2008 Leisure Taiwan launched in Taipei World Trade Center

Saturday, July 19, 2008

This year’s Leisure Taiwan trade show (a.k.a Taiwan Sport Recreation and Leisure Show) started yesterday, with 131 companies participating including sports media companies such as ESPN and VideoLand Television, businesses selling sports equipment and fitness clubs.

There were also a variety of sports being played in the arena built for the trade show. The events included a 3-on-3 basketball tournament, free style shooting, and bicycle test-riding. In addition, conferences discussed issues related to sports and physical education.

A major topic in the trade show was energy-efficiency and, as a result, bicycles and similar sports equipment were being heavily promoted.

Next Tuesday, companies from the electronics industry plan to promote their industry at “2008 Digital E-Park.” In previous years, organizations from the electronics industry have showcased their products at Leisure Taiwan instead of at the Digital E-Park, so this move has reduced the number of markets covered by Leisure Taiwan.

Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=2008_Leisure_Taiwan_launched_in_Taipei_World_Trade_Center&oldid=851720”

Online Games Sim City Shows The Dark

Online games SimCity Shows the Dark

by

Dallas Wicks

SimCity Shows the Dark Side of Online Gaming

SimCity\’s launch was a disaster. Will our online games always be victim to such spectacularly bad releases?

EA has managed to get SimCity into the headlines for all the wrong reasons this week, completely ruining the launch of its connected new title, having it temporarily pulled from one of the world\’s largest retailers, and looking shameful as it offered mixed signals with refunds to some unhappy customers and then ban warnings to others.

The core of the problem is this: SimCity requires you to be permanently connected to the Internet, and data is constantly being passed between your machine and the game\’s servers. There is no option to play offline, and right now the servers are so overloaded with requests they simply cannot keep up. The game, as it currently stands, is broken.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n33RPvpp5_4[/youtube]

SimCity shouldn\’t be broken. There are no excuses. It\’s a frustrating and painful experience, and the people getting burnt are the game\’s most loyal supporters.

These server woes are particularly egregious to many because they reflect a schism between gamers and publishers. One of the biggest causes of friction in our industry at the moment is the rift between established longtime gamers, who grew up predominantly with isolated single-player adventures, and modern publishers looking to transform their long-running franchises into service-led experiences.

Predictably, Maxis says this online requirement offers up a suite of social, connected features that just wouldn\’t be possible otherwise. The argument, it goes, is that that the 2013 version of SimCity just wouldn\’t work as a concept unless it\’s hooked into the Internet. So what we\’ve ended up with is a product that, for now, just doesn\’t work at all.

Therein lies the problem. Publishers are becoming too eager to leap into their service-led futures without nailing the basics first. EA is trying to run before it can walk, and many more intricately network games have launched with fewer problems and, when the worst happens, recovered faster. SimCity is in a league of its own when it comes to network failure, but it\’s also not the only one guilty of the problem. The issue spreads to almost all online games: think back to the awkward launches of Diablo III, Guild Wars 2, Gears of War 2, Battlefield 3 and Bad Company 2. These problems are happening all too often, and need to stop.

It\’s frustrating, sure, and too often publishers and developers are left desperately scrambling to rush out apologetic tweets and grovelling forum announcements as they race to stem the entirely justified ire felt by their customers. But what of a month from now, when servers will likely have stabilised? Some people like to think Maxis is currently rearranging the deck chairs on its own personal Titanic, but I don\’t think these launch woes will obliterate the game from the offset. Yet they\’ll certainly stain its reputation.

Service-led gaming isn\’t inherently disgusting, but the idea shouldn\’t be wholly intertwined with absolutely every game on the market. Good services are almost completely transparent. You take them for granted, and you can\’t imagine life without the best ones: things like Netflix, electricity, Twitter, and your mobile phone contract. There can be agonising problems along the way, but by and large they are accepted pretty seamlessly into our lives. But when games attempt to be a service they seem inevitably destined to stumble out of the starting block. Even when SimCity has been fixed, many will still remain cautious. The service will never be able disappear into the background.

Games publishers rushing into the dream of connected, always-online versions of traditional single-player games seems to be a step too far at the moment. It\’s not a case of a faulty concept but of poor design and execution, and that\’s a real shame. To put it simply: until always-on can work flawlessly, developers should make sure there\’s an optional offline mode.

It\’s ghastly when things go wrong, but it\’s fantastic that developers are trying to rethink the way we play traditional games. Look at something like Dark Souls, and its oft-praised mechanics of having other players leave messages. These fantastic bits of game design that feel endearingly modern, and completely refresh the idea of a third-person RPG.

It\’s an incredible connected feature, and Dark Souls will still function if Xbox Live/PlayStation Network is down or your Internet drops at home. It\’s a lesser experience that way, sure, but the option is still there. And, really, the beauty of the Internet is that it should be giving us more options as opposed to less.

There\’s still plenty for publishers to learn, then. It\’s good to see the SimCity team trying out new ideas, but this aggressive pursuit of an always-on, connected service has affected the game and will continue to do so long after the servers stabilise. The problem is not the concept, however, and we shouldn\’t treat social connectivity as the villain in the sorry state of SimCity.

The author is a News Editor at

games free online

. He works out of the company\’s London office in the UK., and loves extra chunky peanut butter & playing

free online games

.

Article Source:

ArticleRich.com

Parajet Skycar expedition takes off from London to Timbuktu

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Two explorers have set off from Knightsbridge, London Wednesday morning (0900 GMT) in a propeller-powered dune buggy heading for the Sahara. Giles Cardozo, age 29, from Dorset, with chief pilot and expedition leader Neil Laughton, age 45, an ex-SAS officer, will fly and drive the amazing two-seater vehicle more than 6,000-km (3,750-miles) to fabled Timbuktu on February 20.

“I just can’t wait to see their faces when we fly in and start playing football with them. I don’t think they will be able to believe somebody in a flying car has just visited them,” ‘extreme golfer’ Mr Laughton said before the departure. Timbuktu (Timbuctoo; Koyra Chiini: Tumbutu; French: Tombouctou) is an isolated city in Tombouctou Region, in the West African nation of Mali. They will traverse Europe and Africa about 42 days to arrive at the city in Mali, West Africa before returning home via Senegal.

The home-made 450-kilogram Skycar has been designed by Cardozo in just 18 months. It is the world’s first road legal bio fuelled flying car. It is a four cylinders modified Rage Motorsport off-road racing buggy which was approved by the government last month. It runs on bioethanol and is powered by a modified 140bhp Yamaha R1 superbike engine with a lightweight automatic continuously variable transmission from a snowmobile.

The team invested about £250,000 ($380,000) to make the 1000cc engine Skycar desert-proof. In its maiden voyage, the flying car will be escorted by up to 13 people convoy including an eight-wheel truck, two Toyota Land Cruiser 4x4s and several motorbikes. It has left London’s Sheraton Park Tower hotel, heading through the capital to Dunsfold airfield in Surrey.

The team had initially planned to take the air route across the English Channel, but the 35km flight was vetoed by aviation authorities. Skycar is required by law to obtain a license from Britain’s Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), including a permit from the British Microlight Aircraft Association (BMAA). Skycar spokeswoman, Charlie Bell, however clarified that the team was “in liaison with the CAA and they are looking to finalize the permit,” adding that it is in order for the rest of the trip.

The Skycar will thereafter fly over the high-altitude Pyrenees near Andorra, and would cross over the 14-km (nine-mile) Strait of Gibraltar. The prepared journey also includes the route through Mauritania, Atlas Mountains in Morocco and into Mali. It will further cross the harsh environment of Sahara’s remote “Rub’ al Khali” (empty quarter), for up to two weeks amid real fears of terrorist attacks.

The expedition will not have an easy task, especially since the Skycar will be tested to the limits amid punishing operating environments and weather conditions. “Clearly the reliability of the car is crucial,” said Mr Laughton. “We’re going to have to cope with wind chill temperatures as low as -30 deg C and blistering heat of up to 50 deg C. But it’s been fully tested at a secret location and it 100 per cent works,” he added.

The Parajet Skycar is a prototype flying car. It was developed by British paramotor manufacturer Parajet. The flying car utilizes a paramotor and a parafoil attached to a modified dune buggy to achieve sustained level flight. Should the engine fail, the vehicle can glide back to the ground. Should the canopy rip, an emergency reserve parachute would be deployed. It requires three minutes to convert it from a car to an aircraft. The prototype runs on biodiesel and is fully road-legal.

In 2004 British engineer Giles Cardozo, a paramotor manufacturer, has invented a fan-powered flying car to prove the Skycar is real and works. “I started making a paramotor on wheels that you sit on and take off and it suddenly occurred to me, ‘Why not just have a car that does everything?’” Cardozo said. His Wiltshire-based company Parajet built the paramotor that the adventurer Bear Grylls did fly near Everest in 2008. In 1998, Grylls, aged 23, became the youngest British to ascend Mount Everest. In May 2007, Grylls and Cardozo departed from Pheriche, about 32 kilometres south of Mount Everest.

I thought this would be an interesting challenge… Timbuktu is an iconic and quirky destination.

Cardozo has claimed he may finally have made it. “I’ve been dreaming about making flying cars since I was a boy, thinking about all the ways it could be done and seeing how all the other people in the world have done it wrong. No one’s ever made one that really does work that you can go out and buy. But here’s the ultimate solution: it’s cheap, it’s safe, it works, all the technology’s already there. So I pushed ahead and thought, ‘We’ve got to do it’,” he said.

If the Skycar becomes successful, Cardozo’s company plans a limited production with a selling price of £35,000 to £40,000 for a standard model and £60,000 for a high-performance sports version. “It will be a serious aircraft but also a proper road machine, with acceleration to match your average sports car,” says Cardozo. “I’m not going to sell millions of them but even if we sell 20 we’ll be laughing,” he added.

The explorers, with the aid of sponsors, supporters and benefactor Sir Ranulph Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes, 3rd Baronet OBE (known as ‘Ranulph (Ran) Fiennes’), have aimed to raise more than £100,000 for some charities including an African orphanage.

Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=Parajet_Skycar_expedition_takes_off_from_London_to_Timbuktu&oldid=4521076”

Pennsylvania state trooper found guilty of first-degree murder

Friday, March 20, 2009

In the United States, a suspended Pennsylvania state trooper has been convicted of first-degree murder for killing his girlfriend’s estranged husband.

Kevin Foley, 43, faces a mandatory life sentence without parole for slashing to death John Yelenic, a Blairsville dentist who was in the final stages of divorcing his wife, Michele. Foley’s attorney said he plans to appeal the decision. Prosecutors did not seek the death penalty.

Foley previously said he “loathed Dr. Yelenic” and asked another fellow trooper to help kill him. During his testimony, which lasted several hours, Foley claimed he was joking and had no true intention of carrying out the threat, but the Indiana County jury rejected that defense after about six hours of deliberations.

John Yelenic was found dead in his home on April 13, 2006, one day before he was planning on signing his divorce papers. Charges were brought against Foley in September 2007, more than 17 months after the murder.

Foley, who had been on suspension from the Pennsylvania State Police, was himself the final witness to take the stand Wednesday in the trial. Foley insisted he was innocent during his testimony, and even made jokes that the jury laughed at on a few occasions.

“I never made a threat with the intention of carrying it out,” Foley said under cross-examination by the prosecution.

When Senior Deputy Attorney General Anthony Krastek pressed Foley for what was funny about asking another state trooper to help him kill Yelenic, Foley answered, “There isn’t any joke. It’s just my personality, my behavior (with co-workers).”

Prosecutors said Foley killed Yelenic after going to the dentist’s house to confront him over the terms of the divorce. Prosecutors claim Foley slashed Yelenic several times with a knife and pushed his head through a small window. Yelenic bled to death.

“John has his justice tonight,” Mary Ann Clark, a cousin of Yelenic, told MSNBC. “John deserved this; he was the most wonderful person in the world. He died the most horrible death and tonight, this is his night. The system worked.”

Foley had been living with Michele Yelenic for two years at the time of the homicide. Prosecutors previously said Foley and Michele helped perpetuate rumors that Dr. Yelenic molested their son. John and Michele Yelenic had been separated in 2002. Michele Yelenic stood to collect Dr. Yelenic’s estate and a US$1 million life insurance policy, and could lose about $2,500 a month in support if the divorce was finalized, a Pennsylvania grand jury previously determined.

Michele Yelenic, who has not appeared at the trial, may face legal action herself, media reports indicated. A sentencing hearing for Foley is scheduled for June 1.

Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=Pennsylvania_state_trooper_found_guilty_of_first-degree_murder&oldid=2330265”

Benefits Of Solar Equipment Leasing

Benefits Of Solar Equipment Leasing

by

Anna222

Solar energy ?? ? w?? t? harness th? sun\’s strength ?nd m?k? electricity t? power ?ur daily lives. Th?? form ?f renewable energy ?? extremely clean. Solar panels ?r? ?urr?ntl? b??ng developed ?? w? ??n produce m?r? electricity fr?m l??? surface area. Th?? ?? ? great advancement ?? w? w?ll eventually b? ?bl? t? produce ? great deal ?f power fr?m th? sun indeed. Th? solar power, wind power ?nd hydro-electric power industries ?r? ?ur future ?nd w? n??d t? l??k ?nt? advancing them. Renewable energy ?? clean, leaves ? small carbon footprint ?nd ?l?? produces v?r? l?ttl? wasted energy n?rm?ll? ?n th? form ?f heat.

Wh?n w? th?nk ?f solar power, w? generally th?nk ?f ? lot ?f effort f?r ? small result. Th?? ?? n?t ?nt?r?l? true, ?? today solar power ??n b? produced efficiently ?nd easily ?n ?ur daily lives. W? ??n ?ll h?l? ?ut wh?n ?t ??m?? t? reducing ?ur affects ?n th? environment. Th? government ?? ?l?? v?r? keen f?r u? t? t?k? initiative ?nd install solar equipment ?n ?nd ?n ?ur houses. Solar water heating ?nd solar panels producing electricity f?r ?ur daily lives ?r? ?u?t th? start t? ?ur green future. Solar energy ?? ?nl? ?n? form ?f renewable energy but ?t ??n b? thought ?f ?? th? m??t practical f?r th? general public t? b? involved with.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYTGKPTUouY[/youtube]

Types ?f equipment u??d t? produce solar energy ?r? solar panels, solar hot-water systems, electrical cables f?r installation, solar battery chargers ?nd deep-cycle storage batteries ?nd photovoltaic cells u??d ?n panels t? produce energy f?r ??ur household. Th?? type ?f equipment generally doesn\’t t?k? u? ?? mu?h room ?? wind generators ?r areas u??d t? produce hydro-electricity. Th?? ?? ? strong advantage ?nd leads t? solar energy b??ng ? popular option f?r th? everyday public t? m?k? power.

Buying solar equipment t? produce renewable energy ?? t?? expensive f?r m?n? home-owners. Leasing ?? ? good alternative t? buying ?nd th? costs ?f leasing th?? equipment ?r? ?ft?n l??? th?n th? normal electric bills ??u pay. W? ?ll kn?w th? ecological benefits ?f solar power production. Wh?n ??u ?r? l??k?ng t? lease th? equipment, ??u mu?t read ?nd understand th? renting agreement ?nd b? prepared f?r wh?n th? leasing time period ends. It ?? n?t ?lw??? easy t? lease solar equipment, but ?t h?? great rewards ?ft?r ??u search f?r th? r?ght lessor t? suit ??ur needs.

Leasing solar equipment ?? ? r?l?t?v?l? n?w idea. It ?? brought ?n b? th? n??d f?r renewable energy b???u?? ?f th? coal shortages w? h?v? ?nd ?l?? th? damage th?t th? u?? ?f non-renewable resources h?? d?n? t? ?ur environment. Th? world w? live ?n ?? th? m??t important part ?f ?ur lives. If w? destroy it, w? w?ll ?nd u? w?th nothing. Th? warning signs ?r? v?r? strong ?nd w? mu?t d? ??m?th?ng ?b?ut them. B? leasing solar equipment ?nd making renewable energy w? ?r? helping th? environment but ?l?? helping ?ur ?wn financial situation ?t th? ??m? time.

Hi I am Anna Bella, I love to post articles on different related topics hope you like my article.Regards

Article Source:

ArticleRich.com

Hiker missing from US state of Utah wilderness found in Australia

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

A man missing from a camping ground in southern Utah in the Western US since July 30 was found in Australia. His automobile was found in a campground of Dixie National Forest with a note that he would be back in a few hours. An extensive search and rescue operation was conducted to try to locate this hiker by the Washington County Sheriff’s Office in Utah.

Investigators in the Sheriff’s Office were able to track him down to Cairns, Queensland. Apparently before he was “missing”, he bought a one-way ticket to Australia. Bryan Butas, the missing hiker, apparently had been under a great deal of stress and “got sick of it all”, according to a telephone interview by the Associated Press.

Butas has been charged with insurance fraud, a second-degree felony, by Washington County Attorney Brock Belnap. This was because Butas plotted to obtain a $250,000 life insurance policy before faking his own disappearance. He has also been given a bill for $20,000 by the Washington County Sheriff’s Office for their search and rescue operations on his behalf.

His wife and children have since his disappearance moved to the wife’s parent’s home in Ohio. Butas’s parents came to Southern Utah to help in the search and were “embarrassed and shocked” to learn their son had merely run away from marital and financial difficulties, Washington County Sheriff Kirk Smith said.

Washington County Sheriff Sgt. Jake Adams said his investigation included tracing an application Butas made for a passport, his purchase of a one-way airline ticket to Australia, and the life insurance policy that names his wife and children as beneficiaries. On August 18, Adams said Butas’s mother called him to say her son had called home the evening of August 11, several days after the search was officially called off for the missing man. Butas asked his mother for money and an airline ticket home, which she sent.

Butas has since been checked into the Veteran’s Administration Hospital in Brecksville, Ohio, according to Adams, but will shortly return to Utah.

Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=Hiker_missing_from_US_state_of_Utah_wilderness_found_in_Australia&oldid=3130263”

Weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz wins the Philippines’ first-ever Olympic gold medal

Friday, July 30, 2021

On Monday, Filipina weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz won the gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics in women’s weightlifting in the 55 kg category during her fourth Olympic games. She lifted a combined weight 224 kg (494 lb), tying the previous new Olympic record. In the snatch she lifted 97 kg (214 lb) and in the clean and jerk 127 kg (280 lb), totaling the 224 kg.

After the match, she said in an interview, “I am 30 years old and I thought it would be like going down, my performance, but I was shocked I was able to do it”. A statement from the Philippines’ presidential spokesman Harry Roque celebrated Diaz’s win, saying, “Congratulations, Hidilyn. The entire Filipino nation is proud of you”.

The previous record-setter Liao Qiuyun of China took the silver medal with a total weight of 223 kg (492 lb), and Zulfiya Chinshanlo of Kazakhstan took the bronze with 213 kg (470 lb).

Diaz won the silver medal during the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where she competed in the 53 kg category. She won a gold medal in the 2019 Southeast Asian Games. Diaz trained in Malaysia, where she was stuck due to COVID-19 travel restrictions imposed by the Philippines. While there, she trained in a self-built gym, using water bottles.

Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=Weightlifter_Hidilyn_Diaz_wins_the_Philippines%27_first-ever_Olympic_gold_medal&oldid=4637943”

Creativity And Innovation Management Thought Leadership

By Kal Bishop

Leadership is only sustainable when leaders consistently come up with good ideas – when they are dependable thought leaders. It follows then that leaders would be more effective if they knew how to manage creativity and innovation.

Some of the tools for effective creativity management include:

a)

Develop the brief. Formulating a brief helps i) induce the problem solving state of mind, ii) creates structures with boundaries and limitations within which experimentation can take place and iii) enhances motivation.

b)

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESY97_JreNY[/youtube]

One tacit knowledge elicitation and lateral thinking technique is to use the five senses. This helps define problems and generate ideas along five different pathways, instantly increasing the quantity of ideas and further increasing the probability that quality ideas will be generated.

c)

Setting a clear goal. Goals and incremental targets produce more output than simply ‘do your best.’ Prolific screenwriters that stick to goals produce more output and move along the learning curve much faster than those who simply wait for inspiration. Look at the untold number of people with unfinished manuscripts under their beds.

d)

Separate idea generation from idea valuation. Creative and critical thinking and two separate and distinct activities.

e)

Persistence pays off. Persistence slowly but surely helps develop the competencies required for quality output. Failure is a learning activity. Ridley Scott didn’t achieve financial success with Blade Runner but went on to make some very successful movies.

These and other topics are covered in depth in the MBA dissertation on Managing Creativity & Innovation, which can be purchased (along with a Creativity and Innovation DIY Audit, Good Idea Generator Software and Power Point Presentation) from http://www.managing-creativity.com

Kal Bishop, MBA

**********************************

You are free to reproduce this article as long as no changes are made and the author’s name and site URL are retained.

About the Author: Kal Bishop is a management consultant based in London, UK. He has consulted in the visual media and software industries and for clients such as Toshiba and Transport for London. He has led Improv, creativity and innovation workshops, exhibited artwork in San Francisco, Los Angeles and London and written a number of screenplays. He is a passionate traveller. He can be reached on

managing-creativity.com

.

Source:

isnare.com

Permanent Link:

isnare.com/?aid=1812&ca=Business+Management

Climate change impacts Wyoming

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Cheek numbing, eye watering winds whip across the plains of the Laramie Basin, Wyoming. The ground is yellow brown with patches of recalcitrant snow. Sheep Mountain is losing its winter coat. All normal affairs for March. The March edition of the Wyoming Basin Outlook Report also reports, based on February accumulations, that Snow Water Equivalent is at 99% of average.

The SWE is a measure of the snow pack that feeds the streams, rivers and reservoirs that Wyoming, Nebraska and other states depend upon for water. Current averages are compared to the average SWE for 1971-2000. In recent years, snow pack in this region has been anything but normal.

The Outlook Reports are issued January to June. Since March 2000, only five of 46 months have been above normal. While many of the winter months have been near normal, June’s snow pack is far below average. Even in 2006, the wettest year of the last eight years, June snow pack was only 37% of the average.

In an e-mail interview with Wikinews, Lee Hackleman, Water Supply Specialist, said

The snowpack is melting out several weeks earlier than average. The higher temperatures in the spring are responsible for this. There seems to be a significant drop in the amount of runoff that we are able to retain in our reservoirs, a lot of runoff seems to be soaking into the ground. We do not have the June flood events any more. We use to [sic] be cool then hot, not cool warm then hot.

In a phone interview with Wikinews, Myra Wilensky of the National Wildlife Federation in nearby Colorado, also commented on changing snow patterns.

In the west, nothing is ever clockwork, the patterns shift, a good amount of snowfall in the season and then a quick warm up. We don’t get the prolonged snowpack that we used to have. May have a really wet snow year, then really dry with rain.

Can’t count on getting estimated amount of snow anymore. March and November have historically been our snowiest months, but this year it’s been a fairly dry in March and November. Winter is shorter now.

This is part of a general increase in temperature in the region. An Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change cited by the National Wildlife Federation estimates that the temperature will rise almost 7 degrees (F) by 2100.

This will likely cause most, if not all, of the state’s glaciers to disappear. Wildfires may increase, droughts could get worse and rains–when they do come–will likely come in more severe downpours that may cause more flash flooding. Warmer temperatures also mean less snowpack in the mountains, leading to more winter runoff and reduced summer flows in many Wyoming streams.

The NWF’s main concern is the fate of the wildlife in the region, particularly how the impact of pine bark beetles. Warmer winters have led to mass infestations in Western lodge pole pine forests and The New York Times reports that they are now moving on to white bark pines in Yellowstone particularly impacting grizzly bears there. In turn, the grizzlies are shifting to feeding on Canadian thistle, an invasive species that might be choking out native plants.

Changing weather patterns have also affected large migratory animals.

This year winter came late. When the heavy snows hit, the mule deer and the elk were spread out, had to be fed. Feeding isn’t newsworthy, happened before like in 1982 but it wasn’t as successful this year because they were so spread out.

Water for people has also become a major issue in the region.

There is a much greater concern for water rights than there used to be. There is not enough late season water to satisfy everyone all the time.

Kansas has long fought Wyoming over water rights issues. And Montana is currently suing Wyoming, claiming that the Yellowstone River Compact signed in 1950 gives rights to both surface and ground water, while Wyoming disagrees. On February 18, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the lawsuit.

Wyoming officials say they are adhering to the compact and that the drought has meant less water for both states.

But Montana says Wyoming is storing more water in reservoirs than the compact permits and allowing excessive pumping of groundwater reserves that feed into the two rivers.

Those “groundwater” reserves are tapped by some Wyoming farmers to irrigate their fields. Energy companies discharge large volumes of groundwater during production of coal-bed methane, a type of natural gas prevalent in northern Wyoming.

Authorities do not see this fight over increasingly limited water resources going away anytime soon.

Everyone is going to have to learn to get by with less.
Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=Climate_change_impacts_Wyoming&oldid=4274702”

Wikinews interviews Eric Saussine, director of the James Bond fan film Shamelady

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

The James Bond film series is one of the most popular and successful, having grossed over US$4 billion worldwide. The suave, sophisticated secret agent has secured his place in popular culture as the definitive action hero that has appeared in twenty-three films between 1954 and 2006.

Daniel Craig was announced as the seventh actor to portray 007 in late 2005, making his debut in the 2006 smash hit Casino Royale. While fans await Craig’s second outing in Quantum of Solace, due later this year, they have been able to watch Shamelady, a fan film made by the French film production company Constellation Studios.

Shamelady is a tribute to Ian Fleming, the author of the James Bond novels on which many of the films are based, and EON Productions, the makers of the official 007 films. The film was first released in 2007 and runs just under an hour long. It can be downloaded from Constellation’s website or viewed on YouTube.

Legally, the filmmakers cannot profit from Shamelady, but they didn’t make it for the money, rather the thrill of creating an original Bond film. The plot is fairly simple, and reminiscent of Casino Royale. Bond is sent to a casino to nab a vicious crime lord, but gets betrayed by a fellow agent in the process. Viewer reaction to the film was positive for the most part, and Constellation Studios has now planned a sequel to Shamelady, which director Eric Saussine speaks of in the interview below.

Retrieved from “https://en.wikinews.org/w/index.php?title=Wikinews_interviews_Eric_Saussine,_director_of_the_James_Bond_fan_film_Shamelady&oldid=675363”