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Porsche 911 by TechArt 2012




The TECHART styling packages for the exterior give the sporty and elegant design of the Porsche 911 a quite personal note. Trims, painted in custom colour or in carbon-fibre, make the sports car an individual piece. A clear statement of sportiness: the TECHART Formula III forged light alloy wheel in 20- and 21-inch size, available colours are Sterling Silver and individual paint with five dynamically shaped twin-spokes. The particularly low weight and the significantly reduced unsprung masses directly result in an enhanced driving performance of the new Porsche 911.

The TECHART interior individualization offers a number of refining options to give the car the unique character of its driver: from the high-quality all-leather interior with decorative stitching to elegant styling optic packages made in carbon-fibre or in an individual colour. A maximum of driving pleasure plus quick shifting and perfect handling of the new Porsche 911 enable the TECHART 3-spoke sport steering wheels with the TECHART paddle shifters.

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The Thing is a 2011 science-fiction horror film

The Thing is a 2011 science-fiction horror film directed by Matthijs van Heijningen Jr., and written by Eric Heisserer and Ronald D. Moore. It is a prequel to the 1982 film of the same name by John Carpenter, the plot taking place immediately prior to the events of that film. It stars Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Joel Edgerton who are part of a team of Norwegian and American scientists who discover an alien buried deep in the ice of Antarctica, realizing too late that it is still alive, consuming then imitating the team members.















In 1982, paleontologist Kate Lloyd (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) is recruited by scientists Dr. Sander Halversen (Ulrich Thomsen) and his assistant Adam Goodman (Eric Christian Olsen) to join a Norwegian scientific team that has stumbled across a crashed extraterrestrial spaceship buried beneath the ice of Antarctica. They discover the frozen corpse of a creature that seems to have died in the crash 100,000 years ago.


After the creature is transported back to base in a block of ice, Dr. Sander orders them to conduct an experiment to retrieve a tissue sample, against Kate's protests. Later, while the others celebrate, American helicopter pilot Derek Jameson (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje) sees the Thing escape from the block of ice. The team splits up into groups to search for the alien. Olav (Jan Gunnar Røise) and Henrik (Jo Adrian Haavind) discover it hiding under one of the buildings. The Thing grabs Henrik and pulls him into its body. The others converge on the scene and set it and the entire building on fire. In the chaotic aftermath, the lone dog of the team is found dead in a bloody heap in its kennel, a massive hole torn in the wire mesh.











During an autopsy, Kate and Dr. Sander discover that the creature was somehow digesting Henrik's body. Based on an examination of a sample of Henrik's tissue, Kate determines that the cells of the Thing were attaching to, absorbing, and imitating Henrik's cells. Meanwhile, Derek, pilot Sam Carter (Joel Edgerton), Griggs (Paul Braunstein), and Olav prepare to leave the base in the only helicopter to bring back help. Just as they prepare to take off, Kate discovers four bloody, discarded metal tooth fillings and a massive amount of blood on the shower walls and floor. She runs outside to flag down the departing helicopter, fearing that one of the passengers is the Thing. When Carter decides to land, Griggs, who is really one of the Things, transforms and kills Olav, causing the helicopter to spin wildly out of control and crash, presumably killing all onboard.


In the rec room, Kate tells the other scientists her theory on the nature of the creature: It is perfectly capable of imitating any life form, but cannot imitate inorganic material such as metal, hence why it spit out the tooth fillings. Most of the team members either do not believe her or accuse her of turning them against each other out of paranoia. After everyone else leaves, Juliette (Kim Bubbs) tells Kate that she believes her, and says that she saw Colin (Jonathan Lloyd Walker) leave the shower with some sort of towel or rag. Juliette tells Kate that she knows where they keep the keys to all the vehicles, and that they can take them to prevent anyone else from leaving; however, when the two are alone in the storeroom where the keys are, Juliette transforms and attempts to kill Kate. Kate escapes, running past Karl (Carsten Bjørnlund), who is killed by the Juliette-Thing. Dog handler Lars (Jørgen Langhelle) arrives with a flamethrower and burns the Thing as it assimilates Karl.











As they burn the remains outside, Carter and Derek return, both half-frozen and barely alive. While Peder and Sander both immediately believe that both are Things and should be burned, Kate convinces them to simply lock them in a storage shed until a test can be prepared. Afterward, Adam and Sander are in the lab preparing a potential test, but when both leave for a short while, the lab is suddenly engulfed in flames in an apparent sabotage. Tensions rise as accusations by both the Norwegians and the Americans are made, but Kate proposes another, much simpler test to single out those who might be the Thing from those who aren't. With Peder manning the flamethrower, she uses a flashlight to inspect the teeth of all the other team members to see who has fillings and who doesn't. This test singles out Adam, Dr. Sander, station commander Edvard (Trond Espen Seim), and Colin. Peder sends Lars and Jonas (Kristofer Hivju) out to bring back Carter and Derek, but they have tunneled out the floor of the storage shed and into a neighboring building. While Lars leans in the doorway of the other building, they grab him and pull him inside. Jonas runs back and pleads with Peder to help him rescue Lars, but Kate orders him to guard the prisoners.


During the argument, Carter and Derek force their way inside, armed with Lars's flamethrower. Edvard repeatedly pushes Peder to burn both of them, assuming that they have killed Lars and deserve retribution. But when Peder takes aim, Derek shoots him three times, puncturing his flamethrower's tank and causing an explosion that kills Peder and renders Edvard unconscious. When Edvard is brought back to the rec room, he transforms into the Thing and kills Jonas, Adam, and Derek while Sander runs off to hide. Colin, Carter, and Kate head off in a group to hunt it down, but Colin is eventually separated from them. The Thing, which is now in the form of a creature with the faces of both Edvard and Adam, finds and kills Dr. Sander. The monster manages to separate Carter from Kate and traps him in the kitchen. Just as it is about to kill him, Kate arrives and torches the monster.


















Kate and Carter see the Sander-Thing driving off in one of the Snowcats and give chase in the remaining vehicle. They follow it out to the wreck of its ship, which has been opened up and restarted, slowly preparing to take off. Kate and Carter are separated once again and Kate encounters the Thing. She barely manages to stay out of its reach, and when it finally catches her, she destroys it with a grenade. She and Carter escape and make it back to the Snowcat. As they are preparing to leave, Kate notices that Carter is missing his left ear piercing and determines that he is one of the Things. Despite his protests, she burns him and destroys the Snowcat. Kate slowly climbs into the remaining Snowcat and stares blankly into the night.


The next morning, a Norwegian helicopter pilot, Matias (Ole Martin Aune Nilsen), arrives at the Norwegian camp in a two-man helicopter and finds the facility burning and deserted, as well as the charred remains of the two-faced Thing. It is then revealed that Colin went into the radio room and committed suicide by slitting both of his wrists and his throat with a scalpel. Lars, who has survived hiding in the building where Derek and Carter attacked him, shoots at Matias but recognizes that he is human after checking his fillings. At that moment, the Thing in the form of Lars' dog bolts out of a ruined building and runs away. Lars fires at it, then orders Matias to take off in pursuit. Lars begins shooting at the animal from the helicopter, directly leading into the beginning of John Carpenter's The Thing.
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2011 SsangYong XIV-1 Concept

The name XIV-1 is derived from the phrase ‘eXciting user Interface Vehicle’, highlighting the show car’s focus on interaction with the driver and passengers. The exterior design of SsangYong XIV-1 Concept with its continuous glass area epitomises the perfect proportions of the compact SUV. Designers took inspiration from the simplicity of the side view of a graceful sailing yacht, which is synonymous with outdoor pleasure and enjoyment. A wide C-pillar and slim roof appear to float above the body, providing a nimble, fast yet strong stance.




The objective of SsangYong XIV-1 Concept is to maximise the enjoyment of movement while also providing passengers with a moving communication space. SsangYong’s designers have named the interior concept ‘each one & all together’, enabling passengers to freely move and rotate all the seats to tailor the cabin layout to their specific needs. Each of the concept’s four seats can rotate through 360 degrees in addition to moving forwards and backwards.


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IBM's 1000 patent was purchased by Google



Google Inc., according to documents filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, to help defend against claims of othertechnology companies and the pending purchase of about 1,000 have been granted patents from IBM in its quest.

Google and IBM's spokesman, declined to comment on the sale Friday.



Google Web search and advertising business and the transfer of patents from the last two weeks doing little more technology, and includes many. First, the clock automatically shows how to connect the electrical contacts and other surface treatments.



However, Google's business and have little relationship to the patent, it could be useful ammunition in the world of hyper-technology litigation.

When the company sued for patent, based on patented technology that their business, Google will be able to submit a response.



Mobile phone manufacturers, as a young company, that is the Android software from Google and Microsoft sued Apple, Google is against the stream and has some of its own patents.



Kent Walker, Google's general counsel, patent litigation explosion, wrote in a blog post in April is likely to inhibit innovation.

"But things stand today, this type of litigation in a strong patent portfolio is one of the best defense against (ironically) are opposed, so you can, the freedom of your new products and To develop the service, "said Walker wrote.



Earlier this month, Google, Nortel 6000, has participated in the auction for the collection of patents from a bankrupt manufacturer of communications equipment in Canada. It was developed by a consortium including the defeat of th $ 4.5 billion paid by Apple.

Last year, Google has bought the patent from Motorola Inc. and Verizon Communications

Sale of a patent, first reported by Google, the next sea, as reported by the SEO blogs.
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Debt Summit Delayed Amid Calls For EU Action

EU leaders have postponed a key meeting on the eurozone debt strategy, as the Chancellor George Osborne reiterated his call for swift action over the crisis.

The European Council president Herman Van Rompuy said an October 17 meeting would take place a week later, to allow officials to "finalise" their plan.

But just hours later Mr Osborne said Europe needed to "come to a clear decision now".

"We need a comprehensive solution that puts our largest trading market on a much more stable footing," he said in a statement to the House of Commons.

The Chancellor also repeated his desire to see the package of measures completed by the time of the Cannes summit at the start of November.

And he said that eurozone nations must acknowledge that the 440bn euros in their rescue fund was not enough.

The delay to the eurozone meeting comes as new research warns the region is heading for a recession next year if leaders fail to manage the sovereign debt crisis.

Accountants Ernst & Young calculate that the combined GDP of the 17-nation group could fall by 2% next year and by a further 1% in 2013 if decisive action is not taken.

This would "almost certainly" drag the UK into recession as well, E&Y's Andy Baldwin told Sky News.

The firm's report claims that European leaders have vastly underestimated how much cash they need to contribute to the eurozone rescue fund and warn that bank lending in the region is already falling.

"The latest data already shows distinct indicators of recessionary risk," said E&Y economic advisor Marie Diron.

The warning comes a day after France and Germany said they had reached an agreement about how to strengthen the region's troubled banking sector amid the debt crisis.

A "comprehensive response" will be unveiled by the end of the month, including a detailed plan on how to recapitalise the banks, said the French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

"The economy needs secure financing to ensure growth," he added.

"There is no prospering economy without stable banks. That is what is at stake."

Mr Sarkozy and his German counterpart Angela Merkel refused to give further details of the plan, or an estimated cost, adding that other European leaders would need to see it first.

In Britain, the Prime Minister added to the calls for "decisive steps" from eurozone leaders.

David Cameron told the Financial Times: "You either make the eurozone work properly or you confront its potential failure."

Debt Summit Delayed Amid Calls For EU Action

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West Ham's Olympic Stadium Deal 'Collapses'



The Government is expected to confirm that West Ham United's deal to take over the Olympic Stadium has collapsed.

Ministers are said to be concerned that legal action by Tottenham Hotspur and Leyton Orient could drag on for years during which time the stadium would remain empty.

The Stratford stadium will instead be leased out to a tenant following a new tender process.

It is likely that, under the new tender process, any costs of transforming the stadium after the 2012 Games will be covered by the Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC).

The successful tenant will then pay an annual rent to the OPLC which could actually prove to be less costly for the likes of West Ham.

A £50m fund of public money has been set aside to convert the 80,000-capacity stadium into a 60,000-seater venue after the games next year.

The decision by the Government is also likely to remove uncertainty over the stadium ahead of London's bid for the World Athletics Championships in 2017.

There has been an anonymous complaint to the European Commission, claiming that the £40m being provided by Newham Council to West Ham represented "state aid".

The football club had wanted to convert the £537m stadium into a 60,000-capacity venue for football, athletics, concerts and community use.

But it has experienced financial problems since it was relegated from the Premier League last season.

It is understood that no contract has been signed with West Ham, allowing the move to a fresh tender process, but the club will be encouraged to bid again.

Leasing the stadium is estimated to cost around £2m, which would be a much more affordable option.

The decision is also likely to have been influenced by concerns that the application for a judicial review by Spurs and Orient could drag on and, even if their bids failed, they could appeal.

In a statement Karren Brady, vice-chairman of West Ham United, and Kim Bromley-Derry, chief executive of the London Borough of Newham said: "Uncertainty caused by the anonymous complaint to the European Commission and ongoing legal challenges have put the Olympic legacy at risk and certainly a stadium, as we envisioned it, may not be in place by 2014 due as a direct result of the legal delay.

"Therefore we would welcome a move by OPLC and government to end that uncertainty and allow a football and athletics stadium to be in place by 2014 under a new process.

"If the speculation is true, West Ham will look to become a tenant of the stadium while Newham will aim to help deliver the legacy.

"Our bid is the only one that will secure the sporting and community legacy promise of the Olympic Stadium - an amazing year-round home for football, athletics and community events of which the nation could be proud.

"The true legacy of London 2012 will be the creation of jobs and a generation of young people inspired by sport based around a community home for all by 2014. We remain committed to help deliver that legacy promise to the people of London and the nation."

The Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) is expected to make a formal statement at lunchtime.
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Minogue's thyroid condition



Singer-turned-reality TV show judge Dannii Minogue is receiving treatment for an under-active thyroid which caused her to shed weight after giving birth.

The Australian star had her first child, son Ethan, last year, but shortly after leaving hospital she fell ill and suffered a bout of appendicitis.

She spent months believing her subsequent tiredness and rundown state was a consequence of her new role as a mum, but she was eventually diagnosed with a thyroid condition.

And she's confessed her health issues even took their toll on her relationship with former rugby star Kris Smith.

Minogue tells Stella magazine, "Yes, that was a hard time for me. I was physically unwell and that takes its toll on everything. My thyroid stopped working and I had appendicitis. Leading up to that I was getting thinner and thinner, and stressing because I didn't know what it was.

"Normally you put on weight if you have an under-active thyroid. But there is a percentage of people that have it reversed. It was very hard to concentrate, you can't sleep, and I got very weak. They explain it to you as running a car without petrol.

"I was finding it hard to pick up Ethan and I was thinking, 'I'm a new mum, I know I'm tired but surely it can't be this hard?'. When you've just had a baby you think it must be normal tiredness. But it got to the point where I thought, 'This cannot be normal'. Poor Kris. He was thinking after getting through the pregnancy and the baby that everything would be just fine and he couldn't work out why I wasn't well. It was bloody difficult."

Asked if the couple is planning to extend its brood, Minogue replies, "Yes, but honestly until I get my health back on track it's not a possibility."
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Airlines present security vision



The airline industry has presented its vision for the future of check-in security, including hi-tech colour-coded scanning corridors.

Passengers will be able to keep their shoes on and their bags in their hand - toothpaste, nail clippers, laptops and all - as they pass through the "checkpoint of the future".

Under a mock-up checkpoint on display at the Aviation Security World Conference in Amsterdam, passengers are guided into one of three corridors upon presenting their passports: blue for frequent travellers, purple for normal passengers and orange for those deemed to require enhanced vetting.

People do not have to empty their pockets, remove any of their clothing or subject themselves to pat-downs before walking through a 20-foot tunnel that scans metals, liquids, laptops and other potential dangers one by one.

International Air Transport Association chief Tony Tyler said: "We spend too much time on the 99.9% who mean us no harm, when threat detection surely should be focused on those with greater potential to do damage.

"By making our checkpoints smarter, and using 'known traveller' programmes, we can give everybody a baseline level of security ... and in the end get everybody through security much faster."

The concept faces technical and financial hurdles, and is likely to be opposed by people who object to profiling or believe passing through body scanners violates their privacy. But it indicates the direction the industry hopes to go, Mr Tyler said.

He argued the "risk-based approach" is not the same as profiling, since it does not use ethnic or religious data. It relies partly on pre-flight information submitted by passengers, partly on biometric scans and data stored in passports, and partly on human observers who would have the discretion to choose a more rigorous scan for someone acting suspiciously.

US Transport Security Authority (TSA) chief John Pistole said the checkpoint of the future idea parallels the TSA's own new emphasis on "risk-based security".

"It's an idea clearly worth consideration as technology develops," he said. "Segmenting the passenger population for different levels of security screening is exactly what we're pursuing."
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Bono pays tribute to 'great' Jobs



Bono has paid tribute to the late Steve Jobs describing him as the "hardware software Elvis" and a man "only interested in doing truly great things".

Apple's pioneering former chief executive, who gave the world revolutionary computers, iPhone and iPods, died on Wednesday after a lengthy battle with pancreatic cancer.

U2 singer Bono added his voice to the many tributes paid by world leaders to the 56-year-old technology wizard.

He recalled how aside from his impact on technology and culture, he had helped improve the lives of people in Africa by supporting his (RED) initiative, and how he was a devoted family man.

"What made Steve Jobs truly great is that he was only interested in doing truly great things. He was bored by an easy ride or easy profit," said Bono. "In a world littered with dull objects, he brought the beauty of clean lines and clear thought. This rhyme of intellect and intuition could be applied to a wide range of subjects from the US education system, to sculpture, to the fight against HIV/AIDS where his support of (RED) literally transformed the lives of two million people in Africa.

"He changed music. He changed film. He changed the personal computer and turned telephony on its head while he was at it."

US President Barack Obama said that "the world has lost a visionary," while Bill Gates, Jobs's friend and founder of rival Microsoft said his impact would be "felt for many generations to come".

Devotees of Apple have laid floral tributes outside the computer guru's home in California's Silicon Valley, showing he had a popularity equal to that of many rock stars.

Bono continued: "Steve told me as proud as he was of Apple and Pixar, his real pride was his family. He was a thoughtful and tender father, and loved nothing more than hanging out in the house with his belle Laurene and the kids.

"I already miss him - one of a very small group of anarchic Americans who through technology literally invented the 21st century. We will all miss the hardware software Elvis."
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Brit Kids 'Face Soaring Poverty Over Reforms'

Almost a quarter of Britain's children will be left in poverty by the end of this decade because of the Government's tax and benefit changes, a think-tank is warning.
Drops in family income are set to drive up poverty by about 600,000 children and 800,000 working-age adults, the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) report says.

The Universal Credit will lift around 450,000 children and 600,000 working-age adults out of relative poverty - defined as living in a household on less than 60% of average income - by 2020/21.

But the IFS said the positive impact of the new system - to be introduced in 2013 - will be outweighed by other tax and benefit changes.

Its forecasts show 3.3 million children, a quarter of the UK's child population, will be in relative poverty by the end of the decade, compared with 2.5 million children (19.2%) now.

This would mean the Government missing by a wide margin the legally-binding targets in the Child Poverty Act, which stated no more than 5% of children should be in absolute poverty and 10% in relative poverty by the end of the decade.

James Browne, one of the authors of the report, said: "Even if there were an immense increase in the resources made available, it is hard to see how child poverty could fall by enough to hit this supposedly legally-binding target in just nine years."

A Government spokesman said the IFS had not fully considered the behavioural changes expected to result from welfare changes and reforms to the education system.

He said the reforms would encourage people into work - many for the first time.

"Over the last decade billions of pounds have been moved around the tax and benefit system in an attempt to address poverty," he said.

"This has had the perverse effect of trapping thousands of families on benefits while income inequality increased to its highest ever level.

"It is clear that sticking with the status quo which has had no meaningful long-term effect on poverty projections is not an option."

But children's groups described the report as "devastating".

Alison Garnham, chief executive of Child Poverty Action Group, said: "The Government must accept that you cannot fight poverty or improve life chances by making the poor poorer."

Bob Reitemeier, chief executive of the Children's Society, said: "We are particularly concerned that the proposed cap on benefits will cut support to more than 200,000 children and potentially make 82,000 children homeless."




Brit Kids 'Face Soaring Poverty Over Reforms'

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NHS Hid Mistake Over Girl's Asthma Death



Medical negligence surrounding the death of a seven-year-old girl has been kept secret from her family by the NHS for more than three years.

When Izabelle Easen's heart stopped beating at her home in Thorne, near Doncaster, during an asthma attack in April 2008, her mother began resuscitation with help from a 999 operator.

Izabelle was declared dead at the scene by paramedic James McKenna, but her family was not told he should have given her continuous resuscitation which might have saved her.

Sky News contacted Izabelle's family after investigating anonymous transcripts of Heath Professions Council (HPC) misconduct hearings released under the Freedom of Information Act.

Izabelle's mother, Lorna Easen, 29, learned about the secrecy a week before what would have been her daughter's eleventh birthday.

"It's morally wrong, if nothing else. They should have informed me. They should have informed the police as far as I'm concerned," she said.

Izabelle's family say they were not contacted by the Yorkshire Ambulance Service (YAS), which initially decided McKenna should not be disciplined, nor by the HPC which later ruled he was guilty of misconduct and struck him off.

An online message posted by Mrs Easen a few months after her daughter's death shows she wrongly blamed herself for not knowing how to perform emergency first aid.

She wrote on the Gone Too Soon website: "If I did, maybe things would have been different? She would be stood at the side of me instead of looking down."

Dr Bob Bingham from the UK Resuscitation Council told Sky News that children whose hearts stop beating completely when they are not in a hospital have approximately a one in 50 chance of survival if resuscitation is continued.

While making it clear he cannot comment on Izabelle's case, Dr Bingham said continuous resuscitation on a child can make the difference between life and death.

He pointed to studies including one in America that showed that out of 277 children whose hearts had stopped moving, as Izabelle's had, 14 made a good enough recovery to leave hospital.

Mrs Easen says Izabelle should have been given that chance: "Any chance is a chance, it's always worth having a go, it's always worth it.

"I would like a full apology from them for hiding everything from me. I think a full apology is the least that any family could expect."

The secrecy was revealed after Sky News requested full transcripts of a handful of paramedic misconduct cases selected at random from the HPC website where the patient had subsequently died.

The investigation established that following at least four of the deaths the patient's family had not been informed by the ambulance service or the HPC that disciplinary procedures were under way.

The secrecy has led to coroners not being informed that negligence has been identified in instances where an inquest may be required by law.

Official enquiries are now being made into all four cases, with the Doncaster coroner investigating Izabelle's death, an inquest under way in Northumberland and a police investigation being launched in Strathclyde.

The Department of Health criticised the secrecy when the first case, involving the death of 61-year-old Graeme Giles in Northumberland, was revealed in July.

In a statement they said: "It is completely unacceptable for relatives not to be informed when a mistake, error or unprofessional behaviour has caused serious harm to a loved one.

"We expect the NHS to be open about mistakes, apologise to those affected and ensure that lessons are learned to prevent them from being repeated."

Yorkshire Ambulance Service refused to discuss the case of Izabelle Easen until she was identified by Sky News.

Last week, a spokeswoman for the Wakefield-based NHS Trust said it "will not be able to help" when asked to pass a message to her then-anonymous family.

After we identified Izabelle they issued a statement saying: "The Trust is committed to being open and is it is our practice to communicate with and involve patients and relatives, wherever possible, if a serious or untoward incident occurs and is being investigated.

"There has been no policy of keeping information from the family and we would be willing to meet with them to discuss any concerns they may have."

The Scottish Ambulance Service, which admitted to the HPC that it had deliberately hidden misconduct from the family of a 72-year-old woman who died in Greenock in 2006, has also repeatedly refused to discuss that case.

When Sky News identified her as former nurse Margaret McKay and established that neither her family nor the procurator fiscal had been informed of the negligence, a spokesman said they could not comment because the authorities were now involved.

The procurator fiscal's office told Sky News they would be requesting an investigation by Strathclyde Police before deciding whether to hold a fatal accident inquiry.

Mrs McKay's daughter, Brenda McKay, a former senior nurse, told Sky News that her mother, who had been a hospital operating theatre manager, would not have wanted negligence to be kept secret.

"She would want it followed through and lessons learned to avoid it happening to someone else," she said.

According to the HPC at least 95 paramedics have been struck off the register since 2005, but it is not known how many other families have not been told about medical negligence.

NHS Hid Mistake Over Girl's Asthma Death

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Microsoft's Skype plan gets EC nod



The European Commission has approved Microsoft Corporation's proposed 8.5 billion dollar (£5.5 billion) acquisition of the internet voice and video communication provider Skype, saying the deal would not significantly impede competition in Europe.

The approval appears to be the final step in the technology giant's effort to acquire Skype.

Brad Smith, general counsel and executive vice president of Microsoft, said in an emailed statement that the company is pleased with the decision.

Mr Smith said it was "an important milestone" because the company has "now received clearance from both the United States and the European Union".
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Women Shower in China Window Display

A shopping mall stunned passers-by in downtown Lanzhou, western China’s Gansu Province, were shocked by a recent window display which appears to feature three young women taking a shower.



Many were drawn to the presentation and had to look very closely before realizing that that the women showering were in fact, mannequins.

The exhibit, although a masterful piece of advertising for the Xi Dan Mall, was not what it seemed. It drew attention to the fake women in the shower but was actually all about something else that is sometimes referred to as subliminal (suggestive) advertising.

The objects of interest were not the mannequins but rather the clothes, which were draped over theshower doors. These represented the latest fashions the store had to offer.

Store officials admitted that that the purpose of the presentation was to attract attention, which it certainly did.

“I couldn’t believe my eyes. I thought they were real women at first. It certainly caught my attention,” said one passerby.

It may pay in the long run to keep clean at all costs, but for one shop in one Chinese mall rewards come in other more lucrative formats.
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World’s Hairiest Man Promotes Dating Agency

According to the Guinness Book of Records, Yu Zhenhuan is the hairiest man on planet earth. Diagnosed with a rare medical condition that causes hair to grow in abnormal places, body hair covers 96 percent of his body.



While this might seem an unlikely image to promote a dating agency, Yu’s oddness has granted him an exotic and skewed celebrity throughout China.

He has been signed up to promote a dating agency and just about everything under the sun from hair removal to Planet of the Apes movies since the people at Guinness gave him his hairy moniker.



During the launch party for the dating agency which is located in

Hunan, southern China, young nurses flocked to see him and some have referred to his condition as “manly.”

“I’ve never really thought of myself as attractive but I’m knocked out by the response I’ve had today,” said Yu after the agency party.



Yu did have a girlfriend who eventually dumped him but according to Yu it had nothing to do with his medical condition. She was turned off by his “show biz life style.

For Yu, the son of a farmer, body hair has been a problem since he was barely two years of age.

But the future looks bright and Yu might have the chance to live a normal life if he can withstand a laser treatment that can remove all of his body hair.

While that prospect cannot be pleasant, despite his acceptance in the advertising world, laser hair removal could be the answer to a to a new and happier life.

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2012 Honda Civic EU-Version

Developed specifically for the European market, the Honda Civic will be offered exclusively as a five-door hatchback. Overall the new Honda Civic builds on the core strengths of its predecessor and takes them to an appreciably higher level. It also is one of the sector’s best in performance against low CO2 emissions – the diesel model produces just 110 g/km with 150 PS and 350 Nm of torque.









The new Honda Civic will be offered with three engine options: a 1.4 l petrol unit, a 1.8 l petrol unit and a 2.2 l diesel unit. All the engines are combined with a 6-speed manual gearbox, ECO Assist, advanced fueling control technology and Idle Stop. They are also equipped with Hill Start Assist. The 1.8 l engine can be paired with a specially designed 5-speed automatic transmission.

The new Honda Civic will reach European showrooms in early 2012.


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Real Steel Film

Real Steel is a 2011 American science fiction film starring Hugh Jackman and directed by Shawn Levy. The film is based on the 1956 short story "Steel" by Richard Matheson, though Levy placed the film in U.S. state fairs and other "old-fashioned" Americana settings. Real Steel was in development for several years before production began on June 11, 2010. Filming took place primarily in the U.S. state of Michigan. Animatronic robots were built for the film, and motion capture technology was used to depict the brawling of computer-generated robots and animatronics. Real Steel was publicly released in Australia onOctober 6, 2011 and in the United States and Canada on October 7, 2011 to mixed to positive reviews. It was released in both conventional and IMAX theaters.











In 2020, humans have been replaced by robots in boxing. Charlie Kenton (Hugh Jackman) is a former boxer who attempts to get money in illegal boxing matches between robots to pay his debts to loan sharks. During a fight, Charlie's robot, Ambush, is destroyed by Black Thunder, a bull belonging to Ricky (Kevin Durand). Having made a bet that Ambush would win, Charlie now owes Ricky $20,000, which he doesn't pay before leaving.


Charlie is informed his ex-girlfriend has died, and he has to attend a meeting to decide the fate of his preteen son Max (Dakota Goyo). Max's aunt Debra (Hope Davis) and uncle Marvin (James Rebhorn) want full custody, and Charlie gives it to them in exchange for $100,000 from Marvin, $50,000 of it in advance, on the condition that Charlie takes care of Max for three months, while Marvin and Debra are away on a second honeymoon.










Charlie and Max meet with Charlie's friend Bailey Tallet (Evangeline Lilly), who runs the boxing gym of her deceased father, Charlie's old coach. There, Charlie buys a secondhand WRB league robot, the once-famous Noisy Boy, and arranges for it to fight the illegal circuit's champion, Midas, at a venue belonging to his friend Finn (Anthony Mackie). Partly due to his inexperience with Noisy Boy's combinations, Charlie ends up losing control of Noisy Boy and Midas destroys it.


Charlie breaks into a junkyard with Max to steal scraps that he can use to put a new robot together. There, Max falls over a ledge, where he is saved from doom after being snagged by a lodged and buried robot arm. After Charlie pulls him back up, Max uncovers the entire robot, called Atom. On Max's insistence, Charlie takes it back to Bailey's gym, where they discover Atom is an obsolete Generation-2 sparring bot built in 2014. Atom has been designed to sustain massive damage, but is unable to deal out much damage itself. Max convinces Charlie to get Atom a fight, and upgrades it to take vocal commands using spare parts from Noisy Boy and Ambush.










Charlie and Max take Atom to fight an unsanctioned outdoor match against a robot called Metro, and Atom wins, earning back some of Charlie's money. Atom's string of subsequent wins and high speed humanoid boxing maneuvers which are rarely seen from a robot, attracts the attention of a promoter from the World Robot Boxing league (WRB), who offers Atom a professional fight against a robot called Twin Cities. Charlie accepts, and Atom wins again, thanks to Charlie's knowledge of boxing, which allows him to locate a design flaw in Twin Cities. Taking advantage of Atom's subsequent novelty attention, Max challenges WRB champion Zeus, designed by arrogant genius Tak Mashido (Karl Yune) and sponsored by rich Russian Farra Lemcova (Olga Fonda), who accepts, but first tries to buy the upstart Atom.


As they leave the Twin Cities fight, Charlie is attacked by Ricky and his men, who beat him severely, assault Max and steal their money. Feeling guilty, Charlie returns Max to his aunt and uncle so they can protect him, but Bailey convinces him he can be a better father to Max. Debra allows him one more chance, and Charlie takes Max to the Zeus-Atom match. Zeus severely damages Atom — while also getting injured, a first for Zeus. In addition, by the end of the first round, Ricky ends up being led away by Finn and some of his men to pay up and presumably beat him up (earlier, he bet $100,000 that Atom wouldn't last the first round). In the last round of the five-round match, Atom's vocal receptors are damaged, and Atom must fight in shadow-boxing mode, copying Charlie's moves from the aisle. Zeus, now controlled manually by a very furious Tak Mashido, expends energy on pummeling the defensive Atom. After Zeus runs very low on power, Atom begins to heavily damage Zeus, even knocking the seemingly invincible champion down once, but doesn't win before the round ends, and the judges declare a winner on points. They favor Zeus, but his reputation is tarnished, and Atom has become famous as "The People's Champion".
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