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Wartmag - BD, bande dessinée, manga, comics et pas seulement ! -
7 hours and 54 minutes ago
Véritable franchise
cross-média, Blue Dragon a bénéficié
des services d’Akira Toriyama, le créateur de Dragon
Ball Z, lors de la conception du jeu vidéo sorti sur Xbox 360. En
février 2009, Kana sort le premier tome de l’adaptation en manga signée
Tsuneo Takano et mise en image par Takeshi Obata, le
dessinateur de Death Note. Cerise sur le gâteau, la série
ne compte que 4 tomes, vendus chacun 6,25 euros.

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Wartmag - BD, bande dessinée, manga, comics et pas seulement ! -
11 hours and 55 minutes ago
Depuis son départ
de la direction de Série B chez Delcourt, le dessinateur Olivier Vatine
n’a eu de cesse de tisser des liens avec la Chine en multipliant les voyages sur place et
en signant la préface du collectif Chroniques de Pékin
chez l’éditeur de manhua Xiao Pan. Mieux, toute l’iconographie de sa nouvelle structure Comix
Buro, proposant différentes affiches et sketchbooks d’auteurs, tourne
autour de la révolution communiste chinoise.
Pour le début d’année 2009, le créateur
d’Aquablue revient avec deux nouveautés pour le compte de
la maison d’édition au triangle rouge. 9 Tigres, du nom
d’une mystérieuse société secrète, propose de découvrir
les aventures d’une tueuse à gages chinoise intraitable. Scénariste sur
l’album, Vatine collabore sur ce titre avec le dessinateur pékinois Jian
Yi, déjà vu dans le fameux collectif sur la capitale de l’empire du
Milieu.
Nommé Le Petit livre rouge (du story-board), le second titre
réunira les différents story-boards réalisé pour plusieurs
séries du label Série B. Réputé pour ses découpages
dynamiques, ce livre complété par un entretien avec Olivier Vatine devrait faire
des heureux contre 25 euros. Les amateurs de cuisines internes ou les apprentis auteurs pourront
ainsi découvrir les secrets de fabrication, décortiquer le travail du board et voir
les différences avec les pages définitives sur les titres
Arcanes, Tao Bang, Golden
Cup, Angela et celui de 9
Tigres. À l’heure de la globalisation et des collaborations entre
auteurs issus de différents continents ne parlant pas la même langue, le story-board
s’avère être une étape idéale pour se faire comprendre…
Une idée (presque) révolutionnaire !



Les images sont © Guy Delcourt Productions - Vatine - Jian Yi.


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Wartmag - BD, bande dessinée, manga, comics et pas seulement ! -
11 hours and 56 minutes ago
Lancé il
y a 14 ans, dans la collection Soleil de Nuit, Lanfeust a fait bien du chemin depuis ses
débuts confidentiels jusqu’à la conquête des Étoiles ! Alors que
Lanfeust Odyssey, le nouveau cycle, se prépare, que penser de la saga d’Arleston et
Tarquin, véritable porte-étendard des éditions Soleil ?
Peut-on parler de classique concernant Lanfeust de Troy ? Cela
paraît une évidence. Pourquoi ? Parce qu’il s’agit d’un des plus
grands succès de la BD contemporaine, que cette réussite s’accompagne
d’une indéniable qualité, et que cette série aura amené un
nombre incroyable de jeunes lecteurs à s’intéresser de plus près
à cet art dont on dit qu’il est le neuvième. La sortie de l’ultime
album du deuxième cycle est peut-être l’occasion de revenir sur ce qui
s’apparente à un véritable phénomène. Reprenons depuis le
début… Lire la
suite...
La magie fait partie de la vie quotidienne des habitants du monde de Troy : chacun possède
en effet un pouvoir, qu’il soit utile ou non, terrifiant ou ridicule. Dans le paisible
village de Glinin vit un jeune homme du nom de Lanfeust dont la capacité est de faire
fondre le métal d’un seul regard : il sera forgeron. Mais un jour, par un de ces
tours que nous joue le hasard, il met la main sur une épée dont le pommeau,
sculpté dans l’ivoire d’une bête fabuleuse, le Magohamoth, lui
confère un pouvoir absolu et illimité. Il devra donc quitter sa vie de simple
villageois pour vivre celle d’un héros malgré lui et affronter un être
vil et cruel doué de pouvoirs semblables aux siens : Thanos le pirate.

Lanfeust
de Troy réunit tous les éléments que l’on peut attendre
d’une série de ce type : un groupe d’aventuriers aux caractères
tranchés et dissonants, une quête mystique dans un univers médiéval,
des héros qui subissent de multiples épreuves, des bêtes sauvages et
improbables, des méchants très... méchants, et bien sûr
d’accortes donzelles pour égayer le paysage (mais pas seulement !).
Tout n’y est certainement pas parfait. Par moments, Arleston donne l’impression de
s’égarer, ne faisant pas beaucoup avancer son histoire dans certains tomes. Mais une
chose est sûre : il sait où il va, même s’il prend parfois des chemins
détournés pour nous y conduire. Et sa façon de raconter son histoire, bien
que fort classique et codifiée, est rarement prise en défaut : l’action,
ponctuée de scènes plus humoristiques, se déroule sans véritable
temps mort, les dialogues foisonnent de jeux de mots et les textes narratifs ne manquent jamais
d’ajouter une note d’humour. De quoi nous rappeler la véritable raison
d’être de l’histoire : divertir ! Cet humour qui, il est vrai, n’est pas
toujours des plus fins, naît surtout de la confrontation de personnages aux divergences
plus que marquées. Abstraction faite de l’éternelle naïveté de
Lanfeust, sur laquelle les auteurs ont tendance à trop s’appesantir, chacun tient
bien son rôle, à commencer par le troll Hébus, véritable trouvaille
d’une série qu’il semble parfois porter à lui seul.

Le dessin répond lui aussi aux canons du genre. Accompagné aux
couleurs d’Yves Lencot puis de Claude Guth, Tarquin ne
cesse de s’améliorer au fil des tomes, ses hésitations du début
faisant place à une maîtrise de plus en plus assurée. Il en ressort
malheureusement une qualité inégale sur l’ensemble de la série.
Après tout, qu’importe ? C’est là le signe d’une époque
où l’on pouvait s’enthousiasmer pour une série dont les auteurs
n’étaient pas encore des professionnels accomplis. On remarque d’ailleurs ce
phénomène chez d’autres dessinateurs. Citons au hasard le travail
d’Olivier Ledroit sur les Chroniques de la Lune
Noire, de Tiburce Oger sur Gorn, de
Danard sur Marlysa, d’Aouamri
sur Mortepierre ou, dans un genre complètement différent,
de Lewis Trondheim sur Lapinot et les carottes de
Patagonie.
Quoi qu’il en soit, l’ensemble est cohérent et démontre
l’implication des auteurs dans leur série fétiche, une Å“uvre
qui, si elle ne plaira pas forcément aux acharnés de l’underground les plus
obtus, constitue une véritable référence couronnée par le
succès que l’on sait. Une réussite telle qu’ils ne pouvaient pas
s’arrêter en si bon chemin... De Lanfeust des Étoiles à Trolls de Troy,
des Conquérants de Troy à Gnomes de Troy, Arleston a en effet mis en place
l’un des univers de la BD qui comptent le plus de séries parallèles. Simple
mine d’or à exploiter ou véritable source d’inspiration intarissable ?
La qualité de ces différentes suites varie en tout cas du très bon au
franchement décevant.

Lanfeust des Étoiles s’achève donc avec ce
huitième tome, et ponctue un cycle qui aura connu des hauts et des bas.
L’intérêt suscité par les aventures intersidérales de Lanfeust
aura fortement varié d’un album à l’autre, entre de nombreuses
trouvailles à l’efficacité redoutable et une fâcheuse tendance à
se perdre en chemin à force de trop vouloir en faire. Malgré ces quelques
égarements, c’est sur une note résolument positive que se referme Le sang des
comètes, car Arleston aura fait preuve d’une grande audace dans
plusieurs de ses choix : faire vieillir certains de ses personnages, et ainsi jouer avec la
relativité temporelle, voire en faire disparaître d’autres, qui pouvaient
pourtant paraître indispensables. Se montrer audacieux dans une série
établie, la clé du succès ? Toujours est-il que Lanfeust des
Étoiles s’en sort admirablement, bien plus en tout cas que
d’autres séries qui viennent de connaître leur dénouement. La fin trop
longtemps attendue, et donc forcément décevante, de Gorn
et des Chroniques de la Lune Noire, à qui la surprise et
l’originalité font cruellement défaut, s’érige ainsi en parfait
contre-exemple.
Que faut-il attendre du nouveau cycle à paraître, et qui verra Lanfeust quitter les
Étoiles pour retrouver son monde de Troy ? Seul l’avenir nous le dira. Ce qui est
sûr, par contre, c’est l’attachement inébranlable de toute une
génération pour un personnage qui, comme tous les héros d’antan, ne
meurt jamais. À moins que…
David Wesel
· Lanfeust des Étoiles #8, Christophe
Arleston, Didier Tarquin, Éditions Soleil, 12,90 €, en
librairie.
Les images sont © MC Productions - Arleston - Tarquin.


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Wartmag - BD, bande dessinée, manga, comics et pas seulement ! -
11 hours and 56 minutes ago
Oubliez les autres collectifs du moment, c’est Sky
Doll Lacrima Christi qu’il vous faut. Parce qu’en plus
d’être un livre-objet magnifique – le moindre petit
élément semble travaillé –, les planches de
Benjamin, Fernandez, Barbucci,
Smudja, Khaled ou Bourgoin rivalisent
d’inventivité et d’effets spectaculaires. Un régal pour les yeux.
Côté scénar, si toutes les histoires sont loin d’être
passionnantes, chacune renvoie aux papesses Agape et Ludovique et, à leur façon,
creuse le background des personnages et de cet univers à la fois commercial et
religieux.
En deux mots : Requiem graphique
Collectif aux éditions Soleil - 72 pages - 14,95 €

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Media Matters for America -
26 minutes ago
On the December 1 edition of Fox News' Hannity & Colmes, co-host Sean Hannity
asserted that in the Minnesota Senate recount, challenger Al Franken (D) "has been trying to
challenge ballots that are clearly for [incumbent Sen.] Norm Coleman [R]," adding, "That is
stealing an election." Subsequently, Hannity aired several examples of ballots that the Franken
campaign has contested and said to former Rep. John Kasich (R-OH): "I'm gonna put up on the
screen -- and I want Al Franken to sue me, because for him to challenge these ballots that are so
clearly, you know, for Norm Coleman, I think it shows that he's trying to steal the election."
However, Hannity did not display any of the published examples of ballots that the Coleman
campaign has challenged that appear to be marked for Franken or another candidate besides
Coleman.
Later, former Hillary Clinton campaign adviser Kiki McLean said to Hannity: "Sean, I'd like to
know that you actually spent the time looking at the ballots that Norm Coleman has tried to have
dismissed. Have you?" She also said: "My question to you is have you reviewed all the ballots
that Norm Coleman has tried to throw out?" Hannity replied: "I've reviewed a number of them, but
I don't see any that are this obvious." But Hannity again did not show his viewers any of the
ballots Coleman has challenged.
As Media Matters for America has noted, a Minnesota Public Radio article,
originally published November 19, provided some examples of ballots that the Coleman campaign has
challenged along with reporting on the reason for the challenge:
The Coleman campaign challenged this ballot [on November 19], arguing the voter didn't intend to
vote for Franken, because of the small dot inside the bubble next to Dean Barkley's name.

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Media Matters for America -
30 minutes ago
In a November 27 report discussing efforts to "turn around what some military analysts are
calling an eight-year stalemate" in Afghanistan, NBC's Nightly News included a clip of
NBC News military analyst and retired Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey saying, "The answer is the Afghan
security forces, with 40 NATO and allied present supporting elements, but not the U.S. fighting
the significant counterinsurgency battle." Neither McCaffrey nor NBC News disclosed during the
report that McCaffrey is a member of the board of directors of DynCorp International, according
to that company's website.
An August 5 DynCorp press
release reported that the company had been awarded an 18-month, $317.4 million contract with
the State Department to "provide at least 580 civilian police advisors to advise, train, and
mentor the Afghanistan National Police and the Ministry of Interior." According to a 2006 State
Department "Fact
Sheet," the "Afghan National Police" are one of two components of the "Afghanistan National
Security Forces."
At the time Nightly News aired McCaffrey's remarks stressing the importance of "Afghan
security forces," NBC was aware of McCaffrey's ties to DynCorp. McCaffrey's
bio on MSNBC's website reports that he "has been elected to: the Board of Directors of
DynCorp International." Additionally, in an April 20 New York Times
article, investigative reporter David Barstow detailed the connections between media military
analysts and the Pentagon and defense industries, and named McCaffrey as one of numerous military
analysts who "have ties to military contractors vested in the very war policies they are asked to
assess on air." Barstow reported that McCaffrey had his "own consulting firm[]" and "sat on the
boards of major military contractors." (Following the Times' article, Media Matters
for America conducted a review of appearances between January
2002 and May 2008 by military analysts named in the article, including McCaffrey, and identified
more than 600 appearances by McCaffrey on NBC, MSNBC, and CNBC.)
Before Nightly News' November 27 broadcast aired, NBC was also reportedly aware of a
then-forthcoming follow-up
article by Barstow focusing on McCaffrey's extensive ties to military contractors. In a
December 1
post on his Salon.com blog, Glenn Greenwald reported that he had "obtained, from a very
trustworthy source"
emails dated November 20 and 21 "between NBC News executives and McCaffrey (which cc:d
[Nightly News host] Brian Williams), reflecting the extensive collaboration between NBC
and McCaffrey to formulate a coordinated response" to Barstow's article, which was published on
November 29 and detailed McCaffrey's ties to DynCorp, among other companies.
In his November 29 follow-up article, Barstow wrote that McCaffrey "has immersed himself in
businesses that have grown with the fight against terrorism" and highlighted a June 28, 2005, NBC
News special report anchored by Williams in which McCaffrey said that "the Iraqi security forces
are real," but did not disclose his ties to DynCorp -- the company that trained those forces --
or to Veritas Capital, DynCorp's parent company. According to Barstow, McCaffrey served on
DynCorp's board of directors at the time and "owned special stock that allowed him to share in
DynCorp's profits, up 87 percent that year largely because of the Iraq war." Forbes.com has
previously
reported that McCaffrey joined DynCorp's board in 2005. Barstow further reported that
McCaffrey has "earned at least $500,000" for his work on the "advisory council" of Veritas
Capital.
According to a June 23 company press release, DynCorp has been a "major part of the CIVPOL [International Civilian
Police] mission in Iraq since 2003" and has held the contract for the "overall Civilian Advisor
Support work" in Iraq since 2004.
Barstow extensively detailed McCaffrey's role with DynCorp in his November 29 Times
article, specifically how "when DynCorp executives learned that General McCaffrey was planning to
travel to Iraq that June [1995], they asked him to sound out American commanders and reassure
them of DynCorp's determination to make things right":
At the same time, General McCaffrey used his access to further business interests, as he did
during the summer of 2005, when Americans were turning against the Iraq war in droves.
Veritas had been on a shopping spree, buying military contractors deeply enmeshed in the war. Its
biggest acquisition was of DynCorp International, best known for training foreign security forces
for the United States government. By 2005 operations in Iraq and Afghanistan accounted for 37
percent of DynCorp's revenues.
The crumbling public support, though, posed a threat to Veritas's prize acquisition. The changing
political climate and unrelenting violence, DynCorp warned investors, could force a withdrawal
from Iraq.
What is more, some of DynCorp's Iraq contracts were in trouble, plagued by cost overruns, inept
work by subcontractors and ineffective training programs. So when DynCorp executives learned that
General McCaffrey was planning to travel to Iraq that June, they asked him to sound out American
commanders and reassure them of DynCorp's determination to make things right.
"It is useful both ways," Gregory Lagana, a DynCorp spokesman, said in an interview. "If there
were problems, and there were, then we could get an independent judgment and fix them."
Mr. Lagana said General McCaffrey had been a troubleshooter for DynCorp on other trips. "He'll
say: 'I'm going over. Is there anyone you want me to see?' " Mr. Lagana said. "And then he'd go
in and say, 'I'm on the board. What can you tell me?' "
The Pentagon had its own agenda. For eight days, General McCaffrey was given red-carpet
treatment. Iraqi commandos even staged a live-fire demonstration for him. But General McCaffrey
also was given access to officials whose decisions were important to his business interests,
including DynCorp, which was planning an I.P.O. He met with General [David] Petraeus, who was
then in charge of training Iraqi security forces and responsible for supervising DynCorp's 500
police trainers. He also met with officials responsible for billions of dollars' worth of
contracts in Iraq.
Barstow went on to report that following the June 2005 trip, McCaffrey "undertook a one-man news
media blitz in which he contradicted the dire assessments of many journalists in Iraq" and
"vouched for Iraq's security forces," including during the June 28, 2005, NBC News special
report:
Back home, General McCaffrey undertook a one-man news media blitz in which he contradicted the
dire assessments of many journalists in Iraq. He bore witness to progress on all fronts, but most
of all he vouched for Iraq's security forces. A year earlier, before joining DynCorp's board, he
had described these forces as "badly equipped, badly trained, politically unreliable." Just
months before, Gary E. Luck, a retired four-star Army general sent to assess progress in Iraq,
had reported to Mr. Bush that security training was going poorly. Yet General McCaffrey now
emphasized his "surprising" conclusion that the training was succeeding.
After Mr. Bush gave a speech praising Iraq's new security forces, Brian Williams asked General
McCaffrey for an independent assessment. "The Iraqi security forces are real," General McCaffrey
replied, without noting the concerns about DynCorp.
His financial stake in the policy debates over Iraq was not mentioned. He did not disclose that
he owned special stock that allowed him to share in DynCorp's profits, up 87 percent that year
largely because of the Iraq war.
Despite McCaffrey's repeated failure to disclose his ties to military contractors, as exemplified
by his appearance on that June 2005 NBC News special report, in which he said that Iraqi security
forces (trained by a company whose board McCaffrey serves on) were making progress, NBC defended
its actions and those of McCaffrey to Barstow. Barstow reported:
The president of NBC News, Steve Capus, said in an interview that General McCaffrey was a man of
honor and achievement who would never let business obligations color his analysis for NBC. He
described General McCaffrey as an "independent voice" who had courageously challenged Mr.
[Donald] Rumsfeld, adding, "There's no open microphone that begins with the Pentagon and ends
with him going out over our airwaves."
General McCaffrey is not required to abide by NBC's formal conflict-of-interest rules, Mr. Capus
said, because he is a consultant, not a news employee. Nor is he required to disclose his
business interests periodically. But Mr. Capus said that the network had conversations with its
military analysts about the need to avoid even the appearance of a conflict, and that General
McCaffrey had been "incredibly forthcoming" about his ties to military contractors.
In an April 29
post on his MSNBC.com blog, Williams responded to Barstow's April 20 article, describing
McCaffrey and fellow NBC News analyst Wayne Downing, who passed away in July 2007, as "honest
brokers" and writing that McCaffrey and Downing were "warriors-turned-analysts, not lobbyists or
politicians":
All I can say is this: these two guys never gave what I considered to be the party line. They
were tough, honest critics of the U.S. military effort in Iraq. If you've had any exposure to
retired officers of that rank (and we've not had any five-star Generals in the modern era) then
you know: these men are passionate patriots. In my dealings with them, they were also honest
brokers. I knew full well whenever either man went on a fact-finding mission or went for
high-level briefings. They never came back spun, and never attempted a conversion. They are
warriors-turned-analysts, not lobbyists or politicians.
In asserting that McCaffrey "never gave what I considered to be the party line," Williams' post
did not address Barstow's April 20 reporting on McCaffrey's ties to military contractors.
According to a Media Matters search, Williams has yet to comment on Barstow's November
29 story.
From the November 27 edition of NBC's Nightly News with Brian Williams:
DAVID GREGORY (guest anchor): When the Afghanistan veterans return to the war zone, they may in
fact be using a new strategy to defeat the Taliban. Here's NBC's Jim Maceda.
[begin video clip]
MACEDA: Even on Thanksgiving Day, there was no letup in Islamist attacks on U.S. and Afghan
forces. In Kabul, yet another suicide bomber set off explosives, this time outside the U.S.
Embassy, just as an American military convoy passed by. None in the convoy was hurt, but the car
bomb killed four more Afghan civilians.
With violence escalating, U.S. military commanders are now looking at bolder strategies, like
winning over Afghan tribal leaders with money and the promise of political power if they fight
against the Taliban -- similar to the game-changing deal struck with Sunni tribes in Iraq -- and
investing billions of dollars to beef up the Afghan army and police to some 200,000 forces. In
Kandahar, the birthplace of the Taliban, Major John Payne, an embedded police mentor from
Brooklyn, New York, shows Afghans how to search cars, interrogate people, and be good cops.
PAYNE: You got 200 liters a month, would that be good?
MACEDA: But he spends a lot of his time on other more basic issues, like helping out when the
Afghan police cars run out of gas and keeping their poor living standards high enough to fight
off corruption.
PAYNE: Well, we're not talking fancy things. We're talking power, water, and sewer.
MACEDA: But here in Afghanistan, what is often called "the other war" is heating up. Some 10 to
15,000 more U.S. combat forces are expected to deploy here over the coming months to try to turn
around what some military analysts are calling an eight-year stalemate. Still, even those who
support a surge in Afghanistan say it's not America's war.
McCAFFREY: The answer is the Afghan security forces, with 40 NATO and allied present supporting
elements, but not the U.S. fighting the significant counterinsurgency battle.
MACEDA: But with Afghan forces still years from being able to hold their own against the Taliban,
U.S. soldiers are likely to mark many more Thanksgivings here. Jim Maceda, NBC News, Kandahar
Airfield, Afghanistan.
[end video clip]

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MacNN | The Macintosh News Network -
40 minutes ago
ProteMac has released KeyBag, a program that intercepts and records every keystroke entered on a
Mac. The utility allows users to keep track of all chat conversations, applications opened, and
keys pressed in any application, all while running hidden in the background. Users can also use the
records as a detailed backup copy of information, in case a file is accidentally deleted or the
computer ma... 
|
Boing Boing -
42 minutes ago
Rebecca McKinnon has published an extensive and densely informative blog post in which she shares
findings of her ongoing Chinese blog censorship research. She is developing a more in-depth
academic paper for release in 2009, and welcomes feedback and reaction to what she's posted now,
including the presentation slides which contain more concrete, visual examples of how the
censorship works. Snip: All Chinese blog-hosting companies are required by government regulators to
censor their users' content in order to keep their business licenses. But as Liu discovered, they
all make different choices not only about how to implement censorship requirements, but also how to
treat the users who get censored. Most Chinese bloggers who want an audience inside mainland China
use domestic Chinese blog-hosting services - only a very tiny minority use overseas services like
Blogger or Wordpress.com because they tend to be blocked, and even fewer have the tech skills to do
their own custom Wordpress installation on their own rented server space. The aim of my research
was to look at the Chinese blog-hosting services (which includes foreign brands offering services
inside China to the Chinese market) and establish how much variation there is in terms of what gets
censored and how it gets censored. Since it's not in the interest of people who work at
blog-hosting companies to tell the truth about these things in great detail to a foreign
researcher, I decided that the best way to do this would be to post a range of content across a
number of blog-hosting services and track who censored what and how. With the help of John Kennedy,
Ben Cheng, and some student research assistants, my team posted more than 100 pieces of content -
passages from news items, blogs, and chatrooms of varying political sensitivity - consistently
across 15 different Chinese blog-hosting platforms. We found that censorship levels and methods
vary tremendously from company to company. I have written about some of the interesting findings
that came up as we went along here, here, and here. If I publish a chart naming who censors more
than whom, it is likely that those who censor less will get in trouble with the authorities.
Therefore in the chart at right I have changed all the company names to letters. Of 108 pieces of
content on a variety of public affairs and news-related subjects from a variety of sources (ranging
from Xinhua to dissident websites), the most censor-happy company deleted over half, while the most
laid-back company censored only one. (Note that I only posted one item about FLG and one about
Tiananmen because most bloggers expect those to be censored - it's more interesting to see how
censorship works on topics that Chinese bloggers interested in current events might write about.)
Studying Chinese blog censorship (RConversation) Previously on Boing Boing: Google founder regrets
censoring China - Boing Boing Google, China, and genocide: web censorship and Tibet - Boing Boing
China: gov to expand "Great 'Net Firewall," censor web even more ... Which search engine is worst
censor in China? - Boing Boing Chinese editions of MSN Spaces censor political terms - Boing Boing
How Chinese net-censorship works -- Reporters Without Borders ... Net censorship: HOWTO bypass
China's Great Firewall - Boing Boing China: blog providers sign "self-discipline" act to nix
anonymous ... Okay, *do* be evil: Google launches censored google.cn in China ... Xeni's LAT op-ed:
war, blogs, news, and profit. - Boing Boing Yahoo: dissident shareholders' anti-censor, pro-human
rights move ......br style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=220f7aab74ea28660d7a340c877e2905p=1"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=220f7aab74ea28660d7a340c877e2905p=1"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=220f7aab74ea28660d7a340c877e2905" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/

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High-Def Digest: All High-Def Disc News -
45 minutes ago
In an early announcement to retailers, Lionsgate has set a late-January Blu-ray debut for the
rock-horror opus 'Repo! The Genetic Opera.' Starring Sarah Brightman and Paris Hilton and directed
by 'Saw'...img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/highdefdigestallnews/~4/472721609" height="1"
width="1"/
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MacNN | The Macintosh News Network -
45 minutes ago
GenArts has published v3.0 of its Sapphire plug-ins for Avid editing systems, specifically
Symphony, NewsCutter and Media Composer. The focus of the update is on its 36 new effects, such as
TVDamage, which reproduces broadcast artifacts like static and ghosting. Many are divided into
specific themes, such as wipe and dissolve transitions, or texture- and Z-buffer-based effects.
Some also attemp... 
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Lifehacker -
45 minutes ago
Last year we showed you a new, lightweight Linux-based operating system called gOS (aka Good OS)
with an emphasis on integrating web-based applications with your desktop. gOS first gained
notoriety...
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Gizmodo -
45 minutes ago
In the electric future, cats' nervous systems run on USB, and we can tap into them for our needs.
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Joystiq -
45 minutes ago
Filed under: Sony PlayStation 3,
Microsoft Xbox 360, Action
click to enlarge It's no
secret that Atari rescued Starbreeze Studios' hi-def remake of
The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher
Bay after Activision-Blizzard kicked
it to the curb. What you don't know - and we didn't know until we recently saw it in
action - is that those added "Dark Athena" levels are quite substantial. They've been expended into
an entirely new, 10-plus-hour campaign, complete with new game mechanics, full-game production
values ... the works.
Starbreeze told us that, despite the game being absent from
anyone's radar for quite some time, it never let up on development. In fact, the acquisition of
the game by Atari has afforded the team upwards of nine additional months of development time,
hence the (essentally) second full game and what the team was visibly ecstatic about: more time to
polish every last detail.
The Chronicles of Riddick: Assault on Dark Athena ( Escape from Butcher's Bay is
still there, looks amazing, and will incorporate new gameplay and tech developed for Dark
Athena) is set for release in spring of 2009. Check back tomorrow for our full impressions of
the new campaign.
Gallery: The Chronicles of Riddick: Assault on Dark
Athena
 
Riddick: Dark Athena coming early '09, features new 10-hour campaign originally appeared on
Joystiq on Tue, 02 Dec 2008 16:00:00 EST. Please see our
terms for use of feeds.
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Rage3D Discussion Area - 75,85,87,93,99 -
52 minutes ago
Only the 320i, 325i, 330i are within my reach (and that too after a stretch). How is the BMW 520i
btw because that is in my reach.
My only concern is that engines are severely underpowered in these cars barring the 330i but then
again a BMW 3 series looks like a frickin' corolla.
I am just too confused about purchasing a new car. Too many options, too little money and really a
bad time to invest in a car but then again I have to have one... :hmm:
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Latest financial news - CNNMoney.com -
54 minutes ago
General Electric shares rallied more than 13% Tuesday after executives vowed to preserve the
company's dividend and work to maintain its triple-A credit rating - a designation that keeps GE's
borrowing costs lower than almost any company in corporate America and gives it a significant
advantage over its competition.img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/rss/money_latest/~4/i8RRHLNXsv8" height="1" width="1"/
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