Sunday, 9 February 2003
.< 11:58:54 PM >
RuminateThis: "WE DECIDED NOT TO RUN IT..." 'Major bipartisan legislation opposing a war nobody wants, and what do we hear? The sound of media silence.'
.< 11:51:51 PM >
US fury at European peace plan. Transatlantic tensions burst into public slanging match as French and Germans call for more time. [Guardian Unlimited]
.< 11:47:29 PM >
Looking After Life Without Leaving Office. A new survey has found that people spend more time online finishing office work at home than they do surfing the Web at work for personal reasons. [New York Times: Technology]
Ugh. Something's wrong here.
.< 11:32:38 PM >
Iran mining uranium for fuel. Iran has its own uranium deposits and is on track to become self-sufficient in nuclear energy, President Khatami announces. [BBC News | World | UK Edition]This 'axis of evil' thing is getting complicated.
.< 11:30:59 PM >
'Bombs won't cure world': UGCC cardinal
The head of the world's Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church (UGCC) has begun
a tour of Canada by urging people to campaign for peace as war looms on
the horizon.
F U L L S T O R Y [CBC News]
.< 2:25:44 AM >
Telnet into your .Mac mail account [Mac OS X Hints]
.< 2:21:41 AM >
t r u t h o u t - William Rivers Pitt | Blair-Powell UN Report Written by Student 'The veracity of Colin Powell's report on Wednesday before the United Nations Security Council was dealt a serious blow when Britain's Channel 4 News broke a story that severely undermines the credibility of the intelligence Powell used to make his case to the UN.'
.< 2:17:57 AM >
Why doesn't MSN work with Opera 'The purpose of this page is to document, in technical terms, what is going on. Did the Opera programmers make grave mistakes? Or is it something wrong on the MSN site? If so, is the Opera browser targeted specifically? (Executive summary: no, yes, yes)'
.< 2:14:25 AM >
"The Guardian | The choice for Iraq's rag-tag army: be killed by the US or by Saddam" [Daypop Top 40]
.< 2:04:45 AM >
Russia: Wild Card in Kyoto Pact. Environmentalists hoping to see an international greenhouse-gas reduction treaty take effect worry that the Bush administration is pressuring Russia to bow out, despite Vladimir Putin's initial support of the pact. By Steve Kettmann. [Wired News]
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