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Daily Archives: August 12, 2012

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iPhone 5 Battery Smaller Than Expected

That begs the question, just how good can the iPhone 5′s battery life be with such a small battery, especially if it has to power a larger screen and faster data network?

9to5Mac postulates, “Perhaps Apple’s tweaked dual-core system on a chip for this new iPhone is efficient enough to run LTE with[out] the need for a much larger battery. We also speculate that Apple may indeed be moving ahead with latest version of the Qualcomm Gobi chips that has a smaller battery draw than previous versions.”

It’s also possible that the leaked photos aren’t of the iPhone 5′s battery at all. Given the size of the batteries in other Apple devices, such as the iPad and MacBook Air–and those devices’ lengthy battery life–I am not worried that the iPhone 5 will have crummy battery life

Olympics 2012: Italy beat Bulgaria to win men’s bronze in volleyball

Italy beat Bulgaria 3-1 to win the Olympic men’s volleyball bronze on Sunday, their fourth volleyball medal in the last five Games.

Captain Cristian Savani top scored for Italy with 23 points in a 25-19 23-25 25-22 25-21 victory.

“Not everyone is able to win an Olympic medal. We have been really good at pulling our teeth from the beginning to the end,” Savani told reporters. Brazil face Russia for the gold medal later on Sunday

Mexico’s 2-1 upset of Brazil in men’s soccer not a total shock

Oribe PeraltaMexico’s national anthem played at a medal ceremony for the first time in the London Olympics on Saturday, following its men’s soccer team’s 2-1 upset of Brazil in the gold-medal match.

But if the country’s Olympic program continues to improve at the pace it has over the last 12 years, the song could be getting a lot more airplay in Rio de Janeiro and beyond.

Because while Saturday’s victory sent fans pouring into the streets of Mexico, it was little more than an emphatic exclamation point to one of the most successful Olympics in Mexico’s history. With seven medals — including the country’s first in archery and soccer — heading into the final day of competition, Mexico has won more here than at any Olympics except the 1968 Games in Mexico City, where it won nine.

It’s all part of a surge that began a few weeks before the 1996 Atlanta Games, where Mexico’s 97 athletes combined for just a single bronze. In the wake of that embarrassment, the government’s sports ministry began staging annual National Olympics, with competition over a wide range of sports. Since then, Mexico has captured 20 Olympic medals, nearly a third of the country’s total in all Olympics. And less than a year ago Mexico had its most successful winning 133 medals, 42 of them gold.

“It’s been costly. It’s been criticized by some people. But it’s been successful,” says Elbert Pratt, a coach with the country’s national track-and-field team.

The idea came from Ivar Sisnieaga, then president of the national sports committee. Just as important, though, was the fact that Sisnieaga also decentralized sports in Mexico, emphasizing the development of regional programs and training centers outside the capital.

WRAPUP 1-U.S., Turkey to study Syria no-fly zone

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said after meeting her Turkish counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu in Istanbul on Saturday that Washington and Ankara should develop detailed operational planning on ways to assist the rebels fighting to topple Assad.

“Our intelligence services, our military have very important responsibilities and roles to play so we are going to be setting up a working group to do exactly that,” she said.

Asked about options such as imposing a no-fly zone over rebel-held territory, Clinton said these were possibilities she and Davutoglu had agreed “need greater in-depth analysis”, while indicating that no decisions were necessarily imminent.

“It is one thing to talk about all kinds of potential actions, but you cannot make reasoned decisions without doing intense analysis and operational planning,” she said.

Though any intervention appears to be a distant prospect, her remarks were nevertheless the closest Washington has come to suggesting direct military action in Syria.

No-fly zones imposed by NATO and Arab allies helped Libyan rebels overthrow Muammar Gaddafi last year. Until recently, the West had shunned the idea of repeating any Libya-style action.

Saudi Arabia and Qatar are believed to be arming Syrian rebels, while the United States and Britain have pledged to step up non-lethal assistance to Assad’s opponents.

Davutoglu said it was time outside powers took decisive steps to resolve the humanitarian crisis in cities such as Aleppo, where Assad’s forces have fought rebels for three weeks.

 

JETS, TANKS IN ACTION

In the latest battles, tanks and troops pummelled rebels near the shattered district of Salaheddine, a former opposition stronghold that commands the main southern approach to Aleppo.

Tank fire crashed into the adjacent Saif al-Dawla neighbourhood as military jets circled over an abandoned police station held by rebels, firing missiles every few minutes.

Insurgents said they had been forced to retreat in the latest twist in relentless, see-saw battles for Salaheddine, part of a swathe of Aleppo seized by rebels last month.

Some rebels, outgunned and low on ammunition in Aleppo, have pleaded for outside military help, arguing that more weapons and a no-fly zone over areas they control near the Turkish border would give them a secure base against Assad’s forces.

“The reason we retreated from Salaheddine this week is a lack of weapons,” complained Abu Thadet, a rebel commander in Aleppo who said his fighters would regroup and fight back. “We can handle the bombing. It’s the snipers that make it hard.”

Flipping arena with a toss, Dutt gives India its fifth medal

FPYogeshwar Dutt possessed the strength and stamina to bring India one of its most exhilarating bronze medals of the London Olympics. What the Sonepat pehelwan did was to combine the brain with the brawn, digging out his most potent weapon at just the right time to deny North Korean Jong Myong Ri a podium and to emerge as one of the most popular wrestling medallists at the ExCel Arena. There were not more than half a dozen Indian supporters in the stands, but the full house — the Brits, Iranians, Turks, Americans and even the unobliging North Koreans — gave the Indian a standing ovation as he won the 60 kg freestyle wrestling bout. It was a reception that’s reserved for last-ball sixes back home, or for penalty shootouts here in London. What evoked that reaction was Yogeshwar’s stunning last move — thrusting his head between his rival’s thighs, wrapping his arms around his legs and then flipping him like an omelette several times — something called the “phitle” for short. The points piled up, one, then one more, then a third, and finally a 6 flashed on the score-screen as the Indian punched the air in triumph. Phitle is a “daav (hold/ move)” that Dutt had employed on a lesser stage when returning from his career-threatening knee injury at the Commonwealth Games, to win gold. He also used it in his opening bout here against Bulgarian Anatolie Ilarinovitch. It requires the most flexible of iron grips, and the good upper body strength that Dutt exudes.

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