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Youku is gaining popularity in China

SHANGHAI (Rueters) - Video-sharing Web site Youku.com, which is trying to position itself as China's next YouTube, has tied up with News Corp-invested social networking site MySpace China to target the local market.

The partnership is aimed at driving Internet traffic to both Web sites and sharing online products, Youku Chief Executive Victor Koo said in a statement on Friday.

Social networks such as MySpace and Facebook let users share images, music, videos and blogs. By November last year, Youku had completed three rounds of venture financing totaling $40 million, including from Brookside Capital, Sutter Hill Ventures, Farallon Capital and Chengwei Ventures.

Launched in December 2006, Youku has more than 100 million daily video views, according to research firm Nielsen/NetRatings.

MySpace China (http://www.myspace.cn) is a locally owned, operated and managed company that has secured investment from Rupert Murdoch's MySpace Inc, publisher IDG and China Broadband Capital Partners LP, a fund operated by Edward Tian, the former chief of China Netcom Group.

China, which had 210 million Web users at the end of last year, has since overtaken the United States as the world's biggest Internet market by number of users, Beijing-based research firm BDA said on Thursday.

(Reporting by Sophie Taylor; Editing by Edmund Klamann)



Robot Spy Bat in development

The U.S. Army has awarded the University of Michigan College of Engineering a five-year, $10-million grant to help develop a six-inch robotic spy plane modeled after a bat.




Michigan Engineering:
The University of Michigan College of Engineering is ranked among the top engineering schools in the country. Michigan Engineering boasts one of the largest engineering research budgets of any public university, at more than $130 million annually. Michigan Engineering is home to 11 academic departments and a National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center. The college plays a leading role in the Michigan Memorial Phoenix Energy Institute and the Graham Environmental Sustainability Institute. Within the college, there is a special emphasis on research in three emerging areas: nanotechnology and integrated microsystems; cellular and molecular biotechnology; and information technology. Michigan Engineering is raising $300 million for capital projects and program support in these and other areas to continue fostering breakthrough scholarly advances, an unparalleled scope of student opportunities and contributions that improve the quality of life on an international scale.


More here.

Man pleads guilty over exports to India

Posted 18h 43m ago | Comment
By Pete Yost, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON — A businessman pleaded guilty Thursday to conspiracy for illegally exporting sensitive military components to India.

Appearing before a federal judge in Washington, Parthasarathy Sudarshan admitted to a scheme to conceal the true destination for electronic parts used in missile guidance systems and jet fighters, and night vision filters used in combat aircraft.

Sudarshan came to the United States and opened an office in Simpsonville, S.C.

He was accused by the government of conspiring to violate U.S. export restrictions by directing at least seven American firms he did business with to send deliveries to Singapore or to the office in South Carolina, where Sudarshan then re-exported the items to India.

According to papers filed in the case, Sudarshan coordinated with and took direction from a co-conspirator who was identified only as an Indian government official in Washington, D.C. The court papers identify five other co-conspirators, all employed by Sudarshan's business.

Officials at the Indian Embassy in Washington had no immediate comment.

Sudarshan's company, Cirrus, made 16 shipments in 3 1/2 years of microprocessors, memory chips and other items that ended up in units at the Indian government's defense ministry or space center, the court papers stated.

Some of the exported items were built specifically for military use and required licenses from the State Department's Directorate of Defense Trade Controls.

Sudarshan did not get the licenses, nor did he get licenses for other electronic components from the Commerce Department, which restricts the export to certain countries involved in developing nuclear weapons or ballistic missile delivery systems.

The equipment went to three Indian government agencies: the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, which researches spacecraft and ballistic missiles; Bharat Dynamics Ltd., a key agency in the nation's guided missile program; and the Aeronautical Development Establishment, which is developing the Tejas combat jet.

Sudarshan, 47, faces a maximum five-year prison term for conspiring to violate two federal laws including the Arms Export Control Act.

U.S. District Judge Ricardo M. Urbina scheduled sentencing for June 16.

The United States imposed sanctions in 1998 after India conducted tests of its nuclear weapons, with the Commerce Department placing a number of enterprises in India on a list that included some of Sudarshan's principal customers.

According to evidence presented by Justice Department prosecutors in court Thursday, Sudarshan told one prospective customer that the sanctions were no obstacle for one of his enterprises. "Orders, like, flew ... it was flowing like water," he was quoted saying. The court papers identified the enterprise as Bharat Electronics Ltd.

The USA Today report is here.

Nvidia offers PhysX support to AMD / ATI

Custom PC reports would suggest we standardize physics and that they accept for the good of the gaming industry. As it stands physics in games is lagging sound and 3D graphics by a large margin.



Nvidia is currently working on implementing PhysX into its CUDA language, which is supported by all GeForce 8-series GPUs. When this is ready to go, Alibrandi said that owners of these GPUs will ‘simply need to download the CUDA PhysX drivers from Nvidia,’ and that ‘hardware acceleration will then be transparently supported for applications making use of the PhysX SDK.’ Nvidia plans to support PhysX in a number of ways, and Alibrandi says that these ‘could include both single and SLI based options.’ He also confirmed that Nvidia’s relationship with Havok is now over, saying that ‘we are 100 per cent focused on enabling CUDA-based GPUs to accelerate PhysX processing.’

AMD dual-core Sempron comes to China

Monica Chen, Taipei; Joseph Tsai, DIGITIMES [Wednesday 27 February 2008]

AMD has recently launched the first dual-core Sempron processors in China in a bid to counter Intel's dual-core Celeron product line in the entry-level market, according to sources at motherboard makers.

AMD Sempron 2100+ processors adopt a 65nm process, and have a core frequency of 1.8GHz. Pricing in the China market is set at RMB 399 (US$55). Due to the cheap price and potential of AMD's own-brand RS780 and 690G IGP chipsets, the CPU has been popular with consumers in China prompting them support AMD's platform.

In order to hit back, channel vendors predict Intel will drop its dual-core Celeron processor pricing. However, they pointed out that even if the two processors are equal in price, AMD's strong IGP chipsets still give the company an advantage.

Article URL

Chuck Norris - the real WMD

By Mohammed Abbas in Fallujah

March 10, 2008 09:05pm
Article from: Reuters

HOLLYWOOD action star Chuck Norris, known for his martial arts prowess and tough-guy image, has become a cult figure among the US military in Iraq and an unlikely hero for some in Iraq's security forces.

A small cardboard shrine is dedicated to Norris at a US military helicopter hub in Baghdad, and comments lauding the manliness and virility of the actor have been left on toilet walls across Iraq and even in neighbouring Kuwait, soldiers say.

"The fastest way to a man's heart is with Chuck Norris's fist," reads one message at the shrine, which consists of a signed photo of the actor surrounded by similar statements.

"Chuck Norris puts the laughter in manslaughter," reads one and "Chuck Norris divides by zero," reads another.

Known as Chuck Norris "facts", the claims have already become an internet phenomenon, and scores are featured on http://www.chucknorrisfacts.com/, including "Superman wears Chuck Norris pyjamas", and "There are no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, Chuck Norris lives in Oklahoma".

The actor has visited Iraq several times and was made an honorary Marine last year. Some 20 US military personnel and support staff spoken to by Reuters could recite at least one Norris "fact", despite many having not visited the website.

US troops in Iraq say his support for them and Norris' invincible image has made him their idol and insist the exaggerated and satirical claims are not meant to mock him.

"The jokes all add to his legend. They're not derogatory. He's an icon," said Sergeant Joe Lindsay at a base in Fallujah in Iraq's Western Anbar province, which Norris has visited.

Bearded and muscled, Norris shot to fame fighting kung fu legend Bruce Lee in the 1972 film The Way of the Dragon, and later films show him devastating groups of men with one kick.

"Norris visited Iraq when violence was its worst and other celebrities were skittish. He's one of the guys," US military public affairs officer Specialist Mark Braden said in Baghdad.

"The Marines love him. He's like a mythical legend," Staff Sergeant Amy Forsythe in Fallujah said.

Soldiers cited many reasons for his appeal. Some appreciated his films and fighting ability - Norris is a martial arts guru, and many of his films have military themes.

Others said the masculine and plainly dressed actor was an antidote to the preening and moisturised metrosexual male.

Some praised his Christian and political values. The actor recently endorsed Republican Party presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee, though in the spirit of the Norris "facts", Marines argued it was Huckabee who endorsed Norris.

"He's helped us a lot. The appeal is also his martial arts, and sheer physical presence ... I don't think I go a day without hearing a Norris joke," said Corporal Ricardo Jones in Fallujah.

Norris' appeal is not restricted to US troops either. At an Iraqi police graduation ceremony in Fallujah, graduates called out for their "Chuck Norris" to pose with them for photos.

"Truthfully, I didn't know who he was. I asked the Americans, and they said he was a great fighter, and that's why they named me after him. They showed me a video, and it's true, he's a great fighter" said police trainer Mohammed Rasheed.

Another police trainer said Chuck Norris was a role model for the police in Fallujah, which until 2007 was an al-Qaeda stronghold and the scene of fierce battles with security forces.

"I've seen his videos, he's a hero. He saves the city, he protects women and children and he fights crime wherever it is. We should all be like Chuck Norris," Khaled Hussein said.

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