New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

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New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

22nd August, 2010 | Posted by |

1282481372 77 New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone: The LG C900 smartphone use the slide-out QWERTY keyboard design, a rounded landscape slider equipped with a four-row keyboard and a simplified two-button capacitive layout beneath the screen paired with a chrome Windows key. Notably, this is the first time we’ve seen carrier branding on Windows Phone 7′s home screen in the wild – you can see AT&T’s logo prominently displayed as a tile in one of the pictures in the gallery after the break, but now about this smartphone’s specific parameters has not be announced.
New LG Phones – AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone Picture

(source: engadget)

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Tags: LG Cell Phones, New Cell Phone

New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

Minister harps on Lalbagh constructions : In & Around

22nd August, 2010 | Posted by |

1282480954 19 Minister harps on Lalbagh constructions : In & AroundMinister harps on Lalbagh constructions

Staff Reporter
BANGALORE: Even as the public opposes interference in the name of development at Lalbagh Botanical Gardens, the Horticulture Ministry seems to be keen on adding more “attractions” to this lung space.

At an interaction with the public on developments of Lalbagh on Thursday, Horticulture Minister Umesh V. Katti harped on the proposed rock garden in 20 acres behind the Kempe Gowda tower. “The beauty of the garden will not be affected,” Mr. Katti told a small gathering of walkers, environmentalists and public at the Kempe Gowda tower.

On other attractions at the garden, Mr. Katti said the department wanted to put in place a musical fountain, boating facility for visitors and a Niagara Falls replica.

Lalbagh Walkers’ Association president Sadashiv was not impressed. He said: “It is better to keep Lalbagh as a botanical garden instead of converting it to a commercial park.”

Minister harps on Lalbagh constructions : In & Around

Droughts driving drop in plants' ability to store carbon

22nd August, 2010 | Posted by |

1282480711 42 Droughts driving drop in plants' ability to store carbon

Most of the focus of climate policy has been on efforts to cut down on the carbon we’re dumping into the atmosphere, either by limiting emissions in the first place, or by capturing and storing it. But the Earth itself already does a lot of the latter for us: roughly 60 percent of the carbon dioxide we put into the atmosphere gets taken up by the oceans and terrestrial ecosystems. That has led to worries that land use changes and rising temperatures themselves might start inhibiting the natural carbon sinks. A study published in yesterday’s issue of Science provides some evidence that this may be taking place: droughts over the past decade have caused the amount of CO2 taken up by land plants to drop.

The authors of the new paper focus on a figure called “net primary production,” or NPP, which acts as a measure of the growth of terrestrial plant biomass. It’s possible to estimate NPP using spectroscopic data obtained from satellites, and the authors use a 10-year record obtained from an instrument aboard NASA’s Terra mission. Since plants grow by removing CO2 from the atmosphere, the changes in vegetation revealed by NPP should provide some measure of how effectively the planet’s surface is sequestering carbon.

One of the surprises of the paper is just how well NPP acts as a measure. The first figure of the paper shows how annual changes in NPP compare to changes in the rate of growth in atmospheric carbon; the two graphs are eerily similar. When NPP goes up, the growth of atmospheric carbon goes down. This is more than a bit surprising, given that, overall, the oceans are a larger sink, and many of the carbon-fixing organisms there undergo boom-and-bust cycles that radically change their populations. The data here suggests that a lot of what happens in the ocean balances itself out, leaving very little year-to-year variability.

Fires also correlate with changes in annual carbon fluxes, but the correlation is not as strong as NPP, and many of the fires that occur are the product of extended droughts that had already dropped the NPP, or occur during the process of human-driven deforestation.

Because the Terra instrument provides decent spatial resolution, the authors were able to ask which regions were contributing to changes in NPP. In keeping with the general trend of reforestation within the developed world, the Northern Hemisphere showed a slight increase in NPP over the past decade, driven primarily by productivity in North America and, to a lesser extent, Europe and Siberia.

Unfortunately, these changes were dwarfed by events in the Southern Hemisphere. Indonesia, Australia, and southern Africa all saw huge drops in NPP, as did Argentina and a large portion of the Amazon basin. In fact, the authors find that, to a large extent, trends in the Amazon drove the majority of changes in the past decade. “Amazon NPP alone explains 66 percent of the global NPP variations,” they note, “though it accounts for only 14 percent of the global total.”

The authors suggest a pretty plausible explanation for how rising temperatures could have driven these trends. The Terra instruments also provide information on snow cover, which averages 125 days in the Northern Hemisphere; that figure has been declining with rising temperatures. In contrast, land in the Southern Hemisphere only gets an average of 7.5 days of snow cover, suggesting rising temperatures would make little difference.

That doesn’t, however, explain why NPP trended downwards in the Southern Hemisphere, so the authors examine trends in the water cycle. During the past decade, the Southern Hemisphere has actually seen increased levels of rainfall, but these have been offset by an increased evaporation rate driven by the high temperatures. As a result, the area has experienced an overall drying trend, which the authors conclude is the likely cause of the NPP decline.

The authors caution that a decade’s worth of data is too short to separate long-term drying trends from some of the significant periodic droughts that occurred during the past 10 years, they suggest a few factors are likely to cause the recent trends to persist. For starters, the areas that saw improved NPP in the past decade account for only 16 percent of the global total, and less than a quarter of the total vegetated land area. They also cite a series of studies that indicate that increasing droughts are likely to accompany the increasing temperatures expected over the next several decades.

Science, 2010. DOI: 10.1126/science.1192666  (About DOIs).

Droughts driving drop in plants' ability to store carbon

New Cataclysm Zone Q&A: Darkshore | WoW Reviews & Guides

22nd August, 2010 | Posted by |

 New Cataclysm Zone Q&A: Darkshore | WoW Reviews & Guides

Game designers Luis Barriga and Craig Amai sat down with us to discuss upcoming changes to Darkshore’s landscape, the fate of Auberdine, and the challenges of redesigning an old-world zone from the ground up in this World of Warcraft: Cataclysm content preview.

Q. What was the original concept for the zone?

A. Darkshore was one of the areas hit hardest by the Cataclysm, so the main idea was to present a zone that had literally been shattered by those events. That was the approach we took for the revamp in terms of lore and aesthetics.

In terms of gameplay, our goal was to take advantage of the changes to the environment and use them to help address previous issues with quest flow. It was an opportunity to streamline progression within Darkshore so that the overall experience for players would be much smoother and require less running back and forth.

Q. Who will be using this zone (what levels/factions)?

A. Darkshore is designed for Alliance players, primarily night elves and worgen, from level 11 through 20.

Q. What is changing about the zone?

A. Auberdine has been destroyed; entire species of creatures have been wiped out, and the land has been torn wide open in multiple places.

The Cataclysm has also given the upper hand to a number of nearby foes, including coastal naga, Twilight’s Hammer cultists, and opportunistic trolls of the Shatterspear tribe who seek to exploit weakened night elven settlements.

Q. What’s happened to Auberdine?

A. Auberdine has been nearly razed to the ground, and what wasn’t destroyed by the Cataclysm is now under assault by air elementals led by Twilight’s Hammer cultists. The city is pretty much in ruins, but some survivors did make it out alive.

Q. With Auberdine in ruins, where do night elves go now?

A. Lor’danel. It’s a small night elven town just to the north of the ruins of Auberdine.

Q. Without giving up any spoilers, what’s the general storyline for this zone?

A. Darkshore has suffered immensely from the massive seismic ripples of the Cataclysm. The night elves are in survival mode, helping refugees and, wherever they can, fending off the advances of the Twilight’s Hammer cult, the naga, and the Shatterspear trolls. Meanwhile, Malfurion Stormrage, recently returned from the Emerald Dream, has traveled to the epicenter of the destruction and called upon the ancient powers of Cenarius to contain it.

Q. What do you think is the most exciting new addition to the zone?

A. Without a doubt, the most exciting addition to Darkshore is the gigantic vortex in the center of the zone, where the devastating forces of the Cataclysm are being pit against the primal power of Malfurion Stormrage. Our amazing artists and level designers made us an epic energy vortex to serve as a visual centerpiece for the destruction, and it looks phenomenal.

Q. What goes into redesigning a zone like this?

A. Redesigning Darkshore required much more work than we originally anticipated. This was one of the first zones we tackled that centered on the effects of the Cataclysm, so we started out with the modest goal of adding a few themed quests and improving the general flow of the zone. As we piled on the visual changes, though, we soon discovered that a lot more manpower was needed to generate content that correctly reflected Darkshore’s new landscape and lore.

Q. What was the most challenging aspect about implementing these changes?

A. At first we thought that we would be able to work with the majority of the original quests in Darkshore, but most of them just didn’t make sense when viewed in the context of the zone’s new storyline and direction. For example, chasing after corrupted wildlife and investigating washed-up threshers would seem out of place when everything around you is being ravaged by natural disasters, elementals, naga… and worse. Reaching the realization that we would basically have to scrap all of the old content and start from scratch — and then actually bringing that plan to fruition — was probably the hardest part of the process.

Q. What’s happening at the Master’s Glaive? The last time we saw it, it was mostly buried underground.

A. Twilight’s Hammer cultists have recently begun to unearth the remains of Soggoth, one of the more powerful servants of the Old Gods, from beneath the Master’s Glaive with the intent of bringing him back to life. Players will have to foil the cultists’ plans before the new incarnation of Soggoth reaches full strength.

Q. Is there anything new at the Grove of the Ancients?

A. The Grove of the Ancients was shielded from most of the devastation caused by the Cataclysm, due in large part to the power of the ancient guardians residing therein. Protecting the grove required an enormous amount of energy, though, and as a result, most of the guardians have gone into a sort of slumber. Players will have to figure out a way to wake them and bring them into the fight to ensure the survival of Darkshore.

Incoming search terms for the article:

  • best pally build ret

Tags: A. Auberdine, About, Alliance, Ancient, Aspect, auberdine, Blizzard games, catacl, cataclysm, Cataclysm, Concept, content preview, Craig Amai, Darkshore, elementals, Epic, first, From, General, Last, Lore, Luis Barriga, Malfurion, News, original concept, pit, preview gallery, progression, Quest, Survival, The Ancients, Time, trolls, Vortex, warcraft, World, world of warcraft, world of warcraft: cataclysm, Zone
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New Cataclysm Zone Q&A: Darkshore | WoW Reviews & Guides

New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

22nd August, 2010 | Posted by |

1282480592 20 New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone: The LG C900 smartphone use the slide-out QWERTY keyboard design, a rounded landscape slider equipped with a four-row keyboard and a simplified two-button capacitive layout beneath the screen paired with a chrome Windows key. Notably, this is the first time we’ve seen carrier branding on Windows Phone 7′s home screen in the wild – you can see AT&T’s logo prominently displayed as a tile in one of the pictures in the gallery after the break, but now about this smartphone’s specific parameters has not be announced.
New LG Phones – AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone Picture

(source: engadget)

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Tags: LG Cell Phones, New Cell Phone

New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

New Cataclysm Zone Q&A: Darkshore | WoW Reviews & Guides

22nd August, 2010 | Posted by |

1282480291 87 New Cataclysm Zone Q&A: Darkshore | WoW Reviews & Guides

Game designers Luis Barriga and Craig Amai sat down with us to discuss upcoming changes to Darkshore’s landscape, the fate of Auberdine

Q. What was the original concept

New Cataclysm Zone Q&A: Darkshore | WoW Reviews & Guides

New Cataclysm Zone Q&A: Darkshore | WoW Reviews & Guides

22nd August, 2010 | Posted by |

 New Cataclysm Zone Q&A: Darkshore | WoW Reviews & Guides

Game designers Luis Barriga and Craig Amai sat down with us to discuss upcoming changes to Darkshore’s landscape, the fate of Auberdine, and the challenges of redesigning an old-world zone from the ground up in this World of Warcraft: Cataclysm content preview.

Q. What was the original concept for the zone?

A. Darkshore was one of the areas hit hardest by the Cataclysm, so the main idea was to present a zone that had literally been shattered by those events. That was the approach we took for the revamp in terms of lore and aesthetics.

In terms of gameplay, our goal was to take advantage of the changes to the environment and use them to help address previous issues with quest flow. It was an opportunity to streamline progression within Darkshore so that the overall experience for players would be much smoother and require less running back and forth.

Q. Who will be using this zone (what levels/factions)?

A. Darkshore is designed for Alliance players, primarily night elves and worgen, from level 11 through 20.

Q. What is changing about the zone?

A. Auberdine has been destroyed; entire species of creatures have been wiped out, and the land has been torn wide open in multiple places.

The Cataclysm has also given the upper hand to a number of nearby foes, including coastal naga, Twilight’s Hammer cultists, and opportunistic trolls of the Shatterspear tribe who seek to exploit weakened night elven settlements.

Q. What’s happened to Auberdine?

A. Auberdine has been nearly razed to the ground, and what wasn’t destroyed by the Cataclysm is now under assault by air elementals led by Twilight’s Hammer cultists. The city is pretty much in ruins, but some survivors did make it out alive.

Q. With Auberdine in ruins, where do night elves go now?

A. Lor’danel. It’s a small night elven town just to the north of the ruins of Auberdine.

Q. Without giving up any spoilers, what’s the general storyline for this zone?

A. Darkshore has suffered immensely from the massive seismic ripples of the Cataclysm. The night elves are in survival mode, helping refugees and, wherever they can, fending off the advances of the Twilight’s Hammer cult, the naga, and the Shatterspear trolls. Meanwhile, Malfurion Stormrage, recently returned from the Emerald Dream, has traveled to the epicenter of the destruction and called upon the ancient powers of Cenarius to contain it.

Q. What do you think is the most exciting new addition to the zone?

A. Without a doubt, the most exciting addition to Darkshore is the gigantic vortex in the center of the zone, where the devastating forces of the Cataclysm are being pit against the primal power of Malfurion Stormrage. Our amazing artists and level designers made us an epic energy vortex to serve as a visual centerpiece for the destruction, and it looks phenomenal.

Q. What goes into redesigning a zone like this?

A. Redesigning Darkshore required much more work than we originally anticipated. This was one of the first zones we tackled that centered on the effects of the Cataclysm, so we started out with the modest goal of adding a few themed quests and improving the general flow of the zone. As we piled on the visual changes, though, we soon discovered that a lot more manpower was needed to generate content that correctly reflected Darkshore’s new landscape and lore.

Q. What was the most challenging aspect about implementing these changes?

A. At first we thought that we would be able to work with the majority of the original quests in Darkshore, but most of them just didn’t make sense when viewed in the context of the zone’s new storyline and direction. For example, chasing after corrupted wildlife and investigating washed-up threshers would seem out of place when everything around you is being ravaged by natural disasters, elementals, naga… and worse. Reaching the realization that we would basically have to scrap all of the old content and start from scratch — and then actually bringing that plan to fruition — was probably the hardest part of the process.

Q. What’s happening at the Master’s Glaive? The last time we saw it, it was mostly buried underground.

A. Twilight’s Hammer cultists have recently begun to unearth the remains of Soggoth, one of the more powerful servants of the Old Gods, from beneath the Master’s Glaive with the intent of bringing him back to life. Players will have to foil the cultists’ plans before the new incarnation of Soggoth reaches full strength.

Q. Is there anything new at the Grove of the Ancients?

A. The Grove of the Ancients was shielded from most of the devastation caused by the Cataclysm, due in large part to the power of the ancient guardians residing therein. Protecting the grove required an enormous amount of energy, though, and as a result, most of the guardians have gone into a sort of slumber. Players will have to figure out a way to wake them and bring them into the fight to ensure the survival of Darkshore.

Incoming search terms for the article:

  • best pally build ret

Tags: A. Auberdine, About, Alliance, Ancient, Aspect, auberdine, Blizzard games, catacl, cataclysm, Cataclysm, Concept, content preview, Craig Amai, Darkshore, elementals, Epic, first, From, General, Last, Lore, Luis Barriga, Malfurion, News, original concept, pit, preview gallery, progression, Quest, Survival, The Ancients, Time, trolls, Vortex, warcraft, World, world of warcraft, world of warcraft: cataclysm, Zone
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  • The Oculus (1)
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  • Holy Priest Guide (1)

New Cataclysm Zone Q&A: Darkshore | WoW Reviews & Guides

New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

22nd August, 2010 | Posted by |

 New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone: The LG C900 smartphone use the slide-out QWERTY keyboard design, a rounded landscape slider equipped with a four-row keyboard and a simplified two-button capacitive layout beneath the screen paired with a chrome Windows key. Notably, this is the first time we’ve seen carrier branding on Windows Phone 7′s home screen in the wild – you can see AT&T’s logo prominently displayed as a tile in one of the pictures in the gallery after the break, but now about this smartphone’s specific parameters has not be announced.
New LG Phones – AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone Picture

(source: engadget)

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New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

Minister harps on Lalbagh constructions : In & Around

22nd August, 2010 | Posted by |

1282479086 89 Minister harps on Lalbagh constructions : In & AroundMinister harps on Lalbagh constructions

Staff Reporter
BANGALORE: Even as the public opposes interference in the name of development at Lalbagh Botanical Gardens, the Horticulture Ministry seems to be keen on adding more “attractions” to this lung space.

At an interaction with the public on developments of Lalbagh on Thursday, Horticulture Minister Umesh V. Katti harped on the proposed rock garden in 20 acres behind the Kempe Gowda tower. “The beauty of the garden will not be affected,” Mr. Katti told a small gathering of walkers, environmentalists and public at the Kempe Gowda tower.

On other attractions at the garden, Mr. Katti said the department wanted to put in place a musical fountain, boating facility for visitors and a Niagara Falls replica.

Lalbagh Walkers’ Association president Sadashiv was not impressed. He said: “It is better to keep Lalbagh as a botanical garden instead of converting it to a commercial park.”

Minister harps on Lalbagh constructions : In & Around

New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

22nd August, 2010 | Posted by |

1282478845 94 New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone

New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone: The LG C900 smartphone use the slide-out QWERTY keyboard design, a rounded landscape slider equipped with a four-row keyboard and a simplified two-button capacitive layout beneath the screen paired with a chrome Windows key. Notably, this is the first time we’ve seen carrier branding on Windows Phone 7′s home screen in the wild – you can see AT&T’s logo prominently displayed as a tile in one of the pictures in the gallery after the break, but now about this smartphone’s specific parameters has not be announced.
New LG Phones – AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone Picture

(source: engadget)

Related Posts

  • New LG 3.8-inch Windows Phone 7 Smartphone
  • New LG Town C300 Cell Phone
  • New LG Wink 3G Cell Phone Reviews
  • New LG Wink Style Cell Phone
  • New LG Optimus Z SU950 Cell Phone Released

Tags: LG Cell Phones, New Cell Phone

New AT&T LG C900 Windows Phone 7 Smartphone