Tuesday, 31 May 2011

Arrest in internet piracy probe

Police in Londonderry have seized £83,000 and computer equipment as part of an ongoing investigation into internet piracy.

A search by the PSNI in conjunction with Federation against Copyright Theft (F.A.C.T) was carried out in the Carnhill area of the city on Wednesday.

A 26-year-old man was arrested and later released on bail.

Police were granted an application to have the cash detained pending the outcome of the investigation.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-northern-ireland-foyle-west-13557817

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Monday, 30 May 2011

Human brain's 'bat sight' found

Bat in flightBats use sound to hunt
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The part of the brain used by people who can "see like a bat" has been identified by researchers in Canada.

Some blind people have learned to echolocate by making clicking noises and listening to the returning echoes.

A study of two such people, published in PLoS ONE, showed a part of the brain usually associated with sight was activated when listening to echoes.

Action for Blind People said further research could improve the way the technique is taught.

Bats and dolphins bounce sound waves off their surroundings and by listening to the echoes can "see" the world around them.

“[They] use echolocation in a way that seems uncannily similar to vision”

Dr Lore Thaler University of Western Ontario

Some blind humans have also trained themselves to do this, allowing them to explore cities, cycle and play sports.

Researchers looked at two patients who use echolocation every day. EB, aged 43, was blinded at age 13 months. LB, 27, had been blind since age 14.

They were recorded echolocating, while microphones were attached to their ears.

The recordings were then played while their brain activity was being recorded in an fMRI machine.

Increased activity in the calcarine cortex was discovered.

Dr Lore Thaler, from University of Western Ontario, said: "This suggests that visual brain areas play an important role for echolocation in blind people."

The study looked at only two people so cannot say for certain what happens in the brains of all people who learn the technique, but the study concludes: "EB and LB use echolocation in a way that seems uncannily similar to vision."

Susie Roberts, rehabilitation officer at Action for Blind People, said: "This research into brain activity and echolocation is very interesting and improves our understanding of how some visually impaired people may be processing information to help them navigate safely.

"Further investigation may help to improve the way the technique is taught to people in the future, potentially improving their mobility and independence."

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/health-13539921

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Scientists probe deadly cucumbers

A farmer displays a cucumber cut in half in a greenhouse near Malaga, southern Spain, 29 May 2011Suspicion has fallen on organic cucumbers from Spain
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Germans have been warned not to eat cucumbers until tests identify the source of a deadly E.coli outbreak that has killed 10 and spread across Europe.

It is thought contaminated organic cucumbers were imported from Spain, but further tests are being carried out.

The vegetables have left hundreds ill with Hemolytic-uremic Syndrome (HUS), which causes kidney problems.

Cases have also been recorded in Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands and the UK.

On Sunday, authorities in the Czech Republic and Austria took some Spanish-grown cucumbers off store shelves amid contamination fears.

Czech officials said affected cucumbers may also have been exported to Hungary and Luxembourg.

The suspicion has fallen on organic cucumbers from Spain imported by Germany but then re-exported to other European countries, or exported directly by Spain.

Two Spanish greenhouses identified as sources for the outbreak have been closed and are currently under investigation to see whether the outbreak originated there or elsewhere, said an EU spokesman.

The outbreak - which the Sweden-based European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control has called "one of the largest described of HUS worldwide and the largest ever reported in Germany" - has been particularly severe in the Hamburg area.

It has baffled scientists because whereas HUS normally affects children under the age of five, in this outbreaks nearly 90% are adults and two-thirds are women, says the BBC's Stephen Evans in Berlin.

One possibility is that they became infected after eating food for what they thought were health reasons, adds our correspondent.

The DNA of the bacterium is to be analysed later to try to find ways of catching it early in people infected by it.

The sickness is not directly contagious but it can be transferred between people if an infected person prepares food for others.

The German authorities warn that the source may still be active and that means there is a possibility of the outbreak getting worse.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-europe-13592765

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Sunday, 29 May 2011

Pupils to find out school choices

John O'DowdJohn O'Dowd said some students will be disappointed.

More than 23,000 children across Northern Ireland will find out on Saturday which post primary school they will transfer to in September.

Around 9,000 of those pupils will be going to grammar schools.

Transfer test results were delivered to students around the country back in February.

The Education Minister John O'Dowd said if parents are unhappy they can challenge the decision.

"There are a number of appeal mechanisms available to parents," he added.

"Those are available on the Department of Education's website if they wish to appeal the decision that has been made around their child not getting their first choice of school.

"There will always be disappointment. It's how we manage that disappointment."

Mr O'Dowd urged parents to talk to teachers at schools and to check out the department's website for more information.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-northern-ireland-13582505

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Saturday, 28 May 2011

New appeal about Moffett murder

Bobby MoffettBobby Moffett was shot dead by two masked gunmen last year
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Police have said a team of detectives is still investigating the murder of Belfast man Bobby Moffett.

Mr Moffett, 43, was shot a number of times by at least two masked gunmen at the junction of the Shankill Road and Conway Street on 28 May last year.

He was taken to hospital but died a short time later. The killers ran off towards Conway Street.

Police have issued a new appeal for information on the first anniversary of the murder.

Eight people have been arrested over the killing - which the International Monitoring Commission said was sanctioned by UVF leaders - but no-one has been charged.

"We are still actively pursuing our inquiries and we are as determined as ever to bring those responsible for this brutal murder before the courts," Detective Chief Inspector John McVea said.

"We continue to follow definite lines of inquiry but we need information which we can turn into evidence before we can bring charges.

"I am appealing again to the local community to tell us what they know, what they saw and what they have heard.

"If the community comes forward with tangible assistance, police will not be found wanting in pursuing those leads."

He urged anyone with information to contact police on 028 9056 1812 or Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-northern-ireland-13580100

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Friday, 27 May 2011

VIDEO: Chief economist warns of 'hard times'

The Bank of England's chief economist, Spencer Dale, warns of hard times

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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/business-13581468

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Tory MP declares NHS 'red lines'

NHS logoThe NHS changes affect only England
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The BBC has learned that Conservative MPs are organising to oppose changes that Nick Clegg wants to make to the government health overhaul in England.

One MP, Nick de Bois, who sits on the parliamentary committee looking at the NHS Bill, has set out a series of "red lines" from which he says his fellow Tories should not retreat.

Some of them appear to clash directly with proposals from the deputy PM.

The NHS Bill is currently on hold while ministers consider objections to it.

In an e-mail sent to all Conservative MPs and obtained by the BBC, Mr de Bois says there has been talk of "concerning change" to the NHS Bill from "our coalition partners" - the Lib Dems.

He says critics of the bill have so far "made their voices the loudest", and calls on his fellow Tories to set out their own red lines - "the principles on which we will not budge".

He says those should include:

The declaration that any qualified provider, including private companies and charities, should be able to provide care. Mr de Bois said: "Government should do nothing that stands in their way", but Mr Clegg said earlier on Thursday there would be "no sudden, top-down opening up of all NHS services to any qualified provider"A clear date - April 2013 - "when statutory responsibility must transfer from the top-down bureaucracy to GP consortia". Mr de Bois said this was "a very reasonable period of time", but Mr Clegg said there should be "no arbitrary deadline"The requirement for all GPs to take on these new responsibilities, right across England. Mr de Bois said "there must be no two-tier NHS", but Mr Clegg said this change should be introduced in a "planned, phased way"

Mr De Bois asks Tory MPs to share their views and adds: "I am determined that we reclaim the debate over the future of the National Health Service from those who seek to use the bill as a political tool."

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-politics-13568175

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Thursday, 26 May 2011

India bans sexy deodorant adverts

Advert for Wild Stone in IndiaThe ministry says the adverts violate the cable operators' code
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Television channels in India have been ordered not to broadcast "overtly sexual" deodorant adverts that use female models in racy storylines.

The channels have been given five days to modify the offending adverts or take them off air.

"The ads brim with messages aimed at tickling libidinous male instincts," India's information ministry said in a statement.

None of the companies named by the ministry have so far responded.

The ministry said that the adverts offended "good taste and decency" and appeared "indecent, vulgar and suggestive" by subtly sending a message that the products "arouse women's sexuality".

It said that they portrayed women as "lustily hankering after men under the influence of such deodorants".

"The depiction and portrayal of women in these ads is overtly sexual."

The ministry argued that the adverts violate India's advertising code, which states that "cable operators should ensure that the portrayal of the female form... is tasteful and aesthetic and within the well established norms of good taste and decency".

Correspondents say that none of the companies concerned is likely to respond in public to the ministry's move because of the sensitivities surrounding the issue.

There are several advertisements in question, including one in which a woman finds a man's deodorant so stimulating that she begins to undress.

Advert for Wild Stone in IndiaThe adverts depict women lusting after men who are wearing deodorant

The ministry told the Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) to ensure that the adverts were modified or taken off air within five days.

A statement on the ASCI's website says that there have been a large number of complaints about deodorant adverts in the last two years and that it has acted in some cases.

But the statement says that "in many cases, it has been decided that the advertising is not objectionable".

"At ASCI, there are very specific guidelines. Any visual that is not likely to cause grave or widespread offence is not a cause of concern. Most of these deodorant ads are played after 11pm on TV, outside family viewing timing," the statement said.

Brands affected by the ban include Wild Stone, Addiction Deo and Axe.

Last year the ministry suspended Fashion TV (FTV) for 10 days for showing topless models during a show.

Officials said that FTV had violated several provisions of the Cable Television Networks rules by showing women in an "obscene" manner.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-south-asia-13562182

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Wednesday, 25 May 2011

VIDEO: Iceland: Life under the ash cloud

Life under the ash cloud created by Iceland's Grimsvotn volcano

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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-europe-13529445

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Tuesday, 24 May 2011

Stoner races to French MotoGP win

Casey Stoner wins an incident-packed French MotoGP after Dani Pedrosa crashes out with a broken collarbone.

Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/sport1/hi/motorsport/motorbikes/9486431.stm

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Lebanon cleric 'spied for Israel'

Breaking news

A Shia cleric has been arrested in Lebanon on suspicion of spying for Israel, Lebanese security sources say.

A Lebanese newspaper said the cleric was known for his criticism of the Shia movement, Hezbollah.

A number of senior Lebanese figures from the army, politics and business have been arrested over the past two years, as part of a campaign against a suspected Israeli espionage network.

Several have received death sentences, although none have been carried out.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-middle-east-13519684

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Monday, 23 May 2011

Pole goal

Humanoid pylons ©Choi+Shine Architects, LLC, all rights reservedHumanoid pylons, highly commended in an Icelandic contest

Electricity pylons, little changed since the 1920s, may get a makeover with a new international design competition. Are transmission towers icons or eyesores?

Where is your nearest pylon?

Except for those living almost directly under one, many will be hard pressed to say. These giant man-made structures are now part of the landscape.

Electrical backbone
Pylons
Pylon design contest run by Royal Institute of British Architects for Department of Energy and Climate Change and National GridMore than 88,000 pylons in the UKDesign has changed little since 1928Stand 50m high, weigh 30 tonnes and carry up to 400,000 volts of electricityMore on the pylon design competition

But can a pylon be a thing of beauty? On Monday, the UK became the latest country to run a pylon design competition, open to entries from around the world.

This is for practical as well as aesthetic purposes. More will need to be built to link new generating schemes - be it wind, hydro or nuclear - to our electricity sockets. The alternative, laying cables underground, costs more and requires wide swathes of land to be dug up.

Since more are to be built, what should they look like?

For some, the transmission tower is already a thing of stark beauty. Photographers and pylon-spotters appreciate the geometry of the lattice structure.

Poets, too, have found inspiration in the march of grey steel across the landscape. So popular was pylon imagery in the 1930s that it lent its name to a school of poetry.

And they have been immortalised in film - a pink one in particular in Among Giants, in which pylon painters Rachel Griffiths and the late Pete Postlethwaite found love among the high-voltage wires.

Humanoid pylons ©Choi+Shine Architects, LLC, all rights reservedThe humanoid towers use the same modular structure as standard pylons

Iceland's Landsnet power company ran a similar design competition in 2008. Highly commended among the entries was one for humanoid pylons from Massachusetts-based architects Choi + Shine. It also won the 2010 Boston Society of Architects Unbuilt Architecture Award.

Landsnet has now joined forces with Norway's TSO Statnett to assess the feasibility of building the best designs, says CEO Thordur Gudmundsson.

"Lower visual impact was of special interest here. We were also looking for masts that would be erected as standalone towers at special places of interest, such as the man and woman towers of Choi and Shine."

Other companies around the world have also expressed interest in their design.

It draws on both art and industry, says Jin Choi - Giacometti's spindly, elongated sculptures, and massed pylons marching away from a hydro-electric scheme in Quebec.

While the materials and construction methods are similar to standard pylons, one point of departure is the colour - white instead of gun-metal grey.

"These are not trying to disappear into the landscape, but to make a contrast against it. And with proper lighting, it could become a tourist attraction," says Choi.

Pylon school of poetry

A term loosely applied to poets of the 1930s who reflected on the impact of industry and technology on the landscape.

Stephen Spender's The Pylons is the definitive specimen. He described them as: "Bare like nude, giant girls that/have no secret."

"It has the potential to be quite beautiful, especially against the dark lava rocks and grey Icelandic sky."

Co-designer Thomas Shine says public opinion on pylons is split. "There are people who would rather see nothing - they think all power generation and power lines are a bad thing and spoil the environment.

"Then there's the view that if you have to have power lines, wind turbines and power masts, at least if they are pretty and attractive, that helps. So we took something that was an eyesore and made it into something beautiful."

Even the original designers tried to make a virtue of the huge steel transmission towers.

Rachel Griffiths played a pylon painter in Among GiantsThe pink pylon in Among Giants was pulled down in 2003

The British design chosen in 1927 by leading architect Sir Reginald Blomfield sought to be more delicate than the brutalist structures used in Europe and the United States, and closer to the true sense of a pylon - an Egyptian gateway to the sun.

The first went up in July 1928 near Edinburgh, and the last of of 26,000 went up in the New Forest in September 1933 - ahead of schedule and on budget.

But only after a vociferous anti-pylon campaign, says urban historian Bill Luckin, of the University of Bolton.

"Did the Central Electricity board feel genuinely threatened? The archives suggest they felt very threatened. So many of the people involved in the protest movements were so eminent - what the electrical press called 'impractical aesthetes'."

These "impractical aesthetes" included the economist John Maynard Keynes and the author Rudyard Kipling, co-signatories of a letter to The Times in 1929 decrying plans to erect pylons in the rolling green of the Sussex Downs.

Some concessions were made to the anti-pylon brigade. But nothing could stop the grid.

Pylon and wind turbines in ScotlandWind turbines, too, split opinions

"They are largely transparent to a large extent. You look through them, rather than at them," says Ross Hayman, spokesman for the National Grid. "That was part of the original intention, as well as improving their wind resistance.

As well as the see-through design, planners try to lay pylons below the skyline to be less intrusive.

But second only to motorway networks, pylons are the biggest manmade addition to the landscape.

"The German attitude tends to be that new features, if properly planned, can enhance the landscape," says urban planner Sir Peter Hall. "In Britain, since the dawn of the rail age, it's been the opposite, that they take away from the quality of landscape."

Pylon v folded plate design - offered as an alternative in National Grid consultationsPylon v mono-pole - an alternative offered already by the National Grid

The National Grid offers alternative mono-pole designs in public consultations, but the results have been inconclusive, says Hayman. "People tend to prefer the old lattice design."

At a public meeting in Shropshire recently, village residents demanded to know where new pylons would be built to connect a proposed wind farm to the national grid. Told there was no need for new pylons as the existing ones could do the job, the response was "what pylons?"

"I took them to the window of the village hall and pointed out the pylons about a mile away. They'd become so used to them, they'd stopped noticing them."

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-13473408

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Sunday, 22 May 2011

Volcano halts Icelandic flights

Grimsvotn eruption 21 May 2011Grimsvotn lies under the the largest glacier in Europe, Vatnajokull
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The Icelandic authorities have imposed a local flight ban after the country's most active volcano, Grimsvotn, began erupting.

A plume of smoke has risen 20km (12 miles) into the sky from the volcano.

But Iceland's Meteorological Office says the eruption should not cause widespread disruption to air traffic.

Last year, ash clouds from another Icelandic volcano, Eyjafjallajokul, led to the closure of a large section of European airspace.

Governments feared that ash particles could cause aircraft engines to fail, and the closure caused chaos to air travellers.

Hjordis Gudmundsdottir, a spokeswoman for the Isavia civil aviation authority - which has imposed a flight ban of 120 nautical miles (222 km) around Grimsvotn - said: "We have closed the area until we know better what effect the ash will have."

Grimsvotn volcano

Glaciologist Matthew Roberts: the eruption "shouldn't have any far-reaching effects"

But officials say it is unlikey to have the same impact as last year.

Pall Einarsson, a geophysicist at the University of Iceland, said the 2010 eruption was a rare event.

"The ash in Eyjafjallajokull was persistent or unremitting and fine-grained," he said.

"The ash in Grimsvotn is more coarse and not as likely to cause danger as it falls to the ground faster and doesn't stay as long in the air as in the Eyjafjallajokull eruption."

Domestic airline Icelandair said no traffic had been affected.

"We do not expect the Grimsvotn eruption to affect air traffic to and from the country in any way," said communications director Gudjon Arngrimsson.

Icelandair pilot Thor Kristinsson told the BBC he had flown near the volcano on Saturday.

"We were able to finish our flight but we did see the ash plume rise fast. We were at 38,000 feet ... and the ash was at least at 40,000 feet at that time.

"It looks at least as bad as the one last year and it looks like it could get worse. It's as big, if not bigger than the last ash cloud."

Grimsvotn lies under the the largest glacier in Europe, Vatnajokull in south-east Iceland.

Reuters news agency says that when it last erupted in 2004, transatlantic flights had to be re-routed south of Iceland, but no airports were closed.

Last year's outpouring of ash from Eyjafjallajokull led to the largest closure of European airspace since World War II.

About 10 million travellers were affected and some questioned whether the shutdown was an over-reaction.

However, a scientific study published last month said the safety concerns had been well founded.

Researchers from the University of Copenhagen and the University of Iceland said ash particles from the early part of the Eyjafjallajokull eruption were especially abrasive, posing a possible threat to aircraft engines.

map of tectonic plates and volcanoes

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This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-europe-13489944

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