Why little girl want play computer

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Jack Falls


Age of the Dragons

Monday, March 28, 2011

I Spit On Your Grave




This movie is Rated R for pervasive strong sadistic brutal violence, rape and torture, nudity and language.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Gaddafi shells towns, rebels pinned down in east

TRIPOLI (Reuters) – Muammar Gaddafi's forces attacked two west Libyan towns, killing dozens, while rebels were pinned down in the east and NATO tried to resolve a dispute over who should lead the Western air campaign.
With anti-Gaddafi rebels struggling to create a command structure that could capitalize on the air strikes against Libyan tanks and air defenses, Western countries had still to decide who would take over command once Washington pulled back in a few days.
In the latest fighting on Tuesday, Gaddafi's tanks shelled the rebel-held western town of Misrata and casualties included four children killed when their car was hit, residents said, adding the death toll for Monday alone had reached 40.
Residents painted a grim picture of the situation in Misrata, under siege by Gaddafi loyalists for weeks, with tanks in the city center and doctors operating on people with bullet and shrapnel wounds in hospital corridors.
"The situation here is very bad. Tanks started shelling the town this morning," a resident called Mohammed told Reuters by telephone from outside the city's hospital, adding: "Snipers are taking part in the operation too. A civilian car was destroyed killing four children on board, the oldest is aged 13 years."
In the first apparent air force casualty of the campaign, a U.S. F-15E crashed in Libya overnight and its two crew members were rescued, the U.S. military said. The crash was likely caused by mechanical failure and not hostile fire, it said.
Explosions and anti-aircraft fire rang out around Tripoli for a third night and state television said several sites in the capital had been attacked by the "crusader enemy."
A Reuters correspondent taken to a naval facility in east Tripoli by Libyan officials saw four Soviet-made missile carrier trucks which were destroyed. They were parked inside a building whose roof had collapsed, leaving piles of smoldering rubble.
"Yesterday six missiles and one bomb from a warplane hit this facility," said Captain Fathi al-Rabti, an officer at the facility. "It was a massive explosion."
REBELS PINNED DOWN IN EAST
Gaddafi forces were trying to seize the western rebel-held town of Zintan near the Tunisian border in an attack using heavy weapons. One resident said 10 people were killed on Tuesday. People fled to seek shelter in mountain caves.
Security analysts say it is unclear what will happen if the Libyan leader digs in, especially since Western powers have made it clear they would be unwilling to see Libya partitioned between a rebel-held east and Gaddafi-controlled west.
Rebels in east Libya were stuck just outside Ajdabiyah on Tuesday, making no advance on the strategic town despite three nights of Western air strikes on the oil-producing state.
At the front line in the desert scrub about 5 km (3 miles) outside the town, gateway to the rebel-held east, fighters said air strikes were helping to cripple Gaddafi's heavy armor.
When asked why rebel units had not advanced toward their objective, which is the eventual taking of Tripoli, Ahmed al-Aroufi, a rebel fighter at the front line, told Reuters: "Gaddafi has tanks and trucks with missiles."
Commenting on the air campaign to protect civilians in this uprising against Gaddafi's 41-year rule, Aroufi said:
"We don't depend on anyone but God, not France or America. We started this revolution without them through the sweat of our own brow, and that is how we will finish it."
Washington, wary of being drawn into another war after long campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan, has ruled out specific action to overthrow Gaddafi, although France said on Monday it hoped the Libyan government would collapse from within.
Facing questions at home about the U.S. military getting bogged down in a third Muslim country and the future of Libya, the U.S. administration has been keen to say the aim of the resolution was to protect civilians.
Commenting on the mission, former U.S. diplomat Nicholas Burns said: "We have to recognize this situation for what it really is -- the first time in American history when we have used our military power to prop up and possibly put in power a group of people we literally do not know."
The United States expects to hand over command of the air campaign in "a matter of days" but has not said which country or organization would take charge.
Britain and France took a lead role in pushing for air strikes which have destroyed much of Libya's air defenses.
COORDINATING ROLE
President Barack Obama said on Monday the United States would cede operational control within days and NATO would have a coordinating role.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said the intention was to transfer command to NATO but France said Arab countries did not want the U.S.-led alliance in charge of the operation.
NATO ambassadors in Brussels completed plans to help enforce a U.N.-mandated no-fly zone "if needed," but French and Turkish objections again prevented it being put under NATO command.
A NATO role would require political support from all the 28 states. Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, whose country is a NATO member, said on Tuesday that the United Nations should be the umbrella for a solely humanitarian operation in Libya.
Diplomats said France had argued that the coalition led by France, Britain and the United States should retain political control of the mission, with NATO providing operational support, including command-and-control capabilities.
French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe told parliament France and Britain had agreed to put together a "political steering body" of foreign ministers of countries participating in the coalition and the Arab League which would meet in the next few days in Brussels, London or Paris and hold regular meetings.
Two Qatari fighters and two 17 transport aircraft landed in Crete on Tuesday and the U.S. military said the aircraft would be "up and flying" over Libya by the weekend. That will be the first direct outside Arab involvement in the operation.
Four more Qatari aircraft and 24 UAE warplanes were also expected in Crete on their way to a forward base in Sicily.
"GADDAFI'S LIES"
Rifts were growing internationally over the U.N. resolution, with Russia saying the U.N. Security Council would discuss on Thursday whether Western countries were going beyond the bounds of their authority for intervention. China and Brazil urged a ceasefire amid fears of civilian casualties.
Algeria called on Tuesday for an immediate end to military intervention in Libya, calling the action "disproportionate."
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said those responsible for civilian deaths in Libya should pray for their souls.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Tuesday during a visit to Moscow some people in Russia seemed to believe what he termed Gaddafi's "lies" about civilian casualties in Libya.
Libyan officials have said air strikes have killed dozens of civilians. They say the rebels are al Qaeda militants assisted by Western powers who are trying to steal Libya's oil.
In Tripoli, Reuters correspondents said some residents, emboldened by a third night of air strikes, dropped their customary praise of Gaddafi and said they wanted him gone.
"My children are afraid but I know it's changing," one man said. "This is the end. The government has no control any more."
(Reporting by Mohammed Abbas and Angus MacSwan in Benghazi, Maria Golovnina and Michael Georgy in Tripoli, Hamid Ould Ahmed and Christian Lowe in Algiers, Tom Perry in Cairo; David Brunnstrom in Brussels, Phil Stewart in Moscow; Writing by Peter Millership and jon hemming; Editing by Andrew Dobbie)

Maws caught cheering for the Indonesian Team and against the Askalz

Maws caught cheering for the Indonesian Team and against the Askalz

 Click to Watch

Red Riding Hood

Limitless





Tuesday, March 15, 2011

'Alarming' planet likely awaits today's teens in old age

"How old will you be in 2050?"

The question, initially posed by a young woman at the United Nations (UN) Climate Change Talks in 2009, was a cause for concern among high school students at the launch Wednesday of a report on children’s welfare.

The report describes climate change — along with severe pollution and loss of biodiversity — as "the most urgent and alarming threat to the environment."

The State of the World’s Children Report 2011, launched in Quezon City by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), focuses on adolescents and includes a chapter on the effects of climate change on the youth.

For 15-year-old Jessa Mae Ancor, a third year high school student of Commonwealth High School, the waist-level floods she experienced when typhoon Ondoy struck in September 2009 immediately came to mind. “Natatakot po ako kasi may posibilidad pong mangyari yon uli (I am afraid because there is a possibility it will happen again)," Ancor said in an interview with GMA News Online.

Another 15-year-old, third year high school student Marijoy Calimlim, pinned the blame on adults who exploit the environment. “Mas maganda po na maaga pa lang, matigil na ang ginagawa nila (It would be better at the earliest possible time to stop what they are doing)," Calimlim said.

The above question raised by a British woman in Bonn, Germany in 2009 “won a round of applause," according to the UNICEF report.

“By the following day, hundreds of people in Bonn were wearing T-shirts emblazoned with that question — including the Chair himself, who started the next day’s session stating that he would be 110 in 2050 but that his children then would be in their fifties," the report says.

Generally, a hot Philippines

The National Economic, Environment, and Development Study for Climate Change predicts generally higher temperatures in all regions of the Philippines by 2050. Published by the United Framework Convention on Climate Change in 2009, the report also predicts erratic seasons of rain.

Addressing the climate summit in Copenhagen in 2009, former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo raised the alarm on the effects of climate change in the Philippines. “In fact we top the list of nations most in danger of facing more frequent and more intense storms when the impact of climate change intensifies," Arroyo said.

The UNICEF report says the current generation of teenagers will bear the brunt of climate change. “Adolescents will be harder hit than adults simply because 88 percent of them live in developing countries, which are projected to suffer disproportionately from the effects of rising global average temperatures," the report explains.

The report adds that “knowledge and opportunity" are key to long-term protection and stewardship of the environment.

A suggestion raised by the Department of Environment and National Resources is for school publications to put up a "green page" dedicated to reporting on the environment.

Japan Battles to Avert Nuclear Power Plant Disaster

At its epicenter, the earthquake exceeded Fukushima Daiichi’s design strength.

his story is part of a special series that explores energy issues. For more, visit The Great Energy Challenge.
The nuclear crisis at Fukushima Daiichi power plant comes four years after another earthquake delivered a warning to Tokyo Electric Power Company that seismic risks at its atomic reactors could be far greater than plant engineers had reckoned.
TEPCO is now battling to avert a catastrophic meltdown at three of the six reactors at the Fukushima facility­, with a second hydrogen explosion early Monday morning signaling the difficulty of that effort.
But in 2007, the company escaped such peril at its Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant, the largest nuclear power station in the world, when it was damaged by a 6.8-magnitude earthquake that was up to three times larger than the plant’s design was built t­o withstand.
That underestimate touched off concern and study throughout the global nuclear industry, but officials have pointed to the incident as a demonstration of nuclear plant resilience, because no critical safety structures or systems were impaired. Industry critics have drawn a less comforting conclusion: “They were lucky,” says Arjun Makhijani, an engineer and president of the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for Energy and Environmental Research.
In any case, there is no question that TEPCO’s seismic risk assessments now will be under renewed scrutiny.
A Measure of Risk
And at Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex, where cooling system failures appear to have caused at least a partial meltdown of nuclear fuel, at least one earthquake measurement signals cause for concern. Peak ground acceleration, or shaking, caused by Friday’s earthquake was nearly double—at its epicenter—than what the Fukushima Daiichi plant, 110 miles (172 km) away, was built to withstand.
The Fukushima plants were built to endure peak ground acceleration of .18 g (a measure of the force of gravity), according to data provided to National Geographic by the U.S. Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI). The earthquake at its epicenter reached a peak ground acceleration of .35 g, said the NEI, which represents the U.S. nuclear industry, including General Electric, the company that designed the Fukushima plant.
But NEI warned against drawing any conclusions from the figures, since the actual measure of ground acceleration at the Fukushima site is not yet known. Shaking measurements can vary widely during an earthquake even across small distances. And NEI spokesman Mitch Singer added that it was not the earthquake itself, but the subsequent tsunami, that touched off the crisis by knocking out the backup diesel power generators needed to operate the plant’s cooling system.
“The reactors maintained their structural integrity despite an 8.9-magnitude earthquake,”Singer said. “All the systems performed as they were expected to do when the tsunami compromised the fuel source of the generators.”
But others believe the temblor itself cannot yet be ruled out as a contributing factor in the Fukushima crisis. “You can infer that most of the damage may have been done by the tsunami,” says Makhijani, “but whether the generators came loose from their moorings or were cracked by the earthquake, at this point, who knows?”
At the Fukushima plant, a suspected hydrogen explosion early Monday blew the roof off the building housing the Number 3 reactor. A similar blast damaged the outer building of the Number 1 unit on Saturday. And at the Number 2 reactor, officials have indicated a complete failure of the cooling system caused the water level to fall, leaving the fuel rods fully exposed. The situation means that the rods will heat up, and increases the risk of an uncontrolled meltdown.
Based on radiation readings, authorities assume that some melting of fuel has already taken place. But the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has stressed the primary containment of all the structures remains intact, holding down any radiation release. Also, the situation at a second plant about 37 miles (60 kilometers) away, Fukushima Daiini, appears to have stabilized after initial problems with cooling system when the tsunami flooded the plant’s power switches.
Nevertheless, nearly 185,000 residents have been evacuated from a radius of 12 miles (20 kilometers) from Fukushima Daiichi. Japan also has distributed 230,000 units of stable iodine to evacuation centers as a precautionary measure; iodine can help protect against thyroid cancer in the event of radiation exposure.
Planned Shutdown’s Aftermath
Japan relies on nuclear power for one-third of its electricity, with 54 power plants built since 1966. In total, about 11 of Japan’s nuclear power stations remain shut down following the earthquake and tsunami; industry sources say that in all cases—even at Fukushima Daiichi—the plants responded as they were designed to do, shutting down the fission reaction automatically.
But they say the problems at Fukishima Daiichi stem from operators’ inability to grapple with the decay heat from the fuel, which needs to be cooled for a protracted period of time even after the nuclear reaction has been stopped.
(Related: "Nuclear Reactors, Dams at Risk Due to Global Warming")
Because of this need for cooling, a nuclear plant must have constant power to run the system of motors and pumps. To protect the system in the event of a power outage like the one that followed the earthquake, nuclear plant operators have systems of backup diesel fuel generators in place, as well as battery systems. But at Fukushima, the generators stopped working soon after the quake and subsequent tsunami on Friday, and the batteries can store power only for several hours. Although backup systems have been rushed to the facility, it is clear that obtaining fresh water for cooling also has been an issue. TEPCO said it was using a mixture of seawater and boric acid to aid in the cooling, a measure that industry observers say has never been tried before.
Neil Wilmshurst, vice president of the nuclear sector at the U.S. Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), the industry’s nonprofit research organization, says that the specifications of the Fukushima plant, and the level of seismic risk for which it was designed, will surely be the subject of scrutiny. “That will be asked over the coming days and weeks,” he said.
Increasing Seismic Risk
Experts from U.S. EPRI were among many scientists and engineers who studied the aftermath of the 2007 quake at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant, which is on west coast in the Niigita prefecture—the opposite side of Japan from the current center of crisis.
After the 6.8 magnitude quake, the plant experienced a transformer fire, a failure of part of the fire suppression system, broken pipes and damaged air ducts.
The fact that the quake significantly exceeded the design specifications for Kashiwazaki-Kariwa touched off global scrutiny of nuclear plant seismic hazard. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) conducted fact-finding at the site, and hosted a forum to exchange research. Among the findings in IAEA’s report on the incident: “Recent studies for the evaluation of seismic hazard for new and operating nuclear facilities have consistently shown significantly higher values compared to those evaluated in previous decades.” And the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa plant, commissioned in the early 1980s, was a decade younger than the Fukushima plant, which is nearly 40 years old.
Because of the concerns in the wake of the 2007 quake, three of the seven reactors at Kashiwazaki-Kariwa remain out of service as TEPCO has continued work on seismic reinforcement and integrity testing at the site. The next reactor restart at Kashiwazaki-Kariwa, in fact, had been scheduled for later this month.
Industry experts drew at least one positive message from the 2007 incident. “What we found was minimal damage to any systems, virtually nothing of anything to reactor safety,” says Wilmshurst. “It indicates that the reactors were very, very well designed with substantial margins of safety.”
It is hoped that the same levels of protection will control the risk to the public from the crisis at Fukushima. Wilmshurst says that the radiation readings indicate that the first barrier, a clad around the nuclear fuel itself, usually made of a metal such as zirconium, may have been breached. But two other levels of containment, the reactor vessel and associated systems, made of high-quality steel, and the primary containment structure, made of concrete and often lined with steel, still appear to be intact. (The hydrogen blasts at the facility appear at this point only to have damaged the buildings surrounding these primary containment structures.) The containment facilities are designed to “act as barriers as long as they need to,” says Wilmshurst.
But he said that he would not minimize the situation. “This is clearly a significant event for the plants involved and the company and the people in the surrounding area,” he said. “The tremendous focus within Japan and around the globe now is on getting the help needed to make these plants safe.”

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Powerful quake, tsunami kills hundreds in Japan

TOKYO – For more than two terrifying, seemingly endless minutes Friday, the most powerful earthquake ever recorded in Japan shook apart homes and buildings, cracked open highways and unnerved even those who have learned to live with swaying skyscrapers. Then came a devastating tsunami that slammed into northeastern Japan and killed hundreds of people.

The violent wall of water swept away houses, cars and ships. Fires burned out of control. Power to a cooling system at a nuclear power plant was knocked out, forcing thousands to flee. A boat was caught in the vortex of a whirlpool at sea.

The death toll rose steadily throughout the day, but the true extent of the disaster was not known because roads to the worst-hit areas were washed away or blocked by debris and airports were closed.

After dawn Saturday, the scale of destruction became clearer.

Aerial scenes of the town of Ofunato showed homes and warehouses in ruins. Sludge and high water spread over acres of land, with people seeking refuge on roofs of partially submerged buildings. At one school, a large white "SOS" had been spelled out in English.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said an initial assessment found "enormous damage," adding that the Defense Ministry was sending troops to the hardest-hit region.

President Barack Obama pledged U.S. assistance following what he called a potentially "catastrophic" disaster. He said one U.S. aircraft carrier is already in Japan and a second was on its way. A U.S. ship was also heading to the Marianas Islands to assist as needed, he added.

The entire Pacific had been put on alert — including coastal areas of South America, Canada and Alaska — but waves were not as bad as expected.

The magnitude-8.9 offshore quake struck at 2:46 p.m. local time and was the biggest to hit Japan since record-keeping began in the late 1800s. It ranked as the fifth-largest earthquake in the world since 1900 and was nearly 8,000 times stronger than one that devastated Christchurch, New Zealand, last month, scientists said.

The quake shook dozens of cities and villages along a 1,300-mile (2,100-kilometer) stretch of coast and tall buildings swayed in Tokyo, hundreds of miles from the epicenter. Prime Minister Naoto Kan was attending a parliamentary session at the time.

"I thought I was going to die," said Tokyo marketing employee Koto Fujikawa. "It felt like the whole structure was collapsing."

Fujikawa, 28, was riding a monorail when the quake hit and had to later pick her way along narrow, elevated tracks to the nearest station.

Minutes later, the earthquake unleashed a 23-foot (seven-meter) tsunami along the northeastern coast of Japan near the coastal city of Sendai in Miyagi prefecture. The quake was followed for hours by aftershocks. The U.S. Geological Survey said 124 were detected off Japan's main island of Honshu, 111 of them of magnitude 5.0 or greater.

Large fishing boats and other vessels rode the high waves ashore, slamming against overpasses or scraping under them and snapping power lines along the way. A fleet of partially submerged cars bobbed in the water. Ships anchored in ports crashed against each other.

The tsunami roared over embankments, washing anything in its path inland before reversing direction and carrying the cars, homes and other debris out to sea. Flames shot from some of the homes, apparently from burst gas pipes.

Waves of muddy waters flowed over farms near Sendai, carrying buildings, some of them ablaze. Drivers attempted to flee. The tarmac at Sendai's airport was inundated with thick, muddy debris that included cars, trucks, buses and even light planes.

Highways to the worst-hit coastal areas buckled. Telephone lines snapped. Train service was suspended in northeastern Japan and in Tokyo, which normally serves 10 million people a day. Untold numbers of people were stranded in stations or roaming the streets. Tokyo's Narita airport was closed indefinitely.

Police said 200-300 bodies were found in Sendai, although the official casualty toll was 185 killed, 741 missing and 948 injured.

A ship with 80 dock workers was swept away from a shipyard in Miyagi. All on the ship was believed to be safe, although the vessel had sprung a leak and was taking on some water, Japan's coast guard said.

In the coastal town of Minami-soma, about 1,800 houses were destroyed or ravaged, a Defense Ministry spokeswoman said. Fire burned well past dark in a large section of Kesennuma, a city of 70,000 people in Miyagi.

A resident in Miyagi prefecture who had been stranded on his roof, surrounded by water, mud and fallen trees, was rescued by a Self-Defense Force helicopter Saturday morning, TV video showed.

Officials declared the first-ever state of emergency at a Japanese nuclear power plant and ordered evacuations after the earthquake knocked out power to a cooling system at the Fukushima Daiichi facility near the city of Onahama, about 170 miles (270 kilometers) northeast of Tokyo. They said radiation levels inside the facility had surged to 1,000 times more than normal.

Some radiation had seeped outside the plant, the nuclear safety agency said early Saturday, prompting calls for more evacuations of the area. Some 3,000 people have already been urged to leave their homes.

The Defense Ministry said it had sent dozens of troops trained to deal with chemical disasters to the plant in case of a radiation leak.

An American working at the facility said the whole building shook and debris fell from the ceiling. Danny Eudy, 52, a technician employed by Texas-based Atlantic Plant Maintenance, and his colleagues escaped the building just as the tsunami hit, his wife told The Associated Press.

"He walked through so much glass that his feet were cut. It slowed him down," said Pineville, Louisiana, resident Janie Eudy, who spoke to her husband by phone after the quake.

The group watched homes and vehicles carried away in the wave and found their hotel mostly destroyed when they reached it.

A large fire erupted at the Cosmo oil refinery in the city of Ichihara and burned out of control with 100-foot (30-meter) flames whipping into the sky.

Also in Miyagi prefecture, a fire broke out in a turbine building of a nuclear power plant, but it was later extinguished, said Tohoku Electric Power Co.

Japanese automakers Toyota, Nissan and Honda halted production at some assembly plants in areas hit by the quake. One worker was killed and more than 30 injured after being crushed by a collapsing wall at a Honda Motor Co. research facility in northeastern Tochigi prefecture, the company said.

Jesse Johnson, a native of Nevada who lives in Chiba, north of Tokyo, was eating at a sushi restaurant with his wife when the quake hit.

"At first it didn't feel unusual, but then it went on and on. So I got myself and my wife under the table," he told the AP. "I've lived in Japan for 10 years, and I've never felt anything like this before. The aftershocks keep coming. It's gotten to the point where I don't know whether it's me shaking or an earthquake."

Tokyo was brought to a near standstill. Tens of thousands of people were stranded with the rail network down, and the streets were jammed with cars, buses and trucks trying to get out of the city.

The city set up 33 shelters in city hall, on university campuses and in government offices, but many planned to spend the night at 24-hour cafes, hotels and offices.

NHK said more than 4 million buildings were without power in Tokyo and its suburbs.

Jefferies International Ltd., a global investment banking group, estimated overall losses of about $10 billion.

The tsunami hit Hawaii before dawn Friday, with most damage coming on the Big Island. The waves covered beachfront roads and rushed into hotels. One house was picked up and carried out to sea. Low-lying areas in Maui were flooded by 7-foot waves.

On the U.S. mainland, marinas and harbors in California and Oregon bore the brunt of the damage, estimated by authorities to be in the millions of dollars. Boats crashed into each other in marines and some vessels were washed out to sea.

Rescue crews were searching for a man who was swept away in northern California while taking pictures. Two people with him tried to rescue him, although they were able to return to shore.

Thousands fled homes in Indonesia after officials warned of a tsunami up to 6 feet (2 meters) high, but waves of only 4 inches (10 centimeters) were measured. No big waves came to the Northern Mariana Islands, a U.S. territory, either.

Islands across the South Pacific were hit by bigger-than-normal waves, but no major damage was reported. Surges up to 26 inches (66 centimeters) high were reported in American Samoa, Nauru, Saipan and at the far northern tip of New Zealand.

In Tonga, water flooded houses in the low-lying Ha'apai islands early Saturday, police said. Thousands in the capital, Nuku'alofa, sought refuge at the king's residence on higher ground, Radio Tonga said.

The quake struck at a depth of six miles (10 kilometers), about 80 miles (125 kilometers) off Japan's east coast, the USGS said. The area is 240 miles (380 kilometers) northeast of Tokyo. Several quakes hit the same region in recent days, including one measured at magnitude 7.3 on Wednesday that caused no damage.

"The energy radiated by this quake is nearly equal to one month's worth of energy consumption" in the United States, USGS scientist Brian Atwater told The Associated Press.

Early Saturday, a magnitude-6.6 earthquake struck the central, mountainous part of Japan — far from the original quake's epicenter. It was not immediately clear if that temblor was related to the others.

Japan's worst previous quake was a magnitude 8.3 in Kanto that killed 143,000 people in 1923, according to USGS. A 7.2-magnitude quake in Kobe killed 6,400 people in 1995.

Japan lies on the "Ring of Fire" — an arc of earthquake and volcanic zones stretching around the Pacific where about 90 percent of the world's quakes occur, including the one that triggered the Dec. 26, 2004, Indian Ocean tsunami that killed an estimated 230,000 people in 12 countries. A magnitude-8.8 temblor that shook central Chile in February 2010 also generated a tsunami and killed 524 people.

___

Associated Press writers contributing to this report Jay Alabaster, Mari Yamaguchi, Tomoko A. Hosaka and Yuri Kageyama in Tokyo; Seth Borenstein and Julie Pace in Washington; Michael Kunzelman in New Orleans; Jaymes Song and Audrey McAvoy in Honolulu; Denise Petski and Daisy Nguyen in Los Angeles; Garance Burke in San Francisco; Nigel Duara in Seaside, Ore.; Jeff Barnard in Crescent City, Calif.; Alicia Chang in Pasadena, Calif.; and Mark Niesse in Ewa Beach, Hawaii.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Partition Magic


PartitionMagic® allows you to create, resize, merge and convert partitions without destroying data. Award-winning PartitionMagic Pro from Symantec is a leader in hard-drive partitioning software. PartitionMagic Pro allows you to create, resize, move, and convert partitions without destroying your data. You can quickly and easily create partitions, which can act as file drawers on your hard disks for storing valuable information such as data files, applications, and operating systems. Storing information in separate partitions helps you organize and protect your data, safely run multiple operating systems, and reclaim wasted disk space.

PartitionMagic enables you to secure your data by physically separating it from other files. Separate partitions also make backups to networks and removable drives easy. The program also helps you run multiple operating systems on the same computer reliably, and perform partitioning operations and view the changes that would be made before applying them to your system. You can convert NTFS files to either FAT or FAT32 partitions, merge FAT and FAT 32 partitions, and convert primary partitions to logical partitions and vice versa.Includes support for FAT, FAT32, Linux ext 2, Linux SWAP, NTFS, and HPFS partitions. In addition, you can view comprehensive information about your hard disk geometry and hardware system, and resize your root directories.

With Symantec PartitionMagic Pro, IT professionals can quickly and easily create partitions on desktop hard disks for storing valuable corporate information such as data files, applications, and operating systems. It enables corporations to secure data by physically separating it from other files. Separate partitions also make backups easier.

New Features Partition Magic 8.01:

- Divides a single hard drive into two or more partitions.
- Lets you safely run multiple operating systems on the same PC.
- BootMagic™ makes it easy to switch between different operating systems.
- Allows you to copy, move, resize, split, or merge partitions as needed—without losing data.
- How-to wizards guide you step by step through the partitioning process.
- Intuitive Windows®-based browser lets you find, copy and paste files in both Windows and Linux® partitions.
- Allows you to create and modify partitions up to 300 GB.
- Supports USB 2.0, USB 1.1, and FireWire® external drives.
- Supports FAT, FAT32, NTFS, Ext2, and Ext3 file systems.
- Converts partitions among FAT, FAT32, and NTFS without losing data.
- Allows you to enlarge an NTFS partition without restarting your computer.
- Resizes NTFS system clusters to the most effective size.

New Features Partition Magic 8.0:

- PQBoot™ for Windows - While running Windows, select which OS to run the next time the computer is rebooted.
- Enlarge NTFS partitions "hot" - No rebooting is required when expanding an NTFS partition, not even the system partition.
- New step-by-step wizards - Create Backup Partition and Install Another OS.
- Larger partition support - Support for partition sizes up to 160GB.
- Now supports - Linux Ext3 partitions, GRUB, USB2, and FireWire (1394).
- PartitionMagic allows you to install and run multiple operating systems on the same PC.
- PartitionMagic allows you to fine tune your system performance by converting to a more efficient file system, changing cluster sizes, or adding a Linux SWAP file partition.
- Create a separate partition for data to facilitate regular backups and separate data from operating systems and applications.
- Test new or unstable software in a separate p
artition.

Big Mommas: Like Father, Like Son

Clinic