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Monday 26 September 2011

Facebook Changes Everything You Need To Know

As we predicted, Mark Zuckerberg’s keynote at the f8 conference in San Francisco Thursday introduced some of the most profound changes seen on Facebook since its inception. So many changes, in fact, that it can be hard to keep track. So here’s a handy-dandy guide. 1. You’re going to get a Timeline — a scrapbook of your life. In a complete overhaul of its ever-evolving profile page, Facebook is introducing Timeline. This is a stream of information about you — the photos you’ve posted, all your status updates, the apps you’ve used, even the places you’ve visited on a world map — that scrolls all the way back to your birth. It encourages you to post more stuff about your past, such as baby pictures, using Facebook as a scrapbook.
The further back in Timeline you go, the more Facebook will compress the information so that you’re only seeing the most interesting parts of your history. You can customize this by clicking on a star next to a status, say, or enlarging a picture.
Timeline is in beta now, and will be opt-in to start. In the long run, it will become the new default profile page.
2. You don’t have to just Like something — now you can [verb] any [noun]. Remember when all you could do to something on Facebook — a video, a comment, a product, a person — was Like it? Pretty soon that’s going to seem laughably antiquated. The social network has launched Facebook Gestures, which means that Facebook’s partners and developers can turn any verb into a button.
So you’ll start seeing the option to tell the world you’re Reading a particular book, for example, or Watching a given movie, or Listening to a certain tune. In turn, as many observers have pointed out, this is likely to lead to an explosion of oversharing — and far more information on your friends’ activities showing up in your news feed than you probably cared to know.
3. Facebook apps need only ask permission once to share stories on your behalf. Although not as big a deal as the Timeline, this tweak may be one of the more controversial. Previously, apps had to ask every time they shared information about you in your profile. Now, the first time you authorize the app, it will tell you what it’s going to share about you. If you’re cool with that, the app never has to ask you again.
But you don’t have to worry about this app stuff clogging your news feed, because …
4. All “lightweight” information is going to the Ticker. Status updates, photos from a wedding or a vacation, changes in relationship status: these are the kinds of things you want to see from your friends when you look at your news feed. Who killed whom in Mafia Wars? Who planted what in FarmVille? Not so much. So that kind of trivial detail has been banished to the Ticker, a real-time list of things your friends are posting now that scrolls down the side of your screen.
5. You can watch TV and movies, listen to music, and read news with your friends — all within Facebook. Starting today, thanks to a whole bunch of partnerships, there are a lot more things you can do without ever having to leave Facebook. You can watch a show on Hulu, listen to a song on Spotify, or check out a story on Yahoo News (or Mashable, via the Washington Post‘s Social Read app). The ticker will tell you what your friends are watching, listening to or reading, allowing you to share the experience with them by clicking on a link.
The upshot: a brand-new kind of media-based peer pressure. On stage, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings — a launch partner — revealed that he had only just decided to watch Breaking Bad because Facebook’s Ticker told him a colleague was watching it. Netflix’s own algorithm had been recommending the show to him for years, but that was never reason enough for Hastings.
6. Facebook has more users and more engagement than ever. We got two interesting nuggets of information out of Zuckerberg (and the Zuckerberg-impersonating Andy Samberg): Facebook has hit 800 million users, and most of them are active. The social network just saw a new record for the most visitors in one day: an eye-popping 500 million.
Indeed, the whole impression left by the event was that of a confident, fast-evolving company that is becoming ever more professional, and Zuckerberg’s stage show bore more than a little resemblance to an Apple keynote. It’s going to be interesting to see what Google+ can do to keep up.

Monday 19 September 2011

Emmy Award nominations Winners list 2011

Jane Lynch is hosting the 63rd annual Emmy Awards live from the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles.

After tonight's Emmy Awards, there is no doubt, Hollywood adores its British imports.

UK series Downton Abbey, which airs in the U.S. on the PBS network, was one of the big winners on the night.
It picked up four awards, including the coveted best miniseries or TV movie Emmy.

And the winners are…
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS  (COMEDY)
Julie Bowen – “Modern Family”
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR (COMEDY SERIES)
Ty Burrell – “Modern Family”
BEST DIRECTOR (COMEDY)
Michael Alan Spiller – “Modern Family”
BEST WRITER (COMEDY)
Steve Levitan and Jeffrey Richman – “Modern Family”
BEST ACTOR (COMEDY)
Jim Parsons – “The Big Bang Theory”
BEST ACTRESS (COMEDY)
Melissa McCarthy – “Mike & Molly”
BEST REALITY COMPETITION
“The Amazing Race”
BEST WRITING (COMEDY, VARIETY OR MUSICAL)
“The Daily Show with Jon Stewart”
BEST DIRECTING (COMEDY, VARIETY OR MUSICAL)
Don Roy King – “Saturday Night Live”
BEST SHOW (COMEDY, VARIETY OR MUSICAL)
“The Daily Show with Jon Stewart”
BEST WRITING (DRAMA)
Jason Katims – “Friday Night Lights”
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS (DRAMA)
Margo Martindale “Justified”
BEST DIRECTING (DRAMA)
Martin Scorsese – “Boardwalk Empire”
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR (DRAMA)
Peter Dinklage – “Game of Thrones”
BEST ACTRESS (DRAMA)
Julianna Margulies – “The Good Wife”
BEST ACTOR (DRAMA)
Kyle Chandler – “Friday Night Lights”
BEST WRITING (MINISERIES, MOVIE OR DRAMATIC SPECIAL)
Julian Fellowes – “Downton Abbey”
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS (MINISERIES OR MOVIE)
Maggie Smith – “Downton Abbey”
BEST MALE ACTOR (MINISERIES OR MOVIE)
Barry Pepper – “The Kennedys”
BEST DIRECTING (MINISERIES, MOVIE OR DRAMATIC SPECIAL)
Brian Percival – “Downton Abbey”
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR (MINISERIES OR MOVIE)
Guy Pearce – “Mildred Pierce”
BEST ACTRESS (MINISERIES OR MOVIE)
Kate Winslet – “Mildred Pierce”
BEST MINISERIES OR MOVIE
“Downton Abbey”
BEST DRAMA SERIES
“Mad Men”
BEST COMEDY SERIES
“Modern Family”

Friday 9 September 2011

America on high alert after 9/11 terror threat anniversary of the September 11

America on high alert after terror threat

The US Attorney General, John Ashcroft, said: "The US intelligence community has received information based on debriefing of a senior al-Qa'ida operative of a possible terrorist attack at a time to coincide with the anniversary of the September 11 attacks on the United States."
Mr Ashcroft added that he also had information about individuals in the Middle East plotting suicide attacks.
Noting that he was not moving America to the highest level of alert, Mr Ashcroft said he was not recommending that anniversary events be cancelled. But he urged vigilance.
The White House has advised Americans to go about their lives just as they would on any other morning in September. A strange admonishment indeed on the first anniversary of the worst tragedy ever to strike the nation and as fears of new attacks intensified.
Plans for events to mark the destruction of the twin towers at the World Trade Centre, the attack on the Pentagon and the plane crash in Pennsylvania have been in the works for months. Nowhere is the schedule of remembrance more packed than in New York City itself. It will begin long before dawn with processions of bagpipers from all five boroughs towards ground zero.
Even as the White House sought to underplay any sense of drama in the new alert, it managed to create the opposite effect by confirming that Vice-President Dick Cheney had been moved to an "undisclosed location". As they spoke, the sky above the White House shuddered with the blades of a helicopter. Thus, the eyes of mourners in New York will be distracted as they attend the series of events in the city. Distracted by the sniffer labradors milling beneath them, by the sharp-shooters prowling on the rooftops above them and by the unexpected road blocks on bridges, around the United Nations headquarters and outside other landmarks.
In 12 months, New Yorkers have managed to reassert some normality in their routines. But today will bring back the sadness. The heightened security will bring back the stress and the worry.
All across the country the preparations to honour the 3,000 who died are ready. In hundreds of cities and towns, church bells and fire sirens will sound at 10.05am and 10.28am, when first the south tower and then the north tower, of the World Trade Centre collapsed. There will be memorial services, wreath-layings, and sombre concerts, but also tree plantings, naturalisation ceremonies, even a firework display. Into the single day of 11 September 2002 will be compressed the contrasting moods of an entire year; starting with the shock and grief, but metamorphosing into an outpouring of patriotism.

The solemn business of commemorating 11 September has been brutally overlaid with another emotion – anxiety. Washington announced last night that it was raising for the first time its colour-coded level of alertness from yellow to orange, from "elevated" to "high". Only one category remains: red or "severe".
The solemn business of commemorating 11 September has been brutally overlaid with another emotion – anxiety. Washington announced last night that it was raising for the first time its colour-coded level of alertness from yellow to orange, from "elevated" to "high". Only one category remains: red or "severe".
The new alert appeared to be focused specifically on the security of US installations overseas. "There is no specific threat to America," President George Bush said in an address at the Afghan embassy in Washington. Yet officials had not ruled out that terrorists could also be eyeing targets in America. They said they were considering arming anti-aircraft missiles deployed around the Pentagon, ostensibly for an exercise. The missiles could be used to protect America's seats of government.
All the while, President Bush will be striving to recapture the mood of patriotic unity that so benefited him immediately after the atrocity. Thus, the President will attend three ceremonies, first at the Pentagon, just outside the capital, then at a new shrine to those who perished in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, where the fourth hijacked airliner crashed. Finally, he will travel to New York for an evening unveiling of a temporary memorial to those who died in the towers. Later he will cross the harbour to Ellis Island to address the whole nation in a television broadcast.
New Yorkers hope only that dignity, not political advantage, will be the main order of the day's many events. These will include two citywide moments of silence at 8.46am and at 9.04am; an official memorial service at ground zero, when the former mayor Rudy Giuliani will read the names of the victims; Governor George Pataki will read the Gettysburg Address; the current Mayor Michael Bloomberg will recite the "Four Freedoms" from a 1941 speech by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Meanwhile all of the city will be watching and waiting for the fresh attacks should they come. Every siren will make citizens jump. Every plane that passes will make them look up. 

Thursday 8 September 2011

Reese Witherspoon Treated at Hospital after being hit by a car

Reese Witherspoon Treated at Hospital after being hit by a car. 
 
Reese Witherspoon was hit by a car while jogging in Santa Monica on Wednesday.
Though she was taken to a hospital by ambulance,
Reese Witherspoon suffered only minor injuries and was 
resting at home by the afternoon.
 
The Oscar winner sustained minor injuries and is now "resting 
comfortably at home" after receiving treatment, said her rep, Nanci 
Ryder.

Officers responded to a call placed at 11:14 a.m. regarding a traffic collision involving a vehicle and a female pedestrian, according to the Santa Monica Police Department.
The car that hit Witherspoon, who was running within an unmarked crosswalk, was going approximately 20 miles per hour, police said.
 The driver was an 84-year-old woman who was interviewed at the scene and then cited for failing to yield to a pedestrian in a crosswalk. Witherspoon was transported via ambulance to a nearby hospital.
"The driver seemed to have not seen her because of a large tree at the intersection," a witness told Us Weekly, calling the "Legally Blonde" star "lucky, because it could have been much more serious."
Witherspoon, 35, most recently starred in "Water for Elephants" with Robert Pattinson. She won a best actress Oscar in 2006 for her performance as June Carter Cash in "Walk the Line."
In June, she took home the Generation Award at MTV's Movie Awards, saying to thunderous applause, "I know it's cool to be bad, I get it -- but it's also possible to make it in Hollywood without a reality show."