Shabbat Times
Daily Updates

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Search
Google
Web This Site
Donations
This Month
July 2007
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31
RSS Newsfeeds
Battalion Of Deborah Main RSS Feed Main Page RSS
News RSS Feed News RSS
Powered by
Powered by BlogHarbor


Performancing
Login
User name:
Password:
Remember me 
Main Page  »  News
View Article  William Koenig Announces ,US Presidential Plans
12-Point Platform
1. Our Nation
The United States is a Constitutional Republic. A Republic protects the individual's rights without regard to social or economic circumstances. We must stop classifying our citizens by socioeconomic and ethnic classes, which leads with certainty to economic and racial division. We are all Americans and we celebrate our common heritage as a proud nation of immigrants who have come together to become American citizens, building and maintaining the greatest nation on earth.
2. Take Our Enemies Seriously
Radical Islam critically threatens the interests of the United States at home and abroad. This threat is not a perception; it is openly celebrated in the streets of militant countries who proclaim their hatred of the United States and call on their citizens to live with harmful intent toward America and her citizens. The actions they have taken and the actions they vow to take must be taken seriously. If the U.S. leaves the Middle East, Iran and terrorist organizations will intensify their aggressive action and override the entire region, trampling the Palestinians along with the peoples of Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, Lebanon, Israel, and other Middle Eastern countries. This action will certainly jeopardize and possibly destroy ...   more »
View Article  Britain doesn't rule out Iran strike
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has not ruled out a military strike on Iran, the newly appointed premier told reporters in London on Monday.
"I believe that the economic sanctions imposed on Teheran will be effective, but I wouldn't… rule out action of a different kind," he said.
In his first interview from 10 Downing St., Brown expressed hope that the United Nations Security Council will approve additional sanctions on the Islamic republic in the near future.
Asked whether he would consider an offensive that would target Iran's nuclear program, Brown said that he "isn't one of those [people] who say they rule out this option."
However, Brown said that he still thought UN sanctions were effective. "Soon, a decision will be made regarding Iran and I believe that this path will continue to be efficient," said Brown.
"The UK will do all that is necessary to strengthen these sanctions," said the prime minister.
Original Source

   more »
View Article  RFID solutions made in Saudi Arabia for the regional market
DEPCO systems has conducted a rigorous market study to determine the best suited RFID middleware to our operations and reached a common agreement within our organization that NCR with their NCR TransitionWorksTM software platform has the best positioned AIDC product to supports our efforts presently and in the future.
Radio Frequency Identification or RFID, is a revolutionary technology that will allow many industries to embed radio frequency microchips into their products enabling intelligence at the edge of the corporation. This method of operation has proven throughout recent years to be most efficient in managing any industry supply chain, increasing security, improving efficiency and reducing the company's OPEX justifying a strong Return On Investment (ROI).
DEPCO systems will launch at the end of 2007 the first RFID system developed in Saudi Arabia unique in function and customized solely for regional corporate requirements using the NCR AIDC middleware. Following an in-depth market study conducted over a period of 6 months, DEPCO systems will initially target the valuable goods & services markets by aiming at our clients in the jewellery business and the banking sector.
The Open architecture adopted by NCR AIDC engine allows DEPCO systems R&D team to fully integrate our RFID ...   more »
View Article  America & The House of Saud
It has become apparent that the billions of US dollars annually spent on Saudi oil seldom reciprocate loyalty anymore.
The recent military figures made available to The Los Angeles Times by senior American officials state that roughly 45% of all foreign combatants in the Iraq war theatre come solely from Saudi Arabia. However, this should, in no way, be a revelation.
For years, many in the West have overtly expressed their outrage at Wahabbist odium towards religious plurality, the backwards indoctrination of Saudi school children through their public educational system, the apocalyptic conspiracy theories that are rife in Saudi state-run media, and the profound antipathy that the majority in their religious establishment have towards western values.
In 2002, with the images of 9/11 still fresh in the American mindset and approximately nine months before the start of the Iraq war, scholar Victor Davis Hanson wrote a most detailed analysis about America’s self-defeating “alliance” with the House of Saud.
In Our enemies the Saudis, Hanson examines the conundrum of why a western, liberalized society that bases its entire identity on pluralism can have any diplomatic relations, let alone a strong alliance, with the reactionary neo-Caliphate oligarchy of Saudi Arabia. The “anomaly ...   more »
View Article  Chips: High-tech aids or tools for Big Brother
By Todd Lewan
CityWatcher.com, a provider of surveillance equipment, attracted little notice itself — until a year ago, when two of its employees had glass-encapsulated microchips with miniature antennas embedded in their forearms.
The “chipping” of two workers with RFIDs — radio frequency identification tags as long as two grains of rice, as thick as a toothpick — was merely a way of restricting access to vaults that held sensitive data and images for police departments, a layer of security beyond key cards and clearance codes, the company said.
“To protect high-end secure data, you use more sophisticated techniques,” Sean Darks, chief executive of the Cincinnati-based company, said. He compared chip implants to retina scans or fingerprinting. “There’s a reader outside the door; you walk up to the reader, put your arm under it, and it opens the door.”
Innocuous? Maybe.
But the news that Americans had, for the first time, been injected with electronic identifiers to perform their jobs fired up a debate over the proliferation of ever-more-precise tracking technologies and their ability to erode privacy in the digital age.
High-tech helper or Big Brother?
To some, the microchip was a wondrous invention — a high-tech helper that could ...   more »
View Article  Powerful new radio chip unveiled
Hewlett-Packard is introducing new technology to allow the storage of large amounts of information on small chips that can be attached to various objects.
The mobile chips, called Memory Spots, have an adhesive back enabling them to be placed on objects such as paintings, photographs, passports and medical-alert bracelets, the New York Times reports.
Stored information on the tiny, mobile chip could include sound, text or video.
Memory Spots have a distinct advantage over the controversial Radio Frequency Identification, or RFID, tags, with the ability to store more than 250 times as much data and transmit 20 times faster.
The information can be accessed by touching the chip with an inexpensive handheld electronic reader, the Times said.
RFID tags, which have raised privacy concerns, can be read from many feet away while Memory Spots can be read only up close.
Promoters of Memory Spots also insist privacy is of little worry because the information can be encrypted.
If produced in volume, the Memory Spots could cost as little as 10 cents each. However, questions remain about the practicality of the technology for everyday use. Also unanswered is what happens to the data should the tiny device become detached from an ...   more »