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BBC News | World | UK Edition -
21 hours and 32 minutes ago
Kenya's prisons service says it is shocked at a video showing warders beating inmates, one of whom
later died.
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Gamers.fr - Actus -
23 hours and 34 minutes ago
L'attaque des clones. pDévoilé lors de la dernière Game Convention de Leipzig,
voilà que le clavier sans fil PS3 refait parlé de lui puisque Sony vient de donner
quelques nouvelles. Comme vous pouvez le constater, cet objet se clipsera à la manette PS3
(aussi bien Sixaxis que Dual Shock 3), à peu près de la même mani... /p
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"Bloody-Disgusting" -
23 hours and 42 minutes ago
This morning SpookyDan had the chance to talk with shock-rocker Rob Zombie about his new track, "War Zone", which is now available on
iTunes and Lionsgate's soundtrack for PUNISHER: WAR ZONE. During the interview, Zombie also talked
a bit about the new White Zombie box set, his forthcoming solo album and the status of his animated
feature project, THE HAUNTED WORLD OF EL SUPERBEASTO. You can read all the juicy details beyond the
break.
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Joel on Software -
1 days and 6 hours ago
Michiko Kakutani reviews
Malcolm Gladwell's latest book in the New York Times: “Much of what Mr. Gladwell has to
say about superstars is little more than common sense: that talent alone is not enough to ensure
success, that opportunity, hard work, timing and luck play important roles as well. The problem
is that he then tries to extrapolate these observations into broader hypotheses about success.
These hypotheses not only rely heavily on suggestion and innuendo, but they also pivot
deceptively around various anecdotes and studies that are selective in the extreme: the reader
has no idea how representative such examples are, or how reliable — or dated
— any particular study might be.”
This review captures what's been driving me crazy over the last year... an unbelievable
proliferation of anecdotes disguised as science, self-professed experts writing about things they
actually know nothing about, and amusing stories disguised as metaphors for how the world works.
Whether it's Thomas Friedman, who, it seems, cannot go a whole week without inventing a new
fruit-based metaphor explaining everything about the entire modern world, all based on some
random jibberish he misunderstood from a taxi driver in Kuala Lumpur, or Malcolm Gladwell with
his weak theories on tipping points, crazy incorrect theories on first impressions, or utterly
lunatic theories on experts, it all becomes insanely popular simply because the stories are fun
and interesting and everybody wants to hear a good story. Spare me.
Friedman and Gladwell's outsized, flat-world success has lead to a huge number of wannabes. I was
really looking forward to reading Simplexity, because it sounded
like an interesting topic, until I settled down with it tonight and discovered that it was
chock-full of all those amusing bedtime stories about the map of the cholera plague in London in
1854, which I've heard a million times, and then suddenly I noticed (shock!) that not only was
the author a journalist, not a scientist, but he was actually an editor at Time Magazine, which
has an editorial method in which editors write stories based on notes submitted by reporters (the
reporters don't write their own stories), so it's practically designed to get everything
wrong, to insure that, no matter how ignorant the reporters are on an issue, they'll find someone
who knows even less to write the actual story. Panicking, I began to flip through the
book at random. There's that story about Don Norman and complicated user interfaces. Here he is
reading Nassim Taleb. I've heard all these anecdotes! Stop, already! I threw the book away in
frustration.
This is the third one of the day. My business partner Jeff Atwood was busy extracting himself
from the flamewars he started by writing an article on, of all things, NP-completeness, which is,
actually, something that it's possible to know something about, because it's not a vague
sociological hypotheticoncept like simplexiflatness or blinkoutliers, it's actually a real,
important result from Computer Science, with a rigorous definition and lots of published papers,
and poor Jeff got himself in something of a pickle by writing a book review when he hadn't read
the book, and fortunately, he has comments on his blog, so his readers called him out on it.
Now, I am not one to throw stones. Heck, I practically invented the formula of "tell a funny
story and then get all serious and show how this is amusing anecdote just goes to show
that (one thing|the other) is a universal truth." And everybody is like, oh yes! how true! and
they link to it with approval, and it zooms to the top of Slashdot. And six years later, a new
king arises who did not know Joel, and he writes up another amusing anecdote, really, it's the
same anecdote, and he uses it to prove the exact opposite, and everyone is like, oh yes!
how true! and it zooms to the top of Reddit.
This is not the way to move science forward. On Sunday Dave Winer [partially] defined "great
blogging" as "people talking about things they know about, not just expressing opinions about
things they are not experts in (nothing wrong with that, of course)." Can we get some more of
that, please? Thanks.
Not loving your job? Visit the Joel on Software Job
Board: Great software jobs, great people.

|
Releaselog | RLSLOG.net » DVDRiP -
1 days and 8 hours ago
This article has been published at RLSLOG.net - visit our
site for full content.
A not really well known scene group EXViD released a proper dvdrip of Canadian
horror Gutterballs few minutes ago. This is a rather brutal movie full of blood and violence,
mostly exploiting other classic works of the genre. The cast consists of almost or completely new
actors. The proper reason is bad AR of previous dvdrip from (a p2p group) iAPULA.
A brutally sadistic rape leads to a series of bizarre gory murders during a midnight disco
bowl-a-rama at a popular bowling alley. One by one, players of two teams meet blood-drenched
gruesome deaths at the hand of a black bowling-gloved masked killer. This alley will run red with
blood by sunrise and the shocking twist that reveals the killer will shock even the most jaded
viewer!
Gutterballs.2008.PROPER.DVDRip.XviD-EXViD
1 CD, 700 MB, exvid-gutterballs
95 min, 893 Kbps, 560×352 px, mp3
IMDB (5.1), Homepage, NFO, Torrent
more at RLSLOG.net
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Guardian Unlimited -
1 days and 9 hours ago
divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/24359?ns=guardianpageName=Media%3A+Ninety+jobs+to+go+at+Independent+as+owner+eyes+outsourcingch=Mediac3=The+Guardianc4=Independent+News+and+Media%2CPress+and+publishing%2CMedia%2CUK+newsc5=Press+Media%2CNot+commercially+useful%2CMedia+Weeklyc6=Chris+Tryhornc7=2008_11_19c8=1119951c9=articlec10=GUc11=Mediac12=Independent+News+%26+Mediac13=c14=h2=GU%2FMedia%2FIndependent+News+%26+Media"
width="1" height="1" //divpThe scale of the crisis facing the newspaper industry was underlined
yesterday when the owner of the Independent titles said more than a fifth of their staff would be
axed. /ppAround 90 jobs are to go at the Independent and the Independent on Sunday, out of a
workforce of 430. Of these, 60 will come from the papers' 230 journalists. /ppIndependent News and
Media, the owner of the loss-making papers, said the industry-wide downturn in advertising revenues
had prompted the cuts, which form part of a restructuring plan designed to save more than
pound;10m. The company promised greater integration between the two papers and more efficient use
of technology to prevent further job cuts. The savings will staunch losses but will not be enough
to take the papers into profit./pp"As a management team, we would have been irresponsible had we
not reacted to the economic conditions affecting every media business in the world by looking at
our cost base," said Simon Kelner, the Independent's managing director. "These changes will be
instrumental in helping to secure the future of these great newspapers."/ppINM, which is run and
28%-owned by the Irish media magnate Tony O'Reilly, said it was reviewing office and other costs in
London and investigating the possibility of outsourcing some of its operations./ppIt is believed
that most of the journalists to be axed will come from the ranks of production staff such as
subeditors, with few reporters expected to leave when the cuts are implemented early in the new
year. Although the company said a "sizeable number" would be voluntary departures, the National
Union of Journalists (NUJ) called for guarantees that no one would be forced to quit. /ppBarry
Fitzpatrick, the NUJ's head of publishing, said the scale of the cutbacks had come as a "massive
shock" to staff at the Independent. "Journalists' confidence in management at the moment is shaky
at best, and far below what we would expect when entering into negotiations over any major
restructuring," he said./ppThe Independent is not the only newspaper making cuts in the face of
what many executives say is the worst advertising downturn they can recall. Rupert Murdoch has
warned of cutbacks at his News International papers, Express Newspapers is making more than half of
its subeditors redundant and the Daily Mail owner DMGT is expected to unveil cuts when it announces
results tomorrow./ppIn addition to the pressure on advertising, there is a widespread feeling the
industry is in irreversible decline as readers and advertisers head online./ppThe Independent
titles are in a particularly vulnerable position, with the lowest circulation among the UK's
quality papers. Last month the Independent sold an average of 201,019 copies a day, down 16% from a
year ago, while the Independent on Sunday averaged 165,764, down 21%./pdiv style="float: left;
margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;"ullia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/independentnewsmedia"Independent News Media/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/pressandpublishing"Press publishing/a/li/ul/divdiv
class="guRssAdvert"a
href="http://ads.guardian.co.uk/click.ng/richmedia=yessite=Mediacountry=(none)spacedesc=rsssystem=rsstransactionID=1227063965591111903122645481"img
src="http://ads.guardian.co.uk/image.ng/richmedia=yessite=Mediacountry=(none)spacedesc=rsssystem=rsstransactionID=1227063965591111903122645481"
border="0" //a/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

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"Bloody-Disgusting" -
1 days and 9 hours ago
This weekend I sat down to watch the highly anticipated Animals, the big budget adaptation
to Craig Spector's novel about man's internal rage. What I witnessed was nothing short of an
atrocity. " ANIMALS fails on every single level and left me in a state of shock. When it was all
said and done I would have needed to fill an entire notebook to list all of the problems. I highly
recommend watching this film only to witness what is one of the single worst horror movies ever
made. Although difficult to make it from start to finish, its so bad that it actually becomes
captivating... I think credit it due for Director Arnold Cassius who turns in quite possibly one of
the worst horror films ever made." Click the title above for the full review.
|
TechCrunch -
1 days and 12 hours ago

Why do certain videos on YouTube become mass
phenomena while the vast majority of videos just get a handful of views, if any?
Riley Crane, an American post doctoral fellow currently researching at the Chair of Entrepreneurial
Risks at ETH university in Zurich/Switzerland, says he has the answer: According to him, the
success of online videos can be explained with physics.
Crane claims every time a YouTube video turns into a hit, the development takes the form of an
“attention spiral”, a geometric pattern that partly follows physical laws. He
discovered that a decrease of popularity with certain videos, for example, can be explained
through methods usually utilized in modeling the aftershocks of earthquakes. He believes social
systems on the web follow the rules of physics and can therefore be analyzed mathematically.
The popularity of YouTube videos can be characterized through curves visualizing increases and
decreases in the number of viewers and the amount of attention they pay to each video. For
example, the following graph shows two different attention spirals (top left: level of search
activity following the Tsunami that hit part of Asia in December 2004; top right: the volume of
search queries for Harry Potter between April and October 2007, bottom left:views of Harry Potter
videos on YouTube; bottom right: views of tsunami videos on Youtube):
After researching the usage of about 5 million YouTube videos over 8 months, Crane found out that
only 10 percent are viewed more than 100 times a day. According to Crane, the popularity of these
videos can be measured through distinguishing whether a burst of activity was observed after a
large-scale “exogenous” (external) shock or whether it’s the result of a number
of smaller “endogeneous” (internal) factors that had a cumulative effect. Also, it
seems to be important to take into account the extent to which web users can influence others to
take action (what he calls “critical” vs. “subcritical,” where the latter
term means exerting influence is impossible).
Crane categorizes especially popular videos into three different classes:
- “junk” (exogenous subcritical type, videos that quickly pick up and lose viewers
/ see the green diagram at the bottom left in the picture below)
- “viral” (endogenous critical type, videos spreading through the site through word
of mouth / see the red diagram at the top right in the picture below)
- “quality” (exogenous critical type, videos that attract attention quickly and
only slowly lose their appeal over time because of their high quality / see the blue diagram at
the bottom right in the picture below)
Junk videos are characterized by a significant peak that contains the vast majority of views and
fail to spread through the site. In contrast to quality videos, viral videos show precursory
growth before peaking out and decaying slowly (see the Harry Potter example above, diagram A): It
takes time for the endogenous phenomenon to build up and spread within the network. Quality
videos, however, reach the peak much faster as a reaction to an external “shock” but
also decay slowly (see the Tsunami video example above, diagram B).
Crane claims that viral and quality videos show very characteristic patterns over a specific
period of time, supposedly making it possible (through the analysis of tendencies) to predict if
a video has the potential to become a super hit.
The final goal is the development of an encompassing and science-based online trend monitoring
system. The university
newsletter writes (German only) Amazon is currently in
negotiations with Crane to integrate his model into its site, hoping to predict the potential of
newly listed products at an early stage.
The critical factor here (and one of the long-term objectives) is to correctly determine the
tipping point, the point in time at which the viral effect kicks in and sales or (in the case of
YouTube) views of videos take off. Details of the Crane model (presented with fellow researcher
Didier Sornette) can be found in the October issue of PNAS magazine (available online here).
Crunch Network: CrunchGear
drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.


|
Journal of Molecular Biology -
1 days and 14 hours ago
Publication Date: 2008 Nov 5 PMID: 19013177br/Authors: Jiang, L. - Schaffitzel, C. -
Bingel-Erlenmeyer, R. - Ban, N. - Korber, P. - Koning, R. I. - de Geus, D. C. - Plaisier, J. R. -
Abrahams, J. P.br/Journal: J Mol Biolbr/br/When heat shock prematurely dissociates a translating
bacterial ribosome, its 50S subunit is prevented from reinitiating protein synthesis by tRNA
covalently linked to the unfinished protein chain that remains threaded through the exit tunnel.
Hsp15, a highly upregulated bacterial heat shock protein, is essential for reactivating such
dead-end complexes. Here, we show with cryo-electron microscopy reconstructions and functional
assays that Hsp15 reversibly translocates the tRNA moiety from the A site to the P site of stalled
50S subunits. By stabilizing the tRNA in the P site, Hsp15 indirectly frees up the A site, allowing
a release factor to land there and cleave off the tRNA. Such a release factor must be stop codon
independent, suggesting a possible role for a poorly characterized class of putative release
factors that are upregulated by cellular stress, lack a codon recognition domain and are conserved
in eukaryotes.br/br/post to: a href =
http://www.citeulike.org/posturl?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov%2Fentrez%2Fquery.fcgi%3Fcmd%3DRetrieve%26db%3DPubMed%26dopt%3DAbstract%26list_uids%3D19013177title=Entrez+PubmedCiteULike/a

|
Listening Post -
1 days and 16 hours ago
A recent New Yorker article
paints a short, complicated picture of the artist currently known as Prince in which the star --
a noted practitioner of the jehovah's witness religion -- responds to questions about social
issues.
A PerezHilton source says the New Yorker misquoted Prince regarding homosexuality. The New
Yorker maintains that its story is accurate.
"You've got the Republicans, and basically they want to live according to [the bible]," says
Prince in the
article. "But there's the problem of interpretation, and you've got some churches, some
people, basically doing things and saying it comes from here, but it doesn't. And then on the
opposite end of the spectrum you've got blue, you've got the Democrats, and they're, like, 'You
can do whatever you want.' Gay marriage, whatever. But neither of them is right...
"God came to earth and saw people sticking it wherever and doing it with whatever, and he just
cleared it all out. He was, like, 'Enough.'"
At the other end of the literary respectrum is PerezHilton. The publication claims an
outraged source within Prince's camp accuses the New Yorker of misquoting Prince. The
source also apparently claims that the New Yorker's reporter, Claire Hoffman, did not
record the interview, which could make it hard to unravel what really happened.
"Contrary to what a recent interview with the New Yorker is reporting, a source close to
the rocker tells us that Prince was grossly misquoted and misinterpreted as not down with gay
rightsm," reads a post on the site. "Apparently, the interviewer did not even use a
recorder... What His Purpleness actually did was gesture to the Bible and said he
follows what it teaches, referring mainly to the parts about loving everyone and refraining from
judgment. 'We're very angry he was misquoted,' says our Prince insider."
However, the New Yorker stands by its story, as a spokeswoman confirmed to Wired.com on Tuesday
morning. It sounds like this Prince insider may have been doing some damage control for his
client, whose views may come as a surprise to some of his fans.
See Also:
Illustration (courtesy of the New Yorker): Tom Bachtell


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Engadget -
1 days and 17 hours ago
pFiled under: a href="http://www.engadget.com/category/hdtv/" rel="tag"HDTV/a, a
href="http://www.engadget.com/category/homeentertainment/" rel="tag"Home Entertainment/a/pdiv
align="center"a href="http://hometheater.vudu.com/products_VBX1500.html"img vspace="4" hspace="4"
border="0" alt="" src="http://www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com/media/2008/11/11-18-08-vudu-xl2.jpg"
//abr //div Given just how far a href="http://www.engadgethd.com/tag/Vudu/"VUDU/a has been getting
into the custom install game, it's no shock at all to see it produce a set-top-box that's less a
href="http://www.engadgethd.com/2008/01/07/hands-on-with-the-pricey-vudu-xl/"STB/a and more
integrator-friendly. The 1U rack-mountable XL2 sports a classic black motif and plays nice with
systems from leading control and automation manufacturers such as Crestron, Logitech, Netstreams,
Nevo and Philips. You'll be able to enjoy the spoils of integrated IP / IR control, a 1TB internal
hard drive, optical / coaxial / RCA audio outputs and an HDMI port. Sadly, the XL2 can't be
purchased online, meaning you'll have to coax a a
href="http://www.engadgethd.com/2008/10/20/vudus-custom-installer-network-balloons-to-1-000/"local
installer/a to sell you one for $1,299.br /br /[Via a
href="http://www.electronichouse.com/article/vudu_unleashes_xl2_set_top/C91"Electronic House/a]p
style="padding:5px;background:#ddd;border:1px solid #ccc;clear:both;"a
href="http://www.engadget.com/2008/11/18/vudu-xl2-brings-on-demand-films-to-rack-mountable-enclosure/"VUDU
XL2 brings on-demand films to rack-mountable enclosure/a originally appeared on a
href="http://www.engadget.com"Engadget/a on Tue, 18 Nov 2008 10:45:00 EST. Please see our a
href="http://www.weblogsinc.com/feed-terms/"terms for use of feeds/a./ph6 style="clear: both;
padding: 8px 0 0 0; height: 2px; font-size: 1px; border: 0; margin: 0; padding: 0;"/h6a
href=http://hometheater.vudu.com/products_VBX1500.htmlRead/anbsp;|nbsp;a
href="http://www.engadget.com/2008/11/18/vudu-xl2-brings-on-demand-films-to-rack-mountable-enclosure/"
rel="bookmark" title="Permanent link to this entry"Permalink/anbsp;|nbsp;a
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Engadget -
1 days and 17 hours ago
Filed under: HDTV, Home Entertainment

Given just how far VUDU has been getting into the
custom install game, it's no shock at all to see it produce a set-top-box that's less STB and more
integrator-friendly. The 1U rack-mountable XL2 sports a classic black motif and plays nice with
systems from leading control and automation manufacturers such as Crestron, Logitech, Netstreams,
Nevo and Philips. You'll be able to enjoy the spoils of integrated IP / IR control, a 1TB internal
hard drive, optical / coaxial / RCA audio outputs and an HDMI port. Sadly, the XL2 can't be
purchased online, meaning you'll have to coax a local
installer to sell you one for $1,299.
[Via Electronic
House]
VUDU XL2 brings on-demand films to rack-mountable enclosure originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 Nov 2008 10:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email
this | Comments
|
TabletPC Corner -
1 days and 19 hours ago
Deacute;voileacute; agrave; l'occasion d'une vraie confeacute;rence de presse agrave; laquelle
Akihabaranews eacute;tait preacute;sent, Panasonic a preacute;senteacute; son Mobile Clinical
Assistant qui a eacute;teacute; repousseacute; de quelques mois pour acceuillir la plateforme Atom.
Proposeacute; sous un ATOM Z540 (1.86 GHz) avec 1 Go de RAM DDR2 et 80 Go de HD ou SSD Intel, il
dispose d'un eacute;cran 10.4 pouces lisible en plein soleil grace agrave; l'eacute;norme
luminositeacute; de 500 nits. Comme toutes les machines suivant les preacute;requis de la
plateforme MCA, il dispose d'une WEBCAM 2 MPixels, lecteur Code Barre, Lecteur RFID, d'u
renforcement et d'un traitement speacute;cial pour supporter les aggressions des principaux
produits deacute;sinfectants (tout de mecirc;me pas le four poupinel :) ) et surtout, une autonomie
theacute;orique de 6 heures ! Il peut disposer d'un module WWAN en option... La galerie de photo
chez Akihabaranews (javascript:void(0);/*1227018441241*/) Annonceacute; disponible en Janvier 2009,
World Wide entre $2799USD et $2999USD Panasonic Toughbookreg; H1: Select Features and
Specifications Genuine Windows Vistareg; Business with Service Pack 1 (with Windows XP Tablet
downgrade option) Intelreg; Atomtrade; processor (1.86GHz) Z540 533MHZ FSB, 512KB L2 cache 1GB
standard RAM configuration 80 GB 1.8-inch shock mounted hard drive 10.4rdquo; XGA sunlight viewable
500 NIT Dual Touch LCD screen (1024 x 768 resolution) Anti-reflective screen treatment Integrated
2.0 megapixel auto-focus camera with dual LED lights Fingerprint scanner Contactless smartcard
reader RFID reader Fully rugged MIL-STD-810F and IP54 compliant 3 foot drop approved Magnesium
chassis...

|
Journalism.co.uk -
1 days and 19 hours ago
Hardly a surprising reaction but here#8217;s what the National Union of Journalists has said, in
reaction to the news that 90 jobs will be cut at the Independent, the majority of which are
editorial positions: #8220;The scale of today’s announcement will have come as a massive
shock to our members at the Independent,#8221;Â the NUJ’s Head [...]img width='1'
height='1' src='http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/367/f/5716/s/264b7e8/mf.gif' border='0'/div
class='mf-viral'table border='0'trtd valign='middle'a
href="http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/sendemail2.html?title=NUJ says scale of Indy job cuts are a
‘massive
shock’link=http://blogs.journalism.co.uk/editors/2008/11/18/nuj-says-scale-of-indy-job-cuts-are-a-massive-shock/"
target="_blank"img src="http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/emailthis2.gif" border="0" //a/tdtd
valign='middle'a href="http://res.feedsportal.com/viral/bookmark.cfm?title=NUJ says scale of Indy
job cuts are a ‘massive
shock’link=http://blogs.journalism.co.uk/editors/2008/11/18/nuj-says-scale-of-indy-job-cuts-are-a-massive-shock/"
target="_blank"img src="http://rss.feedsportal.com/images/bookmark.gif" border="0"
//a/td/tr/table/divbr/br/a
href="http://da.feedsportal.com/r/24192606414/u/49/f/5716/c/367/s/40155112/a2.htm"img
src="http://da.feedsportal.com/r/24192606414/u/49/f/5716/c/367/s/40155112/a2.img" border="0"//a

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Gameblog.fr -
1 days and 22 hours ago
Les responsables de Microsoft ne vont juste pas trouver ça drôle du tout. Non. Ainsi
dans un récent booklet d'information sur Windows Vista, regardez bien les appareils
présentés "à guise d'illustrations" en page 1 et 10 ! Non, vous ne rêvez
pas : un MacBook Pro et des manettes Dual Shock 2 ! J'ose à peine imaginer la tête
quand ils l'ont vu... ou vont l'apprendre. Car si nous ça nous fait…
|
BBC News | World | UK Edition -
1 days and 23 hours ago
A judge presiding over the case of a tortured and murdered three-year-old girl weeps as she
delivers sentence.
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