatov’s opener was a straightforward header from two yards after John O’Shea had flicked Giggs’s corner.

But the failure of goalkeeper Ben Foster to collect the corner was noticeable and a reminder as to why Ferguson felt able to sell the England keeper to Birmingham last summer.

Ferguson had clearly sent his team out with instructions to test Foster with crosses and high balls and, on every occasion, the keeper looked ill at ease.

His uncertainty spread through the Birmingham back four and United’s second goal, on 31 minutes, came following a misplaced pass by defender Roger Johnson, which was cut out by Anderson, whose quick ball forward sparked United’s goal.

Anderson’s ball to Rooney saw the forward race forward before threading a pass to Berbatov, who scored past Foster from 12 yards.

Birmingham were now looking to keep the score down, but United continued to pour forward and Giggs scored the goal of the game in first-half stoppage time.

The 37-year-old rounded off slick interplay between Berbatov and Rooney by scoring from a tight angle inside the six yard box.

Despite United’s breathtaking forward play, Rooney continued to look for his first goal at Old Trafford since a penalty against West Ham in August.

The chance looked to have come on 47 minutes when Nani’s far post cross found Rooney unmarked, but from three yards, the England striker headed wide.

He was still able to create, however, and after receiving Edwin van der Sar’s clearance on 54 minutes, he released Giggs to tee up Berbatov’s hat-trick goal – a slide in strike from close range.

Birmingham’s woeful performance was then summed up on 58 minutes when Irish midfielder Keith Fahey missed an open goal from three yards after being teed up by Matt Derbyshire.

And Nani compounded their misery when he made it 5-0 with a left foot strike from 20 yards on 75 minutes.

sir alex ferguson, hat trick hero, lee bowyer, alex ferguson, goal tally, high balls, old trafford, mark ogden, home turf, berbatov, rio ferdinand, bloomfield road, rsquo, darren fletcher, league goal, ben foster, league game, ryan giggs, teamers, carling cup
qtdz
Telegraph.co.uk

Dinner

photo

Dinner

Caterpillar and friends on a Billy Button flower, Falls Creek.

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Flickr.com

21 Ocak 2011 Cuma

Bunching up

photo

Bunching up

A small grouping of deer at the edge of the tiny town of Rock Lake, ND. About 3/4 of a mile West of this location there was a group that was probably 3 times this size, but they were too far away for a decent shot :(

This one's better in larger sizes

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North Dakota

winter

snow

Towner County

NikonD60

white tailed deer

Rock Lake

rock lake nd, tiny town, deer download
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Flickr.com

New York by night

photo

New York by night

Photo du quatier de Time Square New York prise de haut de l'empire states Building

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New

York

Time

Square

Nuit

Night

time square new york, empire states online, prise
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Flickr.com

20 Ocak 2011 Perşembe

Berkeley Tower Dream ...

photo

Berkeley Tower Dream ...

View On Black
Last night dream... I dreamt that i was there on the Berkeley campus with my son ( we were there for real about a month ago ) and that we were caught in a snowstorm ( must be all those snow pictures that i have seen from my flickr friends ;-)

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tower

campus

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berkeley university

storm

snow storm

berkeley tower dream

UC Berkeley

berkeley campus, dream view, snowstorm, night dream
qtdz
Flickr.com

Mitford Sunset (HDR)

photo

Mitford sunset (HDR)

One of my first attempts at HDR!

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Mitford

Sunset

HDR

Winter

Snow

Ice

Tree

attempts, sunset
qtdz
Flickr.com

19 Ocak 2011 Çarşamba

Generic Burning Man Sunset

photo

Generic Burning Man Sunset

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35mm

BM

BM10

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Black Rock City

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Sunday Mass

photo

Sunday Mass

The church still plays a significant role in the life of people in the country. This church is built not far from where German missionaries brought the gospel over a century before.

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Madang

Gospel

Alexishafen

Riwo Villageqtdz
Flickr.com

Nearing the summit

photo

Nearing the summit

Nearing the summit of Snowdon it was living up to its name.

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North Wales

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Snowdon

winter

mountaineering

Sun

snowdon, summit
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Flickr.com

img249

photo

img249

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800

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approximate locationqtdz
Flickr.com

18 Ocak 2011 Salı

Tunisia government unveils new freedoms

Tunisia government unveils new freedoms

Tunisia unveiled a unity government on Monday to prepare for elections, promising unprecedented freedoms and the release of political prisoners although the ousted president's party retained key posts.

Prime Minister Mohammed Ghannouchi

Prime Minister Mohammed Ghannouchi announced that he will remain as head of the transitional government, which will prepare for presidential and parliamentary elections within a maximum of six months Photo: EPA

7:30AM GMT 18 Jan 2011

The new authority also put a cost to weeks of turmoil that forced Zine El Abidine Ben Ali to flee Friday after 23 years in power, saying 78 people were killed and the economy had lost 1.6 billion euros (£1.3 billion).

Prime Minister Mohammed Ghannouchi announced that he will remain as head of the transitional government, which will prepare for presidential and parliamentary elections within a maximum of six months.

His Constitutional Democratic Rally (RCD) also retained the key foreign, interior, defence and finance ministries, even after hundreds demanded in protests in Tunis and other cities Monday that the party be abolished.

The new government includes three leaders of the legal opposition as well as representatives of civil society, with a dissident blogger arrested under Mr Ben Ali named as secretary of state for youth and sports.

It excludes banned political parties including the Communists and the Islamist Ennahdha, although Mr Ghannouchi said that all political parties would be legalised and media freed.

Restrictions would also be lifted on non-governmental organisations including Tunisia's main human rights group, the Human Rights League, he said.

"We announce total freedom of information," Mr Ghannouchi told reporters after announcing the cabinet. "We have decided to allow all associations to have normal activities without any interference on the part of the government."

Moncef Marzouki, a dissident living in Paris who has announced that he would stand for the presidency in the future polls, immediately branded the new government a "masquerade" still dominated by Mr Ben Ali's supporters.

"Tunisia deserved much more," the secular leftist said.

"A unity government in name only because, in reality, it is made up of members of the party of dictatorship, the RCD," he said on France's I-Tele channel.

The Communist party, which is still banned in Tunisia, also slammed the new government saying it was the old regime in a new guise.

With Tunisia in chaos since Mr Ben Ali's downfall – which followed weeks of popular revolt in which security forces opened fire on protesters – the UN chief Ban Ki-moon called for the "prompt restoration" of rule of law.

Interior Minister Ahmed Friaa said 78 people were killed, several times higher than the last official figure of 21 dead issued on January 11, a few days before the president fled.

moncef marzouki, zine el abidine ben ali, human rights group, tunisia government, minister mohammed, zine el abidine, legal opposition, democratic rally, unity government, political prisoners, non governmental organisations, living in paris, finance ministries, parliamentary elections, transitional government, freedom of information, 23 years, blogger, communists, political parties
qtdz
Telegraph.co.uk

Pelican at Quarantine Bay, Eden, New South Wales, Australia IMG_8184_Eden

photo

pelican at Quarantine Bay, Eden, New South Wales, Australia IMG_8184_Eden

This charming pelican is seen here enjoying a late afternoon swim at Quarantine Bay, Eden, New South Wales, Australia. Located on the Sapphire Coast.

© Darren Stones
All Rights Reserved

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dgstones

eden

nsw

new

south

wales

australia

quarantine

bay

pelican

sapphire

coast

quarantine bay, new south wales australia, new south wales, south wales australia, sapphire coast, late afternoon, pelican, eden, img
qtdz
Flickr.com

17 Ocak 2011 Pazartesi

David Cameron denies he believes NHS is 'second rate'

David Cameron denies he believes NHS is 'second rate'

David Cameron has clarified that he does not think parts of the NHS were “second rate,” instead claiming he meant that we should not settle for “second best” in their treatment.

David Cameron denies he believes NHS is 'second rate'

Mr Cameron was defending the plans for reform of the National health Service and the speed with which the shake-up is being introduced.  Photo: AP

Andrew Porter

By Andrew Porter, Political Editor 1:00PM GMT 17 Jan 2011

Comments

The Prime Minister had been accused by Labour of insulting “millions of NHS staff” with his comments.

Mr Cameron was defending the plans for reform of the National Health Service and the speed with which the shake-up is being introduced.

In an interview, Mr Cameron said that patients should not have to settle for "second rate" healthcare. He corrected himself, fearing that health professionals would take a very dim view of his assessment.

Labour seized on the slip with John Healey, the shadow health secretary, saying that improvements in the NHS were clear for everyone to see.

He said: “David Cameron also seems to see the NHS as second rate when everybody else has seen big improvements by Labour in recent years and public satisfaction is now at an all time high. This is an insult to millions of NHS staff.

“Strong criticism from NHS experts, professional bodies and patient groups shows that those who know the health service best fear the Government will force competition, price wars and privatisation on the NHS at the expense of good patient care.”

When later asked to clarify his remarks Mr Cameron admitted that he wanted to say “second best” and pointed out that there were cases – Mid-Staffordshire being a case in point – where patients did get second best care.

He repeated: “We should not settle for second best.”

In a major speech defending public sector reforms Mr Cameron brushed off criticism that the Coalition was imposing yet another top-down reorganisation on the health service. Among those who have today attacked the plans – calling them “potentially disastrous” – is the British Medical Association and the Royal College of Nursing.

But Mr Cameron, talking about health and education reforms, said: “Every year without modernisation the costs of our public services escalate. Demand rises, the chains of commands can grow, costs may go up, inefficiencies become more entrenched.

"Pretending that there is some 'easy option' of sticking with the status quo and hoping that a little bit of extra money will smooth over the challenges is a complete fiction.

"We need modernisation, on both sides of the equation. Modernisation to do something about the demand for healthcare, which is about public health. And modernisation to make the supply of healthcare more efficient, which is about opening up the system, being competitive and cutting out waste and bureaucracy.

"Put another way: it's not that we can't afford to modernise; it's that we can't afford not to modernise."

Andrew Lansley, the Health Secretary, has been accused by some of exceeding his remit in pushing through reform, including the scrapping of Primary Care Trusts and the handing over £80billion of commissioning budgets to GPs, that were not included in the Coalition agreement. But Mr Cameron said it was right that the issue was addressed head on.

He pointed out that Tony Blair, despite having the right instincts on reform of the public sector, was thwarted by "institutional inertia". But he also pointed out previous Tory failings.

Mr Cameron added: “I believe previous Conservative governments had some really good ideas about introducing choice and competition to health and education - so people were in the driving seat. But there was insufficient respect for the ethos of public services - and public service," he said.

"The impression was given that there was a clear dividing line running through our economy, with the wealth creators of the private sector on one side paying for the wealth consumers of the public sector on the other.

"This analysis was - and still is - much too simplistic. Public sector employees don't just provide a great public service - they contribute directly to wealth creation."

He denied he was planning "a kind of public service version of a laissez-faire economic policy" with the Government's reforms for schools and hospitals, "where winners are created at the expense of those who get left behind".

"The state has a hugely important responsibility to ensure clear, basic standards are met, the rights of users are maintained and independent inspection is carried out in our public services and we are in no way abrogating that.”

He added: “Every year we delay, every year without improving our schools is another year of children let down, another year our health outcomes lag behind the rest of Europe, another year that trust and confidence in law and order erodes," he said.

"These reforms aren't about theory or ideology - they are about people's lives. Your lives, the lives of the people you and I care most about - our children, our families and our friends.

“So I have to say to people: if not now, then when? We should not put this off any longer.”

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16 Ocak 2011 Pazar

Canada Wins Gold in Women's Hockey

[womenshockey022] AFP/Getty Images

Members of the Canadian team celebrate their win.

VANCOUVER, British Columbia – Canada's women upheld their half of the bargain in letting the world know who owns hockey Thursday, blanking archrival the United States 2-0 in their Olympic gold-medal game.

The game was the reverse of the U.S.-Canada men's game Sunday. This time Team USA carried the play only to be stymied by the Canadian goaltender. All the scoring took place in the first period, when Canada got two opportunistic goals from Marie-Philip Poulin. Canada rode goalie Shannon Szabados the rest of the way.

"My teammates were unbelievable today," Ms. Szabados said. "This is an incredible moment."

View Full Image

whockey0225

Associated Press

Marie-Philip Poulin, center, celebrates her goal against the U.S.

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The game was a tribute to what women's hockey can be when played by two equal opponents. This Olympic tournament showed once more how the U.S. and Canada are eons ahead of other countries in women's hockey, a fact reflected in numerous blowouts and questions about whether there were enough players around the world to merit inclusion in the Olympics.

But when played by two teams as equally skilled as the Americans and Canadians, the women's game was perfectly fast-paced and thrilling. Passes zipped tape to tape, slapshots boomed and both goalies acrobatically knocked away pucks or snagged them with darting gloves.

"For sure it's good hockey," Canadian men's hockey defenseman Brent Seabrook said during the first-period intermission. "It's really exciting."

Fans also passionately supported the game, holding banners that read "She Shoots, She Scores" and "I Believe in Women's Hockey."

The game started slowly but the U.S. began a relentless forecheck, which pinned the Canadian defense in their zone much of the night. Forwards Hilary Knight and Caitlin Cahow stormed the net several times, but Ms. Szabados kept turning them away, often relying on her fast glove hand to snag pucks out of the air.

The U.S. had an even better chance to get into the game in the second period when Canada was called for delay of game by shooting the puck over the glass. A few seconds later, it was called again for the same penalty – a highly unusual sequence of events that gave the U.S. a five-on-three power play for almost two minutes. But between the Canadians' deft shot-blocking and too much U.S. passing, the danger passed.

By the third, it was clear Canada was planning to hang on and the game became a series of efforts by the U.S. team to penetrate the Canadian zone, with Canada countering when the U.S. defense pinched too deep.

The medals ceremony was touching, with the bronze-medal Finnish team clearly thrilled to have won a medal. The U.S. women, meanwhile, were despondent, many in tears. When U.S. fans began chanting "U.S.A., U.S.A.," the Canadian-dominated arena took up the chant as well.

But the roof went off when gold was handed out. Looking down from the skyboxes was the Canadian men's team. They must get through the semifinals Friday to reach their gold-medal game to hold up their end of the national bargain.

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West Ham United v Arsenal: live

West Ham United v Arsenal: live

Follow live, minute-by-minute commentary of the Premier League game between West Ham United and Arsenal at Upton Park on Saturday Jan 15 2011, kick-off 17.30 GMT.

PREVIEW

LIVE

WEST HAM

0 - 3

FT

ARSENAL

Saturday, January 15 17:30

Premier League

Upton Park

(HT 0-2)

van Persie (13, 77)

Walcott (41)

West Ham United v Arsenal: live

 

Image 1 of 2

Yellow peril: Robin van Persie celebrates giving Arsenal the lead against West ham United Photo: AP

West ham United v Arsenal: liver

 

Image 1 of 2

A friendly word: Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger shows solidarity with his West ham counterpart Avram Grant ahead of the match Photo: GETTY IMAGES

5:00PM GMT 15 Jan 2011

COMMENTARY

KEY MOMENTS

60000

2011-01-15 19:25:20.0

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/competitions/premier-league/8257542/West-Ham-United-v-Arsenal-live.html?service=artBody

This page will automatically update every 60 secondsOn Off

Email Thom Gibbs with who you'd like to see replace Avram Grant at West Ham, topical anagrams and good-natured abuse.
------------------------------------

FULL TIME
That's it. Thank goodness for that. Avram Grant looks very sad. His West Ham side were awful, enforcing themselves on the game for no more than five minutes during the 90. No obvious protest from the West Ham fans about their farcical managerial situation, just some half-hearted boos for an insipid performance. Arsenal were tremendous and could have had 10 if they'd been trying. Over and out from me, and goodbye Uncle Avram.

90+1 min: Jon Champion has just pronounced "Hitzlsperger", as in the crocked West Ham midfielder Thomas, as "Hits-all-burger". By his own high standards he'll be disappointed with that.

90 min: Three added minutes will be played.

89 min: Wilshere has far too much time to get a shot at goal. Green saves.

88 min: Wayne Bridge, to cap an absolutely miserable afternoon, has cramp and is being led off by West Ham's physio to be humanely destroyed. Oh sorry, no, he's just being substituted for Frank Nouble.

87 min: Nasri's jinking run takes him past five West Ham defenders, but his shot is out for a corner. Nasri is substituted moments later, for Gibbs, and it's Arshavin on for Walcott.

86 min: This game has been over for a long time. I'm surprised ESPN haven't sent Chris Waddle home early. I feel sorry for West Ham. They look so listless, so desperately short of quality and motivation. I think Avram Grant should punch ever one of his players in the face as they file down the tunnel in four minutes time. A lovely leaving present.

82 min: Walcott fails to find Van Persie in the middle, with the Ducthman screaming for the ball and a chance for his hat trick.

80 min: Denilson on for Fabregas, who has been imperious.

79 min: At least six West Ham fans are singing "4-3, we're gonna win 4-3." No you're not, chaps. No you're not.

Goal77 min: GOAL!!! West Ham 0 Arsenal 3 (Van Persie)
Low and powerful into the bottom left. Green goes the right way but can't do anything about it. Can the last West Ham fan to leave Upton Park please turn off the lights?

76 min: PENALTY!! (Arsenal)
Silly challenge from Bridge as Walcott got into the box. No question about that. Horrible debut for Bridge, who's looked way off the pace.

75 min: ESPN have just showed three different spectators that are fast asleep. That's as accurate a summary of this half as I can think of.

72 min: Genuinely nothing to report. West Ham's players look like they want to go gome.

68 min: This is a slow and tiresome game. Arsenal are knocking it about and carving West Ham open almost at will. Van Persie gets a low ball to the near post, but Walcott, under pressure, can only stab the ball out for a goal kick.

65 min: Boa Morte's through ball finds Hines who battles past Eboue in the box. He never really gets the ball under control and is eventually muscled out of possession by three Arsenal defenders. Good effort from the youngster, though, and appreciated by the home support who must not be having a very pleasant time at all.

64 min: Pablo Barrera is on for Freddie Sears. The world continues to turn.

61 min: Sears' mishit cross takes everyone by surpsie and Szczesny does well to tip it behind from a corner. Cole's unconventional header has the Arsenal keeper scrambling again, but he's able to nullify the threat at the second time of asking.

59 min: Wilshere fouled as he was sizing up a pass into the box. Boa Morte is booked. Van Persie shaping to take the free kick, again about 25 yards out, but slightly to the right hand side of the goal. Van Persie's shot is defelcted off Upson for a corner.

55 min: After what must be 40 consecutive Arsenal passes Walcott loses patience and decides to shoot. His low attempt is stopped by Green.

52 min: It's not a bad shot, spinning just wide of the left hand side post after taking a deflection off Van Persie. The corner is cleared to Faubert, whose optimistic shot is charged down.

51 min: West Ham have a free kick. Dead centre and about 22 yards from goal. It'll be Bridge to take it. Uh-oh.

49 min: Walcott earns Arsenal a corner after trading passes with Alex Song and playing the ball off Bridge. It eventually reaches Clichy on the other side whose cross is too powerful. Moments later Van Persie hits a rising shot over the bar. Arsenal bullying West Ham here.

Twitter48 min: Kevin Garside on Twitter: "Graham Gooch in the Press Box at West Ham. Needs a daddy hundred from his team. #afc beating #whufc at a canter"

47 min: A wonderful stat from the first half via ESPN's anorak department: Cesc Fabregas touched the ball more than the entire West Ham midfield in the first half.

46 min: West Ham begin the second half with a kick off, as is the tradition.

HALF TIME

45+2 min: Green claims the corner without much difficulty.

45+1 min: Djourou somehow makes it into the box and towards Green. The West Ham keeper is out to save the ball, with his face. He'll get some treatment before Arsenal can take their corner.

45 min: Two minutes of added time have indicated on a sophisticated electronic number display board.

44 min: West Ham's corner comes to nothing. Chris Waddle, ESPN co-commentator is adamant that Carlton Cole should have scored. I think that's a little harsh, but then I'm terrible at heading a football and always feel a little cruel criticising anyone else's ability in the air.

43 min: Wowzers, West Ham almost score! Sears, who's looked bright and gifted on the two or three occasions he's touched the ball, puts in a rasping cross for Cole. He makes good contact, but it's also into the path of Koscielny who gets a touch, and it's out for a corner.

Goal41 min: GOAL!!! West Ham 0 Arsenal 2 (Walcott)
Wayne Bridge: no. Van Persie pulls the ball back from the touchline against the odds, Theo Walcott completely evades his marker and finishes emphatically from six yards, slamming the ball into the roof of the net. Game over.

38 min: Kovac shepherds the ball out of play before the referee amusingly awards a corner, Tomkins having got a minor touch as the ball headed towards the touchline. Nasri's delivery comes to nothing.

35 min: West Ham's supporters have something to cheer about as Carlton Cole... charges down a Djourou clearance and concedes a throw in. You've got to take your thrills where you can get them.

32 min: Van Persie so unlucky to not double his tally. His shot comes off the inside of the post and out again after Nasri had played him in with barely-believable deftness and speed. Arsenal are looking tremendous going forward.

30 min: West Ham aren't doing a bad job of defending when they've got their lines set, but as soon as something unexpected happens it's chaos. A neat Arsenal move results in a looping high ball into the box which isn't attacked by one West Ham defenders. Not good enough.

29 min: Some textbook over-intricate play from Arsenal who sweep forward at speed, but play passes over such a short distance when approaching the box that it's like a very controlled version of pinball. The ball eventually ends at Song's feet, and his shot is deflected. Green does well to catch it high to his right.

26 min: It's not just West Ham looking leaky at the back, a simple quick throw almost gives Cole a chance as Song is caught napping and Djourou nowhere to be seen. Arsenal's superiority is otherwise so evident that there's a danger of complacency. Which is never a great idea when you're only 1-0 up.

24 min: Wayne Bridge is not having a great debut. He passes it straight to Fabregas under only minor pressure, but Arsenal can't eke out a chance.

22 min: Afwful backpass from Djourou lets in Cole, but his shot hits Szczensy. Hines' follow up is wildly high and wide.

21 min: West Ham - they're not good, are they? Eboue ghosts past Hines and Cole as if they're not there, in his own half. Moments earlier Hines, who I would describe as "raw" was easily muscled off the ball by Song.

20 min: Mark Noble trudges off with an invisible injury and it's Luis Boa Morte on in his place.

19 min: Walcott's pace earns him a one-on-one against Green, but he scuffs the shot pathetically into the keeper's arms.

18 min: "It's so quiet, it's so quiet, it's quiet: Upton Park" sing the Arsenal fans to the tune of Millwall's timeless classic "No-one likes us". That's a bit rich coming from supporters who watch their football at the Emirates Shhhhhhhtadium.

17 min: Arsenal already looking to toy with their opponents. Song and Nasri turn on the feints and shimmies tap and almost create an opening. Fabregas' long shot 30 seconds later is just wide of the post.

15 min: Faubert is booked for a pretty nasty tackle on Fabregas on the far touchline. Feet off floor + worrying scissors-like configuration of legs = naughty.

Goal13 min: GOAL!! West Ham 0 Arsenal 1 (Van Persie)
Walcott is allowed approximately eight light years to get a cross in as Bridge stands off him. Nasri lets the ball run through his legs and onto the right foot of Van Persie, whose inch perfect finish into the bottom corner gave Green no chance. Game over?

12 min: A lovely volleyed backheel flick from Sears sets Hines away down the left hand side, and past the full back. His cross is cleared for a corner. Noble's delivery is nodded away at the far post.

10 min: Wilshere misjudges a ball to Walcott, playing it behind him rather than into the huge chasm that's opened up between West Ham's left back position and the goal. It's out for a throw.

8 min: Van Persie tees up Nasri from a free kick about 40 yards out. He strikes it wickedly and it takes a couple of minor deflections on its way through to Rob Green, who uncharacteristically holds the ball rather than letting it squirm under him.

7 min: Decent spell from West Ham who seem to have weathered Arsenal's early storm and are doing a good job of pressing in midfield.

5 min: Sears, constricted like an eager spring, gets a volley away some 20 yards from goal. It's well charged down by the Arsenal defence.

4 min: Walcott, running forward at pace and looking dangerous.... falls over. Lovely stuff.

3 min: Van Persie's free kick is straight at the wall. The ball eventually comes high into the box and Van Persie does well to het his head to it. Faubert stretches out a leg to nick the ball off Fabregas' head.

2 min: Eboue's harmless cross is knocked behind for a needless corner by Faubert. Shortly afterwards Fabregas wins a free kick 30 yards out.

1 min: Arsenal, in their yellow and maroon away kit, get us underway.

17:28: If ESPN screen one more advert for a certain gritty Scottish drama which is now in cinemas I might have a little cry.

17:25: Jon Champion, commentating for ESPN is waxing lyrical about the good old days at West Ham, when they never changed their manager, nothing ever went wrong, they won every game, all this round here was fields etc. The teams are out of the tunnel and we're approaching kick off.

17:20: Carlton Cole is the only West Ham player in their team to have ever scored a goal aganist Arsenal. Feeling optimistic, West Ham fans? Arsense Wenger's pre-match wall o'adverts interview is as cagey and pointless as you'd expect. "Our main priority is the championship," he says. I think he means winning the Premier League rather than securing passage into the second tier.

17:12: And here come the teams: (not out of the tunnel, you understand. Just a list of who's playing)

West Ham (4-5-1): Green; Faubert, Tomkins, Upson, Bridge; Spector, Kovac, Noble, Sears, Hines; Cole.
Subs: Boffin, Reid, Gabbidon, Barrera, Boa Morte, McCarthy, Nouble.

Arsenal (4-2-3-1): Szczesny; Eboue, Djourou, Koscielny, Clichy; Song, Wilshere; Fabregas; Walcott, Nasri; van Persie.
Subs: Shea, Vela, Denilson, Arshavin, Gibbs, Chamakh, Bendtner.

Referee: Andre Marriner (W Midlands)

No Scott Parker for the home side which has got to be a A Worry. Bacary Sagna serves the final game of his three match suspension.

17:05: ESPN's roving reporter is interviewing a pair of West Ham fans with suspiciously West Country accents, asking their opinions on the Grant / O'Neill switcheroo. "I reckon he's had his time and.... time to go," says David. You can't buy that sort of incisive analysis.

17:00: Good afternoon, and welcome to farewell lap of Avram Grant's West Ham United career. All the pre-match talk has been about Grant's supposed nailed-on departure following it, which does dampen the mood somewhat. What's the point in sending his side out to do anything other than lose if Karen Brady and her oddly-dressed millionaire friends have already decided he's out afterwards?

Arsenal are the visitors to the Boelyn Ground (why does nobody call it that any more?) and are on the back of a truly insipid performance in the League Cup at Ipswich on Wednesday with a more-or-less full-strength side.

It will be interesting to see what happens with Uncle Avram if he can pull off a shock this afternoon. I'm just hoping for public weeping.

Teams to follow, get your emails to me here.

-----------------------------------
PREVIEW

Saturday, January 15

West Ham United v Arsenal
Upton Park
Kick-off: 17.30 GMT
TV: Live, ESPN. Highlights, BBC1 Match of the Day

TALE OF THE GAME:

Avram Grant has brought dignity to the role of dead man walking.

Victory over Birmingham in the first leg of the League Cup semi-final prolonged his stay. He is unlikely to survive defeat on Saturday.

Arsenal will not be the supine force they were in losing to Ipswich at Portman Road.

Samir Nasri is back to fire the Gunners. Arsenal’s centre-back crisis offers West Ham a glimmer but can they keep Arsenal out? Think not.

TEAM NEWS:

Arsenal will be without goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski (shoulder) for Saturday's Premier League trip to West Ham United, where Wojciech Szczesny will again deputise.

Centre-back Sebastien Squillaci (hamstring) is also out and right-back Bacary Sagna serves the last of his three-match ban.

Denilson has recovered from a thigh problem, while both Robin van Persie and Samir Nasri return to the squad having been rested for the midweek Carling Cup defeat at Ipswich.

Midfielder Abou Diaby (calf), goalkeeper Manuel Almunia (ankle), Abou Diaby (calf) and centre-back Thomas Vermaelen (Achilles) remain out.

West Ham forward Victor Obinna is suspended after being sent off against Birmingham in the Carling Cup in midweek.

Lars Jacobsen returns after a lengthy lay-off and Danny Gabbidon is available after missing the cup tie.

Carlton Cole is also fully fit and could start against Arsenal after scoring as a substitute against Birmingham.

Prediction: West Ham 0 Arsenal 3qtdz
Telegraph.co.uk

15 Ocak 2011 Cumartesi

Cheshire Plain - in frustration

photo

Cheshire Plain - in frustration

This one is borne out of frustration - I drove 40 miles to take a picture of the Cheshire Plain at night, only to be buffeted by high winds. I was holding the camera down on top of a stone plinth but could not keep it still.
There were better views over the other side looking towards Staffordshire, but there was nowhere to stop and park the car - pitch black, not easy.
This image is a variation on camera tossing (no - it's not an offence), manually set the camera to bulb and moved it around to capture the street lights. Some you win............

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