Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Wikipedia founder backs UK student wanted by US

(AP) ? The founder of Wikipedia urged British officials on Monday to block the extradition of a 24-year-old British student wanted in the United States over alleged copyright offenses.

Wikipedia's Jimmy Wales expressed support for Richard O'Dwyer, who was arrested at his university dorm in 2010 by British officers accompanied by agents from the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. O'Dwyer's alleged crime was running a file-swapping website called TVShack.net, where users shared links to movies and television shows, many of them protected by copyright.

Wales said merely posting links is not a crime and urged citizens to stand up for their rights online.

"Richard O'Dwyer is the human face of the battle between the content industry and the interests of the general public," Wales said in an online petition posted on Change.org, adding that the student had always done his best to "play by the rules."

By midday Monday the petition to halt O'Dwyer's extradition had gained more than 20,400 signatures.

The Guardian newspaper has thrown its support behind O'Dwyer as well, saying in an editorial published Monday that his case was "unfair" and "absurd."

Associated Press

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Most Americans oppose health law but like provisions (reuters)

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Monday, June 25, 2012

Suspect Arrested In 1997 Slaying Of Former East Hartford Resident In Florida

In March, Fred Parlante of East Hartford went to Broward County, Fla., with the intention of telling the detectives working on his mother's 15-year-old murder to step aside and let the FBI's cold-case agents take over the dormant case.

"They showed me the boxes of evidence,'' Parlante recalled Saturday. "They didn't want to let it go.''

Last week, Parlante, an ex-boxer and retired truck driver, got the call he'd been waiting for since his mother, Olga Parlante, 71, a former East Hartford resident, was killed during a robbery in her Dania Beach, Fla., apartment in 1997.

"'Fred, we're going to make an arrest,''' Parlante quoted Broward Sheriff's Department Detective Frank Ilarraza as saying over the telephone.

A convicted felon named Bennie Hall, who has a history of robbery arrests, was charged on Thursday with first-degree murder in Olga Parlante's death.

"I was in seventh heaven; what a relief," said Parlante, 67.

Crime-scene investigators at the time of the homicide collected fingerprints and palm prints from the walls of the apartment, the inside of Olga's pocketbook and a dresser drawer. But the prints never matched a suspect; in any case, the database couldn't accept palm prints.

With the case stalled, Fred Parlante said, he consulted with psychics and hired private detectives.

"I pressed for 15 years,'' he said.

But it all led nowhere ? until now.

Recent advances in the huge national database of crime-scene prints made it possible for investigators to submit palm prints ? and the Broward County detectives hit pay dirt.

A palm print lifted from a wall in Olga Parlante's apartment in 1997 matched a print on file from Hall, who was serving time for other crimes in the Martin County, Fla., jail.

Officials told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel that Hall, 44, had been convicted of robberies against elderly victims inMiami-Dade County.

He will be charged in the killing of Olga Parlante, who was known throughout Broward County as the "Bingo Queen'' for her habit of playing the region's bingo halls nearly every day.

"The database grows, and the computer technology keeps improving year after year," Broward County Sheriff Al Lamberti told the Sun-Sentinel. "It doesn't matter how long it takes: We're going to get justice for the family, and this case is a perfect example of this."

Fred Parlante echoed those sentiments Saturday.

"I am so happy we were one of the first new cases,'' he said. "Not only for this family, but, God forbid, for the next family that can be helped by this technology. Losing a mother or a father ? that is the hardest thing in the world."

Olga Parlante moved to Florida in the mid 1960s with her husband, Anneo, who was suffering from emphysema. Olga drove tractor-trailers and worked as a waitress, Fred Parlante said. Anneo Parlante died about 10 years later, and Olga went on with a life filled with her grandchildren ? and bingo.

On March 13,1997, Parlante, who was living alone in her apartment Dania Beach, near Fort Lauderdale, was beaten, strangled with a blouse and dragged back into the home when she tried to crawl away, the Courant reported at the time. Stolen during the killing: a 20-inch television set, radio with cassette player, mantel clock and $53.

Her body was discovered by a granddaughter, who needed counseling after the ordeal.

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Oil prices rise, drop, and rise again. Buckle up, Earth.

Predicting global oil prices is not easy. Prices have more to do with global politics -- and supply and demand -- than with politicians, but voters take out their anger on the leaders they can reach.?

By Scott Baldauf,?Staff writer / June 6, 2012

A sign for $2.99 a gallon gasoline is seen as vehicles wait for a traffic light to turn green at a Hot Spot convenience store on the corner of Henry and Converse Streets on June 1, in Spartanburg, S.C.

Rainier Ehrhardt/AP

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For sheer roller-coaster thrills, picture yourself as an oil market analyst.

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Imagine the challenge of (correctly) predicting the future price of oil and all those wonderful fuel products Americans love to use, in the midst of a crucial election year.

When oil-producing countries like Iran, Iraq, Libya, and Nigeria, become unstable, oil prices can soar. When economies shrink in energy-consuming places like Europe and the United States, oil prices can sink. When both trends happen at the same time, oil market analysts dig into their pockets for a coin to flip.

In February, when oil prices surged over $110 a barrel, some oil analysts were predicting an End Times scenario, where the US economy would go into a fetal position, rocking back and forth and singing Adele songs. Fox News Channel, the drama queen of the global news pageant, was betting that gasoline pump prices were likely to hit $8 a gallon, a factoid that, at least for now, appears to be utterly false.

RELATED: Eight ways $100 oil may affect you?

Early this week, crude oil prices had dropped to $84, driven downward by the lower demand of a contracting global economy. Gasoline prices are dropping with them, down to a national average $3.56. This is significantly higher than the 26 cents it cost to fill your father?s ? or your grandfather?s ? Oldsmobile, but the dollar is worth less today than it was in the 1950s. In inflation-adjusted dollars, we have been paying $10 to $30 a barrel for the past 160 years or so, with just a few major spikes in 1860-1861, 1979-1980 and 2007-2008.

Now the bad news has gotten so bad, it?s good. On Wednesday, oil prices shot up again to $85.56 a barrel, ahead of Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke?s testimony before Congress, as oil market analysts bet that he would urge for some kind of stimulus package.

Aside from gasoline price swings from nearly $4 a gallon to $3.50, the volatility of oil prices has other effects. Higher oil prices, which drive up the cost of production, make factory owners think twice about expanding. High oil prices also encourage consumers to start thinking about conservation, such as turning off lights and buying fuel efficient cars. But high oil prices also make oil exploration in new places more attractive. And as oil companies start finding oil in untapped fields in Kenya, North Dakota, Ghana, Alberta, Israel, and Somalia, that increases the overall supply of oil, which ends up driving prices down again.

A growing global supply of oil might seem to be the solution to America?s economic doldrums, but this solution brings a host of ecological problems, according to Foreign Policy magazine?s Steve Levine.

Already, carbon emissions last year reached levels that are linked by scientists with a 2 degree rise in global temperatures over the past 50 years, according to the International Energy Agency. But if carbon emissions continue to rise ? as they will if more energy is produced, and if energy prices drop enough for people to consume more of it ? the world will ?blow through? emissions targets agreed to in global treaties.

So this provides what may be the most vexing moral dilemma of our times: to grow, or not to grow. That is the question.

One thing you will notice about this process: It has very little to do with politicians. These days, the price of oil is determined more by roughnecks in greasy denims or Wall Street futures traders than by Middle Eastern oil sheikhs or White House economists. But voters, driven by fear or angst, still feel the need to punish the man in charge for their economic suffering. And in an election year ? as former French President Nicolas Sarkozy can attest -- the economy matters above all else.

The roller coaster continues. Buckle up, Mr. Obama.

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Never leave a cybernetic organism behind! (Unqualified Offerings)

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Washington Capitals trade Cody Eakin at NHL entry draft

Mike Ribeiro, acquired in a trade with the Dallas Stars during Friday night?s first round of the 2012 NHL entry draft, may fill the role of No. 2 centerman for the Washington Capitals.But he came at the cost of forward Cody Eakin, who produced 13 goals and 14 assists in 43 games with the Hershey Bears as a rookie in 2011-12.

The Caps sent Eakin and their second-round pick (No. 54) to Dallas in exchange for Ribeiro.

?We?ve got some big, gritty forwards,? Caps GM George McPhee said at a press conference broadcast on WashingtonCapitals.com. ?We just wanted to put another skilled guy in the middle of it to see if it helps. I think it makes our team immediately better today.

?He?s got skill. He makes plays.?

Eakin, who also had four goals and four assists in 30 games with Washington last season, might have made a run to stay up full-time with Washington in 2012-13. But, as summer free-agent season looms, his loss is a hit to Hershey?s theoretical forward depth right now.

?We gave up a real good kid in Cody,? McPhee said. ?He?s going to play a long time in this league. But, obviously, Ribeiro will come in and play much higher in the lineup right away.?

In a whirlwind day of NHL trades, the Caps also made two first-round picks at CONSOL Energy Center in Pittsburgh, taking Swedish centerman Filip Forsberg at No. 11 and Plymouth (OHL) winger Tom Wilson at No. 16.

Forsberg was ranked the No. 2 prospect in the draft by The Hockey News and No. 3 by TSN, but he fell to No. 11 as eight defensemen went in the first 10 picks.

The 6-4, 195-pound power forward Wilson had 27 points and 141 penalty minutes in 49 games last season.

The Pittsburgh Penguins and Carolina Hurricanes brokered a major trade. Pittsburgh sent Jordan Staal to Carolina for the No. 8 pick, 2007 first-rounder Brandon Sutter and Boston College defenseman Brian Dumoulin, a 2009 second-rounder.

Staal, who had one season remaining on his contract and turned down a contract extension offer by Pittsburgh, will get to play with his brother Eric in Carolina.

?I just felt, as an organization we felt, it was the right thing to do for Jordan,? Penguins GM Ray Shero said during the NBC Sports Network?s broadcast of the draft. ?He?s ready for an expanded role.?

With the No. 8 pick, Pittsburgh drafted Portland (WHL) defenseman Derrick Pouliot. At No. 22, the Penguins selected London (OHL) defenseman Olli Maatta.

The Philadelphia Flyers also made a big trade, sending goalie Sergei Bobrovsky to the Columbus Blue Jackets for second- and fourth-round picks in the 2012 draft and a 2013 fourth-rounder.

With the No. 20 pick, Philadelphia took Oshawa (OHL) centerman Scott Laughton.

Calgary Flames GM Jay Feaster, former general manager of the Bears, also made a trade. The Flames gave their No. 14 pick to the Buffalo Sabres in exchange for a first-round pick (No. 21) and a second-rounder (No. 42).

At No. 21, Calgary selected high school centerman Mark Jankowski.

With the No. 1 overall pick, the Edmonton Oilers selected Sarnia (OHL) winger Nail Yakupov, a native of Russia.

NOTEBOOK

As a junior eligible, Eakin was a member of Hershey?s 2009-10 Calder Cup club, playing four regular-season games and five playoff games. He scored a goal on his first pro shot at Syracuse.

ON TWITTER: @timleone

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Sunday, June 24, 2012

Microsoft Surface, Windows Phone 8, Ikea TVs, Clear Potato Chips and More... [The Best Stories Of The Week]

Last week was Apple's week. This week was all Microsoft's. The company had some big announcements, including a new tablet and an update to it's Windows Phone OS, that got us plenty excited. But there were a few other gems that slipped in as well, including crystal clear potato chips. Here are our top stories of the week. More »


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