One Canuck's Radio Weblog

A 'news items' 'clipping service' for myself and anyone else who's interested

Last modified:
30/1/2006; 6:37:32

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Radio UserLand

  Monday, 7 April 2003

.< 11:30:37 PM >

Pro Sound News Online Daily - Rochelle Unveils First Standalone Streaming Internet Radio with Ethernet and Wi-Fi

.< 11:30:06 PM >

ProSoundNews Online - Dolby Debuts Pro Logic II Encoding for Broadcast TV 'Dolby Pro Logic II encoding allows networks to broadcast a high-quality, matrixed, 5-channel surround sound signal through any existing analog or digital stereo medium, complementing the Dolby Digital 5.1 experience delivered on HDTV and DTV services.'

.< 11:01:04 PM >
NAB Las Vegas

Apple senior VP of worldwide product marketing Phil Schiller delivered a keynote presentation at the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) show, introducing new versions of Apple’s professional video applications: Final Cut Pro 4, DVD Studio Pro 2 and Shake 3. See pictures and stories from NAB. [Apr 6] [Apple Hot News]



.< 10:59:28 PM >
A small collection of performance hints

A brief collection of tips to enhance perceived and actual speed of OS X on your machine. [macosxhints]



.< 10:56:48 PM >
NAB: Peak 4 to be Mac OS X only

[MacCentral]



.< 10:53:48 PM >

CBC News: Arabs sign up to fight beside Iraqis 'The sight of American tanks tearing up the pavement in downtown Baghdad has encouraged Arab volunteers to sign up to join Iraqis in their fight against advancing coalition forces. In countries such as Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Oman and Egypt, Arabs refused to believe the pictures, saying they were American propaganda.'
It's clear that both sides are in denial. Arabs about Baghdad being over run. Americans about the impact their actions will have on the rest of the Arab world. Dangerous times.


.< 10:51:28 PM >

CBC News: N.S. disputes new study into tainted tar ponds 'SYDNEY, N.S. - All three neighbourhoods that border Nova Scotia's most polluted industrial site are contaminated, according to a new study by environmentalists and a network of medical researchers. But the province rejects the findings, saying its own evidence shows that homes near the Sydney tar ponds are safe to live in. [...]

"Our study is the first ? to show that the contaminants are entering the home and are present on the floors and the house dust," said Tim Lambert, one of the report's authors, on Sunday. "This is the primary exposure for children and people."

"We don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out that there is a link" between the tar ponds and illnesses in the area, said Ann Marie Ross, who spends a lot of time nowadays trying to get rid of dust in her home.'

.< 10:49:12 PM >

CBC News: Ontario gets 10,000 masks to battle SARS 'Health Canada officials said Monday that they're also making the drug ribavirin available for use in battling the disease if doctors ask for it. The drug has yet to receive regulatory approval for such use.'

.< 9:48:40 PM >

TiVo Desktop allows iTunes, iPhoto streaming 'Jim Barton, co-founder and CTO for TiVo, said in January that TiVo?s upcoming premium service package will use Rendezvous technology to automatically discover Macs within the home network and determine which services they provide, allowing customers to listen to their shared music or view their shared photos on their TV.'

.< 6:21:02 PM >

BBC NEWS | Middle East | 'This is just a scene from hell' '"This is just a scene from hell here. All the vehicles on fire. There are bodies burning around me, there are bodies lying around, there are bits of bodies on the ground. This is a really bad own goal by the Americans.'

.< 6:17:25 PM >
"What if Fox News were around during...

"What if Fox News were around during other historical events?" [Daypop Top 40]



.< 4:59:37 PM >
bbc world service

Since the war I've been listening to the BBC World Service. I can easily get it on medium wave (AM) 648Khz and have been amazed at their excellent reporting, much of which doesn't show up for hours on other news outlets.

It feels like these journalists are from the 'old school', and probably forgotten by many colleagues, who jockey for position on prime-time slots.

Yesterday I heard the friendly fire report filed by BBCWS veteran John Simpson. I have yet to hear or see such detail of this tragedy elsewhere.

You can listen to the BBC World Service in real audio. [Adam Curry: Adam Curry's Weblog]

This is the story I was talking about. It was the closest I've come to appreciating the chaos of war.



.< 4:55:47 PM >
Librarians Use Shredders to Counter New F.B.I. Powers

"It used to be a librarian would be pictured with a book," said Ms. Snider, the branch manager, slightly exasperated as she hunched over the wastebasket. "Now it is a librarian with a shredder." Librarians in America, specifically those in Santa Cruz, California, have resorted to shredding nearly all documents or records of any sort in order to counter the United States' new Patriot Act (EFF critique), a law passed after 9/11 which significantly broadened the federal authorities' ability to tap into public information in the name of anti-terrorism. Many libraries have begun distributing leaflets to visitors which detail their objections to the increased F.B.I. power and explain that librarians are in the process of reviewing their files to ensure that any and all data they have about borrowing and computer usage histories is absolutely necessary to their operation. [Kuro5hin.org]

Impressive. Librarians take a stand.



.< 4:53:07 PM >
Baghdad's hospitals in crisis

The capital's hospitals are suffering a surge in patients and shortages of water, power and medical supplies, the Red Cross says. [BBC News | World | UK Edition] 'Around the city, casualties have been admitted on an average of 100 per hour, with staff working day and night.

Wards at the five major hospitals treating wounded were already overflowing with injured when American troops made their first incursion on Saturday.'



.< 4:43:47 PM >

Adamouski Is Latest Casualty in Iraq War (washingtonpost.com) 'She said the family was granting interviews today "because I want the United States to know what a person we've lost-what an incredible loss he was to the country."'
All wars waste valuable lives.


.< 11:51:51 AM >

Accident Reminds Some of 1991 War 'After the 1991 Persian Gulf War, when 35 of the United States' 148 combat casualties were the result of friendly fire, the military pledged to do something about it. Since then, the Defense Department has abandoned the most advanced of its friendly fire avoidance technology programs. And the most sophisticated communications systems, designed to give soldiers the broadest understanding of the battlefield, are not used by the forces currently in Iraq.'

.< 11:46:49 AM >
Scared to death

Toronto dispatch: So far, more than six Canadians have died from Sars. With so little known about the virus, it is hard to reassure the public, writes Anne McIlroy. [Guardian Unlimited] 'Toronto is now the North American epicentre of the outbreak that began last autumn in Guangdong and which Chinese authorities kept secret. Canada's largest city now has more cases of Sars than any place outside of Asia, and the number of suspected cases rises every day.'

The title's a bit hyperbolic, if not misleading. 'Scared of death perhaps. But the subheading is downright strange. 'More than six'? Well, I guess nine is more than six. But it's 50% more than six.



.< 11:24:29 AM >
'Chemical Ali' Found Dead, British Officer Says

Ali Hassan al-Majid, dubbed "Chemical Ali" for ordering a poison gas attack that killed thousands of Kurds, has been found dead, a Monday. [New York Times: NYT HomePage]



.< 11:23:38 AM >

Apple recasts movie-making software | CNET News.com 'Appearing Sunday at the National Association of Broadcasters convention in Las Vegas, Apple unveiled Final Cut Pro 4, its high-end video-editing software; DVD Studio Pro 2, its high-end product for creating menus, chapter titles and other DVD features; and Shake 3, which adds visual effects.'

.< 2:41:14 AM >

ROMlife - The Secrets of Egypt's Everlasting Oasis 'Enjoy an illustrated talk on the Canadian-led archaeological dig in the Dakhleh Oasis, in Egypt's Western Desert. Archaeologists have uncovered an Old Kingdom capital, and in a Roman-era "desert Pompeii," Egypt's oldest churches, the world's two oldest books, and a priceless archive of 10,000 papyri. Home to humans for at least 400,000 years, we discover that Dakhleh and the desert have made a surprising contribution to the rise of pharaonic civilization along the Nile. Speaker Harry Thurston is one of Canada's leading science and environmental writers. He has written 12 books and feature articles for more than 30 magazines, including Audubon, Equinox, and National Geographic. He will be signing copies of his latest book, Island of the Blessed: the Secrets of Egypt's Everlasting Oasis.'
This is where we'll all be this Friday evening. There was a half page ad in this week's Books section of The Globe & Mail. The week before there had been a long and very positive review of Harry's book.


.< 2:14:32 AM >
Counting the victims of Iraq war

One of the biggest and as yet unanswered questions about the war in Iraq is how many people have been killed. [BBC News | World | UK Edition]



.< 2:11:47 AM >

BBC NEWS | World | From Our Own Correspondent | A war too big to comprehend 'Who is illegal? The invaders or the invaded? The language of the new liberator to people here is strange indeed. [...] This war is almost too big to comprehend. [...] You see the faces of the soldiers, confused, out of their depth as they try to control the crowds, and you wonder where this is going.

A giant war - the birth of a new liberator with his new language - and the birth of a new world order that feels frightening and strange.'

.< 2:07:06 AM >
'Friendly fire' hits Kurdish convoy

At least 10 people are killed as a US warplane bombs a Kurdish convoy which included members of US special forces. [BBC News | World | UK Edition]

I watched a report on this disaster come in on BBC News. Terrifying stuff. The BBC cameraman rolled tape immediately after a US pilot dropped a bomb on his convoy. The first thing you see is blood drip onto the lens. Then you hear the terrified breathing of the correspondant and the frantic hollering of people in the convoy as they try to sort out what has happened.



.< 2:03:20 AM >
MidEast press on Baghdad battle

Papers speak of a "river of blood" as coalition forces move in on Baghdad, but voice hope that greater bloodshed can be averted. [BBC News | World | UK Edition]



.< 2:02:10 AM >
Russian envoys 'caught in crossfire'

Diplomats shot at while leaving Baghdad were caught between Iraqi and US forces, a Russian TV reporter says. [BBC News | World | UK Edition]



.< 2:01:31 AM >
Summit pressure on Bush

Tony Blair will today urge George Bush to internationalise the reconstruction of postwar Iraq. [Guardian Unlimited]



.< 2:00:42 AM >
Rule by U.S. and Britain May Pass 6 Months, Wolfowitz Asserts

Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz said that ceding power to an Iraqi-led civilian authority would take some time. [New York Times: NYT HomePage]



.< 1:59:35 AM >
For One Pastor, the War Hits Home

The Rev. Tandy Sloan has presided over many a funeral and memorial service in Cleveland. But on Sunday, he wondered why his only child had to die in Iraq. [New York Times: NYT HomePage]



.< 1:56:18 AM >

CNN.com - Ex-CIA director: U.S. faces 'World War IV' - Apr. 3, 2003 'He said the new war is actually against three enemies: the religious rulers of Iran, the "fascists" of Iraq and Syria, and Islamic extremists like al Qaeda.'

.< 1:53:33 AM >

Al Jazeera - It's just as fair as CNN. By Chris[sgl dagger]Suellentrop 'American TV news has always presented an American perspective, just as Al Jazeera presents an Arab perspective. But in wartime, the American slant has become more obvious, and as a result Al Jazeera's Arab slant has become less objectionable.'

.< 1:49:47 AM >

Boston Globe Online / Nation | World / Kerry says US needs its own 'regime change' 'Senator John F. Kerry said yesterday that President Bush committed a ''breach of trust'' in the eyes of many United Nations members by going to war with Iraq, creating a diplomatic chasm that will not be bridged as long as Bush remains in office. ''What we need now is not just a regime change in Saddam Hussein and Iraq, but we need a regime change in the United States,'' Kerry said in a speech at the Peterborough Town Library.'

.< 1:43:37 AM >

The Globe and Mail: Rummy's war 'In 1976, Mr. Rumsfeld successfully persuaded the president to kill the SALT II disarmament treaty with the Soviet Union, which Mr. Kissinger had been working on for years. In Mr. Rumsfeld's view, nuclear disarmament, even in limited, strategic form, was simply not an option. He had come to detest the U.S. military bureaucracy during this period. His experience with the Vietnam War led him to believe that military problems were created by Democrats and solved by Republicans. His belief in the military as a dumb, slow-moving beast continues to this day.'

.< 1:32:40 AM >

The Globe and Mail: Toronto hospitals delay most surgery 'Three of Toronto's major hospitals are performing only 5 per cent of their normal surgical caseloads, attending only to the most urgent cases and excluding many coronary bypass and cancer operations, as the SARS outbreak continues to spread.'

.< 1:22:37 AM >
The Statutory Debt Limit

In February, the United States federal debt reached its current statutory limit of $6.4 trillion. For now, the Treasury Department is taking the usual stopgap measures involving the G-Fund, but Congress will need to increase the limit soon to avoid a default. Most likely, Congress will approve an increase before any default would happen. But this time, there is actually a smidgen of doubt, given that last year's bill to raise the limit was barely passed by the House at the 11th hour. What would be the effects of a government default? For one thing, it might put a damper on the administration's New American Century agenda. [Kuro5hin.org]






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Last Update: 30/1/2006; 6:37:32 Copyright 2006 Peter Cook, All Rights Reserved.