stargeek
PHP news website logo.
home    PHP scripts    articles    seo tools    links    search    contact    shop    realtors


Iran Newspaper







Iran Newspaper

Iran Newspaper 06/06/2004 05:30 PM

…§‡ †§† ¨§Œ ©Œ ©‡ ˆ¨„§ ͺˆŠ §‡§† …ˆ…Œ ©†. ¨§Œ §Š†€Œ ©§ ‚§ŒŒ ’…ˆ ͺŒ Ї€Œ§† .. 6 …§‡ †§† ¨§Š † §©§Š¨ ˆ¨„§!

iraninstitute.com/iran/1383/830317/social.htm#s334083
track this site | 4 links




This is a GrokNews Entry: (what is grok?)





Similar Items

Iran Newspaper

Grok Headline matches for Iran Newspaper

The Sun Newspaper Online - UK's biggest
selling newspaper


The Sun Newspaper Online - UK's biggest
selling newspaper
03/14/2003 12:58 PM
French President Jacques Chirac stood accused last night of being a blood brother of Iraqi tyrant Saddam Hussein .. Chiraq, Note to self: Try not to piss off the British Tabloids .. London Sun .. Le Worm

track this site | 6 links


"The Sun Newspaper Online - UK's biggest
selling newspaper"


"The Sun Newspaper Online - UK's biggest
selling newspaper"
05/18/2004 11:43 AM

Iran Focus-News - Special Wire - Girl,
16, hanged in public in Iran


Iran Focus-News - Special Wire - Girl,
16, hanged in public in Iran
08/22/2004 03:43 PM
This is sickening .. been hanged

iranfocus.com/modules/news/article.php?storyid=80
track this site | 4 links


Project: FREE IRAN![activistchat.com] ::
View topic - SAY NO To Israeli Strikes
on IRAN!


Project: FREE IRAN![activistchat.com] ::
View topic - SAY NO To Israeli Strikes
on IRAN!
05/10/2004 03:03 AM
ActivistChat's forum

activistchat.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=2264
track this site | 3 links


Iran to Prosecute 8 British Crew - Iran
TV (Reuters)


Iran to Prosecute 8 British Crew - Iran
TV (Reuters)
06/22/2004 02:53 AM
Reuters - Iran will prosecute eight British sailors held overnight along with their three boats after apparently straying into Iranian waters near the Iraqi border, Iran's state-run al Alam television said Tuesday.

More Than a Newspaper


More Than a Newspaper 04/15/2004 10:17 AM
The Washington Post Co. offers a lot to investors.

Love thy newspaper


Love thy newspaper 09/22/2004 02:02 AM
'[T]hese partisans also will seize the exception and call it the rule' .. Righties will use Rather flap as excuse to boycott big media .. writes

sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2004/09/21/EDGN58R2L51. DTL
track this site | 3 links


Distributing MP3 Via Newspaper


Distributing MP3 Via Newspaper 04/15/2004 09:05 AM

Storing on paper: This seems pretty useless, but very cool nonetheless. So a lot like Ashton Kutcher, really.

Tokyo's Yomiuri Shimbun, Japan’s leading newspaper, has been printing on the corner of a page a series of black dots, which are not Japenese characters. These black dots are in a tight, uneven pattern. From a distance it looks like a woven fabric, and closely it looks like a snowy TV screen. When this page is fed through a scanner, the true nature of the image is revealed: it’s software — a computer data. In this way, the newspaper is sending music files, video games software, etc., to its 10 million customers.

Here's the Web site of the company that makes the technology. Some interesting reading there.

I found this via a neat new blog called hypulp which I found via Metafilter.

Click here to comment on this entry


local Phuket newspaper


local Phuket newspaper 12/30/2004 08:41 AM
de Phuket Gazette

phuketgazette.net
track this site | 3 links


"NY Times is a liberal newspaper"


"NY Times is a liberal newspaper" 07/26/2004 08:59 PM

A Final Newspaper Column, and My Thanks


A Final Newspaper Column, and My Thanks 01/02/2005 02:09 PM

(This is also my final Sunday column in the San Jose Mercury News.) Wow, what a ride. I moved to Silicon Valley a little over 10 years ago. I've been constantly amazed by what has happened here since then -- a furious rush of innovation and change. I'm not smart or wise enough to predict in any detail what will happen in the next decade. But I'm certain that, as always, it'll be interesting, because innovation and change are still the coins of this realm. It didn't take long to learn what made Silicon Valley so special. The combination of attributes was unequaled: the great research universities, an astonishing collection of talent, a pool of investors with enormous sums at their disposal and an ingrained culture of risk-taking. (The weather's nice, too.) The willingness -- no, eagerness -- to take risks has always been the valley's most special quality. In most places, business failure leaves an indelible career stain. Here, failure is often seen as an education, provided one fails the right way, which is to say not stupidly or sleazily. The rise and fall of Apple's fascinating but flawed Newton handheld computer, for example, helped spark the Palm Pilot, the true breakthrough in the genre. I won't forget the shiver of excitement I and others in a crowd of tech executives and journalists felt when we saw the first Palm on the 1996 Demo conference stage. We don't think of the Apple iPod or today's ever-smarter mobile phones as more modern handheld computers, but they are. They're also a result of the valley's relentless progress. The chips powering not just PCs but all kinds of everyday objects are making everything more intelligent. Even faster advances in storage mean that all these intelligent things are gaining memory. And the advent of faster data networks -- still retarded by cable and phone companies, unfortunately -- means that we're connecting it all. Those intelligent connections are bringing vast capabilities to the people at the edges of networks. The long-range importance of early Internet file-sharing was not the potential for copyright infringement. It was the heightened ability of everyday people to inform and help each other. Along the way, we went through the bubble years, a time when greed totally superseded all other principles and values. The prevailing Wall Street attitude, which also pervaded the valley, was sickening. When what's acceptable is what you can get away with, society has turned rancid. The bubble's deflation was hellish for those who became collateral damage. But it was useful in reminding us that even in such a fast-changing world, a few tried-and-true principles, economic and otherwise, still applied. In the past several years the valley has returned, in part, to useful roots. Innovation and building great companies matter as much to entrepreneurs as scoring big financially. And everywhere I look, I see innovation. But I also see competition where it didn't exist before. The rest of the world has learned some of the valley's lessons and can provide much of what we do here at a lower cost. This is the harsh dynamism of the modern world at work. The fact that other regions are rising economically is positive overall, even if it's not the best news locally. As noted, I'm not smart enough to tell you what's coming in any specific way. But we can look together at the trends and imagine some of what might be, if all goes well. We will see breathtaking leaps in medicine, environmental protection, and a variety of materials sciences and manufacturing processes. We can thank advances in biotechnology and the emerging field of nanotechnology. Information technology is at the heart of both as a tool, and it will remain so. The Internet and its progeny are still early in their development, meanwhile. The Net is nowhere near as universal as it will be when we enter an age of what some call ubiquitous computing, but the outlines of its value are obvious today. For example, all media will eventually move around the world in little digital packages, called packets, that are the basic units of tomorrow's communications. The importance of this -- in decimating old businesses while improving most people's lives -- has not been sufficiently appreciated. The risks are growing, too. When the ability to do great things spreads away from the center, so does the ability to do massively dangerous things. The power of one fanatic or small group to create incalculable damage -- assuming we don't do it simply by mistake -- should worry everyone. But we should not allow that concern to stifle progress. And, as always, the people and institutions currently holding the clout don't cede it willingly. Governments are clamping down on us in all kinds of ways. Incumbent business powerhouses are trying to hold back the tide as well, not just to keep their positions but also to thwart new innovation that might threaten them. These reactionary encroachments and retrenchments are not surprising. They always occur in times of swift change and challenge. In the end, they are almost always unsuccessful, because progress ultimately finds a way around barriers, and because people challenge the reactionaries. But we need to keep the pressure up, as citizens and people who want the freedom to use these new tools and live in liberty. The stakes are high, and liberty takes work. This is my last column for the Mercury News. Starting tomorrow, I'll embark on a new adventure, a project to help bring online grass-roots journalism to more people and communities. I leave a job that has been a constant challenge in the best sense, often an outright joy. I leave colleagues whom I like and admire. But this opportunity, to help create something truly new and valuable, is too exciting not to try. During these past 10 years I've enjoyed a privileged, front-row seat -- not on a roller coaster, even if it occasionally seemed that way, but a vehicle of exploration. I'm grateful for the opportunity to have taken this fantastic ride. Mostly, though, I'm grateful to you. This has always been about you, the people who read what I write. I've tried to be on your side. Even when you've disagreed with me, you've been on my side in a vital way. You've challenged me to think deeply about technology and the larger issues we must all ponder and deal with in this complex era. You've always known more than I do, and I'm fortunate that you haven't been shy about telling me. Our conversation -- which I hope we'll continue as my new project gets under way -- has been a constant source of inspiration. If it's meant something to you, that pleases me more than I can say. Thank you all.


Laying the Newspaper Gently Down to Die


Laying the Newspaper Gently Down to Die 03/29/2005 02:44 AM
And keeping the spirit of journalism alive. Craig Newmark: "My guess is that either me, personally, or my craigslist team, will promote work which merges professional and citizen journalism, along with more fact checking and more investigative journalism."

Newspaper Writers on the Election


Newspaper Writers on the Election 02/01/2005 08:32 PM
In a small room in Stanford’s history building, a small panel discusses media coverage of the 2004 election. The guests…

Back to newspaper B.C. (before
computers)


Back to newspaper B.C. (before
computers)
03/27/2005 12:35 PM
AP via Newsday Mar 27 2005 4:50PM GMT

Your town. Your Neighbors. Your
Newspaper.


Your town. Your Neighbors. Your
Newspaper.
01/18/2004 08:17 PM
Instead of buying ad space on Amazon.com or Google, which many companies think is the only way to advertise their product, go to where the market is and sell ...

New FeedDemon Newspaper Styles


New FeedDemon Newspaper Styles 05/24/2004 12:18 PM

Over the weekend I created a number of newspape r styles which I plan to include in the final release of FeedDemon 1.10. If you'd like to give them a try, just browse this page in FeedDemon and click the links below:


just a geek's first newspaper review!


just a geek's first newspaper review! 12/19/2004 03:48 PM

Okay, I'll admit it. I have a "Wil Wheaton" as a Google News Alert. I'd say it's an ego thing . . . but it gets triggered so rarely, that's sort of counterintuitive. It's actually a business thing, so I can be aware press and stuff, but I'll be honest: I do get a little thrill when one hits my inbox.

So about a week ago, I got a news alert because I was very kindly mentioned in a brief bit about Sean Astin in the Oregonian:


You loved him as loyal hobbit Sam Gamgee in the "Lord of the Rings" films. You adored him in "Rudy." But to you, Astin will always be the kid from "The Goonies," a film that is widely considered The Best Movie Ever Filmed In Oregon. Hold onto your mithril, kids: Astin is coming to Portland. Naturally, you will want to show him a good time.

A Sean Astin autobiography? Well, sure. (Like you didn't positively inhale the latest Wil Wheaton book.) Astin's opus, "There and Back Again: An Actor's Tale," spills the candid scoop on backstage antics during the filming of "The Lord of the Rings" and the challenges of living the Hollywood way.


(dorky bolding is mine)

I was so excited, I sent a note to the reporter that said:

I just finished reading your OregonLive piece about Sean Astin's impending visit to Portland ("Let's go!," by Chelsea Cain, A&E, Dec. 3), and I wanted to thank you for kindly mentioning my book, "Just a Geek." I've got strong connections to Oregon (I filmed "Stand by Me" in Eugene, and my wife is from Portland), so even though I'm from Los Angeles, I felt like I saw my name in my hometown paper. Thanks for that! :)

See ya, Wil Wheaton Los Angeles

She wrote me back and thanked me for e-mailing, I wrote her back again, (it's sort of like passing notes in class, without the possible thrill of getting caught) one thing led to another . . . and she wrote a story about me that is in today's Oregonian! My three favorite bits:


  • Since the success of his blog, Wheaton has published two laugh-out-loud books and established himself as a fresh, funny and self-deprecating writer. Much of his material comes out of his life as a geek (he also pens a column for Dungeon Magazine, the must-read for D&D players).

    The Oregonian recently caught up with the ensign-turned-author for a Very Serious Interview.


  • Have you ever read any "Star Trek" fan fiction?

    Just one . . . and in it, Lt. Worf traded my character, Wesley, to a Romulan for a Romulan Ale and two packs of smokes. I haven't read fan fiction since.

    [I originally said that Wesley was Worf's Prision Bitch, but that was ruled unacceptable for a family publication . . . which I guess I've just determined WWdN is not.]


  • Whose work do you read to get inspired?

    David Sedaris and Stephen King are the two most influential authors in my life. They both tell stories in ways that are engaging and easy to read. David Sedaris' "Me Talk Pretty One Day" made me want to tell stories about my life, and Stephen King's "On Writing" taught me how to do it.



Accompanying the story is the very first mainstream media review of Just A Geek! It's phenomenal, and includes the following observation, which made me so happy, I peed a little:

"Just a Geek" is not a celebrity memoir. It is more a collection of humorous commentaries with one essential theme: How does a grown-up geek with two step-kids, a wife, and few job prospects make a go of it?

[Wheaton's] sarcasm, honesty, heart and ferocious gift for dialogue are a delight.


So far, I haven't been able to effectively communicate to people who haven't read my book that it's not limited to a Star Trek or celebrity memoir-reading audience, and people outside that audience may want to give Just A Geek a chance. It has been the most frustrating thing in the world, and it's severely limited the audience that I can reach. To date, I haven't gotten any support to reach beyond . . . well, you guys who read WWdN, so I've had to do it on my own. I've felt pretty down about the whole thing recently (it's about 90% of the not sleeping well thing), because things are not going the way I expected they would with Just A Geek, but this fantastic review is going to be a big help, and will hopefully open a lot of doors for me.


Newspaper xhtml redesign


Newspaper xhtml redesign 08/02/2004 01:35 PM
When Wired News redesigned as nearly standards compliant xhtml in fall of 2002, it was cause for a great deal of celebration. Since then other prominent sites like ESPN and PGA have jumped on the standards bandwagon, as have countless personal sites. Today the SF Examiner launched a new site design which does validate as xhtml. More interesting to me are their category archives and date archives, which mimic a weblog's simple and useful layout. Heck, I even love the story pages which feature large leaded text (space between lines - the amount of "double spaceness") which is also blog-like, and makes for comfortable reading. As far as I know, SF Examiner is the first, but will this start a new wave of bandwidth-saving, well-designed newspaper redesigns? [via veen]

Newspaper Calls Gambling What It Is


Newspaper Calls Gambling What It Is 04/24/2004 09:08 PM

Not once in this LA Times story (reg req) about Native American casinos' gambling revenues -- and whether the casinos should pay more to the state -- do you find the word "gaming," I'm happy to note. The gambling industry has tried to sanitize what it does by renaming the activity into something that sounds totally benign. And the media usually plays along. Not this time. A tip of the hat to whoever made that decision.


Citizen Journalism: A Newspaper Goes for
It


Citizen Journalism: A Newspaper Goes for
It
12/19/2004 03:18 PM
As Jay Rosen explains in his latest PressThink article, the local paper in Greensboro, N.C., is turning its online self into a community square. Bravo. This is a big deal. And as Ed Cone observes -- Ed is a blogger of note and columnist for the paper -- this isn't exactly rocket science. Anyone can do it. Almost every newspaper should try.

Newspaper Sorry for Naughty Santa Jokes
(AP)


Newspaper Sorry for Naughty Santa Jokes
(AP)
12/19/2004 03:22 PM
AP - A weekly newspaper in eastern Kentucky has apologized for mistakenly printing sexually explicit Christmas jokes that left some blushing readers as red as Santa's suit.

Tabloid T&A and politics in Murdoch's
Sun newspaper


Tabloid T&A and politics in Murdoch's
Sun newspaper
08/29/2004 02:07 PM
Xeni Jardin: BoingBoing reader Rod says,
In the UK, Rupert Murdoch's "The Sun" tabloid -- famous for it's topless models on Page 3 -- has decided that merely displaying a couple of boobs to increase circulation is not enough. Now, accompanying the lady proudly displaying her knockers, is a small snippet of right-wing Murdoch-approved propoganda, purporting to be the opinion of the Page 3 Girl. Tim Ireland's gathered together some prime examples from the last 8 months.
Link

Newspaper Giants Buy Web News Monitor


Newspaper Giants Buy Web News Monitor 03/23/2005 12:11 AM
The Gannett Company, Knight-Ridder Inc. and the Tribune Company are joining forces to buy three-fourths of Topix.net, a Web site that monitors online news sources.

how craigslist destroyed newspaper
classifieds


how craigslist destroyed newspaper
classifieds
06/03/2004 06:44 AM
nobody in print journalism will talk about it, but craig's eating their lunch

RSS gaining ground in the newspaper
world


RSS gaining ground in the newspaper
world
08/05/2004 08:29 AM
It seems the big newspapers are picking up RSS. It has been happening for a good while here in Norway. All the major newspapers have...

N.C. Newspaper Uses Blogs to Reach
Readers (AP)


N.C. Newspaper Uses Blogs to Reach
Readers (AP)
03/27/2005 01:11 PM
AP - It's a journalist's job to ask questions, but they're usually aimed at outsiders. At the News & Record, a 93,000-daily circulation newspaper in Greensboro, reporters and editors are asking tough questions about the paper itself. The biggest questions: If the paper needs to change to survive, what changes should be made? What can it do, especially online, to make itself the electronic equivalent of a town square?

N.C. newspaper uses bl0gs to reach
readers


N.C. newspaper uses bl0gs to reach
readers
03/27/2005 03:48 PM
San Jose Mercury News Mar 27 2005 6:53PM GMT

Lennon accepts newspaper apology


Lennon accepts newspaper apology 08/06/2004 06:30 AM
Celtic footballer Neil Lennon accepts a public apology and damages in his case against the Daily Record.

ZAMAN DAILY NEWSPAPER (2004092112424)


ZAMAN DAILY NEWSPAPER (2004092112424) 09/24/2004 01:55 PM
one person willing to run against him for leader of Iraq .. Steady leadership in times of change .. the real thing

zaman.org/?bl=international&alt=&trh=20040921&hn=12424
track this site | 3 links


making money with newspaper bl0gs


making money with newspaper bl0gs 07/23/2004 01:18 PM
details on how the Spokesman-Review is starting to put ads around their blogs

AP, Miss. Newspaper Sue Over Tape
Erasure (AP)


AP, Miss. Newspaper Sue Over Tape
Erasure (AP)
05/10/2004 08:34 PM
AP - The Associated Press and the Hattiesburg American filed a lawsuit Monday against the U.S. Marshals Service over an incident in April in which a federal marshal erased reporters' recordings of a speech Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia gave to high school students.

"EditorandPublisher.com - Information
Authority for the Newspaper ..."


"EditorandPublisher.com - Information
Authority for the Newspaper ..."
05/25/2004 03:56 AM

Wow, somebody types in the Fry's
newspaper ads and puts them on the Web.


Wow, somebody types in the Fry's
newspaper ads and puts them on the Web.
07/29/2004 10:29 PM
Wow, somebody types in the Fry's newspaper ads and puts them on the Web.

Neb. Newspaper Prints Edition Backward
(AP)


Neb. Newspaper Prints Edition Backward
(AP)
08/16/2004 08:41 AM
AP - Custer County Chief publisher Deb McCaslin admits her newspaper, at least for a week, was leftist. But not in the way most media critics would presume.

"Is The New York Times a Liberal
Newspaper?"


"Is The New York Times a Liberal
Newspaper?"
07/25/2004 08:59 PM

Is the New York Times a liberal
newspaper?


Is the New York Times a liberal
newspaper?
07/25/2004 03:44 PM
(*)

nytimes.com/2004/07/25/weekinreview/25bott.html
track this site | 3 links


Newspaper Industry Continues Their
Missteps


Newspaper Industry Continues Their
Missteps
05/06/2004 08:31 PM
Last year we wrote about why charging for newspapers online doesn't make sense. It's a backwards move, trying to force an old business model onto a new delivery platform that won't have it. It actually does more damage to the newspaper by cutting off opportunities - especially as the online advertising market is taking off again. And, yet, many more newspapers seem headed in that direction, mistaking squeezing more revenue out of a dwindling readership for actually figuring out how to embrace the opportunities that the internet presents.

Will the Greensboro Newspaper Open Its
Archive?


Will the Greensboro Newspaper Open Its
Archive?
02/01/2005 08:39 PM
Bill Mitchell of Poynter: "I don't know what your chances are of winning this one, but it sure is worth exploring." Editor in Greensboro: "As the decision makers see the traffic and better understand the potential, the argument over free archives will be easier to win."

"Is the New York Times a liberal
newspaper? Of course it is."


"Is the New York Times a liberal
newspaper? Of course it is."
07/25/2004 03:44 PM
Daniel Okrent

nytimes.com/2004/07/25/weekinreview/25bott.html?pagewanted=al l&position=
track this site | 3 links


Grok Description matches for Iran Newspaper
GrokA matches for Iran Newspaper

Iran Newspaper

The following phrases have been identified by the grok system as matching this entry:

















Also check out:


Grok

Ipod Porn on the
Rise

Brief Abstract of
Wikipedia's
Mesothelioma Cancer
page

Get first aid
instructions in your
cell phone

IE is crap
JSPWiki gains
podcasting support

Alan’s Bluebells
Upcoming Releases:
PowerMacs, iMacs,
iTunes?

Acer chief: Digital
home market is
anybody's game

Sao Mathias is first
VP to be
computerised

Bochs: An open
source virtual PC
software

Free Software Use in
Brazil Spreads
Beyond Gov't

Uganda [editorial]:
High-Tech Riot Gear
Won't Cure Police
Brutality

Texas Says to Stop
Messing With Slogan
(AP)

Duck Unstuck but
Rescuer Left in Muck
(AP)

Reagan’s
monument

MaxSpeak, You
Listen!: EVIL JEW
FINANCIER WATCH

Capitol Hill Blue:
The oldest daily
political news site
on the World Wide
Web

Free Software Use in
Brazil Spreads
Beyond Gov't
(Reuters)

Your mission, if you
choose to accept it,
is to keep your
balls from blowing
right the hell up.

BWAAAAAAAAW!
When drug companies
hide data

Abu 0.0.4
Free Realty
2.8.6-pre3-beta
(Testing)

Download machine
0.21

aww 0.32
XAMPP 1.4.5
Project Manager X
2.25

LostIRC 0.4.0
Knoppix
Auto-configuration
0.3.2 (Mandrake)

sipsak 0.8.9
xmailheaders 0.1.1
They Work For You
Kerry Suspends
Campaign Events in
Honor of Reagan

Gaudio's Heroics
Clinch French Title

Sharon Cabinet
Passes Watered-Down
Gaza Plan

Bush Will Seek to
Mollify Allies at
Group of Eight

Congo Rebels Leave
Bukavu, Two UN
Troops Killed

UN Iraq Mandate
Looks Likely After
US-Iraqi Pledge

U.N. Iraq Mandate
Looks Likely After
U.S.-Iraqi Pledge

World Leaders Hail
D-Day Heroes, Pledge
Unity

Reagan to Receive
State Funeral,
America Mourns

Otago researcher
makes step towards
quantum computer

US stocks: Market
boosted by Intel,
jobs data and lower
oil

IGNOU examinations
of computer courses
cancelled

Computer lobby group
insists EU Microsoft
ruling must stand

Bootstrapping a
directory of
aggregators

Griffey Homers
Twice, Reds Top
Expos 6-5 (AP)

'Harry Potter' Takes
Nearly $93
Million (AP)

Cricket: Rampant
England on top

UN holds special
session on Iraq

Americans mourn
President Reagan

How complicated can
simple be?

UN Iraq Mandate
Looks Likely After
US-Iraqi Pledge
(Reuters)

Gaddafi Regrets
Reagan Died Without
Facing Trial
(Reuters)

Sharon Cabinet
Passes Watered-Down
Gaza Plan (Reuters)

what is grok?