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/ 26 July 2005

Did Microsoft wipe Apple off the map?

As software rivals, Microsoft wants to wipe Apple Computer off the map. With Microsoft’s new web service for satellite photographs, did the world’s largest software company find a way to do exactly that? Anyone who uses Microsoft’s new ”Virtual Earth” website for a bird’s-eye view of Apple’s corporate headquarters sees only a grainy photograph of what appears to be a nondescript warehouse.

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/ 25 July 2005

I’m Lance, let’s go out!

Friends say Lance Archibald is a tall, handsome former college asketball player and graduate of Harvard business school. He’s also still single at 31, and so they’re hoping to speed things up with a billboard and website. ”Team DateLance,” the cadre of friends and co-workers behind the scheme, are screening date applications

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/ 23 July 2005

Revolutionary, yes, but Google is still vulnerable

A new generation of dotcom punters on Friday discovered a financial fact of life: shares in Google can go down as well as up. The 6% fall that greeted the search engine’s second-quarter earnings was hardly a rout, but was still a broad hint from Wall Street that Google requires perfection every time to maintain the sky-high rating on its shares.

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/ 22 July 2005

Censored, but not silenced

When Nigerian reporter Isioma Daniel heard that a <i>fatwa</i>, or Islamic ruling, had been issued against her, she "felt calm … then realised that there was no going back". "Was I scared? I didn’t sleep too well that night," she wrote in a February 2003 article published by <i>The Guardian</i> about her case.

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/ 21 July 2005

Forget what mom said: showers can be dangerous

Traces of magnesium found in household water could be sufficient to cause permanent brain damages to those who take a regular shower, according to a report published in the United States journal Medical Hypotheses. John Spangler and his team suggested that breathing in vapour containing manganese salts could be dangerous over the longer term.

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/ 21 July 2005

Photographer testifies at topless photos trial

A photographer accused of threatening to sell topless photos of Cameron Diaz testified that he initially thought the signature on her photo release form was authentic and acknowledged he hadn’t personally asked her to sign it. John Rutter (42) testified on Wednesday that his practice during photo shoots was to have an assistant take care of the forms instead.

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/ 21 July 2005

Nasa to launch Discovery on July 26

Nasa set Tuesday as the tentative launch date for the shuttle Discovery, after saying it was confident the technical glitch that delayed the original July 13 launch has been overcome. ”Right now we think we have eliminated all possible causes” related to the glitch, said shuttle programme director Bill Parson.

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/ 20 July 2005

Worldwide computer sales up 17%

Worldwide PC sales grew by about 17% in the second quarter of the year as falling prices spiked demand in Asia and Latin America, research firm IDC said on Tuesday. Total PC shipments during the second quarter grew to 46,57-million compared with 39,94-million in the same period a year earlier, IDC said.

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/ 20 July 2005

Bush picks appeals judge for supreme court

United States President George Bush on Tuesday night nominated an appeals court judge, John Roberts, as the new member of the supreme court, describing the choice as ”one of the most consequential decisions a president makes”. Democratic senators vowed to question him closely in the coming confirmation hearings.

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/ 20 July 2005

US to aid India’s nuclear power project

The United States President, George Bush, has agreed to aid India’s civilian nuclear power programme, an unexpected decision that reverses three decades of American policies designed to deter nations from developing nuclear weapons. The agreement is the first exception to the international bar on nuclear assistance to any country that does not accept monitoring of all of its nuclear facilities.

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/ 20 July 2005

New HP boss plans 14 500 job cuts

Hewlett-Packard on Tuesday announced plans to cut 14 500 jobs over the next 18 months, representing 10% of the struggling company’s worldwide workforce. The plans were the first significant move by Mark Hurd, who was hired after Carly Fiorina was ousted as chief executive in February.

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/ 20 July 2005

Visa, American Express cut ties with card processor

Visa USA and American Express are cutting ties with the payment-processing company that left 40-million credit and debit card accounts vulnerable to hackers in one of the biggest breaches of consumer data security. CardSystems Solutions ”has not corrected, and cannot at this point correct, the failure to provide proper data security for Visa accounts,” said Rosetta Jones, a vice president at Foster City, California-based Visa.

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/ 20 July 2005

Federal crackdown on aircraft pilots

United States prosecutors announced criminal charges on Tuesday against 40 airplane pilots suspected of lying about potentially dangerous illnesses ranging from schizophrenia to drug addiction. The majority of those indicted were only licensed to fly private jets, but some earned their livings shuttling people or cargo through the skies.

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/ 19 July 2005

Moodie continues winning streak

South African Wesley Moodie beat the heat on Monday in a steamy struggle over Jean-Rene Lisnard of France 6-3, 6-3 to reach the second round of the  000 RCA Championships in Indianapolis. Moodie was the surprise winner of the Wimbledon doubles title this month, alongside Australian Stephen Huss.

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/ 18 July 2005

Top White House advisers named as CIA leak sources

Key political advisers to United States President George Bush and vice-president Dick Cheney were named on Sunday as sources in the leaking of the name of a CIA operative. A Time magazine reporter said that Bush’s chief political adviser, Karl Rove, was the first person to tell him that a critic of the administration’s decision to go to war in Iraq was married to a CIA operative.

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/ 15 July 2005

Beleaguered Jackson faces fresh court battles

An otherworldly, pale-faced man dressed in a frockcoat, sporting lipstick and fake-looking hair throws open his arms to welcome a group of children to his private dreamworld. No, it’s not Michael Jackson at the gates of Neverland, but Willy Wonka, as played by Johnny Depp in the film adaptation of Roald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, which opens on Friday in the United States.

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/ 14 July 2005

Corpse stalls traffic on highway

A corpse caused a traffic jam on a Dallas, Texas, highway after it fell off a pick-up truck late on Tuesday, local media reported. The body was being transported to a Shreveport, Louisiana, funeral home when it fell off the truck and landed in the fast lane, <i>The Dallas Morning News</i> reported on Wednesday.

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/ 14 July 2005

Astronomer’s three-star find

An astronomer has identified a planet with three suns far away in the galaxy — the first of a class dubbed ”Tatooine planets” after the home of Luke Skywalker, the young hero of the Star Wars films. The stars are about as close to each other as Saturn is to the sun.