'Kill'에 해당되는 글 6건

  1. 2009.03.25 Will OnLive Kill The Game Console? by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2008.12.03 Why Nokia Could Kill The Netbook by CEOinIRVINE
  3. 2008.11.28 Indian Commandos Battle Assailants by CEOinIRVINE
  4. 2008.11.23 Suspected U.S. drone kills 4 in Pakistan by CEOinIRVINE
  5. 2008.11.22 U.N.: Gunmen kill woman while trying to rape girl at camp by CEOinIRVINE
  6. 2008.11.10 Russia: Fire system caused 20 sub deaths by CEOinIRVINE

The new online gaming service lets players stream games on computers and TVs.


SAN FRANCISCO--When serial entrepreneur Steve Perlman founded tech incubator Rearden, he says he had a simple goal: to take risks on wildly disruptive new business ideas. Perlman's latest idea is a doozy. If it works as promised, Sony, Microsoft and Nintendo's console efforts could be in big trouble.

The idea Perlman is unveiling Tuesday at the 2009 Game Developers Conference is simple, even if the execution is mind-bogglingly complex: Move videogames online and give players access to the latest games on cheap computers or on even cheaper "microconsoles" the size of a pack of cigarettes.

Perlman promises that his new company, OnLive, can deliver the latest games, instantly, on any TV with a cheap "microconsole" or on a Mac or PC via a conventional DSL or cable broadband connection. No need for the latest machine equipped with a powerful multi-core processor or a pricey graphics card.

The catch: The online game service has to move the data from the server hosting the game to the user, and back, quick enough that a gamer won't notice any lag between his input and what he sees on the screen.

Crack that problem, however, and a number of others go away. There's no need for gamers to invest in a pricey console. No need to upgrade, either. Games hosted on servers can't be pirated. And Perlman says he'll be able to offer game developers a fatter slice of the revenues than they can get by working with retail channels stuffed with middlemen.

Of course, OnLive first has to solve the tricky business of moving information between a gamer and a remote server. Perlman, a former Apple (nasdaq: AAPL - news - people ) principal scientist and founder of WebTV, is confident he's gotten there, and he says he's filed for plenty of patents, too. "The good thing about doing something insane like this is it's easy to patent," Perlman says. "I think if I knew how big a problem this was to solve I would not have done this."

To demonstrate the system for a reporter, Perlman loaded up "Crysis," a game notorious for pushing even $2,000 gaming rigs past their limits. He then showed off the lush foliage and the gently undulating waves of the game's tropical battlefield, as another player snuck up behind to conk him on the head as others watched the action.

In other words, OnLive promises more than just access to the latest games. Because the games are played on a server, OnLive also allows fans to watch live games, join games at any point or share video clips of their exploits with friends.

Perlman says the service is supported by a wide range of game developers, including Electronic Arts (nasdaq: ERTS - news - people ), Ubisoft, Take-Two Interactive Software (nasdaq: TTWO - news - people ), Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment, THQ (nasdaq: THQI - news - people ), Epic Games, Eidos, Atari Interactive and Codemasters.

So will it work? Success will lie in the details. Will the experience please demanding hardcore gamers, whose opinions are influential among the wider community of gamers? Will gaming publishers pile into the platform with enough content to compete with game consoles boasting hundreds of titles? Will the company be able to charge enough money to cover the costs of the hardware it will use to play all those games?

We'll find out. OnLive will give videogame developers a chance to try out 16 playable titles this week in San Francisco.






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The Finnish phone maker's new N97 device could compete with low-cost laptops.

Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs has been dancing on the tables at Nokia's party for just a little too long, and it looks like the Finns have finally pulled out the collapsible baton. If you're a fan of consumer electronics, then this is a bone-busting brawl that you're going to enjoy.

The Nokia (nyse: NOK - news - people ) N97, introduced at the Nokia World 2008 conference in Barcelona Tuesday, is a GPS-equipped, 3G phone that comes with a touchscreen, a keyboard and a mission: stopping Apple's (nasdaq: AAPL - news - people ) iPhone.


But the real damage from the N97 could be to the emerging market for small, thin, cheap and connected laptop computers known as netbooks. After all, the Nokia N97 and even Apple's iPod Touch promise to do everything a netbook does with one key difference: You can actually slip these suckers into your pocket.

Netbooks are hot right now, to be sure. Netbooks hawked by Asus, ACER and Samsung dominated sales on Amazon.com's (nasdaq: AMZN - news - people ) computer and PC hardware category Monday.

The dinky laptops, many sporting Intel's (nasdaq: INTC - news - people ) power-sipping Atom processor have seven- and 10-inch screens, scaled-down keyboards, built-in wi-fi connections and price tags starting at less than $400. Nokia's N97, by contrast, will likely start at just under $700 when it goes on sale in Europe next year.

All those new netbook buyers will soon discover, however, that it's tough to scale down expectations to match a new price point. Not that Intel, the netbook's biggest backer, isn't trying. "If you've ever used a netbook, it's fine for an hour," Stu Pann, vice president of sales and marketing at Intel, told investors at a Raymond James IT supply chain conference. "It's not something you're going to use day in and day out."

If you own a smart phone, however, you will use it every day. Not that the N97 meant to compete, directly, with the Asus Eee PC, Dell's Inspiron Mini 9 or HP's Mini 1000. That, however, is what makes it so dangerous: The N97 isn't a laptop scaled down to be more portable and more connected. Smart phones started out that way, and, thanks to Intel, they're only going to be getting smarter.

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MUMBAI, Nov. 28 -- Indian army commandos struggled all day Thursday and into the early hours of Friday to regain control of two luxury hotels and a Jewish center in India's commercial capital, battling armed assailants who were part of a group that Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said was "based outside the country."

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The coordinated attacks against well-known symbols of India's prosperity and places where Westerners and Israelis gather left at least 125 people dead and more than 320 wounded, authorities said, and transformed parts of Mumbai into a smoldering war zone. Dozens of people remained trapped in the vast hotels, although it was unclear how many gunmen were still inside.

Indian police and terrorism experts said they were uncertain who had carried out the attack, but Singh, in a nationally televised address, used phrases usually taken here to mean Pakistan, raising fears that the violence in Mumbai could raise tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals.

"The group which carried out these attacks, based outside the country, had come with single-minded determination to create havoc in the commercial capital of the country," Singh said. "We will take up strongly with our neighbors that the use of their territory for launching attacks on us will not be tolerated, and that there would be a cost if suitable measures are not taken by them."

Husain Haqqani, Pakistan's ambassador to the United States, said his government condemned the attacks in Mumbai. "It is unfair to blame Pakistan or Pakistanis for these acts of terrorism even before an investigation is undertaken," Haqqani said in a statement. "Instead of scoring political points at the expense of a neighboring country that is itself a victim of terrorism, it is time for India's leaders to work together with Pakistan's elected leaders in putting up a joint front against terrorism."

Arriving ashore in what police said were at least two rubber dinghies, groups of college-age men on Wednesday roamed the streets of Mumbai with automatic assault rifles and backpacks filled with ammunition and explosives, shooting up crowded places and taking hostages in hotels. One video shown again and again on television depicted the almost giddy face of a young gunman walking down the street with an AK-47 assault rifle.

The attackers struck targets in addition to the hotels and the Jewish center, including a movie theater, a hospital, a railway station, a cafe popular with foreigners and several other sites in the heart of Mumbai.

A British businessman, Rakesh Patel, who escaped the Taj Mahal Palace & Tower hotel, told television stations that two young men with a machine gun forced 15 hostages onto the hotel roof and told them that "they wanted anyone with British or American passports."

In Washington, State Department spokesman Robert McInturff said three Americans were among those injured in the Mumbai attacks, the Associated Press reported. He said there was no indication that any U.S. citizens had been killed. The Web site of the Synchronicity Foundation, a Faber, Va.-based spiritual organization whose members were staying at one of the hotels, said two Americans in the group were feared dead and two Americans and two Canadians had been wounded by gunfire.

Five non-Indians -- an Australian, a Briton, a German, an Italian and a Japanese -- were reported killed.

"All we can say now is this is the worst, most brazen, audacious attacks in Indian history because people were shooting openly on the street," police official A.K. Sharma said. He spoke Thursday at the funeral of a police inspector who was killed while trying to stop gunmen at the train station. "It's a violent situation that's still ongoing. Mumbai remains at war."

As the sun set Thursday, some hostages unfurled "Save Us" banners from the windows of the Taj, across from the Gateway of India monument and Mumbai's waterfront. Others emerged from upper-story windows using bedsheets tied together as ladders. Earlier in the day, at least four bodies and dozens of freed hostages were taken out of the hotel -- a castlelike, 1903 landmark that was set on fire during the attacks.



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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (CNN) -- A suspected missile strike from a U.S. Predator drone killed at least four people at a house in Pakistan's North Waziristan region early Saturday.

Protestes demonstrate against recent U.S. missile strikes on the Pakistani tribal areas.

Protestes demonstrate against recent U.S. missile strikes on the Pakistani tribal areas.

The attack occurred in the Mir Ali subdivision in the village of Ali Khel, according to local political official Muhammad Nasim Dawar.

The names of the victims have not yet been released. It is also not yet known why the house was targeted.

Six people were injured in Saturday's attack, the fourth suspected U.S. strike on Pakistani soil in November.

Meanwhile, an explosion inside a mosque in northwest Pakistan's tribal region on Saturday killed three people and injured four others, a government official said.

The explosion happened just after 4 p.m. (6 a.m. ET), leaving the Hangu district mosque in Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province in ruins, said Omer Faraz Khan, deputy superintendent of Hangu.

He said rescuers were trying to save people trapped under the debris. It was not immediately clear how many people were inside the mosque at the time of the blast.

Pakistan's Foreign Ministry summoned U.S. Ambassador Anne Patterson on Thursday to lodge a formal protest against another suspected U.S. missile strike on its territory, an act Pakistan Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani called a violation of his nation's sovereignty.

Wednesday's strike in the Bannu region of Pakistan's North West Frontier Province left five dead and seven wounded Wednesday. That attack was further inside Pakistani territory than previous attacks.

The attack targeted a home outside the tribal areas that U.S. intelligence says have become a haven for Taliban and al Qaeda fighters battling U.S. and NATO troops in neighboring Afghanistan.

The U.S. government has not acknowledged hitting targets within Pakistan, an ally in the war on al Qaeda launched after the September 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington. However, Pakistan's government has repeatedly complained about the strikes.

Gilani took to the floor of the parliament and renewed his condemnation of the attacks Thursday, but added he thinks they will be controlled when President-elect Barack Obama takes office.

In October, the foreign ministry summoned Patterson to lodge a "strong" protest on continuing missile attacks and said they should be stopped immediately. At the time, a missile strike from a suspected U.S. drone on a compound in South Waziristan killed 20 people.

Pakistan's government said the attacks cost lives and undermine public support for its counterterrorism efforts.

The U.S-led coalition and NATO, based in Afghanistan, have been seeking a way to effectively battle militants who are launching attacks from Pakistan's swath of tribal areas along the border.

They have become frustrated with Islamabad over the years, saying it is not being active enough against militants, a claim Pakistan denies.

The United States is the only country operating in the region known to have the capability to launch missiles from drones, which are controlled remotely.



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Armed men entered a Congolese camp for displaced people Friday to kidnap and rape a girl, but when the girl screamed, the gunmen fired shots, killing a 20-year-old woman, a U.N. spokesman said.
A girl fills a jug with water at the camp for internally displaced people in Kibati, Congo, on Thursday.

A girl fills a jug with water at the camp for internally displaced people in Kibati, Congo, on Thursday.

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The camp in Kibati, near Goma, is home to thousands of people seeking refuge from warfare between a Tutsi militia and Congolese forces. The fighting is an offshoot of the Hutu-Tutsi animosity that culminated in the 1994 genocide of 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutus in neighboring Rwanda.

The U.N. Security Council has approved 3,000 troops to bolster the 17,000-strong peacekeeping force charged with the daunting task of stemming violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo's North Kivu province.

"It's extremely volatile," said Andrej Mahecic, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees' spokesman in Geneva, Switzerland.

Mahecic said he did not know whether the gunmen involved in Friday's attack were with the Tutsi militia or Congolese military.

"We have seen both sides doing this," he said.

"The fact that the camps are so close to the front lines is a huge cause of concern for us," Mahecic said.

The agency says there has been "relative calm" in North Kivu this week, allowing officials to develop a displaced persons camp more than 9 miles from Kibati, on the outskirts of Goma, the North Kivu capital. The new camp is supposed to alleviate some of the strain on the burgeoning Kibati camps. Map of Goma, Congo »

Friday's "incident adds more to the pressure to move these people as soon as possible," Mahecic said.

The warfare between Congolese government forces and rebels under the command of Laurent Nkunda represents the lingering tensions between Hutus and Tutsis in neighboring Rwanda.

Rwandan Hutus who fled to Congo after the massacres feared returning home, believing they would be targeted for revenge by Tutsis, who now dominate the Rwandan government. Rwandan Hutus remained in the jungles of eastern Congo, where they preyed on local residents and participated in Hutu militias.

Nkunda, a Tutsi and former Congolese army general, has repeatedly blamed the Congolese government for not protecting Tutsis from Rwandan Hutus in Congo.

A January cease-fire between Nkunda's forces and the Congolese army fell through in August. Nkunda's forces launched an offensive, and an estimated 250,000 people have fled their homes amid the fighting, which also has drawn in militias allied with the government.

Nkunda declared a unilateral cease-fire October 29, but fighting and reports of atrocities have continued.

The U.N. special envoy to Congo, former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasango, met with Nkunda earlier this week. Rebels pulled back from a strategic area after the meeting.

Jaya Murthy, spokesman for the U.N. Children's Fund in Goma, said that 1.1 million North Kivu residents -- about 20 percent of the population -- have been displaced in violence since December 2006.

Murthy said he heard reports Friday of looting and an unconfirmed report of a person burned alive in Kanyabayonga, north of Goma. Farther north, thousands have fled the town of Kanya and are "hiding in the bush" after fighting there, the U.N. reported.

The U.N. is transporting therapeutic milk by helicopter to Kanya and Kanyabayonga to feed hundreds of malnourished children.

Many civilians are on the move across North Kivu to escape the warfare, Murthy said.

UNICEF has issued a statement on humanitarian conditions in North Kivu, saying there is a "very high risk of child deaths due to malnutrition, malaria, respiratory infections."

Cholera is endemic, it said, and threatens to worsen without latrines and clean water. Video Watch how Congo could be on the verge of a health catastrophe »

UNICEF offered only one nugget of good news: Two schools in the Kibati settlement have reopened after people who occupied the schools moved out.

In Rutshuru, 85 percent of schools remain closed, affecting 150,000 students. Plans to pass out school kits are under way after Nkunda's group said it would reopen all schools next week.

"Today, there's still insecurity," Murthy said, adding that aid workers have limited access to many areas and a planned humanitarian corridor has yet to open.

Aid organizations have long said the enormous African country -- which borders nine nations and is more than twice the size of Alaska -- is suffering a humanitarian disaster. World Vision says the conflict in Congo, ongoing since 1997, is the deadliest since World War II.

"The last decade of conflict has resulted in some 4 million deaths; an estimated 1,200 people die every day due to ongoing epidemics and war-related causes; some aid agencies estimate upward of 1,400 deaths per day," the Christian relief organization said in a news release.








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aused by a malfunctioning fire safety system that spewed out chemicals, according to an initial investigation, officials said Sunday.
The submarine, believed to be called Nerpa, is seen heading to its base on Sunday in a Russian TV image.

The submarine, believed to be called Nerpa, is seen heading to its base on Sunday in a Russian TV image.

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At least 21 other people were injured during Saturday's test run in the Sea of Japan, the Russian Defense Ministry said.

It was Russia's worst naval accident since the nuclear submarine Kursk sank after an onboard torpedo explosion on August 12, 2000, killing all 118 crew members.

The latest fatal accident was the result of the "accidental launch of the fire-extinguishing system" on the Pacific Fleet sub, Russian navy spokesman Capt. Igor Dygalo told reporters.

Russian news agency Interfax said a preliminary forensic investigation found that the release of Freon gas following the activation of the fire extinguishing system may have caused the fatalities.

Seventeen of the fatalities were civilian members of the shipyard crew, Interfax reported. The submarine was being field tested before it became a official part of the navy, according to a Russian Defense Ministry statement.

The statement said 208 people, including 81 soldiers were on board the submarine. In addition to the fatalities, the accident wounded 21, Russian officials said.

The accident did not damage the nuclear reactor on the submarine which later traveled back to its base on Russia's Pacific coast under its own power, Dygalo added.

The submarine returned to Bolshoi Kamen, a military shipyard and a navy base near Vladivostok, state-run Rossiya television said, according to The Associated Press.

Officials did not reveal the name of the submarine, but Russian news agencies quoted officials at the Amur Shipbuilding Factory who said the submarine was built there and is called the Nerpa.

Construction of the Nerpa, an Akula II class attack submarine, started in 1991 but due to a shortage of funding was suspended for several years, the reports said. Testing on the submarine began last month and it submerged for the first time last week.

The Kremlin is seeking to restore Russia's military power amid strained ties with the West following the war with Georgia.

But despite former President Vladimir Putin increasing military spending, Russia's military remains hampered by decrepit infrastructure and aging weapons.

The Kremlin said President Dmitry Medvedev was told about the accident immediately and ordered a thorough investigation.



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