Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Robot Girlfriend

This could be good news for somebody...



Japanese Firm Creates Robot Girlfriend for Lonely Men
Wednesday, June 18, 2008

She's big-busted, petite, very friendly and she runs on batteries. Sega, best known for its home video game consoles, has introduced a 15-inch tall robotic 'girlfriend' that kisses on command, with a target market of lonely adult men. The robot, named "EMA," which stands for Eternal Maiden Actualization, is designed to pucker up for nearby human heads, entering "love mode" using a series of infrared sensors powered by battery. "Strong, tough and battle-ready are some of the words often associated with robots, but we wanted to break that stereotype and provide a robot that's sweet and interactive," said Minako Sakanoue, a spokeswoman for the maker, Sega Toys to Reuters news agency. "She's very lovable and though she's not a human, she can act like a real girlfriend." EMA can also hand out business cards, sing and dance. Sega is hoping to sell 10,000 robotic girlfriends in it's first year and envisions a $10-billion market for artificial intelligence in a decade. The busty bot will be available in Japan in September for around $175.

~courtesy Fox News, see pictures here

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Fighting Against War



Ballet amid the bullets in Iraq


An arts school is an oasis for children who keep culture alive despite war and threats from extremists.
By Alexandra Zavis
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

April 1, 2008

BAGHDAD — In an airy studio lined with mirrors, little girls in pink leotards and boys in black shorts and white T-shirts pull themselves up as straight as they can and push their toes out into first position.


Their teacher, Ghada Taiyi, walks between them, straightening a pair of knobby knees and adjusting the curve of an arm. She switches on a cassette player, and the strains of a grand piano fill the room.

"You wouldn't think we are in Iraq," she says with a smile.

In a city full of bloodshed, the Baghdad School of Music and Ballet is an oasis, instilling in its young charges a love of music and dance in the midst of war.

"I feel happy when I come here," 11-year-old Lisam says as she catches her breath between leaps and twirls in another of the school's studios.

Through the worst of the violence, Iraq's only performing arts school never stopped putting on shows and sending its teachers and students on cultural exchanges abroad.

But the school, one of the few places left in Baghdad where children of all ethnic and religious backgrounds learn together, cannot shield the students from the horrors beyond its heavily guarded gates. Bomb blasts and rocket barrages shook the capital in the few hours that the students were practicing demi-plies and ports de bras.

"Sometimes, we see people killed and kidnapped," says Lisam, who doesn't give her last name for safety reasons. "Sometimes we even worry about our parents, when they bring us here and pick us up."

Lisam shares the same dreams as dance students anywhere in the world: "to be famous," she says.

But unlike girls growing up in less turbulent countries, she practices excerpts from the great classical ballets in her stocking feet, so as not to wear out her precious point shoes before the end-of-year recital. There is no place to buy another pair in Baghdad.

Most of the ballet students drop out when they're 12 or 13, Taiyi says, afraid of the Muslim extremists who consider music sacrilegious and kill for much less than dancing in public in a form-revealing tutu.

Each time a student stops showing up for class, staff members call the parents to ask why.

"They always say 'security, security, security,' " says Taiyi, a slim woman with a commanding presence who is not afraid to wear a leotard in front of male visitors in her studio.

Taiyi says she cried for days when one particularly promising student disappeared without explanation.

Taiyi graduated from the state-run school in 1984 and went on to teach there. Now, she says, "I am afraid that we are going to lose the art of ballet itself."

The school, which offers primary and secondary education, hasn't graduated a ballet-major class since the mid-1990s, when Saddam Hussein began courting conservative tribal and religious leaders to shore up his rule.

Even if the students did complete their training, there are no opportunities for ballet dancers in Iraq. The only professional performances most of the children see are on the videos and DVDs in the school library.

The challenges are just as great for the music students. Most leave their violins and flutes at school to avoid attracting the attention of religious militias by carrying instrument cases in the street. That cuts into their practice time, making it difficult to progress, says Ahmed Saleem, who as the school's technical director oversees music and dance education and the 42 arts teachers, many of them part-time staffers.

Saleem has moved six times to escape death threats, and he is not the only staff member to receive them. To avoid drawing attention, the school took down its sign two years ago.

It was not always like this. Art and culture have flourished in Iraq since the dawn of civilization. Even Hussein's brutal regime patronized artists, musicians and dancers for the glory they could bring the country.

The music department, which offers instruction in both classical and Arab instruments, opened in 1968, part of a modernization drive that marked Hussein's early years in power. The ballet section was added the following year.

Admission is by audition, and instruments and tuition are provided free. Academic lessons are held in the morning, and the afternoons are devoted to art.

Until the 1990s, Hussein's government brought skilled professionals from the Soviet Union to teach the students, and imported instruments, music scores and ballet slippers by the crate-load. The training was rigorous, and the school's graduates are found in orchestras and ballet schools around the world.

But the foreign teachers left when Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990 and never returned. As the economy buckled under the effects of United Nations-imposed sanctions, crucial supplies began running out.

Because of the school's association with Hussein, angry mobs descended on it after the dictator's fall in April 2003. What they could not carry away, they smashed to pieces. Even the grand piano was gashed with an ax.

But the next day, the teachers were back, sweeping away the debris so classes could begin again. The school now depends largely on donations from embassies, cultural institutions and arts lovers in Europe and the United States to equip its students.

Most of the school's students have come from educated, middle-class families, which were among the first to flee the city's descent into chaos after U.S.-led forces invaded five years ago. The number of students has dropped to about 150 from a peak of more than 400. Just 15 of them study ballet, and the department has had to fend off attempts by the Culture Ministry, which is controlled by Islamists, to shut it down altogether.

Nadja Hamadi, who has served as school principal for 20 years, insists these are temporary setbacks.

"Iraq is the cradle of culture. The first letters were written here. The first farming took place here. And the first law was drafted here," she says. "These wars are only temporary things. We have to preserve our culture and start anew."

Arecent drop in violence has provided much-needed encouragement.

Hadil Youssef, a woman veiled in black, risks bombs and gunfire every day to drive her two boys to school from Sadiya, still one of Baghdad's most dangerous neighborhoods. Amer, 8, is learning to play a Middle Eastern lute called the oud, and 7-year-old Mujaid is studying ballet.

Youssef waits for them all day in the car park and drives them home in the afternoon. The police and soldiers on the streets have a habit of firing guns in the air to hustle the traffic along, and occasionally a stray bullet lands nearby. But that doesn't deter the shoemaker's wife from bringing her boys to school.

"I want a better future for them," she says.

At the height of the sectarian killing, in December 2006, the school put on a Concert for Peace featuring the children's orchestra and choir. The dance students performed an original ballet describing the violence that had engulfed Baghdad. It ended with a resurrection representing what they hoped would be their city's emergence from the bloodshed.

"People said this school was finished," says Saleem, the technical director. "We did this performance to show that they were wrong."




















~courtesy LA Times

Monday, June 16, 2008

Blind Cyclist

Boy wants to be youngest to sail around world

US teen sailor takes on the world

A 16-year-old from Los Angeles is hoping to become the youngest person to sail round the world alone. Zac Sunderland sets off on Saturday and will make the historic year-long journey in a boat bought with his own savings, the BBC’s Rajesh Mirchandani reports.

zacsunderland.com)
Zac will cross treacherous waters in the Pacific, Indian and Atlantic oceans

“The boat’s called Intrepid,” Zac Sunderland tells me, as we step aboard. A more fitting name might be “Unfinished”, I think to myself.

A few days before he sets sail on a world record-breaking attempt, Zac is waiting for new sails to arrive.

Several people are working on deck, drilling, fastening, making adjustments.

Down below, the mess resembles, well, a typical teenager’s bedroom.

However, Zac is far from typical. He cannot yet drive legally, yet he plans to sail this 36-foot (11m) boat around the world. Alone.

And to return as the youngest person ever to do so, he needs to get back by January 2010. The current record belongs to Australian David Dicks, who finished his voyage in 1996, aged 18 years and 41 days.

“It’s going to be an amazing adventure, going to all those places, meeting all those people, you know, just checking out all the different places around the world,” Zac says.

“It’s the adventure of a lifetime.”

Freeze-dried food

So, home for the next year, at least, will be a cramped cabin: here he will sleep on a narrow bunk, strapped in, in case of choppy seas; he will plot routes, study weather charts and communicate with his family, friends and the outside world via a sophisticated array of equipment (with two iPods for some light relief).

Here he will also prepare meals on a stove that pivots back and forth, although he admits his kitchen skills to date begin and end at the microwave (there is one onboard).

Zac’s supply of fresh food will last four weeks. After that, it is tins and freeze-dried food, supplemented by a few fish he may catch himself.


He will spend periods of up to four to six weeks alone at sea, in between stops. Zac’s first port of call will be the Marshall Islands, 4,000 miles (6,437km) away.

The 40,000-mile (64,400-km) route will then take him across the Pacific to Papua New Guinea and Australia, and from there across the Indian Ocean to Mauritius and Madagascar.

After rounding the treacherous Cape of Good Hope in South Africa, he will traverse the South Atlantic ocean.

He will then navigate the Panama Canal before taking in the Galapagos Islands and heading north back to California.

He had planned to sail through the Suez Canal, but changed his route after reading about pirates off the coast of Somalia.

Safety precautions

Now this unassuming teenager’s greatest fears are being away from his friends, not getting enough sleep and falling behind with the year’s worth of school work he is taking with him.

Isla Isabella in the Galapagos
One stop near the end of his intended route is the Galapagos Islands

“I have all my books with me. I have one more year to finish at high school and I have to send back my tests [via e-mail] to my mum. She’s going to grade them and make sure I am doing well.”

So, apart from checking up on homework, how do his parents feel about their son’s voyage?

Well, it helps that they cruised the Pacific with their young family for three years, and are in the ship maintenance business themselves.

Zac’s mother, Marianne Sunderland, says: “As far as worrying about something tragic, I don’t have that worry.

“I think we have taken all the necessary safety precautions, he has all the latest equipment, his own father outfitted his boat. So as far as that goes, we have managed those risks.”

His father, Laurence Sunderland, from England, adds: “He’s a very competent man on the ocean. If he was going to be involved in some other feat that I was not involved with I would be more worried.”

Zac intends to write a book while he is on his trip and record footage for a potential documentary on his return.

He is far-sighted and mature enough to acknowledge this adventure could set him up for a career in sailing.

In all, he expects to cover more than 40,000 miles. But whether he breaks the record or not, it looks set to be the greatest journey of his young life.

Map showing Zac Sunderland's projected route round the world

~courtesy BBC

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Mayor Says No to Pay Raise

W.Va. mayor still opposes his own pay raise

A West Virginia city council has pared a planned pay raise for its mayor, but the mayor still says no.

The Huntington council first discussed increasing Mayor David Felinton’s pay from about $62,000 a year to $90,000. On Monday, the council dropped it to $80,000 and is expected to vote in two weeks.

Council members say it’s needed to attract top candidates to run West Virginia’s second-largest city.

But Felinton still says he’ll veto any raise because the city has other priorities. Other city workers will get no raises next year and are making concessions in health insurance coverage. He says he’ll support a raise in better economic conditions.

Making a Difference

Verizon, Sprint, and Time Warner Cable are taking a proactive step to end child sex abuse.

Read the Story!

~courtesy BBC News 6/10/08

Long Lost Watch

An 89 year old former Royal Nay Lieutenant is reunited with his watch after 67 years. It’s been buried under water and mud for all these years yet still works perfectly!

Read the Story!

~courtesy BBC News 6/10/08