Carlsberg spúšťa Web-TV bolo na mieste asi v televízny program spojiť s futbalom a humorista ostatné agendy, ktoré urobím z vás rozesmA a bezradné tiež musel Partofthegame.tv, že predložené pořad program futbalu, ktorý bol od klasických, že to bol moderný
Study group scheme flourishingThe UEFA Study Group Scheme, which heralds a new era in football technical co-operation across Europe Študijná skupina režime flourishingThe UEFA Study Group schémy, ktoré hlasatelé novej éry vo futbale technickej spolupráce-prevádzka po celej Európe
Here in web tv could also put forward the agenda in an online manner Tu v Web TV by tiež predložiť pořad v on-line spôsobom
www.partofthegame.tv

Rabu, 26 November 2008
Carlsberg spúšťa Web-TV
Selasa, 18 November 2008
India – China has dismissed talks in India by exiled Tibetan leaders on the future of the Himalayan region, saying any moves to separate Tibet from China will fail.
"Any attempt to separate Tibet from Chinese territory will be doomed," Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told a news conference Tuesday. "The so-called Tibet government in exile is not recognized by any government in the world,"
Qin's comments come as Tibetan leaders meet this week in the first major re-evaluation of their strategy since the Dalai Lama in 1988 outlined his "middle way." That philosophy pushes for autonomy but not outright independence for Tibet.
The meeting in India comes after the Dalai Lama expressed frustration over years of fruitless talks with China.
(This version CORRECTS APNewsNow. corrects spelling to Qin Gang in 2nd graf.)
Selasa, 11 November 2008
Senin, 10 November 2008
Hydrogen peroxide
Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is a very pale blue liquid which appears colorless in a dilute solution, slightly more viscous than water. It is a weak acid. It has strong oxidizing properties and is therefore a powerful bleaching agent that is mostly used for bleaching paper, but has also found use as a disinfectant, as an oxidizer, as an antiseptic, and in rocketry (particularly in high concentrations as high-test peroxide or HTP) as a monopropellant, and in bipropellant systems. The oxidizing capacity of hydrogen peroxide is so strong that the chemical is considered a highly reactive oxygen species.
Hydrogen peroxide is naturally produced as a byproduct of oxygen metabolism, and virtually all organisms possess enzymes known as peroxidases, which harmlessly catalytically decompose low concentrations of hydrogen peroxide to water and oxygen (see Decomposition below).
Examples of redox reactions
A good example is the reaction between hydrogen and fluorine:
We can write this overall reaction as two half-reactions: the oxidation reaction
and the reduction reaction:
Analysing each half-reaction in isolation can often make the overall chemical process clearer. Because there is no net change in charge during a redox reaction, the number of electrons in excess in the oxidation reaction must equal the number consumed by the reduction reaction (as shown above).
Elements, even in molecular form, always have an oxidation number of zero. In the first half reaction, hydrogen is oxidized from an oxidation number of zero to an oxidation number of +1. In the second half reaction, fluorine is reduced from an oxidation number of zero to an oxidation number of −1.
When adding the reactions together the electrons cancel:
And the ions combine to form hydrogen fluoride:
Redox
Redox (shorthand for reduction-oxidation reaction) describes all chemical reactions in which atoms have their oxidation number (oxidation state) changed. This can be either a simple redox process such as the oxidation of carbon to yield carbon dioxide, or the reduction of carbon by hydrogen to yield methane (CH4), or it can be a complex process such as the oxidation of sugar in the human body through a series of very complex electron transfer processes.
The term redox comes from the two concepts of reduction and oxidation. It can be explained in simple terms:
* Oxidation describes the loss of electrons / hydrogen or gain of oxygen / increase in oxidation state by a molecule, atom or ion
* Reduction describes the gain of electrons / hydrogen or a loss of oxygen / decrease in oxidation state by a molecule, atom or ion
Though sufficient for many purposes, these descriptions are not precisely correct. Oxidation and reduction properly refer to a change in oxidation number—the actual transfer of electrons may never occur. Thus, oxidation is better defined as an increase in oxidation number, and reduction as a decrease in oxidation number. In practice, the transfer of electrons will always cause a change in oxidation number, but there are many reactions which are classed as "redox" even though no electron transfer occurs (such as those involving covalent bonds).
Non-redox reactions, which do not involve changes in formal charge, are known as metathesis reactions.
Hypoxia or oxygen
Hypoxia or oxygen depletion is a phenomenon that occurs in aquatic environments as dissolved oxygen (DO; molecular oxygen dissolved in the water) becomes reduced in concentration to a point detrimental to aquatic organisms living in the system. Dissolved oxygen is typically expressed as a percentage of the oxygen that would dissolve in the water at the prevailing temperature and salinity (both of which affect the solubility of oxygen in water; see oxygen saturation and underwater). An aquatic system lacking dissolved oxygen (0% saturation) is termed anaerobic, reducing, or anoxic; a system with low DO concentration—in the range between 1 and 30% DO saturation—is called hypoxic. Most fish cannot live below 30% DO saturation. A "healthy" aquatic environment should seldom experience DO less than 80%.
Dead zones are hypoxic
Dead zones are hypoxic (low-oxygen) areas in the world's oceans, the observed incidences of which have been increasing since oceanographers began noting them in the 1970s. These occur near inhabited coastlines, where aquatic life is most concentrated. (The vast middle portions of the oceans which naturally have little life are not considered "dead zones".) The term can also be applied to the identical phenomenon in large lakes.
In March 2004, when the recently-established UN Environment Programme published its first Global Environment Outlook Year Book (GEO Year Book 2003) it reported 146 dead zones in the world oceans where marine life could not be supported due to depleted oxygen levels. Some of these were as small as a square kilometre (0.4 mi²), but the largest dead zone covered 70,000 square kilometres (27,000 mi²). A 2008 study counted 405 dead zones worldwide.
award evil
best known to television viewers around the world as the executive producer/co-creator of more than 500 hours of Star Trek, lost his long battle with an aggressive form of head & neck cancer on Tuesday, November 1, 2005 at 4:51 a.m. at his home in Los Angeles. He was 57. He is survived by his wife Sandra, daughter Brent and son Shawn.
Piller co-created and executive produced Star Trek: Voyager (1994-1996), Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1992-1995), and executive produced Star Trek: The Next Generation (1989-1994). During the 1994-95 television season, he also co-created and executive produced the UPN network series Legend.
With Piller at the helm of Star Trek: The Next Generation, the show became the first syndicated series in the 90’s to receive an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Drama. Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and Star Trek: Voyager continued the success of the franchise during their respective seven seasons on the air.
In 1998, Piller wrote and co-produced Star Trek: Insurrection, the ninth installment in the enormously successful Star Trek feature film franchise for Paramount Pictures.
In 1999, Michael partnered with his son Shawn Piller to form Piller² Inc., a Hollywood-based production company where they developed and produced new television and motion picture properties. The father/son duo are the co-creators of USA Network’s top-rated cable drama series The Dead Zone, and ABC Family’s Wildfire.
One of Piller’s greatest contributions to the industry was his willingness – indeed, a profound eagerness -- to encourage and recruit new writing talent. In addition to serving on the Advisory Board for the Department of Communications Studies at his alma mater, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, he gave the school a major grant to help launch a nationally recognized screenwriting program.
Piller sought out new writers wherever he could find them -- not just in Hollywood, but at college campuses and writing seminars around the country. As a television producer, he was always a patron of the internship and mentor programs offered by the Writers Guild of America and the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Most importantly, he helped break down the barriers in Hollywood that made it difficult for young writers to get a foot in the door. As head writer of Star Trek: The Next Generation, he convinced Paramount to let him do what nobody else in Hollywood had ever done -- he opened the doors to freelance script submissions to anyone in the world, not just professional writers.
Over the years, Piller “discovered” and mentored dozens of young writers in Hollywood. Today, the names of many of those successful writers can be seen in the opening credits of hit television series covering a broad spectrum of programming on both network and cable television.
An Emmy Award-winning journalist, Michael began his broadcasting career with CBS News in New York. He subsequently served as managing editor of the WBTV-TV News in Charlotte, North Carolina, and assistant news director at WBBM-TV, the CBS affiliate in Chicago.
His first position in entertainment television was as a censor in the CBS docudrama unit. Piller then spent two years as a programming executive before leaving CBS to write full-time.
Michael's credits as a writer-producer include the series Simon & Simon, Cagney & Lacey, Miami Vice, Probe, and Hard Time on Planet Earth. In addition, he co-created and executive produced the syndicated series Group One Medical.
Donations in Michael’s name can be made to The Michael Piller Distinguished Professorship at Carolina Writing for the Screen and Stage Program Arts and Sciences Foundation, c/o Emily Stevens, 134 East Franklin Street, Chapel Hill, NC 27514.
The Dead Zone
USA Network has picked up The Dead Zone, the hit series starring Anthony Michael Hall ("61*," "The Pirates of Silicon Valley," "Sixteen Candles"), for a sixth broadcast season of 13 one-hour episodes, it was announced today by Jeff Wachtel, USA's executive vice president, original programming.
Produced by Lionsgate (NYSE: LGF), the leading independent filmed entertainment studio, and CBS Paramount International Television in association with Piller-Segan, the series will return to USA Network in Summer 2007, with production scheduled to begin early next year.
The Dead Zone premiered in June 2002 as the network's highest-rated original dramatic series debut ever, earning a place as the top basic cable original dramatic series of all time. The show still continues to perform as one of basic cable's top-rated series.
"It's been a long, winding and wonderful road on 'The Dead Zone'. Our relationship with Lionsgate and the show's producers has been everything a network could ask for," said Wachtel. "We look forward to continued success in the show's Sixth Season."
"'The Dead Zone' is an important franchise for us and we're delighted about the pick-up," said Kevin Beggs, Lionsgate's president of television programming and production. "We've enjoyed a great creative partnership with Piller-Segan and tremendous support from the network, and are looking forward to the start of an exciting new season."
The Dead Zone is a psychological thriller blending action, romance, the paranormal and a continuing quest for justice. In one of the most demanding roles on series television, Hall stars as Johnny Smith, a man injured in a near-fatal car crash, who emerges from a six-yearlong coma with psychic powers that allow him to see into the past and future through visions triggered by touch.
History Hydrogen peroxide
History
Hydrogen peroxide was first isolated in 1818 by Louis Jacques Thénard by reacting barium peroxide with nitric acid. An improved version of this process used hydrochloric acid, followed by sulfuric acid to precipitate the barium sulfate byproduct. Thénard's process was used from the end of the 19th century until the middle of the 20th century. Modern production methods are discussed below.
For a long time it was believed that pure hydrogen peroxide was unstable, because attempts to separate the hydrogen peroxide from the water, which is present during synthesis, failed. This was because traces of solids and heavy metal ions led to a catalytic decomposition or explosions of the hydrogen peroxide. 100% pure hydrogen peroxide was first obtained through vacuum distillation by Richard Wolffenstein in 1894.
FINAL SEASON DVD
FINAL SEASON DVD
The Dead Zone: The Final Season is now available on DVD! The 3-disc set includes all 13 episodes plus deleted scenes, commentaries with cast and crew, and two exclusively produced featurettes: "Dead Zone Walking: Making the Move to Montreal" and "All Aboard: Filming The Dead Zone on a Train." Click here to order your copy!
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan – Pakistan is succeeding in its fight against Islamic extremists close to the border with Afghanistan, even though the campaign is being hampered by U.S. missile strikes in the region, the country's president said Monday.
Asif Ali Zardari told The Associated Press in an interview he expects U.S. President-elect Barack Obama to take a "new look" at Pakistan's objections to the missile attacks on suspected al-Qaida and Taliban targets, but that did not know if Obama would halt them.
The United States is pressing Pakistan to take more action against militants in its rugged and lawless northwest border area, which many consider the global front line in the fight against al-Qaida.
Pakistan has pursued a military campaign in a tribal region in the northwest since August that officials say has killed 1,500 suspected insurgents.
U.S. officials say it has helped stem the flow of fighters into neighboring Afghanistan, where they are blamed for rising attacks on American troops.
"I think from where it was when we took over, we are in a much better place," said Zardari about the military operation in Bajur tribal region.
"We used the force of the government and they (the militants) realized that there is a force here, that the people of Pakistan are to be reckoned to it," said Zardari, whose wife, ex-Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto was killed in a suicide and gun attack believed carried out by al-Qaida-linked militants.
Since August, the United States is believed to have launched at least 18 missile strikes on militant targets from unmanned drones believed launched from neighboring Afghanistan.
The attacks have killed some militants, but many of the dead have been civilians, Pakistani officials say. U.S. military Gen. David Petraeus said last week that the missile strikes had killed three top extremists leaders.
Pakistani leaders have condemned the strikes.
"We feel that the strikes are an intrusion on our sovereignty which are not appreciated by the people at large, and the first aspect of this war is to win the hearts and mind of the people," Zardari said.
Pakistan also faces dire economic problems, from soaring inflation to a falling currency.
The government is talking to the International Monetary Fund about a bailout, a politically unpopular move because it often means cuts in government programs that help the poor.
Zardari insisted Monday that there was no economic meltdown looming in Pakistan, but also defended turning to the IMF.
"I think it's a difficult pill, but one has to take medicine to get better," Zardari said.
___
Associated Press Writer Chris Brummitt contributed to this report.
Sabtu, 16 Agustus 2008
News Hollywood
From Hollywood wild-child to Academy Award winner to respected U.N. Goodwill Ambassador, actress Angelina Jolie underwent a series of metamorphic transformations over the course of her career. An exceedingly beautiful, strikingly talented performer, Jolie broke on to the scene in the mid-1990s, quickly gaining a reputation for both her on-screen work as well as her outrageous off-camera antics. Interestingly enough, however, within a decade, Jolie shed her reckless image and successfully managed to re-invent herself – not only as an artist, but also as a celebrity humanitarian of the highest order....
Restless energy channeled into the relentless pursuit of success transformed teen rap artist the Fresh Prince into Academy Award-nominated leading man and blockbuster movie producer, Will Smith. His witty charisma, infectious spirit and rare versatility transcended racial and generational borders, continually attracting record-breaking crowds to sci-fi adventures, comedies and dramas. He was equally at home shooting a film with Barry Sonnenfeld as he was recording with Snoop Dogg....
A bubbly, blonde pop music sensation who built a fan base with a girl-next-door sweetness, catchy tunes, flashy dance moves and a magnetic sexual appeal, Britney Spears went from a small-town Louisiana girl to the veritable heir to Madonna's media saturation crown, beginning with the release of her first single in 1998 and holding fast well into the next millennium – and much like Madonna, the attention quickly shifted away from her artistry and focused squarely on her personal dramas....
Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt's twins
HOLLYWOOD - Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt's twins are worth a whopping $7 million each--that's what People magazine bosses paid for exclusive pictures of the family.
A European editor for the publication was spotted in Nice, France, where the twins were born last month, on the day Jolie gave birth.
And a deal between the magazine and the celebrity couple was done within days.
The resulting cover shot and 19-page "family album" special is sure to give People one of its biggest issues of the year.
The cover shot features the doting parents cradling their newborn twins.
The spread also features the couple's other children, Shiloh, Maddox, Pax and Zahara playing with their new siblings.
Jolie says, "My mom loved being a mom and made sure her children knew every day how much joy we brought to her. I hope to give that to my kids."
Other shots feature a blue-mohawked Maddox cradling his new baby sister and brother Pax rocking his baby brother as proud dad Pitt looks on.
Meanwhile, Jolie admits she was nervous towards the end of her pregnancy because she knew her babies, born a minute apart, would be born prematurely.
She tells People, "When I saw they were big and screaming with healthy lungs, I was at peace."
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