Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Billboard Music Awards Winners List 2011

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Taylor Swift - Justin Bieber@aceshowbiz.com
The young musicians once again managed to prove their achievements. In the Billboard Music Awards, held May 22 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Taylor Swift and Justin Bieber became the winners announced at the beginning of the show.

Announced by Matthew Morrison, GLEE star, Swift won the award Albums Artist of the Year because of her new album 'popular', Speak Now. "The greatness of an album is determined by the fans. You've just given me a reason to really fall in love with you, "Swift said when receiving the trophy. This was the second Cup trophy he was receiving, after seizing the Top Country Album award.
Furthermore, Justin Bieber invited onto the stage to receive the trophy for the Digital Artist of the Year. 'I want to thank all who have helped me out of my hometown, "said a Canadian singer is said, mentioning the fans and Usher, his mentor. In addition to this award, Bieber also won the trophy for Top Social Artist, Top Streaming Artist, Top Digital Artist , Top Pop Albums and Top Streaming Song (Video).
Who also successfully climbed to the podium to receive trophies and giving victory speeches?
ARTIST AWARDS:
* Top Male Artist: Eminem
* Top Social Artist: Justin Bieber
* Top Streaming Artist: Justin Bieber
* Top Digital Media Artist: Justin Bieber
* Top Rap Artist: Eminem
* Top Dance / Electronic Artist: Lady GaGa
* Top Christian Artist: Chris Tomlin
ALBUM AWARDS
* Top Billboard 200 Albums: Eminem - Recovery
* Top Pop Album: Justin Bieber - My World 2.0
* Top R & B Album: Usher - Raymond vs. Raymond
* Top Rap Albums: Eminem - Recovery
* Top Country Albums: Taylor Swift - Speak Now
* Top Rock Albums: Mumford & Sons - Sigh No More
* Top Alternative Albums: Mumford & Sons Sigh No More
* Top Dance / Electronic / Electronic Album: Lady GaGa - The Fame
* Top Christian Album: Skillet - Awake
SONG AWARDS
* Top Digital Song: Taio Cruz - Dynamite
* Top Radio Song: Bruno Mars - Just the Way You Are
* Top Streaming Song (Audio): Nelly - Just a Dream
* Top Streaming Song (Video): Justin Bieber ft. Ludacris - Baby
* Top Pop Song: Taio Cruz - Dynamite
* Top R & B Song: Usher ft. will.i.am - OMG
* Top Rap Song: Eminem ft. Rihanna - Love the Way You Lie
* Top Rock Song: Train - Hey, Soul Sister
* Top Alternative Song: Neon Trees - Animal
* Top Latin Song: Shakira ft. Freshleyground - Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)
* Top Dance / Electronic Song: Edward Maya & Vika Jigulina - Stereo Love
* Top Christian Song: Chris Tomlin - Our God

source: http://music4hardcore.blogspot.com

Monday, May 23, 2011

Myanmar's sex worker clinics offer solace from stigma

Myanmar's sex worker clinics offer solace from stigma  
AFP/File – A medical technician (L) in Yangon takes a blood sample from a Myanmar woman as part of an HIV test in …
YANGON (AFP) – When Thida Win contracted HIV after selling her body on the Yangon streets, it was her fellow sex workers that she turned to, not Myanmar's crumbling health service.
The Top project, run almost entirely by those in the sex trade, gave her treatment, a place to be herself away from the dual stigma of HIV and prostitution -- and eventually a job.
"I am now a health worker for my community and I can forget I am positive. I am so proud to work for the programmes, I will work for them for my whole life," the 33-year-old told AFP.
Top and similar projects are a vital resource in army-dominated Myanmar, where a chronically underfunded health service, large itinerant populations and poor education fuel one of Asia's worst HIV epidemics.
"When I was diagnosed I was pregnant and they told me how to find a safe way for the baby. So the child is negative and I am so happy," Thida Win said.
Nearly one in five of Myanmar's estimated 60,000 sex workers were infected with HIV in 2008.
A United Nations report from August last year said legal constraints and discrimination made it hard to reach those in the trade, which is illegal. Surveys suggested police even used condoms as evidence for arrest.
Top founder and director Habib Rahman said providing a place free from taboos and letting people share their problems with contemporaries was a key aim for the project.
"Even the cleaner comes from the sex worker community, the counsellors are also sex workers. That's one of the reasons I decided to recruit from the community -- because there should not be any stigma and discrimination," he said.
Rahman said many women enter sex work without knowing about the risks.
"In general in Myanmar I do not think there is any sex education in school," he said.
The project recruits former and current sex workers to help educate others about HIV, spreading the message from a position of trust within the community.
"We cannot tell anyone to stop selling sex even though they are positive but what we do is tell them how they can keep healthy and protect the client by using condoms," said Rahman.
He said Top's part-time "peer educators" who chose to continue in the sex trade were encouraged to always use protection, while full-time employees were instructed to stop selling sex altogether.
Myint Myint contracted HIV soon after being recruited to work in a brothel following the break-up of her marriage. She said her clients, mainly local bean and fish traders, had often been reluctant to use protection.
"I have faced violence with customers who don't want to use condoms. This is a big problem. I think customers don't know about condoms. They think they are plastic rubbish," said the Top peer educator who continues to sell sex to a few of her old clients.
HIV transmission in Myanmar occurs "primarily through high-risk sexual contact between sex workers and their clients", as well as men who have sex with men and their partners, according to the UN report.
It said while injecting drug users have the highest HIV prevalence, at 36 percent, they are also likely to pay for sex and "this interaction may refuel the sex-work-driven epidemic".
Years of neglect by the ruling generals -- Myanmar spent just 0.9 percent of its budget on health in 2007 -- have left foreign donors facilitating most of the country's HIV treatment.
A new government, which came into power after controversial November 2010 elections, has raised hopes of more investment from overseas donors -- but not the state, which is expected to spend around 20 percent of outlay on the army this year.
In 2009 the UN estimated 240,000 people in Myanmar were living with the virus and while there have been improvements, the situation remains worrying with prevalence rates the third highest in Asia after Thailand and Papua New Guinea.
"The HIV epidemic in Myanmar is on a decreasing trend and among the key population groups it is also reducing -- but it is still really quite high," said Soe Naing of UNAIDS in Myanmar.
He said some state provision for HIV treatment does exist in big cities, "but of course the standards and situations are not ideal. People are reluctant to go to them because of privacy issues and quality".
Top clinics provide everything from testing and counselling to routine medical care.
Last year it gave treatment and consultation to 11,770 female sex workers and 10,727 men. It also accounted for 40 percent and 82 percent of all HIV tests for those groups respectively in the country.
The programme, which was formed by Population Services International (PSI) seven years ago, now employs 350 people -- 95 percent of whom are from the sex worker community and men who have sex with men -- in 19 towns and cities.
In Myanmar, where the US estimates around a third of people were below the poverty line in 2007, money worries are likely to continue to drive people into sex work.
Thida Win, who was still a university student when she first sold sex, said the financial burden of marriage and children only pushed her further into the trade.
"I got my degree with sex work, I supported my family very well with sex work," said the chemistry graduate, who said her earnings still help support seven family members.

Russia's parting gift to NASA: Shuttle legacy photo

Space shuttle Endeavour astronauts Mike Fincke and Drew Feustel exit the Qwest airlock at the beginning of their spacewalk in this image from NASA TV  
Reuters – Space shuttle Endeavour astronauts Mike Fincke (L) and Drew Feustel exit the Qwest airlock at the beginning …
 
CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) – Half the International Space Station crew departs for Earth on Monday, leaving behind the visiting shuttle Endeavour and a parting gift for NASA -- a legacy photograph of the shuttle parked at the orbital outpost.
As the 30-year-old shuttle program winds down, NASA has been looking for an opportunity to capture an iconic image of one of its orbiters on the job at the space station. The United States will have devoted 37 of its 135 space shuttle flights to construction and support of the space station by the time the program ends after one last cargo run in July.
"Hopefully those pictures will show up in textbooks for years to come," said Kenneth Todd, a space station manager. "It would be great to have the space shuttle represented there with us, as well as all the other international partners."
The only way to get the shot is from aboard a Russian Soyuz capsule, the vehicles used to transport station crews to and from the outpost.
NASA pitched the idea of a Soyuz photo shoot to its Russian partners earlier this year, but it was scuttled for technical reasons. However, a two-week launch delay for shuttle Endeavour to repair an electrical problem presented another opportunity: Its 12-day visit coincided with the scheduled departure of outgoing station commander Dmitry Kondratyev, Italian astronaut Paolo Nespoli and NASA astronaut Catherine "Cady" Coleman.
The trio is scheduled to climb into one of the station's two Soyuz capsules to return to Earth on Monday, ending their six-month stay in space. They'll have one last job before landing.
After departing the outpost at 5:35 p.m. EDT, Kondratyev will fly his Soyuz spaceship out to about 200 meters (656 feet) from the station, which will then slowly rotate about 130 degrees while Nespoli snaps pictures and shoots video.
It will be the first time a shuttle and the space station have appeared together from a remote vantage point, with a planetary view of Earth in the background.
NASA will have one last opportunity to get the shot, if for some reason Monday's attempt fails. Shuttle Atlantis is due to arrive at the station in July for NASA's final shuttle mission. There is no station crew rotation planned for that time, so any photo shoot would require the Soyuz to leave and then repark at the station, a more complicated operation that has yet to be approved.
Kondratyev and his crew, along with the prized pictures, are scheduled to land at 10:26 p.m. in Kazakhstan. NASA hopes to copy and distribute the digital images within a day or two.
The Endeavour crew, which has completed two of four spacewalks for station maintenance, has some off-duty time Monday. The primary goal of the mission, which began on May 16, was to deliver the $2 billion Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer particle detector and spare parts for the station.
Three new station crewmembers -- cosmonaut Sergi Volkov, NASA astronaut Michael Fossum and Japan's Satoshi Furukawa -- are scheduled to launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on June 7.
Endeavour and its crew -- commander Mark Kelly, pilot Greg Johnson, spacewalkers Andrew Feustel, Michael Fincke and Greg Chamitoff, and Italian astronaut Roberto Vittori -- are due back at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on June 1.
(Editing by Eric Walsh)

yahoo.com

Obama's 'Jewish state' reference jars Palestinians

Israeli right wing activists protest outside the US embassy in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, May 22, 2011. US President Barack Obama warned America's pro-  
AP – Israeli right wing activists protest outside the US embassy in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, May 22, 2011. …

JERUSALEM – U.S.-Israel tension over Barack Obama's endorsement of Israel's pre-1967 borders is obscuring a flip side of the Middle East coin: The past days' speeches by the U.S. president contained difficult challenges for the Palestinians as well.
Addressing the American Israel Public Affairs Committee Sunday, Obama reiterated his request that the Palestinians drop their plans to appeal for recognition at the United Nations this fall, and — as he did in another Mideast speech Thursday — raised tough questions about an emerging Palestinian unity government that is to include the Hamas militant group.
Most difficult for Palestinians is Obama's call to recognize Israel as the Jewish homeland, essentially requiring the Palestinians to accept that most refugees will be denied the "right of return" to what is now Israel.
Perhaps for this reason, the Palestinians have remained largely quiet about the substance of Obama's speeches, seemingly content to watch Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu clash with the U.S. administration over Israel's future borders.
"It's really premature to jump into any of these details," said Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, when asked by The Associated Press about the demands Obama made of the Palestinians.
The fate of Palestinian refugees is one of the most emotional and explosive issues in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians either fled or were expelled during the war surrounding Israel's creation in 1948. Today, the surviving refugees, with their descendants, number several million people.
The Palestinians claim they have the right to return to their family's lost properties. Israel rejects the principle, saying it would mean the end of the country as a Jewish democracy. Israeli leaders say the refugees should be entitled to compensation and resettled in a future Palestine to be established next to Israel, or absorbed where they now live.
In his speech last Thursday, Obama did not explicitly mention the refugees. But by saying a final peace deal must recognize "Israel as a Jewish state and the homeland for the Jewish people," he appeared to back the Israeli position.
The issue is so central to Palestinian policy and society that no Palestinian leader can be seen as abandoning the rights of the refugees, particularly at a time when peace efforts are at a standstill and so many other difficult issues, such as borders and the final status of Jerusalem, remain unresolved.
Nabil Shaath, a senior Palestinian official, said recognition of Israel as a Jewish state would sell out not only the refugees, but potentially open the door to Israel expelling its roughly 1.5 million Arab citizens as well. This idea has never been seriously raised in Israel.
He said the Palestinian recognition of Israel's right to exist, without any reference to national character, should be sufficient.
"We recognize Israel as a state," he said. "It's a recognition of a state to a state."
In his two recent speeches, Obama took aim at two other central planks of Palestinian policy: plans to ask the U.N. in September to recognize an independent Palestine, with or without a peace agreement; and a unity deal struck between President Mahmoud Abbas' Fatah movement and the Iranian-backed Hamas militants.
In Thursday's speech, Obama warned that "symbolic actions to isolate Israel at the United Nations in September won't create an independent state." And referring to Hamas in Sunday's address to AIPAC, a powerful pro-Israel lobby, Obama stated: "No country can be expected to negotiate with a terrorist organization sworn to its destruction."
"We will hold the Palestinians accountable for their actions and their rhetoric," Obama said.
Erekat insisted the world must embrace the Fatah-Hamas reconciliation, meant to end the split that has left rival governments in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The Palestinians claim both areas, along with east Jerusalem, for their future state, and Erekat said there can be no independence without reconciliation.
In any case, he said Abbas, and the umbrella Palestine Liberation Organization, dominated by Fatah, are the parties to negotiate peace with Israel — not the "unity government" of the Palestinian Authority which would be backed by both parties.
Erekat, like other Palestinians officials, declined to discuss most of the specifics of Obama's speech, including the issue of the Jewish state. For now, he says the border issue should be the focus of Mideast diplomacy.
The Palestinians demand a return to the pre-1967 lines, which would require an Israeli pullout from the West Bank and east Jerusalem, though they are open to Obama's idea of agreed-upon modifications through land swaps — as long as they are small.
Erekat said if Netanyahu accepts the 1967 lines he could raise any other matter in negotiations. "Before I hear the prime minister of Israel saying that he accepts this principle, I think it would be a waste of my time to discuss any other issue," Erekat said.
Netanyahu says the 1967 lines are "indefensible," and his anger toward the U.S. president seemed palpable at a White House meeting Friday.
But even Obama's reference to the 1967 lines may not be entirely to the Palestinians' liking.
Clarifying his position Sunday, Obama said those lines should be the basis for a peace deal, but that the final borders could be adjusted to accommodate "new demographic realities."
That was seen as a recognition that Israel could keep at least some of the occupied area where it has settled Jews. Some 500,000 Israelis live in Jewish settlements, which are considered illegal by the Palestinians and the international community.
Obama also noted the 1967 lines have long been considered a basis for a final peace deal, most recently in previous negotiations that broke down in 2008. So his embrace of those borders is not revolutionary. "What I did on Thursday was to say publicly what has long been acknowledged privately," he said.
After initial shock and anger toward Obama, members of Netanyahu's hard-line coalition have begun to soften their opposition.
Limor Livnat, a Cabinet minister in Netanyahu's nationalist Likud Party, called Obama's speech on Sunday "excellent." She praised his tough line against Hamas and support for Israel as a Jewish state.
"Following the prime minister's words, the president sharpened his message and said things that he didn't say clearly beforehand," she told Channel 2 TV. "These are important things."


Josef Federman can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/joseffederman

source : yahoo.com

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Could the bin Laden Raid Have Revealed a Secret New Helicopter?

A picture of the tail rotor of the chopper that the Navy Seals' Team Six detonated revealed unfamiliar features. Reports say it could be a new, secret helicopter.
When the Team Six members reached Osama bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad one of the choppers made a "controlled but hard landing," according to reports, probably due to higher than expected temperatures.
Temperatures affects the density of the air, and low density makes it harder for the rotor to sustain the weight of the chopper, especially if it was near its maximum weight (being packed with soldiers and fuel to fly in from Afghanistan). Abbottabad is about 1200 meters above the sea level, and altitude also affects air density. (Inside the Osama bin Laden Strike: How America Got Its Man.)
So what machine exactly experienced the hard landing described above? Short answer: we don't know for sure. Long answer: It seems that the tail rotor visible in the picture belongs to a highly modified version of the H-60, the chopper of choice of the special forces for more than 30 years. Aviation Week doesn't beat around the bush, claiming: "A previously undisclosed, classified stealth helicopter apparently was part of the U.S. task force that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan on May 1."
Stealth technology on helicopters is not itself new, but the fact that a previously unknown machine was used in this raid is yet another proof of the degree of importance that this mission had for U.S. commanders. (Watch President Obama's announcement of Osama bin Laden's death.)
Aviation Week then goes techie and explains what we can see from that picture: "Photos disseminated via the European PressPhoto agency and attributed to an anonymous stringer show that the helicopter’s tail features stealth-configured shapes on the boom and the tail rotor hub fairings, swept stabilizers and a 'dishpan' cover over a five-or-six-blade tail rotor. It has a silver-loaded infrared suppression finish similar to that seen on V-22s."
Low radar visibility was essential, for the Pakistani air force would have either scrambled its jets if an unknown threat to its airspace (and near the country's best military academy!) was detected, or fired its surface to air missiles. It's possibly more proof of the fact that Pakistan really knew nothing about the mission - or at least its first wave of attack - until it ended. (See pictures of Osama bin Laden.)
This would explain why the Seals wasted critically precious time to blew up the mysterious helicopter and why many experts had problems identifying its remains. It's unclear what Pakistan could have made of the downed chopper, but growing ties between Pakistani and Chinese armed forces could have made the destruction of such new machine a must. China and Pakistan, over the past two decades, have developed a multi role combat aircraft called JF-17 and an advanced trainer, the JL-8.
The Navy Seals usually fly in the famed Sikorsky UH-60, popularized by the movie Black Hawk Down, in which two UH-60 were shot down in Somalia, resulting in the death of 18 men.
Black Hawk Down was a scenario, insiders say, that together with first attempt to rescue the hostages held at the U.S. embassy in 1980 in Iran, that's been evoked constantly in the planning phases leading to the May 1 raid, as examples of potentially disastrous outcomes.

Renren under pressure as shares in China's Facebook debut


Chinese companies drive new listings activity at the New
The company known as China's Facebook has not disappointed. Shares in Renren jumped 50% when they started trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

Investors had expected the hype surrounding the Chinese social networking site to make it another blockbuster listing, like that of Youku, China's YouTube.

Shares in Youku had tripled, in the best opening for a US listing in five years.

However, some analysts have questioned what might happen after the "dizzying heights" of the early days of trading.

"The post-IPO hangover will see volatility as investors wonder if this is really the 'next Baidu' or just one of a handful of struggling Facebook copycats," says Michael Clendenin, managing director of RedTech Advisors.

Renren, like Youku, is not making money at the time of listing.

But its business model holds the promise of massive future profits in the world's biggest internet market because of the number of Renren users.

Renren is banking on that premise, as well as on its singular status as the only pure-play social networking site open to mainstream investors. China's Facebook
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote


The appetite for Renren shares is there because this is the first major social networking site from anywhere to list” End Quote Mark Natkin Marbridge Consulting

It is known as China's Facebook because of obvious similarities between the two.

Facebook itself is banned from China for censorship reasons.

Renren was started in 2005 by three classmates who initially targeted university students, before it was purchased by the current chief executive, Joseph Chen.

The site eventually widened its base to appeal to all internet users in China - hence its name, which means "everyone".

Like Facebook, Renren makes money from internet advertising, but almost half of its income comes from online games.

The company shares were priced at $14 each. That represents a 30% increase from just a week ago, when it became clear that demand exceeded supply.

The social networking site was able to increase its listing price range, even after it told investors that it had only 31 million active users every month, much less than the 117 million that it had stated initially. First to list

Mark Natkin, founder of Marbridge Consulting, says few investors would tolerate this kind of behaviour from a non-Chinese internet company.

"There aren't a lot of companies that could get away with that," he says.

Online games mean big profit for China's social networking sites

But he adds: "The appetite for Renren shares is there because this is the first major social networking site from anywhere to list."

The embarrassing revision of user numbers is only one reason why analysts in Beijing, where Renren is based, are sceptical about Renren's long-term future.

Sabrina Dong, an analyst at Analysys International, believes the pace of new users joining Renren is slowing every month.

"Of course its overall user base continues to grow, but if you look carefully you can see that the pace of acquisition is clearly falling," she says.

According to figures supplied by Renren, the company added an average of 29% more active users in 2009 compared with the year before.

But that figure fell to 18% in 2010, and remained at 19% in the first three months of this year because of greater competition from other social network applications. Rise of microblogs

Renren may be known to the West as China's Facebook, but in fact it is just one of many social networking sites on the Chinese mainland.

There is Kaixin001, due to list later in 2011, as well as internet heavyweights such as like Tencent, Sina and potentially even search engine Baidu.


“Start Quote


The powers of non-Chinese regulatory authorities are often limited when it comes to Chinese companies that are not also listed in their home country”


And Mr Clendenin believes the explosive rise of microblogs modelled on Twitter are stealing users from the likes of Renren.

"China's microblogs combine the functions of Twitter and Facebook, offering a one-stop shopping opportunity," he says.

He says it took Renren five years to attract 120 million users, whereas Sina's microblog, called Weibo, did the same in less than two years.

Weibo amassed about 37 million users in the first three months of the year alone.

But US investors are unlikely to be considering Renren's rivals as they pile into the listing on Wednesday.

They are more like to consider much bigger numbers.

China has an internet population of almost half a billion, and half of them use social media.

With global favourite Facebook out of the running, investors believe homegrown talent will find fertile ground.

Chinese Facebook, Renren, shoots for U.S. IPO

(Reuters) – China's largest social network, Renren, filed for a U.S. initial public offering to raise up to $573.1 million, the first of a clutch of Facebook clones hoping to boost their profile with an American listing.

Renren, owned by Oak Pacific Interactive, hopes to tap strong appetite for Chinese tech stocks. Online video company Youku.com Inc, known as China's YouTube, surged 161 percent on its debut late last year, locking in the best first-day returns of an IPO in five years.

China's Internet sector -- the world's largest by users -- is red hot because it is difficult for outside competitors to overcome the political and cultural barriers to operate there, but some analysts warn of a bubble forming.

Renren's website -- sporting some 117 million registered users -- is similar to Facebook's as it allows users to share locations with friends, "like" something and post updates.

Sources have said that rival social network Kaixin001 also plans to list, but has not gone through the process of selecting banks.

Social networking sites have grown in popularity in China in recent years, gaining most of their revenue from online advertising. They benefit from an ecosystem closed to major foreign competition, with Facebook and Twitter banned in the world's second-largest economy.

But the market is getting increasingly competitive with more than 100 social networking sites operating.

Two social networking sites shut in 2010 due to cash flow issues, local media reported. The industry is also fraught with regulatory and legal risks as China seeks to control the flow of information online.

Renren and some of its shareholders are offering about 52.1 million American Depository Shares (ADS). The company expects the IPO to be priced at between $9 and $11 per ADS.

It intends to list on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "RENN". Underwriters for the IPO include Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank Securities and Credit Suisse.

In the filing, Renren said its website had about 117 million activated users as of March 31, 2011.

Oak Pacific also owns Nuomi, a website featuring daily deals similar to the popular U.S. website Groupon.

In 2010, Renren had revenue of about $76.5 million and a net loss from continuing operations of $61.2 million including some charges.

(Reporting by A. Ananthalakshmi in Bangalore; Editing by Don Sebastian and Tim Dobbyn)

source : yahoo

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Regimental Mascot

In watching the Royal wedding this week I was quite taken by the splendid mascot of the Irish Guards - this magnificent Irish wolfhound, named Conmael.  Impressively, this hound even has a medal!


It was a big day for everyone...
And so it occurs to me that in building my next HQ unit, perhaps I need to add an appropriate mascot.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Shock and Surprise!

A usual, TMP has a bunch of polls going. One of them at the moment is [what is the] "Most Popular Painting/Wargaming Site Besides TMP?" Well blow me down if I didn't find this blog listed there as one of the selections!

And not only that, but 4 people (OK, me and 3 other people) voted for YIAWWS - Huzzah!

Make your vote count, whatever it may be, here:
http://theminiaturespage.com/polls/1792421011/

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Tobsen77 Miniatures

A German company that makes great looking VSF and Pulp vehicles in 28mm scale.  Check out these examples:




Find them here:
http://www.tobsen77.de/index.php?lan=en

Friday, December 24, 2010

Wishing you a Very Merry....



Have a great and safe one everybody, 
and wishing you a gaming filled 2011!
(thanks to Brigade Models for the pic!)

Friday, December 10, 2010

You always need more

And here is the excuse you've been looking for!


As for the previous couple of years, we're running a blanket discount rather than specific special offers, since everyone seems to like them. Although there are a few exceptions, this isn't a '15% of selected items' or 'Up to 15% off' sale, it's a real '15% off everything' sale.

So once again that's 15% off all of our models - Aeronef, starships, Land Ironclads, 15mm and 6mm tanks, Iron Stars, WWI Belgians... all except Celtos, where the Celtic Gods are being even more generous and giving 25% off.

And that's it - no minimum or maximum orders, just a blanket discount until January 3rd. So what are you waiting for? Go out there and shop!

http://www.brigademodels.co.uk/Xmas.html

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Nemo's War

A solitaire VSF game I've just ordered - looks fun!

Jules Verne’s classic novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea tells the story of Captain Nemo and his astounding ship, the Nautilus. Set in the year 1866, this amazing electric-powered submarine travels throughout the seas tacitly on missions of research and exploration, but it isn’t long before two captive crew members, rescued from the wreck of a Nautilus attack, Professor Aronnax and Canadian whaler Ned Land, realize that Captain Nemo’s motives are far more complex and possibly sinister.

Can you command the Nautilus on its year-long cruise to destiny? Can you fend off giant squids? Discover the South Pole, the Arabian Tunnel or the lost city of Atlantis? Can you scourge the high seas and create enough fear in the great maritime powers to free the colonial peoples of the world from them? There really is a whole world to explore and master when you are adventuring in this amazing solitaire game: Nemo’s War.

http://victorypointgames.com/details.php?prodId=94
http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/39232/nemos-war

PS While at Victory Point Games, check out  another of their games:  "Toe-to-Toe Nu’klr Combat with the Rooskies"

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

15mm Figures For America's Splendid Little War


From Sculptor/Modeler/Author Chris Ferree, returns his original line of figures for the Spanish-American War in 15mm. First produced by Richard Houston over 10 years ago as part of the innovative "Battles In A Box" miniatures collections, the full line is once again available exclusively from TVAG.

Masterfully cast by Tom Dye of GFI/MiniFigs USA, the figures come from newly mastered molds and are as crisp and full of character as ever.

"Rough Riders!" consists of all troop types actually sent to Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippine Islands by the United States, and as they fought the defending Spanish forces. The Spanish are themselves well represented by the troops (as defined by recognizable uniform types) defending the last outposts of their former Empire.

And as combat with the Spanish ended, new foes appeared. Of these, the most colorful and exotic were Spain's perenial Philippine enemies, the Moros. "Rough Riders!" provides these fanatical warriors and their lethal weapons in spades.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Dispatches from the edges of civilised places

Erudite fans of this blog will have noted the blasphemous time since the last post. I have nothing to offer but a sincere mea culpa and beg forgiveness based on other gaming diversions and the brewing of beer.  Somehow though we have grown to almost a hundred followers, so I guess some of the content endures in utility. 

Instead I present this offering, posted recently by Mssr Blease to rekindle the spirit of adventure and daring-do!

'Ere's To You Fuzzy-Wuzzy

David Manley kindly invited me around for a game of his fledgling Sudan rules (Don't Throw, Bloody Spears, At Me!) tonight. Fast play simple rules they worked really well using a random card based move sequence (that almost worked in my favour in the end game) which gave a very good period feel.


I took the role of the "pore benighted" Madhists against the pride of the British Empire and decided to dispense with convoluted tactics advancing to contact as quickly as possible. Unfortunately one fuzzy-wuzzy unit seemed very reluctant to enter battle and kept rolling half movement for most of the game!


Contact was made on both flanks quite quickly. On the left DM's cavalry squadrons took out half my camel unit but came unstuck against a heroic band of fuzzy-wuzzys who managed to destroy both squadrons (the Madhist cannon picking off the sole survivor at long range with a lucky die roll). Unfortunately on the right my cavalry disintergrated after one volley from the Naval Brigade.


The card based activation system dictates whose move it is and I managed two simultaneous moves before DM pulled the Joker ending the turn without the British moving. I then pulled another black card so had a third move whilst all the British could do is defensive fire.


This run on the cards allowed me to seize the initiative and I managed to overrun and destroy one British infantry regiment, who had formed square after my surviving camels got behind the British line, however I did not quite have enough to break the second British regiment before DM managed to pull a card allowing the British to move again. The Naval Brigade swung into action and in a volley of Martini and cannon fire the Madhist centre was ripped apart with the Madhi himself dying as DM ordered rapid fire!


Overall an enjoyable game and it had a wonderful colonial feel with the plucky Brits managing to stand firm and grab victory at the end despite the breaking of one square and the incompetent behaviour of their cavalry.


So 'ere's ~to~ you, Fuzzy-Wuzzy, at your 'ome in the Soudan;
You're a pore benighted 'eathen but a first-class fightin' man;
An' 'ere's ~to~ you, Fuzzy-Wuzzy, with your 'ayrick 'ead of 'air --
You big black boundin' beggar -- for you broke a British square!

Friday, April 9, 2010

Little Wars Melbourne

Melbourne's Annual Wargames Participation Event is coming up next month.
God (and families) willing, Owen and I shall be in attendance!

We have signed up for "Jurrassic Reich" in the AM:



By late 1944 German scientists have developed the technology to breed dinosaurs, and ‘Dino’ de Laurentis had been induced to begin filming a documentary on the new pride of the German Army “Krieg-X”



American War Correspondent Ginger Snaps has been kidnapped and coerced into appearing in the film to lend it credibility. A special command unit headed by Sergeant Stone has been tasked with rescuing Ginger and destroying Project Krieg X. Can you help? Your country needs you!






To be then followed by some VSF War of the worlds action in the PM. This will be using the GASLIGHT rules, whichI havent tried before but am looking forward to!







Looking forward to it!



http://www.littlewars.net.au/

Monday, January 11, 2010

Open the Gin...again!


The Factorium is still boxed up but the bar is unpacked and we are back online in a secret new location in the southern provinces of the colony!

The new residence (a true heritage syle mansion I must say) even has its own lemon tree for the freshest GnTs possible - lovely!

[and I see we cracked 60 followers in the meantime - welcome lads!]

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Once more into the Hindu-kush!

The baggage is packed and the bearers are ready. A small yet well furnished palanquin has been prepared for the ladies travelling with us. Time to depart for the new abode - I will rejoin the YIAWWS team once the bar has been erected at the new estate!

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Factorium Closes

In preparation for next week's relocation to more southern provinces of the Colonies, my VSF Factorium has now officially ceased production. Today saw packing begin in earnest, including the boxing of factorium automatons and materiel.
We hope to re-commence production of vital war supplies as soon as possible.
Long live the Queen!