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Local Networking sites

Businessweek has an interesting article that discusses the success of small local networking websites, in markets where Facebook and MySpace are trying to get in.

A very interesting observation about the Dutch Market:

Hyves had 5.7 million unique visitors in November, compared with Facebook’s 585,000 and MySpace’s 566,000. And in October, nine months after MySpace announced a renewed focus on the Netherlands, the Beverly Hills (Calif.)-based site shut its Amsterdam office. MySpace found the landscape competitive and entered the country late, Derek Fehmers, who led MySpace’s operations in the region, told a Dutch news outlet.

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Goodnight Irene



IMDB: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0835828/

A Portuguese movie that does not suck. I had the pleasure of watching this movie in the Tallinn Black Nights movie festival (poff.ee) and was quite amused by it. Very good images of Lisbon.

Toby writes on http://www.cambridgefilmfestival.org.uk/films/2008/goodnight-irene/reviews/
For me, this beautifully understated and deceptively simple film was the discovery of the Festival - an incredibly assured and affecting feature debut from writer and director Paolo Marinou-Blanco.

Having long been a fan of Welsh actor Robert Pugh, it’s a real treat to see him in a lead role as ex-pat Brit Alex, emotionally closed down and marking time in Lisbon - and he delivers an outstanding performance; intense, poignant and frequently very, very funny. Notwithstanding some powerful speeches plundered from a variety of classic plays (Pugh’s character Alex was once an actor) Marinou-Blanco is generally sparse with both his own dialogue and his direction, making the most of the silences and never letting anything outstay its welcome.

In the writing, Marinou-Blanco has also achieved something that (apparently) few others can manage: representing two nationalities without either falling back on caricature or cliche. It also carefully avoids becoming a piece that relies on a clash of cultures or stock ‘fish out of water’ situations. Culture is here shown to be a more subtle, shifting, ungraspable entity than those dramas would suggest - and this is about alienation of a deeper kind.

The photography is stunning, making Lisbon at once beautiful and oppressive, and there are occasional images that, while entirely naturalistic, haunt you like something from a dream (Alex’s encounter with a pack of dogs in a town square at night has a particularly weird resonance, like a glimpse of Hades).

Marinou-Blanco has set himself a tough brief here, tackling the Really Big Questions - a challenge that can so often lead to cynicism or pretentiousness (or both). But it’s a trap he never falls into, partly because he finds genuine delight in the everyday and the ordinary, but also because he never loses sight of the need for humour (both for the characters and the audience).

A previous reviewer stated she had expected more of a road movie, and so was disappointed that the 'road’ section of the film comes so late. But some of the most important journeys take place without going anywhere, and Alex’s begins long before he leaves his apartment - a point made more ironic by his dismal job of recording voice-overs for travelogues of places he has never been while shut in a recording booth at home (his 'cell’).

A beautiful, fun, yet nonetheless deeply moving film that demonstrates with absolute conviction and clarity that life is more about the search than the finding.

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US Army deserter seeks asylum in Germany

Interesting news on Reuters some time ago about a US soldier who refused to return to Iraq and is now applying for asylum in Germany. The main argument was that while in the US he was not aware of everything that went on in Iraq, and now that he is in Germany he sees the war with different eyes.
 

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - A U.S. soldier who deserted his unit to avoid returning to Iraq has applied for asylum in Germany, saying the Iraq war was illegal and that he could not support the “heinous acts” taking place.

Andre Shepherd, 31, who served in Iraq between September 2004 and February 2005 as an Apache helicopter mechanic in the 412th Aviation Support Battalion, has been living in Germany since deserting last year.

“When I read and heard about people being ripped to shreds from machine guns or being blown to bits by the Hellfire missiles I began to feel ashamed about what I was doing,” Shepherd told a Frankfurt news conference Thursday.

“I could not in good conscience continue to serve.”

Shepherd, originally from Cleveland, Ohio and ranked as an army specialist, applied for asylum in Germany Wednesday, said Tim Huber from the Military Counseling Network, a non-military group which is assisting him.

According to U.S. law, soldiers who desert during a time of war can face the death penalty.

The soldier said he was particularly hopeful he would be granted asylum in Germany, a staunch opponent of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, due to the legacy of the post-war trials of Nazi officials, notably in Nuremberg in 1945-1949.

“Here in Germany it was established that everyone, even a soldier, must take responsibility for his or her actions, no matter how many superiors are giving orders,” he said.

Shepherd, who enlisted in January 2004, is only the second U.S. soldier to have applied to Germany for asylum “in a similar situation,” said Claudia Moebus from the government’s department for migration. The earlier application was later withdrawn.

The specialist was posted to Germany in 2005 where he undertook desk jobs, but he gradually began questioning the justification for the Iraq war and began worrying he would be sent back to serve there, said Huber.

“That’s when he went AWOL,” he added.

Earlier this year, Jeremy Hinzman, an American who applied for refugee status in Canada after deserting the U.S. Army when he received orders to go to Iraq, said he would appeal a deportation order returning him to the United States.

Another U.S. deserter, Robin Long, was deported from Canada in July and sent to jail in Colorado.

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Second hand shopping turns fashionable

Maybe it’s just the current economy crisis, but an ever growing number of people are turning to second hand shopping to keep a more frugal lifestyle.


The thing with second hand shopping in many of the post-Soviet countries is that it is still associated with a certain stigma. That of old “babushkas” who have little to go by and go to the second hand shops out of necessity. That isn’t the case in most of Western Europe and the US, where second hand shops are visited mostly by urban folks who look at vintage clothing as a way of expressing their identity. It’s not a case of wallet size, it’s a matter of taste.

An article in the New York Times discusses the recent success of such shops in Poland (and I believe it can be applied to most of Eastern Europe).

WARSAW — At 9 a.m. on a recent December day, several dozen shoppers all hurled themselves at the door of a second-hand clothes store here, like a rugby scrum hitting a wall. Those stuck outside could only watch as a surprising mix of young hipsters and graying retirees sprinted upstairs, first to where the fur and leather coats awaited.

In a scene repeated daily, whenever the latest delivery has landed, the battle was on for the best finds at the store, called Tomitex, where everything, including the fur, sells for roughly $7 a pound the first week after delivery and as low as 75 cents thereafter.

But this is not a tale of people buying used clothes in the midst of recessionary gloom. The global economic crisis has yet to hit a majority of Poles.

Thrift stores here have become impromptu laboratories of the changing mores and attitudes in a country adjusting to newfound wealth. Young Poles here in the capital are now confident enough in their ability to buy new clothes that they at last have taken to wearing old ones. Those eking out a living on fixed incomes, especially retirees, still lack the means to do otherwise.

And so the hip and the strapped meet at secondhand stores like Tomitex, on Nowowiejska Street in downtown Warsaw.

The pronounced stigma of buying used clothes in a poor country was once a powerful deterrent for shopping — or at least admitting to shopping — at secondhand stores, known here by the derogative colloquialism lumpex, which translates as something like bum export. That stigma has been replaced among the young by a playful attitude toward vintage clothing and bargain-hunting that would not be out of place among their contemporaries in London or New York.

It is all part of the ferment of a capital rife with traffic jams as the new and used imported cars have outstripped the capacity of the roads to carry them all. One boutique for the latest new styles, aptly named Luxury & Liberty, has opened in the former headquarters of the governing Polish United Workers’ Party, which also previously housed the Warsaw Stock Exchange since the end of Communism.

Poles, who under Communism had few choices for clothes, now have the entire spectrum, but the full breadth is only available to a few.

The gulf between the haves and have-nots is wide, and the two sides are increasingly bumping against each other quite literally.

“I think the elderly people connect this with the past in Poland, in the ‘80s, the queues,” said Melanie Kucharska, 21, wearing black boots, jeans and dangly earrings, and braving the throngs to sift through the latest delivery with a pair of friends. “But it’s trendy now to go to secondhand stores,” she said. “I can dress in a different way than half of Warsaw does.”

Asked about her better finds, Ms. Kucharska, a student and nanny, recalled her greatest triumph: a ballerina-style dress with a big bow in the front, which she thought was from the '50s or '60s.

Older women, by contrast, registered their extreme displeasure at finding a reporter and a photographer at Tomitex, expressing emotions ranging from embarrassment to anger. “It will make me seem poor,” one complained. Others hurled the kind of colorful expressions usually reserved for use on ships at sea.

“Older ladies here are proud and so fashionable,” said Ania Kuczynska, 33, a fashion designer in Warsaw. “You can see that they aren’t very rich, but they’re elegant and they have their own style.”

Ms. Kuczynska said that after socialism consumers placed a great emphasis on labels and logos, to prove that their clothes were new and expensive. A willingness to embrace used clothes signals a new maturity in a city finding its way in fashion, Ms. Kuczynska said. “It’s just the next step in our reality, in our growing economy,” she said. “The times are changing.”

It is a trend that has just begun to touch the mainstream here. Marcin Rozyc, a local fashion journalist and stylist, described his surprise when he traveled to Amsterdam several years ago and found well-to-do young people in thrift store fashions.

“Young people had everything from secondhand, but also carried the newest bags from Chanel,” Mr. Rozyc said.

The broadening of the fashion spectrum through the arrival of designer boutiques and stores made a more experimental approach to clothes possible in the first place, he said.

Luxury & Liberty opened in September, describing itself as a “concept multibrand store” with a bar and restaurant, where the winners of the transition from socialism and their children can buy a Vivienne Westwood bag for around $460 or a Diane von Furstenberg coat for just over $1,000, or 3,159 zloty. “The biggest luxury is liberty,” reads one part of the store’s philosophy statement. “Luxury and liberty are inside us. All we need to do is focus on them and find them.”

At the Tomitex, there was plenty of focus on display, but not much luxury.

“I can’t afford to spend 400 zloty on a new coat,” said Edyta Sudzinska, 47, neatly dressed in brown pants and a black coat, as she left the store on a recent morning. Ms. Sudzinska, who works as an extra, said she lived off just 1,200 zloty a month, putting 500 zloty toward rent in her one-room apartment.

“For many years we’ll be wearing used clothes, till we get to an E.U. standard of wages,” Ms. Sudzinska said. She said she had noticed the trend among buyers who lived at or above Western standards. “Now even people who earn well buy here.”

Four years ago, the Tomitex chain had just six stores, according to its co-founder, Piotr Malecki. With business booming, the number of stores has mushroomed to 25 in Poland and an additional 5 in Ukraine, aided, he said, by an emphasis in the media and the broader culture on the environment that made recycling and reusing hip.

Mr. Malecki, 34, no relation to the photographer of the same name who was cursed in his store while taking pictures for this article, said that typical lumpex shops in smaller towns were going out of business. Used, he said, was O.K.; low quality no longer sufficed. “Even in those small towns, people want to feel good in their clothes,” he said. “They don’t want a shop where everything stinks.”

But his cash cow is still the higher price for the new deliveries. In Warsaw, he worried about one location frequented by a mostly older, poorer clientele, but should have had more faith in the discerning, younger crowd.

“Our clients know exactly where and when the new deliveries will take place,” Mr. Malecki said. “They ride around Warsaw tracking them.”

In Ukraine, by contrast, he said that all that mattered was the lowest possible price, regardless of quality. “The middle class is small, meanwhile the rich are willing to pay three times as much for an Armani as in Paris or New York,” he said. “In terms of quality, it’s really quite a Dumpster. It can be compared to Poland 12 years ago.”

At the Nowowiejska Street Tomitex store, women burrowed elbow-deep into crates of scarves. One woman made off with a pair of French Connection jeans; a man picked up a Derby County soccer jersey with an Adidas logo. The goods are weighed on scales, once at the register and again at the door to discourage theft.

Disputes between the customers, on the other hand, are harder to prevent.

“They curse each other and they do fight, but rarely,” said Ania Jaroszewska, 23, who was watching the second scale at the door. “It’s usually a random thing, when they grab at the same time and say: 'It’s mine! It’s mine!’ ”

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Riga - Violent protests scheduled for Jan 13

Things are starting to look dangerous in the Latvian capital, with protesters asking for the violent overthrow of the current government. With the president refusing to call for early elections or dissolving the parliament. People now look increasingly weary of the current inept government and are looking for ways of overthrowing it.
 

RIGA - The Latvian security police have launched a criminal investigation over a call to stage a violent revolt on Jan. 13, when mass protests are expected to take place in Riga, a police representative told the Baltic News Service.

Following reports about a call for violent riots and a coup on Jan. 13 that has been posted on an Internet website, the security police have launched a probe over a public appeal to overthrow state authority established by the Constitution or to change the political system by violent means, and distribution of materials to that end.

According to the Baltic News Service, the criminal probe has been launched over the appeal posted at www.nostarsaeimu.times.lv

“We urge all capacitated residents of Latvia to take part in the January 13 rally in Dome Square at 5.30 p.m and in a violent toppling of the government. Let’s gather at around 5.30 p.m. in Dome Square and head to the parliament building on 11 Jekaba Street armed with petrol bombs, pitchforks and tractors,” the statement said.

“The president from the zoo [a reference to the fact that the candidacy of Latvia’s incumbent President Valdis Zatlers was agreed among Latvia’s policymakers at the Riga Zoo] has already said he would not dissolve the parliament. Karlis Ulmanis [former Latvian president who came to power in a coup in the 1930s] was the only one in Latvia’s history to do what a president must do – to stage a coup. How long will they be building libraries instead of nursery schools?” the statement says.

Farmers are called to arrive for the rally with tractors for blocking streets to the parliament building to prevent police from accessing the parliament building. Farmers could also distribute pitchforks and other tools that could be used as makeshift weapons to people.

“We are calling on policemen and soldiers to feel part of the people that the ruling clique has just humiliated by cutting jobs and wages, while not forgetting to pay bonuses to themselves. We urge you not to turn against your own people, but to participate in and support the violent coup.”

“You got it right, we are calling for riots and a violent coup on Jan. 13,” authors of the statement said using an expletive against security police to mock its inability to find the still unidentified organizers.

Police declined to provide more details, citing investigation interests.

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Beer is now cheaper in the UK than in Tallinn

According to a news piece on balticbusinessnews.com , the prices for most consumer goods are still more expensive in Tallinn than many European capitals.

 
A new survey shows that although food prices in Estonia have been falling since the second half, food is still relatively more expensive in Tallinn than, for instance, in Budapest or Prague.

Postimees quotes a survey made by the Estonian Institute of Economic Research which showed that wheat flour, potatoes, domestic cucumber, chocolate, rape seed oil, brie and also beer cost relatively more in Tallinn than elsewhere.

At the same time Tallinn is doing relatively well in comparison with other Baltic capitals, since it has now the cheapest food among the three cities although at the end of 2007 food in Tallinn was still more expensive than in Riga or Vilnius. Especially sharply have declined the price of poultry, eggs, some dairy products, vegetables and fruit.

The survey shows that while price of petrol 95E fell 14 percent during the year in Europe, the fall in Tallinn was only 10 percent. In the pan-Baltic comparison, while normally fuel has cost about the same in the three Baltic capitals, Tallinn is not the city with the most expensive fuel 95E and diesel in the Baltic states.

And according to a news item on the BBC, some pubs in the UK started selling a pint of beer for 99p, which is roughtly 17 EEK at the time I write this piece. The recent devaluation of the British Pound means that now it is actually cheaper to drink beer in the UK than in most pubs in Tallinn, where a pint of beer (or actually half a liter) costs at least 35 EEK. Almost twice as much as in the UK.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7810263.stm

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Joe “the plumber” becomes a war correspondent

Joe the Plumber is taking on a new job.
 
The Ohio man, who became famous during the U.S. presidential campaign
after asking Barack Obama about his tax plan, is heading to Israel as
a war correspondent for a conservative Web site called pjtv.com.
 
Dubbed “Joe the Plumber” by McCain’s campaign, Samuel “Joe”
Wurzelbacher was held up as an example of an American worker who would
be hurt economically by Obama’s election.
 
Wurzelbacher says he’ll spend 10 days covering the fighting and
explaining why Israeli forces are mounting attacks against Hamas.
 
He tells WNWO-TV in Toledo that he wants “go over there and let their
‘Average Joes’ share their story.”
 
Wurzelbacher later joined Republican John McCain on the campaign trail.
 
At one stop, Wurzelbacher agreed with a McCain supporter who asked if
he believed a vote for Obama was a vote for the death of Israel.

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Sugar for my honey

For my girlfriend, who always adds a bit of sugar in her (delicious) cooking.


So, I come from a place where salads don’t have sugar. In fact most things don’t need to have sugar added. Unless you want them sweet. That’s why we don’t add sugar when cooking any main course. We do have great deserts and pastry, and those get the “royal-sugar” treatment. There’s plenty of sugar in those! 

To me it comes from the notion that food can be divided into salty and sweet. And that’s it! Simple and easy, mix them throughout your day and you’ll be fine. Sweet (or salty, depending on mood, taste and availability of food) breakfast, salty lunch, a sweet snack in the afternoon and finish the day with a salty main course for dinner and a sweet desert. There. Perfect!

But here, they seem to add sugar to almost anything they cook. I always found it weird. It’s like they use sugar the way we use olive oil or salt…


Well, today I read an article in the NY Times that talks about the use of sugar in cooking , and using a scientific approach, goes on to explain why using sugar (a bit of it anyway) is a good idea.

My mother, when she still cooked, always added a dash of sugar to the vegetables she stir-fried. She said it preserved the bright green of the greens. I always thought that was hooey.
Shirley O. Corriher, a biochemist turned folksy food scientist who was sitting at my dining table, said she had not heard of this — but added that sugar does do more to fruits and vegetables than add sweetness.
It also helps preserve their shape. Heat shrinks the plant cells and transforms molecules in the cell walls into pectin, which dissolves. “The cells are falling apart and leaking,” said Ms. Corriher, who dissected the science of recipes in her books “Cookwise” and “Bakewise.”
“It’s mass death and destruction when you heat a fruit or vegetable,” she said.
Adding sugar helps keep the glue between the cells intact, she said. “It’s preventing the leaking of the acid." 

So, there it is, in the face of scientific proof that sugar does help cooking, there is nothing I can say. And anyway the final result was always so good. But for now I will never argue with my girlfriend again. (well, there’s still the extra sugar in her coffee, but that’s another issue…)

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UK Scientist want your brain!!!

According to the BBC, there is a shortage of brains for research.

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/01/06/brain_appeal/

If you have no use for your brain, you know where to donate it now!

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