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Posts Tagged ‘front’

An easterner to the front

Could a former president of Latvia make it as the European Union president?

OPTIMISTIC Latvians are thin on the ground these days. The combination of fractious politics and a dismal economic outlook blunts the enthusiasm of even the most cheerfully patriotic soul. All the more reason, therefore, to applaud the announcement that the country’s former president, Vaira Vike-Freiberga, is running for the job of president of the European Union.

At first sight, Ms Vike-Freiberga’s chances seem vanishingly slim. And at a second glance they don’t look much fatter. On the plus side, she speaks perfect French. She is a woman. And she has no big enemies. Observers of Latvian politics in the years 1999-2007 (admittedly, not exactly a mainstream hobby in Brussels) remember her as an uncommonly effective president of that country. She proved a powerful bulwark against over-mighty tycoons bent on suborning Latvia’s independent institutions and a strong defender of probity in public office. …

Home front

In praise of insulation and thermostats

A DELUGE of information, computer modelling, policy suggestions and rhetoric is swamping the mind—and desk—of your correspondent in the run-up to the climate-change talks taking place in Copenhagen in December. But the simple message contained in one report is so stark that it caught his attention. On October 7th the International Energy Agency released an excerpt of its “World Energy Outlook 2009” that highlights the difference individuals can make.

The excerpt addresses the agency’s “450 scenario”—its view on the stable atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide (450 parts per million) that will halt climate change—and looks at a range of potential contributions to cuts in emissions that could be made by producing power differently and using energy more efficiently. The effects of these different technologies and strategies are popularly called “wedges”, because a graph showing how they effect carbon emissions over time is invariably wedge-shaped. …

Hilary Swank doesn’t mind being nude in front of beau’s son

Hilary Swank has said that she has no qualms about being naked in front of her boyfriend John Campisi’’s six-year-old son.
However, the ”P.S. I Love You” actress has admitted that she might have to start covering up soon.
“I don”t sleep in anything, but my boyfriend’’s son is six years old, and you wonder at what [...]

Basketball team given heroes’ welcome

Several thousand people gathered in front of the Belgrade assembly last night to welcome the Serbian basketball team home. The reception ended without incident.

When Aaron Eckhart bathed himself in his front yard!

Actor Aaron Eckhart recently stripped to his undergarments in front of his neighbours as he took bath at his front yard in his Los Angeles home.
The ‘Paycheck’ star had returned from Louisiana after a shoot, when he realized that his plumber had not fixed waterworks in his house.
So Eckhart could only douse himself with the [...]

How Google’s Data Liberation Front Can Boost Google Apps

Google’s Data Liberation Front enables data portability. This is of particular importance for the Google Apps enterprise team, which is trying to make it easier for users to move from their existing platforms to Google’s cloud computing applications. Google is working to let business users export entire Google Sites wikis as HTML with microformats, and to let users select multiple Docs files and export them in OpenOffice.org, HTML or Microsoft formats.
– While Google’s Data
Liberation Front Website is intended to educate consumers about how they
can move data to and from Google applications such as Gmail and Blogger, it
will be worth watching the effect the effort will have on Google Apps.
The Data Liberation Front consists of a special team of…


Briton shot in front of Belgrade nightclub

A British national shot last night near the Freestyler nightclub has undergone surgery and is in a stable condition, B92 understands from the Clinical Center. The injured young man, who is conscious, was taken to Casualty from the Centar hostel in Karađorđeva Street near the railway station.

Virtual front line

By Maggie Shiels
Technology reporter, BBC News, Silicon Valley

Austin Heap at the Iran Rally in San Francisco July 2009

At a recent demonstration in San Francisco, thousands of supporters chanted for freedom and democracy for Iran following the contested presidential election held in June.

More than 40 days have passed since the election result declared for Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and not opposition leader Mir Hussein Mousavi, whom many believed had really won.

People have died and gone to jail for their part in protesting the outcome and trying to tell the world about their plight.

As Iranians rushed to the internet and social networking sites like YouTube, Facebook and Twitter to vent their anger and organise rallies and demonstrations, the government countered by blocking them.

At the forefront in helping them has been a concerned tech community that has battled to find ways around Iranian government filters and blocks.

Among them is a 25-year-old, self-confessed geek who found himself on stage at the San Francisco rally explaining his role in a story that has variously gripped the world.

For many, Austin Heap has become one of a band of accidental heroes fighting on the virtual front lines to help Iranians speak out.

"A simple thing"

Mr Austin’s role started out as a fairly simple one: compile a list of as many proxy servers for people so that they could get around the Iranian government’s efforts to silence them.

Mr Heap also put out a set of simple instructions on how to set up these proxies, which act as an intermediary between a computer user and the internet to bypass censorship.

Message in Farsi saying access blocked, 25 May, 2009

In no time he became the main conduit of this list and was contacted by people all over the globe offering new proxy addresses.

Traffic to his site grew from a few dozen users a day to more than 100,000 in 24 hours.

"To me it seemed like such a simple thing to do," said Mr Heap from his downtown loft in the heart of San Francisco’s tech community.

"I have the technical skills and resources and I knew I could call on the world’s open source community for help to set up proxies. It seemed like it was something that wouldn’t take up much of my time but that could make a big difference for a lot of people.

"These are people who are just like me. Young, connected and Web 2.0 nerds. I couldn’t let them down," Mr Heap told BBC News.

Since then, the effort to keep Iran online has taken up all his free time and even eaten into his work time.

"I missed three weeks of work. No vacation. No Paris. I now work on this about 90 hours a week, from when I get up until I go to bed some days.

" It’s all about keeping these people online in one form or another. Giving them the power to be heard."

"A better place"

Today Mr Heap is not alone.

His main cyber activist cohort is 24 year old Daniel Colascione from Buffalo, New York, whom he met online and through the micro-blogging service Twitter.

"Daniel is phenomenal at understanding all those ones and zeros and bits and bytes like no one I know," said Mr Heap.

Protest in Iran

"As a matter of principal I had to do something to help. It was critically important for me, " explained Mr Colascione.

"We want to make the world a better place and make sure the people who died there didn’t die in vain."

Together the two 20-year-old somethings developed some anti-filtering software called Haystack. In lofty terms, Mr Heap said it "is designed to honestly uphold human rights via technology."

Less prosaically it is meant to help people inside Iran circumvent their own government’s filtering system.

"That means whenever someone inside the country gets a page saying ‘access denied’ when they try to use Twitter or Facebook, if they run Haystack Twitter is back, Facebook is back.

" It’s completely secure for the user so the government can’t snoop on them. We use many anonymising steps so that identities are masked and it is as safe as possible so people have a safe way to communicate with the world," explained Mr Heap.

National firewall

So just how effective have Mr Heap and others been in their efforts to get around the so called Iranian national firewall.

Arbor Networks monitors more than 70% of the world’s internet service providers, or ISP’s, along with many large businesses.

graph from Arbor networks

It has charted the flow of internet traffic in and out of Iran since the election and found that traffic is down an average of 30-40%.

"Throughout this period we have seen some severe filtering as the government consolidates its physical and virtual hold over its people," Arbor Network’s chief scientist Craig Labovitz told BBC News.

"It has been interesting watching those traffic manipulations and from our perspective it has looked as though Iran has struggled with the technology and the capacity to do the filtering. Folks are still finding their way around the filters."

Other software products similar to Haystack include FreeGate, which was devised to work around filtering efforts in China.

"Good versus evil"

Back in early June, before the election had taken place Mr Heap spent his spare time playing the online game World of Warcraft. He has admitted to knowing little about Iranian politics. Now all that has changed.

"I am a huge election protection advocate and free speech advocate. My friends joke that 45 days ago I knew nothing about the election. I just wasn’t paying attention but now all I see is censorship and violence and that disturbs me.

Austin Heap

"Today I still don’t know that much but I love programming and I know I can make a difference. I know it sounds hippy, but that is what techies do.

"Technology is about collaboration. Everything builds on everything else. And that is the beautiful part is that we are all in this together," said Mr Heap.

Mr Colascione agreed.

"There is a quote I am fond of and will mangle but "never doubt that a small group of common people can change the world."

"This project gives me a sense of significance. This is more important than anything I have ever done."

While both men say their primary focus is on Iran they hope the software they have devised can be used in other countries. They have their sights set on China next.

"It’s too cool to have an opportunity to help people," said Mr Heap.

"I love the power of the internet because we can chill behind our computer screen and not only do the right thing, but give people the uncensored internet back and let their voice be heard.

"We also get to take on a nutty government and I like that. I see this as a good versus evil issue," said Mr Heap.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Yoani Sanchez: Cuba And U.S. Start To Dismantle Their Mutual Insults

At night a few red flashes lit up a bit of the Malecon, just where the guards’ whistles warned that no one could sit….

Kate Hudson, A-Rod confirm romance rumours by smooching publicly

Actress Kate Hudson and baseball hunk Alex Rodriguez have confirmed that they are dating after the two were spotted locking lips in front of snappers at the New York Yankees annual picnic.
The actress has tried to keep her romance with Rodriguez quiet, but has failed to see off public interest in the relationship after she [...]

Kate Hudson, A-Rod confirm romance rumours by smooching publicly

Actress Kate Hudson and baseball hunk Alex Rodriguez have confirmed that they are dating after the two were spotted locking lips in front of snappers at the New York Yankees annual picnic.
The actress has tried to keep her romance with Rodriguez quiet, but has failed to see off public interest in the relationship after she [...]

Montelimar to Mont Ventoux – live!

Juan Manuel Garate’s stage victory was the only surprise on a horror-climb that left it “as you were” at the top of the general classification

The top five overall with one stage to go

1. Alberto Contador
2. Andy Schleck +4min 11sec
3. Lance Armstrong +5min 24sec
4. Bradley Wiggins +6min 01sec
5. Frank Schleck +6min 04sec

Yellow jersey: Alberto Contador (Spa/Astana)
Green jersey: Thor Hushovd (Nor/Cervelo)
Polka dot jersey: Franco Pellizotti (Ita/Liquigas)
White jersey: Andy Schleck (Lux/Saxo Bank)

The stage result

1. Juan Manuel Garate (Spain/Rabobank) 4hr 39min 21sec
2. Tony Martin (Ger/THR) +3sec
3. Andy Schleck (Lux/Saxo-Bank) + 38sec
4. Alberto Contador (Spa/Astana) +38sec
5. Lance Armstrong (USA/Astana) + 41sec
6. Frank Schleck (Lux/Saxo-Bank) +43
7. Roman Kreuziger (Cze/Liquigas) +46
8. Franco Pellizotti (Ita/Liquigas) +56
9. Vincenzo Nibali (Ita/Liquigas) +58
10. Bradley Wiggins (GBR/Garmin-Slipstream)

Good news for Bradley Wiggins After a brave ride, he only lost 20 seconds on Frank Schleck, which means he’ll keeps his fourth spot on general classification going into tomorrow’s final stage.

3.33pm: Wiggins pedals over the finish line looking absolutely exhausted. The commentators on ITV seem to think he’s done enough to hold on to fourth place on general classification, but aren’t quite sure and will let us know after a commercial break.

3.31pm:Juan Manuel Garate has led from start to finish of this stage and crosses the line triumphantly, just ahead of Tony Martin. Andy Schleck, Al;berto Contador and – in no particular order – Lance Armstrong, Frank Schleck, Vincenzo Nibali and Pelizotti are next over … but where’s Bradley Wiggins?

3.30pm: A kilometre from the summit, Juan Manuel Garate has gone for glory, but been pegged back by Tony Martin – if either of them takes the stage win, it’ll be a sensational victory. Franco Pellizotti is 38 seconds behind them and the yellow jersey group is a further 10 seconds behind him,

3.26pm: Andy Schleck attacks from the front of the yellow jersey group, taking Contador and Armstrong with him, but leaving brother Frank behind. At the back of the group, Wiggins and Nibali are slipping out the back door.

3.25pm: Brilliant riding from Bradley Wiggins, who drags himself back into the yellow jersey group. Up the road, King of the Mountains Franco Pellizotti’s face is a picture of agony as he attempts to bridge the gap between himself and stage leaders Tony Martin and Juan Manuek Garate.

3.23pm: In the yellow jersey group, Andy Schleck continues shovelling coal in to the furnace, while Bradley Wiggins continues struggling at the back and losing touch. He’ll lose fourth place if he loses 24 seconds to Frank Schleck.

3.21pm: Bradley Wiggins looks to have cracked. He’s been unhitched from the yellow jersey train and is struggling to stay in touch.

3.20pm: In the yellow jersey group, Andy Schleck attacks again, taking brother Frank with him. Armstrong, Contadore and Wiggins immediately get on their wheels and the look on Frank Schleck’s face when he looks over his shoulder and sees Armstrong on his wheel is priceless. Kloeden has dropped out the back of the yellow jersey group.

3.19pm: In the betting in-running, Tony Martin and Juan Manuel Garate are joint favourites to win the stage, with polka dot jersey occupant Franco Pellizotti thunders towards them.

3.15pm: It’s must be like like cycling through the queue for a proviincial nightclub, with the roads lined five or six deep on either side as the riders grit their teeth and continue their ascent. Only five kilometres to the summit.

3.12pm: Andy Schleck, Contador and Nibali have slowed right down, with Schleck unsure what to do as he’s unable to shake off Contador and improve his own position on GC, but also unable to help his brother overtake Lance Armstrong because he’s 10 seconds down the road. He decides to sit up and wait: brotherly love … isn’t that sweet?

3.10pm: Contador and Andy Schleck will soon catch Garate and Martin and be the one-two on the road as well as on general classification. Andy is continuously looking over his shoulder, wondering where his brother is, and seems bewildered by the fact that he’s not in sight.

3.07pm: Andy Schleck, Contador and Nibali are 1min 46sec behind Martin and Garate, the stage leaders on the road. Schlkeck keeps looking over his shoulder trying to see where he’s brother is, wondering how he can help him. He’s 16 seconds behind in a group with Armstrong, Wiggins and Kloeden.

3.05pm: Andy Schleck and Contador attack and are let go. Nibali makes a break to try and bridge the gap. He needs to make up over two minutes on Armstrong to get third place overall.

3pm: The yellow jersey group is now comprised of: Andy and Frank Schleck, Nibalo, Armstrong, Contador, Wiggins and … barely … Kloeden. Andy Schleck keeps trying to attack off the front in a bid to launch his brother up the mountain and on to the podium in Paris, but Lance Armstrong is watching Frank Schleck like a hawk.

Quick reminder: The two stage leaders on the road today are Tony Martin and Juan Manuel Garate, who have a 2min 15sec lead on the yellow jersey group, where the battle to win the Tou is being enacted. There’s only 10km to go, but it’s a steep 10k that’ll take them the business end of 30 minutes to ride.

2.32pm: Up, up, up they go, with Frank Schleck attacking from the front, only to look over his shoulder and see Lance Armstrong on his wheel. Andreas Kloeden has been dropped by the yellow jersey group, but is slowly clawing his way back.

2.55pm: Andy Schleck attacks and is immediately covered by Alberto Contador, who takes up residence on his back wheel. They’ve opened a 10-metre gap on the rest of the heavywieghts as they continue passing the detritus from the original 16-man breakaway.

2.55pm: With their lieutenants and helpers going backwards, the top six in the Tour on GC are all that remain in the only group that matters.

2.50pm: Disregarding the breakaway they’re reeling in, the one-two-three on general classification – Alberto Contador, Andy Schleck and Lance Armstrong – are in that order in the yellow jersey group on the road as their team-mates drop like flies. Frank Schleck attacks but is immediately covered by Lance Armstrong, who is looking very comfortable.

2.47pm: At the moment, the riders are cycling along a tree- and people-lined road. Soon the trees will be gone and only people will remain, affording little protection from the bufffeting winds.

2.45pm: As things stand, the early breakaway group has been reduced to three men, who are 32 seconds ahead of the first-class train with all the main contenders on board. The peloton are a further 2min 50sec behind them, while the bus full of sprinters, the knackered and assorted other non-climbers who we need not concern ourselves with, is another 1min 40sec behind them.

2.40pm: “You have me wrong,” writes Ben Foskett (2.17pm). “I was just wondering how she was managing to stay ahead on what looks like a mountain bike.”

2.36pm: The yellow jersey group, comprised of 24 riders almost exclusively from the Saxo-Bank, Garmin-Slipstream and Astana teams is strung out along the road, with Garmin rider David Millar making a furious pace at the front. It’s shit-or-get-off-the-pot time for anyone who wants to finish on the podium in Paris tomorrow and they’re only just beginning the 1,912km climb to the finish line. This is going to be brutal.

2.35pm: Bradley Wiggins’ Garmin Slipstream team are taking their turn at the front of the yellow jersey group, with assorted domestiques putting the hammer down and doing their bit to try and crack Astana’s riders before running out of puff and dropping back to finish the climb in their own time.

2.30pm: There’s a furious wind blowing as Astana take to the front of the yellow jersey group. Everyone in the top 10 on General Classification is in that particular group and it’s from this point that the loose ends of this year’s Tour will be tied up. Fabian Cancellera tries to organise the riders into an echelon (pace line) to protect themselves from the wind as they approach the beginning of the climb to Ventoux.

2.27pm: Time trial specialist Fabian Cancellara is gritting his teeth and pedalling furiously into a headwind as he drags the yellow jersey group onwards. His Saxo Bank team-mates are strung out behind him, followed by Alberto Contador’s Astana team.

2.24pm: The big guns on General Classification – Alberto Contador, Andy Schleck, Lance Armstrong, Bradley Wiggins, Andreas Kloeden and Frank Schleck – are all positioned in a group of 41 riders that’s rolling towards the beginning of the ascent to Mont Ventoux, 6min 15sec behind the breakaway group of 16 riders.

2.20pm: Race on! With 27km to go and five to the beginning of the main climb, team Astana have taken advantage of some crosswinds to put the hammer down and split the main field, but Bradley Wiggins and both Schleck brothers were well positioned to go with them.

2.17pm: “I assume the lady in your photograph is the race leader, as there’s nobody in front of her. I wonder why,” sniggers Ben Foskett, impressing nobody with his crass, laddish, juvenile end-of-pier humour.

2.13pm: His sterling afternoon’s work done, Stuart O’Grady has slipped back into the bunch and left it to the Astana boys to make the pace at the front of the peloton as they descend the Col des Abeilles to the foot of Mont Venteux. Bradley Wiggins’ Garmin team-mates are next in the queue, making sure their man gets a good position for the beginning of the climb. The gap between the peloton and the main bunch is 7min 53sec and dropping fast, as the breakaway group slow down in the hope that, if they take their time beginning the ascent to Mont Ventoux, it might go away.

2.07pm: Freewheeling down towards the summit to Mont Ventoux, the breakaway group passes a fleet of fire engines screaming past them in the opposite direction. They’re obviously en route to the forest fire that needs to be tackled.

2.01pm: The breakaway group pedal over the summit of the Col des Abeilles and begin their descent into Mormoiron. After that it’s uphill all the way. The gap to the peloton is 8min 31sec. I did Stuart O’Grady a grave injustice earlier – he’s still dragging the peloton along behind him. Last year’s Tour champion, Carlos Sastre, can be spotted up near the front of the peloton. He’s a great climber who’s had a fairly mediocre Tour this year, but he’s made no secret of his desire to win this stage.

2pm: “Speaking as a lady cyclist, I think that picture is very funny,” writes Catherine Otey. “That said, my husband is very upset that there’s a photograph of me on your minute-by-minute report.”

1.56pm: Considering the numbers who turned out to watch Lance compared to the unnamed woman, it seems that Oliver James is wrong: the entire audience prefers the rear view of a fit male cyclist.

1.51pm: On the subject of my recent picture-change, Oliver James writes: “Perhaps the ladies in the audience prefer the rear view of a fit male cyclist,” he says. “The Guardian should be more able to laugh at itself. Surely most of the readership are able to recognise a joke? Maybe I was enjoying it too much.” Sorry about that Oliver, here’s a little reminder of what you’re missing.

1.45pm: The breakway group are on their way up the fourth climb of the day, the Col des Abeilles, after which they’ll descend to the foot of Mont Ventoux, then begin their hellish 1,912m ascent to the finish line.

1.39pm: I was at a wedding in the east of France last week and had a couple of days in Paris, during which time I got to see assorted workmen erecting temporasry seating on the both sides of the Champs-Élysées for tomorrow’s finale. For the benefit of anyone who’s never been lucky enough to visit it before, I can tell you it’s very long, very wide and very cobbled.

Having been making the pace at the front of the peloton for some time now, Saxo Bank rider Stuart O’Grady, stands up on his pedals, has a bit of a stretch and then moves to one side to let somebody else do the donkey-work for a while. 53km to go, the gap between the peloton and the breakaway is 8min 26sec.

1.35pm: Approaching the Col des Abeilles (the Climb of the Honeybees) the breakaway group still has a lead of 8min 22sec, while the fire looks to be raging some distance from where the riders will be passing. The aforementioned airplane is dropping a mixture of water and chemicals on it, so hopefully there won’t be any smoke blowing across the faces of the competitors when they beging their ascent of Ventoux. It’ll be difficult enough for them to get up the damned thing without having to contend with the acrid stench of thick smoke choking their airways.

1.29km: Apparently there’s a forest fire at the foot of Mont Ventoux about 15km from the finish line of today’s stage. With 500,000 spectators reported to be lining the route up the mountain, it could have been started by a rogue cigarette butt, somebody passing the time until the cyclists arrive by 1.35pm:”murdering ants using only a magnifying glass and the sun, or with a jerrycan of petrol and a Zippo lighter. I’m not sure how bad it is, but there is a airplane used for firefighting flying overhead.

1.25pm: The Garmin Slipstream team of Bradley Wiggins have moved to the front of the peloton and the gap between them and the breakaway is down to 9min 02sec. Alberto Contador, the Schleck brothers, Wiggins, Andreas Kloeden and Lance Armstrong are all sitting pretty towards the front of the main bunch, where they’ll no doubt stay until reaching the foot of the ascent to Monteux, where all hell will break loose once they begin ramping up the steep first 9km.

1.16pm: With 70km to go, Saxo Bank are dragging the peloton along, trying to bridge the 9min 15sec gap that separates them from the 16-man breakaway.

1.06pm: The stage leaders have just crossed the third climb of the day, the col de Fontaube.

Stat attack: The leaders covered 39.1km in the second hour of the race, making their average speed for the first two hours 41.2km per hour.

12.53pm: The gap between the breakaway and the peloton has increased to 10min 19sec. I’m going to have to switch over to ITV4′s coverage when it begins at 1pm, as something’s gone wrong with the Eurosport in our office, meaning I’m working off sound alone at the moment. This is devastating news for those of us were looking forward to passing off the erudite musings of former Irish cyclist Sean Kelly as our own for the rest of the afternoon.

12.50pm: Astana are no longer leading the peloton, having made way for the Saxo Bank team of the Schleck brothers. There’s currently 8min 25sec between the main bunch and the breakaway, which contains Juan Manuel Garate and Christophe Riblon among its notables (notables being cyclists I’ve heard of).

Your emails are flooding in II: Sorry, Allan Brooks. Double bah!

Your emails are flooding in: So far I’ve had one, from Alan Brooks … correcting a spelling. Bah!

12.45pm: The gap between the 16-man breakaway and the peloton is down to 8min 48sec. William Bonnet, Maxime Bouet, Cyril Lemoine, Albert Timmer and Tony Martin are among the 16, as is Aleksandr Kuschnyinski, who has just rejoined them after stoping for a wee. There ar e three different ways of climbing Mont Ventoux, all of them unpleasant, but according to Eurosport co-commentator Sean Kelly, today’s is the worst by a considerable margin.

Some footage of Lance Armstrong and the late Marco Pantani tackling the summit of Mont Ventoux in 2002, just to give you a feel for what it’s like.

Weather report: It’s 23 degrees celsius on the road, but that howliong sound you can here is a strong wind with gusts of over 110mph, which could make things very interesting indeed.

12.34pm The 16-man breakaway has just crossed the col d’Ey, a third category climb that peaked at the 65.5km mark of today’s stage. Franco Pellizotti, who is not in this group, need only finish the race tomorrow to guarantee himself the polka-dot King of the Mountains jersey.

The race for the green jersey: Thor Hushovd is currently swaddled in the points jersey and is almost certain to hold on to it, as his only rival, Mark Cavendish is extremely unlikely to be contesting any of the 53 remaining points that are up for grabs in today’s stage.

Today’s stage so far … With 64km behind them, a 16-man breakaway containing nobody of any consequence has opened up a 9min 10sec lead on the peloton, with the Astana and Garmion teams leading the chase. Bradley Wiggins has already had to drop out of the peloton twice with mechanical problems but his team-mates have helped back on both occasions.

Montelimar to Mont Ventoux

It’s probably no exaggeration to say that many of the riders on this year’s Tour – non-climber Mark Cavendish foremost among them – will have had recurring nightmares about the ordeal facing them today: a 167km stage that culminates in a nightmarish 1,800m climb up the desolate face of Mont Ventoux, the highest point in Provence.

Seven-times a stage finish in its 95 million year existence, Mont Ventoux boasts a Mediterranean forest at its base, much Alpine flora at its summit and – on a sunny Saturday afternoon in July at least – nothing but scorching hot rock in between. Literally and metaphorically, there’s nowhere to hide.

With no shelter to protect them from the elements, the remaining 156 riders in this year’s Tour will have to contend with searing heat beating down on their necks from above (and up into their faces from the baking road below) as they try to pedal their way up an often vertical looking mountainside most sane folk wouldn’t attempt to negotiate in a small car.

Expect the field to finish strung out like Tuesday’s washing, while the winner of today’s stage will almost certainly come from the top five on GC. I don’t know about you, but the sadist in me can’t wait to spend the afternoon watching them suffer. Alberto Contador will probably cross the line first, but in the quest for value, my (very small amount of) money is on Lance Armstrong to conquer Mont Ventoux for the first time.

General Classification

1. Alberto Contador (Spain/Astana) 77hr 06min 18sec
2. Andy Schleck (Luxembourg/Saxo Bank) +4:11
3. Lance Armstrong (U.S./Astana) +5:21
4. Bradley Wiggins (Britain/Garmin) +5:36
5. Andreas Kloeden (Germany/Astana) +5:38
6. Frank Schleck (Luxembourg/Saxo Bank) +5:59
7. Vincenzo Nibali (Italy/Liquigas) +7:15
8. Christian Vande Velde (US/ Garmin) +10:08
9. Christophe Le Mevel (France/Francaise des Jeux) +12:37
10. Mikel Astarloza (Spain/Euskaltel) +12:38

Today’s fashions

Yellow jersey: Alberto Contador (Spa/Astana)
Green jersey: Thor Hushovd (Nor/Cervelo)
Polka dot jersey: Franco Pellizotti (Ita/Liquigas)
White jersey: Andy Schleck (Lux/Saxo Bank)

Good afternoon. With serious illness, a bad accident or some other unforeseen disaster being all that separate Spain’s Alberto Contador from winning this year’s Tour, today’s stage is all about the race to see who’ll join him on the podium in Paris tomorrow afternoon.

The climb to hell that is Mont Ventoux will be sorting out the men from the boys this afternoon, prior to tomorrow’s celebratory procession to Paris, where the sprinters will be left to duke it out on the cobbles of the Champs-Élysées to see who gets to finish runner-up behind Mark Cavendish in the final stage.

But on general classification, where it really matters, Andy Schleck has second place all but sewn up. Seven-times winner of this race, Lance Armstrong is currently sitting pretty in the bronze medal position, but will be keeping his eyes peeled for the UK rider Bradley Wiggins, the climbing revelation of this year’s Tour who is 15 seconds behind in fourth. While Wiggins has no choice but to attack Armstrong today, he’ll also need to be wary of the American’s Astana team-mate Andreas Kloeden, who is only two seconds behind him. Another 21 seconds behind, Andy Schleck’s older brother, Frank is the only other rider entertaining realistic hope of nailing a top-three finish on GC.

Expect to see attack after attack today as (a) Astana do everything within their power to ensure Contador, Armstrong and Kloeden make it a 1-2-3 in Paris, (b) Saxo Bank try to get Schleck the Elder on to the podium alongside his younger brother and (c) Garmin try to improve the position of their man Wiggins.

I’ll be back to begin coverage of the stage at 12.15pm, but in the meantime, here’s some other stuff you might like.

• Richard Williams on the conspicuous absence of drug scandals in this year’s Tour … so far.

• Bradley Wiggins on Twitter (note decidedly unsubtle dig at Mark Cavendish on 9.05am on 22 July).

• Lance Armstrong on Twitter

• Our all-singing, all-dancing Tour De France 2009 special report

• The official Tour website

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Iran opposition unveils new group

Mir-Hossein Mousavi displays the paint on his fingers after he voted on 12 June

The main opposition leader in Iran, Mir Hossein Mousavi, has confirmed plans to form a new broad-based political front.

Writing on his website, he said the front would have a charter and would give the opposition a legal framework.

Mr Mousavi was the leading reformist candidate in the disputed presidential elections in Iran on 12 June.

Meanwhile, his wife has confirmed that her brother was among those detained during protests against the presidential election.

Mr Mousavi has made it clear that the new front will not be a substitute for popular protest, but a way of giving the Green movement – as it has become known – a legal political framework.

Challenge

Our Middle East analyst, Roger Hardy, says the front is likely to attract the support not just of reformists but of disaffected centrists and conservatives.

Mr Mousavi stressed the need to stay within the law.

This, says our correspondent, shows that his challenge is to the legitimacy of the presidential elections, rather than the legitimacy of the system.

The opposition movement claims that the elections, which the incumbent Mahmoud Ahmedinejad won by a landslide, were rigged.

Mr Ahmedinejad denies fraud, and the results of the vote were confirmed by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Mr Mousavi has demanded a re-run of the disputed vote, and has described the new government as illegitimate.

After the results were announced, thousands of people poured onto the streets in protest. At least 20 were killed in clashes, and hundreds detained.

Mr Mousavi’s wife, Zahra Rahnavard, has confirmed that her brother Shahpour Kazemi, 62, was among those arrested.

In an interview with the Iranian ILNA news agency, Ms Rahnavard said neither she nor other Iranians would believe any "forced confessions" extracted from her brother who, she said, had been held for a month.

The authorities say that most of those detained have already been released.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Health institutions to receive 24 ambulances from EU

A ceremonial donation of 24 ambulances to health institutions will take place in front of the Palace of Serbia at 14:30, according to the Health Ministry. Head of the European Commission delegation to Serbia, Josep Lloveras, Deputy Prime Minister Božidar Đelić and Health Minister Tomica Milosavljević will be giving the keys to the vehicles to the directors of six health institutions in Serbia.

Yahoo’s front page makeover

By Maggie Shiels
Technology reporter, BBC News, Silicon Valley

Yahoo front page

Yahoo has unveiled sweeping changes to its front page aimed at shoring up its position as the main portal to the web.

Consumers in the US are the first to benefit from a new, customisable format which lets them link to third parties like Google and Twitter.

The new style will be introduced to parts of Europe and India later this week and Asia later in the year.

"We want to be at the centre of people’s lives online," said Yahoo’s consumer experiences head Tapan Bhat.

"There is a destination for everything you are about in just a click or two. Now we are looking at Yahoo holistically, all centred around the user," Mr Bhat told reporters in a conference call.

The key is personalisation and the biggest change involves a bar on the left hand side of the page, called My Favorites. Here, users can customise links to Yahoo and other services they use the most from news to social networks to email to movies.

While there are over 60 of these applications at the moment, consumers can add their own by typing in web addresses.

There are also plans to allow other software developers to design their own, more sophisticated applications that people can add.

"The new homepage is designed to make Yahoo the web’s number one destination portal by once again giving people one place to access everything," said Ben Parr, associate editor of social media blog Mashable.com.

‘Gateway to the web’

Yahoo has described the overhaul as the most "radical" and "fundamental" make-over of the site since it began more than a decade ago.

Yahoo front page

Changes to its front page were announced back in October 2007 and the company began testing with users around a year ago.

At its annual shareholder meeting last month, Yahoo’s chief executive officer Carol Bartz said the redesign was on target for completion by the autumn.

Yahoo’s front page is seen as vital to the company’s future and is regarded as prime real estate because it serves as an entry point for users, and as a result commands premium advertisement prices.

"Yahoo has been losing ground as a gateway to the web with individual services ranging from Google to Facebook to Twitter," said Business Week’s Rob Hof.

"So a home page that can connect them in one fell swoop to those services is its only hope to maintain its status as a key starting point on the internet – and one of the few places online where advertisers can reach a TV-sized audience."

An estimated 570 million people visit Yahoo every month.

‘Renaissance’

The launch of the new home page comes as speculation and rumour mount that Yahoo is near to finalising a deal with Microsoft over a search and advertising partnership.

The company is also facing increasing competition from the software giant following the release of its Bing internet search engine last month.

Bing screenshot (Microsoft)

There is little doubt that Yahoo is hoping this overhaul will revitalise both the company itself and the way it is viewed.

"It marks the beginning of a renaissance of Yahoo, a renaissance where every pixel matters," said Yahoo’s Mr Bhat.

While it is too early to tell how successful the changes will be, industry watchers say they are impressed.

"Time will tell if it is a success, but it is certainly a good and even innovative effort, in much the same spirit as Microsoft has had with its new Bing search offering," said Kara Swisher from AllThingsD.

"And while some might complain it is not ‘cutting edge’ enough, it seems just the right amount of re-jiggering and open feel for the mass of users it serves."

Users who want to take advantage of the new home page will have to opt-in and click on a link to select the new design.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

“Social democrats to form united front?”

Small, social democratically-oriented parties are holding informal talks on forming a single party, the result of which will be known in autumn, writes Novosti. The daily states, quoting unofficial reports, that those involved include Rasim Ljajić’s Sandžak Democratic Party (SDP), Nebojša Čović’s Social Democratic Party and Zoran Dragišić’s Independent Social Democrats, while other like-minded parties could join the talks soon.

Scott Stringer: Putting Food Policy On The City’s Front Burner

Our food system in New York City needs a radical overhaul. We need to make food a real priority.

Hughes ready for Harmison’s bouncer barrage

Australian opener Phillip Hughes has said that he is eyeing off another showdown with giant England quick Steve Harmison, who has been drafted into the host squad for the second Test, beginning at Lord’’s tomorrow.
Harmison twice bounced out Hughes in a tour match at Worcester and England insists the 20-year-old opener has a clear weakness [...]

Jon Gosselin, In St. Tropez, Parties On Yacht With Banana-Penis

Ed Hardy “designer” Christian Audigier and Jon and Kate Plus Eight’s Jon Gosselin were happy to deboard S.S. Cad (part deux) and pose for photographers in front of a giant cocknana.

(Click through for more pictures)

More on Jon …

How Newspapers Abdicated the Front Page’s Influence and How They Can Get it Back By Linking

The front page of the newspaper used to set the news agenda. Extra, Extra, read all about it! But that influence has steadily waned through the TV and Cable News era, and the web now threatens to obliterate it entirely.
So who sets the news agenda now? One significant influence is a guy with nothing but [...]