Stobart VK M-Sport Ford driver Henning Solberg is occupying a strong position at the end of Day 1 of Neste Oil Rally Finland, the ninth round of the FIA World Rally Championship, moving up to sixth place after ten stages of fast-paced action around the Finnish lakes and forests. Team mate Matthew Wilson, meanwhile, is also well-placed to move into a points-scoring position, lying in tenth place overnight and locked in a battle with Citroen Junior driver Sebastien Ogier who is just 3.5 seconds ahead of the young Brit.
After the traditional opening Super Special Stage at the Killeri trotting track last night, 90 crews headed north-west of the Rally HQ in Jyväskylä to take on two passes of a four-stage loop over the famed Finnish forest roads. Ultra high-speeds tested the drivers’ bravery as well as their skill, and the throngs of fans out on the stages were thrilled by the spectacular jumps.

Given a cast of Adam Sandler, Seth Rogen and Jonah Hill, and the guiding hand of director and writer Judd Apatow (”Knocked Up” and “The 40-Year-Old Virgin”), perhaps there is no more appropriate title than simply “Funny People.”
Which is saying something, since “Funny People” frequently treads into the darker realms of comedy.
Sandler leads the cast as George Simmons, an A-list Hollywood comedian whose fame and fortune has brought him a beautiful mansion on the beach, lots of luck with the ladies and, as the audience soon discovers, a life of loneliness.
Sandler is quick to point out that he and his character have little in common.
“I can’t really say this guy is me; he’s not living my life,” says Sandler, who is married with two children. “The movie star thing we have in common; we have a few mood swings in common. … But the lifestyle and the attitude is not really me.”
George’s biggest problem isn’t his desolation, however. He’s been diagnosed with a leukemia-like terminal disease, prompting him to get back to his roots and do more stand-up comedy.
Along the way, he hires struggling comedian Ira Wright, played by Rogen, to pen jokes for him and act as his personal assistant. Despite hurling an occasional insult at Ira, George learns to trust his new, eager-to-please sidekick.
The feeling isn’t always mutual. Ira is forced to adapt to his boss’ constant mood swings, erratic behavior as he deals with the fear of dying and deep regret at losing Laura (Leslie Mann), the only woman he ever loved. However, Ira does earn a steady paycheck — and gets a taste of show business.
Rogen, who says he wouldn’t be in comedy if he never saw Sandler’s movies while he was growing up, says “Funny People” paints an accurate picture of the ups and downs of comedians who are just starting out.
“It’s an incredibly realistic representation,” Rogen says. “Those scenes where you’re backstage at the comedy club and you’re all sitting around pitching jokes to each other. It’s exactly like that.”
Apatow, who performed stand-up comedy earlier in his career, says, “It is an ode to stand-up. I’ve always been a crazy fan of stand-up comedians. Jonathan Winters … Don Rickles, things like that.”
Apatow, who knows he’s taking a risk with “Funny People’s” mix of light and darkness, made a wisecrack about his hopes for the film at the Los Angeles premiere.
“Well, I think there’s 10 movies that are going to be up for best picture this year, and we definitely are shooting for No. 16,” he says.
The cast also took some risks, performing stand-up in front of live audiences for the film — and, occasionally, watching their jokes fall flat.
Hill says he had never done stand-up before and calls the experience “terrifying.”
“It can be brutal out there,” Rogen adds.
Sandler, the most seasoned comedian by far, remembers his first days onstage and can relate.
“It’s all about your last set,” he recalls. “If I did good Wednesday … all day Thursday, I was in a good mood.
“Then Thursday night comes around and I go onstage and if I did bad, Friday was a miserable time for everyone.”
Adam Richard Sandler (born September 9, 1966) is an American comedian, actor, musician, screenwriter and film producer. After becoming a Saturday Night Live cast member, he went on to star in several Hollywood feature films that grossed over US$100 million at the box office.[1] Though he is best known for his comedic roles, such as in the films Billy Madison (1995), Happy Gilmore (1996), Big Daddy (1999) and Mr. Deeds (2002), he has also had success in romantic and dramatic roles, such as in the films The Wedding Singer (1998), Punch-Drunk Love (2002), Spanglish (2004), Reign Over Me (2007), and Funny People (2009).
Seth Rogen (born April 15, 1982) is a Canadian actor, comedian, writer and film producer. Rogen began his career doing stand-up comedy for four years during his teens, coming in second place in the Vancouver Amateur Comedy Contest when he was 16. While still living in his native Canada, he auditioned for (and ultimately landed) a supporting role in Freaks and Geeks. After he moved to Los Angeles for the role, Freaks and Geeks was canceled after one season. He then got a part on the equally short-lived Undeclared, which also hired him as a staff writer.

Given a cast of Adam Sandler, Seth Rogen and Jonah Hill, and the guiding hand of director and writer Judd Apatow (”Knocked Up” and “The 40-Year-Old Virgin”), perhaps there is no more appropriate title than simply “Funny People.”
Which is saying something, since “Funny People” frequently treads into the darker realms of comedy.
Sandler leads the cast as George Simmons, an A-list Hollywood comedian whose fame and fortune has brought him a beautiful mansion on the beach, lots of luck with the ladies and, as the audience soon discovers, a life of loneliness.
Sandler is quick to point out that he and his character have little in common.
“I can’t really say this guy is me; he’s not living my life,” says Sandler, who is married with two children. “The movie star thing we have in common; we have a few mood swings in common. … But the lifestyle and the attitude is not really me.”
George’s biggest problem isn’t his desolation, however. He’s been diagnosed with a leukemia-like terminal disease, prompting him to get back to his roots and do more stand-up comedy.
Along the way, he hires struggling comedian Ira Wright, played by Rogen, to pen jokes for him and act as his personal assistant. Despite hurling an occasional insult at Ira, George learns to trust his new, eager-to-please sidekick.
The feeling isn’t always mutual. Ira is forced to adapt to his boss’ constant mood swings, erratic behavior as he deals with the fear of dying and deep regret at losing Laura (Leslie Mann), the only woman he ever loved. However, Ira does earn a steady paycheck — and gets a taste of show business.
Rogen, who says he wouldn’t be in comedy if he never saw Sandler’s movies while he was growing up, says “Funny People” paints an accurate picture of the ups and downs of comedians who are just starting out.
“It’s an incredibly realistic representation,” Rogen says. “Those scenes where you’re backstage at the comedy club and you’re all sitting around pitching jokes to each other. It’s exactly like that.”
Apatow, who performed stand-up comedy earlier in his career, says, “It is an ode to stand-up. I’ve always been a crazy fan of stand-up comedians. Jonathan Winters … Don Rickles, things like that.”
Apatow, who knows he’s taking a risk with “Funny People’s” mix of light and darkness, made a wisecrack about his hopes for the film at the Los Angeles premiere.
“Well, I think there’s 10 movies that are going to be up for best picture this year, and we definitely are shooting for No. 16,” he says.
The cast also took some risks, performing stand-up in front of live audiences for the film — and, occasionally, watching their jokes fall flat.
Hill says he had never done stand-up before and calls the experience “terrifying.”
“It can be brutal out there,” Rogen adds.
Sandler, the most seasoned comedian by far, remembers his first days onstage and can relate.
“It’s all about your last set,” he recalls. “If I did good Wednesday … all day Thursday, I was in a good mood.
“Then Thursday night comes around and I go onstage and if I did bad, Friday was a miserable time for everyone.”
Adam Richard Sandler (born September 9, 1966) is an American comedian, actor, musician, screenwriter and film producer. After becoming a Saturday Night Live cast member, he went on to star in several Hollywood feature films that grossed over US$100 million at the box office.[1] Though he is best known for his comedic roles, such as in the films Billy Madison (1995), Happy Gilmore (1996), Big Daddy (1999) and Mr. Deeds (2002), he has also had success in romantic and dramatic roles, such as in the films The Wedding Singer (1998), Punch-Drunk Love (2002), Spanglish (2004), Reign Over Me (2007), and Funny People (2009).
Seth Rogen (born April 15, 1982) is a Canadian actor, comedian, writer and film producer. Rogen began his career doing stand-up comedy for four years during his teens, coming in second place in the Vancouver Amateur Comedy Contest when he was 16. While still living in his native Canada, he auditioned for (and ultimately landed) a supporting role in Freaks and Geeks. After he moved to Los Angeles for the role, Freaks and Geeks was canceled after one season. He then got a part on the equally short-lived Undeclared, which also hired him as a staff writer.

Monica Seles Is Working on Memoir
Former tennis great Monica Seles is working on a memoir.
She said in a statement Wednesday that she hopes “to share how I found balance, strength and happiness in my life after a rollercoaster ride of exhilarating accomplishment and sometimes overwhelming tragedy”
The book, currently untitled, will be published in 2009 by Avery, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA).
Seles, 34, won nine Grand Slam tournaments and as a teenager was the top-ranked women’s player for three years, in the early 1990s. But she is also known for one of the sport’s most bizarre and terrifying incidents: In April 1993, at a tournament in Hamburg, Germany, she was stabbed in the back by a man who climbed out of the stands.
Seles returned to the game 27 months later and immediately reached the 1995 U.S. Open final. Her final Grand Slam title then came at the 1996 Australian Open. She did reach two more major finals but was hampered by a left foot injury. Her last match was a first-round loss at the 2003 French Open. She officially retired last month.
Seles, who has struggled with weight problems, is currently a contestant on the hit ABC series “Dancing With the Stars.”
“After years of having every aspect of her training, diet and life dictated and scrutinized by others, Monica took control, deciding what she wanted from life and set out to obtain it,” her publisher, Avery, said in a statement.
“Cutting through the fog of sadness, fear and frustration that made Seles overweight and unhappy, today she looks and feels better than ever and has created a life in balance.”
via AOL
Tennis icon Monica Seles has sold her memoir to Avery, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA). The untitled project is scheduled for publication in March 2009. The auction for world rights was conducted by Dana Beck at Bill Adler Books.
In this inspiring and revealing memoir, Seles will explore her remarkable journey of brilliant tennis, fame, tragedy, loss and self-discovery. After years of having every aspect of her training, diet and life dictated and scrutinized by others, Monica took control, deciding what she wanted from life and set out to obtain it. Cutting through the fog of sadness, fear and frustration that made Seles overweight and unhappy, today she looks and feels better than ever and has created a life in balance.
Seles said, “On February 14th, I officially retired from professional tennis, closing one chapter of my life. I’m now opening a new chapter where I hope to share how I found balance, strength and happiness in my life after a rollercoaster ride of exhilarating accomplishment and sometimes overwhelming tragedy. Avery is giving me the opportunity to put this journey in words, and I’m thrilled to be working with them.”
Megan Newman, Publisher at Avery, said, “Avery is delighted to be publishing Monica Seles’ book. Her remarkable, uplifting story is one that will resonate with readers — those who were fans during her illustrious tennis career and those who will meet her for the first time. It is an honor to be working with such a talented athlete and promising author.”
John Steele, Senior Vice President at IMG, who represents Seles in her non-tennis activities, added, “Since Monica won the French Open at age 16, she has been living in the public spotlight but she has never really discussed the struggles that went along with all the victories. It will be both a remarkable read and a motivating story of finding health and happiness.”
About the Author
Earlier this year, Seles, 34, announced her retirement from professional tennis. Over her extraordinary career, she earned nine Grand Slam titles and won 53 singles and six doubles tournaments. She first became No. 1 in the world in March 1991. Seles was No. 1 for 178 weeks during the next two years — the youngest No. 1 ever at the time — until tragedy struck in April 1993, when she was stabbed in the back by a deranged fan during a match in Hamburg, Germany. She was not able to play again for more than two years. When she did return, she won even more hearts with her comeback win at the Canadian Open, and then reached the U.S. Open final the following month. Remarkably, she then won her ninth Grand Slam title at the Australian Open in January 1996. Seles joined the cast of the sixth season of ABC’s hit “Dancing with the Stars” in 2008.
About Penguin Group (USA)
Penguin Group (USA) Inc. is the U.S. member of the internationally renowned Penguin Group. Penguin Group (USA) is one of the leading U.S. adult and children’s trade book publishers, owning a wide range of imprints and trademarks, including Viking, G. P. Putnam’s Sons, The Penguin Press, Riverhead Books, Dutton, Penguin Books, Berkley Books, Gotham Books, Portfolio, New American Library, Plume, Tarcher, Avery, Philomel, Grosset & Dunlap, Puffin, and Frederick Warne, among others. The Penguin Group is part of Pearson plc, the international media company.
About IMG
Operating in 30 countries, IMG’s diverse businesses include: consulting services; event ownership and management; fashion events and models representation; licensing; golf course design; and client representation in golf, tennis, broadcasting, speakers, European football, rugby, cricket, motor sports, coaching, Olympic sports and action sports. IMG Academies are the world’s largest and most advanced multi-sport training and educational facilities, delivering world-class sports training experiences to more than 12,000 junior, collegiate, adult, and professional athletes each year.
IMG’s media and entertainment operations include content production subsidiaries Darlow Smithson Productions and Tiger Aspect Productions. Globally, IMG produces and distributes more than 11,000 hours of sports, documentary, drama, comedy, entertainment, popular factual and children’s content annually. IMG also represents the broadcast rights to many of the world’s premier sporting events and has the world’s largest sports archive with more than 250,000 hours of footage.
Forstmann Little & Co. purchased IMG in 2004.
via MSN

Terminator 4 to open May 2009
The fourth TERMINATOR movie, entitled TERMINATOR SALVATION: THE FUTURE BEGINS will open in May 2009, according to Variety.
Warner Brothers announced the news to the trade. The actual date penciled in for the McG starrer is May 22, 2009, the start of Memorial Day weekend. Christian Bale will star in the new movie as hero John Connor.
The trade says that he plot of the latest movie is being kept under tight wraps, but the film is the first part of a planned three-picture arc that begins after Skynet has destroyed much of humanity in a nuclear holocaust.
Shooting kicks off in New Mexico on May 5th of this year. Bale will next be seen in another Warner Brothers franchise, the highly anticipated BATMAN BEGINS sequel THE DARK KNIGHT.
via thehollywoodnews
T4 Gets Release Date
So much for Judgment Day. The Terminator has been assigned a new target: May 22, 2009.
That’s the date Warner Bros. has scheduled to unspool its heavily anticipated Terminator Salvation: The Future Begins, per the trades.
The sequel, which will also serve as the first installment of another planned trilogy in the fabled man vs. machine sci-fi tale, picks up shortly after the first Terminator trilogy left off. Christian Bale plays the adult John Connor, leading a rebellion against the sentient computer network known as Skynet that seeks to wipe out all of humanity.
The studio will distribute Terminator Salvation in North America after securing a pact with Halcyon Co., which owns the franchise rights. Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions Group will control international distribution.
Warner Bros.’ summer tent pole will bow the same day Twentieth Century Fox plans to roll out Night at the Museum II: Escape from the Smithsonian, the follow-up to its 2006 comedy hit Night at the Museum, in which Ben Stiller will reprise his part as the hapless security guard of a museum whose exhibits come to life after dark.
The original fantasy grossed $250 million in domestic ticket sales and the second Night is sure to give Bale and company a run for their money at the box office.
Despite its overwhelming popularity with the ComiCon crowd, the billion-dollar Terminator series has seen its blockbuster status slip in recent years. Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, featuring Arnold Schwarzenegger back in the indestructible robot role that made him famous, grossed $150 million domestically when it opened in 2003, but cost an estimated $200 million to make. However, the film more than made up for it internationally, raking in $283 million in foreign ticket sales to bring its global haul to $433 million.
By contrast, 1984’s The Terminator cost $6 million and tallied $38 million in the U.S., and eventually finished with $78 million worldwide. The biggest of them all was 1991’s Terminator 2: Judgment Day, which generated a whopping $204 million in U.S. ticket sales before going on to earn $516 million internationally.
The first two films were written and directed by James Cameron and the third by Jonathan Mostow.
Taking the reigns on the fourth chapter will be McG, a Hollywood director who started out in music videos but found big-screen success helming the feature film version of Charlie’s Angels and its subsequent sequel.
But whether or not the director, whose real name is Joseph McGinty Nichol, has the chops to deliver the high-octane action goods of his predecessors remains to be seen.
The filmmakers have been tight-lipped about T4’s plot, but one thing’s for sure: it will not feature Schwarzenegger, who’s busy finishing out his term as California’s governor.
The story, penned by T3 writers John Brancato and Michael Ferris, is said to be set in the postapocalyptic nightmare briefly alluded to in the first three movies after Skynet fomented a nuclear holocaust hoping to destroy its human makers.
Aside from Bale—who’s pulling double hero duty as the Caped Crusader in this summer’s Batman sequel, Dark Knight—actor Sam Worthington is also in talks to come aboard. As it happens, Worthington is in the midst of wrapping a key role in Cameron’s sci-fi action-adventure epic Avatar, the self-anointed king of the world’s first Hollywood film since 1997’s Oscar-winning Titanic.
Shooting on Terminator Salvation is scheduled to kick off in New Mexico on May 5 and continue there for two months before moving on to other locales.
via eonline
Reference: The Terminator is a 1984 science fiction/action film directed and co-written by James Cameron. It features Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda Hamilton and Michael Biehn.
The film takes place in 1984, introducing the concept of a “terminator”, specifically the titular character (Arnold Schwarzenegger), a seemingly unstoppable cyborg assassin who has been sent back from the year 2029 by a race of artificially intelligent computer-controlled machines bent on the extermination of mankind. The Terminator’s mission is to kill Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton) whose future son founds a resistance against the machines. A human, Kyle Reese, is also sent back from the future to protect her.

Planet-hunters set for big bounty
Rocky planets, possibly with conditions suitable for life, may be more common than previously thought in our galaxy, a study has found.
New evidence suggests more than half the Sun-like stars in the Milky Way could have similar planetary systems.
There may also be hundreds of undiscovered worlds in outer parts of our Solar System, astronomers believe.
Future studies of such worlds will radically alter our understanding of how planets are formed, they say.
New findings about planets were presented at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Boston.
Nasa telescope
Michael Meyer, an astronomer from the University of Arizona, said he believed Earth-like planets were probably very common around Sun-like stars.
“Our observations suggest that between 20% and 60% of Sun-like stars have evidence for the formation of rocky planets not unlike the processes we think led to planet Earth,” he said. “That is very exciting.”
Mr Meyer’s team used the US space agency’s Spitzer space telescope to look at groups of stars with masses similar to the Sun.
They detected discs of cosmic dust around stars in some of the youngest groups surveyed.
The dust is believed to be a by-product of rocky debris colliding and merging to form planets.
Nasa’s Kepler mission to search for Earth-sized and smaller planets, due to be launched next year, is expected to reveal more clues about these distant undiscovered worlds.
Frozen worlds
Some astronomers believe there may be hundreds of small rocky bodies in the outer edges of our own Solar System, and perhaps even a handful of frozen Earth-sized worlds.
Speaking at the AAAS meeting, Nasa’s Alan Stern said he thought only the tip of the iceberg had been found in terms of planets within our own Solar System.
More than a thousand objects had already been discovered in the Kuiper belt alone, he said, many rivalling the planet Pluto in size.
“Our old view, that the Solar System had nine planets will be supplanted by a view that there are hundreds if not thousands of planets in our Solar System,” he told BBC News.
He said many of these planets would be icy, some would be rocky, and there might even be objects with the same mass as Earth.
“It could be that there are objects of Earth-mass in the Oort cloud (a band of debris surrounding our planetary system) but they would be frozen at these distances,” Dr Stern added.
“They would look like a frozen Earth.”
Goldilocks zone
Excitement about finding other Earth-like planets is driven by the idea that some might contain life or perhaps, centuries from now, allow human colonies to be set up on them.
The key to this search, said Debra Fischer of San Francisco State University, California, was the “Goldilocks zone”.
This refers to an area of space in which a planet is “just the right distance” from its parent star so that its surface is not-too-hot or not-too-cold to support liquid water.
“To my mind there are two things we have to go after: we have to find the right mass planet and it has to be at the right distance from the star,” she said.
The AAAS meeting concludes on Monday.
via bbc
Planet hunters find ’super-Earth’
Planet hunters have discovered an icy “super-Earth” circling a distant star.
International astronomers suspect it is a bare, icy, rocky world, much colder than the Earth and 13 times its mass.
The planet was spotted last April but details have only just been revealed in a paper submitted to Astrophysical Journal Letters.
The extra-solar planet is one of a mere handful detected using a novel technique called microlensing.
The planet orbits a star about half as big as our Sun, positioned some 9,000 light-years away. At -201C, it is one of the coldest extra-solar planets to be discovered.
Andrew Gould, professor of astronomy at Ohio State University, US, was one of the first people to discover it.
He said the find has two main implications.
“First, this icy ’super-Earth’ dominates the region around its star that in our Solar System is populated by the gas-giant planets, Jupiter and Saturn,” he said.
“We’ve never seen a system like this before because we’ve never had the means to find them.
“And second, these icy ’super-Earths’ are pretty common. Roughly, 35% of all stars have them.”
Brightening effect
Professor Gould is leader of the Microlensing Follow-up Network (MicroFUN) collaboration.
It is one of several international groups looking for Earth-like planets in planetary systems other than our own using the phenomenon called gravitational microlensing.
The technique is an indirect way of obtaining information about large celestial objects that are too dim to see.
When a massive object such as a star crosses the path of a background star, it acts like a powerful lens, gravitationally bending and magnifying the light rays from the more distant star.
The object’s gravity amplifies the starlight, causing it to brighten as the body passes in front of the star.
This can be observed by telescopes on Earth as a brightening and fading effect, as the lens star floats across the face of the background star.
Neptune-mass
Clues to the presence of the planet were first seen last April by a Polish astronomy project led by Professor Andrzej Udalski from Warsaw University.
When Gould and Udalski realised the star was brightening extremely quickly one night, they alerted the duty astronomer at the MDM Observatory in Arizona.
“It was four in the morning,” Gould recalled, “I was very excited and frantic to get someone to observe that star.”
Astronomers in Arizona took more than 1,000 measurements of the event, which, coupled with software models, confirmed the presence of a Neptune-mass planet, 13 times heavier than Earth.
Gould suspects the planet is a bare, icy Earth-like one, a sort of cold “super-Earth”, although he cannot be certain.
“We can’t really tell for sure,” he said. “If we start getting more statistics on this type of planet, we could piece together a better story.”
Extraterrestrial life
Since the 1990s, astronomers have discovered some 170 extra-solar, or exoplanets, a planet which orbits a star other than the Sun.
There is great interest in finding extrasolar planets that are like the Earth, since these could, in theory, have the right conditions for supporting life.
In January, a new planet 5.5 times the mass of the Earth - the smallest yet - became the third exoplanet to be detected by the microlensing technique.
Tim Naylor, professor of astrophysics at Exeter University, UK, said microlensing had great promise for the future.
“It holds out the promise that we will discover many Earth-sized planets with this technique,” he told the BBC News website.
via bbc

Goldfish memory myth busted
A 15-year-old South Australian school student has busted the myth that goldfish have a three second memory.
Rory Stokes, from the Australian Science and Mathematics School in Adelaide, conducted an experiment to test the commonly held theory that goldfish have short memory spans.
He was also keen to open people’s minds to the cruelty of keeping fish in small tanks.
“We are told that a goldfish has a memory span of less than three seconds and that no matter how small its tank is, it will always discover new places and objects,” Rory said.
“I wanted to challenge this theory as I believe it is a myth intended to make us feel less guilty about keeping fish in small tanks.”
Rory’s experiment involved teaching a small group of fish to swim to a beacon by establishing a memory connection between the beacon and food.
Over a period of three weeks, he placed a beacon in the water at feeding time each day, waited 30 seconds and then sprinkled fish food around the beacon.
The time taken for the fish to swim to the beacon reduced dramatically, from more than one minute for the first few feeds to less than five seconds by the end of the three weeks.
Following the initial three-week period, Rory removed the beacon from the feeding process.
Six days later, he once again placed the beacon in the water and despite not seeing it for almost a week, the fish swam to the beacon in 4.4 seconds, showing they had remembered the association between food and the beacon for at least six days.
“My results strongly showed that goldfish can retain knowledge for at least six days,” Rory said.
“They can retain that knowledge indefinitely if they use it regularly.”
Rory also conducted a number of other experiments to show goldfish were capable of negotiating a simple maze, by having them move onto a second beacon if they found no food at the first.
“My experiments showed that goldfish have the mental capabilities to learn and remember fairly complex concepts and they can retain that knowledge for at least a number of days,” he said.
Australian Science and Mathematics School principal Jim Davies said the series of experiments were an excellent example of science investigation made fun.
via news.com.au
Reference: The goldfish, Carassius auratus, was one of the earliest fish to be domesticated, and is still one of the most commonly kept aquarium fish and water garden fish. A relatively small member of the carp family, the goldfish is a domesticated version of a dark-gray/brown carp native to East Asia. It was first domesticated in China and introduced to Europe in the late 17th century.
Goldfish may grow to a maximum length of 23 inches (59 cm) and a maximum weight of 9.9 pounds (4.5 kg), although this is rare; few goldfish reach even half this size. The oldest recorded goldfish lived to 49 years, but most household goldfish generally live only six to eight years, due to being kept in bowls. A group of goldfish is known as a troubling.

Why scientists love games consoles
Leading scientists are turning to the extraordinary power of games consoles to do their sums and simulate everything from colliding black holes to the effects of drugs.
Reprogram a PlayStation and it will perform feats that would be unthinkable on an ordinary PC because the kinds of calculations required to produce the realistic graphics now seen in sophisticated video games are similar to those used by chemists and physicists as they simulate the interactions between particles ranging from the molecular to the astronomical.
Such simulations are usually carried out on a supercomputer, but time on these machines is expensive and in short supply. By comparison, games consoles are cheap and easily available, says New Scientist.
“There is no doubt that the entertainment industry is helping to drive the direction of high performance computational science - exploiting the power available to the masses will lead to many research breakthroughs in the future,” comments Prof Peter Coveney of University College London, who uses supercomputing in chemistry.
Prof Gaurav Khanna at the University of Massachusetts has used an array of 16 PS3s to calculate what will happen when two black holes merge.
According to Prof Khanna, the PS3 has unique features that make it suitable for scientific computations, namely, the Cell processor dubbed a “supercomputer-on-a-chip.” And it runs on Linux, “so it does not limit what you can do.”
“A single high-precision simulation can sometimes cost more than 5,000 hours on the TeraGrid supercomputers. For the same cost, you can build your own supercomputer using PS3s. It works just as well, has no long wait times and can be used over and over again, indefinitely,” Prof Khanna says.
And Todd Martinez has persuaded the supercomputing centre at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, to buy eight computers each driven by two of the specialised chips that are at the heart of Sony’s PlayStation 3 console.
Together with his student Benjamin Levine he is using them to simulate the interactions between the electrons in atoms, as part of work to see how proteins in the body dovetail with drug molecules.
He was inspired while browsing through his son’s games console’s technical specification “I noticed that the architecture looked a lot like high performance supercomputers I had seen before,” he says. “That’s when I thought about getting one for myself.”
The Wii, made by Nintendo, has a motion tracking remote control unit that is cheaper than a comparable device built from scratch. The device recently emerged as a tool to help surgeons to improve their technique.
Meanwhile, neurologist Thomas Davis at the Vanderbilt Medical Centre in Nashville, Tennessee, is using it to measure movement deficiencies in Parkinson’s patients to assess how well a patient can move when they take part in drug trials.
via telegraph
Reference: A video game console is an interactive entertainment computer or electronic device that manipulates the video display signal of a display device (a television, monitor, etc.) to display a game. The term “video game console” is used to distinguish a machine designed for consumers to buy and use solely for playing video games from a personal computer, which has many other functions, or arcade machines, which are designed for businesses that buy and then charge others to play.

WALMART TO COVER UP “M” RATED GAMES
Bentonville, AR – Censorship, of course, is nothing new. Every creative form of entertainment has endured attempts to restrict its content or who can access it at some point of its existence. Over the past few years video games have taken the brunt of those restrictions. The virulence of the attacks against the industry has only grown along with its rise in popularity.
Early on the industry seemed to learn from its predecessors. With the voluntary introduction of a rating system in the 90’s, the video game industry took a proactive approach to self regulation. The hope was that this show of responsibility would help stave of the more radical proselytizers and give the industry room to breathe. Throughout the Nineties, that approach seemed to be working.
Gaming had its controversies early in its life. Titles such as “Custer’s Revenge” and “Beat ‘em and Eat ‘em” broke boundaries and outraged parents in the nascent days of the industry when they were released for the Atari 2600. Natural selection and technology changes from companies like Nintendo doomed titles of such a controversial nature to extinction. In the early part of the 1990’s though, saw a surge parental outrage, and even US Senate hearings, with the release of titles like “Night Trap” and “Mortal Kombat”.
The resulting controversies forced the industry to form the ESRB and begin to regulate their own product, hoping that they would avoid the censorship the plagued the Film and Music industry before them. For a while, that seemed to work.
The start of the new millennium saw the release of two products that would forever change that calm peace the industry had brokered.
The Sony Playstation 2 and “Grand Theft Auto III” broke new grounds for controversy and popularity. All of a sudden, the industry found itself on the defensive again, and as the decade has progressed, the vigour of the attacks seems to have only increased.
With recent controversies over titles like “Bully” and “Manhunt 2” video games have never been under such scrutiny. That focus has caused not only developers and publishers to become nervous about the content in their titles, but also retailers.
The largest retailer of all has taken new measures to try to protect its consumers from potentially controversial video games.
Much like adult magazines had in the past, Wal-Mart will soon be displaying M-rated titles with a black sleeve covering three quarters of the cover of each title. The hope is that this will prevent children from any kind of exposure to anything that might be offensive on the cover of a game.
“It is the responsibility of Wal-Mart to protect our children from potentially damaging content, such as the covers of some video games,” said a company spokesperson.
When asked why the sleeves would matter when the titles are stored behind glass, the company had no comment.
The new program is expected to be implemented later this year. There are also plans to cover T-rated titles with a more modest half sleeve.
via scrapetv
Reference: Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (NYSE: WMT) is an American public corporation that runs a chain of large, discount department stores. It is the world’s largest public corporation by revenue, according to the 2007 Fortune Global 500.[3] Founded by Sam Walton in 1962, it was incorporated on October 31, 1969, and listed on the New York Stock Exchange in 1972. It is the largest private employer in the world and the fourth largest utility or commercial employer, trailing the Chinese army, the British National Health Service, and the Indian Railways. Wal-Mart is the largest grocery retailer in the United States, with an estimated 20% of the retail grocery and consumables business, as well as the largest toy seller in the U.S., with an estimated 22% share of the toy market.
Wal-Mart operates in Mexico as Walmex, in the UK as ASDA, and in Japan as Seiyu. It has wholly-owned operations in Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Puerto Rico, and the UK. Wal-Mart’s investments outside North America have had mixed results: its operations in South America and China are highly successful, but it sold its retail operations in South Korea and Germany in 2006 after sustained losses.
Wal-Mart has been criticized by some community groups, women’s rights groups, grassroots organizations, and labor unions, specifically for its extensive foreign product sourcing, low rates of employee health insurance enrollment, resistance to union representation, and alleged sexism.

Yahoo’s Board REJECTS Microsoft takeover Offer!
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Yahoo Inc.’s board plans to reject Microsoft Corp.’s bid to buy the Internet pioneer, The Wall Street Jornal reported on its Web site Saturday.
Board members concluded the unsolicited $44.6 billion offer massively undervalues the Web pioneer, a person familiar with the situation told the newspaper.
The bid was made public Feb. 1.
by breitbart
Microsoft has offered to buy the search engine company Yahoo for $44.6bn (?22.4bn) in cash and shares.
The offer, contained in a letter to Yahoo’s board, is 62% above Yahoo’s closing share price on Thursday.
Yahoo cut its revenue forecasts earlier this week and said it would have to spend an additional $300m this year trying to revive the company.
It has been struggling in recent years to compete with Google, which has also been a competitor to Microsoft.
In a conference call, Microsoft’s Kevin Johnson said that the combination of the two companies would create an entity that could better compete with Google.
“Today the market [for online search and advertising] is increasingly dominated by one player,” he said.
Chairman quit
Yahoo confirmed that it has received an unsolicited offer and said that its board would evaluate the proposal, “carefully and promptly in the context of Yahoo’s strategic plans and pursue the best course of action to maximize long-term value for shareholders.”
If Yahoo accepted the offer, competition authorities both in the US and the European Union would be likely to investigate the tie-up.
Yahoo chief executive, Jerry Yang, announced on Tuesday that he intended to lay off 1,000 staff as part of a restructuring plan.
Terry Semel, who stepped down as chief executive last June, also quit as non-executive chairman on Thursday.
Microsoft said that Yahoo shareholders could choose to receive either cash or shares.
Yahoo shares have fallen 46% since reaching a year-high of $34.08 in October. On Friday they closed almost 48% higher.
Microsoft closed 6.6% lower while Google shares fell 8.6%.
“Ultimately this corporate marriage was forced by the rise of Google, which has grown into a serious competitor for both Microsoft as a software company and Yahoo as an internet portal,” said Tim Weber, business editor of the BBC News website.
“It is a shotgun marriage, but the person holding the shotgun is Google.”
‘Exorbitant premium’
According to its letter to Yahoo, Microsoft attempted to enter talks about a deal a year ago, but was rebuffed because Yahoo was confident about the “potential upside” presented by the reorganisation and operational activities that were being put in place at the time.
“A year has gone by, and the competitive situation has not improved,” Microsoft’s letter said.
But there has been some concern about the price that Microsoft is offering.
“To me, the premium seems exorbitant, for what is a dwindling business,” said Tim Smalls from the brokerage firm Execution LLC.
“I personally don’t see how the synergies of Microsoft-Yahoo is going to take on Google.”
Other analysts were more enthusiastic about the offer.
“It is a fantastic offer. It is game on,” said Colin Gillis from Canaccord Adams.
“This consolidates the marketplace down to Google versus Microsoft. These two companies will be going head to head.”
by bbc