热门帖子

2010年12月1日星期三

US deploys 'game-changer' weapon to Afghanistan

www.go2bagtrade.com


WASHINGTON (AFP) – It looks and acts like something best left in the hands of Sylvester Stallone's "Rambo," but this latest dream weapon is real -- and the US Army sees it becoming the Taliban's worst nightmare.
The Pentagon has rolled out prototypes of its first-ever programmable "smart" grenade launcher, a shoulder-fired weapon that uses microchipped ammunition to target and kill the enemy, even when the enemy is hidden behind walls or other cover.

After years of development, the XM25 Counter Defilade Target Engagement System, about the size of a regular rifle, has now been deployed to US units on the battlefields of Afghanistan, where the Army expects it to be a "game-changer" in its counterinsurgency operations. "For well over a week, it's been actively on patrols, and in various combat outposts in areas that are hot," said Lieutenant Colonel Chris Lehner, program manager for the XM25.
The gun's stats are formidable: it fires 25mm air-bursting shells up to 2,300 feet (700 meters), well past the range of most rifles used by today's soldiers, and programs them to explode at a precise distance, allowing troops to neutralize insurgents hiding behind walls, rocks or trenches or inside buildings.
[With Afghan control by 2014, Obama sees combat end]
"This is the first time we're putting smart technology into the hands of the individual soldier," Lehner told AFP in a telephone interview.
"It's giving them the edge," he said, in the harsh Afghan landscape where Islamist extremists have vexed US troops using centuries-old techniques of popping up from behind cover to engage.
"You get behind something when someone is shooting at you, and that sort of cover has protected people for thousands of years," Lehner said.
"Now we're taking that away from the enemy forever."
PEO Soldier says studies show the XM25 is 300 percent more effective than current weapons at the squad level.
The revolutionary advance involves an array of sights, sensors and lasers that reads the distance to the target, assesses elements such as air pressure, temperature, and ballistics and then sends that data to the microchip embedded in the XM25 shell before it is launched.
Previous grenade launchers needed to arc their shells over cover and land near the target to be effective.
[U.S.: Special forces operations down by half in Iraq]
"It takes out a lot of the variables that soldiers have to contemplate and even guess at," Lehner said.
If, for example, an enemy combatant pops up from behind a wall to fire at US troops and then ducks behind it, an XM25 gunner can aim the laser range finder at the top of the wall, then program the shell to detonate one meter beyond it, showering lethal fragmentation where the insurgent is seeking cover.
Use of the XM25 can slash civilian deaths and damage, the Army argues, because its pinpointed firepower offers far less risk than larger mortars or air strikes.
The result, the Army says, is "very limited collateral damage."
The Pentagon plans to purchase at least 12,500 of the guns -- at a price tag of 25,000 to 30,000 dollars each -- beginning next year, enough for one in each Infantry squad and Special Forces team.
Lehner said the XM25 was special in that it requires comparatively little training, because the high-powered technology does so much of the work.
"This system is turning soldiers with average shooting skills into those with phenomenal shooting skills," he said.


www.go2bagtrade.com

What If Hugh Jackman Had Been Jack Sparrow?

We're trying to picture him with a bandanna. Michael Loccisano/Getty Images for Worldwide Orphans Foundation There was a time when Johnny Depp wasn't a superstar. He's been a star and a respected actor for quite some time, but it wasn't until he donned a bandanna and put on eyeliner to play the colorful Captain Jack Sparrow in "Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl" in 2003 that he graduated to the level of a Will Smith or Tom Cruise. Well, it turns out that if things had worked out differently, Depp would never have gotten the opportunity. If one of the film's writers had had his way, the part would have gone to Hugh Jackman.
Johnny Depp gushes over new costar >>
Speaking at the Advance Lounge Chair series this week, Stuart Beattie (who is credited as one of the "Story By" writers for "Black Pearl") said, "I initially wrote that character with Hugh Jackman in mind." Just how committed was he to the idea of casting Jackman? He named the character Jack in his honor. But according to Beattie, Disney didn't think Jackman was a big enough star, eventually going with Depp, who at the point had only had one $100 million movie to his credit: "Sleepy Hollow."
Blockbuster role Matt Damon regrets turning down >>
Whenever a film becomes enormously successful and launches a lucrative franchise, there will be that inevitable moment down the road when we learn who was originally meant to play the characters we've come to know and love. (Honestly, how many paragraphs into Tom Selleck's obituary will it take before they mention that he was almost Indiana Jones?) Usually, people tend to favor the actor who ended up getting the part because that person is so ingrained in our consciousness as that character. But in the case of Jackman, we actually think it could have worked with him in the role. As he's demonstrated in the "X-Men" series, he has the right combination of brawn, swagger and humor that would have served him well as Captain Jack.
But whereas in earlier cases of an actor getting passed over for a big role -- like Eric Stoltz in "Back to the Future" -- we don't need to feel sad for Jackman or lament the glorious career he could have had. Jackman's doing just fine: He's busy currently working on "Wolverine" with "Black Swan" director Darren Aronofsky and is a Tony-winning Broadway actor. (Ironically, one of his biggest duds was "Australia," which was co-written by Beattie.)
Photos: The striking style of Johnny Depp >>
As for Depp, Captain Jack will probably end up being his signature role, for better or worse. Genuinely funny and compellingly larger-than-life in a way that movie stars rarely are anymore in blockbuster films, Depp helped make the first "Pirates of the Caribbean" as supremely entertaining as it was. (Amazingly, it was that role that finally earned him his first Oscar nomination after a decade of underappreciated work in everything from "Ed Wood" to "Donnie Brasco." Not bad for a performance that Depp recently said the Disney bigwigs initially hated, insisting he was "ruining the movie.") At a time when most A-list stars weren't actually great actors, it was really satisfying to see Johnny Depp become part of Hollywood's upper echelon. Sadly, the subsequent "Pirates" sequels got progressively lamer, and Depp's hammy shtick grew tiresome. In the end, though, both actors arrived at the same place: Depp will forever be linked with Captain Jack, and Jackman shall always be Wolverine. It's the trade-off you have to make to become a superstar. And, really, isn't that better than ending up a cinematic footnote like Tom Selleck?

2010年11月24日星期三

Wozniak Says Sorry, Apple Isn't Buying Nuance, but Shares Jump Anyway See full article from DailyFinance: http://www.dailyfinance.com/story/wozniak-apple-nuance-deal-error/19732061/?icid=sphere_copyrightrade

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak pulled a mea cuppa Tuesday, backpedaling from an earlier statement that Apple (AAPL) was purchasing voice recognition software maker Nuance Communications (NUAN).

But despite proclaiming he was "totally wrong," according to a Reuters report, Nuance's shares jumped as high as 12.2% to a new 52-week high of $19.19 during intraday trading before settling back at the close to end the day at $17.75 a share. Reuters notes that Nuance Communication's shares hit levels not seen in more than two and a half years.


Sponsored Links
In pre-market trading Wednesday, the shares continued to gain steam, rising 1.41% to $18 a share.

This time, Woz can't claim he was misquoted. There's a TVDeck.com video showing Woz mentioning an Apple-Nuance merger. Last week, the Woz said in an exclusive Engadget interview that he was misquoted in a Dutch publication as saying Google's (GOOG) Android mobile operating system was better than Apple's iOS.

The Woz isn't shy when it comes to making comments relating to products and services coming out of the iconic company he helped to found. Earlier this year, Woz made an appearance at a California college, where weighed in with his opinions, both positive and negative, on Apple's new toy, the iPad, according to a TechCrunch report.

handbag house: how to distinguish replica handbag's quality

handbag house: how to distinguish replica handbag's quality: "Hi everyone. I am peter from http://www.go2bagtrade.com/ I am here to share some technique to you.Hope this article will help you to disti..."

2010年11月20日星期六

America's Worst Cities for Finding a Job

www.go2bagtrade.com



Bad interviews or a lack of experience may not be the reason you can't land a job. Your location may be to blame. If you're seeking employment, consider moving to Washington, San Jose, or New York. Those are the three best places in the nation for finding a job, according to Juju.com.
Juju, a site that aggregates job listings, releases a monthly Job Search Difficulty Index, which measures how tough it is to find employment in 50 major cities around the country. To gauge the level of difficulty, Juju divides the number of unemployed workers in each city, as reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, by the number of jobs in their index of millions of online job postings.
[Click here to find an online degree program]
"If you look back to November 2009, the average number of unemployed people per job posting was 6.5. This year it is 3.19," says Juju vice president Brendan Cruickshank. "This indicates that the market has gotten significantly better."
The hiring environment may be improving, but job seekers in cities that rely on unstable industries should know that they may each be competing with six, seven or eight other idle workers for one advertised job. "The cities that have continued to underperform rely on jobs from lagging industries such as manufacturing, tourism and construction," Cruickshank says. "Detroit and Las Vegas have improved from this time last year, but they continue have more unemployed individuals per open job than other large metropolitan areas."
[See Who's Hiring Now: Inquire Within]
Unemployment in Las Vegas is at 15%, almost six points above the national average. There are now nine unemployed individuals for every advertised job in Sin City, making it the nation's hardest place to find a job. Sunbelt cities like Las Vegas dominate the list of the most difficult metro areas for finding a job. Large metropolitan areas like Los Angeles, Miami and New Orleans continue to suffer as their tourism remains weak.
For every job posting in Miami, there are 8.5 unemployed people. Los Angeles and New Orleans have about 6.3 and 4 idle workers per advertised job, respectively.
There is far more hope if you're seeking employment in a city with stronger industries. Washington, D.C., is the best metropolitan area in the U.S. for finding a job, with only one unemployed person per job listing. Unemployment in the nation's capital sits at 5.9%, thanks to its stabilized job market and bounty of government, education and health care related jobs.
Other capital cities do well, too. Seven of the 15 metropolitan areas that are best for finding a job are state capitals.
[See 20 Industries Where Jobs Are Coming Back]
"We are seeing some consistent trends from the cities at the top and bottom of our rankings," Cruickshank says. "The cities that are strong performers have a large concentrations of jobs in industries that have held steady during the economic downturn, such as health care, education and government. State capitals such as Hartford and Austin perform well as a result."

Mike Amerson/istockphoto
1. Las Vegas, Nev.
Unemployed Individuals Per Advertised Job: 8.86






Cristian Lazzari/istockphoto
2. Miami, Fla.
Unemployed Individuals Per Advertised Job: 8.46






David Liu/istockphoto
3. Riverside, Calif.
Unemployed Individuals Per Advertised Job: 7.31






Agnieszka Gaul/istockphoto
4. Detroit, Mich.
Unemployed Individuals Per Advertised Job: 7.05








Eric Hood/istockphoto
5. Los Angeles, Calif.
Unemployed Individuals Per Advertised Job: 6.27







www.go2bagtrade.com

Contrarians Pour On the Concrete

www.go2bagtrade.com



Concrete House
Avid fliers who love cars, airplanes, hangars and barns, Shawn and Sherrie Parry are no shrinking violets. "We're both the kind of kids who were described as bulls in a china shop," said Mrs. Parry.
The culmination of their interests, vision and nonconformity is a house that doesn't look anything like the others in this quiet, lakeside neighborhood-or like most other houses, for that matter. Amid tightly spaced Nantucket-style cottages and 1950s ranches sits an 8,000-square-foot conglomeration of concrete, rusted steel and glass geometric shapes.
Slide Show: Inside the Concrete House Inside the 'Slide Show: See More Photos of the Concrete House'
A heavy steel door painted glossy wasabi green swings open to reveal a 75-foot-long bridge suspended 10 feet off the lawn below, creating an inner courtyard. Along one side a few feet away is a wing resembling a railroad car, with rusty burnt orange steel and gray concrete siding. The bridge ends in a door, which opens to another narrow steel bridge, almost a catwalk, overlooking the main room below. That room is mostly bare concrete walls, concrete floors and walls of steel columns and glass windows that look out over a back yard and Lake Washington beyond. Along the ceilings runs exposed pipe that pumps in geothermal heat.
Concrete House

The furniture is sufficiently sparse that the couple's two daughters, 10 and 14, have been allowed to hit tennis balls against the wall in the front hallway and ride scooters along the floors (the scooter has since been banned). An enormous concrete fireplace rises from the floor up to the 24-foot ceiling. Bright red and yellow paintings on wood and canvas break up the one vast white wall.
"It's not for everyone. But it's perfect for us," said Mr. Parry, age 51. A commercial real-estate developer who acted as general contractor, Mr. Parry loves that the house has a view of Renton Municipal Airport, where he and his wife met when she gave him flying lessons. It also has views of Mt. Rainer and the Boeing factory where the couple can see the new 737s emerge.
Posted on design blog contemporist.com, the home attracted praise but also comments like it had "all the warmth of an oil refinery." When the Parrys left a dinner party early one night, noting they had to get up early to meet the concrete truck in the morning, a woman exclaimed "You're pouring more concrete?" Some acquaintances loved it; others asked when the home would be finished long after it was complete.
Some neighbors expressed unhappiness, particularly when 40-ton cranes started erecting 30-foot concrete walls and big pump concrete trucks showed up at 5 a.m. (one neighbor phoned the police, citing a disturbance of the peace).
Concrete House

The couple takes the criticism in stride. "We wanted our house to be strong and a piece of art in itself," Mr. Parry said.
The project's high-profile architect-Tom Kundig of Seattle firm Olson Kundig, known for his steel, concrete and glass homes that expose the guts of their construction-says he's used to what he calls insulting remarks. "This kind of design is scary to some people. It's different. But I still get offended. It's like someone saying you are ugly," he says.
Living in a more traditional house in the suburb of Bellevue, the Parrys purchased the Mercer Island lot for $750,000 in 2001 and tore down its tri-level ranch-style house in 2006. They said they knew exactly the style of house they wanted to build in its place, and mapped out their vision, using words like "strong" and "drama" and taking it to several architects before they worked up the courage to ask for a meeting with Mr. Kundig, whom they considered a rock star out of their league.
Concrete House

The house took a year and cost a little over $200 per square foot to build, considerably less time and money than average because of the Parrys' experience, contacts, participation and skills. Mrs. Parry, 47, acted as the project manager, carrying 60-pound bags of concrete up a 30-foot ladder and overseeing the work from sunrise to sunset. During construction, the family lived in a 500-square-foot beach hut owned by the beach club next door; at one point the hut ran out of power for 10 days. (A shingled, four-bedroom, 3,500-square-foot house down the street with a lake view is for sale for $3 million.)
The beach-club parking lot has a clear view into the Parrys' master bedroom-something that doesn't bother them. Friends often wave to them from below. "In this day of mass-produced cookie cutter houses, they have a unique style," says neighbor and friend Susie Cero, an orthopedic surgeon. "They like things straightforward. What you see is what you get."



www.go2bagtrade.com

Nov. 15-22: Pink, Ne-Yo, Daughtry, And Alanis Embrace Parenthood

www.go2bagtrade.com




http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/thatsreallyweek__5/thatsreallyweek-26165829-1290213080.jpg?ymYrKHEDBDM89In9Alanis Morissette, Pink, Ne-Yo, and Chris Daughtry have more reasons to be grateful this Thanksgiving. Each of the musicians and their mates are welcoming children into their family.
This week, Us Weekly revealed photos of Morissette's bare pregnant belly, save for an elaborate henna tattoo. According to the website Henna Caravan, it is common for expectant mothers in Morocco and India to have the temporary tattoos painted on their stomachs during the third trimester.
"Henna is believed to protect and bless the mother and child from any evil or malicious spirits that may be near during delivery," reads a statement on the Henna Caravan website.
Morissette, 36, and husband MC Souleye are expecting their baby boy next year.
http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/thatsreallyweek__5/thatsreallyweek-409392871-1290213080.jpg?ymYrKHEDHDZamBJSPink confirmed on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" Wednesday that she and her husband, Carey Hart, are also preparing for a special arrival. The fearless pop singer said she was actually hesitant to share their good news.
"I didn't want to talk about it, because I was just really nervous and I have had a miscarriage before," she said.
Pink doesn't know the sex of the baby on the way but said her mother wants her to have a girl. "My mom has always wished me a daughter just like me," Pink said. "I'm terrified one of us will go to jail."
http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/thatsreallyweek__5/thatsreallyweek-822371246-1290213080.jpg?ymYrKHEDIaMsUdkhChris Daughtry and his wife, Deanna, have graduated from the nervous pregnancy stage to the sleep-deprived phase of newborn parenting. Fraternal twins, Adalynn Rose and Noah James, were born Wednesday.
The Daughtrys are excited about their new additions. "Our family is overwhelmed with joy by these two precious gifts from God," the proud father said in a statement on his website. "The babies are both healthy and resting. Thanks to everyone for their love and prayers."
The Daughtrys have two other children, Hannah and Griffin, according to "Access Hollywood."
Baby making music R&B singer Ne-Yo has found inspiration for a new ballad. Ne-Yo and girlfriend Monyetta Shaw had a baby girl, Madilyn Grace, last Friday (November 12).
http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/thatsreallyweek__5/thatsreallyweek-780046304-1290213081.jpg?ymZrKHEDQvWJnTCiThe hit-maker confirmed the birth via Twitter. "Salutations all," Ne-Yo wrote. "As my life transforms due to the new life that sprung up on me last night, it's good to know my folks support."
The artist born Shaffer Smith said he felt like he was in love for the first time. "I promise I'll do my best or die tryin'," he wrote.
In other music-family news this week, Jessica Simpson confirmed her engagement to former NFL player Eric Johnson. The Beatles catalog went on sale on iTunes. Bruce Springsteen and Jimmy Fallon performed Willow Smith's "Whip My Hair." And a Los Angeles Superior Court judge praised Chris Brown for his diligence in completing his probation requirements.
Looks like a lot of folks are going to have a great Thanksgiving this week. The folks at That's Really Week wish the same to you and yours. See you next week.


www.go2bagtrade.com