Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Making Money Uk






Marquardt vs. Okami headlines UFC 122.



Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images




It's been a relatively slow news week in the MMA world, which made Friday's UFC 122 conference call that much more enticing. Great quotes? Trash talking? Challenges to German mega-star David Hasselhoff?


Unfortunately, none of the above happened.


The build for one of the most unanticipated events in recent UFC history has begun, but here are five of the key quotes coming out of the UFC 122 conference call featuring Nate Marquardt, Jorge Rivera and Yushin Okami. Alessio Sakara no-showed.



"The reason this fight is different is that when I lost to Chael (Sonnen), I realized I lost focus of my desire to be the champion. It's back 100 percent and I feel very prepared and ready."


This was Marquardt on his preparation to face Okami in a title shot eliminator, as opposed to his mindset going into his No. 1 contender match to Sonnen.


It was interesting to hear Marquardt reveal that his desire to be a champion had waned at one point, which he went into a little more depth with later on.


Marquardt said that his style has changed from one of fighting not to lose to one of going for the kill. He's done just that, as in four of his last five fights he's finished for the victory.



"It's in a little bit of limbo."


UFC UK Division President Marshall Zelaznik spoke on the TV issues they are having right now. Apparently, an organization in the state of Bavaria called BLM has caused some licensing issues that is resulting in the UFC not being able to make air, relegating German fans to either attend the event live or stream the show on the German language UFC site in order to see it.


The press in Germany was not kind to the UFC when they first ran Cologne for UFC 99 in June 2009 and seemingly is the first country the UFC has run in lately to cause this much of an issue. Zelaznik said the soonest their litigation against the Bavarian organization would resolve is six months.


Bavaria...who knew?


"People are paying good money to watch us fight and we have an obligation to give them what they're looking for. I want to be known as an exciting fighter. Win or lose, I'm coming."


This was Rivera on how he relishes in finishing fights. It was a theme the veteran went back to several times and the latest in a running thread of debate about today's MMA scene on the difference between fighting for sport vs. entertainment. He made it clear that winning is what matters, but that he'd rather be remembered for being an exciting fighter than a boring one.



"I think it was more of an eye opening event for the media, not me. They put him on pedestal as unbeatable. He's susceptible to ground and pound and if someone lands a punch, he can get wobbled."


Marquardt was asked several times about Middleweight Champion Anderson Silva, and this was his response to what he saw in Silva following his razor-thin victory over Sonnen earlier this year. If given the shot at Silva or Vitor Belfort, Marquardt said he wants to secure the title shot first but hopes it's Silva.


The amount of Silva questions Marquardt got had me feeling many think a win over Okami is a foregone conclusion.


"We've been around, we understand what people want. Fans are the ones that do it all. When my career is over, I want to be remembered. When my name comes up, I want people to say, "I loved to watch that guy fight."


I loved this quote from Rivera in that it was straight talk. When he said "we," he was referring to former TUF housemate Chris Lytle, a fighter that made the choice to go the more "exciting" route with his fights as opposed to technically sound decision victories. Essentially what the fans want more of, he will give it to them as best he can.


Rivera has won his last two fights by TKO and is making one more good run at 185 pounds. He knows what he wants to be at age 38, and it's refreshing to hear someone just say what a lot of others inherently know. In the co-main event slot a week from Saturday, he'll have the chance to win over some more fans.


Note there were no Okami quotes, mostly because his interpreter was difficult to understand and because the answers were all quick one-liners with no depth.


Other journalists and I get frustrated at the language barrier with these interviews, and I'm surprised the UFC doesn't employ a better method in assisting with interpretation on these calls.


Even though these fighters may not speak perfect English, they have a lot to say, and I'd love to be able to understand more of what they're thinking. If the organization is to expand at the rate they expect, they have to figure this out both on calls, press conferences and in post-fight interviews.


UFC 122 airs a week from this Saturday on Spike TV via tape delay.


Josh Nason is a New England-based freelance MMA journalist that covers live events, has written for FIGHT! Magazine and frequently does radio/podcast appearances. He's currently pushing for ESPN Boston to cover MMA and asks for your help by following him on Twitter for updates.









The necessity of getting tested for STDs is often avoided as much from embarrassment as from fear of the outcome. Like buying condoms at the store, it’s a situation where your private life is suddenly exposed, and even though it’s not something to be ashamed of, it’s something you’d rather keep to yourself. People shy from going to the clinic or hospital, even when it’s a serious matter for themselves or others, because of this natural tendency to eschew public scrutiny.


A project at St. George’s University in London aims to prevent this problem by making STD testing as private as pregnancy testing. They’re doing so by developing a mobile phone-compatible chip that would be capable of returning results within 15 minutes.



At the moment, it’s still mostly on paper; the eSTI2 project, headed by Dr Tariq Sadiq, just last week received a £4 million grant from the UK’s Medical Research Council and £1.7 million from other sources. That means it’s more or less just a twinkle in the doctor’s eye today, though as he notes, it is recent advances in miniaturization that have made the idea possible.


The chip, which is currently about the size of a thumbdrive, would require a sample from the user — saliva, urine, or blood — and would then pass the raw data to the phone for processing. Normally, the sample would have to be taken at a clinic, sent to a lab, and analyzed there — a process that can take days depending on the load the lab is under and other variables. Sadiq aims at getting results within a quarter of an hour or less.


The challenge is to make the device both accurate and affordable. The prototypes only cost about $30, which is peanuts in medical money, but they hope to drive the cost below $5, allowing for mass public availability and deployment in needy areas.


This last application could be extremely important; STIs are rife in third-world countries and contribute heavily to mortality rates. Clinics are overburdened and labs few and in great demand; a cheap mobile solution like this could vastly improve health conditions, though it can do nothing about unhealthy and dangerous attitudes towards sex and infection.


Mobile health is a growing market in first-world countries as well. Portable machines for monitoring blood sugar, medication levels, and so on are changing the hospital-centric view of health care and personal medical tech is likely to explode over the next decade. In the case of this device, it might accompany your results with directions to the nearest clinic or pharmacy. Yes, we should probably iron out the privacy issues before then.


For now the eSTI2 project (electronic self-testing instruments for sexually transmitted infections, in case you were wondering) must work on getting the device working. Clinical testing and a lengthy approval process mean that we’re unlikely to see a iTest app before 7 to 10 years.


Don’t wait until then to get tested, though.



eric seiger

Pulse <b>News</b> Now Free to Download | Android Phone Fans

Pulse News has announced that they're making their application free to download on the Android market following a desire to pull in a bigger userbase. They'll.

New Yorker&#39;s Music Critic Moves to <b>News</b> Corp.&#39;s Daily - NYTimes.com

Sasha Frere-Jones, a music critic at The New Yorker, will become the culture editor of The Daily, News Corporation's so-called iPad newspaper which is currently in development.

Pulse <b>News</b> Reader Free For iPhone, Android | Download

Pulse News Mini, popular news feed aggregator and reader for iPhone, Android is now free. Download Pulse News Mini for iPhone, Android ....


eric seiger





Marquardt vs. Okami headlines UFC 122.



Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images




It's been a relatively slow news week in the MMA world, which made Friday's UFC 122 conference call that much more enticing. Great quotes? Trash talking? Challenges to German mega-star David Hasselhoff?


Unfortunately, none of the above happened.


The build for one of the most unanticipated events in recent UFC history has begun, but here are five of the key quotes coming out of the UFC 122 conference call featuring Nate Marquardt, Jorge Rivera and Yushin Okami. Alessio Sakara no-showed.



"The reason this fight is different is that when I lost to Chael (Sonnen), I realized I lost focus of my desire to be the champion. It's back 100 percent and I feel very prepared and ready."


This was Marquardt on his preparation to face Okami in a title shot eliminator, as opposed to his mindset going into his No. 1 contender match to Sonnen.


It was interesting to hear Marquardt reveal that his desire to be a champion had waned at one point, which he went into a little more depth with later on.


Marquardt said that his style has changed from one of fighting not to lose to one of going for the kill. He's done just that, as in four of his last five fights he's finished for the victory.



"It's in a little bit of limbo."


UFC UK Division President Marshall Zelaznik spoke on the TV issues they are having right now. Apparently, an organization in the state of Bavaria called BLM has caused some licensing issues that is resulting in the UFC not being able to make air, relegating German fans to either attend the event live or stream the show on the German language UFC site in order to see it.


The press in Germany was not kind to the UFC when they first ran Cologne for UFC 99 in June 2009 and seemingly is the first country the UFC has run in lately to cause this much of an issue. Zelaznik said the soonest their litigation against the Bavarian organization would resolve is six months.


Bavaria...who knew?


"People are paying good money to watch us fight and we have an obligation to give them what they're looking for. I want to be known as an exciting fighter. Win or lose, I'm coming."


This was Rivera on how he relishes in finishing fights. It was a theme the veteran went back to several times and the latest in a running thread of debate about today's MMA scene on the difference between fighting for sport vs. entertainment. He made it clear that winning is what matters, but that he'd rather be remembered for being an exciting fighter than a boring one.



"I think it was more of an eye opening event for the media, not me. They put him on pedestal as unbeatable. He's susceptible to ground and pound and if someone lands a punch, he can get wobbled."


Marquardt was asked several times about Middleweight Champion Anderson Silva, and this was his response to what he saw in Silva following his razor-thin victory over Sonnen earlier this year. If given the shot at Silva or Vitor Belfort, Marquardt said he wants to secure the title shot first but hopes it's Silva.


The amount of Silva questions Marquardt got had me feeling many think a win over Okami is a foregone conclusion.


"We've been around, we understand what people want. Fans are the ones that do it all. When my career is over, I want to be remembered. When my name comes up, I want people to say, "I loved to watch that guy fight."


I loved this quote from Rivera in that it was straight talk. When he said "we," he was referring to former TUF housemate Chris Lytle, a fighter that made the choice to go the more "exciting" route with his fights as opposed to technically sound decision victories. Essentially what the fans want more of, he will give it to them as best he can.


Rivera has won his last two fights by TKO and is making one more good run at 185 pounds. He knows what he wants to be at age 38, and it's refreshing to hear someone just say what a lot of others inherently know. In the co-main event slot a week from Saturday, he'll have the chance to win over some more fans.


Note there were no Okami quotes, mostly because his interpreter was difficult to understand and because the answers were all quick one-liners with no depth.


Other journalists and I get frustrated at the language barrier with these interviews, and I'm surprised the UFC doesn't employ a better method in assisting with interpretation on these calls.


Even though these fighters may not speak perfect English, they have a lot to say, and I'd love to be able to understand more of what they're thinking. If the organization is to expand at the rate they expect, they have to figure this out both on calls, press conferences and in post-fight interviews.


UFC 122 airs a week from this Saturday on Spike TV via tape delay.


Josh Nason is a New England-based freelance MMA journalist that covers live events, has written for FIGHT! Magazine and frequently does radio/podcast appearances. He's currently pushing for ESPN Boston to cover MMA and asks for your help by following him on Twitter for updates.









The necessity of getting tested for STDs is often avoided as much from embarrassment as from fear of the outcome. Like buying condoms at the store, it’s a situation where your private life is suddenly exposed, and even though it’s not something to be ashamed of, it’s something you’d rather keep to yourself. People shy from going to the clinic or hospital, even when it’s a serious matter for themselves or others, because of this natural tendency to eschew public scrutiny.


A project at St. George’s University in London aims to prevent this problem by making STD testing as private as pregnancy testing. They’re doing so by developing a mobile phone-compatible chip that would be capable of returning results within 15 minutes.



At the moment, it’s still mostly on paper; the eSTI2 project, headed by Dr Tariq Sadiq, just last week received a £4 million grant from the UK’s Medical Research Council and £1.7 million from other sources. That means it’s more or less just a twinkle in the doctor’s eye today, though as he notes, it is recent advances in miniaturization that have made the idea possible.


The chip, which is currently about the size of a thumbdrive, would require a sample from the user — saliva, urine, or blood — and would then pass the raw data to the phone for processing. Normally, the sample would have to be taken at a clinic, sent to a lab, and analyzed there — a process that can take days depending on the load the lab is under and other variables. Sadiq aims at getting results within a quarter of an hour or less.


The challenge is to make the device both accurate and affordable. The prototypes only cost about $30, which is peanuts in medical money, but they hope to drive the cost below $5, allowing for mass public availability and deployment in needy areas.


This last application could be extremely important; STIs are rife in third-world countries and contribute heavily to mortality rates. Clinics are overburdened and labs few and in great demand; a cheap mobile solution like this could vastly improve health conditions, though it can do nothing about unhealthy and dangerous attitudes towards sex and infection.


Mobile health is a growing market in first-world countries as well. Portable machines for monitoring blood sugar, medication levels, and so on are changing the hospital-centric view of health care and personal medical tech is likely to explode over the next decade. In the case of this device, it might accompany your results with directions to the nearest clinic or pharmacy. Yes, we should probably iron out the privacy issues before then.


For now the eSTI2 project (electronic self-testing instruments for sexually transmitted infections, in case you were wondering) must work on getting the device working. Clinical testing and a lengthy approval process mean that we’re unlikely to see a iTest app before 7 to 10 years.


Don’t wait until then to get tested, though.



eric seiger

Pulse <b>News</b> Now Free to Download | Android Phone Fans

Pulse News has announced that they're making their application free to download on the Android market following a desire to pull in a bigger userbase. They'll.

New Yorker&#39;s Music Critic Moves to <b>News</b> Corp.&#39;s Daily - NYTimes.com

Sasha Frere-Jones, a music critic at The New Yorker, will become the culture editor of The Daily, News Corporation's so-called iPad newspaper which is currently in development.

Pulse <b>News</b> Reader Free For iPhone, Android | Download

Pulse News Mini, popular news feed aggregator and reader for iPhone, Android is now free. Download Pulse News Mini for iPhone, Android ....


eric seiger

eric seiger

Make Money Online With Gold by Market Rasen Readers Pets


eric seiger

Pulse <b>News</b> Now Free to Download | Android Phone Fans

Pulse News has announced that they're making their application free to download on the Android market following a desire to pull in a bigger userbase. They'll.

New Yorker&#39;s Music Critic Moves to <b>News</b> Corp.&#39;s Daily - NYTimes.com

Sasha Frere-Jones, a music critic at The New Yorker, will become the culture editor of The Daily, News Corporation's so-called iPad newspaper which is currently in development.

Pulse <b>News</b> Reader Free For iPhone, Android | Download

Pulse News Mini, popular news feed aggregator and reader for iPhone, Android is now free. Download Pulse News Mini for iPhone, Android ....


eric seiger





Marquardt vs. Okami headlines UFC 122.



Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images




It's been a relatively slow news week in the MMA world, which made Friday's UFC 122 conference call that much more enticing. Great quotes? Trash talking? Challenges to German mega-star David Hasselhoff?


Unfortunately, none of the above happened.


The build for one of the most unanticipated events in recent UFC history has begun, but here are five of the key quotes coming out of the UFC 122 conference call featuring Nate Marquardt, Jorge Rivera and Yushin Okami. Alessio Sakara no-showed.



"The reason this fight is different is that when I lost to Chael (Sonnen), I realized I lost focus of my desire to be the champion. It's back 100 percent and I feel very prepared and ready."


This was Marquardt on his preparation to face Okami in a title shot eliminator, as opposed to his mindset going into his No. 1 contender match to Sonnen.


It was interesting to hear Marquardt reveal that his desire to be a champion had waned at one point, which he went into a little more depth with later on.


Marquardt said that his style has changed from one of fighting not to lose to one of going for the kill. He's done just that, as in four of his last five fights he's finished for the victory.



"It's in a little bit of limbo."


UFC UK Division President Marshall Zelaznik spoke on the TV issues they are having right now. Apparently, an organization in the state of Bavaria called BLM has caused some licensing issues that is resulting in the UFC not being able to make air, relegating German fans to either attend the event live or stream the show on the German language UFC site in order to see it.


The press in Germany was not kind to the UFC when they first ran Cologne for UFC 99 in June 2009 and seemingly is the first country the UFC has run in lately to cause this much of an issue. Zelaznik said the soonest their litigation against the Bavarian organization would resolve is six months.


Bavaria...who knew?


"People are paying good money to watch us fight and we have an obligation to give them what they're looking for. I want to be known as an exciting fighter. Win or lose, I'm coming."


This was Rivera on how he relishes in finishing fights. It was a theme the veteran went back to several times and the latest in a running thread of debate about today's MMA scene on the difference between fighting for sport vs. entertainment. He made it clear that winning is what matters, but that he'd rather be remembered for being an exciting fighter than a boring one.



"I think it was more of an eye opening event for the media, not me. They put him on pedestal as unbeatable. He's susceptible to ground and pound and if someone lands a punch, he can get wobbled."


Marquardt was asked several times about Middleweight Champion Anderson Silva, and this was his response to what he saw in Silva following his razor-thin victory over Sonnen earlier this year. If given the shot at Silva or Vitor Belfort, Marquardt said he wants to secure the title shot first but hopes it's Silva.


The amount of Silva questions Marquardt got had me feeling many think a win over Okami is a foregone conclusion.


"We've been around, we understand what people want. Fans are the ones that do it all. When my career is over, I want to be remembered. When my name comes up, I want people to say, "I loved to watch that guy fight."


I loved this quote from Rivera in that it was straight talk. When he said "we," he was referring to former TUF housemate Chris Lytle, a fighter that made the choice to go the more "exciting" route with his fights as opposed to technically sound decision victories. Essentially what the fans want more of, he will give it to them as best he can.


Rivera has won his last two fights by TKO and is making one more good run at 185 pounds. He knows what he wants to be at age 38, and it's refreshing to hear someone just say what a lot of others inherently know. In the co-main event slot a week from Saturday, he'll have the chance to win over some more fans.


Note there were no Okami quotes, mostly because his interpreter was difficult to understand and because the answers were all quick one-liners with no depth.


Other journalists and I get frustrated at the language barrier with these interviews, and I'm surprised the UFC doesn't employ a better method in assisting with interpretation on these calls.


Even though these fighters may not speak perfect English, they have a lot to say, and I'd love to be able to understand more of what they're thinking. If the organization is to expand at the rate they expect, they have to figure this out both on calls, press conferences and in post-fight interviews.


UFC 122 airs a week from this Saturday on Spike TV via tape delay.


Josh Nason is a New England-based freelance MMA journalist that covers live events, has written for FIGHT! Magazine and frequently does radio/podcast appearances. He's currently pushing for ESPN Boston to cover MMA and asks for your help by following him on Twitter for updates.









The necessity of getting tested for STDs is often avoided as much from embarrassment as from fear of the outcome. Like buying condoms at the store, it’s a situation where your private life is suddenly exposed, and even though it’s not something to be ashamed of, it’s something you’d rather keep to yourself. People shy from going to the clinic or hospital, even when it’s a serious matter for themselves or others, because of this natural tendency to eschew public scrutiny.


A project at St. George’s University in London aims to prevent this problem by making STD testing as private as pregnancy testing. They’re doing so by developing a mobile phone-compatible chip that would be capable of returning results within 15 minutes.



At the moment, it’s still mostly on paper; the eSTI2 project, headed by Dr Tariq Sadiq, just last week received a £4 million grant from the UK’s Medical Research Council and £1.7 million from other sources. That means it’s more or less just a twinkle in the doctor’s eye today, though as he notes, it is recent advances in miniaturization that have made the idea possible.


The chip, which is currently about the size of a thumbdrive, would require a sample from the user — saliva, urine, or blood — and would then pass the raw data to the phone for processing. Normally, the sample would have to be taken at a clinic, sent to a lab, and analyzed there — a process that can take days depending on the load the lab is under and other variables. Sadiq aims at getting results within a quarter of an hour or less.


The challenge is to make the device both accurate and affordable. The prototypes only cost about $30, which is peanuts in medical money, but they hope to drive the cost below $5, allowing for mass public availability and deployment in needy areas.


This last application could be extremely important; STIs are rife in third-world countries and contribute heavily to mortality rates. Clinics are overburdened and labs few and in great demand; a cheap mobile solution like this could vastly improve health conditions, though it can do nothing about unhealthy and dangerous attitudes towards sex and infection.


Mobile health is a growing market in first-world countries as well. Portable machines for monitoring blood sugar, medication levels, and so on are changing the hospital-centric view of health care and personal medical tech is likely to explode over the next decade. In the case of this device, it might accompany your results with directions to the nearest clinic or pharmacy. Yes, we should probably iron out the privacy issues before then.


For now the eSTI2 project (electronic self-testing instruments for sexually transmitted infections, in case you were wondering) must work on getting the device working. Clinical testing and a lengthy approval process mean that we’re unlikely to see a iTest app before 7 to 10 years.


Don’t wait until then to get tested, though.



eric seiger

Make Money Online With Gold by Market Rasen Readers Pets


eric seiger

Pulse <b>News</b> Now Free to Download | Android Phone Fans

Pulse News has announced that they're making their application free to download on the Android market following a desire to pull in a bigger userbase. They'll.

New Yorker&#39;s Music Critic Moves to <b>News</b> Corp.&#39;s Daily - NYTimes.com

Sasha Frere-Jones, a music critic at The New Yorker, will become the culture editor of The Daily, News Corporation's so-called iPad newspaper which is currently in development.

Pulse <b>News</b> Reader Free For iPhone, Android | Download

Pulse News Mini, popular news feed aggregator and reader for iPhone, Android is now free. Download Pulse News Mini for iPhone, Android ....


eric seiger

Make Money Online With Gold by Market Rasen Readers Pets


eric seiger

Pulse <b>News</b> Now Free to Download | Android Phone Fans

Pulse News has announced that they're making their application free to download on the Android market following a desire to pull in a bigger userbase. They'll.

New Yorker&#39;s Music Critic Moves to <b>News</b> Corp.&#39;s Daily - NYTimes.com

Sasha Frere-Jones, a music critic at The New Yorker, will become the culture editor of The Daily, News Corporation's so-called iPad newspaper which is currently in development.

Pulse <b>News</b> Reader Free For iPhone, Android | Download

Pulse News Mini, popular news feed aggregator and reader for iPhone, Android is now free. Download Pulse News Mini for iPhone, Android ....


eric seiger

Pulse <b>News</b> Now Free to Download | Android Phone Fans

Pulse News has announced that they're making their application free to download on the Android market following a desire to pull in a bigger userbase. They'll.

New Yorker&#39;s Music Critic Moves to <b>News</b> Corp.&#39;s Daily - NYTimes.com

Sasha Frere-Jones, a music critic at The New Yorker, will become the culture editor of The Daily, News Corporation's so-called iPad newspaper which is currently in development.

Pulse <b>News</b> Reader Free For iPhone, Android | Download

Pulse News Mini, popular news feed aggregator and reader for iPhone, Android is now free. Download Pulse News Mini for iPhone, Android ....


eric seiger

Pulse <b>News</b> Now Free to Download | Android Phone Fans

Pulse News has announced that they're making their application free to download on the Android market following a desire to pull in a bigger userbase. They'll.

New Yorker&#39;s Music Critic Moves to <b>News</b> Corp.&#39;s Daily - NYTimes.com

Sasha Frere-Jones, a music critic at The New Yorker, will become the culture editor of The Daily, News Corporation's so-called iPad newspaper which is currently in development.

Pulse <b>News</b> Reader Free For iPhone, Android | Download

Pulse News Mini, popular news feed aggregator and reader for iPhone, Android is now free. Download Pulse News Mini for iPhone, Android ....


eric seiger eric seiger
eric seiger

Make Money Online With Gold by Market Rasen Readers Pets


eric seiger
eric seiger

Pulse <b>News</b> Now Free to Download | Android Phone Fans

Pulse News has announced that they're making their application free to download on the Android market following a desire to pull in a bigger userbase. They'll.

New Yorker&#39;s Music Critic Moves to <b>News</b> Corp.&#39;s Daily - NYTimes.com

Sasha Frere-Jones, a music critic at The New Yorker, will become the culture editor of The Daily, News Corporation's so-called iPad newspaper which is currently in development.

Pulse <b>News</b> Reader Free For iPhone, Android | Download

Pulse News Mini, popular news feed aggregator and reader for iPhone, Android is now free. Download Pulse News Mini for iPhone, Android ....



eric seiger

Pulse <b>News</b> Now Free to Download | Android Phone Fans

Pulse News has announced that they're making their application free to download on the Android market following a desire to pull in a bigger userbase. They'll.

New Yorker&#39;s Music Critic Moves to <b>News</b> Corp.&#39;s Daily - NYTimes.com

Sasha Frere-Jones, a music critic at The New Yorker, will become the culture editor of The Daily, News Corporation's so-called iPad newspaper which is currently in development.

Pulse <b>News</b> Reader Free For iPhone, Android | Download

Pulse News Mini, popular news feed aggregator and reader for iPhone, Android is now free. Download Pulse News Mini for iPhone, Android ....


eric seiger

Pulse <b>News</b> Now Free to Download | Android Phone Fans

Pulse News has announced that they're making their application free to download on the Android market following a desire to pull in a bigger userbase. They'll.

New Yorker&#39;s Music Critic Moves to <b>News</b> Corp.&#39;s Daily - NYTimes.com

Sasha Frere-Jones, a music critic at The New Yorker, will become the culture editor of The Daily, News Corporation's so-called iPad newspaper which is currently in development.

Pulse <b>News</b> Reader Free For iPhone, Android | Download

Pulse News Mini, popular news feed aggregator and reader for iPhone, Android is now free. Download Pulse News Mini for iPhone, Android ....


eric seiger

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