Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Pacquaio vs Hatton Free Live Streaming




Fight starts at: ( undercards ) LIVE ! ! ! at MGM Grand Arena, Las Vegas USA

8:00 am Philippines === May 3, 2009 === Sunday Morning
6:00 pm U.S. ======== May 2, 2009 === Saturday Evening
2:00 am U.K. ======== May 3, 2009 === Sunday Morning
3:00 am Oslo, Norway = May 3, 2009 === Sunday Morning


Here's the OFFICIAL links will broadcast the event.
NOTE: be sure to copy all the links before the fight! Thanks! HAPPY VIEWING !!!

JUSTIN TV LINK:
http://www.justin.tv/TeamRN ( courtesy of RN Halawi )


SOPCAST LINK:

sop://broker.sopcast.com:3912/24267
sop://broker1.sopcast.com:3912/6002 – CCTV-5 NEW !!!

You’ll need to download SOPCAST in able to use the above link.

DOWNLOAD HERE :
http://download.sopcast.cn/download/SopCast.zip


KRALIX LINK:
http://www.kralix.com/2009/04/watch-pacquiao-vs-hatton-fight-online-live-streaming/


PACQUIAO FIGHTS B L O G S P O T LINK:
http://pacquiaofights.blogspot.com/

TEAM PILIPINAS LINK: ( courtesy of RN Halawi )
http://teampilipinas.info/search/label/Pacquiao%20vs.%20Hatton
http://www.youtube.com/user/dude2nuckle
http://www.justin.tv/TeamRN

PUNCH TV (not sure)
http://www.mogulus.com/punchtv


FEEL FREE TO POST YOUR LINK / S HERE !!! THANK YOU ! ! ! :toast:


Ill be updating this post for any updates on the fight so stay tuned for the updated post.


Keep checking this thread, every now & then.... "See You At The R i n g s i d e ."


Share & Enjoy Watching ! ! ! Ilabas ang mga inumin at mga pulutan !!! Kampay !!!

PAMBANSANG KAMAO Video: ( Watch it! ) -->
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tig0PcE32ow


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IF YOU HAVE EXTRA MONEY TO BUY PPV , PLEASE DO IT... LETS SUPPORT MANNY PACQUIAO!!!!!!!!

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Approval expected over Flintshire's £400,000 CCTV plan - HAVE YOUR SAY

MORE than £400,000 is set to be spent updating CCTV systems in Flintshire, in a bid to tackle anti-social behaviour.
A report on the plans, which would also see an extra £82,000 a year spent on specialist staff, is expected to be approved by the council's executive committee today.

The CCTV service was launched in Flintshire in 2002, as part of a partnership between North Wales Police and town and community councils.

About 46 cameras were originally installed to monitor open spaces across the county, in a bid to reduce anti-social behaviour, criminal damage and alcohol-related violence.

Over the past six years, the number of cameras has increased to 120 and the new plans, if approved, will see all equipment updated and two operators on duty in the control room at all times.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Millionaire 'carried out sexual assault on mother-of-two while his own CCTV system recorded attack'

By Chris Brooke
Last updated at 1:49 AM on 16th April 2009

A millionaire businessman was caught on his own CCTV system allegedly attempting to rape a terrified mother-of-two at his luxury mansion, a court heard.

David Atherton, 51, sexually assaulted the 49-year-old woman in his kitchen before threatening to drown her in his swimming pool, it was alleged.

She managed to escape semi-naked to her car, but he snatched the keys off her as she tried to drive away and the victim eventually raised the alarm by flagging down a passing motorist, Leeds Crown Court heard.

Atherton, who made a fortune selling his internet retail business, was a drug addict who was said to have carried out the attack in a 'drugged and or drunken state'.

James Goss, QC, prosecuting, said he had become 'paranoid' through his long-term cocaine addiction.

He believed there was a 'bent police' conspiracy against him involving the woman, with secret passages within the walls of his home and people filming him.

He had installed an intricate CCTV system at his recently renovated £1.5million home in Bolton, with cameras triggered by movement both inside and outside the property.

Images from these cameras allegedly showing the violent sex attack were shown to the jury.

Atherton denies attempted rape, two sex assaults, making threats to kill and false imprisonment.

Mr Goss said the defendant 'has been a successful businessman' and became 'very rich' as a result.

Atherton, who has a grown-up daughter from his former marriage, lived alone at the time of the incident on August 17 last year.

He knew the victim, who drove to his house at his request following a shopping trip. Once in the kitchen the woman was subjected to an unprovoked and violent sex attack in full view of one of his security cameras.

The court heard he 'forced her to the floor and ripped her jeans off' before sexually assaulting her.

Throughout the three-minute attack she was 'crying and telling him to get off'.

He also slapped and punched her and got her in a head-lock, the court heard.

The woman was wearing no underwear and was naked from the waist down when he then took her to the swimming pool.

Mr Goss said he told her he would 'take her to the pool to kill her' and told the woman to take her top off.


But she managed to break free and ran outside to her Range Rover with Atherton in pursuit. The CCTV camera outside showed how Atherton struggled at the car doorway for about 20 minutes, allegedly trying to stop her escaping.

During the tussle, the woman was 'screaming' at Atherton who 'kept throwing things out of the car'.

At one point, she reversed the vehicle with him 'hanging on.' Eventually he snatched the ignition key and went back in the house.

The woman put on a pair of pyjamas she had bought during her earlier shopping trip and ran down the driveway.

She was 'crying and distressed' and asked the first motorist who stopped to phone the police.

The woman was taken to hospital where she was found to have bruising to her jaw, a swollen and bruised neck and bruised thigh.

Police arrested Atherton in an apparently 'intoxicated state'. He was interviewed by police and handed in a statement in which he claimed the woman was a ' prostitute and drug dealer' who had a 'preference for rough sex and simulated rape'.

He said she had 'fully consented' to the incidents caught on camera, which were not sex attacks but a 'simulated sex session'.

In 2006 Atherton sold his business Dabs.com, selling computers and electronic equipment online, to BT for a reported £30 million.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1170271/Millionaire-carried-sexual-assault-mother-CCTV-recorded-attack.html?ITO=1490

Stealthy Rootkit Slides Further Under the Radar

By Jeremy Kirk, IDG News Service - Wed Apr 15, 2009 2:20PM EDT

Thousands of Web sites have been rigged to deliver a powerful piece of malicious software that many security products may be unprepared to handle.

The malicious software is a new variant of Mebroot, a program known as a "rootkit" for the stealthy way it hides deep in the Windows operating system, said Jacques Erasmus, director of research for the security company Prevx.

An earlier version of Mebroot, which is what Symantec named it, first appeared around December 2007 and used a well-known technique to stay hidden. It infects a computer's Master Boot Record (MBR). It's the first code a computer looks for when booting the operating system after the BIOS runs.

If the MBR is under a hacker's control, so is the entire computer and any data that's on it or transmitted via the Internet, Erasmus said.

Since Mebroot appeared, security vendors have refined their software to detect it. But the latest version uses much more sophisticated techniques to stay hidden, Erasmus said.

Mebroot inserts program hooks into various functions of the kernel, or the operating system's core code. Once Mebroot has taken hold, the malware then makes it appear that the MBR hasn't been tampered with.

"When something is trying to scan the MBR, it displays a perfectly good-looking MBR to any security software," Erasmus said.

Then, each time the computer is booted, Mebroot injects itself into a Windows process in memory, such as svc.host. Since it's in memory, it means that nothing is written to the hard disk, another evasive technique, Erasmus said.

Mebroot can then steal any information it likes and send it to a remote server via HTTP. Network analysis tools such as Wireshark won't notice the data leaking out since Mebroot hides the traffic, Erasmus said.

Prevx saw the new variant of Mebroot after one of the company's consumer customers became infected. It took analysts a few days to nail down exactly how Mebroot was managing to embed itself in the operating system. "I think everyone at the moment is working on modifying their [antimalware] engines to find it," Erasmus said.

And those companies need to act fast. Erasmus said it appears that thousands of Web sites have been hacked to deliver Mebroot to vulnerable computers that don't have the proper patches for their Web browsers.

The infection mechanism is known as a drive-by download. It occurs when a person visits a legitimate Web site that's been hacked. Once on the site, an invisible iframe is loaded with an exploit framework that begins testing to see if the browser has a vulnerability. If so, Mebroot is delivered, and a user notices nothing.

"It's pretty wild out there now," Erasmus said. "Everywhere you go, you have a chance to be infected."

It's unknown who wrote Mebroot, but it appears that one aim of the hackers is to simply infect as many computers as possible, Erasmus said.

Prevx has a self-named specialized security product that works alongside antivirus software to detect drive-by browser exploits, password stealers, rootkits and rogue antivirus software.

Prevx released the 3.0 version of its product on Wednesday. The software will detect malware infections for free, but users must upgrade to get the full removal functionality. However, Prevx 3.0 will remove some of the more evil malicious software, including Mebroot, as well as any advertising software, known as adware, free of charge, Erasmus said.

http://tech.yahoo.com/news/pcworld/20090415/tc_pcworld/stealthyrootkitslidesfurtherundertheradar

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

With recent police activity, anti-terror adverts and CCTV everywhere no wonder we're all scared stiff

So it has now become one of the main causes of anxiety. Among all the other worries that people face - the recession, crime, hospital superbugs and terrorism - a new fear has emerged: that of the Big Brother state.

According to a survey by the Mental Health Foundation, we are a pretty fearful lot. In fact, more than seven million of us are living with some sort of anxiety problem.

And the proliferation of surveillance equipment such as CCTV cameras (of which we have more than the rest of Europe put together) only makes people more worried of the very things the cameras are designed to tackle: crime and terrorism.

It is ironic that something which is supposed to put our minds at rest has exactly the opposite effect.

But there is also a darker side to the proliferation of monitoring equipment which should also be a cause of great concern to us all.

The evidence can no longer be ignored that after a decade of New Labour, Britain has become a far worse place for honest citizens to live their lives as they please, away from the eyes and ears of the state.

In the name of 'efficiency' and 'national security', our civil liberties have been systematically eroded.

We have calmly allowed our rulers to grab enormous and unprecedented power. They claim it is needed to protect us from criminals, but in fact they are using it to bully and enslave us with a litany of regulation and red tape.

Police and other state officials have turned from our servants into our masters.

Yahoo to cut hundreds of jobs

Posted on - Tue Apr 14, 2009 10:26PM EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -Yahoo Inc is preparing to lay off several hundred workers in the first round of cuts since Carol Bartz became chief executive in January, a source with knowledge of the situation told Reuters.

The layoffs could be announced next Tuesday, when Yahoo reports its first-quarter financial results, according to the source, who wished to remain anonymous because of the issue's sensitivity.

Yahoo's last round of layoffs was in December, under former CEO and co-founder Jerry Yang. The company, which is the No. 2 U.S. Internet search provider, finished 2008 with roughly 13,600 employees, down by more than 1,600 employees from the third quarter of 2008.

Yahoo declined to comment on the planned layoffs, first reported by the New York Times on Tuesday.

The cuts would come almost two months after Bartz implemented a broad internal management reorganization and as Yahoo explores partnerships to help revive its growth.

Yahoo and Microsoft Corp met recently to discuss a deal involving the company's search business, according to a source familiar with the matter who wished to remain anonymous.

The search company has projected that sales in the first quarter could be down as much as 16 percent at $1.53 billion.

Shares of Yahoo were up 3 cents at $14.10 in after hours trade.

(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; Editing Bernard Orr and Muralikumar Anantharaman)

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Topical Spray Helped Men With Premature Ejaculation

MONDAY, April 6 (HealthDay News) -- A new spray enabled men with premature ejaculation to delay their orgasm six times longer than before, according to a study that included 300 European men.

The men, with clinically diagnosed premature ejaculation, were randomly selected to receive a placebo spray with no active ingredients (100 men) or the PSD502 spray, which contains 7.5 milligrams of lidocaine and 2.5 mg of prilocaine (200 men).

During the three-month study, the men used either the placebo or the PSD502 spray five minutes before intercourse. The men and their partners then used a stopwatch to record the time from vaginal penetration to ejaculation. The men were instructed to abstain from sexual activity or masturbation for 24 hours before each recorded episode of intercourse.

The men who used the PSD502 spray (treatment group) delayed their orgasm from an average of 0.6 minutes to 3.8 minutes, compared to just over 1 minute for those who used the placebo spray. That means the PSD502 spray helped men last 6.3 times longer than normal, compared to 1.7 times longer than normal for those who used the placebo, the study authors said.

The study found that after three months of treatment:

  • 90 percent of the men in the treatment group were able to delay ejaculation for more than 1 minute following vaginal penetration, compared with 54 percent of those in the placebo group.
  • 74 percent of men in the treatment group were able to last 2 minutes before ejaculation, compared with 22 percent of those in the placebo group.
  • 62 percent of men in the treatment group said their orgasms were "good" or "very good" after three months, compared with 20 percent before the start of the study. For men in the placebo group, the figures were 19 percent at the end of the study and 21 percent before the start of the study.
  • More patients and partners in the treatment group reported improvements in perceived control, personal distress, satisfaction with sexual intercourse, and interpersonal problems.

The most common problems noted in the study were loss of erection and a burning sensation in the vagina.

The study findings were published in the April issue of the journal BJU International.

"Premature ejaculation can be a very distressing condition for men and can cause distress, frustration and make them avoid sexual intimacy," lead researcher Professor W. Wallace Dinsmore, of the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast, U.K., said in a news release.

"Our study shows that when the PSD502 spray was applied to the man's penis five minutes before intercourse it improved both sexual performance and sexual satisfaction, which are key factors in treating premature ejaculation."

More information

The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about premature ejaculation.

Keep an eye on the game



By Karen Kaplan, Los Angeles Times-Washington Post
Published: April 08, 2009, 23:09

Here's some evidence that staying hooked to your favourite games may be good for you after all.

According to a study published online in Nature Neuroscience, people who played 50 hours of action video games showed significant improvement in contrast sensitivity function, a key aspect of vision, .

Contrast sensitivity function refers to the ability to detect small differences in shades of grey, and it is one of the most vulnerable elements of vision. Scientists believe it is affected by deterioration of the eye itself.But a team of researchers from The University of Rochester and Tel Aviv University suspected that changes in the brain played a role as well. If so, they reasoned that mental exercise could offer some improvement.

To find out, they recruited video game novices in their 20s and asked some of them to play Atari's Unreal Tournament 2004 and Call of Duty 2 by Infinity Ward, two fast-paced games that require players to aim and shoot weapons from battle vehicles.

Others were assigned to The Sims 2 from Electronic Arts, an elaborate simulation game that doesn't ask players to make any quick or visually precise moves. Participants were asked to play their games for a total of 50 hours over nine weeks. The researchers measured each player's contrast sensitivity function before and after their training and found that the sensitivity of people assigned to the shoot-'em-up games improved by an average of 58 per cent. Those who played The Sims improved, too, but not as much as those who played action games.

The benefits lasted for months and may even last for years. "Generally our results establish that time spent in front of a computer screen is not necessarily detrimental to vision,"the authors of the research wrote.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Woman finds $357,959 cashier's check and returns it

By JOHN ROGERS, Associated Press Writer John Rogers, Associated Press Writer – Wed Apr 8, 4:49 pm ET

LOS ANGELES – As she walked from a post office, Talon Curtis thought she'd found one of those gimmicky sweepstakes offers on the ground that scream something like "$357,959.55" in big bold letters and "This is not a real check" in much smaller type. But just as she was about to do her part for a cleaner planet and deliver the paper from the parking lot to a trash can, she noticed it was a real cashier's check with a real signature.

"I couldn't believe it. I almost passed out," Curtis, who works as a loan negotiator, told The Associated Press on Wednesday. "I have never seen a check that big. Not in my possession, anyway."

She immediately set out to find its rightful recipient, but it was Saturday afternoon and the banks were closing. On Monday, with help from KCAL-TV reporter Dave Malkoff, she located the check's owner, who had arrived at her bank in a panic.

"I think she had walked in at the same time the bank manager called me back," Curtis said. "I could hear her walking up to him. and I could hear all this commotion in the background."

Curtis said she spoke briefly with the woman on the phone about a possible meeting, but Pacific Mercantile Bank instructed her to mail the check to them instead.

Not willing to take a chance on the mail, Curtis delivered it personally. A bank employee confirmed it had arrived.

Curtis said she never thought of keeping the check for herself, and she declined the woman's offer of a reward. Still, she's just a little disappointed.

"I just wanted to see her face," Curtis said, laughing. "I just wanted to let her know that there are honest people left in this world."


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090408/ap_on_fe_st/odd_big_check

Gossip writer out of job after "Wolverine" review



LOS ANGELES - Columnist Roger Friedman is out at FoxNews.com after reviewing an illegally downloaded copy of Fox's "X-Men Origins: Wolverine" last week.

Friedman, who wrote the Fox411 column for FoxNews.com, met with Fox News executives Monday. Following the meeting, the company issued a statement saying the parties had "mutually agreed to part ways immediately."

Friedman could not be immediately reached for comment.

By admitting to having downloaded the film, which doesn't arrive in theaters until May 1, Friedman earned a big thumbs-down from News Corp., Fox News' parent company.

The trouble began Tuesday when an illicit copy of the film made its debut onto the Web. Fox immediately condemned the theft and copying of an unfinished workprint of the film and enlisted the FBI and the Motion Picture Assn. of America to track down the perpetrators.

Downloading a copy of the film himself, Friedman wrote a positive review that appeared in his Fox411 column Thursday.

"I doubt anyone else has seen this film. But everyone can relax. I am, in fact, amazed about how great "Wolverine" turned out. It exceeds expectations at every turn," he wrote.

But he also described how easy it is to download any film or TV show and joked he might decide to catch up on some other recent films via illegal downloads.

Fox -- pointing that out Fox News is a separate business under the News Corp. banner -- responded Friday, "This behavior is reprehensible and we condemn this act categorically, whether the review is good or bad."

Parent News Corp. issued its own condemnation, saying, "Roger Friedman's views in no way reflect the views of News Corp.," and adding, "Once we learned of Roger Friedman's post, we asked Fox News to remove it, which they did immediately."

After word began to circulate late Saturday that Friedman had been removed as well, News Corp. amended its statement, adding that Fox News had "promptly terminated Mr. Friedman."

But the columnist's status still appeared unclear Sunday afternoon.

Friedman would not comment except to say, "Reports of my death have been extremely exaggerated."

"This is an internal matter that we are not prepared to discuss at this time," a Fox News spokesperson said, leaving the entire matter in question.

Twenty-four hours later, Fox News and Friedman had gone their separate ways.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

X-Men Origins: Wolverine Workprint Leaked Online


X-Men Origins: Wolverine is currently slated for a May 1, 2009 release date in the U.S., but unfortunately, it looks like a few people might be getting their hands on the film a bit earlier than intended. Reports are pouring in that a full-length, DVD-quality workprint of the film has been leaked onto the internet and is quietly making its way across various bittorrent sites and other unsavory online venues. According to Drew McWeeny at HitFix, who has evidently seen parts of the video file, the copy is “near-finished…marred only by a few unfinished FX shots.” In addition, “there’s no timecode, no watermark…nothing. It’s a clean, perfect copy.”

This is perhaps the biggest leak for a major tentpole release in recent memory. Leaving aside the well-known phenomenon of Oscar screener leaks, workprint leaks have certainly happened in the past. For example, Eli Roth’s Hostel 2 leaked onto the internet several weeks before its release (in that situation, Roth was furious and blamed the leak for the film’s weak box office performance). Other films such as Rob Zombie’s Halloween and Michael Moore’s Sicko also experienced similar issue. However, those films were all relatively small compared to X-Men Origins: Wolverine, a film which 20th Century Fox was probably betting on to help revive its recent lackluster box office performance.

The film’s production has already been plagued by bad buzz, and with a fairly pristine copy of the film floating around for consumption by the very audience the film is targeted at, it will all probably combine to have a dramatic and negative impact on this film’s opening and overall box office performance.

How did X-Men Origins: We get Leaked on the Internet?



Today an unwatermarked, time code free workprint of X-Men Origins: Wolverine leaked on the internet. Within hours thousands of people had a version of the upcoming Fox release, and once a file like this is in the wild it can never be fully brought back in.

How the hell did this happen?

I got in touch with a friend of mine who works in a post-production facility here in Los Angeles and he seemed to think my question was funny. "I'm surprised this doesn't happen more often," he said.

While studios bend over backwards to police film critics at press screenings (I've become used to security guards with night vision lenses staring at me while I'm watching a movie), the post-production process is apparently porous. Burned DVDs are swapped around with aplomb in this world; in fact I was told that the Wolverine DVD was switching hands for the last couple of weeks. It's hard to nail down where in the post-production process the Wolverine leak originated; it could have been someone working in digital FX, someone working on the titles, or even someone working on the trailer. Hell, it could be somebody working on the DVD release, for that matter.

My source told me stories of people blithely taking home DVDs of major upcoming studio blockbusters - some with watermarks, some without - so that they wouldn't have to work overtime at the office. And it's not just the honchos who have this access. My source told me about interns bringing DVDs home to watch with their friends. Even he seemed incredulous about the lackadaisical security at most of these post-production houses.

I've experienced some of this stuff first hand. I had someone from a post house meet me at a coffee shop and show me the Cloverfield trailer on a laptop. I've had files emailed to me that are clearly watermarked with post house names. I know a filmmaker who had his film pirated in the post-production stage, and who managed to nail the guy who was handing out DVDs to his friends. And I've come across some of these DVDs myself, although I never knew that they were so rampant.

Post isn't the only source of major leaks; these days getting a script to an unmade movie isn't even a badge of insider honor. They seem to be available to anyone who wants them. Someone told me that the security on the script for Cabin in the Woods was so tight no one would get it. Just to prove him wrong I got it three days later. I don't say that to boast but to explain how lax security is on the script end; once something hits an agency, PDFs of it may as well be deposited in the mailboxes of the biggest movie site writers. But while that's a problem - the mass leak of the script to Quentin Tarantino's Inglorious Basterds being one example - it's not half as damaging as the leak of an actual movie. Very few people will read a script. Many more will watch a DIVX file.

I have a feeling that the Wolverine leak is the tip of the iceberg. My source tells me that he suspects the person who leaked it may have been motivated by a grudge against the house where they work - perhaps someone who has been laid off or had his hours reduced (although to be fair he did also say that it's just as likely that this leak came from a dumb intern who simply made a copy for a friend. My friend has no actual knowledge of the particulars of this specific leak). The ease with which a DVD can be ripped and disseminated makes it child's play, and the ubiquity of laptops make it simpler and simpler for someone to rip a movie without even taking the disc off premises. Studios can keep being worried about someone sneaking a Flip camcorder into a press screening, but the real problem is right in their own system. So far they've been amazingly lucky, but how long can that luck hold out?