Friday, 7 May 2010

Life,film,political...always reflection of wut people need?yes or no?or only propagunda technic?

SOMETIMES I FEEL THAT ..WORLD THROW BACK INTO 50 YEARS AGO again  ..BACK TO START AGAIN ..LOOK LIKE...
I USED MY LONG HOLIDAY WITH THE CLASSIC MOVIES I BORROW FROM MY SON ...SOME IS THE GREAT OF  Alfred Hitchcock is psycho....that show of reason about this thief case from the guy in lady lover must response  on father and ex husband duty inside family law after divorced or made kid.. no bastard.....this lover failed to recover love if the duty of father is not over...so she stole big money and after big chasing from highway cop...she found crime in psycho motel by that highway...
family law of American still cover woman and kid right for long time...but until now...cover it is big issues for discuss in APEC Asia pacific conference...but the government ...most of this world still be ignorance...
sometime i think that kid have no right to got their pleasure in habitat that they feel best...why they have no right to choose??/because of after choose the best...family law cannot guarantee that who must pay for their warm home and education accommodation full their life until they get mature....yes or no????and no family law or social welfare that can cover and support the best for the children...they must struggle...after have only one parent support...some are custody in family that they need not to live with...but the love that have no money for good support until mature is big obstacle in undeveloped countries...
some born in poverty family...they try to feel that it is warm family in that parent must live together in full sqarrel and depress into their kids...pretend to act to social that life is perfect...but only tolerate in all unacceptable about divorce family law.some kids growth and hate about poverty...they will not born to be work for government...they cannot accept low salary in full corruption for survive again...left only their parents into that life until retired with full honor that thier kids...next generation will not poor like parent in government zone...somewhere of this world...fund market under foreign invest are the points of these heretage of these parent???..that become the kid that have bad behavior to social...they are poverty uncontrol product...never got nice chances from bad warming look like ...family...and when they grow up...they ask for all chances from everyone...because of born to be poor...and the rich try to help ...to teach...to support..to give chance...
in public company ...full of competitions...the owners always be  difference nation belong from heritable variety..owners never care about how the poverty come from...if they can get more benefit for company..they can stay...but if no contract for produce benefit...every company can offer more income and accommodation for them...
private economic full of great talent persons...difference from low income of government zone ...full of corruption persons..no one need to be evaluation or inspector zone if no benefit or incomes enough to lower benefit of  the guilt...or accused...in somewhere of this world...look like..
community development ...booming in west zone again...after they feel that why east got tricky of power from community strengthening ...empower...full market in east zone...high cost of money and fund market...wut happened in east zone????why under bad political signal...but still on top of world economic interesting for world investors????

sugar and boring day about skinny son that ignore himself in growths...need more food caring ...and more..look like games on line in social world cannot recover the low chance poverty more imagine and more innovate...we still stuck and throw back into ancient time again???.

Why Make Movies? Part 1

November 28, 2009
1diggdigg
One day, in a parallel universe, when President Palin declares martial law (now there’s a movie…) I shall probably be indicted for my 39 (and counting) Crimes Against Cinema (I’m an enthusiastic recidivist). The Prosecutor will inevitably ask me the question: “When did you first decide to make films?” I remember that night well…
We lived in the small English village of Odiham in Hampshire. 3000 people, 7 pubs, one picture palace - The Regal. I was 13 years old, and for the first time I was allowed to go to the movies on a winter’s night by myself. (My mother, bless her, was a little over-protective, hence my later flirtation with stunts.) To get to the Regal on the outskirts of town, I had to walk through the cemetery of the Norman era church. Dark shadows. Wisps of fog. Knowing I was going to see a film crafted by a director dubbed the Master of Suspense made the graveyard all the spookier.



Nokia sues Apple over iPad patents

By Christina Warren
May 7, 2010 -- Updated 1726 GMT (0126 HKT)
Nokia and Apple are in a legal battle over the Apple iPad's 
design.
Nokia and Apple are in a legal battle over the Apple iPad's design.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Nokia claims Apple infringed its patents for the iPad and iPad 3G
  • The suit, filed in federal court, is the latest in an ongoing saga
  • The suit concerns the placement of the iPad's antennae and apps
  • Apple did not immediately respond to a Mashable request for comment
RELATED TOPICS
(Mashable) -- Nokia is suing Apple over what it claims are infringing patents in the iPad and iPad 3G.
This is just the latest in a series of escalating lawsuits between the two companies regarding their respective mobile and consumer electronic devices.
This lawsuit -- which unlike the others was filed in the Federal District Court in the Western District of Wisconsin -- is about technologies related to enhanced speech and data transmission.
In a statement, Nokia described this technology as "positioning data in applications and innovations in antenna configurations that improve performance and save space, allowing smaller and more compact devices."
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment on this story.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NG3-GlvKPcg


Election 2010: Tories meet Lib Dems over deal for power

William Hague and George Osborne were among the senior Tories at the meeting
Talks between senior Conservatives and Liberal Democrats continued late into Friday as the parties tried to broker a deal to form the next government.
A day after the polls closed, it remains unclear who will lead the country after the general election delivered a hung Parliament.
David Cameron approached the Lib Dems after the Tories won the most seats but finished 20 short of a majority.
Labour leader Gordon Brown also says he is prepared to talk to the Lib Dems.
Leaving the Cabinet Office late on Friday, after hour-long talks with Lib Dem counterparts, the Conservatives' William Hague said: "We've had an initial meeting. That's all there is to say at the moment."
Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg said nothing to the press when he left his party's central London HQ later.
His energy spokesman Simon Hughes said: "Things are going properly. Things are going carefully. I am not going to speculate. You'll just have to wait."
326 to win

Predicted seats Seats
Conservative
306
Labour
258
Liberal Democrat
57
Hillary Clinton

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has not only been busy plotting foreign aid reform plotting foreign aid reform. The longstanding advocate for women’s rights launched several initiatives for women entrepreneurs in the developing world during an April 28 entrepreneurial summit in Washington.

The new Secretary’s International Fund for Women and Girls will provide grants to non-governmental organizations working for the economic, social and political advancement of women worldwide. Tech Women will offer Silicon Valley mentorship to women living in Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, the West Bank and Gaza. The first APEC Women Entrepreneurship Summit will be staged in partnership with Japan. And the Secretary’s Innovation Award for the Empowerment of Women and Girls is funded by the Rockefeller Foundation.

She launched several new initiatives to support the advancement of entrepreneurship opportunities for women in [the] developing world, especially Muslim populated countries.
Nominated by Drapirir Adui Alex Drazi, Juba, southern Sudan

Tell us who you think made an extraordinary impact this past week by e-mailing gdb@devex.com, subject line: “Person of the Week.” Very important: Explain your choice in no more than 300 words. Don’t forget to include your name, affiliation and location, and make sure to create a personal profile on www.devex.com, so we can give you proper credit.

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Thanks
Watch out for the video of a May 5 U.S. Global Leadership Coalition event at which USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah took questions from the audience (as well as questions that were submitted via e-mail, Facebook and Twitter) – not surprisingly, much of the debate focused on U.S. aid reform. Who do you believe has the strongest hand in the overhaul of U.S. foreign assistance?
Rolf Rosenkranz in the United States, responding to a comment on our blog post Leaked US Aid Reform Ideas Hint at Upcoming Policy ‘Battle Royal’

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‘Hard choices’ on U.S. aid reform

The international development community this week got its most detailed glimpse yet of draft plans to overhaul U.S. foreign assistance. A leaked White House paper suggests the creation of an interagency panel to spearhead aid policy and outlines steps to refocus operations on key strategic goals.

The draft, which is not final, raised more questions than it answered, especially about the exact relationship between the U.S. Agency for International Development and the Department of State. But a political firestorm may be brewing.

“The new White House plan to ‘elevate development as a pillar of national security strategy, equal to diplomacy and defense’ may spark the biggest political fight over development since Jesse Helms made the head of development report to the Secretary of State,” wrote Patrick Cronin in a May 4 opinion piece, referring to the former North Carolina senator who in the 1990s spearheaded efforts to marginalize USAID.

As a candidate for U.S. president, Barack Obama campaigned on the bold promise to double foreign assistance and revamp a bloated aid bureaucracy spread across the federal government. The draft paper indicates that he is not willing to go as far as many within the development community had hoped: The leaked document does not mention a cabinet-level “aid czar.”

USAID, however, appears to be on an upswing. The leaked document suggests beefing up capacity in budgeting as well as policy and planning, and on May 5, USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah announced the creation of a policy and planning bureau, a move that was praised by the U.S. Senate’s top foreign policy experts.

The Obama administration remains engaged in two parallel foreign policy reviews: the State Department-led Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review and the National Security Council-led presidential study directive on global development policy, which resulted in the leaked draft, according to Josh Rogin of the Foreign Policy magazine’s The Cable blog. But many issues remain unclear, including how exactly USAID and the State Department would collaborate on foreign assistance, and how the “hard choices” outlined in the leaked draft would affect USAID funding.

Congressional leaders have vowed to move ahead with reform even without clear guidance from the White House.

Read more development news.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/

How queen gets last word on UK election

May 7, 2010 -- Updated 2130 GMT (0530 HKT)
http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/05/07/uk.election.queen/index.html?hpt=T1
London, England (CNN) -- After an election that left no party with a clear majority, the final decision over who becomes Britain's next prime minister could lie in the hands of one woman who never votes: The queen.
As a head of state, Queen Elizabeth has numerous traditional roles when it comes to elections and government, yet these are usually no more than ceremonial.
However, as with Thursday's vote that saw the opposition Conservatives secure more seats than Prime Minister Gordon Brown's Labour Party but not enough to form a working government, the queen's position becomes more complicated.
Full story: Political rivals jockey for power
The queen is the embodiment of Britain's constitutional monarchy and everything is done in her name. No laws can be passed nor parliaments opened or dissolved without her approval.
Such strict protocols bind all stages of the process to install a new prime minister -- often with a pomp and grandeur far removed from the boisterous world of British politics.

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