France Continues Infighting, Refuse To Train, Director Quits

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A training ground argument between French captain Patrice Evra and fitness coach Robert Duverne had to be broken up by manager Raymond Domenech. This was followed by the team's refusal to train and the resignation of team director Jean-Louis Valentin on Sunday. This comes a day after the revelation that striker Nicolas Anelka was being sent home early because of his profane words for Domenech and Evra's public assertion that they have a traitor in the team that must be eliminated. The French are in a full-blown meltdown now. Mayhem is upon them. 
Valentin's resignation quickly followed the astonishing training ground scene. From the AP:
“It’s a scandal for the French, for the young people here. It’s a scandal for the federation and the French team,” Valentin said. “They don’t want to train. It’s unacceptable.
“As for me, it’s over. I’m leaving the federation. I’m sickened and disgusted,” said Valentin, who walked away from the training field, got into a car and drove off.
After the argument between Evra and Duverne that ended with Duverne throwing his badges to the ground and walking off (UPDATE: France Football reports that the spat began with Evra accusing Duverne of being the traitor), the team boarded their bus (pictured above). Domenech then read a letter from Evra and the players to the press saying that they were boycotting training in support of Anelka, who reportedly announced his international retirement after his dismissal on Saturday. 

Simply put, this is madness. And there's surely more to come from this French squad as they still have one more group match (will they even play it?!). Wow. 
Here's video of the argument between Evra and Duverne:

And here's video that shows an overview of the entire bizarre attempt at a training session:
Photos: Reuters, Getty
Source Taken From: Yahoo News

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Man Shoots 4, Self In Calif. Fast Food Restaurant

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LOS ANGELES – A gunman attacked his stepdaughter's family as they ate lunch at a California restaurant, killing her husband and 6-year-old son, wounding the woman and another child, and then fatally shooting himself.
Jimmy Schlager, 56, arrived at the Del Taco restaurant in San Bernardino on a bike at about 1 p.m. Saturday, walked over to a table and fired several shots at his 29-year-old stepdaughter, her 33-year-old husband, and their sons, ages 5 and 6, San Bernardino police Lt. Jarrod Burguan said.
"There was a very brief exchange of words, then he opened fire on them at near point-blank range," Burguan said.
The woman's husband was declared dead at the restaurant and the 6-year-old died at a hospital, San Bernardino Fire Department spokesman Steve Tracey said.
The woman and the 5-year-old boy were in critical condition at Loma Linda University Medical Center, Tracey said. The names of the victims were not released.
The woman's mother who was married to Schlager died several years ago, and investigators were trying to determine how well Schlager and his stepdaughter got along as police sought a motive for the shooting, Burguan said.
Police said between five and seven employees and several other customers were in the fast food restaurant, but the gunman clearly walked in seeking the four victims and no one else was injured.
Bullet holes marked the walls and glass covered the floor.
Owners of nearby businesses said horrified patrons streamed out of the restaurant after the shots were fired.
"I saw some people yelling and all of a sudden I heard 'boom, boom, boom, boom'," Jorge Garcia, who works at a recycling trailer in the same parking lot as the restaurant, told the Riverside Press-Enterprise. "I saw two employees run out of the employee door and then I saw eight or 10 people run out of the restaurant and across the street."
Schlager, who is from Lancaster in northern Los Angeles County, had an extensive criminal record dating back to 1972 that included assault with a deadly weapon and a restraining order taken out by a co-worker.
Despite living an hour's drive away, Schlager had many ties to San Bernardino and once lived just a few blocks from the restaurant, Burguan said.
Burguan said the attack on the family was one of the worst crime scenes he could remember in San Bernardino, a city of about 200,000 people some 60 miles east of Los Angeles.
"This was something else," he said.
___
Associated Press Writer Jackie Quinn contributed to this report.
Source Taken From: Yahoo News
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Woods Makes Move, Johnson Takes Lead

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Tiger Woods In Third At U.S. Open
Highlights from the third round at Pebble Beach

VIDEO PLAYLIST video


PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. -- Tiger Woods poured in one birdie after another, more than he had ever made in one round of the U.S. Open, each of them followed by cheers that could be heard down the Pacific coastline at Pebble Beach.
Dustin Johnson didn't realize they were for Woods. He played like he didn't care.
Johnson turned in a prime-time performance of his own Saturday in the U.S. Open, overpowering Pebble Beach and closing with two birdies for a 5-under 66 to build a three-shot lead over Graeme McDowell of Northern Ireland.
"If I keep hitting like I've been hitting ... then I'm going to be tough to beat," Johnson said.
He usually is at Pebble Beach.
Johnson is the two-time defending champion at the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, and he looks just as tough when the conditions are fast and scary and a U.S. Open trophy is on the line.
All he lacks is the experience of 14 majors that Woods brings to the final round on Sunday.
Nine shots out of the lead after a pair of sloppy bogeys early in his round, Woods came to life by making the clutch putts and hitting the extraordinary shots that have been missing since he returned to competition two months ago.
Woods finally looked like the Woods of old, closing out his round with three straight birdies, none more Tiger-like than the par-5 18th. Blocked by a cypress tree from about 260 yards away with the ocean breeze in his face, Woods sent his 3-wood around the left side of the tree, out toward the Pacific and onto the green 15 feet from the pin for his eighth birdie of the round.
He shot a 66, his best score of the year, and his 31 on the back nine was eight shots better than the course average.
"It's been a while," Woods said. "I hadn't played good enough for anyone to cheer anything. So it was nice to actually put it together on the back nine and put myself right back in the championship."
It was a brilliant display that gave him a shot at his 15th major championship and fourth U.S. Open, the second at Pebble.
Then along came Johnson, who made it more of a long shot for Woods with two final birdies that put him at 6-under 207, five shots clear of the world's No. 1 player.
In between them was McDowell, who struggled down the stretch, fell out of the lead on the 17th and finished with a 71. McDowell will play in the final group with Johnson, neither of them with experience contending in a major.
Ahead of them will be a familiar red shirt, with a game that is starting to look familiar, too.
"All the Opens that I've won, I've had one stretch of nine holes ... were you put it together," Woods said. "That's what most Open champions have done. And I did it today."
Johnson, who played a practice round with Woods on Monday, isn't the type to get flustered. Asked how he would feel on Sunday with a chance to win his first major, the 25-year-old from South Carolina smiled as if he knew he had a winning hand.
"I think I'm going to feel good," he said.
Woods has been raving about Johnson's power all week, having played the final round of the Memorial with him and the practice round on Monday, after which Woods called him "stupid long."
Johnson showed that Saturday.
The USGA moved the tees forward on No. 4 to make it play 284 yards up the hill and tempt players to try to drive the green. Johnson did just that -- with a 3-iron to four feet for an eagle. And on the 18th, the same hole where Woods hit 3-wood off the tee and 3-wood onto the green for the loudest cheer of the day, Johnson got there with a driver and a 6-iron.
"Length is an advantage a lot of places, but definitely here, especially if I'm hitting it in the fairway," Johnson said. "Because the ball is going a long way. I'm hitting it extra far."
Johnson, McDowell and Woods were the only three players who remained under par, whileErnie Els (72) and Gregory Havret of France (69) were at even-par 213.
Phil Mickelson stumbled at the start, nearly fell apart along the coastal holes when he had to play one shot right-handed, and had to scramble for par on the closing hole when his tee shot bounced off the rocks and rolled back down on the beach.
Mickelson, runner-up in the U.S. Open a record five times, wound up with a 73 and was seven shots out of the lead.
"I didn't hit it as well as I did yesterday, so I had to fight pretty hard to get some up-and-downs -- some ridiculous up-and-downs -- to keep it within striking distance," said Mickelson, who was at 1-over 214.
Mickelson normally would settle for 1-over par going into the last round of a U.S. Open. He just didn't expect Johnson, one of his regular practice partners, to surge so far ahead.
"But anything can happen on Sunday," Mickelson said. "And if you make a move, you can make up a lot of ground."
That's exactly what Woods did.
After bogeys on the second and third holes, he ran off birdies on the next three and made the turn in even par. Birdies on the 11th and 13th holes got him closer to the conversation, and the final three holes set off a series of cheers that could be heard from all corners of the peninsula.
He rolled in a 12-foot birdie from the 16th, then made the downhill 15-footer from the fringe of the 17th, raising his index finger in the air.
The old Tiger showed up on the 18th hole.
Blocked behind a pair of cypress trees and hitting into an ocean breeze, Woods hit a 3-wood toward the Pacific and urged it on toward the green. "C'mon! C'mon!" he screamed at it, and followed that with a "Yes!" when it stopped in easy two-putt birdie range.
"I was hitting shots like this every now and again," Woods said. "I would get into two-, three-hole stretches, but I haven't strung it out for more than that. And today, I did."
Even so, history is working against him.
Woods has never won any of his 14 majors when he wasn't at least tied for the lead going into the final round. He at least gave himself a chance. And while he won by a record 15 shots the last time the U.S. Open was played at Pebble Beach, in 2000, he rallied from a five-shot deficit earlier that year to win the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, a tournament he no longer plays.
The USGA pushed back the starting times so the third round could be broadcast in prime time on the East Cost, just like two years ago at Torrey Pines. Woods delivered quite a show that day by turning a five-shot deficit into a one-shot lead.
Early Saturday, it looked like McDowell would be the one putting on a show.
He quickly built a four-shot lead with birdies on the opening two holes and looked unflappable until Johnson took over on No. 7 with a lob wedge within a foot for birdie. McDowell got the lead back with a birdie on the ninth, where Johnson missed a three-footer for par, and the two were tied on the 17th until McDowell missed the green and took bogey while Johnson was making birdie.
Another birdie to finish, and, just like that, Johnson was three shots ahead.
"He was awesome today," McDowell said. "He really just stood up and had no fear, hit the shots -- hit all the shots. He's going to go home and sleep on a three-shot lead, and we'll see how he feels tomorrow morning. If he turns up tomorrow like he did today, he's going to be tough to beat."
Source Taken From: ESPN


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NeoBux Review

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Since it’s pre-launch in April 2008, NeoBux has been a slightly different paid to click site compared to your common “paid to click” site.




For starters NeoBux sets itself apart from the rest of the crowd with instant payments, no more waiting business days on your money, you receive your payment within seconds of requesting your money. To protect your funds and account from hackers, NeoBux has a very sophisticated security system which is secured by a 256-bit SSL. For extra account security, NeoBux allows for a users the option to have secondary password needed to login to the account. Additionally, for extra security, users can also order a NeoBux security card. Once the NeoBux security card is activated users can chose what level of security their account has. Every time the card is required, users will be asked 3 random positions in the card’s code, printed on the back. Failure to enter the codes after a few attempts will temporarily block your account and you’ll be warned by email. Even if someone has your password, your secondary password and even your email password, they will be blocked from making changes or performing transactions of any kind.
NeoBux also has a very unique auto-clicker blocking system, requiring you click on an ad, then click a second time on a red dot located somewhere in the ad box to view the ad and receive your earnings. This ensures for advertisers that only real people are visiting and viewing their advertisements on NeoBux. Aside from these features, NeoBux also has a unique way of “making” referrals active. In order to receive any earnings from your referrals, users must be actively clicking ads, if no ads are clicked a user will not receive their referrals earnings the following day.
NeoBux Ads to click -
NeoBux usually has 6-10+ ads per day for standard members and 15+ for golden members. Some users may get less ads at times due to their country or region.
NeoBux Earnings -
NeoBux earnings are very good, as a standard member you will receive $0.01 per click on regular ads and $0.0150 per extended view ads, and you will receive $0.005 per referral click. As a premium member you will receive $0.01 per ad and $0.02 per extended view ads, and $0.01 per referral click. You will also earn 10% of any purchase one of your referrals make.
NeoBux Referrals -
NeoBux does offer referrals like any other PTC site, the only catch to the referral program is you cannot purchase referrals permanently, referrals are rented. Referrals can only be rented for a month at a time, this system may seem kind of lame but their are advantages. At anytime you can replace and inactive referral instantly from your control panel for just 8 cents. Another advantage to the renting system by enabling “autopay” from your user control panel, you can setup referrals to automatically pay for themselves so you do not have to handle making a monthly payment.
Referral renting prices for standard members are as follows: 3 referrals $0.93, 10 referrals $3.10, 20 referrals $6.20, 30 referrals $9.30, 50 referrals $15.50, 70 referrals $21.70 and 100 referrals $31.00. Aside from renting, there are referral jackpots and you can refer your own NeoBux referrals for free with your referral link you get after registering.
NeoBux Site Performance / Design -
The overall performance of the site is phenomenal, the design and layout is very professional and easy to navigate. Everything the site has to offer is well organized, you can really tell the site was built from the ground up. The user control panel offers a decent range of options, including graphs for tracking your clicks as well as your referrals clicks. NeoBux does offer an on-site forum which is integrated into the design of the site, there’s no need for two separate accounts like with most PTC sites whom offer a discussion forum.
NeoBux Support -
NeoBux has a forum and support system. The admin is online on the forums nearly everyday and is very active. NeoBux support responses are usually made within 24 hours of any inquiry or request.
NeoBux Payments -
NeoBux accepts and sends payments by AlertPay. Both standard and golden accounts have the instant cashout option, there is no waiting. You must have $3.00 minimum in your account to cashout.
NeoBux Payment Proofs -
NeoBux Payment $22.62 (12/24/09)
NeoBux Payment $4.49 (01/25/09)
NeoBux Payment $2.63 (06/06/08)

Overall TSKSOFT Rating: 10/10
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AMD Showcases Fusion APU Technology

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AMD has demonstrated earlier today a working version of its Accelerated Processing Unit or APU technology codenamed Fusion, during an event at Computex in Taipei.
Fusion will bring together an x86 processor combined with a DirectX 11 GPU, video decoders, memory controller and system I/O interfaces. AMD will have two versions running aimed primarily at the mobile segment.

Elano will target the ultra portable market and compete with Intel's CULV/i3 products while the Ontario range will square up with Intel's mainstream product family.
Intel has already started to work on a similar concept with its current generation Arrandale Core i3 and i5 processors which bring a CPU and a GPU die on the same package. The next generation, Sandy Bridge, will actually merge both together the same way as Fusion.
This will leave Nvidia as the only one without a similar product yet. It did purchase a company back in 2006 called Stexar which was apparently going to bring in some smart x86 related technology with it but 44 months down the road and still nothing in sight.

The only other potential x86 competitor could be VIA and we might see a partnership between the two given that they both have much to lose otherwise.
AMD's Fusion demo also included a 30-seconds walk through of the graphics intensive Alien vs. Predator game which showcased the capabilities of the platform. It was not as flawless as one might expect, but then, Intel's integrated graphics unit would have come up worse.

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Intel Previews Next Generation Of Atom CPUs

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Intel has announced, at Computex 2010, a new range of Atom processors codenamed Oak Trail that could bring on a new generation of laptops which will make the Mac Book Air look positively obese.
The new range of laptops and tablets, known as "Oak Trail", will come to market in early 2011 and be the based on the Moorestown architecture which was only launched back at the beginning of last month and is specifically targeted smartphones.

It will not only sport a thermal design power that's 40 per cent lower, 40 per cent smaller and 35 per cent thinner than the current generation but it will also support Google Chrome OS, Meego, Android as well as Windows 7 (Embedded Compact we suppose rather than the bloated edition)
Oak Trail Devices built around the Lincroft" System-on-Chip will support HDMI, full 1080p content as well as promises of much longer battery life.

Intel also demoed a new form factor, Canoe Lake, which comes with a dual-core processor and at 14mm, is thinner than the Mac Book air (which is up to 19.4mm thick).
Another device that will almost certainly be ported to Oak Trail at some point in the future is the just-announced Google TV which currently uses the rather long-in-the-tooth Atom CE4100 platform.
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