Archive for January, 2009

‘Duck Hunt’ iPhone game pulled at Nintendo’s request

Saturday, January 31st, 2009

Lawl Mart’s Duck Hunt, an iPhone and iPod touch game that has been available at the App Store, can’t be found any more. The developer says that the game came down at the request of Nintendo, which alleges copyright infringement.

Released in January, Duck Hunt made it through Apple’s App Store vetting process and was available for purchase for 99 cents. The game mirrors a title that Nintendo originally released for the original Nintendo Entertainment System, its 1980s-era video game console, and one of the first to support Nintendo’s Zapper, a light gun peripheral.

The game featured a cartoon hunting dog who would flush out cartoon ducks from rushes; your job was to shoot the ducks as the flew away, before they reached the edge of the screen and out of your range. If you ran out of time or missed three shots, the dog would make fun of you and the game would be over.

Lawl Mart stayed true to the formula, using a graphics motif, sound and music that mirrored the original Nintendo game. And it was this that seemed to run afoul of Nintendo’s legal department, which ordered Apple to take the game down.

Lucas Mansfield, the developer behind the game, confirmed to Macworld in an e-mail that the game had been removed from the App Store at Nintendo’s behest. “It’s an unfortunate situation, but I do understand Nintendo’s position,” he said.

Mansfield indicated that the Duck Hunt game for the iPhone would be reworked and updated to remove the offending graphics and sound, while still trying to take “as much inspiration from the original as possible.”

Eat less to remember more, study suggests

Saturday, January 31st, 2009

Cutting calories may improve memory among healthy elderly men and women, a new study from Germany hints. In the study, researchers found that people who cut their calorie intake by approximately 30 percent performed better on standard memory tests after just three months.

“Our study may help to generate novel prevention strategies to maintain cognitive functions into old age,” Dr. A. Veronica Witte and colleagues from University of Munster wrote in the latest issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Animal studies have shown that diets low in calories and rich in unsaturated fatty acids - the kind found in olive oil and fish - are beneficial for brain function, helping to improve memory in aging rats.

To see whether the same effects can be induced in humans, Witte’s team divided 50 normal- to overweight individuals whose average age was 60 years into three groups. One group restricted by up to 30 percent the amount of calories they consumed; a second group increased their consumption of unsaturated fatty acids by up to 20 percent; and a third group, serving as the control group, made no changes.

According to the investigators, the calorie-restricted group saw a significant 20 percent average increase in verbal memory scores after 3 months. In contrast, no significant changes in memory performance emerged in the two other groups.

The investigators also noticed that memory improvements in the calorie-restricted group correlated with decreases in insulin levels and “biomarkers” of inflammation in the body, and that these changes were most pronounced in those individuals who stuck closest to the prescribed calorie-restricted diet.

“To our knowledge, the current results provide the first experimental evidence in humans that caloric restriction improves memory in the elderly,” Witte and colleagues note.

The results of this study, they add, “may help to develop new prevention and treatment strategies for maintaining cognitive health into old age.”

You don’t know tech: The InfoWorld news quiz

Friday, January 30th, 2009

Despite bearish earnings and big layoffs, any week where there’re rumors of a new iPhone can’t all be bad. Apple rumors, rogue road signs, new and/or improved browsers, and the ever expanding world of Google made it a colorful week. Are you tech savvy enough to ace our quiz? Correct answers are worth 10 points (though some questions may have more than one correct answer), and native speakers of Bulgarian will have a slight advantage. Ready? Then begin.

1. Is a brand-spanking-new iPhone in the works? The MacRumors blog thinks it’s unearthed evidence of a code name for the next-gen Jesus phone. What is it?

a. iPhone2,1
b. iPhone 2.1
c. iPhone 3.2.1
d. iPhone666

Take the InfoWorld news quiz

Dhaka to upgrade highway link with Chittagong

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s government is poised to resume a project to upgrade the highway linking the national capital with Chittagong port city to speed up movement and curb accidents.

The four-lane highway is to eventually link to the Asian Super Highway, The Daily Star newspaper said Wednesday.

The government has decided to seek international invitation for pre-qualifying tender for it, due to cancellation of the immediate past bids.

Communication Minister Syed Abul Hossain has instructed Communication Secretary Iqbal Mahmood to take measures to restart the project ‘immediately’, after receiving the nod from the Prime Minister’s Office.

Initiated in September 2006, tenders for the much needed project were cancelled twice, first in April and then in July 2007 due to procedural lapses.

Some of the firms challenged the government’s decision through a writ that was later upheld by the high court.

Due to the delay in the implementation of the project, the government estimated cost is now as high as Tk 24 billion (about $4 billion) compared to the previous estimated cost of Tk 21.6 billion, government officials said.

The government could have saved an additional Tk three billion by finalising the previous bids, as the lowest quote of the pre-qualified firms was Tk 17 million.

GateHouse Media case against NYTimes goes to trial

Monday, January 26th, 2009

On one side is GateHouse Media, one of the nation’s largest publishers of community newspapers. On the other is The New York Times Co., the parent company of The Boston Globe and its Boston.com Web site.

The two publishers will square off in federal court this week in a case that is being closely watched by journalists, bloggers and Internet users.

GateHouse filed a copyright infringement lawsuit last month, claiming that the Globe’s new community Web sites use online material from GateHouse without permission.

GateHouse claims Boston.com violates copyright and trademark laws by taking GateHouse’s newspaper headlines and lead sentences published on its “Wicked Local” Web sites. GateHouse alleges that Boston.com offers links that send readers directly to “Wicked Local” stories — bypassing ads posted on home pages that help fund its operation and creating confusion on the source of the original reporting.

Last fall, Boston.com launched three “Your Town” community Web sites that cover the cities of Newton, Waltham and Needham. The Globe said that the three towns were the first in a series of more than 100 “hyperlocal” Web sites it plans.

In its lawsuit, GateHouse claims that Boston.com is building community-oriented sites that rely on the work of GateHouse reporters.

News organizations and bloggers say the case could have far-reaching implications for determining how much content one news organization or Web site can use from another.

“It’s certainly being followed within the journalism community, but this is huge in new media and blogging because God help us if a judge or a jury starts to lay down rules as to what constitutes acceptable linking practices and what isn’t,” said Dan Kennedy, an assistant journalism professor at Northeastern University who has been blogging about the case on Media Nation.

Gregory Reibman, the editor-in-chief of the metro unit of GateHouse Media New England, said in an affidavit that many online readers only read headlines and lead sentences and do not click through to the full stories. He said that when readers do click through from the “Your Town” links, they bypass the ads on Wicked Local’s home pages.

“If the Boston Globe wants to compete with us in Newton and the other communities we serve, they should approach it fairly,” Reibman said in the affidavit. “They should hire and pay their own journalists. They should generate their own original content and nurture their own contacts within the community.”

Ira Levy, an attorney for The New York Times Co., declined comment on the case before trial. Anthony Scibelli, an attorney for GateHouse Media, also declined comment.

Catherine Mathis, a spokeswoman for The New York Times Co., declined comment on Friday, but said earlier that the company believes GateHouse’s claims are “without merit.”

Boston.com’s local pages, like hundreds of other news sites, aggregate headlines and snippets of relevant stories published on the Web. They link back to the originating site where the interested user can read the entire article,” Mathis said in a statement on Dec. 22.

“Far from being illegal or improper, this practice of linking to sites is common and is familiar to anyone who has searched the Web. It is fair and benefits both Web users and the originating site.”

Bill Mitchell, director of Poynter Online, said the case is about more than just linking.

“I think it’s a very tricky, interesting issue because on the one hand if I were in GateHouse’s shoes, I’d feel well-served by links from the bigger Boston.com. On the other hand, the extent to which users find themselves sufficiently satisfied just by looking at the Globe hyper local site, that really undercuts what GateHouse is trying to do,” Mitchell said.

GateHouse, based in Fairport, N.Y., owns 97 daily newspapers, 400 other publications and 260 related Web sites reaching more than 10 million people in 21 states. Its Massachusetts publications include The Patriot Ledger, The Enterprise, the Newton TAB and the Daily News Tribune of Waltham.

The trial is scheduled to start Monday in U.S. District Court.

Arctic front freezes US, Canada in record cold snap

Monday, January 19th, 2009

A record cold snap gripped the American Midwest Friday as temperatures plummeted to lows of minus 30 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 34 degrees Celsius) and officials scrambled to protect the homeless and vulnerable.

The cold was the result of an arctic blast that descended from Canada and settled across the upper Midwest, said National Weather Service meteorologist Bill Wilson.

“The wind patterns are like this during the winter,” he said. “Some winters it gets cold. Some winters it gets extreme. This is what we term extreme.”

The temperatures were the coldest since 1999 in Illinois and since 1994 in some parts of Ohio and Indiana.

Temperatures of minus 32 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 36 degrees Celsius) overnight were recorded in Rockford, Illinois, breaking a record set in 1983, Wilson said.

The front was expected to move east in coming days and bring similar bone-chilling temperatures to the East Coast.

Relief may be a long way off, however, as temperatures remained locked below zero (minus 17 Celsius) Friday and weren’t expected to break above 32 degrees Fahrenheit (zero Celsius) until later next week, according to the National Weather Service.

In Canada the polar freeze was not any kinder as the extreme cold caused flooding in Montreal and left 100,000 people in Toronto without power or heating for over 12 hours, as temperatures stood frozen at zero degrees Fahrenheit (minus 18 Celsius).

The severe cold forced scores of school closures, prompted people to leave their homes for warming centers and saw cadres of volunteers and government officials take to the streets across affected states to ensure the homeless and vulnerable were not stuck in the deadly winter freeze.

Homeless shelters, jammed even beyond capacity because of surging home foreclosures that has produced a significant rise in the numbers of homeless people, looked for churches and other social service agencies to open their doors to make room.

Eddy Bazile, executive director of the Fort Wayne, Indiana Rescue Mission reported his facility had seen a 100 percent increase in occupancy over the last few days.

“I believe there is a surge in need just about everywhere,” Bazile said.

In Cleveland, Ohio officials converted recreation centers into warming centers, and issued cold-weather alerts to roughly 100,000 elderly residents, according to the mayor’s office spokeswoman Andrea Taylor.

“People are used to the cold here, but they’re saying that it hasn’t been this cold in years,” Taylor said.

Chicago is operating six warming centers, including one open 24 hours a day, and authorities are checking on at least 3,000 residents considered most at risk, said Anne Sheahan, spokeswoman for Chicago Department of Family and Support Services.

“We have some challenges with our homeless population as some people refuse to come in from the cold. That’s probably the hardest thing for us to deal with. They’re adults, so we can’t make them.”

Temperatures plummeted in Flint, Michigan, forcing all the city’s schools to close, according to Police Chief David Forystek. At midday the temperature was seven degrees Fahrenheit (-14 Celsius) Friday, or 13 degrees below zero (-25 Celsius) factoring in the wind chill.

Flint’s local energy company had also postponed cutting power to residents who have fallen behind on their bills, added Forystek,

“That’s a private industry thing, but it’s a sign of how cold it really is,” Forystek said.

“We are used to temperatures in the 20s (minus six to one degree Celsius) and 30s (one to four degrees Celsius), but it’s not very often we see the temperature fall to 19 degrees below zero (minus 28 Celsius).”

On Inauguration Day, will my cell phone work? (CNET)

Friday, January 16th, 2009

When I head to Washington, D.C., this weekend for the 44th president’s inauguration, there’s one major question burning in my mind: Will my cell phone work?

I am one of the 240,000 people with free tickets attending President-elect Barack Obama’s swearing-in ceremony on the steps of the U.S. Capitol next week. And like the other 2 million or so people descending upon Washington, D.C., this weekend for the festivities, I am counting on my cell phone to not only keep me informed of important traffic alerts and happenings around the nation’s capital but also to help me meet up with many friends and family I plan to see while in town.

The last presidential inauguration I attended was back in 1993 when Bill Clinton had just taken office. Back then I didn’t even know anyone who owned a cell phone. I had to make plans ahead of time, if you can believe that, to make sure I could meet my sister, who had my ticket.

Nowadays, nobody makes plans ahead of time. Instead, we rely on our cell phones to allow us to plan on the fly. I have already exchanged cell phone numbers with at least six different “friends” on Facebook to meet up this weekend. I don’t have solid plans with any one of these people. So I am simply crossing my fingers that the cell phone network holds up.

Just to put things in perspective, four years ago just over 200,000 people showed up for George W. Bush’s inauguration. About 1 million people were in Times Square in New York City on December 31, 2008, to watch the ball drop. The only other crowd of this size that has assembled in recent times is the yearly Muslim pilgrimage, or Hajj, to Mecca in Saudi Arabia, which this year topped out at between 2 million and 3 million visitors.

While cell phone carriers are constantly upgrading capacity in their networks and have routinely prepared for major events in Washington, D.C., such as inaugurations and state funerals, this will likely be the largest gathering of Americans in one place at one time. And given that most of the 2 million people expected to be in D.C. will be carrying a cell phone, it will certainly put a strain on the network, especially if everyone decides to call, text, Twitter, update Facebook pages, watch live video, or send video clips to friends and family at the same time.

What could make cell phone networks particularly vulnerable this year is the proliferation of new smartphones, like Apple’s iPhone or the various Research In Motion BlackBerry phones, that use 2G and 3G networks to access the Web and provide data services.

“We can only bend the laws of physics so much,” said Joe Farren, a spokesman for the Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association (CTIA). “If there are 4 million people on the mall streaming video, sending pictures, or calling, there could be congestion.”

And network congestion means that cell phone users might experience, dropped calls and delayed text messages. Smartphone users, like me with my Apple iPhone, might also see mobile Web pages load excruciatingly slow or not at all. And for people with video services like Verizon’s VCast, Sprint TV, or MobiTV, watching live video of news broadcasts while standing thousands of people deep in the crowd may be impossible.

Best to text instead of talk The CTIA is advising people to text and not talk. Text messages and e-mails travel through the network much more easily than voice calls, especially during peak traffic times. Users should also snap, and save, and send photos later. Sending pictures via the cell network eats up valuable capacity, so CTIA suggests sharing those special moments later. And finally, the trade group advises all people to have a back-up plan. Think old school, and pick a rendezvous place and time to meet friends and family in case the cell network is so clogged you can’t communicate.

That said, the big four wireless operators–AT&T, Verizon Wireless, Sprint Nextel, and T-Mobile USA–say they’ve spent millions of dollars and months of time increasing capacity on their networks to ensure that their customers have a good experience throughout the inauguration weekend.

Each carrier has deployed Cell On Wheels throughout the city where cell phone usage is expected to be high. And each carrier has already deployed at least one Cell On Light Truck right near the Capitol, where Obama will take the oath of office as the 44th president of the U.S., to boost capacity. These mobile units use satellite and microwave technology to increase the capacity in a cell site. They are often deployed at disaster sites when cell towers have been knocked down or taken offline.

In addition, all four of the major mobile operators have also increased capacity at permanent cell sites throughout the Washington, D.C., area.

All told, AT&T says it has boosted its 3G network capacity along the parade route, where between 300,000 and 350,000 people are expected to be, by 80 percent and its 2G capacity by 69 percent. Sprint Nextel says it has increased capacity on its Nextel iDEN network by about 90 percent and capacity on its Sprint CDMA network by about 40 percent. The other major carriers, Verizon Wireless and T-Mobile USA, have also increased capacity. T-Mobile USA says it has increased capacity at about 100 of its cell sites in D.C.

AT&T also said it has boosted cellular signals in many hotels throughout the city, including the Hilton and Hyatt Regency on Capitol Hill and the Renaissance on M Street. Sprint Nextel also said it has increased service capacity in and around tourist attractions, such as the Smithsonian museums, Union Station, and other places where inaugural balls will take place.

The mobile operators also say they’ve upgraded what’s known as their backhaul networks, which carry wireless traffic from cell phone towers to the wired telephone infrastructure where calls are connected throughout the country and the world.

Operators have also upgraded capacity for emergency first responders. While network congestion may cause problems for regular cell phone subscribers, these first responders will not encounter issues, representatives from the major carriers assured me. Calls by emergency responders such as police, firefighters, and medical crews will be given priority over other wireless traffic. And new interoperability standards among the carriers’ networks and devices should eliminate communication issues, such as the ones that occurred during the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center.

Quality of service will depend on numbers As for consumers, representatives from the carriers say they feel confident their services will operate with only minor hiccups. But they all agree that the quality of their service ultimately depends on how many people show up in D.C. this weekend. Early estimates pegged the number around 4 million to 5 million people. But more recently, estimates have fallen to between 1 million and 2 million.

“We feel comfortable with all we’ve done to prepare for this event,” said John Taylor, a spokesman for Sprint Nextel. “And our customers will have great service. But if more than 2 million people show up, there will be blocked and dropped calls. And text messages will be delayed. ”

Taylor said that even if the crowd stays below the 2 million mark, there could be delays and dropped calls at critical moments during the swearing in ceremony or along the parade route if hundreds of thousands of people send text messages at the exact same moment.

“We saw this happen on New Year’s Eve,” he said. “The network was flooded with phone calls and messages all at the same time. And some of those messages were delayed a bit.”

I’m crossing my fingers that the bitter cold we’re experiencing on the East Coast will keep the numbers below 2 million, so that all my wonderful plans for this historic inauguration aren’t shattered by crummy cell phone service. If AT&T’s network is up and running, I’ll be Twittering all weekend on my iPhone. If you want to follow me, check out my feed on Twitter, maggie_reardon.

Ordering a Slot Machine Online

Friday, January 16th, 2009

If you are thinking about buying a slot machine, then you should really look into online sources to find one. There are a number of benefits too this. You will be able to find the perfect one a lot faster if you utilize a number of full catalogs from online suppliers and you will probably be able to find a better deal thanks to the large number of used slot machines for sale.

You can’t ignore the obvious benefit to having an entire catalog at your fingertips. Online brokers have a full selection that usually covers just about everything that the casino world has to offer. If you really want to have the theme that is just perfect for you, you can look online and see if you spot something that just fits right. You might be surprised to know about the variety you will find if you look at the specialty stores with slot machines for sale.

The final benefit is obviously the price break though. As casinos rotate in new machines, a number of older models become available at reduced prices. If you just want to have a fun addition to your room, then any one of the many used slot machines on the market should be just fine. It might even be a bit better for atmosphere, knowing that you have a slot machine that once graced the floor of a real casino.

Hormone replacement therapy shrinks brain

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Hormone replacement therapy may lead to brain shrinkage in postmenopausal women, say researchers.

The study showed that volumes of brain lesions were not significantly increased among women prescribed hormone therapy, but that the total volumes of brain tissue in regions critical to memory were slightly smaller.

The research team found that women who had taken hormone therapy had slightly smaller brain volumes in two critical areas of the brain: the frontal lobe and the hippocampus.

Both areas are involved in thinking and memory skills, and loss of volume in the hippocampus is a risk factor for dementia.

“Our findings suggest one possible explanation for the increased risk for dementia in older women who had previously taken post-menopausal hormone therapy in the Women’’s Health Initiative Memory Study,” said Susan Resnick, Ph.D., of the National Institute on Aging, which is part of NIH.

“Our findings suggest that hormone therapy in older post-menopausal women has a negative effect on brain structures important in maintaining normal memory functioning.

“However, this negative effect was most pronounced in women who already may have had some memory problems before using hormone therapy, suggesting that the therapy may have accelerated a neurodegenerative disease process that had already begun,” she added.

Researchers will next set out to determine whether the negative effects of hormone therapy on brain volumes continue over time through follow-up MRI studies of the women studied.

Berbatov’s exorcist uncle shocked by Man U’s “Red Devils” nickname

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Manchester United star Dimitar Berbatov’s uncle is an exorcist, and he was shocked when he got to know the nickname of his nephew’s football club.

Father Stoyan Berbatov drives out demons in spine-chilling ceremonies in Dimi’s native Bulgaria, and he was shocked to discover the devilish nickname (Red Devils) of his famous nephew’s new club.

Father Stoyan, who takes on the devil just like actor Max von Sydow in hit horror flick The Exorcist, reckons his nephew’s rise to stardom has helped revive religion in Bulgaria.

He said: “I have been in this parish for over 15 years and the congregation used to be small. But now Bulgaria is football mad. It has a celebrity in the best team in the world. And now my church is full! Maybe people think the power of God and the Berbatov luck is a winning team.”

Dimi, 27, who scored in his club’s 3-0 demolition of Chelsea yesterday, has become Bulgaria’s best-known sporting hero since his 30.75 million pounds transfer from Spurs to United in the summer.