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Wartmag - BD, bande dessinée, manga, comics et pas seulement ! -
6 hours and 46 minutes ago
Un peu comme une météorite qui entre dans l’atmosphère, les
Humanoïdes associés n’en finissent plus de se désintégrer avec le
départ des plus grands titres et auteurs de leur catalogue. Cette fois c’est
Ptiluc qui quitte la maison de Métal Hurlant pour
Soleil. Le
10e volume de Rat’s, sa série phare, y est
annoncé pour juin 2009.

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Wartmag - BD, bande dessinée, manga, comics et pas seulement ! -
6 hours and 47 minutes ago
30 ans après sa parution aux Humanos, le mythique Arzach de
Moebius va avoir une suite en 2009, chez Stardom, maison d’édition
perso de l’auteur. C’est ce que révèle actuabd.com, qui annonce que la
nouveauté sera une sorte de “Blueberry mâtiné
d’héroïc fantasy”. D’ici là, nous pourrons toujours nous
plonger dans les carnets de l’auteur avec Inside Moebius, dont le
cinquième tome est attendu ce mois-ci.

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Wartmag - BD, bande dessinée, manga, comics et pas seulement ! -
7 hours and 36 minutes ago
Bien loin des
considérations de TF1, Étienne Davodeau nous raconte les aventures
extraordinaires de Lulu, ménagère de moins de 50 ans. Mariée, trois enfants,
à la faveur d’un énième refus dans sa recherche d’emploi, elle
décide de prendre des vacances sur un coup de tête. Un voyage en dehors de sa
routine. En spécialiste des fictions du réel, l’auteur nous procure dans ce
premier tome une aventure singulièrement zen, tant tout semble couler de source pour sa
femme au foyer moyenne. Un bol d’air frais qui donne envie, tout simplement.
En deux mots : Partir un jour
D’Étienne Davodeau, aux éditions Futuropolis - 80 pages - 16
€

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L'actu en patates -
12 hours and 5 minutes ago
Aujourd’hui, de nombreux sites qui traitent de l’école ont fermé, en
soutien du mouvement de grève. J’ai réalisé un dessin pour
l’occasion libre de droit et que vous pouvez voir par exemple là , là , là ,
là , là ou encore sur les sites de cette liste . (Mais bizarrement pas
sur ce site ).
Et parce qu’elle est toujours d’actualité, je rediffuse cette planche de
l’album “Le journal d’un remplaçant ” que vous avez probablement tous
déjà lu (sinon ça vous fait une bonne idée de cadeau de Noël )
et que j’avais dessiné à l’occasion de la grève du 18 janvier
2005 :
À lire sur leMonde.fr :
Grève dans l’éducation : les revendications
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High-Def Digest: All High-Def Disc News -
23 minutes ago
Paramount has announced a late-January Blu-ray arrival for the Ricky Gervais comedy 'Ghost Town.'
Starring Gervais and Greg Kinnear in a quot;romance with ghosts,quot; the spectral satire earned
over...img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/highdefdigestallnews/~4/459836589" height="1"
width="1"/
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le blog de davidtouvet.com -
38 minutes ago
C’est en tout cas ce qu’a choisit et nous raconte Steve Rubel: Making Gmail Your Gateway to the
Web.
For the past five years my browser home page has been set to either Google.com or iGoogle. (I
briefly flirted with the New York Times as my default but have integrated their feeds everywhere
else.) This week I switched it to Gmail. With all of the features they have been adding
lately, particularly through their Labs, Gmail is unquestionably my virtual Swiss Army Knife.
It is not only my communications hub. It is my knowledge base and to some degree my feed reader.
Some say it is becoming
an enterprise dashboard - it is. It is my gateway to the web. (Note they added
themes today!)
In this post I outline some recent ways I have tweaked my Gmail Personal Nerve Center by
connecting Gmail with other web services.
On est bien d’accord avec lui, mais alors facile après pour google… Savoir ce
que l’on reçoit comme mail, ce que l’on lit comme news et ce que l’on
recherche ne peut être plus simple… Ah, l’avenir sera marrant, faudra
être capable de tromper l’ennemi, par exemple avec deux comptes email ?
Merci à Roberto pour l’info!
Article original écrit par David Touvet et publié sur davidtouvet.com. | Si vous lisez cet article dans son
intégralité sur un autre site que davidtouvet.com c'est qu'il a été
reproduit illégalement et sans autorisation. Merci de le signaler à son
auteur original en cliquant ici | ©
davidtouvet.com - 2008
Tags: démarrage, gmail, home, navigateur, page
Continuez la lecture avec les articles suivants

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Engadget -
40 minutes ago
Frivolous
lawsuits aren't anything new, but this is an eye-opener straight from annals of "office humor."
It turns out that in the past year "several" companies, including UnitedHealthGroup, Cigna, and
AT&T have had employee-filed lawsuits brought against them for unpaid time. That "unpaid time"
is the minutes each day employees spend booting up and shutting down their computers (also their
time-clocks), which they claim adds up to an astounding 15-30 per day. Astounding, that
is, if you've never worked in a corporate office with a terrible IT department. If you have, you'll
probably agree that this figure may, in some cases be on the mark, if not a little conservative.
The employees claim they should be paid to work while the boot-ups and shut-downs are happening,
since during that time they're doing tasks like paperwork or "arranging their calendar," while the
companies counters that they're probably smoking, getting coffee, or talking to people. We're not
really going to judge the veracity of these suits en masse -- we'll take them on a case-by-case
basis, but there does seem to be something suspicious about this many people claiming to still use
paper calendars.
[Via Wired]
Filed under: Desktops
Lawsuits over employees' unpaid computer boot-times stacking up next to unread paperwork
originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 20 Nov 2008
15:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of
feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email
this | Comments

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CNET News.com -
42 minutes ago
Theres just a week to go before retail outlets reveal their seasonal tech price cuts. But this
years Black Friday is going to be a lot different from previous years, for buyers and sellers
alike. On the CNET News Daily Debrief, Charles Cooper and Erica Ogg examine why.
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paidContent.org -
43 minutes ago
pimg src="http://paidcontent.org/images/uploads/ap_logo.gif" alt="image" align="right" width="170"
/Associated Press, one of the largest news organizations worldwide, is planning to cut about 10
percent of its workforce in 2009, a
href="http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssFinancialServices%20-%20Diversified/idUSN2042005920081120"
title="reports Reuters"reports Reuters/a, citing an internal "town-hall" meeting at the company. AP
employs about 3,000 journalists, and a total of about 4,100 people worldwide, which means the cuts
would be about 400 employees. No idea yet of which areas the cuts would come from, but according to
an AP statement: "The Associated Press, like virtually every business in the world, is defining
strategies for operating in these complex and difficult financial times. All areas and ways of
doing business are being reviewed. The AP, which recently instituted a strategic hiring freeze, may
need to reduce staff over the next year. If so, it hopes to achieve much of the reduction through
attrition." /p p These cuts come at a time when AP is restructuring the company, and has also
revised its rates after protest from its member newspapers. The co-op, facing defections from
members large and small, announced in October that is planned to cut member assessments by another
$9 million next year, for a total of nearly $30 million, and would start an examination of its
member structure that could result in a complete overhaul. These cuts are likely a result from that
overhaul. /p p Lots more about AP, the controversies and rate changes a
href="http://www.paidcontent.org/tag/associated-press/" title="here in our special section"here in
our special section/a. /p piSocial Media Deals Report: This 199-page report, filled with charts and
data, examines the categories, number and size of VC and MA deal in social media from 2007 through
2008. stronga href="http://www.paidcontent.org/reports/"Visit the ContentNext Reports
page/a/strongi/p pa href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/pcorg?a=BN2XTD"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/pcorg?i=BN2XTD" border="0"/img/a/pdiv class="feedflare" a
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/pcorg?a=PBJHN"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/pcorg?i=PBJHN" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/pcorg?a=WvQMN"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/pcorg?i=WvQMN" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/pcorg?a=VA3Vn"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/pcorg?i=VA3Vn" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/pcorg?a=sKrlN"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/pcorg?i=sKrlN" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/pcorg?a=AyBfN"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/pcorg?i=AyBfN" border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/pcorg/~4/459961171" height="1" width="1"/

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The Register -
45 minutes ago
h4Error.com's missed opportunity/h4 pPayPal, the online payment service that is a major target of
phishers, has been caught sending customer emails that confuse its own login page with a
third-party landing site that offers spyware protection and a bevy of other products..../p
|
CNET News.com -
47 minutes ago
Want to host high definition videos on YouTube? No problem, just get your copy and paste skills
ready because all it requires is changing the videos URL!
|
InformationWeek RSS Feed -
51 minutes ago
With the prepaid wireless plans, users with unlocked GSM handsets can call internationally at no
additional charge.

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Breaking News: CBSNews.com -
53 minutes ago
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson called the financial crisis now plaguing the world economy a "once
or twice" in a 100 years event, even as he warned Thursday against imposing too-strict regulations
to prevent a repeat calamity.div class="feedflare" a
href="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?a=qP0Mn"img
src="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?i=qP0Mn" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?a=uriyN"img
src="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?i=uriyN" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?a=tjKGn"img
src="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?i=tjKGn" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?a=fqU6n"img
src="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?i=fqU6n" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?a=jeUJN"img
src="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?i=jeUJN" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?a=To1fN"img
src="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~f/CBSNewsMain?i=To1fN" border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsMain/~4/459938980" height="1" width="1"/

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MAKE Magazine -
53 minutes ago
Artist Jason Freeny has produced this awesome Micro Schematic of a LEGO minifig. Via
I Heart Guts!
a href="http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2008/11/visible_minifig.html?CMP=OTC-0D6B48984890"
/Read more/a | a
href="http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2008/11/visible_minifig.html?CMP=OTC-0D6B48984890" /
Permalink/a | a
href="http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2008/11/visible_minifig.html?CMP=OTC-0D6B48984890#comments"
/Comments/a | a href="http://blog.makezine.com/archive/arts/?CMP=OTC-0D6B48984890" /Read more
articles in Arts/a | a
href="http://digg.com/submit?url=blog.makezine.com%2Farchive%2F2008%2F11%2Fvisible_minifig.htmltitle=Visible%20minifigbodytext=%20Artist%20Jason%20Freeny%20has%20produced%20this%20awesome%20Micro%20Schematic%20of%20a%20LEGO%20minifig.%20Via%20I%20Heart%20Guts%21...topic=tech_news"
/Digg this!/a
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Tame The Web: Libraries and Technology -
54 minutes ago
Remember the Flickr &
Libraries post? Here’s a great respoonse from a library director:
My point is that we have so much legalese that comes in that it cripples a library’s
ability to operate in this way. You can’t put people’s picture on flickr because of
their rights (even though they don’t care). It’s no wonder that libraries can often
seem faceless or uncaring. All the legal makes it so you can’t do very much or you violate
someone’s privacy. Libraries are afraid to use a patron’s email to let them know
about an event at the library or services they may be interested in. The only pictures we can use
are of the building or inanimate objects. The only video can be of library staff. I understand
the privacy issue. However, the LIBRARY is faceless as a result.
Jeff Scott is the Library Director for the City of Casa Grande Public Library in Casa Grande,
Arizona. He is also the president of the Pinal County Library Federation, a consortium of 13 public
libraries. Â http://gathernodust.blogspot.com 

|
Media Matters for America -
54 minutes ago
In a November 19 blog
post on ABCNews.com, reporter Matt Jaffe uncritically reported that in a November 13 speech
at Catholic University of America, Cardinal J. Francis Stafford "railed against a speech
[President-elect Barack] Obama gave July 17, 2007, to the Planned Parenthood Federation of
America when the Illinois lawmaker reiterated his support of Roe v. Wade, saying he didn't want
his two daughters, Malia and Sasha, to be 'punished by a pregnancy.' " But Stafford's assertion
contains several falsehoods, none of which Jaffe corrected or otherwise noted. Obama did not say
the word "punished" - or refer to being "punished" with "a pregnancy" or otherwise -- at any
point during his July 17, 2007, Planned Parenthood speech. Obama did use
the phrase "punished with a baby" during a March 29, 2008,
campaign event in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, but as Media Matters for America has previously documented, Obama was referring to sex education
-- not Roe v. Wade or abortion generally -- when he said during that event: "I've got
two daughters -- 9 years old and 6 years old. I'm going to teach them first of all about values
and morals, but if they make a mistake, I don't want them punished with a baby."
According to audio posted
by Catholic University of America's The Tower, during the November 13 speech, Stafford
claimed of Obama:
His clenched jaw was seen at his talk before the Planned Parenthood supporters July 17, 2007.
There he asserted, quote, and I'm quoting, somewhat out of context but not out of his meaning,
"We are not only going to win this election, but also we are going to transform this nation. The
first thing I will do as president is to sign the Freedom of Choice Act -- FOCA. I put
Roe at the center of my lesson plan on reproductive freedom when I taught constitutional
law. I don't want my daughters punished -- punished by a pregnancy." "On this issue," he
continued, "I will not yield on the issues that we're going to [inaudible]." End of quote. Note
the way the president-elect wished to describe the killing of his unborn grandchild. His
daughters must not be quote, "punished - punished," by pregnancy.
But contrary to Stafford's claim, Obama did not use the phrase "punished by a pregnancy" or even
the word "punished" at any point during the July 17, 2007, Planned Parenthood speech.
During the March 29, 2008, campaign event in Pennsylvania, while discussing sex education - not
abortion -- Obama said:
So, when it comes to -- when it comes specifically to HIV/AIDS, the most important prevention is
education, which should include -- which should include abstinence only -- should include
abstinence education and teaching that children -- teaching children, you know, that sex is not
something casual. But it should also include -- it should also include other, you know,
information about contraception because, look, I've got two daughters -- 9 years old and 6 years
old. I'm going to teach them first of all about values and morals, but if they make a mistake, I
don't want them punished with a baby. I don't want them punished with an STD at the age of 16.
You know, so, it doesn't make sense to not give them information. You still want to teach them
the morals and the values to make good decisions.
From the March 29
edition of CNN's Ballot Bowl 2008:
MARY SNOW (CNN correspondent): Welcome back to CNN's edition of Ballot Bowl.
This is a chance for you to hear directly from the candidates. I'm Mary Snow in Johnstown,
Pennsylvania, where Senator Barack Obama is holding a town hall meeting right now, taking
questions from the audience. Let's go straight to Senator Barack Obama; he just
was asked a question about how his administration, if he's elected, would deal with the issue of
HIV and AIDS and also sexually transmitted diseases with young girls. Here's
Senator Barack Obama.
OBAMA: -- or we give them really expensive surgery and we don't spend money on the front end
keeping people healthy in the first place. So, when it comes to -- when it comes specifically to
HIV/AIDS, the most important prevention is education, which should include -- which should
include abstinence only -- should include abstinence education and teaching that children --
teaching children, you know, that sex is not something casual. But it should also include -- it
should also include other, you know, information about contraception because, look, I've got two
daughters -- 9 years old and 6 years old. I'm going to teach them first of all about values and
morals, but if they make a mistake, I don't want them punished with a baby. I
don't want them punished with an STD at the age of 16.
You know, so, it doesn't make sense to not give them information. You still want
to teach them the morals and the values to make good decisions. That will be
important, number one. Then we're still going to have to provide better treatment for those who
do have -- who do contract HIV/AIDS, because it's no longer a death sentence, if, in fact, you
get the proper cocktails. It's expensive. That's why we want to prevent as much as possible.
But we should also provide better treatment. And we should focus on those sectors where it's
prevalent and we've got to get over the stigma because understand that the fastest growth in
HIV/AIDS is in heterosexuals, not gays. And so, we've got to get out of that stigma that we still
have around it. It's connected also to drug use. So, one of the things we have to do is to start
thinking about better substance abuse treatment programs around drugs and not just treat it as a
criminal justice issue. Treat it as a public health issue as well.
From Jaffe's November 19 ABCNews.com post:
Stafford, who has worked at the Vatican for 12 years and heads the Apostolic Penitentiary, said
that, on Nov. 4, "a cultural earthquake hit America" when Obama was elected, after campaigning on
an "extremist anti-life platform.
"He appears to be a relaxed, smiling man. His rhetorical skills, as I mentioned, are very highly
developed," Stafford noted.
"But under all of that grace and charm, there is a tautness of will, a clenched jaw, a state of
constant alertness, to attack and resist any external influence that might affect his will."
Specifically, Stafford railed against a speech Obama gave July 17, 2007, to the Planned
Parenthood Federation of America when the Illinois lawmaker reiterated his support of Roe v.
Wade, saying he didn't want his two daughters, Malia and Sasha, to be "punished by a pregnancy."
Also last week, as reported here, a South Carolina priest was repudiated for saying Catholic
Obama supporters need penance before taking communion, "lest they eat and drink their own
condemnation."

|
CNET News.com -
54 minutes ago
Look around, Steve. iTunes is the last great refuge of DRM-laden downloads. Is this the image you
want?
|
Mac Forums - iPod touch -
56 minutes ago
Hello,
I was recently given a link to Youtube from a friend that plays the piano and I wanted to take the
audio source from the video and convert it to MP3 format so that I could play it on my Ipod Touch.
I used a Mac program called iextractmp3 to convert the Flv file over to MP3(after downloading the
video from Youtube) and it appeared to work.....however on playing the file in iTunes what was
originally a 3 minute song has now turned into a 25 minute long song which repeats itself several
times and the strange thing is that the file size is no bigger as you would expect with a 25 min
mp3 track.
Any ideas?
Michael.
|
Tame The Web: Libraries and Technology -
58 minutes ago
Great article in EDUCAUSE by Bryan Alexander and Alan Levine. Alan writes the CogDog Blog, one of my favorites.
http://connect.educause.edu/Library/EDUCAUSE+Review/Web20StorytellingEmergenc/47444
A story has a beginning, a middle, and a cleanly
wrapped-up ending. Whether told around a campfire, read from a book, or played on a DVD, a story
goes from point A to B and then C. It follows a trajectory, a Freytag
Pyramid—perhaps the line of a human life or the stages of the hero’s
journey. A story is told by one person or by a creative team to an audience that is usually
quiet, even receptive. Or at least that’s what a story used to be, and that’s how a
story used to be told. Today, with digital networks and social media, this pattern is changing.
Stories now are open-ended, branching, hyperlinked, cross-media, participatory, exploratory, and
unpredictable. And they are told in new ways: Web 2.0 storytelling picks up these new types of
stories and runs with them, accelerating the pace of creation and participation while revealing
new directions for narratives to flow.
How can libraries tell stories in this manner?


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Tame The Web: Libraries and Technology -
59 minutes ago
We just opened an amazing room for early literacy at the Waukegan Public Library. The impetuous
for the room was a survey conducted by the United Way on Kindergarten Readiness in Spanish and
English. Cut to the chase—the children of Waukegan are entering school
unprepared, children are not doing well in school and several schools in Waukegan are on the No
Child Left Behind watch list.
Within 6 months we had architectural plans to put in a stimulating, engaging, room for
preschoolers featuring multiple places to explore with hands-on learning. There is a pretend play
theatre, arts and crafts center, science and math lab, nature center, music hall and a
“crawl space” for infants.
We’ve gotten some good online press about it at I Love Libraries, School Library
Journal, and the Suburban
Chicago News.
Here is a some info on the planning.
The concept for the center sprang from a 2006 United Way survey that showed only 43%
of Waukegan kindergartners ever attend preschool, and 77% speak Spanish as their
primary language. Over half the kids surveyed had little or no exposure to books
before entering public school. The study also showed that in this largely Hispanic
community, eight out of ten new kindergartners can’t recognize the letters in
the alphabet. The library had previously set aside 2,200 square feet to build a
space dedicated to preschoolers, but prior to this study coming out the
room’s primary function would have been to hold the preschool book collection.
“I was astounded by the percentages,” says Richard Lee,
Executive Director of the library. “Looking at those deficiencies, we decided
to set some measurable goals.” With guidance from Waukegan School District
60, the library began planning an Early Learning Center (ELC) dedicated to developing
four pre-literacy skills: listening, speaking, reading and writing. Developers based
the design on the Illinois Early Learning
Standards set by the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE), creating stations for
science and math, pretend play, storytimes, arts and crafts, nature, music, and
infant development.
Using the Kohl Children’s Museum in Glenview as a model, the architects crafted
the space to engage the senses and appeal to each child’s inner explorer-with
costumes to don, bells to ring, dough to squish and paint to dab. Of course, the
center also holds an extensive collection of picture and board books, as well as
games and puzzles to foster pre-reading skills. Signage appears in English and
Spanish.
Elizabeth Stearns
Assistant Director of Community Services
www.waukeganpl.org


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Ex Girlfriend Pictures -
1 hours ago
Yummy! What a beautiful body on this hot, little babe! I usually steer clear of pictures without
at least one face shot, but when they stand out | |