Archive for October, 2008

Self-censorship hits big bucks videogames over religion

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

Violence may still be rife in the world of videogames, but when it comes to religion, caution remains the watchword in the big bucks business.

Sony’s decision this month to delay one of the most anticipated games in the history of PlayStation, LittleBigPlanet, to avoid offending Muslims, is the latest sign that videogame-makers are playing prudence when it comes to religion.

LittleBigPlanet, which has received rave reviews, is finally being released next week after a fortnight-long delay because of concerns that a track in the background music might be found offensive.

As copies began to be shipped off to distributors, game developers woke up to the potential for trouble following a post on a Sony public Internet forum stating that a song by Mali artist Toumani Diabate included two expressions from the Koran that could cause offence.

The forum user, who identified himself as “yasser”, said “Muslims consider the mixing of music and words from our Holy Quran deeply offending (sic).”

Responding on the game’s website, Sony said: “We have taken immediate action to rectify this and we sincerely apologise for any offence this may have caused.”

A Sony spokeswoman in Paris told AFP the song had been replaced by an instrumental track by Diabate. “The game has not been changed,” said Emmanuelle Renon. “We did not want polemics.”

But the incident was not the first.

In 2003, Microsoft cancelled the European release of its combat game Kakuto Chojin for its first Xbox for the same reasons — a music track containing quotes from the Koran. The game was also withdrawn from shelves in Japan and the United States and has since remained unavailable.

More recently, Japanese games editor Capcom modified the sound-track to adventure game Zack & Wiki: Quest for Barbaros’ Treasure ahead of its 2008 release for Nintendo’s Wii.

This followed a complaint from the US Council on American-Islamic Relations over the use of a background sound featuring Islamic prayer “Allahu akbar” (”God is great”) as tribal islanders in the game prayed around a totem.

And last year, the Anglican church kicked up a fuss over a building in a Sony game that it said looked like the Anglican cathedral in Manchester, northern England, even prompting then prime minister Tony Blair to kick in and comment.

The church featured as the scene of a violent shootout in Resistance: Fall of Man.

Sony apologised but refused to cave in to the church’s demand to remove the game from store shelves.

The head of the digital leisure section of the European Audiovisual and Telecommunications Institute said the recent and repeated concerns over religious controversy were due to the huge growth in the popularity of videogames.

“If gaming was still as small as it used to be, there wouldn’t be this sort of phenomenon,” said Laurent Michaud. “Now games have a bigger and bigger place in society. They have become a cultural industry like film or music.

“Things that used to shock people at the cinema now shock in a game. This is a sign that everyone is sitting up and watching what happens in the world of videogames.”

Saina, Gurusai keep flag flying

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

India’s top two juniors - top-seed Saina Nehwal in the women’s and sixth ranked Gurusaidutt in men’s - were the sole survivors of a ruthless opening day for the Indian colts at the World Juniors Badminton individual event.

The rest of the team members in the singles event had faded off with the dimming light, as Aditya Prakash, Prajakta Sawant, Pratik Patel, Prannoy HH, Sikki Reddy and PC Thulasi went down to their respective opponents.

While Nehwal and Gurusaidutt sailed into the next round finishing each of their matches within 25 minutes after byes in their first, the steep challenges handed by the draw evicted the others.

Aditya Prakash, playing top seed Chinese Gao Huan was in possession of a game-point in his opener, but failed to capitalise, and handed the reins to his opponent thereafter, losing 22-20, 21-12. Aditya’s brave smashing and dogged rallies took him to the brink of the first game, but his game wilted in the second.

Unseeded Sikki Reddy too was spent after a fighting first game, going down 28-26, 21-9 to Porntip Buranaprasertsuk of Thailand.

In the doubles though, the Indians lived to fight another day. B Sai Praneeth, partnering Pradnya Gadre, advanced to the third round.

Results: (Round One): Men’s singles: Aditya Prakash bt Kirt Soon Tang (Singapore) 21-11, 21-15; H S Pranoy lost to Kam Chung Kuan (Malaysia) 15-21, 16-21; Pratik Patel lost to Tien Chen Chou (Chinese Taipie) 6-21, 17-21; (Round Two)- Guru Saidutt bt Mohammed Saad Othman (Iraq) 21-6, 21-2; Aditya Prakash lost to 1- Huan Gao (China) 22-20, 21-12; 2-Sung Min Park (Korea) bt Kang Ji Wook (Korea) 21-9, 21-17; 3-Tanongsak Saensomboonsuk (Tha) bt Henry Gareth (Jam) 21-12, 21-17; 4-Zhengming Wang (Chn) bt Pisit Poodchalat (Tha) 21-11, 21-14;

Women’s singles (Round one): P C Thulasi bt Lianne Tan (Belgium) 21-9, 21-16; Prajakta Sawant bt Langley Alexandra (England) 21-16, 21-15; (Round Two): 1- Saina Nehwal bt Ozge Bayrak (Turkey) 21-11, 21-8; P C Thulasi lost to Mei Hui Chiang (Chinese Taipei) 21-18, 20-22, 21-23. Sikki Reddy lost to Porntip Buranaprasertsuk (Tha) 26-28, 9-21

Mixed doubles: (Round one): B Sai Praneet/ Pradnya Gadre bt Laura Vana/ Ingmar Seidelberg (Estonia) 21-13, 21-14; Pranav Chopra/ Prajakta Sawant lost to Ryan Saputra/ Aurien Hudiono (Indonesia) 16-21, 17-21; (Round two)- B Sai Praneet/ Pradnya Gadre bt James Eunson/ Michelle Chan (New Zealand) 21-15, 21-12.

Labeling helps organize better

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

What does labeling signify? Labeling is synonymous with organization, especially at workplace. However, one can use labels to organize the home as well. The most popular labels used for categorizing, cataloging, and organizing are addressing labels, identification labels, media labels, file folder labels, and shipping labels. The primary purpose of any label is identification, followed by classification. Avery labels help not only identify and classify but also systemize.

The media labels hold a special place in the management of any office space. Imagine shelves and shelves of CDs and DVDs without any identification. Media without labels are as good as books without their covers. It is important to label and organize office media properly. Professional media labels help do this job efficiently.

Thermal labels are a special type of labels that are created because of heat. There are two types of thermal labels: direct thermal labels and thermal transfer labels. The former ones do not require a ribbon to be printed while the latter ones require ribbons.

Labels are a great way to organize your workplace. Invest in high quality Avery labels for a great experience. Labels not only help you organize but also help add class to your home and business.

Why You Should Consider Custom Wheels and Tires for Your Sport Utility Vehicle

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

Custom wheels are the best option to use for any kind of vehicle as you have to drive your vehicle with your own style so that it should be according to your style. In this regard you would not feel any difficulty in driving your vehicle and you can drive your vehicle in your own way smoothly. For having a smooth drive and strong road grip, bbs wheels are the best option to avail as they are world famous due to their high quality material along with the cheap rates as well. These are also considered as the best supportive wheels for any kind of vehicle but if you want to try another brand then you can also choose enkei wheels as well. These wheels are also the same as the first one and are also considered as the best companion of the vehicle. If you want to have high quality wheels for you r car and you also want that those wheels also include some style too then you should have to select wheels for your vehicle from any one of these brands. Now it’s up to you that which wheel you want for your vehicle so that you would have a smooth

OPEC agrees sharp output cut

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

An emergency OPEC meeting on Friday reached swift agreement to chop production by 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) in an effort to halt a deep oil price slide.

International benchmark U.S. crude has slumped by close to 60 percent from a record high of $147.27 hit in July. On Friday, it fell again to below $63 a barrel.

“The decision was straightforward,” Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said after the meeting.

“OPEC will do whatever is necessary to balance oil markets.”

In the world’s biggest energy consumer the United States, oil prices and economic weakness have been major factors in the run-up to the November presidential election. Washington was quick to criticize OPEC’s decision.

“It has always been our view that the value of commodities, including oil, should be determined in open, competitive markets and not by these kinds of anti-market production decisions,” White House spokesman Tony Fratto said.

For the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, the speed of the oil market’s collapse after a record rally has stirred memories of the Asian financial crisis in the late 1990s.

OPEC’s sluggish response then as demand disappeared and oil stocks mounted up helped to push oil to less than $10 in 1998.

“OPEC is showing it is not going to make that mistake again,” said David Kirsch, a manager at Washington-based PFC Energy.

Before the roughly two hours of talks, which ended just before noon, ministers had agreed about the need to reduce production, but differed over the extent of a cut.

Saudi Arabia and other core Gulf producers have relatively low price requirements and are nervous about further destruction of demand in consumer countries as the world economy falters.

They had favored a relatively modest reduction of around a million bpd, delegates said.

Iran and others are more dependent on higher oil revenues and was among those who had pushed for a deeper cut of around 2 million bpd.

SHOW OF UNITY

But the extent of the market’s collapse focused minds and the two sides soon met in the middle.

“The message to the market is, first, of the strength and unity of OPEC in terms of its decisions. There was no dispute or fight, here we were all in agreement,” said Venezuela’s Energy and Petroleum Minister Rafael Ramirez in an interview with Venezuelan state television.

OPEC’s President Chakib Khelil of Algeria said the only option for member countries was to respect the new agreement.

“They don’t have a choice. What choice do they have? See the oil price go down to lower levels? They’ll make the cuts,” he said.

He also said OPEC would take further action if necessary before the next scheduled meeting in December in Oran, Algeria.

Under Friday’s agreement, the 1.5 million bpd being removed from the September production ceiling of 28.8 million bpd includes 466,000 bpd less from top exporter Saudi Arabia and 199,000 bpd from Iran, the second biggest exporter, OPEC said in a communique.

Although the group said at its September meeting it would strictly adhere to targets, it is still pumping above its collective ceiling.

Khelil said the total removed from the market by the end of the year would be closer to 1.8 million bpd as overproduction was eliminated.

Saudi Arabia, the only OPEC member to be pumping significantly above target, has already reduced supplies slightly. It unilaterally increased its production when prices were racing to their July record.

Outlook Training

Friday, October 24th, 2008

Email is one of the most important aspects of modern communication. The use of Email is constantly expanding with more and more people using this technological wonder to instantly communicate with people from around the world. This means that email technology is at the forefront of most businesses. If you want your employees to be able to make the most out of their email use, then you should look into some outlook 2003 training.

Outlook is a fairly simple program with a lot of room for elegant expansion. There are ways that emails can be sorted upon receipt. Emails from department heads could be filtered to a special box will all the emails from co-workers on a project would go to another. It’s just a basic principle of organization. The important thing is that they know this is an option. Otherwise, they are going to miss out on all of the other great features that it could offer.

There are also options for outlook 2007 training if you have already made the switch. You would then just have to decide whether to start from the beginning or focus on just what’s new in the 2007 suite. It’s your call in the end, but a little help might really improve your employees’ efficiency.

Survey: Half of US doctors use placebo treatments

Friday, October 24th, 2008

About half of American doctors in a new survey say they regularly give patients placebo treatments — usually drugs or vitamins that won’t really help their condition. And many of these doctors are not honest with their patients about what they are doing, the survey found.

That contradicts advice from the American Medical Association, which recommends doctors use treatments with the full knowledge of their patients.

“It’s a disturbing finding,” said Franklin G. Miller, director of the research ethics program at the U.S. National Institutes Health and one of the study authors. “There is an element of deception here which is contrary to the principle of informed consent.”

The study was being published online in Friday’s issue of BMJ, formerly the British Medical Journal.

Placebos as defined in the survey went beyond the typical sugar pill commonly used in medical studies. A placebo was any treatment that wouldn’t necessarily help the patient.

Scientists have long known of the “placebo effect,” in which patients given a fake or ineffective treatment often improve anyway, simply because they expected to get better.

“Doctors may be under a lot of pressure to help their patients, but this is not an acceptable shortcut,” said Irving Kirsch, a professor of psychology at the University of Hull in Britain who has studied the use of placebos.

Researchers at the NIH sent surveys to a random sample of 1,200 internists and rheumatologists — doctors who treat arthritis and other joint problems. They received 679 responses. Of those doctors, 62 percent believed that using a placebo treatment was ethically acceptable.

Half the doctors reported using placebos several times a month, nearly 70 percent of those described the treatment to their patients as “a potentially beneficial medicine not typically used for your condition.” Only 5 percent of doctors explicitly called it a placebo treatment.

Most doctors used actual medicines as a placebo treatment: 41 percent used painkillers, 38 percent used vitamins, 13 percent used antibiotics, 13 percent used sedatives, 3 percent used saline injections, and 2 percent used sugar pills.

In the survey, doctors were asked if they would recommend a sugar pill for patients with chronic pain if it had been shown to be more effective than no treatment. Nearly 60 percent said they would.

Smaller studies done elsewhere, including Britain, Denmark and Sweden, have found similar results.

Jon Tilburt, the lead author of the U.S. study, who is with NIH’s bioethics department, said he believes the doctors surveyed were representative of internists and rheumatologists across the U.S. No statistical work was done to establish whether the survey results would apply to other medical specialists, such as pediatricians or surgeons.

The research was paid for by NIH’s bioethics department and the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine.

The authors said most doctors probably reasoned that doing something was better than doing nothing.

In some cases, placebos were given to patients with conditions such as chronic fatigue syndrome. Doctors also gave antibiotics to patients with viral bronchitis, knowing full well that a virus is impervious to antibiotics, which fight bacteria. Experts believe overuse of antibiotics promotes the development of drug-resistant strains of bacteria.

Some doctors believe placebos are a good treatment in certain situations, as long as patients are told what they are being given. Dr. Walter Brown, a professor of psychiatry at Brown and Tufts universities, said people with insomnia, depression or high blood pressure often respond well to placebo treatments.

“You could tell those patients that this is something that doesn’t have any medicine in it but has been shown to work in people with your condition,” he suggested.

However, experts don’t know if the placebo effect would be undermined if patients were explicitly told they were getting a dummy pill.

Brown said that while he hasn’t prescribed sugar pills, he has given people with anxiety problems pills that had extremely low doses of medication. “The dose was so low that whatever effect the patients were getting was probably a placebo effect,” he said.

Kirsch, the psychologist, said it might be possible to get the psychological impact without using a fake pill. “If doctors just spent more time with their patients so they felt more reassured, that might help,” he said.

Some patients who had just seen their doctors at a clinic in London said the truth was paramount.

“I would feel very cheated if I was given a placebo,” said Ruth Schachter, an 86-year-old Londoner with skin cancer. “I like to have my eyes wide open, even if it’s bad news,” she said. “If I’m given something without being warned what it is, I certainly would not trust the doctor again.”

Gold dips below 12k-mark, silver plunges by Rs 500

Friday, October 24th, 2008

Tracking weak global cues gold prices today dipped below Rs 12,000-mark, on panic selling amid investors liquidating their holdings in commodities to meet the fresh losses in stock markets. Standard gold and ornaments dropped by Rs 500 each at Rs 11,950 and Rs 11,700 per ten gram respectively.

Sovereign fell by Rs 50 at Rs 10,450 per piece of eight gram. “People are liquidating gold and other commodities as their losses in stock markets deepen,” Delhi-based jeweller Gaurav Anand said.

He said the credit crisis and rising concerns of global inflation keep mounting pressure on the stock markets everywhere. In the global markets the precious metal plunged to 13-month lows as dollar gained against leading currencies.

It traded at 719 dollar to 769 dollar an ounce in just two trading sessions. The euro fell to the lowest in almost two years against the dollar, while the pound traded near its lowest in more than five years.

While silver, also plunged owing to selling pressure on weakening trend in London besides reduced offtake by industrial units. Silver ready plunged by Rs 500 at Rs 17,230 per kg and weekly-based delivery by Rs 400 at Rs 17,130 per kg.

Silver coins dropped by Rs 200 at Rs 28,100 for buying and Rs 28,200 for selling of 100 pieces.

United SC unlucky to miss full points

Friday, October 24th, 2008

JCT played the away team’s game but it’s unlikely Sukhwinder Singh would be happy with only a point from the fifth round. One for which the JCT coach would have to thank goalkeeper Karanjit Singh who saved Dulal Biswas’s penalty in the 39th minute.

United SC emerged first among equals in this barren and mostly bland encounter. Missing a slew of regulars, they downed the hatches from kick-off patiently looking for an opportunity to hit on the break.

They got a number of them, thanks in the main to Snehasish Chakraborty’s hard running on the left and had substitute Ayon Choudhury’s first touch not let him down, the home team could actually notched up its second win. Between the 36th and the 39th minutes, United SC got three chances including the fluffed penalty.

Running in from Julius Akpele’s blind side, Soumik Chakraborty was unlucky to not connect Hardeep Saini’s floater from the right. One minute later, Ayon, inducted earlier than Subroto Bhattacharya would perhaps have wanted because Sochungmi Raleng got injured, ran into space on the left corner of the JCT penalty area and let fly but the ball grazed Akpele’s head and changed direction for a corner-kick.

That in turn led to the penalty because Dulal Biswas’s back-header hit left fullback Dawit Singh’s hand.

Sabres captain Craig Rivet has knee surgery

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

Buffalo Sabres captain Craig Rivet will miss at least two weeks after having successful arthroscopic knee surgery Wednesday morning.

General manager Darcy Regier made the announcement shortly before the Sabres (5-0-1) practiced to prepare for a two-game road trip that opens at Minnesota on Thursday. Regier did not say which knee Rivet hurt.

The injury, which wasn’t sustained during a game, gradually became worse as Rivet continued to play.

“It’s something that needed to be done because it wasn’t going to go away,” coach Lindy Ruff said. “He’s been hobbling pretty good.”

The veteran defenseman had an assist and logged more than 20 minutes of ice time in a 3-2 win over Boston on Tuesday. Rivet has three assists in six games this season.

“He’s disappointed,” Ruff said. “I have to give him a lot of credit for playing the couple games that he played, and to play as well as he did.”

Nathan Paetsch, who has been a healthy scratch in all six of the Sabres’ games this year, will replace Rivet.

“It’s an opportunity for Nathan to step in and get some quality playing time,” Ruff said. “We just want to see him play solid defensively.”

A 14-year NHL veteran, Rivet was acquired in a trade with San Jose in July. He immediately made an impact in Buffalo with his physical play and was voted captain by his teammates.

“We’re going to miss him but you have to get through injuries,” Ruff said.

Rivet joins forwards Jochen Hecht (finger), Tim Connolly (back) and Paul Gaustad (thumb) on Buffalo’s injured list.