Monday, January 23, 2012

2012 Australian Open Players Party


Maria Sharapova of Russia arrives at the 2012 Australian open Players Party at Crown Towers



Maria Sharapova of Russia arrives at the 2012 Australian open Players Party at Crown Towers

Maria Sharapova of Russia arrives at the 2012 Australian open Players Party at Crown Towers on January 15, 2012 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Robert Prezioso/Getty Images)




Patrick Rafter and Lara Feltham arrive at the 2012 Australian open Players Party at Crown Towers

Patrick Rafter and Lara Feltham arrive at the 2012 Australian open Players Party at Crown Towers on January 15, 2012 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Robert Prezioso/Getty Images)




Sorana Cirstea of Romania arrives at the 2012 Australian open Players Party

Sorana Cirstea of Romania arrives at the 2012 Australian open Players Party at Crown Towers on January 15, 2012 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Robert Prezioso/Getty Images)




David Nalbandian of Argentina arrives at the 2012 Australian open Players Party

David Nalbandian of Argentina arrives at the 2012 Australian open Players Party at Crown Towers on January 15, 2012 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Robert Prezioso/Getty Images)




Bernard Tomic of Australia arrives at the 2012 Australian open Players Party

Bernard Tomic of Australia arrives at the 2012 Australian open Players Party at Crown Towers on January 15, 2012 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Robert Prezioso/Getty Images)




Rachael Finch arrives at the 2012 Australian open Players Party at Crown Towers



Rachael Finch arrives at the 2012 Australian open Players Party at Crown Towers

Rachael Finch arrives at the 2012 Australian open Players Party at Crown Towers on January 15, 2012 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Robert Prezioso/Getty Images)

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Cambodia prepares for Chinese Spring Festival celebration


By Nguon Sovan

PHNOM PENH, Jan. 18 (Xinhua) -- As the Chinese New Year is getting close, Chinese blood Cambodians have been busy decorating their houses with plum blossoms, red color paper-cuts and Chinese couplets hung on doors and walls, hoping to receive a good fortune and happiness in the upcoming year.

Shops selling decoration materials and praying stuff are bustling.

"A lot of customers come and purchase Chinese New Year decorations from my shop," said Hak Senghong, the owner of a shop near Phnom Penh's Orussei Market.


"For usual days, sales are not high, but ahead of the Chinese New Year, sales are very high and we almost have no time to have meals," he said.

Hak said all the decoration materials in his shop have been directly purchased from China.

In Cambodia, plum blossoms are also popularly used to decorate houses during the Chinese New Year. These flowers are symbolic of trustworthiness, determination, bond in a relationship.

Chan Srey Vy, a seller of plum blossom saplings in Phnom Penh, said year on year, more Chinese blood Cambodians come and buy the trees.

"Every year, I sell out between 100 to 200 plum blossom trees. A tree sells between 70 U.S. dollars to 100 U.S. dollars," she said.

One of the customers Kim Ly believed that the well decoration of house during the Spring Festival would bring good luck and fortune throughout the upcoming year.

"Every year, I decorate my house with red color paper-cuts, couplets and Chinese plum blossom saplings," he said.

"It (plum blossom sapling) is expensive, but according to Chinese belief, the flower can predict business future -- if the tree blooms on the first day of the Chinese New Year, it's believed that one's business throughout the year will make good earnings," he said, adding "the more the tree gives flowers, the more the earnings from business."

As for the security during the occasion, the Phnom Penh Municipality issued a directive on Tuesday, ordering all levels of authorities to strengthen security and public order during the celebration of the upcoming Chinese New Year.

Under the directive signed by the governor of Phnom Penh Municipality Kep Chuk Tema, fire-crackers, fireworks, and all types of explosives will be banned during celebrations of the Chinese New Year from Jan. 22 to 25 to ensure safety, security and public order. Also banned is gambling.

The Chinese New Year is one of the most important festivals in Cambodia, up to 80 percent of Cambodian people celebrate it every year, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen said in a public speech in last January.

Cambodia celebrates three new year festivals in a year -- the Universal New Year, the Chinese New Year and the Khmer New Year, the prime minister said.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party


Actress Shaun Robinson arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party

Actress Shaun Robinson arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party at The Beverly Hilton hotel on January 15, 2012 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)




Actress Nora Arnezeder arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party



Actress Nora Arnezeder arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party

Actress Nora Arnezeder arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party at The Beverly Hilton hotel on January 15, 2012 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)




Singer Janelle Monae arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party

Singer Janelle Monae arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party at The Beverly Hilton hotel on January 15, 2012 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)




Model Elle Macpherson arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party

Model Elle Macpherson arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party at The Beverly Hilton hotel on January 15, 2012 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)




Actress Jeannie Mai arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party

Actress Jeannie Mai arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party at The Beverly Hilton hotel on January 15, 2012 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)




Actress Wendi McLendon-Covey arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party

Actress Wendi McLendon-Covey arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party at The Beverly Hilton hotel on January 15, 2012 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)




Actress Sheila Shah arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party

Actress Sheila Shah arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party at The Beverly Hilton hotel on January 15, 2012 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)




Bai Ling arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party

Bai Ling arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party at The Beverly Hilton hotel on January 15, 2012 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)




Actress Tiffani Thiessen arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party

Actress Tiffani Thiessen arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party at The Beverly Hilton hotel on January 15, 2012 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)




Zhao Xiang arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party

Zhao Xiang arrives at NBC Universal's 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards After Party at The Beverly Hilton hotel on January 15, 2012 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)

Yahoo's Yang is gone. That was the easy part


Yahoo headquarters in Sunnyvale, Calif.
(Credit: Stephen Shankland/CNET)

Separating Jerry Yang from Yahoo is the easy part.

Yang co-founded the Internet pioneer 17 years ago along with David Filo, following the well-trodden path from Stanford student to tech stardom. But yesterday Yahoo announced Yang is leaving, stepping down from his "chief Yahoo" post and the company's board.

Yang has overseen, sometimes directly, years and years of weak performance and as Yahoo squandered its early lead on the Web. That includes the 2008 drama in which Yang and Yahoo's board rebuffed Microsoft's $44.6 billion takeover offer that in hindsight looks astoundingly generous.

So it's not unreasonable to guess that Yang was given the heave-ho now that Scott Thompson has taken over as its new CEO.

And it's not unreasonable to expect the change will make it easier to implement major changes at Yahoo-divestitures, restructuring, private equity deals, for example. "We're not sure that Yang stepping down was necessarily required in order for a deal to get done..., but Yang's departure from Yahoo could remove a potentially complicating factor," said Macquarie Securities analyst Ben Schachter in a note.

But there's a huge difference between evicting one potentially troublesome executive and fixing a mammoth company. I like to think of the challenge as the reverse of the Great Man theory of history.

Individuals are important in business, politics, and war, to be sure, but the Great Man theory ascribes way too much importance to their actions in charting the course of history. The deification of many of successful CEOs, founders, politicians, and generals is frequently unwarranted. Too often somebody is in the right place at the right time, and merely not fumbling an opportunity isn't necessarily enough to justify credit for changing the world.

Great Man thinking is particularly hazardous in technology, which changes at a breakneck pace. Today's pie-in-the-sky idea becomes tomorrow's checkbox on a feature list. A clever videoconferencing idea, attempted to soon in the history of the Internet, is a dud because costs are too high and bandwidth is too low. Too late, and anybody can do it, so adding hangouts to Google+ is nice but not revolutionary. Not everybody can be Skype, which built up a large membership of paying customers by arriving during the sweet spot.

I'm not trying to belittle Skype's achievements, but I'm convinced that if that company hadn't done it, another company would have, because the circumstances were ripe.

Likewise, Yahoo, in its early years, did well transforming from Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle to the starting point on the Web for millions of people. It wasn't easy, and there were competitors.

In the early days of the Web, Yang got a lot of credit. Today, he's getting a lot of the blame, implicit in the 3 percent after-hours rise in Yahoo's stock price that elevated its market capitalization by more than $500 million.

Call it the Great Scapegoat theory of history.

I'm not arguing Yang is blameless. What I am saying is that fixing Yahoo will be a lot harder than hiring a new CEO (the company tried that with Carol Bartz, don't forget), turning over the board, and ejecting a co-founder.

Yahoo remains a collection of thousands of employees. Their collective performance, choices, and decisions helped get Yahoo into today's fix, and now those same employees must strike off in a new direction to help get Yahoo out of today's fix. They must be willing to assess Yahoo's strengths and weaknesses candidly, to see the lay of the land, and to embrace change.

Top management will set that course and decide on major restructuring, but much of the success or failure of tomorrow's Yahoo will come from those thousands in the ranks, not the very few at the top.

How to access Wikipedia during its SOPA blackout


Using Google caching, it should be possible to access most Wikipedia pages.
(Credit: Andrew Lih)

When Jimmy Wales announced that Wikipedia will go black tomorrow in the United States in solidarity with the anti-SOPA protest movement, it was not a decision taken lightly. It might have even surprised many who thought the popular free encyclopedia Wales founded would be adopting a less stark way of protesting the Draconian copyright act. (See CNET's FAQ on SOPA.)

After all, Wikipedia is one of the most popular Web sites in the world, and a major source of information for millions of people.

But fret not. Thanks to some clever advice from Andrew Lih, the author of The Wikipedia Revolution, you don't have to go without Wikipedia during the blackout.



This is a sample of what visitors to Wikipedia will likely see in the United States on Wednesday as the free encyclopedia goes dark in protest against SOPA.
(Credit: Andrew Lih)

Accessing Wikipedia--and most other blacked out sites, it would seem--is actually quite simple. This process assumes that you know what you want to look for on Wikipedia, but if you do, here's how to find it.

First, do a Google search for your desired topic, for example, the "Stop Online Piracy Act."

Next, run your mouse over the right hand side of the search results, and you should see some arrows and a page preview for each result.

Finally, scroll down until you see the Wikipedia page you're looking for (it will frequently be in the top few results, if not first overall), click on "Cached" and Google will deliver you its cached version of the page.

To be sure, the cached version will not be the most current, but it should make do in the absence of Wikipedia.

And as Lih points out, this isn't the first time Wikipedia has gone dark. In fact, the Italian version of the encyclopedia was the first to adopt a blackout, having done so last October in protest of Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's proposed wiretapping act. As Lih writes on Storify, the Italian Wikipedia went silent for three full days, and visitors to the site saw this message: "As things stand, the page you want still exists and is only hidden, but the risk is that soon we will be forced by Law to actually delete it."

Here in the U.S., Wikipedia is joining blackouts by sites such as Reddit, Boing Boing, the Cheezburger Network, and others.

Microsoft lays out Window 8 tablet hardware requirements


(Credit: Microsoft)

Microsoft, as it does for all platforms, has issued a set of requirements for Windows 8 tablets.

While there aren't a lot of surprises (see charts below), Microsoft does specifically address a "convertible" design, which is expected to become popular on both Intel- and ARM-based devices.

Convertible: "A convertible form factor is defined as a standalone device that combines the PC, display and rechargeable power source with a mechanically attached keyboard and pointing device in a single chassis. A convertible can be transformed into a tablet where the attached input devices are hidden or removed leaving the display as the only input mechanism," according to the Microsoft documentation on pg. 87.

Hardware buttons: Must have five hardware buttons. They are--power, rotation lock, Windows Key, volume up, volume down.

Broadband: And many of those designs will have built-in broadband. "If a mobile broadband device is integrated into a tablet or convertible system, then an assisted GPS radio is required," Microsoft stipulates.
A Windows 8 tablet needs to have five buttons.
(Credit: Microsoft) Display: will have to be at least 1366x768 resolution. "The minimum native resolution/color depth is 1366x768 at a depth of 32bits. The physical dimensions of the display panel must match the aspect ratio the native resolution. The native resolution of the panel can be greater than 1366 (horizontally) and 768 (vertically)."
NFC: A visual mark is required for near field communications. "To help users locate and use the proximity technology, the use of a visual mark is required," according to Microsoft.
Alternative to Ctrl-Alt-Delete: The new option is to press Windows Key + Power. "For Windows 8, the SAS (Secure Attention Sequence) signal will be sent when the combination of the Windows Key button and the Power Button is pressed."
Other Windows 8 tablet/convertible minimum hardware requirements include:

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Google fixes Checkout bug that leaked customer data

Google has fixed a bug in its Checkout software that exposed customer phone numbers to merchants in more than two dozen countries that charge a value-added tax--mostly in Europe and Asia.

"We had a bug in our Google Checkout merchant center and API. This meant that merchants selling digital goods may have seen buyer phone numbers which are normally provided only when users buy physical goods," a Google spokesman said in a statement.

"We fixed the problem in the merchant center and we're rolling out a fix to the API over the next few days," he said. "We apologize to those impacted by this issue and appreciate their patience as we work to resolve it."

Basically, the Google Checkout bug mistakenly categorized digital goods as physical goods, which require the buyers to provide their phone numbers to the merchant for shipping purposes, Google said.

The problem lasted about a month and affected Google Checkout users in Ireland, Germany, Netherlands, Austria, Spain, France, Italy, Australia, Japan, Belgium, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Hong Kong, New Zealand, Singapore, Portugal, Israel, Republic of Korea, Russian Federation, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, India, Taiwan, Poland and Czech Republic, the company said.

Jailbroken iPad 2, iPhone 4S running iOS 5.0.1


(Credit: pod2g)

Still, no official date has been mentioned for the public release of a jailbreak solution for A5 devices. The closest to a time frame we've seen has been pod2g's ominous blog note a couple days ago, "Only a few to wait now."

Are you a jailbreaker? What's your favorite non-Apple-sanctioned app? Let me know in the comments!

The fight to jailbreak Apple's A5-chip-powered devices, specifically the iPhone 4S and the iPad, is nearing its end. Hacker "pod2g" and his crew of iOS exploit seekers have released photos and videos of a jailbroken iPhone 4S and a jailbroken iPad 2, both running iOS 5.0.1.

The most compelling proof that an A5 jailbreak is close comes in the form of a video from pod2g and the Chronic Dev Team (via iDownloadBlog). The jailbreak, performed on the iPhone 4S, is completely untethered and seems to be working great.

Read more: http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-19512_7-57360690-233/jailbroken-ipad-2-iphone-4s-running-ios-5.0.1/#ixzz1jmOT4wXY




Backing up the show of the iPhone 4S, pod2g posted a photograph of a jailbroken iPad 2 running iOS 5.0.1.

Read more: http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-19512_7-57360690-233/jailbroken-ipad-2-iphone-4s-running-ios-5.0.1/#ixzz1jmOMDfMy

Kno teaches textbooks to get smart


Kno Me provides students and professors with analytics to track progress and improve study habits.
(Credit: Kno)

Digital textbook reader and marketplace Kno wants you to get smarter, and today it released an update that creates robust flashcards and adds study-habit analytics.

"In digital learning, things should be in context, so instead of going out to the Web the facts should come to you," said Kno CEO and co-founder Osman Rashid in an interview last week at the 2012 Consumer Electronic Show in Las Vegas. The analytics are available in a dashboard called Kno Me, which tracks a student's studying habits within the Kno app. This includes the time spent in a given textbook, notes taken, and quiz results. Importantly, says Rashid, Kno Me will include allow students to compare their habits to others, and allow professors to see how students are engaging with a given text.

Kno currently offers more than 100,000 textbooks for sale, each with a 15-day free trial. Currently available from any Web browser or its iPad app, Kno has plans to release an Android app within the month, said Rashid. As is to be expected in the book marketplace, Kno uses DRM to lock down its texts. Interestingly, though, it uses the open DRM standard called Marlin.



"Education has been really hurt by the keyboard and mouse," he said, when explaining one of the challenges Kno has faced in updating textbooks for modern students. To that end, he said, the Kno Flashcards feature can convert any term from a textbook into an interactive flashcard on the fly.

Students with tablets can use tap and drag to highlight a term, but the cards are not just limited to text. Individual words or phrases can be automatically tied to the Web with deep contextual links. You can also make a flashcard out of images or 3D models, said Rashid. You can then turn those into a flashcard by removing the labels with a single tap or click. Flashcards can then be synced to your Kno Journal, a cloud-based system for keep tracking of notes. Since it's in the cloud, it also makes them accessible from anywhere.

iPad 3 to get February intro, March release?

Apple's iPad 2.
(Credit: Apple)

We could be a few weeks away from getting a peek at Apple's next iPad, if a new report is to be believed.

Citing an Asian supplier and "a source in United States," Japanese Apple blog Macotakara says that Apple is cooking up a special event in "early February" to take the wraps off its next iPad, with a formal launch of the product taking place sometime the following month.

Why the delay? Macotakara says that the Chinese factories involved with the production if iPad 3 units will be celebrating the Chinese New Year, which kicks off at the beginning of next week.

It's not unusual for Apple to delay the sale of a product from its formal introduction, however that time period has only been a week or two for new iterations of existing products. In the case of the iPad 2, the product was unveiled at an event on March 2, 2011, with a release on March 11. With the original iPad it was considerably longer, with Apple unveiling the product on January 27, 2010 and not putting it on sale until April 3.

That same timing held true with some of the latest iPhones, with the device shipping about a week and a half after its introduction. For its predecessor, the iPhone 4, that turnaround time was a little more than two weeks.

This is the latest report to suggest that Apple's aiming for a March release for the iPad 3, and the second to come from Macotakara. In October, the blog suggested Apple was planning on a March release, and making use of a new type of dock connector that would be considerably smaller from the one on current iOS devices. A story from Bloomberg last week also claimed March would be the time when the product hits shelves.

One thing worth pointing out is that a March launch would further move the iPad's release cycle closer to the beginning of the year. That's an impressive feat from a technical standpoint, but also one that could affect sales of the product during the holiday shopping season, with buyers potentially holding off on a purchase in anticipation of Apple delivering a new model just a couple of months later.

Those kind of expectations left a notable mark on iPhone sales during Apple's fourth fiscal quarter last year, with the company selling fewer iPhones than most of Wall Street expected. The big difference in that case was that the product's refresh ran longer than usual.

On the event front, Apple is set to hold its first one of the year with an education-themed announcement in New York next week. While no hardware is anticipated, the event is said to involve the iPad with additions to the company's iBookstore and iTunes U initiatives.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

2012 Consumer Electronics Show Showcases Latest Technology Innovations


New Windows phones are on display during Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's keynote address at the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show



Host Ryan Seacrest show displays the new Nokia Lumia 900 Windows phone as Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer delivers a keynote address at the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show



Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer (L) shows the new Nokia Lumia 900 Windows phone to host Ryan Seacrest as he delivers a keynote address at the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer (L) shows the new Nokia Lumia 900 Windows phone to host Ryan Seacrest as he delivers a keynote address at the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show at the Las Vegas Convention Center January 09, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)




An Asus UX31 Ultrabook is displayed during a press event by Intel Corp. at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

An Asus UX31 Ultrabook is displayed during a press event by Intel Corp. at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)




The DISH Hopper HD DVR system, including a pair of companion Joey set-top boxes, are displayed during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

The DISH Hopper HD DVR system, including a pair of companion Joey set-top boxes, are displayed during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The unit comes with a 2 TB hard drive and can record up to six TV shows at once and can display up to four different shows in four different rooms in a home at the same time. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)




A Lenovo U300s Ultrabook is displayed during a press event by Intel Corp. at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

A Lenovo U300s Ultrabook is displayed during a press event by Intel Corp. at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)




A Panasonic Toughpad is displayed during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show



President of Panasonic Electronics Marketing Company of North America Shiro Kitajima shows a Panasonic Toughpad

President of Panasonic Electronics Marketing Company of North America Shiro Kitajima shows a Panasonic Toughpad during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)




A Samsung ES8000 TV is displayed during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

A Samsung ES8000 TV is displayed during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)




Samsung Telecommunications America Senior Vice President Kevin Packingham shows a Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 LTE during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

Samsung Telecommunications America Senior Vice President Kevin Packingham shows a Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 LTE during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)




A Samsung 55-inch super OLED TV is displayed during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show



Samsung Electronics America Senior Vice President Joe Stinziano (L) and President of Consumer Electronics for Samsung Electronics America Tim Baxter show a Samsung 55-inch super OLED TV during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

Samsung Electronics America Senior Vice President Joe Stinziano (L) and President of Consumer Electronics for Samsung Electronics America Tim Baxter show a Samsung 55-inch super OLED TV during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)




Samsung Telecommunications America Senior Vice President Kevin Packingham shows a Samsung Galaxy Note mobile phone during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

Samsung Telecommunications America Senior Vice President Kevin Packingham shows a Samsung Galaxy Note mobile phone during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)




President of Consumer Electronics for Samsung Electronics America Tim Baxter shows a 16-megapixel WB850F camera during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

President of Consumer Electronics for Samsung Electronics America Tim Baxter shows a 16-megapixel WB850F camera during a press event at The Venetian for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)




President and COO of Sony Electronics Inc. Phil Molyneux shows a new remote for Google TV devices during a Sony press event at the Las Vegas Convention Center for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

President and COO of Sony Electronics Inc. Phil Molyneux shows a new remote for Google TV devices during a Sony press event at the Las Vegas Convention Center for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)




Sony Corp. Executive Deputy President Kazuo Hirai demonstrates Sony's X-Reality picture processing engine during a Sony press event at the Las Vegas Convention Center for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

Sony Corp. Executive Deputy President Kazuo Hirai demonstrates Sony's X-Reality picture processing engine during a Sony press event at the Las Vegas Convention Center for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)




Sony Corp. Executive Deputy President Kazuo Hirai speaks about Sony Network Entertainment's Music Unlimited service during a Sony press event at the Las Vegas Convention Center for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show



Sony Corp. Executive Deputy President Kazuo Hirai speaks about Sony Network Entertainment's Music Unlimited service during a Sony press event at the Las Vegas Convention Center for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show



Sony Corp. Executive Deputy President Kazuo Hirai speaks about the PlayStation Vita during a Sony press event at the Las Vegas Convention Center for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

Sony Corp. Executive Deputy President Kazuo Hirai speaks about the PlayStation Vita during a Sony press event at the Las Vegas Convention Center for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)




President and COO of Sony Electronics Inc. Phil Molyneux talks about the company's cameras and binoculars during a Sony press event at the Las Vegas Convention Center for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show

President and COO of Sony Electronics Inc. Phil Molyneux talks about the company's cameras and binoculars during a Sony press event at the Las Vegas Convention Center for the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show January 9, 2012 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Chinese Dragon In Beijing Aquarium


People dressed as a “Chinese Dragon”, swim in water at the Beijing Aquarium on January 5, 2012 in Beijing, China. The new year in Chinese calendar is the year of Dragon which will fall on January 21, 2012. (Photo by ChinaFotoPress/Getty Images)


People dressed as a Chinese Dragon, swim in water at the Beijing Aquarium



People dressed as a Chinese Dragon, swim in water at the Beijing Aquarium



People dressed as a Chinese Dragon, swim in water at the Beijing Aquarium

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More

 
Design by Free WordPress Themes | Bloggerized by Lasantha - Premium Blogger Themes | Affiliate Network Reviews