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Support Forums: Message List - Announcements (EAP) -
11 hours and 26 minutes ago
!-- [DocumentBodyStart:cf3f8503-d820-4900-9b86-dc202d4c3d7b] --div
class='jive-rendered-content'pHello linux_china,/pp style="min-height: 8pt; height: 8pt; padding:
0px;"nbsp;/pblockquote class="jive-quote" level="1"pGAE is popular in Python community,nbsp; any
plan to support GAE to make/ppdevelopment more easy?/p/blockquotep style="min-height: 8pt; height:
8pt; padding: 0px;"nbsp;/ppWe do want to support GAE eventually, but there's lots of higher
priority /pptasks (like debugger and test runner) that we'll need to implement before /ppwe get
around to supporting GAE./pp style="min-height: 8pt; height: 8pt; padding: 0px;"nbsp;/pp--
/ppDmitry Jemerov/ppDevelopment Lead/ppJetBrains, Inc./ppa class="jive-link-external-small"
href="http://www.jetbrains.com/"http://www.jetbrains.com//a/pp"Develop with Pleasure!"/pp
style="min-height: 8pt; height: 8pt; padding: 0px;"nbsp;/pp style="min-height: 8pt; height: 8pt;
padding: 0px;"nbsp;/pp style="min-height: 8pt; height: 8pt; padding: 0px;"nbsp;/p/div!--
[DocumentBodyEnd:cf3f8503-d820-4900-9b86-dc202d4c3d7b] --

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freshmeat.net announcements (Unix) -
11 hours and 34 minutes ago
img src="http://c.fsdn.com/fm/screenshots/56267_thumb.png" align="right" alt="Screenshot"
hspace="10" vspace="10" kFlickr is a standalone Flickr uploader for KDE. It allows for easy upload
with drag and drop. Common attributes can be edited before sending the photo. Multiple users are
supported. hr / strongLicense:/strong GNU General Public License (GPL) hr / strongChanges:/strongbr
/ kFlickr was ported to KDE4. Almost a complete rewrite was done to take advantage of what Qt4 and
KDE4 have to offer. This version maintains almost all the functionality of the last KDE3 release,
with the addition of better user management and spell checking for photo descriptions. It does not
yet implement batch editing or kpart functionality. This release is intended to allow the
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freshmeat.net announcements (Global) -
11 hours and 34 minutes ago
img src="http://c.fsdn.com/fm/screenshots/56267_thumb.png" align="right" alt="Screenshot"
hspace="10" vspace="10" kFlickr is a standalone Flickr uploader for KDE. It allows for easy upload
with drag and drop. Common attributes can be edited before sending the photo. Multiple users are
supported. hr / strongLicense:/strong GNU General Public License (GPL) hr / strongChanges:/strongbr
/ kFlickr was ported to KDE4. Almost a complete rewrite was done to take advantage of what Qt4 and
KDE4 have to offer. This version maintains almost all the functionality of the last KDE3 release,
with the addition of better user management and spell checking for photo descriptions. It does not
yet implement batch editing or kpart functionality. This release is intended to allow the
translators to get their work done as well as to flush out bugs. pa
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AvaxHome - All the news -
11 hours and 42 minutes ago
div class="center"div class="image"a
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src="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/c7/fa/0009fac7_medium.png" id="external_img_654023"//a/div/divbr/
div class="center"bDell SAN Management Lab Training v3.0 | 260 MB/b/divbr/ This 3-day
instructor-led course is designed to provide IT professionals with the expertise necessary to
implement Dell storage into an existing IT infrastructure. This course covers SAN fundamentals and
initial setup, configuration, and management of Dell/EMC storage arrays, focusing on the Dell/EMC
CX series.
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freshmeat.net announcements (Unix) -
11 hours and 48 minutes ago
pyodbc is a Python module that allows you to access ODBC databases. It implements the Python
Database API Specification v2.0. hr / strongLicense:/strong MIT/X Consortium License hr /
strongChanges:/strongbr / Known bugs were fixed. Non-UCS2 Unicode (Mac OS X primarily) was fixed.
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freshmeat.net announcements (Global) -
11 hours and 48 minutes ago
pyodbc is a Python module that allows you to access ODBC databases. It implements the Python
Database API Specification v2.0. hr / strongLicense:/strong MIT/X Consortium License hr /
strongChanges:/strongbr / Known bugs were fixed. Non-UCS2 Unicode (Mac OS X primarily) was fixed.
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AvaxHome - All the news -
19 hours and 46 minutes ago
div class="center"div class="image"a
href="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/big_show.php?/avaxhome/4c/fa/0009fa4c.jpeg" target="_blank"img
src="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/4c/fa/0009fa4c_medium.jpeg" id="external_img_653900"//a/divbr/
bCooperative Learning Activities in the Library Media Center/bbr/ 166 pages | Libraries Unlimited;
2 edition (March 15, 1999) | ISBN: 1563085429 | rar'd html | 410 kb/divbr/ Farmer's popular book
helps you understand, develop, and implement cooperative learning activities with middle and high
school students. Recent findings about cooperative learning are incorporated into the strategies,
as well as such trends and developments as team planning, outcome-based assessment, information
literacy, and the new national guidelines for library media programs.
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Media Matters for America -
19 hours and 50 minutes ago
In their coverage of World AIDS Day, several media outlets, including CNN, The Washington
Post, The Indianapolis Star, and The Wall Street Journal, praised or
uncritically reported praise of the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). However,
none of those outlets noted criticism of PEPFAR's requirement that starting in fiscal year 2006, 33 percent of funds set aside for
prevention under the act that created PEPFAR be spent on abstinence-until-marriage education -- a
provision the Bush administration
reportedly lobbied Congress to add. According to many of the government officials responsible
for managing PEPFAR abroad, as well as the Institute of Medicine (IOM), this requirement hindered PEPFAR's effectiveness in
preventing the spread of AIDS. Congress removed the requirement when it reauthorized PEPFAR in 2008.
The following media outlets praised or uncritically reported praise of Bush's AIDS relief
efforts:
- On the December 1 edition of CNN Newsroom, CNN correspondent Kathleen Koch stated
that Bush's AIDS policy is "something that the president is quite proud of" and that "[t]he
strides that the U.S. has helped make globally in the fight against HIV/AIDS" are "a really
important part of his legacy."
- A December 2 Washington Post article reported that "Bush called his program to combat HIV/AIDS 'one of
the most important initiatives of my administration' and praised it as a resounding success."
The Post added: "The administration's HIV/AIDS initiative is a particular point of
pride for Bush, who has received praise at home and abroad for his leadership on the issue."
- In a December 2 article, The Indianapolis Star uncritically reported that U.S.
global AIDS coordinator Randall Tobias said that under Bush, the "U.S. has led the global fight
against AIDS with the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief."
- A December 1 post on The Wall Street Journal's Washington Wire blog reported
that "[t]he White House is expected to roll out a series of retrospectives on President George
W. Bush's achievements throughout the month of December" in order to "burnish" his "record."
The post went on to report that "in remarks at the White House, Bush started with a recap of
his substantial accomplishments on AIDS relief" and also uncritically reported Rev. Rick
Warren's assertion that "[n]o man in history, no world leader has ever done more for global
health than President George W. Bush, and I think we need to recognize that and I thank you for
that."
None of these reports mentioned criticism of PEPFAR's abstinence-until-marriage requirement.
According to a 2007 IOM report, "the abstinence-until-marriage budget allocation ... hampers ... PEPFAR's ability to meet the [prevention] target":
PEPFAR's approach to achieving the prevention target involves planning and implementing
prevention programs and activities that are evidence-based, harmonized with country plans and
priorities, and appropriate to each country's unique epidemiologic and cultural context. However,
the abstinence-until-marriage budget allocation in the Leadership Act hampers these efforts and
thus PEPFAR's ability to meet the target. Despite the efforts of the Office of the U.S. Global
AIDS Coordinator to administer the allocation judiciously, it has greatly limited the ability of
Country Teams to develop and implement comprehensive prevention programs that are well integrated
with each other and with counseling and testing, care, and treatment programs and that target
those populations at greatest risk.
IOM further found
that "the Committee has been unable to find evidence for the position that abstinence can stand
alone or that 33 percent is the appropriate allocation for such activities even within integrated
programs."
Moreover, in a 2006 report, the Government Accountability Office
(GAO) noted the assessments of the "focus country teams" made up of the "U.S. agency officials responsible for
managing PEPFAR in the focus countries." According to the GAO, "about half of the focus country teams told us that meeting the
[abstinence] spending requirement can undermine the integration of prevention programs":
Satisfying the Leadership Act's abstinence-until-marriage spending requirement presents
challenges to most country teams. Several focus country teams indicated that they value the ABC
model [Abstain, Be faithful, or use Condoms] as an HIV/AIDS prevention tool and noted the
importance of AB [abstinence/faithfulness] messages, particularly for certain populations.
However, about half of the focus country teams told us that meeting the spending requirement can
undermine the integration of prevention programs by forcing them to isolate funding for AB
activities. Further, 17 of the 20 PEPFAR teams required to meet the spending requirement unless
they obtain exemptions from it reported that the spending requirement presents challenges to
their ability to respond to local epidemiology and cultural and social norms.
Additionally, in a November 2006 report
titled "Bush's AIDS Initiative: Too Little Choice, Too Much Ideology," the Center for Public
Integrity stated that Bush's AIDS relief policy "has enabled his administration to funnel tens of
millions of dollars to Christian faith-based organizations that support his ideology and form his
political base." The report quoted Dr. Paul Zeitz, executive director of the Global AIDS
Alliance, asserting that PEPFAR "is failing to stop the global spread of AIDS and failing to help
lead the world to stop this deadly disease. ... We have a flawed framework with flawed policies
that have kept us from being where we should be by now."
According to a May 2, 2003, New York Times
article, the abstinence-spending provision, added to the
United States Leadership Against Global HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Act of 2003 as an
amendment in the House, "was endorsed by the White House. Lawmakers said Vice President Dick
Cheney called House members today to lobby for it."
A February 21 New York Times article reported that amid Democratic efforts to remove the abstinence
spending requirement from PEPFAR, Bush "defended the requirement":
[F]or the first time on the trip, Mr. Bush faced tough questioning from an African reporter about
his administration's requirement that one-third of the AIDS initiative's prevention funds be
spent on programs promoting abstinence.
The independent Institute of Medicine has said the abstinence requirement is hindering prevention
efforts. Democrats in Congress, debating reauthorization of the initiative, want it dropped.
Mr. Bush's questioner on Wednesday told the president that the requirement was not realistic,
because "multiple sexual relationships or partner relationships is the reality" in African
societies, "though it's not spoken of in public."
As he has in the past, Mr. Bush defended the requirement, but he then went a step further.
"I monitor the results," he said. "And if it looks like it's not working, then we'll change. But
thus far I can report, at least to our citizens, that the program has been unbelievably
effective. And we're going to stay at it."
Additionally, a February 18 article on the San Francisco Chronicle's website reported:
"It is a balanced program. It is an ABC program: abstinence, be faithful and condoms. It's a
program that's been proven effective," he [Bush] said, speaking at a news conference with
Tanzanian President Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete, an enthusiastic supporter of the effort.
"I understand there's voices on both ends of the political spectrum trying to alter the program,"
Bush said. "I would ask Congress to listen to leaders on the continent of Africa ... analyze what
works, stop the squabbling and get the program reauthorized."
Congress subsequently passed the reauthorization bill, and Bush signed it on July 30. According to a 2008 GAO report, the bill "removes the abstinence-until-marriage spending requirement and
calls for the Global AIDS Coordinator to ensure that abstinence and fidelity programs are
evidence-based and country-based."
From the 11 a.m. ET hour of
the December 1 edition of CNN Newsroom:
HARRIS: Today, World AIDS
Day. Take a look at this. That means four people will be infected while I'm on your television
screen. Today is the 20th World AIDS Day. Globally, 33 million people are believed to be infected
with HIV. CNN's Kathleen Koch is at the White House, where a gigantic red ribbon decorates the
North Portico. Kathleen, good morning to you. Quite a sight.
KOCH: Yes indeed, Tony. This very same ribbon actually graced the North Portico, if you'll
remember, last year on World AIDS Day. And it's important to point out that this is a really --
something that the president is quite proud of, the strides that the U.S. has helped make
globally in the fight against HIV/AIDS, a really important part of his legacy. And he and the
first lady came out on the North Lawn about an hour and a half ago underneath this great, huge
ribbon that's gracing the North Portico.
And the president talked about how his President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, known in the
shorthand version as PEPFAR most of the time -- how it finally has reached the goal that it set
back in 2003, when it started, of increasing the number of people who are receiving
anti-retroviral treatment for HIV/AIDS from 50,000 -- that was the number in 2003 -- to 2 million within just five
years.
BUSH [video clip]: When
PEPFAR began, only 50,000 people living with HIV in all of sub-Sahara Africa were receiving
anti-retroviral treatment. Around the world, we've also supported care for more than 10 million
people affected by HIV, including more than 4 million orphans and vulnerable children. More than
237,000 babies had been born HIV-free thanks to the support of the American people for programs
to prevent mothers from passing the virus on to their children.
KOCH: Now, for the last hour or so, the president has been participating across town in a civil
forum in global health here in Washington. And the president receiving a touching video tribute,
not only from U.N. -- the head of the U.N., Ban Ki-moon, but from Bono, from Bill Gates. The
president also reflected on how he got involved in fighting this global pandemic of AIDS, and he
talked about, if he'd done nothing about it, how he would have, quote, "disgraced the office of
the presidency." And he also discussed how he was surrounded by people who felt this was just
such an important cause for the United States to take up, people including Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice.
Now, looking at the program, the president did just in July sign legislation that will authorize
another $48 billion, Tony, to expand the program.
HARRIS: All right, Kathleen Koch. Wow, that's quite a figure right there.
KOCH: Quite a lot.
HARRIS: Yeah. At the White House for us, Kathleen, thank you.

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PRWeb: Art and Entertainment Web sites / Internet -
22 hours and 42 minutes ago
The first grant competition for an online virtual world project that serves the community and
contributes to student learning will be held, also online, at Second Life on December 4, 7 pm
central time, according to the Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Partnership Foundation and the
University of Texas. Four student teams from a UT course called "Working in a Virtual World" will
vie for the prestigious Carter Academic Service Entrepreneur grant, with a prize of $1,000 to
implement the winning project and certificates for students signed by President Jimmy Carter and
Mrs. Carter. The winning project will be the most innovative way for students to serve the
community online in the virtual world Second Life. (PRWeb Dec 4, 2008)
Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2008/12/prweb1695124.htm
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Guardian Unlimited -
1 days and 3 hours ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/790?ns=guardianpageName=Sport%3A+India+step+up+security+to+prevent+cash+crisisch=Sportc3=guardian.co.ukc4=England+cricket+team%2CIndian+Premier+League+%28cricket%29%2CCricket%2CMumbai+terror+attacks+%28News%29c5=Not+commercially+useful%2CCricketc6=David+Hoppsc7=2008_12_03c8=1128213c9=articlec10=GUc11=Sportc12=England+Cricket+Teamc13=c14=h2=GU%2FSport%2FEngland+Cricket+Team"
width="1" height="1" //divpIndia will embark on a major upgrading of security facilities at its
international stadiums in a desperate attempt to prevent the economic collapse of the international
game in the wake of the Mumbai terrorist attacks./ppEmergency levels of security, perhaps
unprecedented in cricket history, have been guaranteed for England's return to India for Tests in
Chennai and Mohali, but there is no guarantee that the Indian government will be so amenable to
special measures — such as the provision of special security forces
— in the future./ppIndian cricket has therefore concluded that permanent
security measures must be introduced for all major competitions to allay players' fears about their
safety, guard against mass withdrawals and to protect the country's status as cricket's thriving
economic powerhouse./ppIndia's greatest worry is that the country that provides roughly 70% of
cricket's revenue will become the country that nobody wants to tour — causing
it to follow Pakistan towards the prospect of a depressing future playing home matches in Abu Dhabi
or Dubai./ppFor India to have to take such a step would ultimately have a disastrous effect on the
finances of the game and England, and its top players, would not be immune./ppThe driving force
behind the security measures is, unsurprisingly, Lalit Modi, vice-president of the Board of Control
for Cricket in India and commissioner of the Indian Premier League. Modi knows that the IPL will
not receive such security support from the state, so he is now pressing for what amounts to a total
modernisation of India's stadiums, with security the overwhelming priority./ppModi said after the
Mumbai atrocities: "Security is something we need to think about seriously because becoming
sidelined like Pakistan due to security threats is something that is logical. We have to ensure
that the security measures we take are the best. We shouldn't allow such attacks to disrupt our
determination."/ppHis response has been swift. He has written to representatives of the eight
grounds that stage IPL Twenty20 cricket — to insist upon new security measures.
He has contacted Shashank Manohar, the board's president, pressing for all cricketing associations
to convene an emergency meeting at the earliest opportunity./ppIt is intended that all these
measures will be in place long before the start of the next IPL tournament in April. Kevin
Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff are among the most sought-after England players —
although Flintoff is widely reported as having ruled out a return to India for the Test series when
the England squad makes its expected departure at the end of the week./ppMeasures include the
installation of permanent CCTV cameras at every stadium and the provision of turnstiles
— rather than just manned gates — at entry and exit points
to allow a more controlled check on spectator entry. Security arrangements at the eight IPL grounds
will be managed by a central agency answerable to the IPL and funding will be provided by the
Indian board. Modi also wants disaster management teams to be appointed to devise definite plans in
the event of a terrorist strike at a cricket stadium./ppIndia has always prized its rotation
system, retaining its 21 grounds, including some in such outlying places as Guwahati and
Visakhapatnam, despite much criticism from touring sides, but those grounds that do not
enthusiastically implement the new measures may find that security concerns end their status as an
international venue./ppThe IPL's governing council had already begun to examine development needs
at its eight stadiums, recognising that many of India's stadiums remain disgracefully underfunded
for such a wealthy cricketing country. Security, by necessity, has now shot to the top of the
agenda./pdiv style="float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;"ullia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/englandcricketteam"England Cricket Team/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/indianpremierleague"Indian Premier League/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/cricket"Cricket/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/mumbai-terror-attacks"Mumbai terror attacks/a/li/ul/diva
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk"guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2008 | Use of
this content is subject to our a
href="http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html"Terms Conditions/a | a
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/webfeeds/1,,1309488,00.html"More Feeds/a pa
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ismap="true"/img/a/p

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Read/WriteWeb -
1 days and 4 hours ago
pimg src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3141/3080311410_8d83fc14b8_o.jpg" width="150" height="118"
alt="scanning_barcode" /With the rise of app-laden smartphones like the iPhone and Google's Android
OS, now on T-Mobile's G1, many penny-pinching shoppers have downloaded barcode scanning
applications onto their mobile devices. These apps allow consumers to compare the prices of
merchandise on a store's shelf to competing stores in the area just by taking pictures with their
smartphone's camera. The prices are instantly retrieved and displayed on the mobile phone so
consumers can know embefore/em they buy if they're getting a good deal. /p p
align="right"emSponsor/embr /a href='http://d.openx.org/ck.php?n=12798amp;cb=12798'
target='_blank'img src='http://d.openx.org/avw.php?zoneid=861amp;cb=12798amp;n=12798' border='0'
alt='' align="right" //a/p pAlthough consumers may be catching on to this barcode-scanning trend,
some stores are still in the dark. For example, a
href="http://www.biggu.com/2008/12/01/first-shopsavvy-ban-target/"a Target store in Michigan
recently requested a shopper to stop scanning merchandise/a, saying it went against store policy.
The customer reported the event to the application's makers, a
href="http://www.biggu.com/about-big-in-japan"Big in Japan/a, whose app a
href="http://www.biggu.com/applications/"Shop Savvy/a is a popular download for Android handsets.
/p pBig in Japan called the Target store in question and spoke to the manager, who indicated that
she was not aware of the policy. We also contacted Target's corporate headquarters to confirm
Target's policy, or lack thereof, but we first had to explain the application to the company
representative. They had never heard of such a thing before! (As it turns out, Target has no policy
whatsoever on barcode scanning their merchandise.)/p pThe same customer also noted they had visited
Sam's Club, where they demonstrated the application to a store employee who seemed "confounded that
such technology even existed," wrote the user. /p h2Instant Price Match Is Retail's Future/h2 pimg
src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3033/3080299622_eae3d15aab_m.jpg" width="129" height="240"
alt="shopsavvy" align="right"Although this is just anecdotal evidence from one customer, it's
entirely believable that without concrete store policies in place, you're going to encounter rogue
employees here and there who have no idea what you're doing and will ask you to stop. /p pOn the
flip side, stores that do get hip to this trend may decide to implement store policies that ban
scanning, once they realize that customers could discover their high prices. a
href="http://adverlab.blogspot.com/2008/07/future-of-retail-instant-price-match.html"A post on
AdLab/a for example, a blog about advertising and marketing, suggests retailers do just that. They
also recommend retailers should consider investing in a a a
href="http://www.methodshop.com/gadgets/reviews/celljammers/index.shtml"cell phone jammer/a. They
even provide a a
href="http://bp1.blogger.com/_XJseql2u5l0/SHhTYVu2qnI/AAAAAAAACYA/e3-W9Rs04o0/s1600-h/no_iphones.png"quot;No
iPhones on Premisesquot; sign/a for printout./p pThat doesn't seem to be a very proactive way of
dealing with the technology. In fact, it reminds us of how both the music and movie industry
attempted to quash the pirating of songs and films: they just tried to make it stop. Instead of
going a route destined for failure and trying to shut down barcode scanning altogether, retailers
could choose to embrace the trend. They could offer easy-to-find barcodes on their promotional
items with signage encouraging customers to compare the price instantly with other stores in the
area. They could make barcode scanning the new advertising circular. /p pHopefully, stories like
those of the Shop Savvy customer will remain isolated incidents and no other store employees will
bother customers looking to save money. If you've used barcode scanning applications and have
experiences to share, please let us know in the comments./p stronga
href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/stores_clueless_about_mobile_barcode_scanning_applications.php#comments-open"Discuss/a/strong
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src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/readwriteweb?d=1034" border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/readwriteweb/~4/SjBdxiZX6mM" height="1" width="1"/

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freshmeat.net announcements (Unix) -
1 days and 5 hours ago
img src="http://c.fsdn.com/fm/screenshots/55916_thumb.jpg" align="right" alt="Screenshot"
hspace="10" vspace="10" The WiKID Strong Authentication System is a highly scalable, secure
two-factor authentication system. It is simple to implement and maintain, allows users to be
validated automatically, requires no hardware tokens, has a simple API for application support (via
Ruby, PHP, Java, COM, Python, etc.), supports multiple domains, and supports replication for fault
tolerance and scalability. It also supports mutual /host and transaction authentication, wireless
tokens only domains, locked tokens (to your PC), anti-keystroke logger keypad PIN entry, etc. hr /
strongLicense:/strong GNU General Public License (GPL) hr / strongChanges:/strongbr / The database
is now ensured to be stopped before running setup. The sudoers file was changed to allow sudo to
work during boot. Improvements were made to scripts. A database connection leak in the passcode
request block was fixed. Connections are now ensured to be properly wrapped for device
initialization. Some general code cleanup was done. pa
href="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/bvwoAwm-mnojQEZnVPb-OFJlRiM/a"img
src="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/bvwoAwm-mnojQEZnVPb-OFJlRiM/i" border="0"
ismap="true"/img/a/pimg
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/freshmeat/feeds/fm-releases-unix/~4/fn9Nmjt-nsA" height="1"
width="1"/

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freshmeat.net announcements (Global) -
1 days and 5 hours ago
img src="http://c.fsdn.com/fm/screenshots/55916_thumb.jpg" align="right" alt="Screenshot"
hspace="10" vspace="10" The WiKID Strong Authentication System is a highly scalable, secure
two-factor authentication system. It is simple to implement and maintain, allows users to be
validated automatically, requires no hardware tokens, has a simple API for application support (via
Ruby, PHP, Java, COM, Python, etc.), supports multiple domains, and supports replication for fault
tolerance and scalability. It also supports mutual /host and transaction authentication, wireless
tokens only domains, locked tokens (to your PC), anti-keystroke logger keypad PIN entry, etc. hr /
strongLicense:/strong GNU General Public License (GPL) hr / strongChanges:/strongbr / The database
is now ensured to be stopped before running setup. The sudoers file was changed to allow sudo to
work during boot. Improvements were made to scripts. A database connection leak in the passcode
request block was fixed. Connections are now ensured to be properly wrapped for device
initialization. Some general code cleanup was done. pa
href="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/cU5eUKTlpCBw7r9SjLidarhYfjk/a"img
src="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/cU5eUKTlpCBw7r9SjLidarhYfjk/i" border="0"
ismap="true"/img/a/pimg
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/freshmeat/feeds/fm-releases-global/~4/fn9Nmjt-nsA" height="1"
width="1"/

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Coolfer -
1 days and 5 hours ago
p#149; Here's a contrast of two countries: Last week's U.S. new releases included two superstar
albums (Kanye West, Guns N' Roses) that did not live up to expectations. In the U.K., Take That
just set a record for first-day album sales. The album is dead. The album lives. (a
href="http://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyleMolt/idUSTRE4B146L20081202"Reuters/a)/p p#149; Amazon
MP3 is now available in the UK. Songs range in price from 59p to over 80p. Some albums have been
sale priced at £3. All four majors are on board. Not all indies have signed up yet. (a
href="http://musically.com/blog/2008/12/03/amazon-mp3-goes-live-in-the-uk-with-3-albums-from-take-that-coldplay-kings-of-leon/"Music
Ally/a)/p p#149; Here's a thorough overview of the efforts by UK stakeholders to implement some
sort of ISP-based alternative to P2P and the actions/penalties against repeat copyright infringers.
(a
href="http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20081201-uk-consumers-big-content-battle-over-three-strikes-rules.html"Ars
Technica/a)/p p#149; CBS Radio is taking over Yahoo Music's Launchcast internet radio operations.
(a
href="http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/content_display/industry/e3ia662814697fe50166f7b1b98468880de"Billboard.biz/a)/p
p#149; The city of Austin, Texas is taking steps to ensure it continues to be a music city: the
creation of a city music department, the development of more music venues, incentives to lure music
companies. (a href="http://www.telegram.com/article/20081203/NEWS/812030405/1102"AP/a)/p p#149;
Musician Marnie Stern has set up a three-tiered kissing booth to help defray her band's touring
costs: $1 for a peck, $3 on the lips and $100 for some tongue. No takers yet on the $100 option. (a
href="http://www.expressnightout.com/content/2008/11/kiss_shred_marnie_stern.php"Express Night
Out/a, via a href="http://voices.washingtonpost.com/postrock/"Post Rock/a)/phr/[music jobs] a
href="http://coolfer.jobamatic.com/a/jbb/job-details/43602"The Beggars Group Matador Records is
seeking a Paralegal/adiv class="feedflare" a
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/coolfer?a=bCSRo"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/coolfer?i=bCSRo" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/coolfer?a=x71jO"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/coolfer?i=x71jO" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/coolfer?a=wUKPO"img
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/coolfer?i=wUKPO" border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/coolfer/~4/473648956" height="1" width="1"/

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Mac Forums - iPod touch -
1 days and 7 hours ago
Hey all,
I'm writing an app that will connect to my server and download XML content which it will then
display to the user.
Thing is, I'd like to secure this in such a way only my app can access the feed. For example, I
don't want other iPhone apps (or websites, etc.) to be able to access and use my feed for free.
Maybe at some point, though, I may want to charge and allow them access.
What's the best method to achieve this? Shall I hash it? Some other technique?
I want to get the design of this right at the start rather than implement something and then have
to go making major changes down the line.
Any advice appreciated.
Rod
|
Guardian Unlimited -
1 days and 8 hours ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/89165?ns=guardianpageName=Money%3A+Tracker+warning+ahead+of+rate+decisionch=Moneyc3=guardian.co.ukc4=Mortgages+%28Money%29%2CProperty%2CBorrowing+and+debt%2CBanks+and+building+societies%2CMoney%2CHousing+market+%28Business%29%2CBusiness%2CUK+news%2CInterest+rates+%28Money%29%2CInterest+rates+%28Business%29c5=Personal+Finance%2CInvestments%2CCredit+Crunch%2CNot+commercially+useful%2CBusiness+Markets%2CProperty+Mortgages+and+Interest+Ratesc6=Staff+and+agenciesc7=2008_12_03c8=1128025c9=articlec10=GUc11=Moneyc12=Mortgagesc13=c14=h2=GU%2FMoney%2FMortgages"
width="1" height="1" //divpAt least half a million tracker a
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/mortgages"mortgage/a customers may not see their repayments
fall in line with this week's expected a
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/interestrates"interest rate/a cut, it was predicted
today./ppThat figure could more than double if the UK's largest lender, Halifax, implements a
clause in its home loans allowing it to change borrowers' rates./ppThe Bank of England's monetary
policy committee (MPC) is widely expected to reduce the base rate by between 0.5% and 1% when it
announces the result of its two-day meeting tomorrow. But clauses in some tracker mortgages will
mean lenders no longer have to pass on the cut to their customers, while those on standard variable
rate (SVR) deals are also unlikely to benefit from the full reduction./ppDespite the fact that
tracker deals automatically move up and down in line with the base rate, some have so-called floors
or collars which state that lenders will stop passing on rate cuts once the base rate falls below a
certain level./ppOn Nationwide deals a collar kicks in when a
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2008/nov/01/mortgages-property"official interest rates fall
below 2.75%/a, while on a Skipton or Yorkshire building society tracker the cut off point is
3%./ppRay Boulger, senior technical manager at mortgage broker John Charcol, said up to 1.2 million
people - a sizeable proportion of the estimated 3.9 million who have tracker deals - may not see
the full reduction passed on to them./ppHe said up to 600,000 people had tracker mortgages with
lenders such as Nationwide and Skipton, while up to a further 600,000 have a tracker deal with
Halifax, which may choose to exercise its option not to pass on the rate cut in
full./ph2Halifax/h2pThe small print in Halifax's mortgage gives it the option not to pass on all or
any cut once the base rate falls below 3%. It tells customers: "We can also change the tracker
margin to your disadvantage, but only at a time when the tracker base rate is less than 3% per
year. /pp"By 'to your disadvantage' we mean increasing the tracker margin where it is positive or
zero, reducing the tracker margin where it is negative, or changing a negative tracker margin to a
positive one." /ppHowever, comments made yesterday by a representative of the City watchdog, the
Financial Services Authority (FSA), suggest the bank could be in trouble if it a
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2008/dec/02/mortgages-banks"tries to implement the
clause/a./ppJon Pain, the FSA's retail markets managing director, told the Council of Mortgage
Lenders annual conference that while tracker interest rate collars could be a legitimate term of a
mortgage, "it can only be if it is clear and unambiguous to the consumer, and is consistently and
prominently spelt out in the initial KFI [key facts illustration] and offer document throughout the
sales process"./ppA spokesman for the FSA said it would not comment on individual companies, but it
seems likely Halifax will be under pressure to pass on any reduction in full. /ppIf it doesn't,
Boulger said it could face a legal challenge from borrowers. "I had a call last week from one
borrower with a large Halifax lifetime tracker mortgage who said he would do just that," he
said./ph2Standard variable rates/h2pBorrowers on SVRs are also unlikely to benefit from the full
reduction. Lloyds TSB, which also lends under the Cheltenham Gloucester brand, is the only major
lender which links its SVR to the Bank base rate. /ppIts terms and conditions pledge that its SVR
will never be more than 2% above the base rate, which means it could fall as low as 4% if the MPC
does opt for a full 1% cut./ppLast month, a number of major lenders were quick to reduce their SVR
by the full 1.5% after coming under pressure from the government, but many others only passed on
smaller cuts./ppOverall, 87 out of 95 lenders with an SVR passed on some of the reduction, but 57
did not pass it on in full, with some only reducing their rates by 0.25%. The Woolwich, Barclays'
lending arm, has not passed on anything./ppLouise Cuming, head of mortgages at
moneysupermarket.com, said: "If we see a 1% cut to [an overall rate of] 2%, it will be very, very
difficult for lenders to pass that on./pp"They have to have an eye on profitability and 2008 has
been about lenders wanting to get profit rather than volume lending."/ppBoulger agreed, saying that
if rates were cut by 1% he would expect lenders to pass on between 0.25% to 0.5% to SVR customers,
unless the government puts pressure on the major lenders to pass on the cut in full again./ppIf the
MPC cuts interest rates by 0.5% and lenders pass on the reduction in full it would save borrowers
with a typical £150,000 mortgage around £43 a month, while a 1% reduction would reduce
monthly repayments by £85./pdiv style="float: left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom:
10px;"ullia href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/mortgages"Mortgages/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/property"Property/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/debt"Borrowing debt/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/banks"Banks and building societies/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/housingmarket"Housing market/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/interestrates"Interest rates/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/interestrates"Interest rates/a/li/ul/diva
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk"guardian.co.uk/a copy; Guardian News Media Limited 2008 | Use of
this content is subject to our a
href="http://users.guardian.co.uk/help/article/0,,933909,00.html"Terms Conditions/a | a
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