বুধবার, ২ জানুয়ারি, ২০১৩

Samsung Galaxy Note II sales exceed one million in Korea, may hit 10M globally in Q1

By all accounts, Samsung's Galaxy Note II has been a massive success. The oversized smartphone has now made its way into the hands of more than one million consumers in South Korea, just a month after Samsung announced that global sales had exceeded five million units. At that pace, the smartphone maker is reportedly on track to move 10 million Note IIs within four to five months of its late-September launch, compared to the nearly 10 months that it took to meet that milestone with the device's predecessor. LG is also reporting similar domestic sales for its aging 5-inch Optimus Vu, so if you've taken the plunge on either 5+ inch behemoth, it looks like you're in good company.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/12/31/samsung-galaxy-note-ii-korea-sales/

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মঙ্গলবার, ১ জানুয়ারি, ২০১৩

NFL: Bears keep playoff hopes alive with win over Lions

(Reuters) - The Chicago Bears held on to beat the Detroit Lions 26-24 to keep their post-season hopes alive and end the New York Giants' Super Bowl defense as the National Football League playoff picture came into sharper focus on the final Sunday.

With head coach Chuck Pagano back on the sidelines for the first time in three months after undergoing cancer treatment, the Indianapolis Colts posted a 28-16 win over Houston that may end up costing the Texans a first round bye.

Needing a win over the Philadelphia Eagles and plenty of help from other teams to keep their slim post-season dreams alive, the Giants came out firing on a bitterly cold day at MetLife Stadium, charging to a 35-7 halftime lead then coasting to 42-7 victory.

A sputtering New York offense that scored a total of 14 points the previous two games, scored three times in the opening quarter, Eli Manning finding Rueben Randle with a pair of touchdown strikes and David Wilson for another.

Manning tossed two more in the second half giving the Super Bowl most valuable player five touchdown passes in a game for the first time in his career but it wasn't nearly enough with the Giants needing the Bears, Minnesota Vikings and Dallas Cowboys all to lose to extend their season.

The suspense ended early as Chicago beat the Lions with the help of four field goals from Olindo Mare, including a 20-yarder in the fourth quarter that provided the margin of victory.

The Bears immediately took the Giants' place in the playoff hot seat and in the unusual position of cheering for their bitter North division rivals the Green Bay Packers to beat the Minnesota Vikings later on Sunday in order to clinch an NFC wild card.

The Texans also will be tuned into the television as they could see their hopes of first round bye disappear.

A win over the Colts would have clinched the AFC's number one seed for Houston but now the Texans could find themselves playing next week if the New England Patriots and Denver Broncos win their final regular season games.

(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto, editing by Gene Cherry)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nfl-bears-keep-playoff-hopes-alive-win-over-214852670--nfl.html

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Video: Two-hour Dateline Fridays return!

Dateline NBC

'Dateline NBC,' the signature broadcast for NBC News in primetime, premiered in 1992. Since then, it has been pioneering a new approach to primetime news programming. The multi-night franchise, supplemented by frequent specials, allows NBC to consistently and comprehensively present the highest-quality reporting, investigative features, breaking news coverage and newsmaker profiles.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032600/vp/50258420#50258420

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Crunch time for San Diegans in Rose parade

It?s crunch time in Pasadena, where much of the planet will focus attention on a five-mile stretch of Colorado Boulevard just after sunrise New Year?s Day morning.

In the last hours before the Tournament of Roses Parade, float builders are putting the finishing touches on their floral creations and equestrian performers are galloping through their final paces.

The world-famous parade, unfolding for its 124th year at 8 a.m. Tuesday, can spell high anxiety and higher anticipation for the thousands of volunteers who spent months working toward a single-minded goal.

?It?s pretty exciting,? said Charlene Zettel, chief executive of Donate Life California, a San Diego charity that for the 10th year in a row is producing a float for the parade. ?Right about this time, they go into long shifts. It can even be 24 hours, depending on how the last minutes go.?

This year?s event includes a number of entries from San Diego County, perhaps none bigger than the ?Journeys of the Heart? float being prepared by Donate Life California.

The design of interlocking hearts is aimed at inspiring people to register as eye, tissue and organ donors.

?It?s about the miracle of saving lives through organ and tissue donation,? Zettel said of the float her charity produced. ?People are passionate about this.?

Donate Life California operates a state registry for people who agree to donate body parts when they die. One of the 2013 honorees on the Donate Life float is Jeremy Henwood, the San Diego police officer killed on duty last year.

Debra Duncan-Montoya of Valley Center will be participating in her third Tournament of Roses Parade in the past four years, but it will be the fourth for her 19-year-old Arabian, Sol Spirit. A friend rode the purebred in the 2005 event, she said.

Duncan-Montoya is part of the Costumed Arabians Region One group, a team of 13 riders from across Southern California who will don traditional outfits and trot up Colorado Boulevard in a pie-shaped formation for two hours.

Duncan-Montoya won her seat on the group by writing a winning essay based on this year?s parade theme, the Dr. Seuss-inspired ?Oh, the Places You?ll Go!? The theme, of course, further links the parade to San Diego. The Dr. Seuss books were by Theodor Geisel, a La Jolla resident who died in 1991.

?Even though this will be my third time I?m so excited,? Duncan-Montoya said. ?When you turn that corner and you see all the people and hear the crowd, it gets very emotional.?

This year?s event is Tournament of Roses President Sally Bixby?s 24th. In a telephone interview Friday, Bixby said the final days may be frantic and crazy, but everything somehow comes together.

?We manage it because we have so many dedicated volunteers who have the same goal ? to make sure it goes off without a hitch,? she said. ?We are all very motivated people who want to give back to the community and love doing it.?

Source: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2012/dec/30/crunch-time-for-san-diegans-in-rose-parade/

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An A to Z guide to the Islamic Republic of 'Banistan'

Getty Images, file

All of these things have been banned in Pakistan at one time or another. Clockwise from top left: Long-haired musicians, 'The Da Vinci Code,' kite-flying, Salman Rushdie's 'Satanic Verses,' India (usually in the form of its newspapers and TV channels) and alcohol.

By Wajahat S. Khan, NBC News

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- Last month, it was cellphones. Before that, it was motorcycles, shawls and jackets. Earlier this year, it was the BBC, Twitter and YouTube. In 2011, it was porn websites. In 2010, it was Facebook. In the 1990s, it was Indian television and musicians with long hair. In the 1980s, it was Salman Rushdie's "Satanic Verses." ?And in the 1970s, it was booze.

All banned. In Pakistan. By Pakistan.

Through the decades. Pakistan's state and non-state actors have found a way to regulate, boycott, ban or completely outlaw technology, information, literature, media and even entire communities.

The result? The Islamic Republic of Pakistan, once imagined as a secular, democratic haven for India's minority Muslim population, may well have become the land of "Banistan."

Babar Sattar, a Harvard-educated lawyer, is one of "Zia's Children" - the generation who grew up during the 1970s and 1980s when the culture of forbiddance took root through ironclad legislation passed by the country's Islamist dictator of the time, Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq.

"The proclivity to ban is the continuing manifestation of expanding religion-driven morality at the expense of personal liberty," Sattar told NBC News. "We don't even recognize that there exists a need not to allow collective outrage?or shame to pillage individual rights."

Here's an A to Z of what's been curtailed in "Banistan."?

Alcohol: Pakistan was a pretty wet place until the late premier Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto banned alcohol - days before he was removed by an Islamist general in a coup in 1977. Though a heavy drinker himself, Bhutto's ban was meant to move him closer to the religious margins of the country. The political strategizing didn't work for him (he was executed), but prohibition in Pakistan stuck. Still, booze is available for the connected and the rich.

The only brewery in Pakistan is a 150-year-old tradition.? Business is booming despite strict prohibition laws.? NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.??? ?

BlackBerry services: Pakistan's blasphemy laws are regarded as the toughest in the Muslim world. But when hundreds of websites were banned in May 2010 for "blasphemous content'" that was appearing on social networks, Pakistan decided to do away with BlackBerry services, too.?

Cellphones: This year saw Pakistan's ?interior minister slam a blanket ban on cellphone services across the country?to prevent handsets being used to detonate suicide bombs.?On at least two religious occasions in 2012, Eid and Ashura, when terrorist attacks were expected, almost 120 million Pakistanis couldn't use their cellphones, even in case of emergency.?

Arif Ali / AFP - Getty Images, file

Pakistani Christians shout slogans as they protest against the movie 'The Da Vinci Code' in Lahore on June 3, 2006. The screen adaptation for the bestselling book by the same name -- starring Tom Hanks as the professor who comes across the Jesus Christ/Mary Magdalene union imagined by author Dan Brown -- was banned in 2004.

'Da Vinci Code, The': The screen adaptation for the bestselling "The Da Vinci Code," starring Tom Hanks as the professor who comes across the Jesus Christ/Mary Magdalene union imagined by author Dan Brown, was banned in 2004.?

In Pakistan's largest city, 'Old Glory' is flammable and profitable

Erotica:?In 2011, the country's Internet regulator placed a blanket ban on thousands of pornography sites. ?Meanwhile, print and DVD/CD formats of porn are available across the country, and the country manages to maintain an underground porn industry.

Food [& Beverages]: As in much of the Muslim world, pork products are banned in Pakistan. But 2012 saw even some "Halal" products?boycotted by a lawyers' association in Lahore as well the campus of a major university because they were made by?Shezan foods, a brand owned by Pakistan's minority Ahmadi sect. (Ahmadis don't think that Mohammad is Islam's final prophet and have been persecuted by successive Pakistani governments for such ideas.) Other products, including Pepsi, were also boycotted for being "Jewish."

Gambling: Once legal, gambling is now banned (thanks in large part to late prime minister Bhutto's attempts to appease the religious right in the late 1970s). However, Pakistan is a joint capital (with India) of the lucrative illegal cricket betting industry in which millions bet billions, especially when archrivals India and Pakistan play.?

Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images, file

Ali Azmat and Salman Ahmad of the rock band Junoon perform in Mumbai, India, in December 2003. The popular band and all musicians with long hair were banned in the 1990s.

Hair: In his own bid to transform what was left of secular Pakistan after the Islamist Zia regime, the 1990s saw prime minister Nawaz Sharif (tipped to be the next premier in upcoming elections) try to implement selective Shariah law by banning popular rock band, Junoon, and all musicians with long hair. The ban on Junoon was politically inspired, as it had campaigned for the financial accountability of those in elected office. ?But it all proved to be rather cosmetic. Rock and roll continued to flourish in Pakistan, and the shutdown only helped Junoon polish off their bad-boy image until they broke up. Meanwhile, Sharif got a hair transplant. The 2000s, however, saw a more complicated and violent hair ban, this time implemented in Pakistan's northwest by Taliban militants, who even bombed and fined barber shops for shaving men.

Pakistan's Generation Y battles to shape country's future

India: The world's largest democracy enjoys a special place in the Islamic Republic's banning regime. Some bans look to be permanent, including all Indian news channels, certain news websites and books, and all printed newspapers and magazines (India reciprocates most of these bans).?

Muhammed Muheisen / AP

Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

Jokes: Forwarding a joke via text message, email or blog can result in a 14-year prison sentence. But only if it targets the country's leadership.?

Rumors of plot to sterilize Muslims with polio vaccine sparks killings

Kites: The centuries-old spring festival of kite flying, Basant, based out of Pakistan's cultural capital Lahore, was also banned by the Supreme Court in 2005 when petitions were filed highlighting the dangerous after-effects of kite flying, including death by strangulation. The Supreme Court reversed the ban earlier this year.

Carl De Souza / AFP/Getty Images

A boy flies a kite on a hill overlooking a large relief camp run by The National Rural Support Program in September 2010.

LGBT rights: Rights for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community are curbed by social taboos in the Islamic Republic, but Pakistan's laws don't help either. The colonial-era Pakistan Penal Code of 1860, designed by the British, imposes a prison sentence for sodomy. But while lesbians have been low-profile in their run-ins with the law of the land, Pakistani transgenders made history in 2012 by successfully lobbying for a landmark Supreme Court judgment in their favor that allows them to both identify themselves and vote as a third sex -- transgender, and not male or female, as they were forced to in the past.

Minorities: First legally pronounced to be non-Muslims in the 1970s, the persecuted Ahmadi sect was further limited in its actions and exercise of religious freedoms by several laws in the 1980s. They were?not allowed to say the Muslim greeting aloud, nor call their houses of worship mosques. Ahmadis continue to be targets of notorious blasphemy laws, under which other religious minorities, particularly Christians, are also targeted.?

Nipples: Customs agents usually redact images of female nipples from foreign publications?available on local newsstands. Bottoms usually are overlooked, but full-frontal nudity is not.

Osama: As the embarrassment of Operation Neptune Spear set in after May 2011, Pakistani authorities first cordoned off Bin Laden's Abbottabad compound, then forbade foreigners in Abbottabad, then forbade non-Abottabadis in Abbotabad, then forbade all and sundry from visiting the location. Finally, they just razed the building.

One year after Osama bin Laden's death, questions remain about his life at the heavily guarded compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.???NBC'S Amna Nawaz reports.?

Parties: According to the regulators of the largest housing authority in Pakistan's largest city, "Marriages Ceremony," "Dance Party," and "Musical Evenings" are not allowed for citizens inside their own homes. However, "Birthday Party" and "Quran Khwani / Dars" (Quran recitals and religious lectures) are.?

Quran burning: Pakistan's blasphemy laws, considered the toughest in the Islamic world, carry a potential death sentence for anyone insulting Islam. When a Christian teenage girl with limited learning abilities was accused of burning and desecrating the Quran, riots and controversy followed?as the case of young Rimsha, initially charged with blasphemy, developed into a complicated legal battle. But it soon became became evident that an imam, who wanted Christians like Rimsha out of his neighborhood, had planted evidence on her.?

For many Pakistanis, 'USA' means 'drones'

Raymond Davis (along with other intelligence contractors and diplomats): When CIA contractor Raymond Davis shot and killed two petty criminals in broad daylight in Lahore in January 2011, the anti-American uproar was so severe that the United States had to dispatch its best diplomats, including John Kerry, to negotiate his release. And although Davis was let go only through the traditional Islamic method of payment of blood money?to the victims' relatives, Pakistan subsequently clamped down on the movement and deployment of all Western diplomats, officials and contractors. Today, if you work for the U.S., or the Argentinian, or the Jamaican embassy, you will have to obtain a "No Objection Certificate" to attend a dinner if it's even one town over from where you are stationed.

Raymond Davis, a CIA contractor who was charged with fatally shooting two men in Pakistan, has been released from prison after relatives of the victims agreed to a deal. NBC's Carol Grisanti reports.

Social media: With almost 20 million Internet connections that reach even deep inside the volatile tribal areas adjoining Afghanistan, Pakistani authorities have tried in vain to regulate social media. And although Facebook recently shut down a page used for recruiting by the Pakistani Taliban, the government has never directly acted to disconnect those who support terror via social networks.?

Demonstrators shout slogans and wave placards as they protest against Facebook in Lahore in May 2010.

Shawls: In what was dubbed by the national press as the most desperate of recently taken security measures, a district in Pakistan's northwest actually banned coats and shawls, even in the dead of winter, under British colonial-era law designed for maintaining public discipline and security. The reason: their possible use to hide suicide jackets under the bulky clothing during a sensitive religious holiday.

Can social media propel 'rock star' politician Imran Khan to power in Pakistan?

Urinating: The absence of public toilets across the country, as well as the spread and social acceptance of a rural 'go anywhere' culture has created a messy challenge for government after government in Pakistan: how to stop millions from answering the call of nature when and where they please. The answer? A national ban, with threat of prosecution.

Vaccinations: Days before 161,000 children were about to inoculated for polio this summer, the Taliban banned the vaccination campaign. Even though Pakistan remains one of the three countries in the world that still carries the debilitating virus, militants continue to target and kill anti-polio campaigners, claiming that the program is a U.S. cover for espionage, similar to the CIA using a Pakistani physician to help locate Osama bin Laden in Abbotabad last year.?

It's been a tough year for Pakistan U.S. relations. Crucial NATO supply routes have been shuttered since November, there is tension over drone strikes and now the countries are at odds over the treason conviction of the Pakistani doctor who helped the U.S. locate Osama Bin Laden.?

Weddings: Forget the five-course wedding dinner. Pakistan -- once the land of extravagant, multi-event weddings -- has a law that doesn't allow for more than one entr?e at a wedding feast. The policy has been in place for several years but is only now being implemented earnestly by a provincial government that is focused on battling food wastage.?

More Pakistan coverage from NBC News

XXX:?As porn is outlawed in Pakistan, "Tripple" is the code word nationally accepted for under-the-counter DVD and magazine purchases that are naughtier than usual.

YouTube:?YouTube is the only social networking site that continues to be blanket-banned in Pakistan since its owner, Google Inc., refused to block an anti-Islamic video last September. But Vimeo, YouTube's competitor network that offers similarly "blasphemous" material, remains rather functional and legal in Pakistani cyberspace.

'Zero Dark Thirty': Though the new Kathryn Bigelow thriller is out, it probably won't be seen in a cinema near you in Pakistan. No theater has promoted the film, no television channel is carrying its trailers, and, so far, no DVD shops are selling even its pirated versions. The reason? Well, one guess. ... "Zero Dark Thirty" is military speak for 12.30 a.m., the time the Abbotabad raid targeting bin Laden commenced in May 2011.

The Oscar-winning team of director/producer Kathryn Bigelow and writer/producer Mark Boal, along with cast members Jessica Chastain and Jason Clarke, talk about the film based on the decade-long search for Osama bin Laden, which already has critics buzzing and is stirring up controversy.

More world stories from NBC News:

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Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/31/15996724-from-alcohol-to-kites-an-a-to-z-guide-to-the-islamic-republic-of-banistan?lite

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U.S. House aims to split Sandy aid bill into two parts

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives is expected to split a $60.4 billion Superstorm Sandy disaster aid bill into two parts, staging votes on $27 billion to fund immediate recovery needs and $33 billion for long-term and other projects, Republican lawmakers and aides said on Monday.

The plan for votes on Tuesday or Wednesday would meet the demands of many Republican lawmakers to vote on a smaller initial package of aid for victims of the October 29 storm that devastated New York and New Jersey coastlines.

But the House plan still provides members from those states an opportunity to try to drum up support for the full aid package approved by the Senate last week. Details emerged after a House Republican caucus meeting on Monday.

"There's going to be two votes, unless the plan changes - one at $27 billion and one at $33 billion," said Representative Steven LaTourette, a member of the appropriations committee who will retire from Congress when it adjourns on Wednesday.

Should the House fail to pass a Sandy bill by then, the Senate's $60.4 billion measure would expire, and the new Congress that gets sworn in on Thursday would have to start over with new legislation, further delaying the disaster funds.

"If we get into the next Congress, you have to hit the reset button," said Representative Jon Runyan, a New Jersey Republican who added that the Sandy aid package has been largely drowned out in recent days by negotiations over the "fiscal cliff" tax hikes and spending cuts set to kick in starting on Tuesday.

"We're doing everything we can to keep this in the forefront," Runyan added.

Many Republicans in Congress say that the Sandy aid bill contains billions of dollars in spending on projects unrelated to damage caused by the storm or for long-term infrastructure improvements that should compete with other discretionary spending.

Among expenditures criticized was $150 million to rebuild fisheries, including those in the Gulf Coast and Alaska, thousands of miles from Sandy's devastation, and $2 million to repair roof damage that pre-dates the storm on Smithsonian Institution buildings in Washington.

There were few details on which expenditures would be considered immediate disaster needs that would go into the $27 billion portion of the House measure, which is likely to win easier passage.

Senate Republicans tried a similar approach, proposing to shrink the $60.4 billion package to $24 billion for near-term projects, but this was defeated in the Democratic-controlled chamber.

Aides said the New York and New Jersey delegations were working to drum up support for the full package. An aide to a New York area Republican congressman said there appeared to be sufficient Republican support for passage.

Democrats, including New York and New Jersey senators, have argued that long-term rebuilding projects such as tunnel repairs, would be delayed if the full funding was not approved. They say that businesses would not start to rebuild if they were not confident of reimbursement.

(Reporting By David Lawder; Editing by Eric Walsh)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-house-aims-split-sandy-aid-bill-two-023739972.html

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Explosions across Iraq kill at least 10, wound 46

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Explosions killed at least 10 people and wounded 46 across Iraq on Monday, police said, underlining sectarian and ethnic divisions that threaten to further destabilize the country a year after U.S. troops left.

Tensions between Shi'ite, Kurdish and Sunni factions in Iraq's power-sharing government have been on the rise this year. Militants continue to strike almost daily, and carry out at least one big attack a month.

The latest violence followed more than a week of protests against Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki by thousands of people from the country's minority Sunni community.

No group claimed responsibility for any of Monday's attacks, which targeted government officials, police patrols and members of both the Sunni and Shi'ite sects.

Seven people from the same Sunni family were killed by a bomb planted near their home in the town of Mussayab, south of Baghdad.

In the Shi'ite majority city of Hilla, also in the south, a parked car bomb went off near the convoy of the governor of Babil province, missing him but killing two other people, police said.

"We heard the sound of a big explosion and the windows of our office shattered. We immediately lay on the ground," said 28-year-old Mohammed Ahmed, who works at a hospital near the site of the explosion.

"After a few minutes I stood up and went to the windows to see what happened. I saw flames and people lying on the ground."

Although violence is far lower than during the sectarian slaughter of 2006-2007, about 2,000 people have been killed in Iraq this year following the withdrawal last December of U.S. troops, who led an invasion in 2003 to overthrow Saddam Hussein.

Monday's violence also included a series of blasts that killed three people in Iraq's disputed territories, over which both the central government and the autonomous Kurdish region claim jurisdiction.

Two of those deaths were in the oil-producing, ethnically mixed city of Kirkuk, where a bomb exploded as a police team tried to defuse it.

Baghdad and Kurdistan are locked in a feud over land and oil rights and recently deployed their respective armies to the swathe of territory along their contested internal boundary, where they are currently facing off against each other.

Efforts to ease the standoff stalled when President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd seen as a steadying influence, suffered a stroke and was flown abroad for medical care earlier this month.

Maliki then detained the bodyguards of his Sunni finance minister, which sparked protests by thousands in the western province of Anbar, a Sunni stronghold on the border with Syria.

Protesters are demanding an end to what they see as the marginalization of Iraq's Sunni minority, which dominated the country until the U.S.-led invasion. They want Maliki to abolish anti-terrorism laws they say are used to persecute them.

On Sunday, Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq, himself a Sunni, was forced to flee the epicenter of the protests in Anbar's city of Ramadi when demonstrators pelted him with stones and bottles.

(Reporting by Ali al-Rubaie in Hilla, Mustafa Mahmoud and Omar Mohammed in Kirkuk, Ali Mohammed in Baquba and Aseel Kami in Baghdad; Writing by Isabel Coles; Editing by Pravin Char)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/explosions-across-iraq-kill-least-10-wound-46-083505805.html

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