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  • 07:01 - 15.06.2009 News >> Latest

        

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  • 11:03 - 11.05.2009 News >> Latest

      From Times of London Online May 11, 2009 King Abdullah: 'This is not a two-state solution, it is a 57-state solution' Richard Beeston
    How has the Pope’s visit gone? I think it’s gone extremely well. I said to His Holiness that this is the right time. You’re coming here on a spiritual pilgrimage with a message of peace … as a signal of hope for what we’re planning to do on the political aspect. It is all part of one major effort. This is a critical crossroads that we need to take advantage of. So this is good timing between your visit to Washington and before President Obama’s visit to Cairo? I concentrated in my discussions with him on his being the spiritual dimension while I work on the politics of this. The trickle-down effect to the people has always been the challenge. So the message of reconciliation, the message of hope for the future of Jerusalem comes at a perfect time because there has been a flurry of activity over the past six weeks, after the Doha summit and what the Arab nations are doing as part of the Arab peace proposal. [Prime Minister Binyamin] Netanyahu’s expected visit to Washington next week will be the turning point. Related Links Netanyahu’s ‘make or break’ peace meeting Obama aims high on his first Arab visit Pope says Church can help bring peace to Middle East Obviously, I’m sure President Obama is keeping his cards close to his chest until he hears what Prime Minister Netanyahu has to say. I think the President is committed to the two-state solution. He is committed to the two-state solution now. He feels the urgency of the need to move today. Because…

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  • 09:01 - 28.11.2009 News >> Latest

     Terror inquiry launched into Russian train crash Russian authorities say a bomb attack is to blame for the derailment that killed at least 25 passengers last night Chechen rebels suspected in Russia train bomb Chechen rebellion 'has been crushed'   

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  • 15:14 - 06.08.2010 News >> Latest

     Sweet Home Chicago? For Obama, Maybe NotA fund-raising visit to Chicago pushed Obama into scandal-tinged race for his old Senate seat.Read Article   

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  • 14:50 - 12.07.2009 News >> Latest

       Climate change: The sun and the oceans do not lie Even a compromised agreement to reduce emissions could devastate the economy - and all for a theory shot full of holes, says Christopher Booker.   By Christopher Booker

    Comments 181 | Comment on this article  
    The moves now being made by the world's political establishment to lock us into December's Copenhagen treaty to halt global warming are as alarming as anything that has happened in our lifetimes. Last week in Italy, the various branches of our emerging world government, G8 and G20, agreed in principle that the world must by 2050 cut its CO2 emissions in half. Britain and the US are already committed to cutting their use of fossil fuels by more than 80 per cent. Short of an unimaginable technological revolution, this could only be achieved by closing down virtually all our economic activity: no electricity, no transport, no industry. All this is being egged on by a gigantic publicity machine, by the UN, by serried ranks of government-funded scientists, by cheerleaders such as Al Gore, last week comparing the fight against global warming to that against Hitler's Nazis, and by politicians who have no idea what they are setting in train. What makes this even odder is that the runaway warming predicted by their computer models simply isn't happening. Last week one of the four official sources of temperature measurement, compiled from satellite data by the University of Huntsville, Alabama, showed that temperatures have now fallen to their average level since satellite data began 30 years ago.
    Faced with a "consensus" view which looks increasingly implausible, a fast-growing body of reputable scientists from many countries has been coming up with a ''counter-consensus'', which holds that…

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TheTelegraph/UK: Obama big winner in Specter defection.

 

Barack Obama nears 60-seat majority with Arlen Specter defection

Barack Obama was given a major political boost on the eve of his 100th day in office when Republican senator Arlen Specter announced he was defecting to the Democratic Party.

 
Arlen Specter: Barack Obama was given a major political boost on the eve of his 100th day in office when Republican senator Arlen Specter announced he was defecting to the Democratic Party
US Senator Arlen Specter announced that he was defecting to the Democratic Party Photo: EPA

The veteran politician's decision effectively gives the US president total control of the Senate and will be a significant advantage as he prepares to push through an ambitious reform agenda.

The move by Mr Specter, a moderate who has served Pennsylvania for 28 years, left Republicans stunned and Democrats ecstatic.

Mr Obama immediately telephoned Mr Specter when he learned the news and told him "we are thrilled to have you".

Democrats need 60 votes in the 100-seat senate to stop Republican filibusters – stalling tactics used to delay or defeat legislation.

Mr Specter's switch of allegiance gives the Democrats 59 senate seats. But they are expected to reach the magic 60 when a long court battle to decide the fate of a Minnesota seat ends within a few weeks.

Describing the decision as “painful”, Mr Specter, a two-time cancer survivor, said: “Since my election in 1980, as part of the Reagan Big Tent, the Republican Party has moved far to the right.

“Last year, more than 200,000 Republicans in Pennsylvania changed their registration to become Democrats. I now find my political philosophy more in line with Democrats than Republicans."

The 79-year-old also made the cold political calculation that he might not have made it to the ballot in 2010 because he faced defeat in the Republican primary under a strong challenge from Pat Toomey, a conservative Congressman.

“The prospects of winning a Republican primary were bleak,” he admitted at a press conference at Congress.

He said he had reached a decision after travelling his state over the past few months.

Mr Specter was known pro-choice on abortion and liberal on immigration and his first political registration was as a Democrat.

But for conservatives in his home state, his decision to support the president's $787 billion stimulus package – he was one of only three Republican senators to do so – was the last straw.

"It shows an uncomfortable trend of eating our own," said John Feehery, a Republican strategist in Washington. "Most Republicans will be shocked by this. I know I am."

On the eve of Mr Obama's 100th day in office, Mr Specter's announcement was the perfect gift. Over the next nine months, the president intends to introduce major reforms expanding green energy, the power of trade unions and health care.

He is also aiming for immigration reform that would effectively give an amnesty to 12 million illegal migrants.

Mr Specter denied he would rubber-stamp every Democratic piece of legislation.

"My change in party affiliation does not mean that I will be a party-line voter any more for the Democrats that I have been for the Republicans," said Mr Specter, who opposed his party's impeachment of Bill Clinton.

“I will not be an automatic 60th vote. I I will not be changing my own personal independence,” said Mr Specter.

Though the support of Mr Specter and Right-wing Democrats cannot be guaranteed on every issue, Mr Obama will win many more votes than he loses and be forced into fewer compromises. The Democrats already have an unassailable majority in the lower House of Representatives.

If a Supreme Court judge dies or retires comes up during his time in office, the 60-seat majority will almost certainly enable Mr Obama to fill the vacancy with a liberal judge, tilting the balance in favour of liberals for the foreseeable future. The nine-seat court is currently hung, with four liberals, four conservatives and an effective swing voter, Justice Anthony Kennedy.

Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele denounced the decision and said the party would strive to beat him if he becomes the Democratic candidate in the Pennsylvania senate race.

"[Specter] didn't leave the GOP based on principles of any kind. He left to further his personal political interests because he knew that he was going to lose a Republican primary due to his left-wing voting record," he said.

 

 

 
Independent debates ( with itself ) if Blogging is Over.

 

Andrew Keen: The word in the hallways is that the days of blogging are over

New media

 

Is blogging dead? Last year, questioning the future of the iconic weblog would have had me sectioned. But today, in the face of the dramatic explosion of real-time social media services such as Twitter, the future of blogging is far from certain.

Getty

 

Is blogging dead? Last year, questioning the future of the iconic weblog would have had me sectioned. But today, in the face of the dramatic explosion of real-time social media services such as Twitter, the future of blogging is far from certain.

 

Is blogging dead? Last year, questioning the future of the iconic weblog would have had me sectioned. But today, in the face of the dramatic explosion of real-time social media services such as Twitter, the future of blogging is far from certain.

It's not just me. Last week, I was in Amsterdam, with a thousand of my closest new media friends, at the Next Web, one of Europe's best tech conferences. And the words whispered in the hallways weren't always promising for the venerable digital institution. Some pundits at Next Web – such as Hermione Way, the London-based founder of Newspepper.com and the presenter of Techfluff.tv – have even begun to pen their obits. "Blogging as we know it is dead," Way told me over dinner one evening at Amsterdam's Loup restaurant. "It's finished."

Are the reports about the death of blogging exaggerated? At that same Loup dinner, Matt Mullenweg, the San Francisco-based co-founder of the open-source blog company WordPress, announced its resurrection. "Blogs will become aggregation points," he explained in a soft voice, as he mapped out the future of blogging. "They will become our personal hub. Places where we store all our own media content, such as our flickr photos and Twitter posts."

I suspect that Mullenweg is right. When blogging was invented in the late 1990s by my bosom Berkeley friend and neighbour, Dave Winer, it was an easy self-publishing tool, a simple way to publish lumps of one's own static text. But just as the internet has dramatically evolved over the last 10 years into a real-time broadcasting platform, so blogging is transforming itself with equal vigour.

With its 10 million to 15 million users and blue chip media clients such as The New York Times, CNN and The Wall Street Journal, Mullenweg's WordPress epitomises these changes. What distinguishes it from some of its competitors is its open-source foundations. This open architecture has fostered a free ecosystem of 5,000 plug-ins that enable WordPress users to do everything from incorporating their Twitter feeds, videos and photos, to managing their own independent record labels.

Last week, WordPress released two new products – Buddy Press and P2 – that underline Mullenweg's vision. Mullenweg described Buddy Press to me as "Facebook in a box" – technology which enables WordPress users to create their own public or private social networks around their blog. While P2 is "Twitter in a box" which, says Mullenweg, transforms the traditional WordPress blog into a real-time media experience.

So who is right about the future of the blog, Hermione Way or Matt Mullenweg? They both are, of course. The old static blog is indeed dying. But it's being resurrected by WordPress as a real-time social media personal portal. The blog is dead, long live the blog!

 

 

 

 
NYT OP: End the University as We Know It

 

End the University as We Know It


 
 
Op-Ed Contributor

End the University as We Know It

By MARK C. TAYLOR

GRADUATE education is the Detroit of higher learning. Most graduate programs in American universities produce a product for which there is no market (candidates for teaching positions that do not exist) and develop skills for which there is diminishing demand (research in subfields within subfields and publication in journals read by no one other than a few like-minded colleagues), all at a rapidly rising cost (sometimes well over $100,000 in student loans).

Widespread hiring freezes and layoffs have brought these problems into sharp relief now. But our graduate system has been in crisis for decades, and the seeds of this crisis go as far back as the formation of modern universities. Kant, in his 1798 work “The Conflict of the Faculties,” wrote that universities should “handle the entire content of learning by mass production, so to speak, by a division of labor, so that for every branch of the sciences there would be a public teacher or professor appointed as its trustee.”

Unfortunately this mass-production university model has led to separation where there ought to be collaboration and to ever-increasing specialization. In my own religion department, for example, we have 10 faculty members, working in eight subfields, with little overlap. And as departments fragment, research and publication become more and more about less and less. Each academic becomes the trustee not of a branch of the sciences, but of limited knowledge that all too often is irrelevant for genuinely important problems. A colleague recently boasted to me that his best student was doing his dissertation on how the medieval theologian Duns Scotus used citations.

The emphasis on narrow scholarship also encourages an educational system that has become a process of cloning. Faculty members cultivate those students whose futures they envision as identical to their own pasts, even though their tenures will stand in the way of these students having futures as full professors.

The dirty secret of higher education is that without underpaid graduate students to help in laboratories and with teaching, universities couldn’t conduct research or even instruct their growing undergraduate populations. That’s one of the main reasons we still encourage people to enroll in doctoral programs. It is simply cheaper to provide graduate students with modest stipends and adjuncts with as little as $5,000 a course — with no benefits — than it is to hire full-time professors.

In other words, young people enroll in graduate programs, work hard for subsistence pay and assume huge debt burdens, all because of the illusory promise of faculty appointments. But their economical presence, coupled with the intransigence of tenure, ensures that there will always be too many candidates for too few openings.

The other obstacle to change is that colleges and universities are self-regulating or, in academic parlance, governed by peer review. While trustees and administrations theoretically have some oversight responsibility, in practice, departments operate independently. To complicate matters further, once a faculty member has been granted tenure he is functionally autonomous. Many academics who cry out for the regulation of financial markets vehemently oppose it in their own departments.

If American higher education is to thrive in the 21st century, colleges and universities, like Wall Street and Detroit, must be rigorously regulated and completely restructured. The long process to make higher learning more agile, adaptive and imaginative can begin with six major steps:

1. Restructure the curriculum, beginning with graduate programs and proceeding as quickly as possible to undergraduate programs. The division-of-labor model of separate departments is obsolete and must be replaced with a curriculum structured like a web or complex adaptive network. Responsible teaching and scholarship must become cross-disciplinary and cross-cultural.

Just a few weeks ago, I attended a meeting of political scientists who had gathered to discuss why international relations theory had never considered the role of religion in society. Given the state of the world today, this is a significant oversight. There can be no adequate understanding of the most important issues we face when disciplines are cloistered from one another and operate on their own premises.

It would be far more effective to bring together people working on questions of religion, politics, history, economics, anthropology, sociology, literature, art, religion and philosophy to engage in comparative analysis of common problems. As the curriculum is restructured, fields of inquiry and methods of investigation will be transformed.

2. Abolish permanent departments, even for undergraduate education, and create problem-focused programs. These constantly evolving programs would have sunset clauses, and every seven years each one should be evaluated and either abolished, continued or significantly changed. It is possible to imagine a broad range of topics around which such zones of inquiry could be organized: Mind, Body, Law, Information, Networks, Language, Space, Time, Media, Money, Life and Water.

Consider, for example, a Water program. In the coming decades, water will become a more pressing problem than oil, and the quantity, quality and distribution of water will pose significant scientific, technological and ecological difficulties as well as serious political and economic challenges. These vexing practical problems cannot be adequately addressed without also considering important philosophical, religious and ethical issues. After all, beliefs shape practices as much as practices shape beliefs.

A Water program would bring together people in the humanities, arts, social and natural sciences with representatives from professional schools like medicine, law, business, engineering, social work, theology and architecture. Through the intersection of multiple perspectives and approaches, new theoretical insights will develop and unexpected practical solutions will emerge.

3. Increase collaboration among institutions. All institutions do not need to do all things and technology makes it possible for schools to form partnerships to share students and faculty. Institutions will be able to expand while contracting. Let one college have a strong department in French, for example, and the other a strong department in German; through teleconferencing and the Internet both subjects can be taught at both places with half the staff. With these tools, I have already team-taught semester-long seminars in real time at the Universities of Helsinki and Melbourne.

4. Transform the traditional dissertation. In the arts and humanities, where looming cutbacks will be most devastating, there is no longer a market for books modeled on the medieval dissertation, with more footnotes than text. As financial pressures on university presses continue to mount, publication of dissertations, and with it scholarly certification, is almost impossible. (The average university press print run of a dissertation that has been converted into a book is less than 500, and sales are usually considerably lower.) For many years, I have taught undergraduate courses in which students do not write traditional papers but develop analytic treatments in formats from hypertext and Web sites to films and video games. Graduate students should likewise be encouraged to produce “theses” in alternative formats.

5. Expand the range of professional options for graduate students. Most graduate students will never hold the kind of job for which they are being trained. It is, therefore, necessary to help them prepare for work in fields other than higher education. The exposure to new approaches and different cultures and the consideration of real-life issues will prepare students for jobs at businesses and nonprofit organizations. Moreover, the knowledge and skills they will cultivate in the new universities will enable them to adapt to a constantly changing world.

6. Impose mandatory retirement and abolish tenure. Initially intended to protect academic freedom, tenure has resulted in institutions with little turnover and professors impervious to change. After all, once tenure has been granted, there is no leverage to encourage a professor to continue to develop professionally or to require him or her to assume responsibilities like administration and student advising. Tenure should be replaced with seven-year contracts, which, like the programs in which faculty teach, can be terminated or renewed. This policy would enable colleges and universities to reward researchers, scholars and teachers who continue to evolve and remain productive while also making room for young people with new ideas and skills.

For many years, I have told students, “Do not do what I do; rather, take whatever I have to offer and do with it what I could never imagine doing and then come back and tell me about it.” My hope is that colleges and universities will be shaken out of their complacency and will open academia to a future we cannot conceive.

Mark C. Taylor, the chairman of the religion department at Columbia, is the author of the forthcoming “Field Notes From Elsewhere: Reflections on Dying and Living.”

 
 



 

 
Guardian/UK: Swine Flu " unstoppable "

 

 

 
BostonGlobe: For many, her blog makes 'Idol' complete

 

For many, her blog makes 'Idol' complete

Tending her 'American Idol' site has become a full-time pursuit for MJ Santilli.
 
Tending her "American Idol" site has become a full-time pursuit for MJ Santilli.
(Globe Staff Photo / Yoon S. Byun)

 

 
Time.com: Learning how to deal with Swine Flu from Past Mistakes

 

An adult woman receives a vaccination with a jet injector during the swine flu nationwide vaccination campaign, which began October 1, 1976.
 
 

 

 
U.S. advises against Mexico trips

 


U.S. advises against Mexico trips

Newspaper vendor Irene Flores wears a surgical mask as she sells newspapers at the US-Mexico border crossing in Tijuana. President Barack Obama declares that spreading swine flu infections were a concern but "not a cause for alarm," while customs agents began checking people coming into the United States by land and air.

 

 
LondonTimes: Why we are heading into a "perfect storm" of cybercrime

 

Why we are heading into a "perfect storm" of cybercrime


There were some very scary statistics being thrown about at the RSA conference for online security in San Francisco this last week. It is the nature of the business of the big internet security companies to try and scare the pants off us consumers to sell their products but nevertheless there has been a worrying spate of events just recently that seems to point to a new tide of malicious software out there.

The biggest headline grabber has been the spread of the conficker virus (even if it has not resulted in webwide armageddon) which is still around in millions of machine and is trying to get people to download dodgy security software. Recent reports have also claimed that foreign cyber criminals had infiltrated the US power grid and security firm Finjan said that almost two million PCs globally, including machines inside UK and US government departments, have been taken over by hackers. Experts traced the botnet of remotely-controlled PCs back to a gang in Ukraine.

At the conference Sophos announced that every day more than 20,000 new samples of malware were discovered and big security firm Symantec said it had blocked 245 million attacks per month in 2008.

RSA President Art Coviello said the cyer criminals controlled "massive armies of zombie computers" and called for cooperation to combat the ecosystem set up by the baddies.

Cooperation and compatibility was the theme of the keynote speech by Dave DeWalt, chairman and CEO of leading security firm McAfee, during which he promoted the McAfee's idea of predictive security to increase the protection available against viruses, trojans, spam and other malicious software

He told the conference that we are heading for a "perfect storm" of malware. As the economy has gone into meltdown, cybercrime has risen sharply, with more viruses etc detected in 2008 than in the previous five years combined. Last year, 80 per cent of cybercrimes were aimed at making money, either by phishing for your cash, stealing your personal information or selling you a dodgy product, he added.

He said data loss has cost businesses across the world more than one trillion dollars.

Perhaps most worryingly, he said cyberterrorism was on the rise with attacks on government infrastructure. "We're starting to see the armament of cyberwarfare," DeWalt said.

He wants to embed at all levels of computing, from chipsets to satellites, sensors that will feed information about security breaches to a global threat intelligence system. If that sounds like a big leap, it is but one, he says, that has to happen if we are to step up against the cyber criminals.

Cloud computing - using big remote servers to update security protection on your PC without you having to download more software - is the way forward for the big security firms and McAfee's approach is part of that. DeWalt wants companies to act together to identify and quickly react to nullify the effects of each newly released piece of malicious software such as the conficker virus.

 

 

 

 
Swine Flu Pandemic Underway

 

 

Several airports throughout the world, including Incheon International Airport in Incheon, South Korea, are using thermal cameras to monitor the body temperature of passengers arriving from overseas in the fight against the possible spread of the swine flu. (Yonhap/AP) 

 

 

 

 
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