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Global Voices Online -
3 hours and 55 minutes ago
On 21 March 1960 the South African police opened fire on a crowd of black protesters who were
part of political campaign organized by the Pan African Congress (PAC) against pass laws. It is
estimated that 69 people were killed on that day in the township of Sharpeville. This horrific
event is commonly known as Sharpeville Massacre .
Sharpeville massacre was the turning point in the history of political resistance to Apartheid in
South Africa. Since 1994, 21 March is Human Rights Day in South Africa. March 21 is also the
International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination in memory of the massacre.
Every March 21st, Rethabile posts his own poem to remember Sharpeville massacre. His Sharpeville
poem for this year is posted on Black
Looks:
the day king walked
from selma to montgomery,
the tops of trees shook
as in a forest, and shivered
for this man who had crossed a line
of centuries in the south, but
even more south, we worried for our lot,
resolved as we were to break you,
but you to put us with our ancestors.
of course there have never been questions:
why shoot them in the back? why shoot them?
why shoot? why? but our name got its shrine
where the children now gather,
for sixty-nine of us lay on the street
on that day in march sixty. as others
filled hospitals and covered cell-floors
with clenched bodies, dachau
was completed, stowe published her book,
alcatraz was shut down for good, and
we moved from non-whites
to non-carriers of passbooks.
© Rethabile Masilo
He also posts a poem by South African political activist and poet Dennis Brutus. It is titled, “A Poem About
Sharpeville”:
What is important
about Sharpeville
is not that seventy died:
nor even that they were shot in the back
retreating, unarmed, defenseless
and certainly not
the heavy caliber slug
that tore through a mother’s back
and ripped through the child in her arms
killing it
Remember Sharpeville
bullet-in-the-back day
Because it epitomized oppression
and the nature of society
more clearly than anything else;
it was the classic event
Nowhere is racial dominance
more clearly defined
nowhere the will to oppress
more clearly demonstrated
what the world whispers
apartheid with snarling guns
the blood lust after
South Africa spills in the dust
Remember Sharpeville
Remember bullet-in-the-back day
And remember the unquenchable will for freedom
Remember the dead
and be glad.
© Dennis Brutus
Travel Blog Portfolio wishes all South Africans
a safe and peaceful Human Rights day and ask them to learn more about Sharpeville Day.
How could such atrocities happen and no one is punished?, asks Sokari Ekine:
It’s been a long time coming, but change is gonna come, sang Sam Cooke about America. He
could have been singing about South Africa, or the world, even. For what is baffling is how
Sharpeville 1960, Soweto 1976, King’s and X’s murders, the Civil Rights movement,
Mandela’s 27 years in jail, not to mention the thousands tortured and killed in South
Africa, and tortured and lynched in America, what is baffling is how these have not entered the
minds of all and instructed them on the evils of discrimination and segregation in all its forms.
That is truly baffling to me.
It is also amazingly stunning that all these things happened and almost no one got punished for
it, no international hunt for the wrong-doers, no motivation to see them “brought to
justice,” as George Bush the son would say about so many who had committed so less. Today
is a day to remember and to know why it should be remembered
Alpha
Christian discusses the link between Good Friday, Human Rights Day and Sharpeville Day:
In a recent column in the Beeld, Nico Botha, deals with this anomaly where the Good Friday falls
on the same date as the Human Rights Day, or, even better, the commemoration of Sharpeville Day.
For many the debate was whether we will loose a public holiday as workers.
Where are we to find the key to link Good Friday to the significance of today, Human Rights day,
Sharpeville day ?
I believe the little dialogue between Jesus and Pilate helps us to start to understand this link.
Michael Trapido remembers this day in his post on Thought Leader titled Sharpeville
Redux and a Bit More:
On that fateful day a group of between 5 000 and 7 000 people converged on the local police
station in the township of Sharpeville, offering themselves up for arrest for not carrying their
pass books.
As the large crowd gathered the atmosphere was peaceful and festive with less than 20 police
officers in the station at the start of the protest. Police and military tried using low-flying
jet fighters in an attempt disperse the crowd without success.
As a result the police set up Saracen armoured vehicles in a line facing the protesters and, at
13:15, incredibly, opened fire on the crowd.
He continues:
The official casualties were 69 people killed, including 8 women and 10 children, with more than
180 injured.
To date the worst case of police insanity in the history of this country.
As a result there followed a spontaneous uprising among black South Africans with demonstrations,
protest marches, strikes, and riots taking place throughout the country.
This led to the government declaring a state of emergency on March 30 1960, which saw more than
18 000 people detained.
Texas In Africa notes that Sharpeville was the first major turning point in
the struggle against apartheid in South Africa and that the massacre led to the
militarisation of the anti-apartheid movement:
The rest of the world started to question the regime's racist policies much more openly; South
Africa left the commonwealth a year later.
It also provoked the militarization of the anti-apartheid movement. The ANC's militant wing, MK
(Umkhonto wa Sizwe) and Poqo, the military wing of the PAC, both formed soon after the massacre.
The next thirty years were marked with horrific acts of violence before - to almost everyone's
surprise - the evil of apartheid ended peacefully.
Five years later to the day, American civil rights protesters led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
began marching from Selma to Montgomery. The attempt by 600 marchers to do the same thing three
weeks earlier culminated in Bloody Sunday, an attack by local and state law enforcement
officials. With a protective order from a federal judge, five times as many marchers turned out
for the March 21 walk. A few months later, LBJ signed the Voting Rights Act, which effectively
ended the last vestiges of legal discrimination in the south.
My students (whom, you will remember, are almost all black men) sometimes debate the question:
“Are you a Malcolm or a Martin?” What they mean by this is, “Is social change
best achieved through peaceful means (as MLK carried out his work) or violent means (as Malcolm X
advocated)?”
I cannot even begin to claim to be qualified to answer this question. If we look at political
history, it's clear that MLK's nonviolent methods worked to restore voting rights and some degree
of social equality for American minorities, and they worked relatively quickly. MK and Poqo's
violent methods certainly also had an effect on the apartheid regime, although the struggle was
very long and ultimately did not end because of violence but rather because of economic turmoil
and Mandela's willingness to negotiate a peaceful settlement with de Klerk. But nothing
approaching true equality of economic opportunity has happened for the vast majority of blacks in
either country.
Abioye
discusses the international dimension of Sharpeville Day:
In 1966 the General Assembly of the UN proclaimed March 21, the International Day for the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination. The UN called on the international community to redouble
its efforts to eliminate all forms of racial discrimination. The Canadian government and various
institutions in Canada including Carleton University and the University of Toronto, colluded with
the white supremacist apartheid government of South Africa by refusing to
divest and continuing to trade with the government and South African companies.
South Africa Good News
has posted a statement from Nelson Mandela Foundation:
March 21, 2010, marks 50 years since 69 unarmed protestors were killed by South African police
outside a police station in Sharpeville, south of Johannesburg.
Nelson Mandela burning his pass on March 28, 1960, in protest to the atrocities at
SharpevilleWhen commemorating Human Rights day, during his presidency, Nelson Mandela said:
“21 March is South African Human Rights Day. It is a day which, more than many others,
captures the essence of the struggle of the South African people and the soul of our non-racial
democracy. March 21 is the day on which we remember and sing praises to those who perished in the
name of democracy and human dignity. It is also a day on which we reflect and assess the progress
we are making in enshrining basic human rights and values.”

|
Guardian Unlimited -
17 hours and 2 minutes ago
How Einstein told his ailing mother of his breakthrough on relativity
As an introduction to one of science's most revolutionary theories, one postcard from Albert
Einstein – now on display at the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Jerusalem as part of its 50th anniversary
celebrations – is gloriously incongruent. "Dear Mother!" he writes. "Today
some happy news. Lorentz telegraphed me that the British expeditions have verified the deflection
of light by the sun." So sorry, by the way, to hear that you are not feeling well, he adds.
Thus Einstein reveals to his ailing Jewish mother that he has become famous as a genius, a man
who has been vindicated over his claim that gravity can distort the space-time continuum. All
that is missing is her reply. "He never writes, he never calls, and suddenly he's cleverer than
Isaac Newton," she might have written. Sadly, we will never know.
The rest of the exhibition is made up of cabinets that display all 46 pages of his great work,
The Foundation of the General Theory of Relativity, which forced scientists to redefine
gravity, predicted the existence of black holes and revealed how galaxies are formed. Einstein
wrote his theory between November 1915 and May 1916 in his Berlin apartment. Later it was
presented to the Hebrew University and is now displayed so that visitors can attempt to follow
the thinking of the great scientist. Each page has its own case, each lighted dimly in a room
that has been darkened to protect the paper. "We have set [the pages] up like the Dead Sea
Scrolls, to protect them but also to give the feeling of entering a kind of holy of holies, which
is how we view it," says curator Hanoch Guttfreund. "You can see Einstein work as you look at the
pages."
And this is probably the most fascinating part of the show. The pages have many cross-outs and insertions in meticulous penmanship
– with an open acknowledgment that some of the maths was beyond even him. His
great idea, although startling at the time, has endured. His mother would have been proud.
Robin McKieguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use
of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

|
Guardian Unlimited -
17 hours and 4 minutes ago
Alistair Darling will announce plans to back low-carbon transport and energy projects in 'budget
for growth'
Alistair Darling will this week announce a £1bn fund to kick-start investment in green
transport and energy projects as part of a "budget for growth".
With Wednesday's budget coming weeks before an expected general election, the chancellor will use
his plans for the new low-carbon infrastructure scheme to contrast Labour's support for industry
with the Conservatives' more hands-off philosophy.
Business secretary Lord Mandelson, who has spearheaded the government's new, more interventionist
approach, told the Observer that the Conservatives "wouldn't lift a single finger" to
help manufacturing.
With the public finances tight, the new green fund will be relatively small in scale, but the
government hopes to use the cash to tempt private investors to back innovative new ideas. "It's
about saying there are ways in which the government can play a role, which are not necessarily
multibillion-pound projects," said a Treasury source. He cited the model of the Sheffield
Forgemasters plant, where Mandelson last week used an £80m loan from taxpayers to secure a
£170m financing package that included support from the European Investment Bank and nuclear
supplier Westinghouse.
The Sheffield Forgemasters deal – which will create 180 jobs initially and
provide 1,000 apprenticeships – was one of several new industrial investments
announced in recent weeks that have been secured with the help of public subsidy.
Mandelson said: "People say: why am I securing Vauxhall, why am I securing the Nissan electric
car to be produced in Sunderland, why am I securing the development and production of Ford's
green technologies, why did I go to Sheffield Forgemasters to deliver funding for a 15,000-tonne
press? It's because if the government doesn't act here, some other government will. If we hadn't
bridged the final mile in the way that we did, because the market couldn't or wouldn't provide,
then the investment would have gone elsewhere."
With the government committed to reduce UK carbon emissions by 80% by 2050, radical changes in
infrastructure and power generation will be needed over the coming decades. Labour hopes that by
boosting low-carbon energy such as wind, wave and solar power, and helping to upgrade the
transport system to use cleaner fuels, it can help to meet those targets while creating thousands
of new "green-collar jobs".
But environmental campaigners warned that £1bn would not go very far. Andrew Simms,
director of the New Economics Foundation, said: "If what they're talking about is less than one
five-hundredth of the amount that was thrown at the banking system, at a point where investment
banks have bonus pots bigger than £1bn, then while the idea is right, the size of the
ambition smacks of skewed priorities."
Comparing the task of preparing for a new low-carbon era to the long drive from London to
Edinburgh, he said: "You won't get very far on a teacupful of petrol." The Stern review on the
economics of climate change suggested it would cost more than £10bn a year to prepare the
economy for cuts in emissions on the scale needed.
Mandelson stressed that as well as underpinning growth, the budget would also reaffirm Labour's
determination to tackle the public deficit. The latest official figures showed that the public
finances are in a healthier state than the chancellor feared at the time of December's pre-budget
report, and he could reduce his £178bn estimate of this year's deficit by as much as
£10bn.
But Mandelson said that would not alter the government's plans for tax rises and public spending
cuts in the years ahead. "We will maintain a tough deficit reduction programme: there's no
question about it. It's necessary for the health of the economy, for the confidence of the
markets. We will make it absolutely clear that what we have committed to, we will follow
through."
However, Darling will also stress that – unlike the Conservatives, who would
start cutbacks immediately – Labour will "lock in recovery" by maintaining its
financial support for the fragile economy for another year.
The UK emerged from recession in the final quarter of 2009, growing by 0.3%, but Bank of England
policymakers have left low interest rates in place, making clear they remain nervous about the
sustainability of the upturn.
Separately, Mandelson is also likely to be given the task of overseeing a new state-backed
investment bank, which will help to support businesses struggling to secure funding from banks.
Heather Stewartguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use
of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

|
Guardian Unlimited -
17 hours and 4 minutes ago
Nationwide protests sparked by falling living standards and demanding the prime minister's
resignation have taken Kremlin by surprise
Thousands of people across Russia took to the streets yesterday demanding the resignation of
Vladimir Putin, in the largest show of discontent since he came to power more than a decade ago.
Opposition movements called the nationwide "Day of Wrath" to express growing discontent at
falling living standards following years of oil-fuelled growth. The protests followed weeks of
sustained demonstrations across Russia that have riled a leadership that does not forgive
displays of unrest.
Cries of "Freedom" and "Putin resign" filled the main square in Kaliningrad, where up to 5,000
people gathered in pouring rain. The Baltic territory, which is nestled between Poland and
Lithuania and separated from the Russian mainland, has been the site of some of the largest
protests to date.
"We want the government to start treating us like people, not like slaves," said Kirill, a
22-year-old student. Protesters called for free elections and complained about widespread
corruption, high unemployment and rising prices.
Russia's first major anti-Putin demonstration was held in Kaliningrad on 30 January, drawing
12,000 people and shocking local leaders and the Kremlin. "It really surprised us," said
Konstantin Polyakov, deputy head of the regional parliament, or Duma, and member of the ruling
United Russia party. "We didn't think so many people would turn out, to be honest." The Kremlin
was obviously shaken, dispatching a high-level delegation to the Baltic exclave and firing its
Kaliningrad adviser, Oleg Matveichev.
Saturday's protest had been banned, and opposition leaders withdrew calls for an organised
demonstration, fearing violence. Yet several thousand showed up anyway, organising through the
internet and word of mouth.
"The general public in the regions is beginning to recognise that it is Putin who is actually to
blame for various troubles they have – increased cost of living, communal
tariffs, taxes and no growth in real wages," said Vladimir Milov, a co-leader of Solidarity, an
umbrella opposition movement.
Regional and local elections held on 14 March appear to support that theory. United Russia, the
party created with the sole purpose of supporting Putin's rule – he is
currently prime minister – garnered unprecedentedly low results, losing its
majority in four of eight regions and giving up the mayorship of Irkutsk, Siberia's largest city,
to a Communist candidate who took 62% of the vote.
In Kaliningrad, protesters wore badges criticising United Russia and held aloft mandarins, the
fruit that has come to symbolise the region's unpopular governor, Georgy Boos, a Muscovite
appointed by Putin.
Few, even those in opposition, believe the Putin government will fall. "It will take time," Milov
said. "But just two years ago it would have been impossible to imagine mass demonstrations making
political demands like the resignation of Putin's government."
A poll this month by Russia's Public Opinion Foundation found that 29% of Russians were ready to
take part in protests, up from 21% in February.
More than 1,000 people turned out on Saturday in the port of Vladivostok, where discontent has
steadily grown since the government imposed a tax on imported cars. About 500 people rallied in
Irkutsk and St Petersburg. Riot police broke up an unsanctioned rally in Moscow violently and
arrested 50 activists. Authorities also shut down a website set up for the "Day of Wrath",
www.20marta.ru, and in the northern city of Arkhangelsk an opposition leader was arrested and
charged with theft.
In Kaliningrad, on the border with the European Union and far from the seat of power, the police
presence was minimal, although agents in plain clothes roamed through the crowd.
"Our population is different from Russia," said Polyakov, sitting in his office adorned with
photos of Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev, in what is, technically, Russia. "Our people,
especially the youth, travel more to Europe than to Russia. There's no reason to go there."
In an implicit criticism of Moscow politics, he added: "We're more European –
more relaxed, less eastern. And we're more democratic." Despite the protesters' rhetoric,
Polyakov argued that Putin's popularity in the region remains high. His wife, Lyudmila, was born
here and visits regularly.
But local authorities, acting in concert with Moscow, reacted with unusual harshness to
Kaliningrad's wave of protests. They banned a rally in the city centre, saying protesters could
gather in a stadium on the outskirts instead.
In an ironic twist, the government has been forced to give in to opponents of liberal market
reforms. Following the Kaliningrad protest, it has promised to slow the post-Soviet
desubsidisation of utilities like heat and water. That will only widen a budget deficit expected
to exceed 6% of GDP this year.
"The leadership is scared," said Solomon Ginzburg, an independent deputy in the regional Duma. "I
have been saying the Kaliningrad region is an indicator – in nine months, it
will be all over Russia."
guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media
Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

|
GigaOM -
1 days ago
In the world of
technology, drama is a valuable commodity. Disruptive change may happen in the minutiae of
software code or the gradual execution of a business plan, but we see its effects in the dramatic
narratives of companies rising and falling, or getting locked in combat with each other. Which is
why the rivalry between Google and Apple is
such a compelling story.
It’s so tempting to get drawn into the ego battles
between Steve Jobs and the Google triumvirate while placing bets on who
will win that it’s easy to forget a deeper truth about this rivalry: Google and Apple
need each other.
They both have a deep desire to stake out claims on the mobile web, but the mobile web is in a
nascent stage. In order to develop, it needs to have both rigid structure and a sometimes
reckless creativity. Structure is necessary to provide a strong foundation and a set of standards
everyone can understand. And creativity is essential to bringing the innovative potential of the
mobile web into full bloom.
This dichotomy was present when the Internet began to develop in the early 90s. Many people who
came online then did so through America Online’s walled gardens, a safe little enclave
where consumers and content providers alike could create the rules of a new medium. Then the web
itself took off and sites like Yahoo and GeoCities offered a much more creative environment to
explore what else could be done.
Now it’s happening again, only with Apple and Google. Apple’s stern and unforgiving
approach to the iPhone offers the structure this new medium needs to succeed. Cupertino’s
control-freak tendencies stretch from enforcing adherence to ever-changing app guidelines to banishing plastic screen
protectors from its retail stores.
Google’s approach is nearly the opposite, much more open and free-wheeling. Its Android OS,
based on the Linux kernel, has so many versions available the company is struggling
to consolidate them. The Android Market is such an unregulated affair that it’s
hard for anyone to count
the number of apps on sale.
Google’s culture has built into it a tolerance for the failures that come with creative
experiments. Its 70-20-10 rule
seems rooted on that spirit of tolerance — how many companies require employees to spend
time on something that may never fly? — and Google has floated so many failed ideas
it’s hard to keep track of them all. Apple, by contrast, starts with an instinctive idea of
how consumers will experience its products and fits everything, even the ecosystem of apps that
extends beyond its corporate walls, into making it work.
It’s in the tension between these two companies and their respective cultures that the
mobile web is being forged. But as America Online found out, the walls eventually come down as
consumers grow more comfortable with the new medium and desert the walled garden. That would
suggest the balance will tip in favor of Google.
But I would be surprised if Apple isn’t anticipating this evolution. Right now, iPhone
owners are experiencing the mobile web through the 150,000 or so apps it offers through the App
Store. But Apple has also backed HTML5, which allows a smartphone browser to have rich app-like
features without requiring any new software to be downloaded. Just as people stopped downloading
AOL’s software and switched to browsers, we may well abandon most of
the apps on our phones today.
Both companies will continue to play a major role on the mobile web, but I doubt either will ever
gain the upper hand. This dramatic tension between Apple and Google may be around for a long
time. So executives at both might as well get used to it.
Image courtesy of Wikimedia
Commons.
Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):
With The
iPad, Apple Takes Google To the Mat


|
Releaselog | RLSLOG.net -
1 days and 2 hours ago
This article has been published at RLSLOG.net - visit our
site for full content.
DJ group has released this 2CD sized compilation “Fashion House Vol. 3 New York
Edition″. Cue files are provided as well. Read more for tracklist &
download link.
Tracklist:
CD1
1. Hanna Hais – I Love America (DJ Meme Main Club Mix)
2. Sharam feat. Kid Cudi – She Came Along (REUP Club Mix)
3. D.O.N.S. vs Jocelyn Brown – Somebody Else’s Guy 2009 (Baggi Begovic Remix)
4. Barbara Tucker – I Get Lifted (David Tort Remix)
5. Andy Caldwell & Mr. V – It’s Guud
6. Stuffa – A Million Secrets (Club Mix Dub Edit)
7. DJ Chus pres. The Groove Foundation – That Feeling (DJ Chus 2010 Revisited
Mix)
8. Diva & Jones – Thriller (David Jones Remix)
9. Tv Rock feat. Rudy – In The Air (Axwell Remix)
10.Kaskade & Deadmau5 – Move For Me
11.Moony – I Don’t Know Why (Dj Chus & Jerome Isma-Ae Superdub Mix)
12.Ron Carroll & Superfunk – Lucky Star 2009 (D.O.N.S. Remix)
13.Hoxton Whores feat. Krysten Cummings – Sunrise (Hoxton Whores Remix)
14.Prok & Fitch feat. Cevin Fisher – Mundo (David Penn Remix)
CD2
1. Larse & Fish – Cesenatico
2. Nacho Marco feat. Aqeel – Move You
3. Matt Flores & Tyree Cooper pres. Goosebumpz feat. Wayne Darrin – Shining Lights (Dub
Version)
4. Dj Leroi feat. Roland Clark – I Get Deep
5. Loco Dice – Pimp Jackson Is Talkin’ Now!!! (Luci Gets Loco Remix by Luciano)
6. Marc Romboy vs. Smokin Jo – What Is This?
7. Mahan – Memory Box
8. Catz N Dogz feat. Pol_On – Me
9. Home & Garden – Domesticated (Pezzner Remix)
10. The Timewriter – Revealing The Sound (Milton Jackson‘s Dark Matter
Remix)
11. Filippo Moscatello – Houz (Quarion?s Start And Stop Remix)
12. Sebastian Davidson & Estroe – Swabian Pancakes (Estroe’s Raisins Remix)
13. Blaze – Lovelee Dae (20:20 Vision Remix)
14. Tiger Stripes – New York New York
15. DJ Meme – Chanson Du Soleil 2009 (Andy Sant Remix)
Release Name:
VA_-_Fashion_House_Vol_3_New_York_Edition_(CLS0001992)-Digipak-2010-DJ
Genre: House
Label: Clubstar Germany
Quality: VBRkbps / 44,1kHz / Joint-Stereo
Size: 225.62 MB
Rip Date: 19-03-2010
Store Date: N/A
Links: NFO
Download: HOTFiLE,
Torrent Search
more at RLSLOG.net

|
eve-online.com | devBlog -
1 days and 7 hours ago
No, we’re not hiring the Hanson brothers to deal with RMT threats. As
there is no one better at beating up targets than EVE pilots, we thought we'd enlist your talents
in slapping EVE Gate into shape.
As CCP t0rfifrans
outlined on his blog introducing Tyrannis, we will
be delivering the very first iteration of EVE Gate in the upcoming expansion. It is my task to
oversee the technical direction of the Web side of things with EVE Gate, and I wanted to take the
opportunity to announce a public “Alpha” test we are planning for EVE Gate and the
steps we are taking to make sure we have a very sound foundation to build upon. What we don't
want to do is just turn all the traffic completely on the first day and pray it doesn’t
break under load. Instead we plan a measured approach that will make sure we have a solid
architecture and enough hardware in place.
The process we are following is as follows:
- Develop and prototype an N-Tier web application with scalability in mind from day one (See my
first
blog on "Cosmos" ) - DONE
- Release and stress an internal alpha to identify and address weakspots - DONE
- Build and utilize load testing and application profiling tools to find and fix bottlenecks -
DONE
- Release a public "alpha" stress test to apply real world load to the application to check our
hardware needs against estimates and monitor it under real conditions
- Roll out a "beta" launch
- Ramp up to full access in increments
On March 23, we will announce access to a public stress test version of EVE Gate which will be
connected to Singularity for all of you to log into and look around. What is critical for
everyone to understand is that the intent of this test is to stress the underlying hardware and
key architectural components. This will allow us to identify and address bottlenecks and
weaknesses well before launch and to make sure we have adequate hardware in place for all the
pounding you folks will put on it once you are all browsing EVE Gate routinely from work (when
your boss isn't looking). We will be watching your comments closely for feedback as well as
closely logging and monitoring the behavior of the software and hardware under load. You can help
us out greatly just by logging in, browsing around and trying the application out.
It needs to be emphasized that while it gives you an early glimpse at EVE Gate, the primary
purpose of this test is a technical one. The features included in the test are still heavily in
development and we wanted to get an early version up and available for you to beat up the
hardware well in advance. There will be elements that are not yet done or which are presented as
a simplified version for testing purposes. To make this clear the application will be labeled the
"EVE Gate Alpha Stress Test"; it will be pretty hard to miss. I am not going to go into depth
here on the features that will be included; we have an additional Dev Blog that will be presented
soon which will focus on the web based functionality which will come with EVE Gate at launch
(calendar, mail, contacts, profiles, broadcast logs, etc).
When EVE Gate does go live with the expansion it will be released as a Beta launch. It will be
fully functional and connected to Tranquility for access to production data however it will be a
Web site that we will continually modify and enhance. As it is a Web site, we have the benefit of
not being tied directly to client releases and can continue to upgrade the site as quickly as we
can get improvements completed. Once access is fully ramped up and we are comfortable that it is
fully stable and production ready we’ll rip off the Beta stamp.
When I mention an incremental ramp up to full access, what I am describing is a measured increase
in the number of players that can access the site when the Beta version goes live. We will do
this with a basic signup page on launch day and we will give X number of additional players
access each day depending on how things are going. Rather than turning the faucet fully on we are
going to open it up a bit, check that all is well, open it up a bit more, etc… until we
have it fully open and everyone has access.
Obviously we will open it up as quickly as is feasible as we have a lot more features we want to
get to work on (>cough< forums >cough<) but our emphasis is on doing this the right
way. Hopefully the ramp up will be quick, and this "Alpha" test I have announced here will play a
big part in getting us as much information as possible so we can be ready. The better the info we
get out of the "Alpha," the more accurate our hardware setup will be, the quicker we can ramp up
full access when we go live.
The team is really looking forward to rolling out EVE Gate for you to use, and we will have
greater detail on the features it will include in a future Dev Blog.

|
Boing Boing -
1 days and 19 hours ago
Every time I have put this on at least three new conversions occur, where the listeners go on to
permanently install this woman's music on their stereo. My neighbor even stalked me once just so
she could listen to it more, until I just gave her my extra copy. Emahoy Tsegué-Maryam
Guèbrou is a nun currently living in Jerusalem. She grew up as the daughter of a prominent
Ethiopian intellectual, but spent much of her young life in exile, first for schooling, and then
again during Mussolini's occupation of Ethiopia's capitol city, Addis Ababa, in 1936. Her musical
career was often tragically thwarted by class and gender politics, and when the Emperor himself
actually went so far as to personally veto an opportunity for Guèbrou to study abroad in
England, she sank into a deep depression before fleeing to a monastery in 1948. Today, she spends
up to seven hours a day playing the piano in seclusion and even gave a concert to some lucky ducks
in Washington D.C. a few years ago. A compilation of her compositions was re-issued on the
consistently great Ethiopiques label. You can read more about her life at the Emahoy Music
Foundation....


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"Bloody-Disgusting" -
1 days and 19 hours ago
Arriving on DVD June 1 from Phase 4 Films is Uwe Boll's first watchable movie, Rampage ( review), which stars Brendan Fletcher, Shaun
Sipos, Lynda Boyd, Robert Clarke, Matt Frewer, Katey Grace, Brent Hodge, Katharine Isabelle,
Michael Paré, Malcolm Stewart and Pale Christian Thomas. " The boredom of small town life
is eating Bill Williamson alive. Feeling constrained and claustrophobic in the meaningless drudgery
of everyday life and helpless against overwhelming global dissolution, Bill (Brendan Fletcher)
begins a descent into madness. His shockingly violent plan will shake the very foundations of
society by painting the streets red with blood." Check out the art and trailer below.
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paidContent.org -
1 days and 20 hours ago
Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO) Chief Technologist Sam Pullara is leaving the company,
capping off a week of high-profile departures. At Yahoo, Pullara was “responsible for
ensuring that products we develop are competitive and provide compelling customer experiences by
driving a dialogue between internal product groups, research and business leaders,”
according to his LinkedIn
profile; he also represented Yahoo on the board of the OpenSocial Foundation and had helped
launch its ‘open application platform’—which lets third-party developers build
apps for Yahoo properties. Pullara is taking a job as
an entrepreneur in residence at Benchmark Capital.
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paidContent.org -
1 days and 20 hours ago
Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO) Chief Technologist Sam Pullara is leaving the company,
capping off a week of high-profile departures. At Yahoo, Pullara was “responsible for
ensuring that products we develop are competitive and provide compelling customer experiences by
driving a dialogue between internal product groups, research and business leaders,”
according to his LinkedIn
profile; he also represented Yahoo on the board of the OpenSocial Foundation and had helped
launch its ‘open application platform’—which lets third-party developers build
apps for Yahoo properties. Pullara is taking a job as
an entrepreneur in residence at Benchmark Capital.
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TechCrunch -
1 days and 21 hours ago
One of Yahoo’s key chief technologists, Sam Pullara, is leaving the company to become
an Entrepreneur in Residence (EIR) at Benchmark Capital. Pullara was the technologist how headed
up the development of the the Yahoo! Open Application Platform,
the Yahoo! Query Language and Yahoo! Pipes. His departure follows
that of veteran Yahoo senior executive
Ash Patel earlier this week.
Back in 2008, Yahoo was making a big push to open
itself up to developers, and Pullara was one of the champions of that strategy. He was also
Yahoo’s representative on the OpenSocial Foundation, which sought to create a counterweight
to Facebook.
Pullara has been an EIR before. In 2004, he held that position at Accel Venture Partners and
created a startup called Gauntlet Systems, which he sold to Borland in 2006. At Benchmark, he
will be looking for new startup opportunities. He will also be working again with Benchmark
partner Peter Fenton, who was at Accel when Pullara was there. Pullara’s last day at Yahoo
will be on April 1. Yahoo has no plans to hire a replacement.
CrunchBase InformationSam PullaraYahoo!Information provided by CrunchBase


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InfoWorld: Top News -
1 days and 22 hours ago
Just a few weeks after Microsoft
pulled the plug on its Windows EBS (Essential Business Server), IBM has beefed up its own
pre-integrated package for small and medium-sized businesses, called Lotus Foundations.
New versions of Lotus Foundations will now include a copy of DB2 Express-C database server, said
Caleb Barlow, who is IBM's director for solutions development for small and medium-sized
businesses. The addition will not raise the price of Lotus Foundations, he promised.
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Indymedia Paris Île-de-France -
1 days and 23 hours ago
Des failles juridiques permettent à des entreprises européennes de participer au
commerce d'« instruments de torture » mis en ligne jeudi 18 mars 2010 par jesusparis Un
nouveau rapport d'Amnesty International et de l'Omega Research Foundation montre que des
entreprises européennes prennent part au commerce mondial de matériel le plus souvent
utilisé pour commettre des tortures ou d'autres formes de mauvais traitements. Menottes
murales, poucettes métalliques, ainsi que « manches » et « menottes
» (...) - Infos
globales / Répression/contrôle social, Europe
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