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2009 SAFF Cup: Defending Champions Beat India To Break Nepalese Hearts

Posted on 09. Dec, 2009 by pharaxe.

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saff championship 2009 bangladesh
The two finalists from last year’s edition played the last group game of the SAFF Cup 2009. India had already qualified for the Semi Finals but Maldives came into the game knowing that a defeat would knock them out of the tournament as Nepal had registered a 3-0 win against Afghanistan to go even on points with Maldives but would go through on goal difference. Jeje got his first start of the tournament after two good outings.

The first half started with Maldives keeping a lot of possession. However it was as it had been in the first two games and neither side managed to make more than passes at a go. Baldeep Singh tried a few long distance shots but none really bothering the Maldives’ keeper. India were finding it difficult to break from mid field and Maldives looked more like to score. And score they did. On 15 minutes, Ali Ishfaq cut through both Ravanan and Ravinder Singh and as both defenders tried to come back to make a tackle he cut the ball back to Ahmed Thoriq who made no mistake from 10 yards. Maldives lead 1-0 and deservedly so. Ali Ishfaq was the main tormentor as India felt out of their depth.

Finally on 20 minutes India managed to build an attack but a poor cross from Jibon Singh went out for a goal kick. Maldives were all over India now and winning a few corners and free kicks. The Indian defense were riding their luck a bit as for all their possession and attacking waves, Maldives were not being able to get a shot on target. Soon India managed two consecutive corners and Ravinder Singh deliverd two beautiful crosses but India couldn’t convert. Balwant Singh got himself booked for ball handling as he tried to get at the end of one of the corners.

As the first half came to an end, Ali Ishafaq got into the referee’s book for contempt and will thus miss the Semi Final. It was totally unnecessary. The first half ended with Maldives leading 1-0 and India lucky to be behind just by a solitary goal.

India came out of the blocks stronger this time around and Blawant Singh wasted a great opportunity as he got through on goal and with only the keeper to beat he put his shot wide. India clearly got a ‘hairdryer’ treatment at half time as it was all India at the beginning of the second half. Raja got two consecutive shots on goal as the Indian attack started to find spaces around the Maldives’ defense. But both shots were off target. And just when India looked likely to score, Ali Ishfaq latched onto a long ball, before racing down on goal and with only the keeper to beat from 10 yards, he missed the target.

On the hour mark, things got worse for India as Blawant Singh was given his marching orders. He got a second yellow card for diving but the replays suggested it was a poor decision by the referee as Balwant was clearly caught. He will now miss the Semi Final against Bangladesh. Sukhwinder made no change immediately as India went a man down. Jeje was doing a good job of holding the ball up but has no support to take the move further.

On 78 minute Ali Ishafaq danced through the Indian defense and into the penalty box but was brought down by Denzel, it was a sure shot penalty but the refereee thought otherwise and India survived. Just as it started to look like this game was going to have no more incidents, Fazeel Ibrahim, who has had a great tournament, doubled Maldives’ lead. As a corner was sent in Kuttimani came out to collect it but completely made a meal of it. Ashfaq collected the loose ball and sent in a cross which was thumped in by Ibrahim. Game was over for India.

The last ten minutes of the game proved to be of no consequence and no happening whatsoever. India let Maldives pass the ball around and at the final whistle, it ended India 0-2 Maldives.

Goalscores: A. Thoriq (Maldives) 15’, Fazeel Ibrahim (Maldives) 83’

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An expatriate prostitutes tested positive for AIDS

Posted on 09. Dec, 2009 by pharaxe.

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Ministry of Health has revealed that an expatriate prostitutes operating in the country has been tested positive for AIDS. Ministry said that these expatriates arrive in Maldives under tourist visa.

Speaking at a press conference held yesterday, Senior Medical Officer Dr Ahmed Jamsheed Mohamed of Center for Community Health and Disease Control (CCHDC) said that even though expatriates arriving in Maldives under work permit are routinely tested for HIV, those arriving with tourist visa go untested. Dr Jamsheed said that if people act heedless to this fact, than there is a danger of spreading the virus among Maldivians.

Speaking in this regard, Dr Jamsheed said that one expatriate caught in prostitution business in Maldives was tested positive for AIDS. This person, who was here on a tourist visa applied for a work permit here, and as required by work permit regulations, a test for HIV was conducted and it came out positive.

Dr Jamsheed added that they have credible information that there are more of such kinds of people arriving in Maldives and working in places like massage parlors and brothels.

So far 246 expatriates have been deported from Maldives after being tested positive for HIV. In addition to this, 14 Maldivians has also been confirmed for HIV, out of which only 4 are still surviving.

Confidential testing for HIV and counseling is undertaken by 3 places in the country. This includes Jaanee, ADK Hospital and Maldives Police Service (MPS.)

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MALDIVES: What do Maldivians understand freedom of religion or belief to be?

Posted on 09. Dec, 2009 by pharaxe.

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By Odd Larsen, Forum 18 News Service
(This article was published by F18News on: 7 December 2009)


Why is there hostility to freedom of religion or belief in the Maldives, where Islam in a form approved by the state is the only legal faith? This hostility even extends to parliament unanimously considering a draft bill to ban the – already impossible – possibility of building non-Muslim places of worship. Although some Maldivians anonymously identify themselves as different from the repressive Maldivian identity imposed by former President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, hostility – from both state and society – to freedom of religion or belief and freedom of expression continues under President Mohamed Nasheed. Repressive legal instruments, state actions and social intolerance contribute to this hostility, which imposes barriers on Maldivians’ understanding of what their human rights are. This has serious implications for the Maldives’ future. Some parents have told Forum 18 News Service that they are afraid of what may happen if they bring their children up with Muslim or non-Muslim beliefs different from those imposed by state and society. As a Muslim explained, “if I teach my child that Islam respects all human beings as equal his Islam teacher states that women are inferior.” She commented that “if I don’t want my child to grow up with this kind of attitudes and thinking, I see no other way than to migrate.”
On 18 November the Maldives parliament, the Majlis, unanimously approved in the initial stages a bill banning all non-Muslim places of worship, with proposed penalties for those who violate the Law of large fines and long imprisonment, Forum 18 News Service notes. As some Majlis members pointed out, the Constitution already bans non-Muslims from being Maldivian citizens and any laws contrary to any “tenet of Islam” – as the Maldives’ repressive government understands this – so the proposed Law does not in practice add new restrictions to Maldivians’ freedom of religion or belief. Nevertheless, Majlis members unanimously sent the bill to a committee for further work. President Mohamed Nasheed’s Office has stated that, if the bill is eventually passed, he would probably sign it. However, it is thought that it may be months before the bill is finally passed, if it is indeed passed. Yet the proposed Law – even if it is not eventually passed – raises the question of what Maldivians understand freedom of religion or belief to be.

Why?

Why is there such extreme hostility to freedom of religion and belief, and what do Maldivians understand by this? Increasingly, Maldivians are identifying themselves – anonymously – in weblogs as secular or non-Muslims. Yet the Maldives continues to severely restrict the religious freedom of both Maldivians and non-Maldivian workers in the country (see eg. F18News 23 June 2009 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1316).

One Maldivian, who preferred not to be identified for fear of reprisals, told Forum 18 in October that “few Maldivians do understand religious freedom. I also believe that there is a fear among many that to consider religious freedom is equivalent to being blasphemous.” Maldivians are under this impression because they are told that in Islam there is no freedom to choose one’s religion.

During the rule of former President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, who lost the October 2008 presidential election, the once religiously tolerant Maldives – which tended towards folk Islam – was changed into a society intolerant of all beliefs except state-approved Sunni Islam (see F18News 18 February 2009 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1257). The country has denied that the freedom of religion or belief provisions of the International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) apply to the Maldives, against the recommendations made by the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief, Asma Jahangir (see F18News 15 October 2008 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1203). It similarly violates its international obligations in relation to the human rights of migrant workers (see F18News 23 June 2009 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1316).

What do Maldivians understand by freedom of religion or belief?

Muslim and non-Muslim Maldivians Forum 18 spoke to in autumn 2009 expressed the view that under President Nasheed they had obtained religious freedom. They defined this as being free to discuss religious issues related to Islam.

A Maldivian Muslim told Forum 18 in autumn 2009 that “we have freedom now. I can now keep my English Bible in a cupboard in my sitting room. I don’t need to hide it in a concealed place, as I used to have to.” However, Forum 18 notes that the individual did not feel safe enough to keep the Bible openly on a table in the sitting room.

Other Maldivians told Forum 18 in autumn 2009 that they have religious freedom because: Salafi Islam can now openly be preached; women can walk around in headscarves, covering even their eyes; and men can wear beards and shortened trousers. None of these things were permitted under former President Gayoom (see F18News 15 October 2008 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1203).

No public freedom of religion or belief permitted

However, when asked whether Maldivians were free to formally study any religion and to choose to follow any religion or belief they wish, people unanimously answered “no”. All agreed that Maldivians have to publicly be Muslim, and that they cannot formally study, publicly profess, or practice any other religion.

When asked whether Maldivian parents had the choice as to whether or not they had to teach their children Islam, the answer was always “no”. One non-Muslim Maldivian said that she had no chance to teach her child something about her own belief. She felt that to do so would put her child in danger. She told Forum 18 that she does not know what would happen to her child, if someone found out that the child was taught about any religion except Islam. For example, she does not know whether the child would be taken away from her.

No public freedom of religion or belief for Muslims permitted

Individual Muslims also have no choice about how they personally follow Islam. Maldivians unanimously stated to Forum 18 that Maldivians could not publicly: follow any other approach to Islam apart from that within Sunni Islam; question the Islamic teaching of religious scholars; or pray in whatever way they wanted. They also stated that there was no public choice over whether one could: fast or not fast during Ramadan; drink alcohol; have intimate relationships outside marriage; or be publicly anything other than heterosexual in sexual orientation.

Echoing views Forum 18 has heard from other Maldivian Muslims in recent years, a Muslim told Forum 18 in autumn 2009 that she needed to migrate for her child to grow up in an environment that respects alternative views. She explained that the state denies her right to teach her child according to her own convictions. “Some years ago, we were told as Maldivians we had to be Muslims. Then the government started to narrow it down and asked us to be Sunni Muslim. Now for my child Sunni Muslim is not good enough, he is taught to follow Islam the Salafi way.”

She told Forum 18 that in schools “the teacher has all power. If I teach my child to speak about God in a language and in terms that they can understand, and my child uses this language and terms in school examinations, the teacher will mark it as wrong. Although my child writes the correct Islamic answers, the teacher insists she personally decides which style of language children have to use when referring to God or religion.” These are distinctions which are very important in speaking Dhivehi.

“If I teach my child that Islam respects all human beings as equal,” she continued, “his Islam teacher states that women are inferior – even that I, my child’s mother, makes my child unclean if I touch him after the ritual washing before prayers. My child is taught that women who follow true Islam stay at home and don’t go out to work. In other words, my child is taught in school that his mother is not following true Islam. If I don’t want my child to grow up with this kind of attitudes and thinking, I see no other way than to migrate.”

As this Muslim Maldivian mother has discovered, legally Maldivians are not forced to follow Salafi Islam – but the social pressure to do so is very high.

Particular problems are caused by the Maldives Government’s insistence that only Islamic marriages conducted in ways acceptable to the Maldives’ narrow interpretations are legal and Muslim women cannot marry non-Muslim men unless they convert to Islam in a ceremony that the Maldivian authorities regard as acceptable (see F18News 15 October 2008 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1203).

What do the authorities understand by freedom of religion or belief?

The authorities’ approach to their international human rights obligations on freedom of religion or belief is hostile. Forum 18 asked the Human Rights Commission of the Maldives (HRCM) on 15 June for comment on the lack of religious freedom suffered by migrant workers (see F18News 23 June 2009 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1316). In particular, the HRCM was asked to comment on:

1. a parliamentary statement of the Minister for Human Resources, Youth and Sports, Hassan Latheef, that the Maldives will not have to respect the freedom of religion or belief of migrant workers on joining the International Labour Organisation;

and 2. the report of the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief (A/HRC/4/21/Add.3) following her country visit to the Maldives, including the comment at paragraph 68 that: “The Special Rapporteur is extremely concerned by the current limitations placed on the right of migrant workers and other foreigners to manifest their religion or belief. She notes that these limitations are implemented as a matter of practice, and not as a matter of law. As such, they may fail to comply with the requirement in article 18, paragraph 3 of the ICCPR that any limitation on the right to manifest one’s freedom of religion or belief must be prescribed by law. Furthermore, the Special Rapporteur questions to what extent these limitations are necessary to protect public safety, order, health or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others, as set out in article 18, paragraph 3, of the ICCPR and article 1, paragraph 3, of the 1981 Declaration.”

[The text of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), including Article 18 on the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion, is available at http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/ccpr.htm; General Comment 22 explaining Article 18 is available at http://www.unhchr.ch/tbs/doc.nsf/%28Symbol%29/9a30112c27d1167cc12563ed004d8f15?Opendocument; and the 1981 Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief is available at http://www.un.org/documents/ga/res/36/a36r055.htm.]

Minivan News on 5 October 2009 reported that HRCM Spokesperson Jeehan Mahmoud had said that the Commission decided not to respond as the Constitution clearly prescribes Islam as the state religion. Jeehan told Minivan News that the HRCM forwarded Forum 18’s enquiry to the Ministry of Islamic Affairs for their reference. “We haven’t sought advice from the Ministry because there’s no question about it,” Jeehan stated. “It’s in the Constitution .. our first priority is the Constitution,” she said.

Minivan News also reported that State Minister of Islamic Affairs Mohamed Shaheem Ali Saeed had said that places of worship for other religions could not be built in the Maldives. “We will not accept it under any circumstances,” he told Minivan News. “They [Forum 18] want to build temples in the country. They have always been trying to spread Christianity in the Maldives. But it cannot be done. All Maldivians are Muslims.”

State Minister Saeed added that expatriates, such as teachers and labourers, were free to worship in the privacy of their homes, but congregating for prayer was illegal. “In their personal life, in their homes, they can practice their beliefs,” he told Minivan News. “But they can’t gather people for worship.”

Mohamed Shafaz Wajeeh, Director of the HRCM, replied to Forum 18 on 7 October that: “such rights should be respected insofar as Article 10 of the Constitution of the Maldives is upheld, which states that Islam shall be the religion of the state and shall be the basis for all laws in the Maldives.”

The HRCM claims on its website that its “Vision” is: “Human rights, democracy and the rule of law for everyone.” Yet Wajeeh’s statement nullifies this “Vision”, as Article 10 of the Constitution enacts Islam as the state religion, and states that “No law contrary to any tenet of Islam shall be enacted in the Maldives”. The Constitution defines – or more accurately does not define – “tenets of Islam” in a way which leaves great uncertainty over what is legal and what is not, thus undermining all three elements of the HRCM “Vision” (see F18News 18 February 2009 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1257).

Continuing to limit human limits, Wajeeh of the Human Rights Commission went on to state that “the Maldives has a reservation against Article 18 ["freedom of thought, conscience and religion"] of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to the effect that the application of the principles set out in Article 18 shall be without prejudice to the Constitution of the Maldives.”

Wajeeh ends his response by stating that “the Commission would like to give its assurances that foreign manual labourers or other expatriates, face no restrictions in joining local mosques for prayers, and further that expatriate school pupils are under no compulsion to choose Islamic Studies and Dhivehi Language, and can freely opt out of these subjects.” The Human Rights Commission in this reply limits the internationally recognised right of all to freedom of religion or belief to practising Islam in a state-approved way and not forcing non-Maldivian children to study Islam.

Also in October the ruling-coalition Adhaalath Party, which controls the Islamic Affairs Ministry, issued a Dhivehi-language statement that: “There might be mosques, churches, temples and synagogues in the same street of Bombay (Mumbai), but we don’t want that here. And even though the Indian government has made laws and is trying to bring the Christians, Hindus, Muslims, Buddhists, Jews and Sikhs to live together in peace and harmony, that doesn’t mean we in the Maldives need to concern ourselves with it or make such laws.”

Censorship continues

Some Maldivians Forum 18 spoke to in autumn 2009 said that they thought there was religious freedom in Maldives because people have the possibility to find out about other religions through the internet. According to them, the government is not able to monitor, censor and block all internet access. “Anyone who is really desperate can find information about other religions on the internet,” Forum 18 was told.

However, the authorities still impose censorship on religious materials (see eg. F18News 23 June 2009 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1316). This still includes blocking access to websites such as the Dhivehi (the Maldivian language) Christian website Sidahitun.com. Similarly, in March 2009 one international and eight local websites were blocked by the newly-created Ministry of Islamic Affairs, according to Iliyas Ahmed of the Telecommunications Authority of Maldives. Among the blocked websites was an Islamic site, raajjeislam.com, which was blocked after it published an audio clip of an imam claiming he had been threatened by State Minister of Islamic Affairs Saeed if he failed to co-operate with the Ministry’s orders.

In July 2009 the Islamic Affairs Ministry banned the import of Indian company Airtel’s digital satellite receivers in the Maldives. Minister Bari stated at a news conference reported by Haveeru on 7 July that the Ministry had received a CD of an Airtel-broadcast programme that promoted Christianity. Haveeru quoted him as saying that “the law prohibits the import of material that can be used to promote and spread illegal religions in the country”, and that the Ministry would ban pornographic or Christian websites reported to them. On 12 July Haveeru reported that Mohamed Zuhair, Press Secretary of President Nasheed’s Office, had said that if anti-Islamic channels cannot be blocked, Airtel receivers will be banned. Some Maldivians Forum 18 has spoken to state that the ban was not implemented because Airtel proposed to modify new satellite dishes, so that unwanted channels would be blocked.

Little chance of change for the better

Given the government hostility to its international human rights obligations to defend human rights such as freedom of religion or belief and the linked right to freedom of expression, it seems unlikely that Maldivians will be able to openly exercise these fundamental human rights in the near future. This will continue to impose barriers on Maldivians’ understanding of what their human rights mean, despite an apparently increasing willingness of some Maldivians to anonymously in web comments openly express their diverse identities – for example in religion, belief, or sexual orientation.

However, already strong social pressure to adopt a radicalised Islamic identity is increasing. This causes moderate Muslim and other Maldivians to think that their only chance of being able to exercise their fundamental human rights is to leave their own country. It is not clear whether President Nasheed will ever seek to defend human rights for all in the Maldives, given his apparent willingness to sign a proposed bill banning all non-Muslim places of worship. (END)

For more background, see Forum 18’s Maldives religious freedom survey at http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=1203.

More analyses on freedom of thought, conscience and belief in the Maldives can be found at http://www.forum18.org/Analyses.php?region=81.

A printer-friendly map of the Maldives is available at http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/atlas/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=maldiv.

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Imam among seven men arrested for homosexual activity

Posted on 08. Dec, 2009 by pharaxe.

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A group of men, including an imam, were arrested in Alif Alif atoll Maalhos on Thursday after photos and videos emerged of the seven engaged in homosexual activity.

An islander who spoke on condition of anonymity told Minivan News a group of teenagers from the island came upon the video CDs in the house of one of the suspects. When the CDs began to be circulated in public, the “island elders” alerted police.

“It came as a big shock to everyone on the island to see that [the imam] was one of them. He gives the Friday sermons at the mosque every week,” he said. “He is a well respected person on the island and we saw him as our religious leader.”

Besides the imam, the pornographic videos featured a mosque caretaker, a carpenter and another man the islanders believe to be mentally unstable, the islander claimed.

“He is a deranged person. We have always seen him running around the island naked,” he said.

Of the three men not featured in the video, two were incriminated in photos found along with the videos, he continued, while the third was believed to have filmed the pornography.

Three of the suspects were married with children, the islander said, while one of them included a second, retired imam. The youngest of the seven men was aged 27, while the rest were over 45 years of age, he said.

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Fewer Nokia Smartphones in 2010

Posted on 08. Dec, 2009 by pharaxe.

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Just like Nokia leads the “dumb” phones market, it tops the smartphone sales as well. While Nokia continues its comfortable lead over competitors in this segment, its dominance is under constant threat from players like Apple, RIM and Android based devices.

In 2009, Nokia had introduced close to 20 smartphones in a variety of price brackets. The notion that smartphones are only high-end devices has begun to fall apart and we now see quite a few moderately priced smartphones as well. As a strategy to retain its lad in this segment, Nokia has come up with a plan that, at first, might raise eyeballs. It is actually planning to cut down on the number of smartphones it will release in the forthcoming year. In fact, we might only see around 10 new phones from the company next year. While it is a good idea to reduce the number of handsets, it also presents to the consumer, far fewer options and freedom of choice which incidentally was one of the strong points for Nokia. People could buy a smartphone of their choice, that suits their needs.

On the flip side, there is also this talk about almost all Nokia phones being similar with the same OS and the consumer being too confused as to what to buy. The reduction in the number of models would mean a simpler, uncluttered product line up. It remains to be seen if this strategy does bear fruit and translates into increased sales.

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Intel Demos 48-Core CPU

Posted on 08. Dec, 2009 by pharaxe.

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Intel has demonstrated an experimental 48-core processor that reflects a rethinking of the chip design in order to dramatically boost performance and power efficiency in future laptops, desktops, and servers.Each core in the prototype shown off Wednesday by Intel researchers at the company’s Santa Clara, Calif., headquarters is fully programmable and shares data over a high-speed on-chip network. Newly invented power management techniques keep energy consumption to as little as 25 watts and as much as 125 watts when the chip is running at maximum performance. That’s about the same amount of power used by today’s Intel’s processors.

Researchers call the processor a “single-chip cloud computer,” because its design resembles the organization of data centers used to support cloud-computing environments that deliver services over the Web.Cloud data centers comprise tens of thousands of computers connected by a physically cabled network used to distribute large tasks and massive data sets in parallel. Intel uses a similar approach in the experimental processor, which is about the size of a postage stamp. The chip was built using Intel’s 45-nanometer manufacturing process.

The high-speed network connecting cores in the experimental chip makes it possible for software to quickly pass information directly between cooperating cores in a matter of a few microseconds, reducing the need to access data in slower, off-chip system memory. Applications can also dynamically manage which cores are used for a given task at a given time, matching the performance and energy needs to the job.

Intel believes adding more cores is the best way to continuously increase processor performance. The company plans to release in 2010 a six-core processor codenamed Gulftown. The 32-nm processor will be based on Intel’s upcoming Westmere microarchitecture.

Processors like the latest concept chip will make it possible to run more applications on fewer physical servers, thereby reducing the size of a data center while making the facility more power efficient, said Justin Rattner, chief technology officer for Intel.

“With a chip like this, you could imagine a cloud datacenter of the future which will be an order of magnitude more energy efficient than what exists today, saving significant resources on space and power costs,” Rattner said in a statement. “Over time, I expect these advanced concepts to find their way into mainstream devices, just as advanced automotive technology such as electronic engine control, air bags, and anti-lock braking eventually found their way into all cars.”

However, the speed at which processors with dozens of cores are adopted will depend on how fast programmers can develop software that takes advantage of the chips, which will require new development tools that simplify the complexity of building applications for such advanced technology.

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Logitech G500 Review

Posted on 08. Dec, 2009 by pharaxe.

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Several years after the inital release of the G5 it’s successor, the G500 has arrived delievering best perfomance to the gamers. The main features of the new mouse are,

  • 10 programmable buttons!
  • Advanced precision, up to 5700dpi!
  • Dual-mode scrolling wheel, a very anticipated improvement!
  • On-board memory for maintaining your macros when you’re not behind your own computer!

They’ve managed to make the new mouse more comfortable by adding width to it so it feels more convenient in your hand – especially if you’re playing with palm grip. I wouldn’t say that the old mouse was bad but it certainly wasn’t that good! The dual-mode scrolling wheel really is a much appreciated feature as it grants you smooth scrolling through web sites and yet allows you to change your weapons in an FPS with ultimate precision. For the extra buttons I didn’t find much use, especially for the one located between back & forth button but I guess the extra buttons are aimed towards MMORPG players for holding their macros.

The price, ranging from about 59$-69$ ain’t the smallest one but its certainly worth it. Of course there are mice from Razer that compete with it but they’re always very specific and might not suit your hand while the G500 is more universal. I hope to test out the new Steelseries Xai and Kinzu soon to find out how well they perform against this mouse.

Overall I can only reccommend it as I didn’t find any major weak spots during my one-week testing period!

Logitech G500

LogitechG500

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