UJYAALO 90 NETWORK :: सीधा कुरा प्रस्ट विचार - News Feed

UJYAALO 90 NETWORK :: सीधा कुरा प्रस्ट विचार - News Feed

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

China tells Japan islands "sacred Chinese territory" in dispute standoff

Beijing


China claimed islands at the core of a row with Japan as its "sacred territory" in talks between the two countries' foreign ministers, Xinhua news agency said on Wednesday, as neither side showed signs of backing down in a long-festering feud.

Xinhua said Yang reiterated China's "solemn position on the issue of Diaoyu Islands, which have been China's sacred territory since ancient times".

-Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba, for his part, said Tokyo had its own stance and called for restraint in the dispute that is threatening ties between Asia's two largest economies, Japan's Kyodo news agency said.

Sino-Japanese relations deteriorated sharply this month after Japan's central government bought the isolated East China Sea islands, called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, from their private owner, sparking anti-Japan protests across China.

China's meetings with Japanese diplomats - at the United Nations and a day earlier in Beijing - suggest Beijing does not want the tensions over the island chain, believed to be in waters rich in natural gas deposits, to lead to a rupture in relations.

But the unyielding tone of China's published remarks suggests that the row is far from over. Beijing has repeatedly called the islands its "sacred territory since ancient times".

"The Japanese move is a gross violation of China's territorial integrity and sovereignty, an outright denial of the outcomes of victory of the world anti-fascist war and a grave challenge to the post-war international order," said Yang, according to the Xinhua summary of his comments.

Japan, which says the islands' purchase was meant to fend off a more provocative bid by the nationalist governor of Tokyo, Shintaro Ishihara to have his metropolitan government buy them, is trying to keep communications channels open.

China postponed a ceremony marking the anniversary of the resumption of diplomatic ties with Japan, but an official at the Japan-China Economic Association said Toyota Motor Corp Chairman Fujio Cho and Hiromasa Yonekura, chairman of Japanese business lobby Keidanren, and other representatives of Japan-China friendship groups would attend an event on Thursday in Beijing.

Patrol vessels from the two countries have also been playing a tense game of cat-and-mouse in the waters near the disputed islands, raising concerns that an unintended collision or other incident could escalate into a broader clash.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

american cinema

Ticket sales at North American cinemas declined an estimated 3 percent, to $4.28 billion, for the period from the first full weekend in May to Labor Day, compared with the period a year earlier. The last time studios experienced a decline for the summer was seven years ago, according to Hollywood.com, which compiles box office data.
But even higher ticket prices could not offset empty seats. Attendance for the period, when studios record about 40 percent of their annual ticket revenue, was the lowest since at least 1993, when independent records started to be kept. About 533 million people went to the movies, a 4 percent drop compared with last summer.
These dour statistics, offset somewhat by international sales, come despite a season that included two huge hits: “The Avengers” took in about $620 million in North America for Disney (over $1.5 billion worldwide); and “The Dark Knight Rises” sold over $431 million in tickets for Warner Brothers (closing in on $1 billion globally).
Studio executives point to the mass shooting in July at a Colorado theater as one reason for the unexpectedly chilly summer. In the weeks after the killings, which took place at a midnight showing of “The Dark Knight Rises,” up to 25 percent of moviegoers were reluctant to visit multiplexes, according to the research firm NRG.
Higher than normal interest in the Olympics also kept people home, with one out of every 10 moviegoers replacing at least one trip to the movies with televised sports, according to the research firm Ipsos MediaCT. Consumers also continued to push back against higher ticket prices; although Imax had a solid season, theaters sold an estimated 15 percent fewer premium-priced 3-D tickets this summer compared with the period a year earlier.
Do not let the movies themselves off the hook, analysts say. At a time when social media are making it harder for studio marketers to put lipstick on pigs, films like “Battleship,” “Total Recall,” “Rock of Ages” and “Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter” missed the creative mark, failing to charm either critics or audiences.
“Some of it was conceptual ideas that didn’t connect and some of it was just bad product,” said Vincent Bruzzese, president of Ipsos MediaCT’s Worldwide Motion Picture Group.
Still, the summer of 2012 may be most remarkable for its extremes. After shooting out of a cannon with “The Avengers,” which broke an industry record in May for the biggest opening weekend ever, the movie business closed its warm-weather season with catastrophic results for “The Oogieloves in the Big Balloon Adventure.”
Over the weekend, “Oogieloves,” which cost about $55 million to make and market and was released on 2,160 screens, took in about $448,000; that result ranks “Oogieloves,” independently made by the “Teletubbies” impresario Kenn Viselman, as one of the biggest flops of all time. (“The Possession,” distributed by Lionsgate, was the No. 1 movie for the weekend, taking in $17.7 million, according to Hollywood.com; the horror movie cost about $15 million to make.)
The swing between huge hits and huge misses was felt at most of Hollywood’s big studios — the consequence, analysts say, of cutting back on midbudget movies in favor of franchise pictures that cost roughly $200 million to make and $150 million more to market. “For better or worse, that’s the game these days,” said Nikki Rocco, president of Universal Pictures Distribution.
Universal, now owned by Comcast, had the summer’s biggest flop, “Battleship,” which performed so poorly compared with its swollen budget that it led the studio to post an $83 million second-quarter loss. But Universal also had the biggest surprise success in Seth MacFarlane’s “Ted,” a relatively inexpensive comedy that to date has taken in about $216 million domestically and $384 million in total.
Sony Pictures Entertainment successfully released “The Amazing Spider-Man,” which took in about $260 million in North America and $735 million worldwide. But two duds — the comedy “That’s My Boy” and “Total Recall” — ate into profits from “Spider-Man.” (Most box office analysts mark “Men in Black 3” as a wash, taking in a hefty sum but also costing one; a Sony spokesman placed the movie firmly “in the win column.”)

Friday, August 31, 2012

cool pictures of bikes





Typhoon hits N. Korea, still reeling from floods

SEOUL, AUG 29 -
A powerful typhoon that killed at least 10 people in South Korea hit the North early Wednesday, knocking down hundreds of trees, destroying power cables and causing blackouts in a country already struggling to rebuild from earlier flooding.
Big rainstorms often mean catastrophe in North Korea because of poor drainage, deforestation and decrepit infrastructure, but the extent of wind and rain damage in the country wasn't immediately clear Wednesday. Pyongyang, the capital, saw strong winds but little apparent damage. Cars splashed through slightly flooded streets, spraying people on crowded sidewalks.
Typhoon Bolaven began pummeling the North late Tuesday, on the country's first Youth Day since new leader Kim Jong Un took over in December. Weather officials had warned that it would be the strongest typhoon to hit the region in several years, but its gusts in other parts of Asia weren't as powerful as predicted.
In South Korea, Bolaven left hundreds of thousands without power, canceled flights and temporarily halted joint war games by U.S. and South Korean military forces. The storm also churned up rough seas that smashed two fishing ships into rocks off southern Jeju island, killing five people and leaving 10 missing.
Dangerous waves kept rescue vessels from approaching the wrecked Chinese fishing ships. The coast guard used a special gun to shoot rope to one ship so officers could pull themselves over and bring the fishermen back to shore, coast guard spokesman Ko Chang-keon said.
The coast guard rescued 12 fishermen, and six others swam or were washed ashore.
The storm killed at least five other people across South Korea. A large container box crushed an apartment janitor to death, a woman fell to her death from a rooftop and another person died after bricks hit a house, according to disaster and fire officials. An 80-year-old man died after a small makeshift building fell on him, officials said, and another man was killed by a falling tree.
About 1.9 million South Korean homes and businesses lost power, the National Emergency Management Agency said, though all but about 34,000 had electricity restored by Wednesday morning. Nearly 100 families were left homeless Wednesday because of floods or storm damage. Nearly 200 flights were canceled Tuesday, but airports were running normally on Wednesday. There were 860 hectares (2,130 acres) of farmland flooded and 32 ships damaged, the agency said in a statement.
The storm came as North Korea tries to help people with food, shelter, health care and clean water after heavy flooding in July, according to a recent United Nations situation report. More than 170 died nationwide, and tens of thousands of homes were destroyed in the floods, according to official North Korean accounts.
Many flood victims still live in tents with limited access to water and other basic facilities, the U.N. report said, and there is worry about increased malnutrition in coming weeks.
deepkafle

Monday, May 28, 2012

ब्रोडलिंकद्वारा निःशुल्क इन्टरनेट

काठमाडौं, वाइफाई
सेवा दिइरहको ब्रोडलिंक कम्युनिकेसनले
नयाँ ग्राहकलाई तीन महिनासम्म
निःशुल्क इन्टरनेट सेवा दिने भएको छ ।
यसका लागि ग्राहकले
सेवा लिनुअघि आवश्यक पर्ने सिग्नल
बोस्टर किट भने किन्नुपर्ने छ ।
'७ हजार ४ सय ९९ मा छतमा राख्ने
किट र इन्टलेसन शुल्क तिरेपछि ग्राहकले
तीन महिनासम्म ५ सय १२ केबीपीएस
क्षमताको इन्टरनेट निःशुल्क पाउने
छन्,'
कम्पनीका प्रबन्ध निर्देशक विनोद
तिमल्सिनाले भने, 'छतमा राख्ने
उपकरणलाई अहिले ६ हजार ५ सय र ९
सय ९९ रुपैयाँ इन्सटलेसन चार्ज लाग्छ ।'
अहिले कम्पनीले ५ सय १२ केबीपीएस
क्षमताको इन्टरनेट लिँदा मासिक २
हजार ७ सय रुपैयाँ लिँदै आएको छ । 'यस
आधारमा इन्टरनेट शुल्क मात्र ८ हजार
१ सय रुपैयाँ पर्छ,' उनले भने,
'यो योजना सीमित
अवधिका लागि ल्याएका हौं ।'