Brazil rallies to beat US in Confed Cup final

Sunday, June 28, 2009 at 5:45 PM
JOHANNESBURG (AP)—Clint Dempsey sobbed as the Americans walked up to get their second-place medals, unable to hide the pain and the disappointment any longer.

The euphoria of knocking off Spain last week dissolved Sunday in the Confederations Cup final when Brazil unleashed its “Beautiful Game.”

After dominating the five-time World Cup champions in the first half, the Americans were powerless as Brazil scored three goals in the final 45 minutes to rally for a 3-2 win.

“We’re at the point where we don’t want respect, we want to win,” said Landon Donovan, whose goal in the 27th minute gave the United States a 2-0 lead. “There’s no guarantee we ever get back to a final game like this, so it’s disappointing.”

Luis Fabiano scored twice for Brazil, and Lucio added the third in the 84th minute to give Brazil its second straight Confederations Cup title and third overall. The American men fell short in their first final of a FIFA tournament, but the experience was invaluable.

Almost sure to qualify for next year’s World Cup, also in South Africa, the Americans certainly saw the benefits of playing this game. What hurt was the way they lost it.

“We continue to try and move ourselves forward, and playing these kind of games only helps,” U.S. coach Bob Bradley said. “But it still feels pretty lousy to let this one get away.”

In the third-place match, Spain fought back to beat host South Africa 3-2 after extra time in Rustenburg.

The United States has beaten Brazil once in 15 games, and it was just 10 days ago that the Brazilians hung a 3-0 rout on the Americans in group play of the tournament that had the critics piling on and some calling for Bradley’s job.

In the first 45 minutes Sunday, though, it was Brazil that looked like the beaten team. Its usually fluid offense created few opportunities and was constantly stymied by the U.S. defense and goalkeeper Tim Howard. Meanwhile, the Americans were relentless in their attack on a nervous-looking Brazil defense, with Donovan working hard to give his team several scoring chances.

Just 10 minutes into the game, Jonathan Spector sprinted down the right side and sent a low cross into the area. Dempsey, who had plenty of room to maneuver, raised his right leg and put just enough of a touch on the ball to alter the direction and send it past a diving Julio Cesar.

Dempsey, who also scored in the 2-0 shocker over top-ranked Spain in the semifinals, finished the tournament with three goals and was awarded the Bronze Ball.

Donovan then got possession at his own end shortly after Maicon had sent in a corner for Brazil from the right. The United States midfielder ran up the middle, passed to Charlie Davies and then reclaimed the ball from his teammate before beating Julio Cesar.

There is a reason Brazil has won so many titles over the years, though, and it wasn’t about to let another slip away.

Luis Fabiano started the comeback in the 46th minute. The striker collected a pass from Ramires before turning and shooting past defender Jay DeMerit for his fourth goal of the tournament.

“We gave up the first goal so early in second half,” Bradley said. “We really put ourselves in a tough spot.”

Luis Fabiano added a tournament-leading fifth goal to equalize in the 74th, heading in a rebound after Kaka’s cross was kicked against the crossbar by Robinho.

The Americans caught a break in the 60th when Kaka headed a cross from Andre Santos to the near post. Howard stepped back into his goal and knocked the shot off the underside of the crossbar and then grabbed it safely in his arms. Kaka appealed, arguing that the ball crossed the line before Howard was able to get to it, and television replays indicated he was correct.

It wouldn’t matter, with Lucio delivering the decisive goal in the 84th when he headed a corner kick from Elano past Howard. Brazil has now won eight matches in a row, and is unbeaten in 16.

“You look around at their players, and you realize why they’re worth so much and why they play at the teams that they play,” Donovan said. “It’s disappointing when we gave such a good effort today.”

As the Brazilians gathered in a circle and jumped up and down in celebration, the Americans remained on the field, watching in stony silence. Many climbed up to get their medals with their heads bowed, and there were few smiles in sight.

“We were able to make it a real game with a top team,” Bradley said. “Over time, to be able to sustain that longer, not have ups and downs throughout the game, that’s a sign of progress.”

Lineups:

United States: Tim Howard, Jay DeMerit, Carlos Bocanegra, Oguchi Onyewu, Jonathan Spector, Ricardo Clark (Conor Casey, 88), Clint Dempsey, Landon Donovan, Charlie Davies, Jozy Altidore (Jonathan Bornstein, 75), Benny Feilhaber (Sacha Klejstan, 75).

Brazil: Julio Cesar, Maicon, Luisao, Lucio, Andre Santos (Daniel Alves, 66), Felipe Melo, Gilberto Silva, Ramires (Elano, 67), Kaka, Robinho, Luis Fabiano.

2009 NBA Draft 1st round

Saturday, June 27, 2009 at 6:28 PM
1. L.A. Clippers -- Blake Griffin, PF, Oklahoma.
Skinny: The only can't-miss star in the draft, for now.

2. Memphis -- Hasheem Thabeet, C, UConn.
Skinny: He'll need two years to get an offense, and an upper body.

3. Oklahoma City -- James Harden, SG, Arizona St.
Skinny: Superb pairing with Russell Westbrook in the backcourt.

4. Sacramento -- Tyreke Evans, PG, Memphis.
Skinny: Just what they needed -- a point guard to build around.

5. Minnesota -- Ricky Rubio, PG, Spain
Skinny: Some say he's the best PG prospect since Kidd.

6. Minnesota -- Jonny Flynn, PG, Syracuse
Skinny: Does this mean Sebastian Telfair needs work?

7. Golden St. -- Stephen Curry, SG, Davidson
Skinny: He and Monta Ellis are yet another perfect pairing.

8. KNICKS -- Jordan Hill, PF, Arizona
Skinny: David Lee becomes good sign-and-trade candidate.

9. Toronto -- Demar DeRozan, SG, USC
Skinny: Vince, Take 2 -- same kind of athlete, anyway.

10. Milwaukee -- Brandon Jennings, PG, Italy.
Skinny: Ominous sign for free agent Ramon Sessions.

11. NETS -- Terrence Williams, SF, Louisville
Skinny: Might shift to the backcourt, to VC's spot.

12. Charlotte -- Gerald Henderson, SF, Duke
Skinny: The guy Larry Brown wanted all along.

13. Indiana -- Tyler Hansbrough, PF, UNC
Skinny: They chose him over DeJuan Blair.

14. Phoenix - Earl Clark, PF, Louisville
Skinny: Jersey guy gets to play with Steve Nash.

15. Detroit - Austin Daye, SF, Gonzaga
Skinny: Yes, he is. Skinny, we mean. Two-year project.

16. Chicago - James Johnson, SF, Wake Forest
Skinny: Rugged 3-man, plays behind Luol Deng.

17. Philadelphia - Jrue Holiday, PG, UCLA
Skinny: Not ready to take over for Andre Miller.

18. Minnesota - Ty Lawson, PG, North Carolina
Skinny: They redirected him to Denver, a good fit there.

19. Atlanta - Jeff Teague, PG, Wake Forest
Skinny: He and Jamal Crawford will replace Mike Bibby.

20. Utah - Eric Maynor, PG, VCU
Skinny: Definitely in best-player-available mode here.

21. New Orleans - Darren Collison, PG, UCLA
Skinny: Because the wear-and-tear on Chris Paul was obvious.

22. Portland - Victor Claver, SF, Spain
Skinny: Cornering the market - their third Spaniard.

23. Sacramento - Omri Casspi, SF, Israel
Skinny: They have time and roster space to develop him.

24. Dallas - B.J. Mullens, C, Ohio State
Skinny: Maybe they missed the Shawn Bradley days.

25. Oklahoma City - Rodrique Beaubois, PG, France
Skinny: The trend of rocket-heeled Euro-guards continues.

26. Chicago - Taj Gibson, PF, USC
Skinny: Seems like duplication here, with Tyrus Thomas.

27. Memphis - DeMarre Carroll, SF, Missouri
Skinny: They hope he bulks up to play the four-spot.

28. Minnesota - Wayne Ellington, SG, North Carolina
Skinny: At least they didn't take a point guard this time.

29. KNICKS (from Lakers) - Toney Douglas, PG, Florida State
Skinny: Maybe Donnie can catch lightning like Isiah used to.

30. Cleveland - Christian Eyenga, SF, Congo
Skinny: Probably will stash him overseas for a few years.

The End Is Coming in '2012'?(MOVIES)

Sunday, June 21, 2009 at 3:11 AM
Few people have destroyed the world more than Roland Emmerich. In his mega-hit "Independence Day," aliens laid waste to pretty much every metropolitan center on the planet, and in his eco-thriller "The Day After Tomorrow," much of the northern hemisphere finds itself buried under ice. In his third crack at presenting the apocalypse, this fall's "2012," Emmerich taps into the angst of thousands of astrologers, doomsday enthusiasts, and conspiracy theorists who fear that a massive cataclysm will strike the earth on December 21 of that year. Yet unlike previous dates tied to the Earth's expiration, this one has its roots in various sources throughout history including interpretations of the Mayan calendar, astrology, and the ancient Chinese fortune-telling text the "I-Ching."

The Mayan Calendar
2012 gained the patina of doom with the best-selling 1966 book "The Maya" by Harvard archeologist Michael D. Coe. He noted that the Mayan culture's famously complex "Long Count" calendar simply ends on 12/21/12, speculating that civilization might come crashing down on that date. Other scholars argue, however, that the Mayan calendar would merely flip over like an odometer that reached 100,000 miles.

Galactic Alignment
Astrologers have also pointed out that during the winter solstice of 2012, the orbital planes of the solar system and the twelve Zodiacal constellations will intersect with the "Dark Rift" -- a black bit of the Milky Way located next to Sagittarius. Some argue this intersection is precisely why the Mayans -- who were brilliant astronomers -- ended their calendar when they did. But other astrologers believe that this conjunction will usher in a great shift in consciousness.

Timewave Zero
And then there's ounterculture thinker Terence McKenna whose Timewave Zero theory -- drawing off of elements from the "I-Ching," the teachings of philosopher Alfred North Whitehead, and modern fractal mathematics -- which determined that 12/21/12 is, you guessed it, the exact date of a profound change in world. Roughly speaking, the Mayans, astrologers and McKenna are all predicting global doom or the dawning of the Age of Aquarius.

Sunspots and Pole Problems
So if the apocalypse is set just in time for holiday shopping season three years from now, how exactly will the world end? One theory that actually has some traction in the scientific community is that a solar flare will cause a sudden shift in the magnetic orientation of the Earth's poles, causing all kinds of planetary problems like volcanic eruptions and earthquakes. NASA is predicting strong solar activity around 2012 and there's evidence that the magnetic poles are slowly weakening, something that reportedly presages a reversal. Of course, most scientists think that this reversal will take centuries, not days, to occur.

So how does Roland Emmerich end the world in his upcoming epic "2012"? "Pole reversal," he said in an interview this week. "All kinds of stuff going on. But it's basically major earthquakes and volcano eruptions which kind of cause this global flood."

"We found this obscure theory of 'Earth crust displacement,' written in the '50s by someone called Professor Hapgood. Albert Einstein wrote the foreword to his book. It pretty much [says] every X number of years the whole Earth's crust shifts, all together. We thought that that was a great underlining theory that can explain why there can be a flood."

And what is the director going to do in preparation for that fated date? When asked he said, "I'm a pretty down to earth guy. Even [though] I made movies about aliens, I don't believe in aliens. And I don't believe that the world will come to an end in 2012, but it's a great scenario."

To get a peek at the devastation Emmerich is bringing to the screen in "2012," which he says has more visual effects than any of his previous films, watch the exclusive trailer below.'





New Robin Hood of File-Sharing Community

Tuesday, June 16, 2009 at 5:39 PM
Since Axxo stop uploading March 11, 2009 (Last Upload was Punisher-War Zone). A new uploader named FXW appeared.

here are FXW his/her/there torrents

http://www.mininova.org/user/fxw
at 5:20 PM

File sharing

(or piracy, if you prefer)

Publication date: 23 February 2004.
Last modified 09-Sep-2008.

Hands up everybody who never buys CDs any more?

Go on. I know you're out there. You don't have to be nervous about it, either; you're not necessarily a copyright infringer just because you download all of your music. Maybe you use iTunes or some other legal pay-to-download service, but even if you only download music for free, there's tons of free, legal music out there these days. And it's easy to find, too; check out iRATE, for instance.

Most people who don't buy music any more, of course, are copyright infringers. The law says that they should have paid for most, or all, of the music on their computer's hard drive, but they didn't.

The primary justification for this activity is that you can get away with it. The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and its equivalent bodies in other countries have been playing Wack-A-Mole with peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing services and even with users of those services, but the number of users of the various networks continues to climb, week by week.

Legally and politically, music sharing (and the increasingly popular video sharing) is a very interesting issue. According to some of the world's largest corporations, it's cutting them to the heart.

Such claims should be taken with a grain of salt, though, because copyright infringement by consumers has, historically, done the movie and music industries no harm at all.

Jack Valenti, the president of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), testified to the US House of Representatives back in 1982 that "the VCR is to the American film producer and the American public as the Boston Strangler is to the woman home alone".

The VCR, of course, turned out to be the best thing that ever happened to the film industry in America and elsewhere, so it's probably just as well that Jack didn't manage to get them banned.

He's still MPAA CEO, though, and you can probably guess what his opinion is about P2P.

Before the developed world had so many cheap, fast, Net-connected computers in it, music and video piracy was difficult. Individuals simply couldn't pirate large amounts of anything; you needed expensive, bulky equipment to infringe copyright on a grand scale.

Today, though, it's easy to send lots of copyrighted material to complete strangers all over the world without lifting a finger, and the incremental cost of doing so is often zero, bandwidth limits permitting. So lots of people do it just out of the goodness of their hearts.

The word "piracy", with its connotations of bloodshed and theft, is misleading in this context. No P2P user makes any money from file sharing - well, OK, maybe from very dumb people - and the amount of money it's costing the copyright holders is questionable.

Anti-"piracy" organisations like to take the retail value of the material illicitly copied, multiply it by the number of illicit copies made, and claim that the result is the amount of money the copyright holders have lost.

But a copied file most certainly does not equal a lost sale. Many P2P users download all kinds of obscure and improbable things that they're not at all sure they'd like, and delete most of them shortly afterwards. This does not suggest they'd be willing to pay for that stuff on CD or DVD if the download wasn't available.

Many P2P users simply don't have the money to buy the stuff they download. There are lots of teenagers with downloaded music collections "worth" many thousands of dollars. Again, if the downloads weren't available, they wouldn't have bought all that music.

The P2P battle is made stranger by the oddness of the commodity it's being fought over.

Recorded music is a very strange product. Some of it costs incredible amounts of money to make, some of it costs close to nothing (cheap personal computers have also made it cheap to set up a multitrack home recording studio), and there's little correlation between this cost and what many people think it's worth.

This is partly because "corporate music" is, more and more, aimed at a less and less discerning mass market, but it's also because music is, in some senses at least, a huge glut on the market.

Even if you restrict yourself to albums listed in the All Music Guide, and even if you assume each album is only half an hour long, there is at the moment a total of about 35 non-stop years of recorded music out there waiting for you.

Yes, a particular listener doesn't necessarily like every genre of music, and there's some redundancy in the All Music database. But even if you only listen to a tenth of the music in the Guide listings, eight continuous hours of listening a day will still give you more than ten years before you have to repeat a song.

And that'll still be the case even if P2P drives every single recording artist to starvation. The absence of new music would be a bit of a bummer, but it wouldn't leave us in a world without melodies.

Of course, P2P isn't about to destroy the enterprise of recording music.

It's unquestionable that music sharing does hurt the income of some artists, but most of those artists are the ultra-famous elite. They're the ones who have enough leverage that they actually receive significant income from their record sales (and those of other artists whose copyrights they've bought - Michael Jackson makes a lot of money out of John, Paul, George and Ringo).

Smaller independent artists have, on numerous occasions, discovered that making their music available for free download is a great promotional strategy. If you don't have a big record company to promote you, P2P and a Web site are great advertising. None of these artists are making millions of dollars a year, but more and more of them are making a living. It certainly beats playing pubs for $100 a night.

Back on the more conventional side of the fence, though, are the recording artists who're contracted to a major label, but don't regularly crack the Top 40. These artists are, practically as a truism, unlikely to ever see significant income from their record sales. Or, quite possibly, from anything - record sales, touring, or merchandising. The money all gets soaked up by their record company, and it's actually common for artists to end up owing the label a lot of money - even if they don't trash any hotel rooms. It can be a high price to pay for a rock-and-roll lifestyle.

An argument can be made that the usurious nature of most recording contracts is necessary, because record companies run a considerable risk every time they lay down money to give an unknown act the recording, promotion and touring that's needed to tell whether the fickle listening public will make them actual stars.

But the fact remains that when the average P2P user copies popular music, the copyright that's being infringed, and whatever income is being lost, probably belongs to a big record company, not a recording artist.

The recording industry has carefully, and progressively, slanted the legal situation towards themselves over the years. Most recently, US law was changed to redefine music recorded under contract as a "work for hire", meaning its copyright can be held in perpetuity by the record company. It never reverts to the artist, even if the record company hasn't felt like pressing any of their CDs for the last 25 years.

(Followers of US politics will be unsurprised to learn that this amendment sneaked into law by the time-honoured method of being added as an eleventh-hour rider to an enormous, unrelated appropriations bill.)

The movie and music industry has also backed legal amendments in Europe and the USA - the WIPO Copyright Treaty and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), respectively. These laws and others have, among other things, extended copyright terms yet further (Mickey Mouse would have finally become a public domain character this year, if not for these changes), and specifically prohibited the circumvention of copy-control technology, in and of itself.

Even if the "circumvention" is no more complex than holding down Shift when you put a CD into your computer, and even if you're doing it purely so that you can make a legal copy of something you own, for yourself, the DMCA makes your action illegal - though that doesn't mean trigger-happy lawyers will be dumb enough to go through with their threats.

And all of this is coming to the rest of the Western world - Europe, and us here in Australia.

Our recently-signed Free Trade Agreement with the USA includes an undertaking to "harmonise" our copyright law with the USA's, including our own DMCA-style WIPO-compliant legislation.

The Australian music and movie industries aren't waiting for the new laws, though. Australian universities, Internet Service Providers (including the 800 pound gorilla, Telstra) and other companies have already been raided by court-order-equipped copyright enforcers, most recently "Music Industry Piracy Investigations", backed by the Australian Recording Industry Association, ARIA.

The new laws will make it easier for individual P2P users to be raided and sued, too, as has already happened in the USA. Whether or not it's a good idea, and whether or not they're doing the music industry any actual harm.

It doesn't have to be this way, though.

In Canada (and many other countries), there's a levy on blank audio recording media (including CD-Rs), which goes to music companies. What the Canadian consumer gets in return is not just the legal right to copy any music he or she wants for private use (which already existed, though the music industry clearly wishes it didn't), but to do so whether or not he or she owns the original.

In Canada, it's not legal to make a copy of a CD and give it to a friend. But it is legal to give your original CD (or maybe even a copy - the law's not clear) to a friend, and let them make the copy, and then give your CD back.

This legislation doesn't apply very elegantly to P2P file sharing, but so far as it does, it says that downloading music is legal, but making music available for download isn't, because that counts as "broadcasting".

So P2P users who want to stay legal can simply "leech" - download, but not share anything.

Surprisingly, similar legislation to this exists in the USA - but there, "data" CD-Rs aren't classified as audio recording media. The levy's only collected on media like "audio" CD-Rs (for stand-alone home CD recorders) and Digital Audio Tapes.

Maybe the future holds a file sharer's utopia, where less restrictive laws, a new licensing scheme, or simple mass civil disobedience stymie the music and movie industry's attempts to keep a death-grip on their properties.

Or perhaps the big Intellectual Property companies will get their wish, and make us all use computers that will only copy files if the copyright holder says it's OK.

In the meantime, P2P is a wild frontier where society, law, politics and technology are blending in a way never seen before.



Note: This Article is taken from http://www.dansdata.com/filesharing.htm

CEOs Without College Degrees

Thursday, June 4, 2009 at 7:37 PM

CEOs Without College Degrees

The thousands of wait-listed would-be MBAs who may not get the chance to go to their dream B-school might want to draw inspiration from the following group of CEOs. Not only did they not get graduate degrees, they didn't get undergraduate degrees -- and some never even attended college.

Of course, not having a degree didn't stop them from being a big name on campus. You'll find Alfred Taubman's name at Brown, Harvard, the University of Michigan, and Lawrence Technological University; at least one building on each campus bears his name, although the retail magnate and philanthropist never finished college. Read on to learn who else made it into corporate top spots without the benefit of a bachelor's degree.

1. Dennis Albaugh

Chairman, Albaugh
Type of Business: Pesticides
Education: Associate's degree from Des Moines Area Community College
Fun fact: He has a collection of more than 100 classic Chevrolets

2. Paul Allen

Founder and chairman, Vulcan
Type of Business: Media, telecommunications
Education: Dropped out of Washington State College after two years
Fun fact: He persuaded Bill Gates to drop out of Harvard. They later founded Microsoft (MSFT) together.

3. Richard Branson

CEO, Virgin Group
Type of Business: Travel, radio, TV, music, venture capital
Education: No college degree
Fun fact: He became an entrepreneur at age 16 with the creation of Student magazine.

4. Maverick Carter

CEO, LRMR Innovative Marketing & Branding
Type of Business: Marketing
Education: 3.5 years of college at Western Michigan University and University of Akron combined
Quote: "Don't be afraid if you see an opportunity to go and give it shot. You can finish school later; it's always there."

5. John Paul DeJoria

CEO, John Paul Mitchell Systems
Type of Business: Hair-care products
Education: No college
Fun fact: He started out selling greeting cards at age 9.

6. Michael Dell

Founder, chairman, and CEO Dell (DELL)
Type of Business: Computers
Education: Attended University of Texas, Austin; did not finish.
Quote: "When I started our company, it was very much an idea outside of the conventional wisdom, and if there were people telling me that it wasn't going to work, I wasn't really listening to them."

7. Felix Dennis

Founder and chairman, Alpha Media Group, formerly Dennis Publishing
Type of Business: Publishing (Maxim, The Week)
Education: No college degree
Fun fact: He wrote a biography and published a magazine about Bruce Lee; sales surged when the martial arts star died suddenly in 1973.

8. Barry Diller

Chairman and CEO of IAC/InterActiveCorp (IACI)
Type of Business: Media
Education: Dropped out of UCLA after three weeks
Fun fact: He started his career working in the mail room of the William Morris Agency.

9. Bill Gates

Co-chair and Trustee, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; Chairman, Microsoft (MSFT)
Type of Business: Philanthropy. Software.
Education: Dropped out of Harvard
Fun fact: As a schoolboy, he created a program that allowed people to play tic-tac-toe on the computer.

10. Mukesh "Micky" Jagtiani

Chairman, Landmark International (Dubai)
Type of Business: Retailing
Education: No college degree
Fun fact: The billionaire mall developer flunked out of a London accounting school as a teenager and worked as a taxi driver before becoming an entrepreneur.

11. Dean Kamen

Founder and chairman, Segway
Type of Business: Motor vehicles
Education: Dropped out of Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Fun fact: Kamen founded FIRST, a robotics competition for high school students.

12. David Oreck

Founder, Oreck
Type of Business: Vacuum cleaners
Education: No college. At 17, enlisted in the army, and flew B-29 bombers during World War II
Quote: "Things are never as bad as they seem to the pessimist and never as good as they seem to the optimist."

13. Amancio Ortega Gaona

President, Inditex Group
Type of Business: Fashion retailing (Zara, Kiddy Class, others). (A Coruna, Spain)
Education: No college
Fun fact: Often cited as the richest man in Spain, he reportedly has never given any media interviews

14. Phillip Ruffin

Owner, Treasure Island
Type of Business: Casinos
Education: Attended Washburn University for three years and Wichita State University but never got his degree.
Quote: "You get the most experience from the business of life."

15. Alfred Taubman

Founder, Taubman Centers (TCO). Philanthropist
Type of Business: Shopping malls
Education: Attended the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor for three years but left to start a family and his career
Quote: "Become an expert in one fundamental area of your market or business. No one starts out as a generalist."

16. Ty Warner

Founder, Ty, Inc.
Type of Business: Toys (stuffed animals)
Education: Dropped out of college to pursue a career in acting. Later founded Ty Inc.
Fun fact: The plush animals his company manufactured retailed for only $5 in the 1990s, but Beanie Baby-mania drove prices up to $30 or more for the hard-to-get characters.

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