Monday, June 23, 2008

M/V Princess of the Stars




MV Princess of the Stars is a ferry owned by Filipino shipping company Sulpicio Lines that capsized off the coast of San Fernando Romblon at the height of Typhoon FRANK on June 22, 2008. Frank passed directly over Romblon as a Category 2 storm.
Built in 1984, the 23,824-tonne ferry MV Princess of the Stars had a total passenger capacity of 1,992 people.




Typhoon "FRANK" Filipino name.

June 22, 2008 in the year of Our LORD.
http://www.bidvertiser.com/bidvertiser/images/blank.gif?bdv_ver_code=BDV-201480-BDV

Saturday, June 21, 2008

June 22, 2008 6:00 am. Philippine Time

Typhoon "Frank" intensified yesterday as it changed directions and moved towards Mindoro, leaving behind at least 17 killed, scores missing and thousands stranded as air and sea flights were canceled.
The typhoon destroyed many houses, agricultural crops and livestock and also knocked down power and telecommunication lines in various areas in the Visayas.
In Eastern Samar, Gov. Benjamin Evardone said power and telecom lines were cut and damage to infrastructure facilities and farm crops was heavy. Jaro, Iloilo Archbishop Angel Lagdameo told the Bulletin that large areas in Iloilo have been flooded.
Other figures of fatalities were 12 to 14.
The figures could rise as 22 persons, mostly fishermen were missing after their bancas were hit by strong waves, according to a report from Tacloban City of correspondent Nestor Abrematea.
Ten people drowned after a swollen river overflowed its banks and swept away three houses in a riverside village in South Upi, Maguindanao, provincial administrator Norie Unas said. Five others were missing.
In nearby Cotabato City, two persons died from a trash slide triggered by "Frank".
The National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC) identified them as Nanding Pulalon, 56, and his granddaughter Bea Pulalon. Early yesterday, the NDCC counted only two fatalities.
If the typhoon does not change its course, it may bring more rains in Metro Manila and nearby areas today, weathermen said.
President Arroyo convened the NDCC in Camp Aguinaldo at the height of the typhoon before flying to the United States for a 10- day visit.
The President presided the two-hour meeting and directed government agencies to undertake search and rescue operations, extend relief and use their calamity fund to help those displaced by the typhoon.
Following its landfall in Eastern Samar Friday afternoon, typhoon "Frank" made another landfall over Romblon province, threatening to dump rains in other areas in Southern and Central Luzon today.
Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) director Dr. Prisco Nilo said "Frank" made landfall over Romblon province around 2 or 3 p.m. yesterday.
He explained that when "Frank" hit Samar island, it gathered strength as it immediately traversed the coast off Samar.
This, Nilo said, was also the reason why "Frank" was able to maintain its typhoon category despite hitting land.
Tropical storms gather strength while over water but weaken when they make landfall.
Nilo said that after making its second landfall over Romblon yesterday, there is still a possibility that it may make another landfall. He, however, said it is not expected to further intensify into a supertyphoon while inside the Philippine territory.
According to the weather bureau chief, "Frank" may traverse Mindoro on its way out to the South China Sea or move to Batangas, where it may pass near Metro Manila and Central Luzon before exiting via South China Sea.
"Frank" may stay inside the Philippines until Tuesday morning if it maintains its current movement, Nilo said.
At 4 p.m. yesterday, "Frank" was located off the coast of Romblon, particularly in the vicinity of Tablas island.
"Frank" further intensified yesterday afternoon as it packed winds at 160 kilometers per hour (kph) near the center and gusts of up to 195 kph.
It was moving to the northwest at a slower pace of 11 kph.
"Frank" was expected to cross Mindoro last night and may be at 90 kms west of Calapan City or in the vicinity of Lubang island this afternoon.
By tomorrow afternoon, it may be at 190 kms westnorthwest of Iba, Zambales and then at 410 kms westnorthwest of Laoag City, Ilocos Norte by Tuesday afternoon.
PAGASA raised public storm warning signal no. 3 over the provinces of Romblon, Marinduque, Batangas, Oriental Mindoro and Occidental Mindoro, including Lubang island; and Calamian group of islands in Luzon and in Northern Antique, Aklan and Capiz in the Visayas yesterday afternoon.
Signal no. 2 was hoisted in Bataan, Cavite, Laguna, Rizal, Quezon, including Polillo island; Camarines Norte and Camarines Sur, Albay, Masbate, including Burias island; Northern Palawan and Metro Manila in Luzon and the rest of Antique, Iloilo and Guimaras in the Visayas.
Signal no. 1 was up over Zambales, Tarlac, Pampanga, Bulacan, Nueva Ecija, Aurora, Sorsogon and the rest of Palawan in Luzon and over Negros Occidental and Negros Oriental, Cebu, Bohol, Siquijor and Leyte in the Visayas.
‘Frank’ triggers blackout, displaces 150 Cebu families
CEBU CITY – Tropical cyclone "Frank" (international name: Fengshen) unleashed its fury in the northern part of Cebu Friday night, toppling down power and communication lines, and destroying houses of at least 150 families in the town of Daanbantayan.
Flood waters forced 150 families in barangay Taytay, Daanbantayan to leave their houses when "Frank" strengthened from Friday midnight to early dawn Saturday, destroying several houses and leaving the northern Cebu in a total black out, said Daanbantayan Vice Mayor Maria Luisa Loot.
The Regional Disaster Coordinating Council and the Provincial Disaster Coordinating Council have not issued a report on casualties or actual damages brought about by "Frank" as heavy rain continued to dampen Cebu yesterday.
Loot said 14 barangays of her town saw the wrath of "Frank" as houses were left roofless and crops flooded. The town’s sports complex was also roofless when residents woke up Saturday morning to check on the effect of the typhoon. No casualties have been reported as of press time Saturday.
"It was a total mess. Several houses were destroyed, roofless. Several families were evacuated due to flood. At least 14 barangays were hit by Frank," said Loot. (Mars W. Mosqueda Jr.)
2 killed in Bicol, NDCC reports
Two persons were killed when heavy rains triggered by Typhoon "Frank" hit several areas in Bicol region and other provinces in Visayas and Mindanao that triggered heavy flooding and landslides, reports reaching the National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC) based in Camp Aguinaldo, Quezon City said yesterday.
President Arroyo met with government officials involved in disaster preparedness at the Department of National Defense (DND) in Camp Aguinaldo for almost two hours to give final instructions in the conduct of relief and rehabilitation operations in severely typhoon-battered areas, particularly in Regions 4, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 12 before she left for the United States.
Dr. Anthony Golez, presidential deputy spokesman, said the President directed the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) to place on stand by all its transport assets - particularly those with airlift capabilities - to be able to quickly respond to the needs of thousands of families that were displaced by Typhoon Frank.
The Chief Executive ordered Philippine Air Force authorities to transform the Villamor Air Base as "operation center" for the relief operations with the C-130 cargo planes and UH-1H Huey helicopters on alert for possible airlifting of relief goods to affected areas.
The Office of Civil Defense (OCD) identified the two fatalities as Bea Pulalon, eight years old and her 56-year-old grandfather, Nanding Pulalon. The two were killed when their house was buried under heavy pile of trash in Canizares, Malagapas, Cotabato City last Friday night.
Citing field reports, Golez said the "trashslide" was triggered by continuous rains in the area.
Golez said that heavy flooding, some of them even reached roof tops of houses, was monitored in Iloilo City, prompting Malacanang to send several teams of disaster response and rehabilitation from the Metro Manila Development Authority (MMDA) to the area.
Meanwhile, close to a hundred domestic flights were cancelled yesterday after airline officials found it too dangerous to fly to different parts of the country which was affected by typhoon Frank.
As of 4 p.m. yesterday, the airport’s Media Affairs Office had a tally of 90 domestic flights between Manila and Southern Luzon and Visayan destinations which had been cancelled.
Cebu Pacific, Philippine Airlines, Asian Spirit, Sea Air and Air Philippines flight services between Manila and Tagbilaran, Legaspi, Dumaguete, Kalibo, Bacolod, Iloilo, Roxas, Busuanga, Tablas, Caticlan, Cagayan de Oro, Naga, Ozamis and Cotabato had to temporarily cancel their flights due to the weather disturbance.
Passengers affected by the flight cancellations were asked to call their respective airline companies for the new flight schedules. (Aris Ilagan and Anjo Perez)
GMA orders relief, rescue operations
President Arroyo yesterday ordered relief and rescue operations for the victims of typhoon "Frank" before she left for the United States for a ten-day working visit.
Mrs. Arroyo convened the National Disaster Coordinating Council (NDCC) and issued directives for the relief operations for the victims of the typhoon.
Mrs. Arroyo put the Department of National Defense (DND) and the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) into "relief-and-rescue standby mode."
The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) has been instructed to repair damaged infrastructure after typhoon "Frank" has left the country.
She also ordered the Department of Health (DOH) and the Department of Social Welfare and Development to "forward-deploy resources" to areas on the typhoon’s path.
"By law, Calamity Funds have been advanced to DND, DPWH and DSWD, which means that the tools to provide care and comfort have been prepositioned in our first responders," she said at the NDCC meeting.
The Philippine Air Force (PAF), including the Presidential Airlift Wing, was ordered to fly "mercy missions" and aid in rescue and relief operations of other government agencies.
Mrs. Arroyo also instructed Department of Agriculture (DA) Secretary Arthur Yap to ensure affordable rice to areas hit hard by the typhoon, and to repair agricultural lands expected to be damaged. (David Cagahastian)

June 22, 2008 6:00 o'clock Philippine time"

We are now experiencing the devastating effect of typhoon "FRANK" the speed of air in my
calculation is almost 140 kph, signal # 3 most part of northern Luzon.
June 22, 08 6:30 0'clock this morning. most of the plants here in the neighborhood are down, we are in the open field, and the devastating effect of this typhoon due to a high speed of air passing from north to south scared the people.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Newsbits

Garcia to give up Meralco bid if power rates reduced by 20%
Government Service Insurance System (GSIS) President Winston F. Garcia vowed yesterday to back off from his bid for a takeover of the management of the Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) on the condition that the Lopez family, its owners, agrees to reduce electricity rates by 20 percent within the next two months.
Senate action on 200 bills sought
House Speaker Prospero C. Nograles urged the Senate yesterday to act on nearly 200 local bills that were already transmitted by the House of Representatives once Congress resumes session next month.
More schoolbuildings finished soon
The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) is set to complete within this month 223 additional schoolbuildings to augment the number of educational facilities nationwide.
BoC told to step up collection
President Arroyo has ordered the Bureau of Customs (BoC) to boost its revenue collection to achieve its target for the year and contain a ballooning budget deficit.
DepEd chief tells schools: Plant trees
Education Secretary Jesli A. Lapus has directed all public and private schools nationwide to plant trees to mitigate the effects of global warming.

The Fight

Pacquiao-Diaz fight ‘live’ at Manila Hotel
The Manny Pacquiao-David Diaz championship fight will be seen live at the Manila Hotel on Sunday, June 29, beginning at 8 a.m.
It will be broadcast as it happens from Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, as Pacquiao tries to capture the World Boxing Council (WBC) title from Diaz in an encounter dubbed as Lethal Combination.
Pacquiao is trying to become the first Filipino and Asian to win four world boxing titles in different divisions.

Sport news

At 135 lbs, Pacquiao deadlier, says Roach
Nick GiongcoLOS ANGELES — It appears that Manny Pacquiao has already dotted the Is and crossed the Ts in anticipation of a rough and tumble duel with David Diaz next week and the remaining seven days of training should be dedicated to the fine-tuning of the game plan for next week’s slambang slugfest at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas.
After raising the number of sparring rounds to over 120 following Tuesday’s session at the Wild Card Boxing Club, Pacquiao will have to taper off when he works out for just eight rounds on Thursday (Friday in Manila).
Freddie Roach, however, is uncertain if he can join in the training owing to a bad case of cough and colds that he contracted after Pacquiao suffered from it upon returning from San Francisco.
Pacquiao, who began training under Roach at the Wild Card on May 13, has since recovered and has been making heads turn anew with less than a week before he aims to knock the World Boxing Council (WBC) lightweight crown off Diaz’s head.
Speaking to the international media during a teleconference call held on Wednesday, Pacquiao said he is optimistic that his speed and power will not abandon him on fight night.
"I don’t believe Diaz is stronger than me. I believe I am stronger than him," said Pacquiao, who is also bidding to become a four-division world champion and the first Filipino to capture the world 135-lb title.
"I can eat more than when I was preparing to make 130 lbs. In the past, when I was trying to make 130 lbs, I was tired from not eating and I felt less powerful. Now that I can eat a bit more, I believe I have more energy."
The past three years, Pacquiao has fought in the super-feather division of 130 lbs and has encountered some difficulty getting down to that weight in his last two assignments, against Marco Antonio Barrera and Juan Manuel Marquez.
Roach is also of the opinion that at lightweight, Pacquiao is going to be deadlier.
With 10 days remaining before the Diaz battle, personalities who matter most to Pacquiao have started to arrive from the Philippines.
On Wednesday night, the fighter was at the LAX Airport to welcome his wife Jinkee, who flew in via Philippine Airlines along with twin sister Janet and a couple of associates as well as three Manila-based scribes.
Pacquiao hadn’t seen Jinkee since the second week of May and as in the past, the 29-year-old southpaw asked to be driven from his apartment unit at The Palazoo in trendy La Brea to the airport to personally fetch his wife.
Another wave of Pacquiao’s followers are coming in this weekend, including Cebu confidant Wakee Salud and restaurateur Demy Dizon of Harbor View. More are expected to follow straight to Las Vegas, some of whom are high-ranking politicians.
Pacquiao will have another sparring session this Saturday and will likely have his last sparring session either Monday or Tuesday.
On Monday, Pacquiao and Diaz will be on hand in nearby Santa Monica for a press conference hosted by Top Rank head Bob Arum. From there, Pacquiao and the 32-year-old Diaz will proceed to Sin City where they will be welcomed formally on Tuesday at Mandalay Bay.
Pacquiao, making his 14th fight on US soil, is the overwhelming favorite going into the scheduled 12-rounder in front of a huge crowd at the 12,000-seat Events Center.
Diaz, who hails from Chicago, has promised to shock the world with a victory over the fighter considered today as the best in the world pound for pound.

The President

Surrendered firearms.President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, accompanied by Press Secretary Jesus Dureza, inspects firearms surrendered by communist rebels to the 4th Infantry Division of the Philippine Army in Davao City on June 18, 2008. Secretary Hermogenes Esperon Jr., Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process, was in the President’s group.

CBCP: Address poverty, root cause of conflict in South
The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) urged the government yesterday to address the root cause of conflict in Mindanao, which is poverty, instead of launching an all-out offensive against the Abu Sayyaf Group.

Senate President Manuel Villar yesterday said higher unemployment and underemployment rates are beginning to show the effects of fuel hikes and urged government to use its P1.3-trillion budget to create jobs.Villar said higher operating costs have prevented the usual job generators from absorbing new entrants to the labor force. He pointed to a "disconnect" between growth performance of certain sectors and employment rates, "which means that we are having jobless growth." Industrial output, Villar...

Samsung Electronics to build $ 1-B microchip plant in Clark Global giant Samsung Electronics is investing $ 1 billion in a 30-hectare lot in Clark Special Economic Zone after almost a year of intense courtship by the Philippine government to locate its microchip manufacturing facility in the country.

Coke targets lead vs Magnolia Frustrated on its bid to gain the solo lead the last time around, Coca-Cola now goes for a share of the top spot instead and solidify its quest for one of the two outright semifinal berths in the Smart-PBA Fiesta Cup

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Newsbits

P1-B fund for buses, jeepneys
For only P80 a day until full payment of an interest- free loan from government banks, drivers and operators of public utility vehicles can convert their diesel engines to use cheaper and environment-friendly liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) or compressed natural gas (CNG).

CHR chief warns gov’t vs abuses in demolitions
Commission on Human Rights (CHR) Chairperson Leila De Lima has warned the government against possible human rights abuses in the conduct of demolition of houses and forced eviction of informal settlers, as she set a meeting with various agencies today to clarify the issue.

Sandigan rules on firm’s claim to ‘Payanig’ property
The Sandiganbayan has finally slammed the door completely on the claim of Greenhills Properties Inc. (GPI) over the 18.4-hectare prime property in Pasig City that was turned over to the government in 1986 by a crony of former President Ferdinand Marcos.

Merger of Lakas, Kampi parties to be finalized in Davao
The Lakas-CMD headquarters aired strong optimism yesterday that the cross-country consultations for its planned fusion with the Kabalikat ng Malayang Pilipino (Kampi) will result in the signing of a merger declaration between local leaders of the two parties in Davao City tomorrow.

Mercury in health care devices to be banned – DoH
The Department of Health (DoH) said yesterday it is set to release an administrative order (AO), imposing a total ban on the use of mercury-based sphygmomanometer, a device used to check one’s blood pressure, and thermometer, a device used to check one’s temperature.

Dole-outs should not come from taxpayers’ money, says Lacson
Opposition Sen. Panfilo Lacson said yesterday the Arroyo administration should not use taxpayers’ money for subsidies designed to endear itself to the people.

P1-M reward approved for information on Ces Drilon kidnappers
The Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG) has approved the release of P1-million cash reward for anyone who will provide information that will lead to the arrest of two Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) personalities believed to be involved in the kidnapping of television reporter Ces Drilon and her crew in Sulu.

GMA promotes gov’t accreditation tests
President Arroyo has encouraged out-of-school youths and interested learners to avail themselves of the government’s free accreditation tests to enable them to return to the formal education system.

Adiong cites Ompia Party
Lanao del Sur Gov. Mamintal "Bombit" Al Adiong Jr. exhorted officers and members of the Ompia Party to work for the welfare of the Muslim community after inducting newly elected officers of the party in Marawi City last week.

Military action not connected with Ces kidnapping — Dureza
ZAMBOANGA CITY — Press Secretary Jesus Dureza yesterday said new troop deployment in Sulu and reports of the use of artillery were not part of an attempt to rescue ABS-CBN reporter Ces Drilon, cameraman Jimmy Encarnacion and Octavio Dinampo from an Abu Sayyaf group.

Archbishop opposes plan to use nuke power
Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Oscar Cruz has opposed the plan of the government to tap nuclear power for future energy use, saying it is unsafe.

DoLE reviews transport workers’ safety standards
The Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) is set to undertake amendments to the occupational safety and health standards (OSHS) of establishments engaged in land, sea and air transportation to further protect workers from hazards in their workplaces.

Local scientists intensify research on jatropha
With the need to fasttrack the development of biofuels to address the skyrocketing prices of fossil fuel in the market, crop scientists in UP Los Baños are currently conducting rigorous gene conservation and regeneration of jatropha species for future use as part of their research and development (R & D) efforts.

Fetal death statistics bared
The National Statistics Office (NSO) has released the latest statistics on fetal deaths in the country based on data on fetal deaths registered nationwide from January 2005 to March 2006.

metro newsbits

Nothing wrong with ‘doleout’ — Gonzalez
Justice Secretary Raul M. Gonzalez said yesterday that there is nothing illegal with the government’s decision to provide "lifeline subsidies" for families heavily burdened by the spiraling cost of electricity.

SC orders firm to pay P124 M in unpaid taxes
The Supreme Court (SC) has affirmed a Court of Appeals (CA) decision that ordered Philippine Health Care Providers Inc. to pay the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) more than P124 million in deficiency documentary stamp tax, excluding surcharge and penalties, for the years 1996 and 1997.

Nursing still most preferred course
Nursing is still the most preferred course in college, despite the Commission on Higher Education’s (CHED) approval of a new guideline that school administrators claimed will burden students and their parents.

DoH urges safety of children at home
As millions of children went back to school last week, the Department of Health (DoH) called for the safety of kids at home and in the street as the nation celebrates National Safe Kids Week.

Powerlotto launched; jackpot estimated to reach record P500 M
The record P249-million jackpot given away to a Quezon City driver is expected to be erased in the next few months following the launching of Powerlotto, a new lottery game that offers a minimum P50 million cash bonanza in its first draw tonight.

House OKs healthcare coverage for maids
Five years of painstaking legislative efforts paid off when the House of Representatives approved on third and final reading the bill providing healthcare benefits for 300,000 househelpers in the country
.

sports newsbits

Woods forces playoff with 18th-hole birdie
SAN DIEGO — Tiger Woods, facing defeat in the 108th U.S. Open, summoned one more dramatic shot Sunday – a birdie putt on the final hole from 12 feet to tie Rocco Mediate at 1-under-par 283 and send the Open into a playoff Monday for the first time since 2001 at Southern Hills.

Pacquiao vs Hatton eyed for Nov. date
Top Rank and Golden Boy Promotions (GBP) are poised to co-host a proposed November showdown between Manny Pacquiao and Ricky Hatton of England.

Desperate Welcoat taps Compton
Languishing in the cellar and again in danger of missing the wild card phase, Welcoat has decided to put its fate in the hands of a familiar face.

Ateneo still a work in progress
Despite a strong performance in the pre-season tournaments, coach Norman Black believes Ateneo is still far from the team he envisioned it to be.

Luna falls to Taiwanese in pool tour qualifying
Jeffrey de Luna’s hopes of entering the main draw suffered a blow yesterday when he lost to Dang Jin-hun of Taiwan, 9-8, to fall into the loser’s bracket of the Philippine Pool Tour’s qualifying stage for the Puerto Princesa 10-ball championship.

Helterbrand named PBA player of week
If one thought Jayjay Helterbrand was already a dangerous player before, then the Barangay Ginebra point guard should be given a closer look now.

RP wrestlers target Doha
Philippine wrestling team hopes to do better this time around as the new breed of young but talented wrestlers will make up the RP squad that will compete in the 2008 Asian Junior Wrestling Championships set July 4 to 6 in Doha, Qatar.

O ye of little faith
"Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith?"

Sunday, June 15, 2008

International Robogames


June 13, 2008 6:55 PM PDT

Thousands of robots from dozens of countries will fight their way through heavy-metal head-to-head battles during the seventh annual international RoboGames. The world's largest open robot competition takes place June 13-15 in the Festival Pavilion at San Francisco's Fort Mason.

Technology news


Intel's future tech for robots, health care, PCs
June 13, 2008 10:53 AM PDT
This robotic arm and hand developed by researchers at Intel's personal robotic lab in Pittsburgh demonstrates the latest in motion planning and manipulation.
With two cameras on its hand, the device is able to autonomously recognize cups on the table, pick them up, and place them in the dishwasher. Eventually, the designers plan to attach the arm to a Segway, making it mobile.
Company researchers demonstrated this and other cutting-edge research from their labs on Wednesday during Research@Intel Day at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif.

IAN FLEMING and how to forge a Bond



in London is marking the 100th anniversary of writer Ian Fleming's birth with an exhibit that explores his life and work. It also examines how his experiences and the people he met provided the inspiration for many of the heroes, villains, babes in bikinis, gadgets, and far-flung locales in the James Bond series.
Fleming wrote more than a dozen Bond books at his home known as Goldeneye on the north coast of Jamaica. He first visited the island during World War II for a naval conference. The writer and his wife, Ann, would spend two months out of the year there, when he would work on his books. He reportedly developed a routine while writing the first book in the series, "Casino Royale." Each day, he'd go for a swim, eat breakfast, then sit down to craft the adventures of 007. The books were published between 1953 and 1965.
"For Your Eyes Only: Ian Fleming and James Bond" runs until March 2009. (You can just hear Sheena Easton singing to you now, can't you?)

Technology

AN OLD ONE'S Too.
June 13, 2008 8:47 AM PDT


NASA announced Thursday that it has awarded a contract to Oceaneering International of Houston, Texas, to develop new spacesuits that will protect astronauts on their treks to the International Space Station--and eventually the moon. The contract for NASA's Constellation Program gives Oceaneering International and its subcontractors until September 2014 to design, development, test, and evaluate the new suits.
The first spacesuit, called Configuration One, will be worn in the new Orion spacecraft for launch and landing; problems in the crew compartment; and emergency space walks. The new suit will include a helmet-feed port for 120-hour survival; elbow and knee joints; modular boots; umbilical connectors; and a rear-entry zipper.

technology news

BRUSSELS--Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes of the European Union delivered an unusually blunt snub to Microsoft on Tuesday by recommending that businesses and governments use software based on open standards.
Kroes has fought bitterly with Microsoft over the past four years, accusing the U.S. software giant of defying her orders and fining the company nearly $2.68 billion for violating European competition rules. But the speech was her strongest recommendation yet to jettison Microsoft products, which are based on proprietary standards, and to use rival operating systems to run computers.
"I know a smart business decision when I see one--choosing open standards is a very smart business decision indeed, Kroes told a conference in Brussels. "No citizen or company should be forced or encouraged to choose a closed technology over an open one."
Kroes did not name Microsoft in advance copies of her speech, but she made her meaning clear by referring to the only company in the history of EU antitrust enforcement that has been fined for refusing to comply with commission orders--a record held by Microsoft.
"The commission has never before had to issue two periodic penalty payments in a competition case," she said.
The EU has previously ruled against Microsoft for abusing its dominance in the markets for software to play music on computers and to communicate with powerful server computers on a network. In recent months, Kroes has opened new investigations against Microsoft following complaints that the company was competing unfairly in the market for Web browsers, using its Internet Explorer software.
Kroes also is investigating whether Microsoft is making it too hard for rivals to work with its Office suite of office applications.

OPINION and EDITORIAL

Professional Regulation Commission celebrates its 35th anniversary
ESTABLISHED through Presidential Decree No. 223 issued on June 22, 1973, the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) was mandated to regulate and supervise the practice of professionals in various fields. The PRC plays a strategic role in developing the corps of professionals in industry, commerce, governance, basic services, and the economy.
Speaking Out
THE 110th commemoration of our nation’s independence was marked with the return of the Rigodon de Honor as a highlight of the traditional Vin d’Honneur for the diplomatic corps. It was considered another step in line with efforts to restore the best of the old traditions of Malacañang Palace and the presidency, display pride in Philippine customs, and contribute to the revival and promotion of Philippine ceremonial dance.
Weighing InPat Sto. Tomas
I WRITE this column for the Bulletin but I also write an online column for OFWs. Both give me a thrill but the online column is a little more difficult because I average 20 e-mails a week asking for very specific information. It strikes me that despite government efforts to give workers information about the overseas employment process, there remains a big gap between what OFWs know and what they ought to know. I answer some of the questions in the column itself but I e-mail back to those with more urgent information requests. Here is a sampler of those letters.
Our first season’s harvestBy Speaker PROSPERO C. NOGRALES
(Legislative Accomplishment Report from February 5, 2008 to June 11, 2008.)
Business BeatMelito Salazar Jr.
WITH Congress extending the effectivity of the present Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) Law to December 31, 2008, I hope the legislators use the remaining months to make the necessary reforms in the CARP bill as well as set the directions to overhaul the manner of its implementation.
Second ThoughtsEdilberto C. De Jesus
MANILA, Philippines — In his protracted, interim appointment as Chair of the Commission on Higher Education (CHEd), Romy Neri has usually managed to avoid major controversies, at least on the education front. Not anymore, with the decision to impose the New Policies and Standards for the B.S. in Nursing Program.
Teaching about retaliation
JESUS said to His disciples, "You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I say to you, offer no resistance to one who is evil. When someone strikes you on [your] right cheek, turn the other one to him as well. If anyone wants to go to law with you over your tunic, hand him your cloak as well. Should anyone press you into service for one mile, go with him for two miles. Give to the one who asks of you, and do not turn your back on one who wants to borrow."
Measures: The case of ISA
THE Institute for Solidarity in Asia (ISA) has been using its strategy map as the basic framework for making regular reports to its board of trustees. It now makes it as part of its regular practice to refer to each of its strategic priorities, and then to use the measures and targets listed under each strategic priority. In making its regular reports, ISA uses the measures and targets to position where the Institute is and what it has accomplished in relation to them. The JFCC letter
THE moment they sent that open-to-question letter to President Arroyo, members of the Joint Foreign Chambers of Commerce in the country may not have known it but they were in a public relations disaster.
On 2nd ‘Dark Ages,’ roller skates for copsFloro Mercene
HOUSES passes a record 398 bills in 39 days of session.

Newsbits

Kings turn back Tigers
:Barangay Ginebra extended its winning streak to three at the expense of Coca-Cola, 91-84, last night to keep its bid for an outright semifinal berth alive in the Smart-PBA Fiesta Cup at the Araneta Coliseum.
What stats don’t show about Diaz
On paper, there’s no question in the minds of most boxing men that Manny Pacquiao is the heavy favorite going into his June 28 shot at David Diaz’s world lightweight crown.
Condes loses world crown; Rubillar gets WBC title shot
RAUL GARCIA of Mexico dethroned International Boxing Federation (IBF) minimumweight champion Florante Condes via a 12-round unanimous decision yesterday at the Estadio Arturo Nahl in La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico.
Celtics gun for NBA title today
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) — The Boston Celtics plan to ratchet up their intensity against the Los Angeles Lakers on Sunday (Monday in Manila) despite holding a commanding 3-1 lead in the NBA Finals.
Gasol vows to be more aggressiveLOS ANGELES (Reuters) — Pau Gasol vowed to be more aggressive when the Los Angeles Lakers host the Boston Celtics in what could be the deciding game of the NBA Finals on Sunday.
Eagles foil Warriors for title
Ateneo went to veteran Chris Tiu at crunch time to beat University of the East, 65-64, and rule the 2008 Nike Summer League at the Philsports Arena in Pasig.
.Liga inks deal with NBN-4, IBC-13
As opening day nears in the country’s newest regional basketball league, Liga Pilipinas, organized by CEO and president Noli Eala, wrapped up preparations for an unprecedented two network coverage of its maiden season with government networks NBN-4 and IBC-13.
Barcarse, Monares top JAL run
Abraham Barcarse Jr. and Noemi Monares stamped their class to win their respective divisions in the 2nd Japan Airlines (JAL) Run For A Cause yesterday at the Bonifacio Global City.
Manila nine nips Taguig
Manila clinched the top seeding in the playoffs of Baseball Philippines’ Series 3 after repulsing Forward Taguig with key hits and solid pitching in the closing innings for a 6-4 victory yesterday at the Rizal Baseball Stadium.
Nadal ends Roddick’s reign
LONDON (AFP) — Rafael Nadal ended Andy Roddick’s reign at Queen’s as the Spaniard reached his first final at the pre-Wimbledon tournament on Saturday.
De Luna eyes spot in $ 30,000 pool tilt
Jeffrey De Luna and Chinese No. 1 Li He-Wen will have to go through a two-day qualifying phase starting today to join a stellar cast seeing action later in the week in the Philippine Pool Tour’s Puerto Princesa 10-Ball Mayor’s Cup.
Alcano hopes to end title drought
Former double world champion Ronnie Alcano hopes to finally pocket his first title this year as he competes in the First Senate President Manny Villar Cup Cebu Leg which fires off on Friday at the Trade Hall of SM City in Cebu.
TIGER ROARS
SAN DIEGO (AP) -- Tiger Woods delivered a performance worthy of prime time in the U.S. Open on Saturday.
Westwood to stick to game plan
SAN DIEGO, California (AFP) — Lee Westwood is the European with the best chance of winning the US Open and he believes he has what it takes to end the European drought at the second major of the year.
Mickelson shoots a 9 on 13th hole
SAN DIEGO, California (AFP) — Phil Mickelson changed his strategy in the third round of the 108th US Open golf championship, but he couldn’t alter his luck on the 13th hole at Torrey Pines.
What more can Mediate do to stop Tiger from winning?
SAN DIEGO (AP) — Rocco Mediate, professional golfer

NEWSBITS

ABS-CBN buys Lorenzos’ stake in Pilipino Cable for P900 million:
ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corporation has bought the 47 percent equity of the Lorenzo family in Pilipino Cable Corporation, which controls the operations of Sky Cable outside of Metro Manila, for P900 million.:
2 firms to expand corn plantations:
The Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP) has received inquiries from the Limketkai Group and Cornworld for funding integrated corn facilities amid a food crisis that’s prompting companies to boost cost efficiencies.
Chemrez pays P160-M cash dividends:
Chemrez Technologies Inc., the country’s leading producer of biopetroleum, resins, oleochemicals, and powder coatings, announced that its board of directors has approved the declaration of a cash dividend amounting to P160 million.
Standard pushed for cocoa exports:
The Cocoa Foundation of the Philippines (CFP) is pushing for a Philippine National Standard (PNS) on cocoa to help boost the country’s production to more than 200,000 metric tons (MT) worth 0 million.
Business and Society:
During these months of my sabbatical in Spain, I found it necessary for time to time to tell new acquaintances "No soy chinito" (I am not a Chinese). In the same manner that many Filipinos would call all white people they meet "Americano" or "Kastila," many Spaniards tend to consider all Asians Chinese.
P/$ stands at P44.41/$ 1:
The peso exchange rate closed at P44.41 to the US dollar last Friday at the Philippine Dealing & Exchange Corp., (PDEx). The weighted average rate stands at P44.362.

Research and development

The Manila Economic and Cultural Office aims to give the Philippines’ nascent IC design sector a push by giving local microchip design engineers the opportunity to train at Taiwan’s leading research and development centers, MECO Managing Director and Resident Representative Antonio Basilio said.
For the Philippines to speed up its IC research and development capabilities and gain a foothold in the global supply chain for electronics, the country needs to further improve its human resources, Basilio said in a statement.
"We have to bring our most promising IC designers to Taiwan, and get them trained at Taiwan’s premier technology centers. Ideally, we would also want to bring in Taiwanese experts to the Philippines who would provide the necessary training for our young crop of IC design engineers," said Basilio.
MECO in fact hopes to clinch a long-term training program with Taiwan’s world-class R&D hubs this year. According to MECO director for Commercial Affairs, Maria Bernardita Angara-Mathay, Philippine Trade and Industry Senior Undersecretary Thomas Aquino, who is scheduled to fly to Taiwan on June 13, will be putting the on-the-job training component in the Philippines’ planned Microelectronics Design Center on the agenda during his meetings with Taiwan officials this month.
Basilio said while the Philippines is already recognized as a key player when it comes to IC packaging and assembly, it, however, needs to shift gears and climb up the value chain. "To do that, we need to have IC design capabilities. If we possess that, plum investments will follow. We could go after potentially lucrative strategic partnerships with Taiwan’s top semiconductor companies."
In retrospect, Taiwan and the Philippines already tried such a partnership in 2005. With the assistance of MECO and the Department of Trade and Industry, Taiwan sent two instructors to hold a training course in chip design layout in Manila. A total of 18 local engineers attended, including students from the University of the Philippines and Ateneo.
According to MECO, the Taiwanese instructors were quite impressed with the performance of the Filipino chip design engineers, noting that the latter could "easily pick up skills and learn fast — very fast."
The Philippines produces thousands of engineers annually, but only a "very small portion" of this talent pool is actually being tapped by the IC industry. The country also boasts 97 Centers of Excellence, and two research and development facilities.
In addition to clinching a training program with Taiwan ‘s R&D centers, MECO is also going after "flagship" accounts disclosed Angara-Mathay.
"In the field of electronics, we’d really go after repeat accounts, and they are the 20 biggest semiconductor companies in Taiwan . It’s a very ambitious plan," she said as she cited that out of the 20 companies on MECO’s list, two — Compal and Winbond — had already held meetings with MECO," she said.
One of the key requirements of these potential investment locators is the availability of IC design engineers according to Angara-Mathay. Further, she said a large pool of IC design talents is also needed for the Philippines to establish its Microelectronics Design Center . The government must also allocate at least US$ 1 million for the purchase of the planned center’s electronic design automation (EDA) tools, she cited.
"The project would require or involve the training of a least 100 microchip design engineers a year. We’ve thought of this as early as three years back. When it comes to IC testing and assembly, we rate an ‘8;’ but design, which accounts for about 80 percent of the gross value of the product in that sector, (is really where the money is)," said Angara-Mathay.
Basilio said that Taiwan ‘s top contract wafer foundries — Taiwan Semiconductor and UMC — could also set up their chip design services centers or "fabless" foundries in the Philippines . Semiconductor companies such as Philips, Fuji and Fastech have already established their operations in the province of Laguna , making the province the "Silicon Valley of the Philippines ." (BCM)

Finance Ministers

DELEGATES OF THE G8 FINANCE MINISTERS MEETING POSE FOR A GROUP PHOTO SESSION IN FRONT OF THE OSAKA CFront row LR: EU Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs Joaquin Almunia, Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde, Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti, Australian Finance Minister Wayne Swan, Japanese Finance Minister Fukushiro Nukaga, Thailand Finance Minister Surapong Suebwonglee, Russian Finance Minister Aleksey Kudrin, US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, British Finance Minister Alistair Darling, Slovenian Finance Minister Andrej Bajuk. Back row L-R: FSF Chairman Mario Draghi, IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn, Germany State Secretary Thomas Mirow, Brazil Secretary for International Affairs Marcos Galvao, Chinese Vice Finance Minister Li Yong, South Korean Vice Minister Choi Joongkyung, South Africa Special Advisor Michael Sachs, World Bank President Robert Zoellick, Asian Development Bank President Haruhiko Kuroda, IEA (International Energy Agency) Executive Director Nobuo Tanaka. The world's top finance ministers urged oil producers to increase their output as they warned that runaway prices imperil global economic growth.

Movies

Rico Blanco goes solo:
After various speculations as to his whereabouts and what he intends to do following his surprising departure from Rivermaya, one of Philippine rock scene’s most talented musicians returns, this time, armed with a reinvigorated passion to continue making good music.
Rising crooner pays homage to Tony Bennett:
Originality is one key word to survive in the industry.
'Monster Mom' Annabelle gets good reviews:
Talent manager and mother to the Gutierrez siblings, Annabelle Rama, has earned a reputation for being "matapang" and "mataray" in show business.
Cinemalaya: Honoring the spirit of ‘independent expression’:
Shaping independence in independent features, initializing a category for children, and giving mainstream actors second chances, the 2008 Cinemalaya is turning a new chapter in the evolution of independent film festivals in the country.
Arrow taps ‘CSI: New York’ actor as brand ambassador:
Arrow, a brand for people who admire and seek to reflect the youthfulness, industriousness, optimism, freedom and great American style throughout the world, recently tapped popular TV actor Carmine Giovinazzo as part of its 2008 Campaign.
Serbis’ and Brillante Mendoza:
It only dawned on Brillante Mendoza that his movie "Serbis" was competing in the 61st Cannes International Film Festival when he was walking on the red carpet.
ABS-CBN’s 55th Year Advocacy ‘Walang Iwanan Sa Bayanijuan’ launched:
ABS-CBN celebrates its 55th year in television not with the stereotypical glamorous lavishness, but with meaningful contributions to the lives of less fortunate Filipinos all over the country with its new advocacy program, "Bayanijuan."
It rains and pours for Karylle:
When it rains, it pours.
Urduja:’ One man’s dream is the nation’s pride
The story of how APT Entertainment’s "Urduja" came to life is as magical as the full-length animation film itself.
Divina Valencia, the 60’s femme fatale
Josephine Connie Fuller alias Divina Valencia became the country’s ultimate sex symbol in 1964.
FDCP sponsors Philippine Program of Paris Cinema 2008:
The Film Development Council of the Philippines, headed by Chairman Rolando "Jacky" S. Atienza Atienza, will sponsor the Philippine Program of the forthcoming Paris Cinema International Film Festival 2008.

another Breakthrough

RP hopes for another breakthrough with Sun global developer confab:
As the Philippines prepares to host a worldwide developers conference through Sun Tech Days this coming June 17 to 19, organizers are crossing their fingers that another brilliant and innovative idea would again pop up with foreign delegates in attendance.
IT veteran signs up as CICT consultant:
Dittas A. Formoso, an oldhand in the local IT industry, is finally hooking up with the Commission on Information and Communications Technology (CICT) -- not as a commissioner but as a consultant.
Symantec warns of new type of IM spam:
Symantec Corporation has announced the emergence of a new type of Instant Messaging (IM) spam, further exploitation of trusted brands, as well as the reemergence of spear phishing in its May 2008 State of Spam report.
Palace declares June as ICT month:
In an attempt to recognize the ICT sector as a major economic growth contributor, Malacañang has decreed the month of June 2008 and every year thereafter as National Information and Communications Technology (ICT) Month.
Cisco fortifies network resilience of top offshore services company:
Stolt-Nielsen Philippines, a top offshore services company and a pioneer in the aquaculture industry, has completely overhauled its network infrastructure and put in place technology from Cisco.
RP to host Ragnarok World Championships:
The Philipines will host the 2008 Ragnarok World Championships, the first time in the history of the event, which have been held traditionally in South Korea.
Level Up! brings online racing craze to RP:
Level Up!, the leading online gaming publisher in the Philippines, has always been at the forefront of successfully localizing the best online games from other countries to be played and enjoyed by Filipino gamers. Once again, the company has brought another game that will surely become a new craze in Internet cafes called Crazy Kart.
Strong growth projected in Asian online gaming:
SCOTTSDALE, Arizona — Revenue for the online gaming market in the Asia/Pacific region is expected to grow rapidly between 2008 and 2013, reports In-Stat. Key factors driving this growth include growing household Internet penetration, increased content development for online-specific games, and the unique experience that online gaming offers, the high-tech market research firm says.
World Cyber Games nat’l eliminations in full swing:
:Top local gamers are battling it out for coveted spots in the Philippine Team at the World Cyber Games (WCG) Philippine Preliminaries. With the Metro Manila eliminations concluding its three-week run at the Villman Gaming Zone over the weekend, the tourney hits key provincial cities on June 21 and 22 at SM Davao, and June 28 and 29 at SM Cebu.
Local firm ‘revives’ laser tag craze in Manila:
Hoping to offer a novel and unique way of simulating actual combat without the risk of injury, a Manila–based company has rolled out Lazerxtreme, its unique state-of-the-art laser tag game located at Market! Market! in Fort Bonifacio, Taguig City.

things of the fast

Coke, Red Bull seek 10th wins:
Co-leaders Coca-Cola and Red Bull try to solidify their bid for outright semifinal berths as they battle separate opponents today in the season-ending Smart-PBA Fiesta Cup at the Araneta Coliseum.
Pacquiao supporters ready Pacman masks:
Manny Pacquiao shirts, jackets and bandanas are a thing of the past.
Warriors capture Filoil crown:
Paul Lee made The Arena in San Juan his personal playground yesterday, sinking five triples for a 20-point fourth quarter performance to lead University of the East to an 81-65 thrashing of San Beda College in the finals of the 2008 Filoil Flying V Invitational Cup.
Condes defends IBF crown:
Power will be the key when Florante Condes of the Philippines makes the first defense of his International Boxing Federation (IBF) minimumweight title against Raul Garcia of Mexico on Saturday night (Sunday morning in Manila) at the Estadio Arturo Nahl in the resort city of La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico.
UE, Ateneo clash for title:
University of the East and Ateneo de Manila clash for the title today in the Nike Summer League basketball tournament at the Philsports Arena in Pasig City.
Manila batters barge into semifinals:
Manila survived a late surge by a gritty Makati side as it hacked out a scary 9-8 victory yesterday to clinch the first of the two outright semifinal berths in Baseball Philippines Series 3 at the Rizal Baseball Stadium.
UE, UST jins shine in all-women tourney:
Unheralded Jessica Ballesteros and Jade Zafra rocked the recent Smart/Petron all-women’s taekwondo championships by winning a gold medal each in two classes where a couple of national training pool members were relegated to third place.

The Worms

A new way to protect computer networks
Jerry LiaoScientists may have found a new way to combat the most dangerous form of computer virus. The method automatically detects within minutes when an Internet worm has infected a computer network. Network administrators can then isolate infected machines and hold them in quarantine for repairs.
Ness Shroff, Ohio Eminent Scholar in Networking and Communications at Ohio State University, and his colleagues describe their strategy in the current issue of IEEE Transactions on Dependable and Secure Computing.
They discovered how to contain the most virulent kind of worm: the kind that scans the Internet randomly, looking for vulnerable hosts to infect. "These worms spread very quickly," Shroff said. "They flood the Net with junk traffic, and at their most benign, they overload computer networks and shut them down."
Code Red was a random scanning worm, and it caused .6 billion in lost productivity to businesses worldwide in 2001. Even worse, Shroff said, the worm blocked network traffic to important physical facilities such as subway stations and 911 call centers.
"Code Red infected more than 350,000 machines in less than 14 hours. We wanted to find a way to catch infections in their earliest stages, before they get that far," Shroff said.
The key, they found, is for software to monitor the number of scans that machines on a network send out. When a machine starts sending out too many scans -- a sign that it has been infected -- administrators should take it off line and check it for viruses.
The strategy sounds straightforward enough. A scan is just a search for Internet addresses -- what we do every time we use search engines such as Google. The difference is, a virus sends out many scans to many different destinations in a very short period of time, as it searches for machines to infect.
Shroff was working at Purdue University in 2006 when doctoral student Sarah Sellke suggested making a mathematical model of the early stages of worm growth. With Saurabh Bagchi, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at Purdue, they developed a model that calculated the probability that a virus would spread, depending on the maximum number of scans allowed before a machine was taken off line.
In simulations, they pitted their model against the Code Red worm, as well as the SQL Slammer worm of 2003. They simulated how far the virus would spread, depending on how many networks on the Internet were using the same containment strategy: quarantine any machine that sends out more than 10,000 scans.
They chose 10,000 because it is well above the number of scans that a typical computer network would send out in a month.
"An infected machine would reach this value very quickly, while a regular machine would not," Shroff explained. "A worm has to hit so many IP addresses so quickly in order to survive."
In the simulations pitted against the Code Red worm, they were able to prevent the spread of the infection to less than 150 hosts on the whole Internet, 95 percent of the time.
A variant of Code Red worm (Code Red II) scans the local network more efficiently, and finds vulnerable targets much faster. Their method was effective in containing such worms. In the simulations, they were able to trap the worm in its original network -- the one that would have started the outbreak -- 77 percent of the time.
Anywhere from 10 to 20 percent of the time, it spread to one other network, but no further. The remaining 3 to 13 percent of the time, it escaped to more networks, but the infection was slowed.
In all cases, there was a dramatic decrease in the spread of the worm within the first hour. To use this strategy, network administrators would have to install software to monitor the number of scans on their networks, and would have to allow for some downtime among computers when they initiate a quarantine.
"You just keep trying to come up with techniques that limit a virus’s ability to do harm."
God Bless us all!

LOANS

By EDMER F. PANESA;House Speaker Prospero C. Nograles has felt relieved for some 50, 000 borrowers who have been delinquent in paying their housing loans with Balikatan Housing Finance Inc. after the company declared it is still open to negotiations and that foreclosure would be considered only as a last resort.
"This is good news. At least now, we have 50, 000 families who have been relieved from the constant threat of being ejected from their homes," Nograles said.
Nograles issued the statement following the assurance made by Federico Cadiz, president of Bahay Financial Services Inc. (BFS), to the House Committee on Housing and Urban Development, chaired by Oriental Mindoro Rep. Rodolfo Valencia.
BFS is an asset management and loan company engaged by Balikatan, a special purpose company jointly owned by the government’s National Home Mortgage Finance Corp. (NHMFC) and DB Real Estate Global Opportunities, to implement its mortgage servicing activities.
Based on House Resolution (HR) 604 filed by Nograles, the Valencia panel is conducting an investigation on the massive foreclosure of low-cost and socialized real estate mortgages sold by NHMFC to Balikatan, which threatened to throw out thousand of families from their homes.
Valencia said the Balikatan would first put priority on negotiations with the borrowers on workable solutions to settle their accounts.
"The BHFI assured the committee it will take into consideration all possible options so the borrowers would be able to amortize their restructured loans," Valencia said.
Nograles, author of Republic Act (RA) 8501 or the Housing Loan Condonation Act of 1998, has been pushing hard for a moratorium on all foreclosures of delinquent low-cost and socialized housing loans as most Filipinos are in dire financial situation due to the spiraling cost of goods and services worldwide.
"We have to be more compassionate especially at this time when most people can hardly afford to three square meals a day. We should not remove the roofs on their heads," Nograles said.
Nograles maintained that foreclosures of lowcost and socialized housing units will only push thousands of Filipino families back to the slums, thereby aggravating the country’s problem on the growing number of informal settlers particularly in urban areas.
During the initial hearing conducted by Valencia’s committee, the Alliance of Homeowners (AHomes) told lawmakers that the transfer of loan accounts from NHMFC to the BHFI was made without prior consultation from its members.
A-Homes also said that its members could not afford the high down payment and that their respective properties are now facing foreclosure proceedings.
Another homeowners group, Kapitbahayan, appealed that those affected should be allowed to restructure their loans and be given a lower interest rate on their loans. It also recommended the option for NHMFC to buy back the accounts.
The NHMFC clarified before the House panel that part of its disposition strategy for its non-performing loans under the Unified Home-Lending Program portfolio was to dispose of accounts classified as highly delinquent to be able to pay its financiers — the Social Security System (SSS), the Pag-IBIG Fund, and the Government Service Insurance System — which extended loans amounting to R42 billion.
It added that from 1988 to 2003, NHMFC paid its financiers some R40.4 billion but still had a balance of R53.2 billion, including interests.
Likewise, it entered into a joint venture with DB Global Opportunities (not Deutsche Bank as earlier reported) and formed the Balikatan to which it sold 52,000 accounts, translating to about R32 billion.
The projected collectibles from its 44 percent share in Balikatan would amount to R3.88 billion, the NHMFC added.
Earlier, Nograles, Parañaque City Rep. Eduardo Zialcita, and Muntinlupa City Rep. Ruffy Biazon separately filed House Bill (HB) Nos. 89, 411, and 1932, all seeking relief for borrowers with delinquent housing accounts.
All three bills seek to institute a re-structuring program for delinquent housing accounts with housing agencies and government financing institutions.
The three authors pushed for the restructuring and the condonation of all penalties and surcharges of delinquent housing loans.
They also sought to condone a reasonable portion of the accrued interests, make the remaining accrued interests a non-interest bearing principal, and impose a low six percent interest on the original principal

Agriculture

By EDU LOPEZThe issue on heavy farm subsidies in the developed world that has derailed the finalization of global trade rules under the World Trade Organization (WTO) since the Seattle debacle a few years back, may again stall ongoing talks.
Philippine agriculture attache to Geneva Jojo Lazaro, has disclosed that the biggest threat to the talks was a new law passed by the US Congress on farm subsidy.
The US congress has approved a farm subsidy law that gives to US farmers practically all the subsidies they enjoyed in the past, Lazaro said.
A negotiating bloc of developing countries led by the Philippines and India had demanded in past negotiations to make deep cuts in farm subsidies in Europe, the United States and Japan as a pre-condition to returning to the negotiation table.
In the eleventh hour during the last round of negotiations in Hong Kong last year, Europe made commitments to slash farm subsidies in European Union member-countries to save the WTO talks from total collapse. The US has not made similar commitments.
Meanwhile, on the negotiating table for non-agricultural market access (NAMA) that covers manufactured goods including fishery and forest products, senior trade negotiator Thomas Aquino shared that negotiators have approved the Swiss formula in tariff cuts on imports.
The Swiss formula, he assured, will be favorable to both Filipino exporters and domestic industries as it gives less developed countries like the Philippines flexibilities on tariff cuts depending on its offensive and defensive interests.
Domestic industries that compete with imported goods from neighboring countries have long been warning negotiators not to throw the country wide open to imports to allow them to fairly compete.
In the negotiation front on trade in services, Margarita Songco, NEDA deputy director general, said that several drafts have been solicited from seven groups of countries and were used in coming out with a draft agreement.
A consolidated draft was not approved due to some concerns raised by Venezuela, Bolivia and Cuba

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

The Inaugural




Internet Week New York: Let it blend

NEW YORK--The inaugural Internet Week New York was eight days of open bars and missed opportunities.
On the red carpet at the 12th Annual Webby Awards on Tuesday night, the final event of the week-long city-sanctioned festival, I called out to Internet Week executive director David-Michel Davies and asked him what he'd do next year to change it. "We'd like to do a better job with the schedule," he said to me after hesitating for a moment. He added a few more words about how a better calendar could help Internet Week-goers connect, before publicists snagged Davies for a string of photo ops.
That was the problem with Internet Week: connecting. But it's an issue that can't just be solved by hiring a few extra Ruby developers for the festival calendar.
As a string of individual events, Internet Week was wildly successful--there was, literally, something for everyone. Tech enthusiasts were treated to job seminars at Google, industry roundtables at Time Warner, and free beer at the "Wiimbledon" tournament. There were no fewer than four digital-ad conferences, two evenings of Webby Awards, a whole BlackBerry's worth of parties every evening, and enough power-breakfast panels to make you never want to see a cheese danish again.

The crowd at the New York Tech Meetup.(Credit: David Karp)
But even all those cheese danishes couldn't fill the sizeable gulf between Gotham's stalwart media-advertising machine and the digital start-ups popping up across the country.
It's an age-old stereotype: the friction between the big guys with the deep pockets and the business expertise who are short on new ideas, and the newcomers teeming with innovation but lacking the financial cred. And in New York's digital scene, it's a reality. Given the shaky economic conditions and uncertain outlook for the ad industry both online and offline--display ad spending dropped in the first quarter of 2008--an effort toward more cohesion in the media business would be a smart move. Internet Week was a stellar opportunity to focus on that cohesion, and it didn't happen; that's why the festival was a disappointment.
True, Internet Week was hindered from the start: because there was no central conference or event, a la South by Southwest Interactive, festival-goers were less likely to encounter new people and make new connections, and more likely to be socializing instead with the people they already knew. During the day, Internet Week's conferences were populated by ad-industry types in suits; at night, it was local entrepreneurs and their fun-loving groupies who were out on the town.
Neither party looked good in the process. It didn't do much of a service to the image of the big-media guys that they rolled into town for a handful of expensive conferences--the Federated Media Conversational Marketing Summit, Digital Hollywood's Advertising 2.0 conference, ContentNext's EconAds--where, in typical New York fashion, the focus was on the money rather than the innovation.

Revelers at Thrillist's 'Information Superparty'(Credit: Nick McGlynn/RandomNightOut.com)
The tech start-up CEOs who'd been called in to speak at those conferences seemed very conscious of the ad industry's impatience. "This whole 'application economy' that was meant to emerge is really concentrating on a handful of developers," said Joanna Shields, president of Bebo, the social network acquired by AOL earlier this year, in a panel at the Conversational Marketing Summit.
She was speaking to a crowd of ad-industry types who, with pens and notebooks out, were attempting to get an idea or two on how to tackle social-media marketing campaigns. Regarding developer platforms' failure to explode into a cash cow, Shields said, "that's just the reality of the situation." In other words, the advertisers needed to calm down.
"I think it's important to also acknowledge the fact that...the concept of a platform and application developers is one year old, that's it," Gina Bianchini, CEO of the hyped social-media start-up Ning, said in the same panel about cashing in on social-network platforms. "I think that certainly everybody is motivated to enable more people to have the freedom to create and customize and use what they want where they want to use it, but we're still really early here."
"This whole 'application economy' that was meant to emerge is really concentrating on a handful of developers."
--Bebo President Joanna Shields
On the flip side, there are those on the big-media side who perceive their start-up brethren as brash, fiscally irresponsible, and unduly disrespectful of the status quo. Some current leaders in the Valley don't disagree with the characterization.
"There's a little bit of the sense that you have to come in and tell people that things have to change and that you have to be this visionary," Bianchini told CNET News.com in an interview during Internet Week. Instead, she said, the focus should be problem-solving. "I think you have to be a lot more respectful of a business that is established."
Bianchini went on to emphasize that the dialogue between old media and new media, San Francisco Bay Area and New York, is more than crucial given the fact that she estimates the economy will be very challenging for the next year and a half. "It's going to take advertising and marketing teams a few years to catch up," she said. "(The media business) is under pressure...and I'm respectful of that, and I think online media companies need to be. That's not to say that things aren't changing."
Somewhat ironically, the brightest glimpses of industry-wide cohesion were at the Webby Awards ceremony, which some members of the New York media like to rip on for its exclusivity and ostensible irrelevance. True, the overlong ceremony and seemingly endless parade of "winners" seemed to underscore the common wisdom that the Internet industry in New York is just too jumbled and scattershot for a week-long festival.
But on the other hand, the lavish event space at Cipriani Wall Street was a more diverse crowd than Internet Week had seen yet: the heads of oddball start-up blogs were seated alongside representatives from the world's biggest media companies and advertising agencies. (I was placed, for example, between an ad strategist from the BBC and one of the editors of political activism site FactCheck.org.)
When it came to the Slinky-shaped Webby Award trophies, sometimes it was the big corporations that won. And sometimes it was the start-ups, as emphasized by the five-word acceptance speech on behalf of Web browser Flock when it won the Webby for best social-networking product: "No s***! We beat Facebook!"
Love them or hate them, the Webbys were Internet Week New York's finest example of digital media's big and small players standing side-by-side. It was a closing note that would do well as a catalyst for a hypothetical Internet Week next year: not just a way to show off the diversity of New York as a digital city, but to help it march in lockstep.
And Davies' team will likely get a chance. Considering Mayor Michael P. Bloomberg took the inaugural Internet Week as an opportunity to throw an official press conference and launch a new venture fund for local tech start-ups, signs indicate he'll want to bring it back next year.
But for the sake of the entire industry, let's just hope everyone will be using the word "monetize" about one-fifth as often.

nikon Camera


Gadgets for Road Trip 2008
May 30, 2008 3:58 AM PDT

It's almost summer, and at CNET News.com, summer means road trip time. News.com reporter Daniel Terdiman is about to hit the highways for his third annual gadget-filled trek in search of geek and technology hot spots. This year, he'll travel through the South for three weeks, stopping at sites of note in Texas, Louisiana, Tennessee, Florida, and more. Here is the gear he'll bring along.
As with road trips past, a big part of Road Trip 2008 will be photographs of the destinations Daniel visits along the way. Last year, he used his own Canon Rebel XT with lenses Canon lent him. This year, he'll be trying Nikon's D60, the company's new entry-level DSLR. It's a 10.2-megapixel camera, and comes with a stock 18-55mm lens. He'll also be using 16-85mm and 70-300mm lenses.
Credit: Nikon

a bit of Technology


TechRepublic contributor Wally Bahny takes you through World of Warcraft's Engineering profession, a world of Steam Tonks, Dimensional Rippers, and Khorium Destroyers.
This is a picture of Metral the Hunter, member of Technologia, the official unofficial guild of TechRepublic. Metral is a highly skilled Engineer.
Engineering provides the player with many crafted items including clothing, such as the Surestrike Goggles v2.0 pictured above, and pets, like the non-combat "companion" pet Mechanical Squirrel also above. While companions cannot engage in combat, Engineers are also able to make combat pets, such as an Explosive Sheep, which charges a target and then explodes causing damage.
Continue on for a deeper look into the Engineering profession.
Credit: World of Warcraft

The Partnership





On Thursday, Disney and Google announced an initiative that brings Walt Disney World into Google Earth. That means that most of the Manhattan-size group of theme parks is now available to view in 3D in the latest version of Google Earth. The partnership allows users to look up-close at the seemingly endless rides, attractions, shops, lakes, and other features of the various parks that make up Disney World.
This is the view in Google Earth of Cinderella Castle, the signature structure of both Disney World and Disneyland.
Credit: Google Earth

GreenPeace report

Video game consoles are ‘toxic’ -GreenpeaceSINGAPORE – A Greenpeace report has called video game consoles a "toxic menace", saying they contain chemicals that could affect memory and sexual development.

Advocates attend Mass

Advocates attend mass, pray for CARP extensionComprehensive Agrarian Reform Program (CARP) advocates gathered in a church near Malacañang in Manila yesterday, hoping that their prayers to extend the CARP will be heard by the authorities.

Bicam approves

Bicam approves PERA measure for OFWsThe Senate and House of Representatives bicameral conference committee approved yesterday the Personal Equity and Retirement Account (PERA) bill that seeks to give pensions to millions of Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs).

The Happening

Ice Age’s’ Sid in the midst of another meltdown in ‘The Happening’Best known as Sid the Sloth in the worldwide hit "Ice Age" franchise, John Leguizamo stars anew in M. Night Shyamalan’s thriller
Humor and HeartIf an ugly ogre could rake in millions at the box office and produce two hit sequels, why not an overweight panda who’s certainly much more cute and lovable? "The Happening."

Miguel Molina

Swimmer Miguel Molina shattered his three Philippine records in the just concluded Janet Evans International Invitational at the University of Southern California but he needs to improve his times dramatically in the next two months to have a better chance of competing in the final round of the Beijing Olympics.
The 24-year-old Molina, who was voted the Most Valuable Player during the Thailand SEA Games last year, first broke his 200m individual medley record by clocking two minutes and 3.22 seconds.
In doing so, he eclipsed his previous best of 2:03.46 which he set in the Japan Open also last year.
His time, however, was two seconds slower than the effort made by eventual winner American Tamas Kerekjarto. He finished fourth in their group but there were other better performers from other groups.
The quadruple gold medalist also erased his national mark of 1:52.67 in the 200m freestyle when he clocked 1:52.56 in finishing 11th in their qualifying group. He registered his old mark in the 2007 World Championship in Melbourne, Australia.
Still, his feat was 4.15 seconds behind the winning effort of American Dominik Meichtry.
Molina’s clocking of 2:16.62 in the 200m breaststroke was almost two seconds behind the effort of American John Criste but it was enough to sink his old mark of 2:16.88 which he posted in winning one of his two golds during the 2005 Manila SEA Games.
The University of California-Berkeley graduate finished 12th in the 100m butterfly with a time of 52.29sec.
Still, Philippine Amateur Swimming Association (PASA) president Mark Joseph is optimistic Molina could better his time in the Beijing Games.
"He is peaking well in his training for the Olympics," Joseph said in an e-mail message. "The Janet Evans International Invitational is where the world’s best converge."
"Miguel’s times indicate he is improving and that could land him very high in the rankings," he added.

Diaz's Training

Diaz’s training has new look: Pinoy is sparmateCHICAGO, Illinois — To get the feel of what it is like to fight against Manny Pacquiao, David Diaz not only tapped a lefty sparmate, he is also Pinoy.

The WI-FI zone

Globe Broadband turns Southwestern University into a WiFi zoneGlobe Broadband makes it easy and convenient for the students, faculty and staff of Southwestern University in Cebu City to access the Internet as it turns the school into a WiFi zone.

Phil.Comp.Society

12th ICT Congress: A multisectoral knowledge sourceThe Philippine Computer Society (PCS), the premier organization of ICT professionals in the country, has once more successfully brought together industry stakeholders in the knowledge packed 12th ICT Professionals’ Congress (ICTPC).

Monday, June 9, 2008

FROM: EDTECH123

"Hello! good morning to all of you readers, Bachelors, Teachers, OFWs, Playboys, Playgirls, Oldies but goodies still trying hard to learn and be a part of this new generation, and modern technology, a new world, real world. Teenager who happens to be the avid readers of Blogger.com, good morning. For me, at my age, all i can say is this, "People should realized that this is the most beautiful thing happened to the history of the world, that everybody, people in all walks of life have the chances to know the events, news, money matters, entertainments, technology, in all parts of the world can see in just a SPLIT SECONDS. It is much easier to send money, letters, sharing to the people of what you feel, what you heard, what you see. Everybody by his or her willingness to know can get access to reach this real world. The world of Computer Technology. I remember the time in the past, i was an OFW in Saudi Arabia, my letters for my family after putting in to the box via Post mail, it will take weeks, months, before reaching our house for my wife to read. She will reply by sending by sending letters via Post mail again, and it will take weeks, months again for me to read the message. this only a simple example in the Layman's term. but for me, things change."
So here i am trying hard to learn to operate this computer my son brought to me, he is working now in abroad for almost two years, and always sending us a Tex message, online call, and its like he is in front of me talking that makes me feel comportable. always telling me to relax, make my self comportable," you spend half of your life working,you never see us growing up like this, with you, your ability of being a good father, a good provider, a good husband of my mother, all you have to do now is relax, everything is under control." Sounds good to me, but into my mind i have to do something, something that makes me feel good, something that i can still earn money, money not for me but for my grandchildren, and here i am, at blogger.point, wishing to earn money just enough so i can buy them a candy, i can buy them a T-shirt, give some pennies whenever they want.For my grandchildren, get a couple of pennies from me because i have a job now. A lot of thanks to readers of bloggers.com, to the bloggers, most especially to Googles for giving me a chance to be a part of your worldwide networking. Being a part of this, i will share to all of you what i know, what i feel, what i see to the best of my knowledge and ability.
I really appreciate it.THANK YOU. GOD BLESS ALL OF US.

Tourist Spot


Tourist Spot

Sunday, June 8, 2008

TETANUS or LOCKJAW

Is a disease of the nervous system caused by a toxin secreted by Bacillus Tetani which live in earth and dust. It sometimes occurs without apparent cause,but usually the bacilli are introduced through a wound, often slight. They remain localized, but the poison they mfr. travels up the sheaths of the nerves, finally reaching the spinal cord. The symptoms usually come on while the wound is healing. The first symptom is stiffness of the muscles near the wound, followed by stiffness of the muscles of the face, back of the neck, and jaw, giving rise to difficulty in opening the mouth. This rapidly passes into lockjaw, in which it is impossible to take any food, and then the muscles of the throat and abdomen become paralyzed so the patient cannot swallow. The body is often bent backward, forward, or sideways. convulsive seizures, exited by the slightest cause, set in and there is great suffering. Death may take place from asphyxia due to paralysis of the respiratory muscles, or from general exhaustion. The sooner symptoms appear the greater the likelihood of the disease ending fatally. The prospect is bad unless they are delayed at least three weeks. The injection of the anti toxic serum has been found of great value in preventing an attack, in delaying the onset, and in lessening the severity, but the injection must be made soon after the wound is received and is effective when symptoms are developing . Horses are liable to contract tetanus, and the antitoxin for humans has been found beneficial in their case also.
source: New Master Encyclopedia

Legitimate Workforce

JOIN HERE AND EARN MONEY!!!! The On Demand Global Workforce - oDeskThe On Demand Global Workforce - oDesk