2012年5月1日火曜日

Nintendo 3DS turning purple on May 20th, takes a bruising from the ugly stick

Nintendo 3DS turning purple on May 20th, takes a bruising from the ugly stick:
Nintendo 3DS turning purple on May 20th
Pink, red, aqua and black not good enough for you? Fine. Have a purple one -- if that's what you really want. On May 20th you can pick up this Grimace-hued Nintendo 3DS for the usual price of $169.99 alongside Mario Tennis Open. Hoping for something a bit more subtle, perhaps a nice clean white or a nice two-tone gray? Tough. You're getting purple.
Continue reading Nintendo 3DS turning purple on May 20th, takes a bruising from the ugly stick
Nintendo 3DS turning purple on May 20th, takes a bruising from the ugly stick originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 Apr 2012 12:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Five Key Learnings From A Local Marketing Success Story

Five Key Learnings From A Local Marketing Success Story: One of our most compelling speakers at the 2012 Local Search Association annual conference was Mary Boysman, VP Brand Marketing and Advertising at Aspen Dental, a fast-growing, multi-market health care provider. Speaking to a crowd of local search leaders from around the world, Boysman described in...



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See SpaceX Test-Fire the Falcon 9 Today at 3:00 PM ET / 12:00 PM PT

See SpaceX Test-Fire the Falcon 9 Today at 3:00 PM ET / 12:00 PM PT:
SpaceX Dragon MateSpace Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) announced on Monday it will webcast a static fire test of the Flacon 9 rocket in preparation of a live launch next week. The space transport company, which develops and manufactures space launch vehicles, will ignite the craft’s nine Merlin engines for two seconds at the company’s Space Launch Complex (SLC-40) at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.
Once the dress rehearsal is completed, SpaceX will conduct a thorough review to make sure the nine engines are in peak condition heading into its scheduled May 7 launch. If given the ok, the Falcon 9 rocket will blast the Dragon spacecraft into low-Earth orbit and attempt to dock with the International space Station, where it will unload cargo onboard.
Founded in 2002 by famed engineer Elon Musk, SpaceX was awarded a $1.6 billion NASA contract for 12 flights of its Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon spacecraft to the ISS, which replaced the Space Shuttle that was retired in 2011. This is the first attempt by a commercial company to send a spacecraft to the ISS, SpaceX said, a feat previously performed by only a few governments.
Most notably known for co-founding both PayPal and Tesla Motors, Musk said he views space as a way to preserve human life and, to do that, it must become “multiplanetary.” “Sooner or later, we must expand life beyond our little blue mud ball—or go extinct,” Musk told Esquire in 2008. The Falcon 9 and Dragon is just one small step toward realizing Musk’s vision.
The webcast, which you can see at spacex.com will begin today at 2:30 PM ET/11:30 AM PT, with the static fire scheduled for 3:00 PM ET/ 12:00 PM PT.
[via SpaceX]

SPACEX TO WEBCAST STATIC FIRE FOR UPCOMING MISSION ON MONDAY

Mission Would Make SpaceX the First Commercial Company to Attempt to Send a Spacecraft to the International Space Station

Hawthorne, CA – On Monday, April 30, Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) will webcast a static fire test of the Falcon 9 rocket’s nine powerful Merlin engines in preparation for the company’s upcoming launch.
The webcast, available at spacex.com, is set to begin at 2:30 PM ET/ 11:30 AM PT, with the actual static fire targeted for 3:00 PM ET/ 12:00 PM PT.
The 9 engine test will take place at the company’s Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station as part of a full launch dress rehearsal leading up to the second Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) launch. During the rehearsal, SpaceX engineers will run through all countdown processes as though it were launch day. The exercise will end with all nine engines firing at full power for two seconds.
After the test, SpaceX will conduct a thorough review of all data as engineers make final preparations for the upcoming launch, currently targeted for May 7. SpaceX plans to launch its Dragon spacecraft into low-Earth orbit atop a Falcon 9 rocket. During the mission, Dragon’s sensors and flight systems will be subject to a series of tests to determine if the vehicle is ready to berth with the space station. If NASA decides Dragon is ready, the vehicle will attach to the station and astronauts will open Dragon’s hatch and unload the cargo onboard.
This will be the first attempt by a commercial company to send a spacecraft to the International Space Station, a feat previously performed by only a few governments. Success is not guaranteed. If any aspect of the mission is not successful, SpaceX will learn from the experience and try again. It is also the second demonstration flight under NASA’s program to develop commercial supply services to the International Space Station. The first SpaceX COTS flight, in December 2010, made SpaceX the first commercial company in history to send a spacecraft to orbit and return it safely to Earth. Once SpaceX demonstrates the ability to carry cargo to the space station, it will begin to fulfill its Commercial Resupply Services (CRS) contract for NASA for at least 12 missions to carry cargo to and from the space station. The Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon spacecraft were designed to one day carry astronauts; both the COTS and CRS missions will yield valuable flight experience toward this goal.

China Cracks Down on Online Code Words for Blind Human Rights Activist

China Cracks Down on Online Code Words for Blind Human Rights Activist:




China’s web censors are playing a game of “whack-a-mole” against online search terms being used to spread information about Chen Guangcheng, a blind Chinese human rights advocate who has reportedly escaped house arrest and taken refuge in a U.S. embassy.
The Chinese and U.S. governments are both tight-lipped on Chen’s whereabouts, but that’s not stopping rumors from flying on Weibo, a Twitter-like service that’s extremely popular in China.
However, Chen’s disappearance is an embarrassment for the Chinese government. Its team of Internet censors is hard at work blocking terms used by Chinese citizens to spread information about Chen’s whereabouts.
Weibo, a Chinese-run company is the most popular microblogging service in China, but foreign services exist as well. Twitter and other social networks operate in the country only on the promise they will comply with state-mandated censorship guidelines.
Chinese users first employed “blind man” as code for Chen immediately after his disappearance became known. After that was blocked by censors, “embassy” became a popular term before it, too, was squelched.
“Sina the weibo now has been unable to search the embassy information,” reported Weibo user mobbyca and translated through Google Chrome. “This trick everyone learned, is not a good thing.”
Users who try searching Weibo for these terms are greeted with an ominous warning: “According to relevant laws and policies, results are not displayed.”
Weibo users have switched to more complex phrases to stay ahead of Beijing’s officials. Just as China’s censors figure out which phrases to ban, activists spread a new code — and another mole pops up for the censors to whack.
“Going into the light” has become widely used as a reference to the activist, according to Reuters, because the phrase represents defection but also because of a play on words on the middle Chinese character in Chen’s name. References to “Shawshank Redemption,” a film featuring a prison breakout, are also being used.
Chen is an outspoken advocate against China’s “one child” policy and use of forced sterilization and abortions. He was arrested and jailed for four years in 2006, and he’s been under house arrest since. According to reports, Chen fled his home in eastern China last week with the help of his supporters. Other activists claim Chen is at the U.S. embassy, a situation that’s added strain on relations between Beijing and Washington.
Chinese citizens aren’t the only ones to use code words to talk about sensitive topics on the Internet. Recently, French election watchers used code phrases on Twitter to share voting results in defiance of laws against early reporting.
Image courtesy of iStockphoto, visual7
More About: censorship, china, weibo, World