Task Management Made Gamer-Friendly

What’s the difference, really, between shuffling off to the Xerox machine to make 50 copies of the TPS reports, and shuffling down to Un’Goro Crater to get 15 pieces of dinosaur meat for your Venomhide Ravasaur? Not much, except there’s a more tangible reward for the latter. Gamer-friendly PIM QuestTracker (free/donationware) manages them both the same way.

If you’re looking for something to replace Microsoft Project, this isn’t it. Featurewise, QuestTracker is very sparse, on par with the task lister built into Gmail. It supports one level of hierarchy; you have quest groups, and quests within them. You cannot reorder quests in a group, or groups in the window. Quests are either done or undone. Each quest can have a detailed text description, describing what needs to be done, how, why, or anything else.

You can set a quest to be recurring. For example, no matter how often you complete the quest “Empty The Trash,” it comes back each morning (or whatever period of time you set), and you don’t even need to hunt down a goblin with punctuation hovering over his head. By default, completed quests are hidden, though not deleted. You can show completed quests, but instead of being checked, they are highlighted in green.

It is also possible to export or import quest lists, which is useful when upgrading to new versions, as QuestTracker is rapidly adding features. This is important, as QuestTracker right now is a nifty idea waiting to blossom. Simply calling tasks “quests” isn’t an exceptional bit of functionality. I would love it if QuestTracker borrowed a bit more from Warcraft. For example, a typical WoW quest would have you gather 15 goblin ears, and track that you’ve collected 7/15. This is more useful than a simple “You have done it/You have not done it” interface. Many quests are also staged: Do part 1, you get part 2. A tracking system which didn’t show you the “next quest” until you’ve completed the “current” one would be helpful, adding more depth and imposing an order on completion.

QuestTracker would also benefit from an aesthetic makeover. It borrows concepts from WoW, but is very graphically plain. The overall structure–”Quests” to the left, descriptions to the right–is the same, but no one looking at it would confuse it with an in-game window. There are tons of fonts out there which strongly resemble Blizzard’s chosen typefaces; you might as well play up the connection in look and feel.

If you need a very straightforward quest…I mean, task…tracking program that is extremely lightweight (ideal for netbooks), QuestTracker is worth checking out. Despite being a fairly early beta, I noticed no stability problems. Development is ongoing, and QuestTracker is free and open source. Overall, I’d say Quest Tracker shows promise for open world task management quests, but it isn’t ready to start seriously raiding endgame productivity instances.

I’m French No 1, I should play when I want, says Tsonga

Jo-Wilfried Tsonga urged French Open organisers to extend him the same kind of courtesy granted to Britain’s Andy Murray at Wimbledon after his preparations were upset by unexpectedly playing a day early.

Tsonga, seeded eighth in Paris, asked organisers if he could start his Roland Garros campaign either on Monday or Tuesday but his request was turned down and the burly right-hander made his bow on Sunday’s low-key opening day programme.

“We are in France. I’m French. I’m French number one. I would have thought it was legitimate for me to be listened to, that I would be given a choice. They should listen to me when I wanted to play or start,” Tsonga told reporters after his 6-0 6-1 6-4 second-round win over compatriot Josselin Ouanna on Wednesday.

“I had asked not to play on a Sunday because I had practised in such a way that I thought I wanted to play on a Monday or Tuesday, to be totally fit.

“But they imposed it on me. If you’re world No. 80 and you’re not that important in the hierarchy, if I can say, loads of things are imposed on you in this case.

“What really bothered me is that, you know, if you look at (Andy) Murray, if he decides on a day or hour at Wimbledon, nobody is going to impose anything on him.”

Organisers were not immediately available for comment.

Fellow Frenchman Richard Gasquet also had his request to play on Monday or Tuesday denied by organisers and played his first-round match against Briton Murray just two days after beating Fernando Verdasco in the Nice Open final.

Gasquet won the first two sets in dazzling fashion before running out of steam, bowing out after a five-set battle.

“24 hours (of recuperation), it’s important. It would have made a difference but I knew I could play either on Monday or Tuesday,” said Gasquet.

“I needed some luck. I did not get any.”

That kind of bad luck would not strike Roger Federer or other top names in the sport, according to Tsonga.

“For Federer in his country it’s the same,” he said.

“In the U.S. I suppose it’s the same thing for the best American players.”

“I expected a bit more from the organisers.”

(Editing by Miles Evans; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

‘In the dark’ Benitez fears the worst for his Liverpool future

London, Apr 29(ANI): Liverpool manager Rafa Benitez has increased the uncertainty over his position in the club, saying that he has received no reassurances from the club’s hierarchy.

“No one has spoken to me. For one year I have been listening to stories about Martin O’Neill taking my job or Klinsmann, Mourinho, Rijkaard or Hiddink,” The Daily Express quoted Benitez, as saying.

“I have to keep doing my job. All I can do is focus on the next game,” he added.

There has been speculation about the future of Benitez after his failure to challenge for the title, but Liverpool Chairman Martin Broughton had said that Benitez was still the ideal man to be manager.

“Rafa is a good manager. We want him to stay, he”s contracted to stay, so I’m assuming he’s staying,” Broughton had said. (ANI)

Ferguson wants Moyes to succeed him at Man U

London, Apr 21 (ANI): Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson wants Everton boss David Moyes to succeed him at Old Trafford.

Ferguson, 68, is convinced that Moyes can provide the continuity that United craves for to keep them challenging for top honours.

Jose Mourinho, however, is the bookies favourite and enjoys a close relationship with Ferguson from his time as coach with Chelsea.

But the United hierarchy, including the influential Sir Bobby Charlton, are not convinced, The Sun reports.

Ferguson knows fellow Glaswegian Moyes, 46, well and has constantly championed his achievements at Preston, and now Everton.

He also believes it is right to give a good British manager the chance to take one of the big jobs in England football. (ANI)

Pecking order determines flock formation

A team of international researchers has discovered how birds manage to fly in such perfect formation.

The scientists found that through a complex hierarchy of leadership, each bird contributes to decisions about the movement of the flock.

Until now there were two theories about what governs the movement of a flock; either it fell to a leadership group of one or more birds, or it was an egalitarian system with each bird contributing to the decision.

But by attaching GPS devices to pigeons, the study found every bird plays a part.

“There was a kind of hierarchy of leadership within the group which means that in fact every individual did seem to have an input into what the flock did, but the weighting of their influences varied according to what the rank of the bird was within the flock,” Dora Biro from Oxford University’s Department of Zoology said.

“So some birds tended to do more leading than others.”

But the researchers did not find out what determines where in the hierarchy each bird sits.

“That’s something that we would very much like to extend this current work to,” Dr Biro said.

What is clear though is that every bird in the flock plays a leadership role.

“For instance, even the ones lower down the chain are responded to, are followed by the ones that are even further down the chain than they are,” Dr Biro said.

“So in fact, this is kind of what we mean by every individual having a vote because every individual has some contribution, can have some contribution to what the flock does.

“But how much they influence is ultimately determined by how far down the chain they are.”

The study, published in Nature magazine, also found the group’s leaders are likely to be in the front of the flock.

It also found that because birds prefer left-eye vision, those with an inferior standing tend to be positioned to the right.

Teeny GPS

The study involved strapping tiny GPS devices to each of the birds’ backs.

“We fitted them with kind of a cloth backpack that the GPS just slotted into,” Dr Biro said.

“These devices recorded the position of the birds with very high temporal resolution so we had positional fixes every 50th second. So every 0.2 seconds we knew where each of the birds was.

“And from the kind of shift from one fix to the next we could work out which bird was the kind of first one to make a turn and which of the others followed.”

Dr Biro is also interested if finding out whether this discovery applies to other animals that flock or herd.

“We’d have to go and track other species with a similar kind of accuracy, spatial and temporal accuracy that we managed to track these pigeons with,” she said.

“But you could think of other scenarios where groups face a kind of collective decision-making problem.”

Mitchell to stand down as Force coach

Western Force coach John Mitchell claims his team’s calamitous start to the Super 14 season has nothing to do with his decision to step down when his current contract expires.

Mitchell, coach of the Force since its foundation year of 2006, today confirmed he would not seek reappointment when his current deal expires at the end of next season.

The Force have endured a disastrous start to their 2010 campaign, losing their opening five games as injuries to key players including marquee signing Andre Pretorius, David Pocock, Cameron Shepherd and Richard Brown took their toll.

But The Fordham Company, which manages Mitchell, claimed their client made his decision to step away before the season even started.

“Because of the circumstances of the Force’s injury-plagued start to the year, John’s focus recently has been squarely on the team and not on himself,” the agency’s chief executive John Fordham said in a statement.

“But because Vern (Force chief executive Vern Reid) has been keen for some time to have a chat about John’s future plans, I decided this morning to be totally transparent with him.

“The Force now has ample time to recruit a replacement and John always wanted to give them the courtesy of a long window.”

Mitchell, who through a statement expressed his desire to see out his current contract, has endured a rocky ride in his four-and-a-half years at the Force.

Alleged complaints from players and staff about their dealings with Mitchell in late 2008 threatened his hold on the top job as the club’s hierarchy ordered an independent inquiry in an attempt to defuse the situation.

Mitchell was temporarily stood down and a raft of recommendations from the inquiry were implemented, the most notable being a more even spread of power among the coaching staff.

The changes seemed to ease most of the tensions as the Force finished eighth in 2009, which included the Triple Crown with wins over Australian rivals the Reds, Waratahs and Brumbies.

But the Firepower sponsorship debacle, which led to the departures of Matt Giteau to the Brumbies and Drew Mitchell to New South Wales at the end of last season, left gaping holes in the Force’s playing roster.

While the recruitment of former Springbok Pretorius was hailed as a coup, his season-ending hamstring injury on the eve of round one was a devastating blow and one the Force never recovered from as the injury-curse spread throughout the team.

In 57 games at the helm of the Force, Mitchell has guided the Perth-based franchise to 20 wins, four draws and 33 losses.

That record is in stark contrast to his stint at the All Blacks, where he enjoyed an 86 per cent winning record before being axed after failing to lead the side to glory at the 2003 World Cup.

Reid could not be contacted for comment on Wednesday.

-AAP

Maya site inhabitants manufactured weapons and tools

Washington, March 15 (ANI): Exploratory work in Mexico has revealed an archaeological site of Maya affiliation dedicated exclusively to manufacture weapons and tools.

San Claudio “was occupied from 200 BC to 900 AD by Maya workers at the service of other community of higher hierarchy”, archaeologist Jose Luis Romero Rivera, director of the excavation project at the site, told artdaily.org

Located in the contact region between Chiapas Mountain Range and Guatemala, this site accounts for quotidian life of ancient Maya population dedicated to weapons and tools manufacture, which were commercialized with other towns.

“One of the main activities at the site was flint exploitation; we have found a great amount of this mineral debris all over the place. Due to its relatively easy manipulation, it was used to create sharp tools such as knives, axes and arrowheads,” said Rivera.

Flint was a strategic material since metal was not known and they would not count on with obsidian, controlled by most important cities, he added.

They created an industry based on exploitation and commercialization of this mineral, displacing obsidian and allowing them to be independent from great commercial networks.

Romero Rivera declared that the site has been researched by the Institute since 1998; “it is not one of the great Maya capitals, but a small site probably subdued to Piedras Negras ancient city, located 40 kilometers away from San Claudio.”

“We have not found inscriptions or architectural elements such as in places like Palenque. There are no tall buildings, but urban organization is delimited by rectangular patios probably used to manufacture objects,” he said.

The archaeologist commented that to present, 3 buildings have been explored, of 97 detected at the site; most of them correspond to pyramidal bases and platforms, distributed on a 70 hectares area.

“We have not found a defined architectural style at San Claudio, but a strong influence of Peten is present; there are battered bases with rounded corners,” he said. (ANI)

Cats eager to re-sign finals hero Lisch

Perth’s hierarchy will move quickly to re-sign Kevin Lisch after the US import starred in the Wildcats’ 96-72 title-winning NBL triumph over Wollongong Hawks on Friday night.

But whether or not the Cats ink a new deal with Lisch, they will lose 36-year-old journeyman Martin Cattalini who retired after snaring his fourth Championship ring.

Lisch drained 29 points and nailed five of nine three-pointers, including one from three metres behind the arc on the three-quarter time buzzer, to lead Perth to the crushing victory in the deciding game three.

The 23-year-old, who scored 15 points in game one and 11 in game two, was named the grand final MVP and coach Rob Beveridge confirmed Lisch was a wanted man at Perth.

“He was everything I was looking for in terms of the work ethic, the attitude, the character,” he said.

“He’s still young and only going to improve.

“Kevin’s earned his right to continue for sure.”

But while Beveridge is confident of locking in his uncontracted players as he attempts to create a dynasty, Hawks coach Gordie McLeod is unsure whether he will be able to do the same.

“I would say it would be pretty hard for us to do that [keep this squad together] because with another team coming in I think a lot of players on the team this year have proven they can play at this level,” McLeod said.

“We only spent just over $700,000 on the cap this year so the guys aren’t playing for big bucks, they play from the heart.

“I think a lot of clubs will want to come and get some players but we’ll sit down with all our guys in the coming week and we’ll talk about the future.”

McLeod said he was confident the club, which was on the verge of folding less than 12 months ago, would continue into next season.

“We’ve done all we can do and now it’s a matter of waiting to see what decisions are made,” he said.

The Hawks led by 11 points early in the second quarter but Lisch and Damian Martin (17 points) turned the tide Perth’s way.

The home side erased the deficit in just four minutes before sealing the win with a dominant 31-15 third quarter.

Cattalini told his team-mates of his decision to retire on Thursday and Beveridge used the announcement as extra motivation.

“We spoke as a group that we wanted to do it for ourselves but said let’s do it for Martin as well,” Beveridge said.

“He’s an icon in the NBL … he was a huge part of our group and we’re going to miss him immensely.”

Beveridge, who almost left Australia after a horror run at the now-defunct Sydney Spirit last season when he was not even being paid at times, admitted his Wildcats unit had exceeded all expectations.

“When we put the team together it was about two or three years down the track,” he said.

“The way everything is run [at Perth] has put me in a position to be able to excel and I’m extremely thankful because I was at the bottom of the basketball doldrums, it was really bad.

“I was out of here and to be thrown a lifeline in Perth and to achieve this … it’s unbelievable.”

- AAP

Mayawati slams Congress party’s austerity drive

Lucknow, Sep 18 (ANI): Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati has ridiculed Congress party’s austerity drive, terming it as a ploy to steer attention away from the steep price rise.

Addressing a mass rally here on Thursday, Mayawati hit out at the Congress party, calling its austerity drive “a drama.”

“Because of the wrong doings by the Congress government at the centre, the prices are rising due to which poor people across the country are suffering. And now to cover up its weaknesses, they have cut down on its travelling expenses by flying economy class and travelling by train. All this is just a drama,” Mayawati said.

“With a drought looming and elections in some states approaching, the Congress-led government has embarked on a much-publicised austerity drive,” she added.

In a country where the hierarchy of politicians is determined by the size of their bungalows and their convoys, Congress Party President Sonia Gandhi has asked party leaders to give up a fifth of their salaries for drought-relief work, and she flew economy class on a commercial flight to Mumbai to launch the poll campaign.

The finance ministry has appealed for fewer overseas trips with smaller entourages, and a ban on conferences in luxury hotels.

Bharatiya Janata Party and other political parties have criticised the austerity measures in view of the economic downturn and drought-like situation prevailing in the country as a case of ‘tokenism’. (ANI)

Sharifs soften stance against Musharraf trial under Saudi pressure

Islamabad, Sep 7 (ANI): The Sharif brothers and top leadership of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) are believed to have softened their demand for the trial of former President Pervez Musharraf owing to international pressure by his guarantors, including the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Well-placed party sources said that the PML-N central leadership would take the party hierarchy into confidence about the pressure for softening their anti-Musharraf stance and to chalk out the party’s new plan of action to prepare it for next elections at party’s scheduled CEC meeting in Murree on Monday.

Sources attach great importance to Nawaz Sharif’s visit to Saudi Arabia in next few days where apart from performing Umrah he is expected to meet the Saudi high-ups in the backdrop of Musharraf’s recent visit to the Kingdom and his meeting with the King Abdullah.

The Nation quoted sources as saying that Saudi authorities have already conveyed to the Sharifs to take soft stance on Musharraf’s trial as the Kingdom regards him needy for help and cooperation as they were while out of power.

The meeting, sources further said, would discuss and evolve a comprehensive strategy to hold party’s elections but after pushing it through an intense process of restructuring and reorganization at grass root level in all parts of the country.

The CEC meeting would decide about the election timeframe either by the end of this year or early next year.

The meeting would also take host of political issues for consideration including PML-N, PPP relations, law and order situation in Balochistan, fate of Local Bodies and implementation of Charter of Democracy by the PPP-led coalition government, they added. (ANI)

Senior FBI agent says Gaddafi may have sanctioned Lockerbie bombing

Jerusalem, Sep. 4 (ANI): A senior FBI agent has claimed that Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi must have personally okayed the 1988 Lockerbie bombing that killed 270 people.

Richard Marquise, an FBI veteran who led the US task force probing the December 1988 blast, said it is unthinkable that such a major terrorist attack in a regime like Libya could have been authorized without Gaddafi’s approval.

“If you were a senior minister, would you do this without telling the boss? I doubt it. I have to think [Gaddafi] knew something was going to happen, something that the US would be pissed about, and he said OK,” The Jerusalem Post quoted Marquise, as saying.

He said investigators had tried to pursue the chain of responsibility up through the Libyan hierarchy, but had been unable to muster the necessary evidence.

“We couldn’t make the connections… A lot of names came up… We had names of people in the Libyan hierarchy, buying radios, making inquiries about putting bombs in radios,” Marquise said.

The bomb that destroyed Pan Am 103 was hidden in a Toshiba radio cassette player.

“But there was no real overt act [that could serve as the basis for an indictment. It would have been nice to indict the entire Libyan regime, but our system wouldn’t allow for it. It would have been a real struggle to show Gaddafi and others in the chain,” he said.

Marquise said he was also convinced that Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, the former Libyan intelligence officer who is the only man ever convicted in the attack, was no “rogue” agent.

“It had been hoped that Megrahi would give us the whole story, and go up the chain. That didn’t happen. And Megrahi never talked. He did everything for his leader,” he said. (ANI)

Fashion may have emerged 80,000 years ago in form of shell beads

London, August 28 (ANI): A new study by an international team of researchers from France, South Africa, Germany, Israel and the UK has confirmed that 80,000-year-old shell beads found in caves in North Africa represent some of the earliest evidence of the use of personal ornamentation, which also points to the dawn of modern human behaviour.

According to a report carried out by the Planet Earth Online, the beads provide evidence that the people alive at the time were acting much like modern humans.

“There is a problem with linking anatomically modern humans with behaviourally modern humans,” said Professor Nick Barton of the University of Oxford UK, and one of the authors of the study. “These people may have looked like us, but were they behaving the same?” he added.

The presence of the beads suggests the people who made and wore them behaved in ways we would recognize.

Using symbolic items like shell beads to communicate ideas about the wearer requires skills found only in modern humans, including a well-developed language and the ability to use abstract concepts.

The researchers analyzed 25 beads from four sites in North Africa from the Middle Palaeolithic period.

The beads, consisting of the shells of sea snails called Nassarius, had been transported some distance from the marine environment in which they’re usually found, and showed evidence of deliberate alterations.

“We found evidence they had been strung together as in a necklace or bracelet,” said Barton.

The shells had been deliberately perforated using stone tools and the researchers found distinctive wear patterns which suggested they had been rubbing together.

Wear marks around the perforations indicated the shells had been threaded on a string.

Several had also been covered with a pigment called red ochre and one shell showed evidence of heating, possibly to alter its colour.

As to what purpose the coloured beads served, Barton said, “What they were signalling, we’re not entirely sure. Possibly, they were an insurance policy, if you had shared access to certain resources and wanted to identify yourself to members of another group.”

The beads may also have let wearers identify members of the same social group, preventing unnecessary conflicts.

Alternatively, the beads might have provided personal information about the wearer, such as the wearer’s position in the social hierarchy, or that they had passed through puberty and into adulthood.

These beads might have also represented the origins of today’s fashions. (ANI)

Samy Vellu disappointed with caste politics reports within MIC

Kuala Lumpur, Aug. 26 (ANI): Malaysian Indian Congress chief S. Samy Vellu has expressed disappointment over reports that many top party leaders are indulging in caste politics in the wake of election for top party posts.

On the list could be former deputy president S. Subramaniam, who is going for the number two position, and his challenger and former vice-president, S. Sothinathan.

The New Strait Times quoted Samy Vellu, as saying that the party is investigating certain party leaders for alleged involvement in caste politics.

“We have been monitoring their activities and their association with some MIC leaders. They have been damaging the party and it is time for us to act. We are considering action against members working hand in glove with these businessmen to use caste to win the elections,” he said.

Earlier, a newspaper had quoted a source as saying that a group calling itself namavar or “our people”, and said to be chaired by millionaire businessman Datuk Vyran T. Raj, had met separately with Subramaniam and Sothinathan last month.

Subramaniam, reportedly, said he would abolish caste politics and open the MIC to all Indians if voted in.

Samy Vellu said the MIC would seek an explanation from because his alleged statement was tantamount to branding the MIC as a caste-based party.

“The Malaysian Indian community is totally against the caste system, especially in politics. There is no room for people who advocate caste in the party. The MIC is for all Indians and we will not hesitate to act against leaders or members who use caste to advance their political career,” Samy Vellu said.

It is understood that caste has always been an issue in the party, with the majority of members belonging to depressed castes disgruntled over the lack of opportunities for advancement in the hierarchy. (ANI)

German academic calls humour ‘an act of aggression’

London, August 24 (ANI): A German academic sees humour as an act of aggression, and says that people who make others laugh think that they are higher up the social ladder than their audiences.

Helga Kotthoff, of the Frieburg University of Education, claims that dominant people exploit the ability to make others laugh as a degree of control to show that they are in charge.

“Those ‘on top’ are freer to make others laugh. They are also freer to be more aggressive and a lot of what is funny is making jokes at someone else’s expense,” the Telegraph quoted her as saying.

“Displaying humour means taking control of the situation from those higher up the hierarchy and this is risky for people of lower status, which before the 1960s meant women rarely made other people laugh-they couldn’t afford to.

“Comedy and satire are based on aggressiveness and not being nice. Until the 1960s it was seen as unladylike to be funny. But even now women tend to prefer telling jokes at their own expense and men tend to prefer telling jokes at other people’s expense,” she added.

According to Helga, the differences between men’s and women’s ability to become comedians starts very young.

She supports this by pointing out that boys as young as four can be seen telling more jokes, frolicking, and clowning about, whereas the girls tend to be the ones doing the laughing.

However, she adds, women tend to become funnier in later age because they feel freer to not be seen as ladylike.

Helga thinks that humour, including teasing, is a mix of “bonding and biting”, which is often used by women to form social bonds with their friends.

Men, on the other hand, often use humour to vent frustration, she says.

However, according to Helga, both sexes use comedy as a means of controlling others.

She said: “For example, doctors sometimes use humour to comfort patients but also to silence them if, for example, the patient displays too much knowledge of a medical condition. Nurses and midwives tend to tell jokes about patients but not when the doctor is present. And when someone initiates a joke they tend to be ignored if they are in the presence of someone of a higher status.”

Helga even suggested that it was because of the fact that most humour is an act of aggression that women rarely became comediennes in public or private until the sexual revolution of the 1960s.

“A study in the late 1980s showed that men use sexual jokes as a way of verbally undressing a woman who rebuts his advances; his humour was aggressive in essence,” she said.

The study was published in the Journal of Pragmatics. (ANI)

Ponting trying to divert attention from Oz failure: Flower

London, July 15 (ANI): Reacting for the first time after a spellbinding climax in the Cardiff Test, coach Andy Flower has said that Australian skipper Ricky Ponting by accusing the England team of delaying tactics, is trying to deflect attention from Australia’s failure to take the wicket they needed to go ahead in the Ashes series

The England’s team director totally rejected the assertion that his side was guilty of gamesmanship if not cheating.

“I am a little surprised at all the hullabaloo over it, to be honest. From my own perspective, in that last hour of the game, there was no time wasting by us. Have a look at the footage yourself. Never did we consciously try to waste time,” he said.

Flower was upset by the allegations of Ponting, who said in the immediate aftermath that England’s behaviour in twice sending out their 12th man in the closing stages was “pretty ordinary.”

Ponting also suggested that the issue should be taken up with the England hierarchy, The Independent reported.

“He has got his own opinion, and I respect his opinion. He is a very good cricketer and has been a very good ambassador for Australia. But in this instance, I think he has made a meal of it,” Flower said.

Flower added that Ponting was making far too much of it and deflecting attention from what really mattered – England’s great escape and Australia’s failure to take the wicket they needed to go ahead in the series.

Flower seemed perplexed by the attention that has been given to England’s decision to send on the 12th man, Bilal Shafayat, in successive overs, the second time accompanied by the team physiotherapist, Steve McCaig.

“Most teams in those situations, you have batsmen talking in the middle for extended periods, knocking down the pitch, changing gloves, getting drinks, which all waste time. At no stage in the last couple of hours did we do that,” Flower said.

“The second point, was that there was perceived confusion out in the middle about what time the game was going to end. We needed to get messages out to them to make sure they were clear.” (ANI)

Lankan refugee camps are not simply temporary shelters

Toronto, Mar 23 (ANI): Thousands of Sri Lankan Tamil families in the country’s south, who were divided for years by the war and finally able to see relatives in the north, are now learning that the government camps are not simply temporary shelters for those who have lost their homes.

The network, which spans the country’s north, holds almost 300,000 people, and is designed to separate the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam fighters from the civilian population using former Tamil Tiger cadres as “witnesses.”

More than 40 per cent of those in the camps are children, according to surveys by UNICEF, and they will stay until their parents have been screened for Tiger affiliations.

The detainees are not just those who have fled the violence, but the entire civilian population of the northeastern conflict area, which is being swept clean of inhabitants by the military, Globe and Mail reports.

Sri Lankan officials say they face a problem: The LTTE effectively militarized large parts of the Tamil population in the breakaway state of Tamil Eelam, in the northern strip of land it controlled until its defeat on Monday.

Fighters, officers and trained suicide bombers are embedded in the civilian population, and include some younger teenagers and older children, so the screening process is bound to be complex, perhaps impossible.

To accomplish the task, they have created an elaborate hierarchy of 41 locations, most of them in remote northern areas, with no access to guests, family members or journalists, and with only restricted contact for aid agencies, the paper reports.

The Sri Lankan Government calls the first and largest tier of camps “welfare villages” and they currently house as many as 280,000 people, some in abandoned schools, but most in cities of tents provided by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.

The largest of these is a cluster of camps north of Vavuniya, in the centre of the island’s north, containing more than 200,000 people over an area of 16 square kilometres.

The government had intended to put all Tamils in this complex, but abandoned that plan because “it got so large that it is swimming” in its waste, a health official said. Now there are subsidiary camps of 11,0000 detainees near Jaffna, in the far north, and of 6,000 in Pulmoddai, in the northeast, Globe and Mail reports.

Second are the “rehabilitation centres,” high-security facilities where suspected Tamil Tiger fighters, mainly male, are held indefinitely.

Military officials said that these centres, which hold almost 3,000 suspected fighters, are used to extract information about the identities of other rebels, and to prepare known fighters to identify former comrades in “screening” operations. It is not known what forms of interrogation are used here, the paper reports.

Finally, there is a very high-security facility on the south coast of Sri Lanka near Galle, where suspected senior LTTE officials and supporters are held and interrogated. One official, a junior officer involved with the screening process, said: “This is our Guantanamo Bay.”

All civilians are required to move into basic camps and are kept until they can be removed to “screening points” where they can be positively identified as non-combatants by panels of witnesses – Tamil Tiger officers who have been “rehabilitated” at tougher, more secure camps. (ANI)

Drogba hopes personal apology will save his Chelsea career

London, May 17 (ANI): Chelsea striker Didier Drogba has given a personal apology to club owner Roman Abramovich, paving the way for the controversial player to stay at Stamford Bridge.

The Chelsea hierarchy took a dim view of his behaviour in the aftermath of their Champions League exit against Barcelona and, with only a year on his contract, Drogba seemed certain to be sold this summer.

The Sun reports that the club’s billionaire owner will ultimately make the decision on Drogba’s future in the absence of a permanent coach.

But a source close to Drogba said: “Didier is totally committed to Chelsea despite the fallout from the semi-final. The club have been supportive of him over the years and he wants to repay that faith.”

With the FA Cup Final against Everton looming, Drogba is determined to end the season on a high and his contrition over the Barcelona bust-up at least looks to have earned him contract talks in the summer.

It is believed the Ivorian would love to sign a long-term deal which would see him end his career at Stamford Bridge. But the club would have reservations about handing a lengthy contract to a player who turned 31 two months ago. (ANI)

Strong social networks benefit baboons

Washington, May 9 (ANI): A monkey communication expert at the University of Pennsylvania has suggested that baboons benefit from strong social networks.

Robert Seyfarth came up with this proposition while delivering a lecture on May 5, the kick-off of the University of Delaware’s Year of Darwin celebration, where he told a true story about a female baboon that herded goats in an African village.

He revealed that the baboon knew all of the relationships between the goats so well that at night she would carry a bleating kid from one barn directly to its mother in another barn.

“For all the centuries we’ve bred dogs, no dog has exhibited this knowledge of kids and mothers. The question is where does this mind come from?” said the Psychology professor at the university.

Seyfarth revealed that he and his research partner Dorothy Cheney, who happens to be his spouse, studied the baboons of Botswana’s Okavanga Delta from 1992 to 2008.

He said that his study suggested that the baboon’s ability to recognize social relationships was due to natural selection.

The researcher revealed that the baboons studied live in groups of 80-90 individuals. Males would leave the group in which they were born, while females stayed in the group for their entire lives, with close bonds to female relatives.

He said that the females were arranged in a matrilineal hierarchy of families, with ranks maintained for years. Although once in a while a coup was attempted, such moves were not often successful.

In their experiments, the researchers observed that baboons with names like Sylvia, Champagne, and Helen, and recorded their language, which consisted of no more than 18 sounds, and the interactions of their families.

They found that baboons used certain calls only in certain contexts. Screams and fear barks were only given from a lower-ranking to a higher-ranking baboon, while threat grunts were given only from a higher-ranking to a lower-ranking baboon.

The researchers recorded the various calls, played them in situations that “break the rules”, and determined from the animals’ behaviour that baboons were able to put together the discrete elements of identity, kinship, and rank.

“The animals somehow see this world in all of its complexity. It’s an innate property of the baboon mind — done instantly and unconsciously,” Seyfarth said.

He and Cheney were also able to measure the animals’ stress levels by analysing faecal samples for gluccocorticoid stress hormones. They found that pregnancy and incidences of predation to be major stressors.

Also, some high-ranking males practice infanticide, targeting infants by rank. Mothers may form relationships with lower-ranking males who will help look after their babies.

“Females respond to stress by associating with their closest grooming relationships. They turn to their support network if they lose someone. They broaden and extend to replace old relationships with new ones. Female baboons with strong social bonds survive better,” Seyfarth said.

Seyfarth and Cheney’s work is highlighted in the award-winning book Baboon Metaphysics: The Evolution of a Social Mind, published by the University of Chicago Press in 2007. (ANI)

Wenger turns Real Madrid 40 m pound offer to commit to Arsenal

London, May 3 (ANI): Arsene Wenger will commit the rest of his career to Arsenal after turning down a 40 million pound offer from the Spanish football club Real Madrid.

Real’s president-elect Florentino Perez was desperate to lure the Frenchman to Spain but the Gunners boss has decided to stay in England, reports The Sun.

Wenger would have been handed a five- year deal which, with bonuses for winning the Champions League and La Liga, would have added up to almost eight million pounds a year. He was also promised a free hand on recruitment by Perez, who also wanted him to eventually become Madrid’s sporting director.owever, despite being flattered by the deal, Wenger has decided to stay put and will sign a new deal at the Emirates that will tie him to Arsenal for at least another three years.

That will also give him the platform to begin the restructuring work Wenger knows he needs to carry out on his latest Arsenal team – starting with the sale of Emmanuel Adebayor to AC Milan.

Wenger’s current contract is up at the end of next season and the Arsenal board are anxious to get another deal in place as quickly as possible.

They were fully aware of Madrid’s overtures to their manager and that Bayern Munich were also interested. But they will now be delighted to discover Wenger has no plans to leave as the club prepares for its Champions League showdown with Manchester United.

He has always insisted he would never break a contract but influential members of the Arsenal hierarchy were concerned Wenger was simply running down his present deal. Now, however, they can start planning for the future safe, in the knowledge Wenger, 59, is still committed to the cause. (ANI)

Official Washington prefer more-breezy, fly-in, fly-out casual partying events

Washington, Apr.30 (ANI): Socialising and partying in official Washington has undergone a change in the last decade and a half.

Washington doesn’t demand or even want a sit-down dinner with an evening port.

According to Politico, partygoers tend to prefer more-breezy, fly-in, fly-out casual events, like birthday parties for A-list reporters and staffers.

Faced with the most terrifying economic crisis since the Great Depression, two wars, the looming collapse of the auto industry, a swine flu epidemic and even a few pirate attacks, the city’s new establishment hasn’t had the time – or perhaps the inclination – to elect a new power hostess.

“The first 100 days, the economy wasn’t solved and the new hostess hasn’t been identified,” says journalist Margaret Carlson, who has a knack for bringing people together.

Its essentially par for the course that every incoming administration reshuffles the Washington deck – effectively determining who’s powerful and who’s not. But as any decent lobbyist will tell you, access is the key to power, and few control the access to the city’s political hierarchy more directly than the reigning social chair.

The doyennes of yesteryear — Democratic powerhouse Esther Coopersmith, the well-known Sally Quinn, and Beth Dozoretz, a friend of the Clintons, remain social fixtures. These women still host fabulous parties.

Several years ago, two new party players – Juleanna Glover and Nancy Jacobson Penn – popped up on the horizon, offering food, drink and expansive homes for White House officials, members of Congress, senators, Capitol Hill staff, lobbyists, reporters and even then-Vice President Dick Cheney.

Glover, a Republican, was more than willing to throw a party for anyone from the newly minted head of CNN’s Washington bureau to visiting A-listers such as businessman John Tisch.

Jacobson Penn, conveniently a Democrat, used her impressive Rolodex to transform her palatial Georgetown home into a sort of social foxhole for Democrats in a town that was run by Republicans.

Between them, Glover and Jacobson Penn had the social cartography of political Washington covered.

Still, the grandeur of a Katharine Graham soiree is missing – the utter sophistication and French chefs replaced by appetizers from Costco.

So who’s in line for the new throne?

Communications guru, avid party-thrower and overall Washington political scene expert Jim Courtovich says that “the list is still emerging.” (ANI)