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GENERAL BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY


Space pistols?   more similar news »
Are these ex-US president's guns out of this world?
Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
What's Inside: Foamalicious, Vaporlicious Easy-Off Oven Cleaner   more similar news »
Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
Military Secrets Help Produce the Ultimate Synthetic Fishing Rod   more similar news »

Andy stone meets me in front of a small building in Manchester, Vermont, a Green Mountain hamlet known for factory outlets and maple syrup. He's wearing busted Carhartts, a flannel shirt, and a thick backwoods beard. As he guides me to the industrial freezer around back, Stone is so excited that I'm starting to fantasize about what's inside (gallons of Ben & Jerry's?). The door opens, and I see a shelf stacked with what appears to be rolls of black paper towels.

"I know it doesn't look like much," he says, "but that stuff is worth several hundred thousand dollars." The "stuff" is unidirectional carbon fiber — not the ubiquitous carbon mesh found everywhere from dashboards to tennis racquets, but a new superlight variety that was, until recently, a highly classified concoction. I start to copy information from a label when Stone barks, "Don't write down the manufacturer's name," and slams the door shut.

It's not just trade secrets he's protecting — it's national security. The composite is used in Predator drones and spy satellites for the US military. Stone, along with colleagues at the outdoors supplier Orvis, use it to build a fly-fishing rod. Called Helios, its story began nearly three years ago when Stone, Jim Lepage, and another man — so entrenched in top-secret contracts that nobody would even tell me his name (we'll call him Deep Trout) — set out to build the ultimate rod: lighter than anything ever made but strong enough to land the big one.

Through his network of black-ops eggheads, Deep Trout learned about a new type of composite the military was using. Traditional sheets of carbon fiber are woven to create a matrix that's strong in every direction. The advanced brew's tapered pieces of graphite employ a high-temperature epoxy and eliminate the need for a grid, decreasing the number of fibers and cutting weight by up to 25 percent.

It's a long cast from bamboo, which until recently was the preferred material for top-shelf poles. No synthetic could surpass its light touch and ability to maneuver a tiny fly. But bamboo is a total pain in the ass to work with: It can take 80 hours to craft a single rod. And because of all that labor, fine bamboo rigs sell for around $1,500.

As early as the 1940s, rod makers started experimenting with fiberglass, but it couldn't match the mighty grass. In the '70s, they looked to graphite, but it felt dead. Then, as government aerospace contracts started drying up in the mid-'80s, "guys who had been developing military systems started sending us their resumes," Lepage says. They brought with them the secrets of carbon fiber. "We realized that if we could perfect carbon fiber," he says, "it would make bamboo obsolete." But though the new composite could outcast bamboo, it lacked the feel.

They worked for years with composite, never quite matching nature. Finally last year, Orvis rolled a tube from the unidirectional material. It was less than half the weight of bamboo, just as bendy, and substantially stronger: The Helios was born. It's so light — 2.1 ounces for a 9-foot rod — it's even more precise than the panda food. Bamboo was bested — especially considering that a Helios costs only about $750.

Of course, engineers now have another problem: The Iraq war makes it tough to get their secret stuff. "Since we're using the raw materials of Apache helicopter blades, it's not easy to secure an order for fishing rods," Lepage says. If the carbon-fiber supply does dry up, there's a riverbank not far from the shop where bamboo grows like crazy.


Mon May 26, 2008
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May 26, 1908: Mideast Oil Discovered -- There Will Be Blood   more similar news »

1908: A British company strikes oil in Persia (now Iran). It's the first big petroleum find in the Middle East, and it sets off a wave of exploration, extraction and exploitation that will change the region's -- and the world's -- history.

Englishman William D'Arcy had obtained a license to explore for oil in Persia in 1901. He sent explorer George Reynolds, who searched fruitlessly for seven years.

Fresh investment from the Burmah Oil Co. had rescued the expedition financially in 1904, but with no results and D'Arcy's personal fortune completely run out, he risked losing his two country houses and his London mansion. In Persia, staff was already being dismissed. Reynolds received orders from London for his last-chance well: Drill to 1,600 feet and then stop.

Why all the fuss? The automobile was in its infancy, and few people could foresee its future. How did an investor expect to get rich off an oil strike? Well -- and we really do mean well -- you could run an electric-power plant with oil, you could run factory machinery on oil and, perhaps most importantly, the world's powerful navies were converting their ships from coal to oil. Almost anything that had run on coal -- especially coal that heated water to create steam -- could run on oil.

Exactly 100 years ago today, the smell of sulfur hovered in the air at Masjid-i-Suleiman. That was a good sign for an experienced oil hand like Reynolds. At 4 in the morning, the drill reached 1,180 feet below the desert and struck oil. A huge gusher shot 75 feet into the air.

The site was so remote that it took five days before D'Arcy got word by telegram in England. "If this is true," he replied, "all our troubles are over." It was indeed true, and more wells hit oil elsewhere in Persia, including a huge one in September.

D'Arcy and Burmah reorganized their holdings in 1909 as the Anglo-Persian Oil Co. (which became the Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. in 1935, British Petroleum in 1954 and BP in 2000.) Its initial public offering of stock shares sold out in 30 minutes in London. People stood five deep around the tellers' cages to buy shares in Glasgow. The race for oil accelerated throughout the Middle East.

At the instigation of First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill, the British government became a majority (and at-first secret) shareholder of Anglo-Persian during World War I. Britain soon became a dominant power in Persian and later Iranian politics. British and American political operations in that nation shaped the developments that led to the Iranian revolution in 1979 and the current Middle Eastern power situation.

Source: Various


Mon May 26, 2008
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Lamest Fetish Items Ever: From Expensive to Foolish, 1999 - '06   more similar news »
:

15 years of Wired Fetish. That's 442 pages of obsessive gear lust. We were bound to make a few bad selections...

3Desk Feb 1999 $70,000 The Unix version was an extra $5,000.: Sep 1999 $695 Roomba's long-forgotten forefather.: Sep 2000 $1,299 Instead of keeping track of 4x6 snapshots, you got to keep track of 3.5-inch CDs.: Sep 2000 $3,150 One-person hovercraft failed to reinvent transportation infrastructure.: Mar 2001 $175 We're wearing ours this very moment.: Apr 2001 $499 We said: "Monster trucks for your feet!" As though that were a good thing.: Apr 2001 $700 Finally, the marriage of a sewing machine and a Game Boy!: Aug 2001 $580 Jacket/lounge chair combo uncomfortable in both modes.: Feb 2002 $229 Not included: gigantic sense of self-importance.: Mar 2002 $799 We've long since run out of the required Procter & Gamble cleaning solution.: Jan 2004 $250,000 British amphibious car suitable for 007 wannabes and Miami drug lords.: Feb 2004 $50 Projected kaleidoscopic images to lull kids, stoners to sleep.: Apr 2005 $261,996 The biggest, but not the priciest, item ever featured in Fetish.: Sep 2005 $60 Steroids proved a more convenient performance enhancer.: Oct 2005 $40 Music toy featured seven rhythm tracks, none actually danceable.: Oct 2005 $N/A Shipping soon!: Jan 2006 $1,075 Is my 66-pound iPod dock a little garish?

Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
Interactive Map: Who's Gushing Now   more similar news »
It's exactly 100 years since the first big Middle Eastern oil discovery. We map world oil reserves by country.

Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
Military Secrets Help Produce the Ultimate Synthetic Fishing Rod   more similar news »

Andy stone meets me in front of a small building in Manchester, Vermont, a Green Mountain hamlet known for factory outlets and maple syrup. He's wearing busted Carhartts, a flannel shirt, and a thick backwoods beard. As he guides me to the industrial freezer around back, Stone is so excited that I'm starting to fantasize about what's inside (gallons of Ben & Jerry's?). The door opens, and I see a shelf stacked with what appears to be rolls of black paper towels.

"I know it doesn't look like much," he says, "but that stuff is worth several hundred thousand dollars." The "stuff" is unidirectional carbon fiber — not the ubiquitous carbon mesh found everywhere from dashboards to tennis racquets, but a new superlight variety that was, until recently, a highly classified concoction. I start to copy information from a label when Stone barks, "Don't write down the manufacturer's name," and slams the door shut.

It's not just trade secrets he's protecting — it's national security. The composite is used in Predator drones and spy satellites for the US military. Stone, along with colleagues at the outdoors supplier Orvis, use it to build a fly-fishing rod. Called Helios, its story began nearly three years ago when Stone, Jim Lepage, and another man — so entrenched in top-secret contracts that nobody would even tell me his name (we'll call him Deep Trout) — set out to build the ultimate rod: lighter than anything ever made but strong enough to land the big one.

Through his network of black-ops eggheads, Deep Trout learned about a new type of composite the military was using. Traditional sheets of carbon fiber are woven to create a matrix that's strong in every direction. The advanced brew's tapered pieces of graphite employ a high-temperature epoxy and eliminate the need for a grid, decreasing the number of fibers and cutting weight by up to 25 percent.

It's a long cast from bamboo, which until recently was the preferred material for top-shelf poles. No synthetic could surpass its light touch and ability to maneuver a tiny fly. But bamboo is a total pain in the ass to work with: It can take 80 hours to craft a single rod. And because of all that labor, fine bamboo rigs sell for around $1,500.

As early as the 1940s, rod makers started experimenting with fiberglass, but it couldn't match the mighty grass. In the '70s, they looked to graphite, but it felt dead. Then, as government aerospace contracts started drying up in the mid-'80s, "guys who had been developing military systems started sending us their resumes," Lepage says. They brought with them the secrets of carbon fiber. "We realized that if we could perfect carbon fiber," he says, "it would make bamboo obsolete." But though the new composite could outcast bamboo, it lacked the feel.

They worked for years with composite, never quite matching nature. Finally last year, Orvis rolled a tube from the unidirectional material. It was less than half the weight of bamboo, just as bendy, and substantially stronger: The Helios was born. It's so light — 2.1 ounces for a 9-foot rod — it's even more precise than the panda food. Bamboo was bested — especially considering that a Helios costs only about $750.

Of course, engineers now have another problem: The Iraq war makes it tough to get their secret stuff. "Since we're using the raw materials of Apache helicopter blades, it's not easy to secure an order for fishing rods," Lepage says. If the carbon-fiber supply does dry up, there's a riverbank not far from the shop where bamboo grows like crazy.


Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
Lamest Fetish Items Ever: From Expensive to Foolish, 1999 - '06   more similar news »
:

15 years of Wired Fetish. That's 442 pages of obsessive gear lust. We were bound to make a few bad selections...

3Desk Feb 1999 $70,000 The Unix version was an extra $5,000.: Sep 1999 $695 Roomba's long-forgotten forefather.: Sep 2000 $1,299 Instead of keeping track of 4x6 snapshots, you got to keep track of 3.5-inch CDs.: Sep 2000 $3,150 One-person hovercraft failed to reinvent transportation infrastructure.: Mar 2001 $175 We're wearing ours this very moment.: Apr 2001 $499 We said: "Monster trucks for your feet!" As though that were a good thing.: Apr 2001 $700 Finally, the marriage of a sewing machine and a Game Boy!: Aug 2001 $580 Jacket/lounge chair combo uncomfortable in both modes.: Feb 2002 $229 Not included: gigantic sense of self-importance.: Mar 2002 $799 We've long since run out of the required Procter & Gamble cleaning solution.: Jan 2004 $250,000 British amphibious car suitable for 007 wannabes and Miami drug lords.: Feb 2004 $50 Projected kaleidoscopic images to lull kids, stoners to sleep.: Apr 2005 $261,996 The biggest, but not the priciest, item ever featured in Fetish.: Sep 2005 $60 Steroids proved a more convenient performance enhancer.: Oct 2005 $40 Music toy featured seven rhythm tracks, none actually danceable.: Oct 2005 $N/A Shipping soon!: Jan 2006 $1,075 Is my 66-pound iPod dock a little garish?
Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
Mars Craft Succeeds in Soft Landing    more similar news »
The spacecraft Phoenix landed safely on Mars yesterday, making a hazardous soft landing on the planet's far north with all its scientific systems apparently intact and ready to begin an intensive new search for life beyond Earth.

Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
What's Inside: Foamalicious, Vaporlicious Easy-Off Oven Cleaner   more similar news »
Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
Military Secrets Help Produce the Ultimate Synthetic Fishing Rod   more similar news »

Andy stone meets me in front of a small building in Manchester, Vermont, a Green Mountain hamlet known for factory outlets and maple syrup. He's wearing busted Carhartts, a flannel shirt, and a thick backwoods beard. As he guides me to the industrial freezer around back, Stone is so excited that I'm starting to fantasize about what's inside (gallons of Ben & Jerry's?). The door opens, and I see a shelf stacked with what appears to be rolls of black paper towels.

"I know it doesn't look like much," he says, "but that stuff is worth several hundred thousand dollars." The "stuff" is unidirectional carbon fiber — not the ubiquitous carbon mesh found everywhere from dashboards to tennis racquets, but a new superlight variety that was, until recently, a highly classified concoction. I start to copy information from a label when Stone barks, "Don't write down the manufacturer's name," and slams the door shut.

It's not just trade secrets he's protecting — it's national security. The composite is used in Predator drones and spy satellites for the US military. Stone, along with colleagues at the outdoors supplier Orvis, use it to build a fly-fishing rod. Called Helios, its story began nearly three years ago when Stone, Jim Lepage, and another man — so entrenched in top-secret contracts that nobody would even tell me his name (we'll call him Deep Trout) — set out to build the ultimate rod: lighter than anything ever made but strong enough to land the big one.

Through his network of black-ops eggheads, Deep Trout learned about a new type of composite the military was using. Traditional sheets of carbon fiber are woven to create a matrix that's strong in every direction. The advanced brew's tapered pieces of graphite employ a high-temperature epoxy and eliminate the need for a grid, decreasing the number of fibers and cutting weight by up to 25 percent.

It's a long cast from bamboo, which until recently was the preferred material for top-shelf poles. No synthetic could surpass its light touch and ability to maneuver a tiny fly. But bamboo is a total pain in the ass to work with: It can take 80 hours to craft a single rod. And because of all that labor, fine bamboo rigs sell for around $1,500.

As early as the 1940s, rod makers started experimenting with fiberglass, but it couldn't match the mighty grass. In the '70s, they looked to graphite, but it felt dead. Then, as government aerospace contracts started drying up in the mid-'80s, "guys who had been developing military systems started sending us their resumes," Lepage says. They brought with them the secrets of carbon fiber. "We realized that if we could perfect carbon fiber," he says, "it would make bamboo obsolete." But though the new composite could outcast bamboo, it lacked the feel.

They worked for years with composite, never quite matching nature. Finally last year, Orvis rolled a tube from the unidirectional material. It was less than half the weight of bamboo, just as bendy, and substantially stronger: The Helios was born. It's so light — 2.1 ounces for a 9-foot rod — it's even more precise than the panda food. Bamboo was bested — especially considering that a Helios costs only about $750.

Of course, engineers now have another problem: The Iraq war makes it tough to get their secret stuff. "Since we're using the raw materials of Apache helicopter blades, it's not easy to secure an order for fishing rods," Lepage says. If the carbon-fiber supply does dry up, there's a riverbank not far from the shop where bamboo grows like crazy.


Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
May 26, 1908: Mideast Oil Discovered -- There Will Be Blood   more similar news »

1908: A British company strikes oil in Persia (now Iran). It's the first big petroleum find in the Middle East, and it sets off a wave of exploration, extraction and exploitation that will change the region's -- and the world's -- history.

Englishman William D'Arcy had obtained a license to explore for oil in Persia in 1901. He sent explorer George Reynolds, who searched fruitlessly for seven years.

Fresh investment from the Burmah Oil Co. had rescued the expedition financially in 1904, but with no results and D'Arcy's personal fortune completely run out, he risked losing his two country houses and his London mansion. In Persia, staff was already being dismissed. Reynolds received orders from London for his last-chance well: Drill to 1,600 feet and then stop.

Why all the fuss? The automobile was in its infancy, and few people could foresee its future. How did an investor expect to get rich off an oil strike? Well -- and we really do mean well -- you could run an electric-power plant with oil, you could run factory machinery on oil and, perhaps most importantly, the world's powerful navies were converting their ships from coal to oil. Almost anything that had run on coal -- especially coal that heated water to create steam -- could run on oil.

Exactly 100 years ago today, the smell of sulfur hovered in the air at Masjid-i-Suleiman. That was a good sign for an experienced oil hand like Reynolds. At 4 in the morning, the drill reached 1,180 feet below the desert and struck oil. A huge gusher shot 75 feet into the air.

The site was so remote that it took five days before D'Arcy got word by telegram in England. "If this is true," he replied, "all our troubles are over." It was indeed true, and more wells hit oil elsewhere in Persia, including a huge one in September.

D'Arcy and Burmah reorganized their holdings in 1909 as the Anglo-Persian Oil Co. (which became the Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. in 1935, British Petroleum in 1954 and BP in 2000.) Its initial public offering of stock shares sold out in 30 minutes in London. People stood five deep around the tellers' cages to buy shares in Glasgow. The race for oil accelerated throughout the Middle East.

At the instigation of First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill, the British government became a majority (and at-first secret) shareholder of Anglo-Persian during World War I. Britain soon became a dominant power in Persian and later Iranian politics. British and American political operations in that nation shaped the developments that led to the Iranian revolution in 1979 and the current Middle Eastern power situation.

Source: Various


Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
Lamest Fetish Items Ever: From Expensive to Foolish, 1999 - '06   more similar news »
:

15 years of Wired Fetish. That's 442 pages of obsessive gear lust. We were bound to make a few bad selections...

3Desk Feb 1999 $70,000 The Unix version was an extra $5,000.: Sep 1999 $695 Roomba's long-forgotten forefather.: Sep 2000 $1,299 Instead of keeping track of 4x6 snapshots, you got to keep track of 3.5-inch CDs.: Sep 2000 $3,150 One-person hovercraft failed to reinvent transportation infrastructure.: Mar 2001 $175 We're wearing ours this very moment.: Apr 2001 $499 We said: "Monster trucks for your feet!" As though that were a good thing.: Apr 2001 $700 Finally, the marriage of a sewing machine and a Game Boy!: Aug 2001 $580 Jacket/lounge chair combo uncomfortable in both modes.: Feb 2002 $229 Not included: gigantic sense of self-importance.: Mar 2002 $799 We've long since run out of the required Procter & Gamble cleaning solution.: Jan 2004 $250,000 British amphibious car suitable for 007 wannabes and Miami drug lords.: Feb 2004 $50 Projected kaleidoscopic images to lull kids, stoners to sleep.: Apr 2005 $261,996 The biggest, but not the priciest, item ever featured in Fetish.: Sep 2005 $60 Steroids proved a more convenient performance enhancer.: Oct 2005 $40 Music toy featured seven rhythm tracks, none actually danceable.: Oct 2005 $N/A Shipping soon!: Jan 2006 $1,075 Is my 66-pound iPod dock a little garish?

Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
Interactive Map: Who's Gushing Now   more similar news »
It's exactly 100 years since the first big Middle Eastern oil discovery. We map world oil reserves by country.

Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
XM Is Seeking $120 Million In Financing    more similar news »
XM Satellite Radio Holdings warned in a regulatory filing last week that its financial position may be threatened if it cannot find $120 million worth of financing to adhere to the terms of its high-profile contract with Major League Baseball.

Mon May 26, 2008
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Learn to Play the Guitar at Your Local Newsstand   more similar news »
Newsstand sales of Guitar World magazine soared after the publisher started putting instructional DVDs on the racks with the magazine.
Mon May 26, 2008
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Learn to Play the Guitar at Your Local Newsstand   more similar news »
Newsstand sales of Guitar World magazine soared after the publisher started putting instructional DVDs on the racks with the magazine.
Mon May 26, 2008
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China Orders 6 Telecoms to Merge Their Assets   more similar news »
The move would allow fixed-line carriers to expand into wireless services and create three operators that will offer phone and Internet connections to 1.3 billion people.
Mon May 26, 2008
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China Orders 6 Telecoms to Merge Their Assets   more similar news »
The move would allow fixed-line carriers to expand into wireless services and create three operators that will offer phone and Internet connections to 1.3 billion people.
Mon May 26, 2008
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Cable Networks Trying to Build on Their Gains in Ratings   more similar news »
Cable channels have been eroding broadcast viewership for years, and comparisons between them are inexact. This season, though, the shifts are especially sharp.
Mon May 26, 2008
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Media Talk: Bringing TV Clips to Blogs, a Site Runs Afoul of Networks   more similar news »
Web start-up Redlasso.com thought its strategy for uploading television clips would make networks eager to sell ads on its site. On the contrary, networks want it to stop.
Mon May 26, 2008
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Media Talk: Bringing TV Clips to Blogs, a Site Runs Afoul of Networks   more similar news »
Web start-up Redlasso.com thought its strategy for uploading television clips would make networks eager to sell ads on its site. On the contrary, networks want it to stop.
Mon May 26, 2008
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Media Talk: DVRs Lop Off End of (Gasp!) ‘American Idol’   more similar news »
When the finale of “American Idol” extended past its time slot, some viewers who saved the program on digital video recorders missed the announcement of the winner.
Mon May 26, 2008
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Media Talk: DVRs Lop Off End of (Gasp!) ‘American Idol’   more similar news »
When the finale of “American Idol” extended past its time slot, some viewers who saved the program on digital video recorders missed the announcement of the winner.
Mon May 26, 2008
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Historic pictures sent from Mars   more similar news »
Nasa's Phoenix lander sets down in the far north of Mars and sends back pictures of a barren landscape.
Mon May 26, 2008
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Historic pictures sent from Mars   more similar news »
Nasa's Phoenix lander sets down in the far north of Mars and sends back pictures of a barren landscape.
Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
Looking Ahead: This Week’s Economic Reports   more similar news »
Reports this week will include new home sales for April, the Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller index of home prices and the consumer confidence index.
Mon May 26, 2008
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Drilling Down: Some Shoppers Head to Supercenters   more similar news »
Eighty-six percent of adults said they had shopped at a supermarket in the last month down from 93 percent in 2005, and stores like Wal-Mart have benefited.
Mon May 26, 2008
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World Bank, U.S., Britain and Japan Take on Warming   more similar news »
The World Bank will raise at least $5.5 billion with the United States, Britain and Japan this year to help poor nations use clean technology and tackle global warming.
Mon May 26, 2008
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British Union Sets Merger With Steelworkers   more similar news »
Britain’s largest union, Unite, said it had finished the details of a planned merger with the United Steelworkers, which would create the first trans-Atlantic labor organization.
Mon May 26, 2008
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Warner Tries a New Tactic to Revive Its DVD Sales   more similar news »
Warner Brothers Entertainment is trying to boost DVD sagging sales by releasing companion projects to its films exclusively on DVD.
Mon May 26, 2008
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Warner Tries a New Tactic to Revive Its DVD Sales   more similar news »
Warner Brothers Entertainment is trying to boost DVD sagging sales by releasing companion projects to its films exclusively on DVD.
Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
After Years of Turmoil, Newsday Prepares for Another Owner   more similar news »
As Cablevision gets ready to take over Newsday, the paper’s readers and journalists are debating whether it means continued shrinkage, an infusion of new resources or something in between.
Mon May 26, 2008
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The Media Equation: The Wars We Choose to Ignore   more similar news »
Coverage of the Iraq war tapered off even as the body count remained high.
Mon May 26, 2008
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A Few Tremors in Oprahland   more similar news »
The average audience for “The Oprah Winfrey Show” has fallen nearly 7 percent this year, according to Nielsen Media Research — its third straight year of decline.
Mon May 26, 2008
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First Photos: Phoenix Shoots Martian Arctic Surface   more similar news »
The Phoenix Lander successfully transmits a series of photographs from the arctic surface of Mars. Check out images showing the solar panels have deployed fully, Martian terrain and a lander foot pad.

Mon May 26, 2008
more from this source»»
First Photos: Phoenix Shoots Martian Arctic Surface   more similar news »
The Phoenix Lander successfully transmits a series of photographs from the arctic surface of Mars. Check out images showing the solar panels have deployed fully, Martian terrain and a lander foot pad.

Mon May 26, 2008
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School row   more similar news »
Australian town mobilises against Islamic school
Mon May 26, 2008
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Home Office hands over £50m for police mobile devices   more similar news »
Day of the networked copper dawns

The Home Office has finalised plans to distribute £50m in extra funding to UK police so that they can purchase 10,000 mobile, networked devices for use by plods in the field.…

Mon May 26, 2008
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Live Blog: Mars Lander Touchdown!   more similar news »
Wired.com is on the scene at Mission Control with technicians at the Jet Propulsion Lab as NASA's Phoenix lander makes successful landfall on Mars. Phoenix should start sending back signals and images from Mars on Sunday evening, so check our Wired Science blog for updates.

Mon May 26, 2008
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