Thursday, September 29, 2005

Oops! It turns out the Stella awards cases are fake. My apologies and thanks to Rachel for debunking this

fyi, these are fake (my hypothesis: they were created and perpetuated by the
anti-civil folks like bush).  Also, the "Stella" case had some reasonsable
justifications. She was a grandma who suffered 3rd degree burns to her
thighs, buttocks and crotch even after McDs had been repeatedly told to
reduce the coffee temp.

https://www.atla.org/homepage/debunk.aspx

Facts About Stella Liebeck's Case
The fictitious "awards" are named after an elderly woman who was severely
burned due to the negligence of a greedy corporation. A number of lies about
her case have spread via email, but in fact:

Stella Liebeck wanted only to be reimbursed for the cost of her medical
treatment alone and to settle the case, but McDonald's opposed her request
and took the case to trial.

Stella was severely injured. At 79 years old, she suffered third degree
burnsto her legs and genitals, was hospitalized for over a week, and had to
have multiple skin grafts.

McDonald's lost-a jury of American citizens heard the evidence and decided
against the company.

During discovery, McDonald's produced documents showing more than 700 claims
by other people burned by its coffee over a 10 year period and still refused
to sell its coffee at a safe temperature.

More facts about the McDonald's Scalding Coffee Case


Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Fw: The Stella Awards - are these like the Darwin awards


> The Stella Awards
>
> It's time once again to review the winners of the annual "Stella Awards."
> The Stellas are named after 81 year-old Stella Liebeck who spilled coffee
> on
> herself and successfully sued McDonald's. That case inspired the Stella
> awards for the most frivolous, ridiculous, successful lawsuits in the
> United
> States.
>
> Here are this year's winners:
> 7th Place: Kathleen Robertson of Austin, Texas, was awarded $780,000 by a
> jury of her peers after breaking her ankle tripping over a toddler who
> was
> running inside a furniture store. The owners of the store were
> understandably surprised at the verdict, considering the misbehaving
> little
> toddler was Ms. Robertson's son.
>
> 6th Place: 19-year-old Carl Truman of Los Angeles won $74,000 and medical
> expenses when his neighbor ran over his hand with a Honda Accord.
> Mr.Truman
> apparently didn't notice there was someone at the wheel ! of the car when
> he
> was trying to steal his neighbor's hubcaps.
>
> 5th Place: Terrence Dickson of Bristol, Pennsylvania, was leaving a house
> he
> had just finished robbing by way of the garage. He was not able to get the
> garage door to go up since the automatic door opener was malfunctioning.
> He
> couldn't re-enter the house because the door connecting the house and
> garage
> locked when he pulled it shut. The family was on vacation, and Mr. Dickson
> found himself locked in the garage for eight days. He subsisted on a case
> of
> Pepsi he found, and a large bag of dry dog food. He sued the homeowner's
> insurance claiming the situation caused him undue mental anguish. The jury
> agreed to the tune of $500,000.
>
> 4th Place: Jerry Williams ofLittle Rock, Arkansas, was awarded $14,500
> and
> medical expenses after being bitten on the buttocks by his next-door
> neighbor's beagle. The beagle was on a chain in its owner's fenced yard.
> The
> award was less than sought because the jury felt the dog might have been
> just a little provoked at the time by Mr. Williams who had climbed over
> the
> fence into the yard and was shooting it repeatedly with a pellet gun.
>
> 3rd Place: A Philadelphia restaurant was ordered to pay Amber Carson of
> Lancaster, Pennsylvania, $113,500 after she slipped on a soft drink and
> broke her coccyx (tailbone). The beverage was on the floor because Ms.
> Carson had thrown it at her boyfriend 30 seconds earlier during an
> argument.
>
> 2nd Place: Kara Walton of Claymont, Delaware, successfully sued the owner
> of a nightclub in a neighboring city when she fell from the bathroom
> window
> to the floor and knocked out her two front teeth. This occurred while
> Ms.Walton was trying to sneak through the window in the ladies room to
> avoid
> paying the $3.50 cover charge. She was awarded $12,000 and dental
> expenses.
>
> 1st Place: This year's run away winner was Mrs. Merv Grazinski of Oklahoma
> City,Oklahoma. Mrs. Grazinski purchased a brand new 32-foot Winnebago
> motor
> home. On her first trip ho! me, (from an OU football game), having driven
> onto the freeway, she set the cruise control at 70 mph and calmly left the
> driver's seat to go into the back and make herself a sandwich. Not
> surprisingly, the RV left the freeway, crashed and overturned.
> Mrs.Grazinski sued Winnebago for not advising her in the owner's manual
> that she couldn't actually do this. The jury awarded her $1,750,000 plus
> a
> new motor home. The company actually changed their manuals on the basis of
> this suit, just in case there were any other complete morons around.
>
>
>

Monday, September 26, 2005

The Lord of War

 
By Tom Masland
Newsweek
Updated: 8:30 a.m. ET Sept. 23, 2005

Sept. 23, 2004 - On the level of entertainment, “Lord of War” succeeds as a genre action film. It fits comfortably, as one blogger put it, in the “autobiographical scumbag” slot pioneered by such classics as "The Godfather" series. The protagonist, Nicolas Cage playing international arms dealer Yuri Orlov, walks into a moral swamp, simply by putting one foot in front of another in pursuit of the vast wealth to be piled up by delivering cheap, Soviet-era weapons to corrupt African warlords. But this is no mere potboiler. Hollywood just scooped the press on one of the best stories in Africa.

Here the truth truly is stranger than fiction. Just run the name “Victor Bout” on Google. More than 21,000 hits pop up. One of the first items up: A PBS report from "Frontline/World" describing Bout (pronounced “butt" in Russian) as the “poster boy for a new generation of post Cold War international arms dealers.” The report notes that Bout has been accused of arming the Taliban when it still ruled Afghanistan. The Global Policy Forum, which monitors policymaking at the United Nations, features Bout in its "Rogues’ Gallery," describing him as having “fueled dozens of the world’s most murderous conflicts by shipping arms clandestinely to rebel groups” in countries ranging from Pakistan to Angola, Liberia, Rwanda and Sierra Leone. And those are just some of the charges.

Now guess from whom “Lord” director Andrew Niccol rented the Antonov-12 cargo aircraft he used to film a fictional African arms delivery? You guessed it. And how about the couple of thousand of AK-47s the extras used during filming in South Africa and Namibia? Niccol simply bought the machine guns on the international arms market, and then sold them back at a small loss after the film wrapped. It was much cheaper and easier than buying dummy props.

The elusive Bout—who has denied the allegations against him—represents only the best-known member of this species. Throughout the badlands of Africa and other impoverished corners of the planet, money that comes out of the ground—in the form of gold, diamonds, oil or other minerals—goes to arm factions that create states within states. Some blame globalization for breaking down traditional authority structures, leaving young men of war age to find other role models. But it’s hard to imagine that the death toll would have been so high if the militiamen had to rely on machetes and hoes instead of automatic weapons. In eastern Congo alone, more than 3 million people are said to have died of war-related injuries or illnesses since the 1994 Rwanda genocide set off a power struggle for this mineral-rich region.

All of which helps explain why Amnesty International has taken such a keen interest in “Lord of War.” The human-rights group this month announced its official support for the film, which went into theaters this week. Amnesty is hardly the usual bedfellow for a Hollywood release. However, with its potentially huge audience, a film such as “Lord of War” can reach more thinking people than the many U.N. studies and press reports already devoted to the topic. Somehow, the arms dealers have never made it onto a radar already crowded with other problems—AIDS, famine, poverty—the list is long. And in order to do the story properly, a reporter would have actually to gain access to an arms transfer. It’s never easy to get on the inside of a criminal enterprise. But realistic cinema can put you there. Hence Amnesty’s abject plea: “See the film, join Amnesty International, and act to save lives.” Amnesty is campaigning for an international convention on small-arms sales. It also wants Washington to help foreign governments better secure their arms stockpiles.

In a free-market world, all that may be pie in the sky. Africa boasts plenty of real estate, limited air-traffic control and pliable officials. Putting a stop to the plague of small arms anytime soon may prove daunting. But a public-awareness campaign wrapped in a major motion picture represents a major step forward.

© 2005 Newsweek, Inc.

Thursday, September 22, 2005

Kenya's battle for a new constitution

 Kenya

Bananas v oranges
Sep 22nd 2005 | BANANA HILL, NAIROBI
From The Economist print edition


Would you like a stronger president or more checks and balances?

AFP
AFP

Kibaki wants more juice


“NDIZI! Ndizi!” shouted the crowd of mostly young, underemployed men. “Banana! Banana!” Kenya's vice-president, Moody Awori, an Anglican in a Hawaiian shirt, waved a ripe banana. A roar went up through the Nairobi shanty town, appropriately enough named Banana Hill. At the back of the crowd, it was said, a woman had been soundly beaten by a mob for brandishing oranges.

In the run-up to a referendum due on November 21st on Kenya's first proper constitution since independence from Britain in 1963, the country has divided into bananas (yes) and oranges (no). Violence is already rife. The country's electoral commission has tried, without success, to stop any campaigning before its civic-education project can be carried out. Instead, politicians have resorted to incendiary populism, sometimes along tribal lines, to sway voters on a draft constitution few have read and even fewer understand. At an up-country funeral, a banana MP captured the national mood by launching himself at an orange speaker and getting himself wrestled to the ground at the feet of none other than Daniel arap Moi, the former president who was ousted in a poll in 2002 after a corrupt reign that had lasted 24 years.

There are plenty of nits to pick in the draft. Muslims complain it does not allow for their religious courts. Christians as well as Muslims fret that it might, even in the smallest way, condone homosexuality. Kenyans of all stripes, especially those abroad, wonder whether they can have dual nationality.

But the central point, on which fruit is so furiously lobbed, is what sort of presidency Kenya should have. Bananas want a stronger, American-style one. Oranges—a more varied bunch, including thoughtful civic leaders, acolytes of previous regimes, and opportunists led by the roads minister, Raila Odinga—would like to devolve more power to parliament and to the regions. Mr Odinga's proclaimed outrage positions him for the general election due in 2007. Like many oranges, he thinks the present version has been tinkered with to the benefit of the present president, Mwai Kibaki, with whom he has fallen out.

Whatever side Kenyans choose, they are likely to be disappointed. It is telling how little effort politicians have made to put copies of the draft into the hands of the people. But then Kenyans are used to disappointment. The country's downward drift since independence has been dismal. True, there has been no war and a laudable history of peacekeeping, but that only makes it harder to explain why the country is placed 154 out of 177 in the UN's latest development index. The UN's World Food Programme estimates that 1.2m (out of 31m) Kenyans are on the verge of starvation in the arid north. Mr Kibaki caused donors, appalled by the country's persistent corruption, to rock back in disbelief in New York last week when he made an impassioned plea for Kenya's debt to be forgiven.

Bubble 2.0

 Bubble 2.0
Sep 22nd 2005
From The Economist print edition


As Microsoft discusses buying a big stake in America Online, a spate of expensive internet deals is creating a sense of déjà vu


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NASTY memories have been stirred up by this week’s reports that Microsoft is in talks to buy a big stake in America Online. After all, the last time that AOL was involved in a big deal—its $150 billion acquisition of Time Warner, a media giant, in January 2000—it soon came to symbolise the madness of internet-company valuations, during the turn-of-the-century dotcom bubble. Nobody expects Microsoft to repeat the near-suicidal folly of Time Warner. But if there is any truth to market rumours that its purchase will value AOL—now a shadow of its old self—at over $20 billion, or about $1,000 per AOL subscriber, then the deal would certainly fuel fears that irrational exuberance is returning to the pricing of internet-related firms.

A Microsoft stake in AOL—which it would merge with its MSN portal—would come hot on the heels of last week’s purchase of Skype, an internet-phone company, by eBay, an internet-auction site. There is no doubt that there is huge commercial potential in internet telephony. But how that potential will come to fruition—and whether Skype will be the company that benefits—are very much open questions. Look at the raw numbers, and this seems like a deal with strikingly bubble-era economics: a price of at least $2.6 billion for a loss-making firm with unlimited ambition but expected revenues this year of only $60m.

Such a high price is hardly unique. Among other richly priced deals contributing recently to the bubbly mood are Barry Diller’s IAC/InterActive’s $1.9 billion acquisition of Ask Jeeves, a search engine, in July; News Corporation’s purchase of IGN, a video-gaming site, this month, and Intermix Media, a social networking site, in July, for a combined $1.2 billion; and Yahoo!’s $1 billion purchase in August of a stake in Alibaba.com, a Chinese internet site that actually prides itself on its lack of a clear business model. Speculation that they will be gobbled up next has lifted shares in several other internet firms, including The Knot (an online wedding planner) and CNET Networks, a news site—both up by over 50% in the past six months.

“The Skype deal is absolutely a return to the 1999 mentality,” says Pip Coburn of Coburn Ventures, a technology-strategy firm. It and many of the other recent and mooted internet deals seem to be based on little more than the belief of management that everything is going to change dramatically in the next few years, in highly unpredictable ways, and so all options need to be covered. Given that mentality, says Mr Coburn, a manager “can pretty much justify paying any price”.

Valuing a firm is tricky at the best of times (as is making a success of a merger), but it is especially hard for a young firm. The rationale of Rajiv Dutta, eBay’s chief financial officer, for the firm’s valuation of Skype does little to inspire confidence. He first compared Skype with eBay’s previous biggest acquisition, of PayPal, an online payment system that is not obviously comparable to a phone service (and which, unlike Skype, eBay knew intimately before the acquisition). PayPal cost 8% of eBay’s market capitalisation in October 2002, said Mr Dutta, whereas Skype cost only 4.8% of eBay’s current market cap. But is that the right measure? Skype’s revenue growth in the 12 months in which it has charged for some of its services, he noted, was faster than eBay’s at a similar stage in its development. Again, why is this relevant? Skype and eBay have completely different business models. Finally, its current losses notwithstanding, Mr Dutta thinks that Skype will have a long-term operating-profit margin of 20-25%—apparently for no other reason than that eBay also assumed that PayPal would achieve that same margin.

While Skype and eBay may yet develop lucrative synergies, the deal does not impress Hal Varian, an economist at Berkeley and co-author of an influential book, “Information Rules: A Strategic Guide to the Network Economy”. Skype’s technology is not hard to replicate, and internet telephony is becoming highly competitive, he says. Skype’s founders, Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis, were smart to take the money—just as earlier AOL’s then boss, Steve Case, was wise to exchange his firm’s hugely overvalued shares for Time Warner’s undervalued old-economy assets.

Déjà vu or not, even the greatest pessimists do not think that history is simply repeating itself. Share prices today are nothing like as crazy as they were in 2000, at least in America. (To relive the full dotcom bubble experience, try China instead, where America’s erstwhile “internet queen”, Mary Meeker of Morgan Stanley, has just been anointing her local favourites.) American investors no longer have much appetite for initial public offerings of shares in firms with nothing more than a bright idea and half a business plan. The price-earnings (p/e) ratios of shares in some of the best-known internet firms are certainly high—Google’s is 90, and eBay’s is 54, compared with a p/e of 18 for the Dow Jones average. They need to boost profits spectacularly to justify these prices; but at least nowadays there are lots of earnings to include in the p/e ratio.

Google is so highly priced in large part because of its mastery of one of the few truly profitable internet business-models: the sale of effective online advertising. But its striking success is alerting rivals to the dangers that Google and other peddlers of online advertising pose to their businesses—which is prompting them to explore how to fight back, which in turn could hurt the now thriving firm’s profits, and expose any overvaluation.

Newspaper, television and radio companies, for instance, have all recently started to understand the threat posed to their traditional advertising revenues by online advertising. A speech by Rupert Murdoch earlier this year on the need for media firms to embrace the internet showed that the industry is not willing to give in easily to its new enemy. The traditional telecoms and cable companies have also started to wake up to the potentially massive threat posed to their revenues by cut-price internet telephony of the sort offered by Skype. They, too, are looking for ways to fight back.


As these industries and firms collide, it is far from clear which firms will emerge on top, and how profitable they will be. That makes valuing their shares extremely hazardous. In January 1999, asked to sort out the hype from the fundamentals in internet shares, Alan Greenspan, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, compared owning shares with buying a lottery ticket. Each share had a small chance of securing a great reward, but a high probability of failure. “What lottery managers have known for centuries is that you could get somebody to pay for a one-in-a-million shot more than the value of that chance,” observed Mr Greenspan. Hence, the more volatile the business outlook, the more likely “you will get a lottery premium in the stock”.

One difference between today and the late 1990s is that today many of the fancy prices of internet firms are being paid by companies buying them, rather than by investors merely buying their shares. Their motives are understandable: to protect themselves from the potential risks and position themselves for the potential rewards of a maturing internet. What remains to be seen is how much some of these embattled firms will pay in their pursuit of the winning lottery ticket.

Europa: A generous state pays, and avoids hard reality

 
Europa: A generous state pays, and avoids hard reality
Richard Bernstein The New York Times
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2005

BERLIN Everybody is amazed that Angela Merkel did as badly as she did, but in retrospect it seems almost obvious that she was going to crash and burn, even if the conventional wisdom of the pollsters and prognosticators was very different.
 
The wise political analysis, especially after the Social Democrats lost their historic stronghold in North Rhine-Westphalia in the spring, was that the Germans were ready for a change. They were fed up with Chancellor Gerhard Schröder. They didn't like his "Agenda 2010" reforms, especially when the reforms failed to stem the steady drumbeat of bad news about unemployment and economic stagnation.
 
That's why they were going to vote for Merkel et al., even if Merkel represented deeper, more radical, more Maggie Thatcher-like reform, while Schröder and the Social Democrats meant less reform.
 
It didn't turn out that way for several reasons, not least that Germany is a country that handles its economic crises extremely well, comfortably, with relatively little in the way of visible pain. True, there are five million unemployed, and the Schröder reforms - especially the unpopular slice of them known as Hartz IV - have substantially reduced unemployment payments.
 
Hartz IV decreed that once unemployment benefits have been exhausted, unemployed persons go on welfare. They have to meet some pretty strict criteria. Their spouse's income is taken into account. They are limited to a house or apartment of a certain size. They might have to do some menial social-service type work - caring for the elderly or weeding a kindergarten's garden - for very low pay.
 
But once they qualify, their rent is covered by the state, along with their utilities. They have health insurance, nursing insurance and pension insurance. They are reimbursed for the purchase of major appliances like stoves and refrigerators. And, in addition, they get a stipend of nearly 350, or $425, a month - plus another 200 a month for each child under 14 - for additional living expenses. It's not a fortune, but, even after Hartz IV - bitterly protested by the left wing of Schröder's own party - came into effect, Germany still had one of the most generous social welfare systems in Europe.
 
I heard the other day about a young man who has worked for a few years at a bank and now wants to go to school. Normally, such a person would apply for a subsidized loan to cover his costs while he is studying. He would then repay the loan when he has finished his course of study and has gotten a job.
 
But in this case, the young man decided simply to declare himself unemployed, and to live on Hartz IV benefits while going to school. Why incur a debt that must be repaid, if the state will cover your rent, heat, and electricity, and give you a stipend of roughly 4,000 a year?
 
What many economists say, including pessimistic economists who believe that Germany desperately needs to pare down its welfare costs, is that the country is so rich that it can afford to shield its citizens from such problems as high unemployment and zero growth. The money accumulated during the wonder years buys a lot of social peace, and, given Germany's past, social peace is a particular prerequisite, a way of forestalling the rise of extremes.
 
But, paradoxically, these economists say, the country's wealth also buys a willed sort of denial.
 
The real situation is that fewer and fewer working people are paying for more and more people on welfare, and eventually, and especially if the economy doesn't improve dramatically, something's got to give.
 
"We have to change the widespread idea that the economic miracle, the good times, are coming back," said Wolfgang Nowak, a former adviser to Schröder who became a Merkel supporter. "The German dream is over. Other countries are making cars as wonderful as German cars. We aren't better than the others any more, and we're more expensive."
 
Well, that was Merkel's message, but it didn't get through, drowned out in part by Schröder's skillful and vigorous campaign, in particular his exploitation of the appointment of a genuine tax-reform radical, Paul Kirchhof, to Merkel's kitchen cabinet.
 
But Merkel's message was drowned out by something else as well, or, if not drowned out exactly, made to fall into a cultural environment so unused to that kind of social and economic discourse that it seemed far more extreme than it was. For the better part of 50 years, the conservatives have themselves not been very conservative. Like the Social Democrats, they have always put the message of social stability, the German notion of a class-conflict-free consensual society, ahead of any message about swallowing bitter pills of economic reality.
 
"It's true," said the economist Thomas Straubhaar, president of the Institute for International Economics in Hamburg. "Germany has been governed by two social democratic parties." One of them is the actual Social Democratic Party, with its 19th-century origins in Marxist notions of social justice. The other is the Christian Democratic Union, and its Bavarian sister, the Christian Social Union, with their origins in 19th-century Christian notions of social justice.
 
In the United States and Britain in recent decades, by contrast, wide differences opened up between Democrats and Republicans, Laborites and Tories over social policy. Free-market, welfare-reform conservatism became a fully articulated alternative with its own think tanks, clubs, magazines and newspapers, even university departments, paving the way for the Thatcher and Reagan revolutions. Paul Kirchhof would have been right at home.
 
In Continental Europe, there was very little such development, especially inside the right-of-center political parties. In France, as became conspicuous during the debate over the European Union constitution, Jacques Chirac, who has governed economically and socially from the left for the 10 years of his presidency, railed against neoliberalism as if it were an infectious disease, rather than an alternative economic philosophy that has paid handsome dividends in the United States and Britain.
 
And in Germany, Merkel as a quiet sort of avatar of neoliberalism was from the beginning isolated, not just politically but intellectually, even within her own party, not to mention in the larger context of German society. The wonder in this sense may not be that she failed to get a majority; it's that she managed, with the Free Democrats, to get as many votes as she did.
 
E-mail: pagetwo@iht.com

Sunday, September 18, 2005

Musharraf's remarks on rapes in Pakistan decried

Musharraf's remarks on rapes in Pakistan decried
16 Sep 2005 11:51:44 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Zeeshan Haider

ISLAMABAD, Sept 16 (Reuters) - Outrage mounted in Pakistan and abroad on Friday over President Pervez Musharraf's comment that many Pakistanis felt that crying rape is an easy way to make money and move to Canada.

Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin has already condemned the remarks made by Musharraf, who is in the United States having addressed the U.N. General Assembly on Wednesday.

London-based rights group Amnesty International said Musharraf should apologise, and newspapers back home decried their leader's attitude.

Musharraf told the Washington Post in an interview published on Tuesday that Pakistan should not be singled out on rape issues as other countries had the same problems.

"You must understand the environment in Pakistan ... This has become a money-making concern. A lot of people say if you want to go abroad and get a visa for Canada or citizenship and be a millionaire, get yourself raped," the Post quoted Musharraf as saying.

Dawn, Pakistan's leading English language daily, rounded on Musharraf in an editorial headlined "Wrong thing to say".

"If this attitude, of blaming rape and other crimes against women on women themselves and ridiculing NGOs (non-government organisations) that take up such issues, begins to travel upward from ignorant mullahs and male chauvinists to permeate the higher echelons of the administration, then God help us," it said.

Amnesty International said it was outraged at the remarks by Musharraf, who is due to address an audience of Pakistani-American women in New York on Saturday.

"This callous and insulting statement requires a public apology from President Musharraf to the women of Pakistan and especially to victims of rape, sexual assault and other forms of violence that are rampant with impunity in Pakistan," the London-based group said in a statement issued on Thursday.

"His statement is an offense to women all over the world."

Musharraf, according to media reports, told a news conference in New York on Thursday that he had been expressing a commonly held opinion rather than his own.

Earlier, Canada's Martin said he had raised the matter with the Pakistani leader during a meeting on the sidelines of the General Assembly.

"I stated unequivocally that comments such as that are not acceptable and that violence against women is also a blight that besmirches all humanity," Martin told a news conference.

GANG RAPE

Rape is prevalent particularly in rural areas of Pakistan, but most cases go unreported because of the social stigma.

Pakistan's media, however, has become more active in following up stories since a notorious gang rape generated massive publicity at home and abroad when the victim spoke out about her ordeal.

Mukhtaran Mai, now an icon for human rights in Pakistan, was gang-raped three years ago on the orders of a village council after her brother, then 12, was judged to have befriended a woman of a powerful clan.

Musharraf earlier this year blocked Mai from travelling to the United States to attend a women's rights conference in the United States, saying he believed the conference would have tarnished Pakistan's image rather than improved the lot of women.

The ban was later lifted after international criticism including from the U.S. government.
 
((PAKISTAN-RAPE, Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Sanjeev Miglani; Reuters Messaging; zeeshan.haider.reuters.com@reuters.net; Islamabad newsroom +92 51 2800 155, fax +92-51 2800 157))

Friday, September 16, 2005

Telecoms and the Internet- VOIP changes everything

 Telecoms and the internet

The meaning of free speech
Sep 15th 2005 | LONDON AND SAN FRANCISCO
From The Economist print edition


The acquisition by eBay of Skype is a helpful reminder to the world's trillion-dollar telecoms industry that all phone calls will eventually be free

NIKLAS Zennstrom and Janus Friis, the founders of Skype, which distributes software that lets people make free calls from their computers to other Skype users anywhere in the world, don't usually travel to America. Legally, they probably could. But they prefer to avoid that jurisdiction, since they also founded (and subsequently sold) KaZaA, a peer-to-peer software company whose product many people use to share copyrighted songs. So setting foot in America could invite some legal trouble. This does not mean, however, that they cannot appear at conferences in Silicon Valley, where Skype—which uses the same basic idea of KaZaA, but applies it mainly to voice communication—is considered the next big thing.

Thus, in July, Mr Zennstrom appeared, via a Skype video call, on the screen of a packed auditorium at Stanford University, while sitting in Estonia next to Tim Draper, a venture capitalist who invested $10m in Skype. Mr Draper is the ultimate loud American, whereas Mr Zennstrom is a sombre Swede. “He's already taken down one industry and he's on to the next one,” hollered Mr Draper—referring to recording studios and telecoms companies. Mr Zennstrom started shifting uncomfortably. “I never wanna sell my stock until it's a hundred billion,” Mr Draper yelled, then started singing and dancing. The blushing Mr Zennstrom was speechless.

Of course, Mr Draper was posturing. That became clear on September 12th, when Skype announced that it had agreed to be taken over by eBay, based in Silicon Valley and the world's largest online marketplace. Mr Draper and Skype's other investors will get nothing like $100 billion, but eBay is paying a hefty sum—$2.6 billion in cash and shares and perhaps more if certain criteria are met—nonetheless.

This pairing took many people by surprise. There have been rumours that Yahoo!, Google, Microsoft and other technology companies were also interested in buying Skype. Any of these might have made a more obvious fit, since each also has instant-messaging software that can be used for free phone calls (or “voice chats”, as opposed to text chats) between computers. Google, the world's most popular internet search engine, launched its own voice-chat software in August. A week later, Microsoft bought Teleo, a San Francisco company that lets people call conventional telephones from their computers (as Skype also does, for $0.02 a minute). Yahoo! had already bought Dialpad, another Skype-like firm, in June. AOL, Apple and others have similar products.

As Meg Whitman, eBay's boss, and Mr Zennstrom explain it, a combination of eBay and Skype is not all that far-fetched. From eBay's point of view, placing cute Skype buttons on the web pages where people trade used cars, houses and other items that usually require voice bargaining “reduces friction”, says Ms Whitman. Buyers can simply click on the button and talk to sellers. Another idea is to make money from “pay-per-call” advertising, where advertisers would place voice links (ie, Skype buttons) on certain pages just as they now place text links on, say, the search-results pages of Google. Whenever a web surfer clicks on one of these links and talks to a salesperson, the advertiser would pay eBay and Skype a fee. Google got rich by doing this in the text world; there is no reason why eBay might not be able to do it in the voice world.

From Skype's point of view, the deal strengthens its existing link with PayPal, eBay's online bank, which it uses to charge for services such as calls from computers to conventional telephones (called SkypeOut) or from conventional phones into Skype (called SkypeIn). This involves prepaid accounts, which Skype users can top up via PayPal with their credit cards.

For Skype, however, the main attraction may be that eBay, unlike the other potential suitors, plans to leave it largely alone, both as a brand and as a business. “When Yahoo! and Microsoft buy companies, they typically disintegrate them,” says Mr Zennstrom. His vision for Skype, by contrast, is to become the world's biggest and best platform for all communications—text, voice or video—from any internet-connected device, whether a computer or a mobile phone.

This is every bit as audacious as it sounds. Mr Zennstrom, in general, is a modest man. But his company is only three years old, will probably make only $60m in revenues this year, and will certainly not turn a profit. So it is the fact that his ambition is not nearly as ridiculous as it sounds that should make incumbent telecoms firms everywhere break out in a cold sweat.

That is because Skype can add 150,000 users a day (its current rate) without spending anything on new equipment (users “bring” their own computers and internet connections) or marketing (users invite each other). With no marginal cost, Skype can thus afford to maximise the number of its users, knowing that if only some of them start buying its fee-based services—such as SkypeOut, SkypeIn and voicemail—Skype will make money. This adds up to a very unusual business plan.

“We want to make as little money as possible per user,” says Mr Zennstrom, because “we don't have any cost per user, but we want a lot of them.” This is the exact opposite of the traditional business model in the telecoms industry, which is based on maximising the average revenue per user, or ARPU. And that has only one logical consequence. According to Rich Tehrani, the founder of Internet Telephony, a magazine devoted to the subject, Skype and services like it are leading inexorably to a future in which all voice communication, near or far, will be free.


The technical term that encompasses all forms of voice communication using the internet is voice-over-internet-protocol, or VOIP. This includes pure computer-to-computer calling as well as the various hybrid states, such as a Skype user connecting to the traditional telephone network, or even two people talking on seemingly conventional phones that are linked, behind the scenes, via the internet. It also includes residential VOIP providers such as Vonage, based in New Jersey and the market leader in America with over 1m subscribers, that supply their customers with adapters so they can plug ordinary telephones into their broadband connections without using a computer.

Sandvine, a telecoms-equipment firm, estimates that there are 1,100 VOIP providers in America alone. But the trend is worldwide. IDC, a market-research firm, predicts that the number of residential VOIP subscribers in America will grow from 3m at the end of 2005 to 27m by the end of 2009; Japan already has over 8m subscribers today. Worldwide, according to iSuppli, a market-research firm, the number of residential VOIP subscribers will reach 197m by 2010. Even these numbers, however, do not include people using VOIP without subscribing to a service (ie, by downloading free software from Google, Skype or others). Skype alone has 54m users.


Even before VOIP makes 100% of telephone calls in the world completely free (which may take many years), it utterly ruins the pricing models of the telecoms industry. Factors such as the distance between the callers or the duration of a call, the key determinants of cost today, are simply irrelevant with VOIP. Vonage already lets its customers choose telephone numbers in San Francisco, New York or London, no matter where they live. A Londoner calling the London number is making a “local” call, even if the Vonage subscriber is picking up the phone in Shanghai. As when checking e-mail on, say, Hotmail, the only thing needed is a broadband-internet connection, but it can be anywhere in the world. Sooner or later, people will discard their unwieldy phone numbers altogether and use names, just as they do with their e-mail addresses, predicts Mr Zennstrom.

Call duration is also becoming irrelevant. “A lot of people open a Skype audio channel and keep it open,” says Mr Zennstrom. After all, it costs nothing. Many people with Apple computers are already accustomed to this. They open an application called iChat, which is a video and voice link, and stay connected to their loved ones far away. Increasingly, members of a family or a business team can stay online throughout the day, escalating from unobtrusive instant-messaging (“Can you talk?”) to a conference call, a video call and back to a little icon on their screen.

It is thus altogether wrong to call this phenomenon the end, or death, of telephony. “Calling it the death of telephony suggests people aren't going to make calls, but they are,” says Sam Paltridge, a telecoms guru at the OECD. “It's just the death of the traditional pricing models.” In short, all this is great news for consumers and awful news for telecoms operators. “VOIP will destroy voice revenues faster than most analysts' models predict,” says Cyrus Mewawalla, an analyst at Westhall Capital. “Voice will very rapidly cease to become a major revenue generator for all telecoms operators, fixed and mobile.”


That said, some telecoms carriers are much more vulnerable to VOIP than others, says Mr Mewawalla. Telecoms operators offer and charge for a number of services besides pure voice calls. Because VOIP will cause only the revenues from voice calls to shrink, it will hit those operators hardest that are most dependent on their revenues from voice (see chart 2).

For pure mobile operators, such as Vodafone or Taiwan Mobile—as it happens, Taiwan is the country with the highest ratio of Skype users—VOIP could be an “enormous problem”, says Mr Mewawalla, because voice accounts for over 80% of their revenues. By contrast, VOIP is less threatening to integrated operators (ie, those offering both fixed and mobile services) such as Deutsche Telekom or Japan's NTT. And those carriers—such as BT, France Telecom or KPN—that are currently building next-generation networks based on internet technologies will be able to offer VOIP services themselves, bundled with other offerings, and might emerge relatively unscathed.

Some operators are taking an unenlightened view by trying to delay the advance of VOIP. China Telecom has been blocking access to Skype from Shenzen, according to local newspaper reports. Vodafone has introduced wording into new contracts for some German subscribers reserving the right to block VOIP in future, though a spokesman for the company says it is not doing so at the moment. Clearwire, an American wireless-broadband provider, also reserves the right to block VOIP traffic. In February, Madison River Communications, a rural phone company in North Carolina, was fined $15,000 by regulators for blocking access to Vonage's VOIP service. Occasionally, operators have even blocked access to Skype's website, thus preventing people from downloading the software or topping up their calling credit.

The more enlightened approach—which most operators in rich countries, to varying degrees, accept—is to compete with VOIP openly or even to embrace it. Already, says Mr Paltridge, pricing of traditional phone services is changing quite radically as operators “try to adjust and to compete with the Skypes of this world”. Operators are moving towards flat-rate pricing plans for traditional telephone service, so that the marginal price of making calls falls to zero. Many American regional operators offer unlimited local and national calling for a fixed monthly fee, and such schemes are also becoming popular in other countries.

Several incumbent operators have also launched their own VOIP services, such as Verizon's VoiceWing and BT's Broadband Voice. These offer lower prices than traditional telephone service but are generally not as cheap as a call between Skype and a regular phone. “If you can't beat 'em, join 'em,” says John Delaney of Ovum, a consultancy. Such services are an admission that a less lucrative VOIP customer is better than no customer at all. Switching to VOIP also helps operators by lowering their own costs dramatically. BT and others are building new, internet-based networks behind the scenes, which will carry all voice traffic as VOIP even if the calls start or end in the traditional way.

The other argument for embracing VOIP is that the incumbents can then start offering the fun new services that VOIP makes possible and charging for them. This goes far beyond traditional voicemail. Video-conferencing and unified messaging—whereby all forms of communication, from voicemail and video messages to e-mails or entire electronic documents go into one virtual “inbox”—will become common, says Wendy McMillan-Turner, head of voice services at BT. Since all of these features are essentially software programmes, they can all be integrated with applications that people today use on their computers, such as Outlook calendars and contacts files.

The service that many telecoms operators are most excited about, however, is IPTV, which refers to television (and entertainment in general) being delivered over new and super-fast broadband-internet connections into homes. This would allow them to charge for a bundle of services, including broadband access, entertainment and voice. The voice component could then atrophy gracefully and eventually be thrown in for nothing. “Ultimately—perhaps by 2010—voice may become a free internet application, with operators making money from related internet applications like IPTV,” says Mr Mewawalla.

Cable operators are coming at VOIP from exactly the opposite direction. They already offer television and entertainment, as well as broadband access, so they might as well offer cheap telephony as well. This puts the cable companies in a good position. Unlike the telecoms operators, they do not depend on voice for their revenues today, so they can use cheap VOIP service as a competitive weapon to make life difficult for the telecoms operators, who are increasingly their only competition. In California, for example, most people have a choice between one cable company, Comcast, and one traditional telecoms carrier, SBC. Since voice uses very little bandwidth compared with television, the cable companies need not even add a lot in the way of bandwidth.

The result, says Mr Mewawalla, is that voice service is fast becoming a marketing freebie to make customers “sticky”—to keep them loyal. “I would expect people to advertise free calls with VOIP, subsidised by other elements of the package,” says Ms McMillan-Turner. Thus, BT will consider value-added services sold around VOIP as voice revenues in future, she says. BT hopes that selling such services will offset the inevitable decline in traditional voice revenue. Evalueserve, a consultancy, predicts that American and European fixed operators' long-distance voice revenue will decline by around 40% by 2008, and that in Europe 50% of broadband users will give up their voice lines by 2008.

Mobile operators face a far greater challenge than fixed-line carriers. Voice accounts for the bulk of their business and they cannot (at least today) offer broadband access as easily as the cable and fixed-line companies. New “third-generation” (3G) networks were supposed to make possible whizzy new data services to compensate for flat and even declining revenues from voice calls, but consumer adoption has been slow.

Worse, those very 3G networks that are supposed to provide future growth for the industry could now undermine it, since they make possible VOIP calling over mobile networks. Already, one mobile operator, E-Plus in Germany, has announced a deal that will allow subscribers to use Skype on its 3G network. Users would thus pay only for the internet connection, while making free calls to other Skype users and to other telephones for very little. E-Plus hopes to win valuable business customers and to put pressure on much bigger but less agile rivals such as Vodafone.

Today, VOIP calling over 3G networks is still very much a minority sport, but as 3G coverage and transmission speeds improve—something the industry is racing to achieve—it will become common. This represents a mortal danger for mobile operators. “VOIP on mobile is the first real threat they are going to face, and they are in a state of shock,” says Mr Mewawalla. Mobile operators generally charge three to five times as much as fixed operators for each minute on the phone, so they have far more to lose from falling voice prices. International travellers will use VOIP over hotel-room broadband links or Wi-Fi hotspots in airports to save on the roaming charges by their mobile-phone company.

Vodafone counters that, like BT, it is moving towards internet-based networks that will reduce its own cost of carrying calls and make possible new value-added services. But this sounds unconvincing. Much more so than fixed-line operators, mobile operators would have to cannibalise their current business in order to generate new revenues from VOIP. Ironically, this means that BT, once regarded as a dinosaur-like incumbent, is now being held up as a shining example of an operator that is embracing the future, while Vodafone, whose pure-mobile strategy once seemed visionary, now stands accused of being on the wrong side of history. At the end of the day, there is no getting around the reality, as Skype's Mr Zennstrom says, that “something that is a great business model for us is probably a terrible business model for them.”

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

Afghan official says commanders let Osama escape

Afghan official says commanders let Osama escape

By Sayed Salahuddin1 hour, 15 minutes ago

Osama bin Laden was provided safe passage to Pakistan in 2001 by Afghan commanders paid by al Qaeda and sympathetic to its cause, a senior Afghan official told Reuters on Wednesday.

Lutfullah Mashal, Afghanistan's Interior Ministry spokesman, said commanders helped the al Qaeda leader escape from the Tora Bora mountains as U.S. warplanes and Afghan forces attacked his hideout near the Pakistan border in late 2001.

"The help was provided because of monetary aid availed by al Qaeda and also partly because of ideological issues," Mashal said.

"Osama along with other al Qaeda people managed to go to Parachinar (in Pakistan) at the time and then Pakistani forces battled the al Qaeda runaways, killing around 70 of them," Mashal added, referring to an area in Pakistan's Kurram tribal agency.

He said commanders loyal to Maulvi Yunus Khalis had helped the al Qaeda leader escape. The whereabouts of Khalis, a top mujahideen leader from the war against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, is unknown.

Mashal told private Pakistani television channel Geo on Tuesday that U.S. forces made a mistake in entrusting the capture of bin Laden to Afghan commanders.

Mashal said he was present in the Tora Bora mountains during the December 2001 operation, and that while U.S. forces were not there in uniform, green berets in plain clothes, some disguised in Uzbek style dress were present.

He said that while 800 or 900 Arabs fled Tora Bora for Pakistan's Khyber tribal agency, senior al Qaeda leaders trekked across to Parachinar on foot, mule and horseback with the help of some Sulemankheil tribal elders.

Mashal said bin Laden later re-crossed the border to Khost where Taliban leader Jalaluddin Haqqani gave him refuge, before returning to Pakistan, this time heading for Miranshah, the main town in another tribal agency, North Waziristan.

Mashal said he had gone to Pakistan himself, searching for bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahri in camps of al Qaeda militants at Parachinar, Shawal, Daddakheil and Miranshah.

"I visited all the camps, where there were Chechens, Uzbeks, but I was not able to find clues about the whereabouts of Osama or al-Zawahri," he told Geo.

Mashal suspected the al Qaeda leader was still moving around Pakistan's tribal lands, guarded by Taliban and Arab fighters.

"His exact location is not clear for he changes his location and is on the move ... He is guarded by Haqqani's men and Yemenis."

U.S. officials have repeatedly said bin Laden, who has evaded a U.S.-led manhunt since the September 11, 2001, attacks, is probably still hiding in the rugged mountains between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The United States invaded Afghanistan after the Taliban refused to hand over bin Laden, blamed for the attacks on U.S. cities, and overthrew the Taliban in late 2001.

London-based Arabic newspaper al-Hayat, quoting a U.S. officer in Afghanistan, said on Wednesday bin Laden was in poor health and was seeking medical attention.

Al-Hayat said it was not clear how the U.S. military had obtained its information or where it thought bin Laden might be.

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Men's Vogue; Chinese basketball; Elvis recipes

Men's Vogue: Guys and Dollars

By Peter Carlson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, September 13, 2005; C02

Human history is, among other things, a compendium of bad ideas -- monarchy, communism, Prohibition, the designated hitter, the XFL, reality TV. And now, the folks at the Conde Nast magazine empire have added another horrific idea to this wretched list:

Men's Vogue.

Men's Vogue ? The very name is a truly moronic oxymoron, like holy war or garlic mouthwash . But alas, it is true: Last week, after a century of Vogue and a few years of Teen Vogue, Conde Nast launched Men's Vogue, the first Vogue for American men. And the company is pondering the possibilities of a magazine to be called Vogue Living.

Why? Wasn't one Vogue enough? Was there a groundswell of demand for more Vogues? Were men and teenagers besieging the Conde Nast building, wearing Armani suits and chanting, "We want our own Vogues," while pumping their meticulously manicured fists into the air?

Probably not. But the folks at Conde Nast are always eager to clone profitable magazines. In 2000 they launched a women's shopping mag called Lucky, which spawned a men's shopping mag called Cargo and a home shopping mag called Domino. Vast forests are felled to produce slick paper bearing pictures of expensive consumer goods.

What is Men's Vogue like? Well, it's a lot like GQ, the Conde Nast mag that I always thought was the men's version of Vogue. Except GQ has more stories that aren't about buying stuff.

Thumb through Men's Vogue and you see picture after picture of sensitive young men who haven't shaved since the day before yesterday wearing absurdly expensive clothes and looking perturbed, as if they're thinking: Jeez, did I leave the stove on at home? Or maybe they're just bored. Or constipated.

The ads in Men's Vogue are for absurdly expensive stuff, such as Macallan Scotch, whose slogan is: "Drunk by People Who Sign Off Their Own Expenses." The articles in Men's Vogue are also about absurdly expensive stuff, such as the Hermes Etriviere briefcase, which costs $3,575, and the new Bentley sedan, which costs $170,000, and the Tour de l'Ile wristwatch, which costs $1.5 million.

There's also a photo spread called "In Her Eyes," in which "three ultimate women reveal what really makes them take notice when a man walks in the room." The three "ultimate women" are Jacquetta Wheeler, Karolina Kurkova and Sophie Dahl. (Who are these babes, and how did they get to be ultimate?) They're lovely lasses but apparently quite shallow: What makes them take notice are $4,500 evening jackets and $4,650 watches and $75 pocket hankies.

Of course, what all this boils down to is that Men's Vogue is a "wish book." Like the original "wish book" -- the Sears catalogue of a century ago -- Men's Vogue is a publication for people who want to drool over stuff they'd love to own. Unlike the old Sears catalogue, however, Men's Vogue does not double as an alternate source of toilet paper -- its pages are way too slick.

But I don't want to be too negative. Men's Vogue does have a couple of articles worth reading. One is a profile of Walton Ford, an eccentric and talented artist who hikes the Berkshires to paint strange nature scenes. The other is "A Bloody Good Time," A.A. Gill's arch and mannered essay on British bird-shooting weekends, which contains this sentence:

"Hunting involves a fox being chased by hounds being chased by horses being chased by merchant bankers, gay interior decorators, farmers, resting criminals, nymphomaniac girls with faces like farriers' anvils . . . and Camilla Parker Bowles chased by psychopathic vegan animal liberationists chased by fat policemen chased by paparazzi chased by insurance-claim lawyers."

Wow! That sentence is so wonderful that it almost makes up for the drivel in the rest of the magazine. Almost but not quite.

How Do You Say 'I Love This Game' in Chinese?

The best basketball story on the newsstands these days appears in an unexpected magazine: Foreign Policy.

On the surface, "Chairman Yao" is a piece on Yao Ming, the NBA's 7-foot 6-inch Chinese superstar, but it's more than that. It's about globalization, the power of American pop culture and the emergence of China as a sports superpower.

Author Brook Larmer, a former Newsweek correspondent, traces the surprisingly long and rich history of basketball in China. The game was taken to China in the 1890s by missionaries who learned basketball from its inventor, James Naismith, in a Massachusetts YMCA. The game thrived, particularly after China's communist rulers decided in the 1980s to promote the country by stressing Olympic sports.

"Were it not for China's ambition to raise its international stature through sports," Larmer writes, "Yao's parents (both basketball players, 6 feet, 10 inches and 6 feet, 2 inches respectively) never would have been forcibly recruited into the Chinese sports system and paired up in retirement to produce the next generation of giants."

At the same time, David Stern, the NBA's savvy commissioner, realized that China was a huge potential market for his product, and he began searching for a Chinese superstar to woo fans among China's 1.2 billion people.

It worked. Since Yao joined the Houston Rockets in 2002, his team's games regularly attract up to 30 million TV viewers in China. And when a Chinese Web site held an online chat with Yao in 2002, Larmer writes, "nearly 9 million fans logged on, crashing the system in six of China's largest cities."

Heartbreak Hotel: Room Service, Please

After decades of ignoring the King's cuisine, Gourmet magazine has finally given America's eaters what they really need: "Elvis's Favorite Recipes."

The recipes include his favorite sandwich -- peanut butter and mashed banana on white bread fried in butter -- and his favorite pound cake, which Gourmet says is "the best pound cake we have ever tasted."

There is also Elvis's own recipe for the meal that he asked his cook, Mary Jenkins, to smuggle to him once in a hospital where he was being treated for colon (!) problems.

"I want you to fix me some kraut and wiener sandwiches," he told Jenkins by phone. "Boil the kraut and wieners together. Take the wieners out, put them on a hot dog bun, and pile the kraut on top. Then fill them full of mustard. Bring them to me this afternoon and tell the guard at my door that you are bringing Linda [Thompson, his girlfriend] some clothes."

As Elvis might say, bon appetit, y'all.

Saturday, September 10, 2005

In the Big Easy, inured to the macabre

 
In the Big Easy, inured to the macabre
By Dan Barry The New York Times
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2005

NEW ORLEANS In the central business district here, on a dry stretch of Union Street, past the Omni Bank automated teller machine, across from a parking garage offering "early bird" rates: a corpse. Its feet jut from a damp blue tarp. Its knees rise in rigor mortis.
 
Six National Guardsmen walked up to it Tuesday afternoon and two blessed themselves with the sign of the cross. One soldier took a parting snapshot like some visiting conventioneer, and they walked away. New Orleans, September 2005.
 
Hours passed, the dusk of curfew crept, the body remained. A Louisiana state trooper around the corner knew all about it: a murder victim, bludgeoned, one of several in that area.
 
The police marked it with traffic cones maybe four days ago, he said, and then he joked that if you wanted to kill someone here, this was a good time.
 
Night came, then morning, then noon, and another sun beat down on a dead son of the Crescent City.
 
That a corpse lies on Union Street may not shock; in the wake of last week's hurricane, there are surely hundreds, probably thousands.
 
What is remarkable is that on a central street in a major American city, a corpse can decompose for days, like carrion, and that is acceptable.
 
Welcome to New Orleans in the postapocalypse, half baked and half deluged: pestilent, eerie, unnaturally quiet.
 
Scraggly residents emerge from waterlogged wood to say strange things, and then return into the rot. Cars drive the wrong way on the interstate and no one cares. Fires burn, dogs scavenge and old signs from bon temps have been replaced with hand-scrawled threats like the one on Chartres Street: "I WILL SHOOT YOUR SORRY ASS - BE NICE and LEAVE."
 
The incomprehensible has become so routine here that it tends to lull you into acceptance.
 
On Sunday, for example, several soldiers on Jefferson Highway had guns aimed at the heads of several prostrate men suspected of breaking into an electronics store.
 
A car pulled right up to this tense scene and the driver leaned out his window to ask a soldier a question: "Hey, how do you get to the interstate?"
 
Maybe the slow acquiescence to the ghastly here - not in Baghdad, not in Rwanda, here - is rooted in the intensive media coverage of the hurricane's aftermath: Floating bodies and obliterated towns equal old news. Maybe the concerns of the living far outweigh the dignity of a corpse on Union Street.
 
Or maybe the nation is numb with post-traumatic shock.
 
Wandering New Orleans this week, away from news conferences and search-and-rescue squads, has granted haunting glimpses of the past, present and future, with the rare comfort found in, say, the white sheet that flaps, not in surrender but as a vow, at the corner of Poydras and St. Charles Avenue.
 
"We Shall Survive," it says, as though wishing past the battalions of bulldozers that will one day come to knock down water-corrupted neighborhoods and rearrange the Louisiana mud for the infrastructure of an altogether different New Orleans.
 
Here, then, the New Orleans of today, where open fire hydrants gush the last thing needed on these streets; where one of the many gag-inducing smells - that of rancid meat - is better than MapQuest in pinpointing the presence of a market; and where images of irony beg to be noticed.
 
The Mardi Gras beads imbedded in mud by a soldier's boot print.
 
The "take-away" signs outside restaurants taken away.
 
The corner kiosk shouting the Aug. 28 headline of the New Orleans Times-Picayune: "Katrina Takes Aim."
 
Rush hour in the city center now means pickups carrying gun-toting men in sunglasses, SUVs loaded with out-of-town reporters hungry for action, and the occasional tank.
 
About the only ones commuting by bus are dull-eyed suspects shuffling two-by-two from the bus-and-train terminal, which is now a makeshift jail.
 
Maybe some of them helped to kick in the portal to the Williams Super Market in the once-desirable Garden District, and who could blame them if all they wanted was food in those first desperate days?
 
The interlopers took the water, beer, cigarettes and snack food. They did not take the wine or the New Orleans postcards.
 
On the other side of the city center, across Canal Street in the French Quarter, the most raucous and most unreal of American avenues is now little more than an empty alley with balconies.
 
The absence of sweetly blown jazz, of someone cooing "ma chère," of men sporting convention name tags and emitting forced guffaws - the absence of us - assaults the senses more than any smell.
 
Past the famous Café du Monde, where a slight breeze twirls the overhead fans for no one, past the statue of Joan of Arc gleaming gold, a man emerges from nothing on Royal Street. He is asked, "Where's St. Bernard Avenue?"
 
"Where's the ice?" he asks in return, eyes narrowed in menace.
 
"Where's the ice? St. Bernard's is that way, but where's the ice?"
 
In the water-weary Seventh, Eighth and Ninth Wards, the severely damaged streets and neighborhoods bear the names of saints who could not protect them.
 
Whatever nature spared, human nature stepped up to provide a kind of democracy in destruction.
 
At the Whitney National Bank on St. Claude Avenue, diamond-like bits of glass spill from the crushed door, offering a view of the complementary coffee table.
 
A large woman named Phoebe Au - "Pronounced 'Awe,"' she says - materializes to report that men smashed it in with a truck.
 
She fades into the neighborhood's broken brick, and a thin woman named Toni Miller materializes to correct the record.
 
"What line of crap's she feeding you?" she asks. Then she says, "They used sledgehammers."
 
Farther down St. Claude Avenue, where tanks rumble past a smoldering building, the roads are cluttered with vandalized city buses.
 
The city parked them on the riverbank for the hurricane, after which some hoods took them for fare-free joy rides through lawless streets, and then discarded them.
 
On Clouet Street, where a days'-old fire continues to burn where a warehouse once stood, a man on a bicycle wheels up through the smoke to introduce himself as Strangebone. The nights without power or water have been tough, he said, especially since the police took away the gun he was carrying - "They beat me and threatened to kill me," he says - but there are benefits to this new world. "You're able to see the stars," he says. "It's wonderful."
 
Law enforcement troops have now begun lending muscle to Mayor C. Ray Nagin's vow to evacuate by force any residents too defiant or too stupid not to leave the toxic metropolis.
 
They searched the streets for the likes of Strangebone, and that woman whose name sounds like Awe.
 
Meanwhile, back in the city center, the shadows of another evening crept like spilled black water over someone's corpse.
 
 



IHT Copyright © 2005 The International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com

Barbara Bush Calls Evacuees Better Off

September 7, 2005

Barbara Bush Calls Evacuees Better Off

WASHINGTON, Sept. 6 - As President Bush battled criticism over the response to Hurricane Katrina, his mother declared it a success for evacuees who "were underprivileged anyway," saying on Monday that many of the poor people she had seen while touring a Houston relocation site were faring better than before the storm hit.

"What I'm hearing, which is sort of scary, is they all want to stay in Texas," Barbara Bush said in an interview on Monday with the radio program "Marketplace." "Everyone is so overwhelmed by the hospitality."

"And so many of the people in the arena here, you know, were underprivileged anyway," she said, "so this is working very well for them."

Mrs. Bush toured the Astrodome complex with her husband, former President George Bush, as part of an administration campaign throughout the Gulf Coast region to counter criticism of the response to the storm. Former President Bush and former President Bill Clinton are helping raise money for the rebuilding effort.

White House officials did not respond on Tuesday to calls for comment on Mrs. Bush's remarks.

Yahoo widgets

 


Going Beyond the Browser
With the Konfabulator

By AARON RUTKOFF
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL ONLINE
September 9, 2005

Before Google's Sidebar and Apple's Dashboard there was the Konfabulator, a small program that can deliver virtually any sort of information to personal computers without a Web browser.

The Gimmick

For Arlo Rose, co-creator of the Konfabulator engine1, the problem "was not really wanting to have a Web browser open to get information," he says. "I wanted to get weather information and to see battery levels on my computer without opening any other program."

[This 'Widget' serves as a day planner. The Konfabulator engine is built to run virtually any information-based applet.]
This 'Widget' serves as a day planner. The Konfabulator engine is built to run virtually any information-based applet.

With Konfabulator applications, which are called "Widgets," the data stream remains while the browser window disappears entirely, replaced by a small, independent display on the desktop. Many Widgets can run at once, and when buried beneath other windows can be summoned forth with single keystroke. The concept is overwhelmingly simple, but somewhat hard to pin down in a world where access to information is normally dominated by the Internet browser.

The idea proved so compelling that Apple incorporated it with few modifications -- even maintaining the term "widgets" -- for a program called Dashboard that is bundled in with the new Mac OS X Tiger operating system.

Imitation, as far as Mr. Rose is concerned, had nothing to do with flattery in this case. A former Apple programmer, Mr. Rose says he was "steamrolled" by Dashboard.

WASTING TIME?
[Wasting Time?]
Do strange Web novelties seem to emerge from nowhere and appear in your email inbox? Send your Time Wasters to aaron.rutkoff@wsj.com2 and we'll investigate their origins.

When word of Dashboard first leaked out in the Apple programmer community, nearly a year before Tiger's official release, it seemed Mr. Rose's former employer was poised to decimate the population of Konfabulator users. "All I can say is I was grumpy," he recalls. At the time, Mr. Rose's engine worked only on Macs and was distributed as shareware for a small one-time fee.

The looming threat of extinction pushed Mr. Rose and his two partners to roll out a Windows version of Konfabulator in November 2004 -- a development that brought the tiny company to the attention of Yahoo and saved it from obsolescence.

The Idea

At the most basic level, Konfabulator is a way to wrap graphically-pleasing "skin" around virtually any type of data -- from local traffic reports and weather conditions to the famous sayings of Yoda.

Konfabulator is powered by a JavaScript engine built to run open-source applets that use simple XML programming language. Beyond the dozen or so original Widgets, which were created in by Mr. Rose and come bundled with Konfabulator, all of the applets are created by users.

Many Widgets are simple derivations of earlier creations. The open source design, bolstered by tutorials3 and forums4, allows even relative novices to create their own Widgets to display personalized information. There are now 1,400 Widgets, and most can run on either Apple's Mac OS or Microsoft's Windows users.

That commitment to open source development, which aims to extend the world of programming to a mass audience, made Konfabulator an interesting commodity for Yahoo, which bought it in July for an undisclosed amount. "If we could open it up to everyone, we could become an operating system for the world," explains Yahoo Vice Pre Toni Schneider, who leads the company's Developer Network5.

"You can build a Widget," he promises. "As long as you're not computer-phobic, you could probably build a basic one. It is really designed for people who don't know how to program."

The Creator

Mr. Rose, a 33-year-old Bay Area native, has made a career out of the art of user interface and grassroots programming. He left Apple in 1997, where he had worked on the user interface system for Mac computers.

[A collection of 'Widgets' sit on a PC desktop. When buried beneath other programs, they can be summoned with one keystroke.]
A collection of 'Widgets' sit on a PC desktop. When buried beneath other programs, they can be summoned with one keystroke.

Mr. Rose then launched Kaleidoscope6, a third-party user interface system for Macs that allowed individuals to modify the basic appearance of the operating system. In an era when Apple products were not the fashion plates of today, Mr. Rose's alternative system gained a large and devoted following.

The inspiration for Konfabulator, as he recounts in an online comic strip7, came while playing with the customizable "skins" of Winamp, one of the first big PC-based audio players. "I like doing stuff people can adapt to their own personalities," Mr. Rose says.

He eventually recruited programmer Perry Clarke to turn out the earliest version of Konfabulator in 2002, which worked only on Mac systems. The previous success of Kaleidoscope "drummed up a lot of buzz right away" for the new program, Mr. Rose recalls. The two formed a software firm called Pixoria and even added an additional employee.

As a business, with a one-time fee of $19.95 for revenue, the Pixoria employees "did do really well with it," Mr. Rose says. "Three of us supported ourselves in Silicon Valley, which is not the cheapest place to live."

Apple's addition of the strikingly similar Dashboard, made Mr. Rose a figure of controversy: he expressed a deeper level of acrimony8 in other media interviews and sparked heated debate9 in the tech world, with programmers10 divided11 over the fairness of Apple's move.

The Tipping Point

At the end of July, when Yahoo bought Pixoria, it quickly rebranded the Konfabulator as Yahoo! Widgets12 and made it free. Now, nearly 200 new Widgets are submitted each week13 -- with well over 150,00 Widget downloads each day.

Yahoo's Mr. Schneider admits the Konfabulator's Widget technology is a way for the Web search company "to go beyond the browser."

"That said, Widgets are not a replacement for Web sites," he adds. "They're a great, visually really exciting way to show snippets of information that can then lead you back to a full Web page."

Both Messrs. Schneider and Rose dismiss the idea that Widgets could become a revenue source for Yahoo by bearing advertisements. Both men also rule out any restrictions that might block online rivals, like Google or eBay, from being used as data sources by independent Widget creators; applets now available help users check Gmail accounts and monitor live auctions without logging on to a Web site.

"The whole idea of Konfabulator is that it is as open as you want it to be," Mr. Rose says. "That we would change from that open idea is just not something we are going to do at any point."

Write to Aaron Rutkoff at aaron.rutkoff@wsj.com14

New Danish ambassador carjacked in Nairobi

 


Story by PATRICK MAYOYO and PATRICK NZIOKA
Publication Date: 09/10/2005

A detective dusts a Danish embassy vehicle for finger prints after it was recovered by police from carjackers in Nairobi yesterday. The ambassador, Mr Bo Jessen, who was being driven in another car, was robbed of his mobile phone and Sh5,000, but he was not hurt.
Photo by Paul Waweru
The new Danish ambassador was yesterday robbed of his mobile phone and Sh5,000 after being caught up in a carjacking incident on Nairobi's Waiyaki Way.

Mr Bo Jessen, who presented his credentials to President Kibaki on Thursday, was robbed a few metres from his offices by a five-man gang.

Gigiri police boss Patrick Lumumba said the robbers confronted Mr Jessen as he was being driven to the embassy offices on Waiyaki Way.

A gang member and an embassy driver were injured when APs at a nearby DO's office engaged the gunmen in a shoot-out. The driver was taken to Nairobi Hospital.

"Apart from losing his phone and wallet containing the money, the ambassador was not harmed," the police boss said.

When Mr Jessen presented his credentials to President Kibaki together with Slovak ambassador Igor Liska and European Union's Eric Jacob Van Der Linden, the President called on ambassadors and high commissioners in Kenya to tour the country and interact with citizens.

Mr Lumumba said the ambassador's car, which was being escorted by another vehicle, was blocked by a white saloon car as it slowed down to turn towards the embassy at the gate of Aga Khan High School.

The robbers commandeered one of the vehicles when they were challenged by two Administration Police officers on patrol who had witnessed the robbery.

A shoot-out ensued and the gang who had by now taken control of one of the vehicles drove off with the APs in pursuit. But the APs shot and deflated the rear and front tyres of the embassy car on Rhapta Road next to the Pakistani embassy.

The gangsters then commandeered another vehicle, dragged their injured colleague into it and sped off towards town.

The vehicle was later found abandoned in Mowlem area in Dandora.

The Danish embassy vehicle abandoned by the gangsters had 24 bullet holes. The window on the driver's side was shattered.

Chief inspector Martin Waititu of Westlands DO's office said Administration Police on patrol spotted the gangsters and fired in the air to scare them before they returned fire and started escaping.

"It was after they discovered that our officers were in the vicinity that they panicked and started making frantic efforts to escape," he said.

Mr Wellington Muya who was among motorists robbed said the gangsters confronted him at gunpoint and demanded his car keys.

"I gave them the car keys... they then took my briefcase and mobile phone before going to the car behind me with diplomatic numbers," he said.

Mr Muya, however, said he was lucky because he managed to get his briefcase back after the gangsters threw it away while escaping from APs. 

Mr Lumumba said police recovered a Russian made sub-machine gun from the car abandoned by the robbers, a police pocket radio, a bullet-proof vest, a neon sign like those used by police at road blocks, a police beret, 31 rounds of ammunition for the machine gun and four rounds of ammunition for an AK-47 rifle.