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Posts Tagged ‘plot’

Airline bomb plot Britons get 108 years

Three British Muslims were jailed for at least 108 years on Monday for plotting to kill thousands by blowing up transatlantic airliners bound for North America using bombs made from liquid explosives. The suspected Al Qaeda suicide plot, just days from being put into operation

British court convicts 3 in liquid explosives plot

Three UK Muslims have been found guilty of conspiring to kill thousands of people three years ago by blowing up trans-Atlantic jetliners with liquid explosives. The men, all in their late 20s, were found guilty of plotting to kill thousands by detonating explosives on commercial aircraft while they were in-flight from London to North American destinations in the U.S. and Canada.

“Sex And The City 2″ Spoilers Leak — Thanks To Kim Cattrall

Kim Cattrall may have inadvertently given away some secrets from the plot of the upcoming big screen blockbuster Sex and The City 2.

Britain’s Daily Mirror zoomed in on a page of script she was carrying in New York City last week, and the tabloid claims there’ll be big chances in the life of sex-obsessed PR [...]

Plot Stamp Helps Index Drawings and Plots Posted By : Amanda Qin

The Plot Stamp command, new feature in ZWCAD 2009i, is instrumental in indexing drawings and plots.

Alleged suicide attack plot sparks Australia arrests

In a major anti-terror operation, Australian police have arrested four men they say were planning a suicide attack on an army base in the country. Hundreds of officers were involved in a series of dawn raids in the southern city of Melbourne.

Thinkers meet to plot the future

By Jonathan Fildes
Technology reporter, BBC News

Jake Eberts at TED2009

Leading thinkers in technology, design and science are gathering in Oxford to share their ideas about the future.

TED Global (Technology, Entertainment and Design) is the European cousin of an already established top US event.

The invitation-only conferences are dedicated to "ideas worth spreading" and have seen talks by former US presidents and Nobel Laureates.

This year’s event will explore questions in neuroscience, astrophysics and economics.

"It is about all the hidden, invisible, not yet discovered or fully explored parts of our lives, society and the world," said Bruno Giussani, European director of TED.

"For example, the human brain; how do you make sense of what I am thinking"

Other questions to be explored include whether life is a mathematical equation, where motivation comes from and whether it is possible to design the air that we breathe.

‘Dark matter’

The invited speakers, who are each given 18 minutes in front of the audience, are drawn from an eclectic backgrounds.

This year’s line up includes an aphorist, a wireless electrician, an underworld investigator and a high-altitude archaeologist.

Pattie Maes at TED2009

Professor Jonathan Zittrain, a cyber-lawyer at Harvard University, is also one of this year’s presenters.

His theme is "ways to tackle problems that do not rely heavily on governments or markets".

"Something I will talk about is how the internet deals with trouble; and by internet I mean the actual fabric of the internet.

"How when there is trouble or outright abuse there are people who come to the rescue urgently, who are not paid top do it, who aren’t asked to do it and that don’t have any particular authority to do it."

"It’s like dark matter in the universe. There’s a lot of it, you don’t see it but it has a huge impact on the physics of the place."

A similar diversity is represented in the audience of 700, who each pay $4,500 (£2,700) and go through a rigorous application process – including essay questions – to attend the event.

The audience – known as Tedsters – acts as a crucial selling point for the organisers in attracting big-name speakers.

"You can watch the videos, download them, burn a CD and give it to your friend, whatever"

Bruno Giussani

"Following my round the world balloon flight in 1999, I gave several hundred speeches, mainly to big corporation and business circles," Swiss adventurer Bertrand Piccard told BBC News.

Mr Piccard, one of this year’s speakers, recently unveiled a prototype of a solar-powered plane he hopes eventually to fly around the world.

"The organisers of TED invited me saying I would never find elsewhere a better and more receptive audience. I don’t know if it is true, but we’ll see."

According to Erik Hersman, a previous Ted speaker, he won’t be disappointed.

"The pull of the TED conference lies not just in sitting in on riveting talks, but on the ability to turn in any direction and have a conversation with a person doing something truly remarkable," he told BBC News.

Mr Hersman is one of the team behind Ushahidi, an open source project for collecting crisis information via mobile phones. The project began after the 2008 post election riots in Kenya.

To balance the exclusivity of the event, the organisers record the talks and distribute them online for free.

"They got the idea that giving it away would be more valuable," said Professor Zittrain.

More than 400 TED talks have been made available for free online and have been viewed by more than 15 million people.

"We want to spread [the talks] as broadly as possible," said Mr Giussani. "It is the only model we have found to keep these great speeches and push it out to the world.

"You can watch the videos, download them, burn a CD and give it to your friend, whatever," he added. "And not only that, you can do it in 40 languages."

Talks are translated by teams of volunteers. Currently, Spanish, Portuguese and Arabic are the most common languages for translations.

Popular talks include a scientist using statistics to debunk myths about the developing world; a researcher showing how the Nintendo Wii games console controller can be hacked for educational uses and a brain researcher showing how her own stroke happened.

This year’s conference runs from 21 to 24 July in Oxford, UK. </p


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

Germany remembers Hitler plotters

German sailor stands next to memorial to 20 July plotters (20 July 2009)

Germany has marked the 65th anniversary of the failed attempt by a group of officers to assassinate Adolf Hitler and drive the Nazis from power.

The 20 July Plot saw Colonel Count Claus von Stauffenberg plant a bomb under a table inside the "Wolf’s Lair", Hitler’s command post in East Prussia.

But through a series of lucky circumstances Hitler was only slightly hurt, and the conspiracy was exposed.

The assassination attempt is one of the proudest traditions of the German army.

During a ceremony in Berlin on Monday, hundreds of young recruits to the force took their ceremonial oath to a democratic Germany.

Memorial

For many Germans, Von Stauffenberg is a hero – one of the few officers who chose to follow his conscience rather than orders, says the BBC’s Oliver Berlau.

Click to see where the bomb was planted and who was hurt

The plot in which he participated was the closest Hitler’s opponents within the German armed forces ever got to killing him.

The attempted coup, which would have seen the establishment of a conservative military regime in Germany which was willing to negotiate an honourable peace, was led by senior military leaders like Field Marshal Erwin von Witzleben and Gen Ludwig Beck.

Col Claus von Stauffenberg

As had been planned, Von Stauffenberg placed a briefcase containing explosives under the table next to Hitler inside the Wolf’s Lair. After he left the building, he heard the bomb explode and assumed the German dictator was dead.

But an officer had moved the briefcase behind a sturdy leg of the table, and Hitler suffered only minor burns and concussion.

Unaware, Von Stauffenberg flew to Berlin to join Von Witzleben and Beck and to take over using the German Home Army. However, they had hesitated and failed to take over the communications network.

Once it became known that Hitler was still alive, the plot crumbled.

Von Stauffenberg and several of his co-conspirators were shot the same night in the courtyard of the Bendlerblock, a building in Berlin which is still part of the defence ministry and the site of a memorial.

Dozens of others were later humiliated in a show trial and executed, hanged with piano wire from meat-hooks. Their deaths were filmed and shown to senior members of the Nazi Party and the armed forces.

THE 20 JULY PLOT

  • Stauffenberg placed a briefcase bomb under the oak table and left
  • One of the table’s two heavy supports shielded Hitler from the blast
  • Large windows and wooden walls allowed pressure to escape
  • All present would have died if they had met in a bunker as usual
  • 1. Adolf Hitler
    2. Field Marshall Wilhelm Keitel
    3. Gen Alfred von Jodl
    4. Gen Walter Warlimont
    5. Franz von Sonnleithner
    6. Maj Herbert Buchs
    7. Stenographer Heinz Buchholz
    8. Lt Gen Hermann Fegelein
    9.Col Nikolaus von Below
    10. Rear Adm Hans-Erich Voss
    11. Otto Gunsche, Hitler’s adjutant
    12. Gen Walter Scherff (injured)
    13. Gen Ernst John von Freyend
    14. Capt Heinz Assman (injured)
    15. Stenographer Heinrich Berger (killed)
    16. Rear Adm Karl-Jesco von Puttkamer (injured)
    17. Gen Walther Buhle
    18. Lt Col Heinrich Borgmann (injured)
    19. Gen Rudolf Schmundt (killed)
    20. Lt Col Heinz Waizenegger
    21. Gen Karl Bodenschatz (injured)
    22. Col Heinz Brandt (killed)
    23. Gen Gunther Korten (killed)
    24. Col Claus von Stauffenberg
    25. Gen Adolf Heusinger (injured)

    20 JULY PLOT

    Click here to return
    </p


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

    Scott Mendelson: Huff Post Review: Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009)

    By any normal standard, this is a wonderfully involving and entertaining tent pole popcorn entertainment. But this is still the weakest Harry Potter film of the series.

    Jerry Capeci: Slain Wiseguy Linked To Murder Plot Against Federal Prosecutor

    The Bonanno crime family mobster who was whacked in a pre-dawn hit in Staten Island as he waited for a bus to take him to…