- Titanic necklace stolen in Denmark
A necklace once worn by a passenger on the ill-fated ocean liner the Titanic has been stolen from a traveling exhibit in Copenhagen, the exhibit venue has said.The necklace was stolen on Saturday during opening hours at the exhibit... かつて不運な客船タイタニックがコペンハーゲンで巡回展から盗まれた上に乗客が身につけていたネックレス、展示会場はsaid.Theネックレスは、展示に時間を開かずの間に土曜日に盗まれている...
- Fancy an earth flyover?
A time-lapse video collated from 600 images from the International Space Station is offering the public a unique glimpse of our planet from space.The footage, uploaded onto YouTube by James Drake, documents the space station's orbit... 国際宇宙ステーションから600枚から照合をタイムラプスビデオは、ジェームズドレイクによってYouTubeにアップロード、space.The映像から私たちの惑星の公共のユニークな姿を提供している、宇宙ステーションの軌道について説明...
- China Achieves Its First Space Docking
China's burgeoning manned space program, aiming to complete a space station by around 2020, cleared a major hurdle with a successful docking between two craft in orbit. 中国の急成長の有人宇宙計画は、2020年頃で宇宙ステーションを完成することを目指し、軌道上の2つの技術間の正常なドッキングと大きなハードルをクリア
- SPEAKING FREELY : The South China Sea is not Chinas Sea
It would be absurd if England were to try to claim sovereignty over most of the English Channel, Iran the Persian Gulf, Thailand the Gulf of Thailand, Vietnam the Gulf of Tonkin, Japan the Sea of Japan, or Mexico the Gulf of Mexico. For their own sake, the major powers must not abandon the South China Sea to be turned into a Chinese lake and Southeast Asian nations to fall into China's orbit. - Huy Duong (Oct 4, '11) イングランドは、メキシコ湾、ペルシャ湾、タイタイ湾、ベトナムトンキン、日本の湾、日本海、またはメキシコ、イギリス海峡の最も上の主権を主張するイランをしようとした場合、それは不条理でしょう
- Why phone hacking is a story that deserves big coverage
There have been suggestions, inside and outside the newspaper world, that it's time to wind down on phone hacking. Some think there are more important stories to worry about. Some complain about vindictiveness. Others argue that it's all too complex to understand.I just can't share any of those negative thoughts, as I argue in my London Evening Standard column today.Importance? Well, there are important stories - such as Libya, the eurozone crisis, the wider economic dramas - and The Guardian is hardly ignoring them. But what British-based story of recent times has led to the resignation of two senior officers from the nation's largest police force, the closure of the country's second-highest selling national newspaper, the resignation of two senior executives from the world's largest news organisation, the resignation of the prime minister's media aide, the early retirement of the chairwoman of the press regulator, a judicial inquiry, two police investigations, two overlapping Commons inquiries, and the arrest of 16 people?Vindictiveness? Rupert Murdoch's News International newspapers - most especially, the late and unlamented News of the World and The Sun - have routinely acted in a vindictive manner to many thousands of people down the years.Is anyone seriously suggesting that we should go easy on journalists and executives who have profited by unjustifiable and casual vindictiveness?Complexity? Well, it may often seem hard to follow but, as always in such stories, the devil really is in the detail.Look back at the great investigative stories of the past - thalidomide, say, or Watergate - and note how the truth had to be extracted bit by painful bit.In cases where powerful corporations seek to prevent revelation (thalidomide) and powerful institutions seek to cover u _NULL_
- World of Warcraft's Players Fall Sharply, Surpassed by League of Legends
The giant hasn't fallen yet, but it's certainly staggering a bit. null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40
- From The Terrible Idea File: Toyota's 'Cyberstalking' Guerrilla Ad Campaign
Two years ago, Amber Duick started getting emails from a 25-year-old English soccer fan named Sebastian Bowler. In his first email, he wrote, “Amber mate! Coming 2 Los Angeles. Gonna lay low at your place for a bit. Till it all blows over. Bringing Trigger.” 二年前、琥珀Duickはセバスチャンボウラーという名前の25歳の英語のサッカーファンからのメールを始めた
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