5/08/2013

Manchester United Manager Leaving At The End Of The Season


MANCHESTER, England — Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson is retiring at the end of the season, bringing an end to more than 26 trophy-filled years at the club.

"The decision to retire is one that I have thought a great deal about and one that I have not taken lightly," Ferguson said in a statement on Wednesday. "It is the right time."

The club did not immediately announce a successor.

Since taking charge at Old Trafford in 1986, Ferguson has established himself as the most successful manager in British soccer history, having reversed a previous plan to retire at the end of the 2001-02 season.

After the Scotsman secured a 13th Premier League title two weeks ago – extending the club's record English championship haul to 20 – he declared that he had no retirement thoughts.

But now he has just two more matches left in charge of the club he has turned into one of the world's biggest sports teams.

"It was important to me to leave an organization in the strongest possible shape and I believe I have done so," Ferguson said. "The quality of this league winning squad, and the balance of ages within it, bodes well for continued success at the highest level whilst the structure of the youth setup will ensure that the long-term future of the club remains a bright one."

Ferguson will stay at the club as a director and an ambassador.

"With these activities, along with my many other interests, I am looking forward to the future," Ferguson said. "I must pay tribute to my family, their love and support has been essential."

- AP

Syria Internet blackout enters second day


DAMASCUS - Syria's Internet blackout entered into its second consecutive day Wednesday, which the state news agency blamed on a fault in optical fibre cables.

Landline phone services between Syrian provinces have also been down since Tuesday, SANA said.

US tech firms and the US State Department reported the blackout Tuesday but did not specify any reasons for it. A similar blackout happened last November.

Novak Djokovic beaten by Grigor Dimitrov at Madrid Open



World number one Novak Djokovic fell to a shock defeat by Grigor Dimitrov in the second round of the Madrid Open.
Dimitrov, the world number 28, had not won a set against Djokovic in two previous meetings but was in top form to win 7-6 (8-6) 6-7 (8-10) 6-3.

Dimitrov won the Wimbledon and US Open junior titles in 2008 and has long been seen as a future star and potential world number one.

Sun's blood pressure benefits 'may outdo cancer risks'


The health benefits of exposing skin to sunlight may far outweigh the risk of developing skin cancer, according to scientists.

Edinburgh University research suggests sunlight helps reduce blood pressure, cutting heart attack and stroke risks and even prolonging life.

UV rays were found to release a compound that lowers blood pressure.

Researchers said more studies would be carried out to determine if it is time to reconsider advice on skin exposure.

Heart disease and stroke linked to high blood pressure are estimated to lead to about 80 times more deaths than those from skin cancer in the UK.

Production of the pressure-reducing compound, nitric oxide, is separate from the body's manufacture of vitamin D, which rises after exposure to sunshine.

Lack of sleep blights pupils' education




Sleep deprivation is a significant hidden factor in lowering the achievement of school pupils, according to researchers carrying out international education tests.

It is a particular problem in more affluent countries, with sleep experts linking it to the use of mobile phones and computers in bedrooms late at night.

Sleep deprivation is such a serious disruption that lessons have to be pitched at a lower level to accommodate sleep-starved learners, the study found.

The international comparison, carried out by Boston College, found the United States to have the highest number of sleep-deprived students, with 73% of 9 and 10-year-olds and 80% of 13 and 14-year-olds identified by their teachers as being adversely affected.

- BBC.co.uk

Headline, May09, 2013


'''ROBBING -THE ELECTRONIC​- VOTE'''




In its sales pitch to the state of Georgia,  Diebold had declared that its AccuVote TS machine was designed to be not only accurate but also fully secure. Its audit trail would record  ''any attempt to create, access, or delete information.''  Separately Diebold explained that independent laboratories would test the machines and ensure that they met high federal standards.
The machines would also be thoroughly tested by Diebold.

None of these claims was entirely true.
From the FTP site, Harris learned that Diebold machines placed  in polling places could be accessed with a  ''supervisor smart card''. Incredibly, every one of these cards had the same password  -'''1111'''   -hard coded into the system. So, anyone with a card could conceivably tamper with vote counts, or simply stop the election when he chose.
Miko Hypponen, the Finnish computer virus expert echoed the sentiment of Harris's online gang of computer experts:
''What were they thinking?''

Worse,  -one of the ways certain Diebold polling-place machines were configured to relay their votes to a ''central server'' was by wireless modem. That, says Hypponen, could make an election  ''potentially hackable''  or disruptable, from anywhere in the world.'' The machines to be used in Georgia relayed results by landline modem, which was better   -but far from hackproof. Tallies could also be uploaded from the machines to a cartridge and physically brought to central server.
But that was the cartridge that might bear results doctored by a supervisor smart card.

Most distressing,  the central server,  to which polling-place results were sent,  employed a database engine used by Microsoft Access. The very mention of that caused  -and should cause-  all computer experts to shake their heads. ''Microsoft Access is great for managing electronic records of something that would be unwieldy on paper,'' said Taylor Bodman. ''But you don't keep serious applications on it. It is too basic and easily hacked.''

On the AccuVote central server, Harris believed, a supervisor would see  votes coming in on his screen through a program called GEMS. But behind it, like a second set of books, was the database engine usable by Microsoft Access, where the  ''vote totals''  were stored. With a couple of Mouse clicks, Harris was able to go in through Microsoft Access, as if through a back door, -change vote totals, and erase any  ''audit trail''  of her actions.

The supervisor looking at his screen on GEMS would see the new tally and have no idea it had been doctored by a hacker.

Strangely, another function allowed anyone with access to the GEMS central server to create minus votes. Why, Harris wondered, would there ever be cause to record negative vote in an electronic voting machine? Later, Diebold spokesman would offer this response:
''Yes, negative votes can be entered into GEMS. If for some reason an election administrator determines they have a need to enter negative votes, that is for them to determine, and we do not believe the system should prevent that.''

So, as far as Harris could tell, this appeared to be the system that Diebold had sent to two labs for approval. The two labs had agreed that it met standards,  all right - but standards set in 1990, the stone age for D.R.E technology.

 And so the Georgia story disclosed a larger one: the grievous lack of any federal regulatory oversight for machines that would perform the most public function in America, and in every reasonable likelihood, All over the world.

With respectful dedication to Imran Khan. And with very best wishes for his full and earliest recovery from this wretched freak accident! 
See Ya in the Arena!!

With respectful dedication to Shigeki Matsuura Editor-in- Chief  HUFFPOST  Japan.

Good Night & God Bless!

SAM Daily Times - the Voice of the Voiceless