Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

THE FACEBOOK REVOLUTION--From Egypt with Love - Cape Cod Today (blog)

02/12/11 · 3:01 am :: posted by David     

Today's blog was to be about China. I've been working on it for a long time, but history doesn't wait for any man, not even an old fart like me. The history being made these days is not about China but about Egypt.

My earliest connection to Egypt was reciting the Hagaddah during Passover. This ancient story of the Jewish escape from Pharaoh's Army has stirred generation after generation.

I personally did not encounter Egypt until I was nearly forty. It happened this way....................I was working in the Pittsburgh area when Marty Glaser asked me to compose a song for an upcoming Jewish Federation fundraiser. Being true to my nature of never knowing when to stop, I composed an orchestral piece that was recorded by members of the Pittsburgh Symphony and I called it Jerusalem. Beyond being used by the Federation, nothing came of it. It took its place on my shelf of other forgotten or obscure pieces.

A year later, President Sadat of Egypt flew to Jerusalem in a quest for peace.

Marvin Franklin, who headed up the advertising agency of which I was a partner-Franklin, Rader and Rojay-suggested that Jerusalem could be tied to Sadat's visit.

Marvin had other motives in mind; we had just recorded an album of original songs by me and he believed that if we put Jerusalem in the album and tied it to an international event, it would be gangbusters.

Marvin had a friendship with Senator Randolph, who was presented with the following scenario devised by a local TV anchor. The scenario said that I had composed Jerusalem with the help of a young accountant in Marvin's employ who was of Lebanese-Syrian descent.

It was a natural-Jewish American and Arab American compose peace song. And it took on a life of its own. The next thing I knew, we were being invited to present a recording to the Egyptian Embassy in Washington DC. Not to be outdone by the Egyptians, the Israeli Embassy invited us also; and then through the process of momentum, a copy was taken to the White House.

All this happened in one afternoon. By 6:30, we were famous-sort of-making the news on all three networks.

Much to my surprise our snowball continued to roll downhill; and so, we were invited to come to Jerusalem and present a recording to Prime Minister Begin. A beat or two later we were likewise invited to go to Cairo and present a recording to President Sadat.

Throughout all this, my "co-composer" (who I will call Seseen) gobbled up the limelight and every microphone or camera in sight, in spite of the fact that he really had nothing to do with any of it.

We finally got to Jerusalem and I noticed right away that Seseen was very nervous. As it turned out, we had to wait for the presentation to Prime Minister Begin and during the three weeks that we waited, Seseen made numerous trips into the old city of Jerusalem where he sort of became radicalized by the Arab shopkeepers that he encountered there.

Before I knew it, he was making unkind references to Israel and "the Jews" but true to form, when the presentation was made, Seseen was all smiles and like I said before, he was first in line to the microphone.

Just days after this, Prime Minister Begin compared Sadat to Hitler. The Egyptians broke off all contact with the Israelis and we found ourselves in a situation where we would not be able to go to Egypt from Israel. The fallback plan was to go to London and go from there to Egypt. But as fate would have it, Seseen and I went to a movie in Jerusalem that night and while we were watching Ryan's Daughter, a squad of Israeli troops came in and sat next to us and laid their oozies down on the concrete floor. In Israel, off-duty troops stay armed; when Seseen heard the click click click of the machine guns against the floor, he fled the theater and booked passage back to the states the following morning. I never saw him again.

Once I was in London, I became, in effect, a ward of the Egyptian Embassy, a very nice, a very splendid Embassy I might say, with a waiting room that featured a Chanson painting of a Nile scene. This was not a copy, it was the real thing.

I was treated with customary Egyptian hospitality that included Turkish coffee and baklava.

The attaché who dealt with me suggested that I take a room at the Cumberland Hotel and wait for an Egyptian visa.

I spent my time walking about London, trying to absorb the sights and sounds of the city. One of those days, while walking down Oxford Street, I saw a young Muslim girl drop her purse and in the process release several papers to the wind.

No one stopped to help her until I arrived and joined her in chasing down documents, papers and other items. When she stood up and looked me in the eye, I could see that she was very beautiful and very distressed.

I suggested that we go into a nearby coffee house so that she could collect herself. When we got inside, her eyes began to tear up and I wondered what I could do for her.

She told me that she had been having a terrible day. She had come to London with her best friend for a short vacation and as soon as she arrived, that very morning, the friend left her for a rendezvous with a Frenchman in Paris. Now she was all alone in London and didn't know what to do.

I looked at my watch and realized it was 10:30. "Would you like to see the Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace?" I said. "It's at 11 o'clock; if we hurry we can get there on time."

Her face lit up with a beautiful smile and in no time we were disembarking from our taxi in front of the crowd that had gathered to see the ceremony.

Strangely enough, a Japanese company was filming a commercial at the same time and we encountered a large Japanese actor in a Samurai outfit with his sword drawn. Then the band began to play God Save the Queen.

Having spent many years in military bands, I was most interested in this band's make up. It had no trumpets, but rather a chorus of cornets which gave the band a very light and delicate sound. I immediately heard the difference between this band, which had an orchestral texture, and American military bands, which blasted all hell out of every note.

There was such a crowd around the palace fence that I instinctively picked up the young girl and held her in my arms so she could see over the rows of heads. Of course this is not something a stranger should do to a Muslim girl, especially one who hasn't even told him her name. When I finally let her down, she was trembling like a little bird and on the spot I gave her the name "Pacushni" and this is what I called her from that moment on. I never found out her real name.
In the three days of the weekend that followed, I took her to the London Zoo, I took her to a movie about the blitz, I took her to the British Museum and I took her to a Turkish Restaurant where we had kebabs and Sigara Boregi. It was here that she talked to me about The Seven Pillars of Wisdom and I realized that she was a very religious girl. And yet, she seemed drawn to me. Of course, I was giving her the grand tour and paying all the expenses. I must say, at this point, that nothing happened between the girl and myself; but I believe we enjoyed each other's company. Her English was excellent and she was very sweet and kind.

The most intimate thing that happened, happened one afternoon in Hyde Park as she began reciting poetry that she had written. When we settled on a bench, she translated it from Arabic to English and it went something like this ........................ "I fly in the mornings while the stars still sleep in the sky; and when I land I see the sun and it is rising." I can't remember more, but it was very heartfelt on her part.

On Monday morning, I met her again and rode with her in a taxi to Heathrow where I saw her board a plane back to Cairo.

The memory of this girl still haunts me, her sweet femininity, the fruit of millenniums of Egyptian womanhood.
______________________________________________________________________________

President Sadat was very gracious, more so than Prime Minister Begin who leaned into me and said in my ear, "Make a million."
There were other differences, the Prime Minister's offices in Jerusalem were very utilitarian, no ruffles and flourishes. Everything was painted grey. The other thing that I remember most was the dead eyes of the Mossad Security. Every one of them seemed to have said El Male Rachamim* for himself. In other words they were dead men walking.

Sadat's digs were splendid-gilded you might say. Strangely enough, Sadat reminded me of a sergeant I had known in the Army whose name was Robert E. Lee Washington.

I ended up with a letter from Sadat thanking me for the composition of Jerusalem and referring to my desire for "peace in the Middle East". The letter is framed and hanging on my living room wall.

Sadly enough, Sadat was assassinated soon afterward. According to the story of his assassination, his killers said to Mubarak who was sitting next to him, "Get out of the way, this is the dog we're after."

My only contact with Egypt in the thirty years since, has been by way of an Israeli diplomat who I met through the offices of Moshe Shilon, the manager of the Prime Minister's office.

You never know when someone you meet will become important to your life. I first met Moshe Shilon in 1962 when he was Counsel General in Los Angeles; I dated his secretary, Alona. I know from my diplomatic friend, who shall remain nameless, an outline of life in Egypt during the Mubarak years.

An Egyptian middle-class evolved under Mubarak as he suppressed the Moslem Brotherhood. At the same time, he maintained the Peace Treaty with Israel, a very important fact. As Henry Kissinger said, "No Egypt, no war."

Egypt, particularly ancient Egypt, became a prime tourist destination for Israelis. A certain amount of trade developed and a natural gas pipeline was laid across the Sinai to Israel. There were other exchanges on the cultural level, up to and including a recent Israeli-Egyptian film titled, The Band's Visit. But all this time a rather strange thing took place; while the diplomatic posture of Egypt was peaceful toward Israel, the internal posture was quite hostile.

Egypt was playing a double game. Sadly enough, this game did not include shaping a more positive attitude toward Israel in the Egyptian mind.

Quite recently a synagogue in Alexandria was restored. It was the synagogue of Maimonides, a famous Jewish philosopher whose name is still recited in synagogues to this day. Maimonides was an adviser to Saladin, the Kurdish General that led an Egyptian Army against the Crusaders, finally ridding the Holy Land of Europeans in the Middle Ages.

No mention of the synagogue opening or the history of Maimonides or of a vibrant, rich and productive Jewish presence in Egypt's past was to be found in any Egyptian newspaper or any form of Egyptian media.

At the same time as these changes took place in Egypt, a slowly simmering resentment began to boil. The same kind of resentment that boiled up in Iran, many Latin-American countries and Indonesia. The resentment that comes from corruption and oppression.

My brother, James, who retired recently as a lobbyist on K Street in Washington, has a theory about all this, about the way it relates to a statement by Condoleezza Rice, i.e. "For sixty years, America has chosen stability over democracy." In other words, we've backed tin-horn dictators at the expense of the common man.

My brother's theory says that it all started with golf. My brothers and I grew up in Country Club Manor a place that surrounded a golf course, one of the first of its kind in America. I woke up every morning in the summertime to the sound of a water sprinkler on the ninth hole. We caddied and learned to play and my brother, James, and my brother, Dennis, have both been semi pro-golfers. Throughout it all, I've wondered why anyone wants to submit themselves to this special kind of Scottish masochism. But there is status in the game and I don't put down any American that loves golf. But in my brother's words, "The only men who can afford to play golf in the poorer countries of the world are men from the ass-hole class." These repressive robber baron sons of bitches especially love to play golf with members of Congress. The problem is that the smell rubs off; it gets in the clothes and in the hair and in the nostrils, some people learn to love it, especially those in the political class. That's why their golfing partners can have anything they want and gladly return everything in kind. Of course, the American taxpayer foots the bill. In the case of Egypt during the reign of Pharaoh Mubarak-about fifty billion dollars worth.

Where did this money go? Did it go to the homeless of Egypt who slept in the cemeteries of the City Of The Dead? Did it go to those that live around the garbage dumps of Cairo and sift through garbage to eke out an existence? Did it go to the laboring class Egyptian who is lucky to earn two dollars a day? Or did it go to members of the Cairo Yacht Club who sit riverside drinking martinis and smoking cigars while less fortunate Egyptians sink into misery because of rising food prices and inflation. Inflation so severe that they can no longer afford ful,** a fast-food dish made from fava beans, a simple thing that Egyptians consider their birthright.

These conditions have lasted for years. The punishment for complaining can earn a visit from the Secret Police or worse.

In 2005 when the kettle boiled over and there were spontaneous protests, Mubarak called out the so-called twenty-pound men; men who are paid the equivalent of four dollars or twenty Egyptian pounds. These thugs were given Viagra so that they could pull women out of the crowds and rape them.

Even among the middle class, there is widespread frustration about the lack of employment for college graduates-most young men and young women can't afford to get married and lead a normal life.

More recently a young Egyptian businessman named Khalid Said was beaten to death for reporting police corruption. This is the event that lit the fuse. The Tunisian Revolt that overthrew the Government of Ben-Ami led to the explosion that ended up in Tahrir Square.

How was this all possible?

It came about through the use of Social Media-Facebook and Twitter and so forth. This is a new phenomenon which started with protests in Iran in 2009.

Everyone who has the tools of this media can communicate with everyone else; ergo massive communication unparalleled in the past.

Every Egyptian who was sick of bullying, sick of massive corruption, sick of the paying of bribes, sick of the insider deals that made the friends and cronies of Mubarak and his son billionaires rose up and responded to a Facebook page.

The Facebook page I have in mind is the one authored by Wael Ghonim that described the beating death of Khalid Said.

Soon after, the Tunisian uprising took place. Many Egyptians said they were shamed by the Tunisian action. Days later, a web page appeared calling for a demonstration in an upscale neighborhood of Cairo.

This neighborhood was soon surrounded by secret police and nobody came. Because through secondary communication the crowd gathered in a poor neighborhood. There were only thirty to fifty people involved but as they walked the streets calling on men in cafes and people on balconies, the crowd swelled to thousands.

The Egyptian Government responded by closing down the internet.

This led to the battles on Kasr El-Nil Bridge leading into Tahrir Square. The marchers were confronted by squadrons of police who used water cannon, tear gas and rubber bullets. When the crowd did not withdraw, live ammunition was used to shoot people down in cold blood.

All this touched such a nerve among Egyptians that the following day the Square was filled with tens of thousands. There was elation until Wednesday morning when mobs of government goons waded in with truncheons, Molotov cocktails and pistols. Out of nowhere came a charge of horses and a camel carrying on their backs men with machetes. These were largely unemployed tourist guides from Giza; there were no tourists.

The battle raged throughout the night as reported on the International media. Ben Wedeman of CNN, a resident of Cairo stood on his balcony and gave a blow-by-blow account. Anderson Cooper showed up as did a legion of other reporters.

During the night Katie Couric and Brian Williams flew in. The next day, Thursday, the thugs of the pro-Mubarak crowd began attacking the media. Anderson Cooper got punched out as did Arwa Damon. Christiane Amanpour got jostled; but as luck would have it, she ended up interviewing Hosni Mubarak.

Katie Couric and Brian Williams got pummeled and fled to America that night. Among the bravest of all these reporters was Laura Logan of CBS who was arrested, blindfolded and held for twelve hours. Strangely enough, not one of these reporters stayed in Cairo to see the end of the story.

The night before it all ended, I turned on Channel two to see, much to my surprise, Charlie Rose in Cairo. Yes, by God, there he was, the pinnacle of intellectual talk, having a conversation with Thomas Friedman who, I was amazed to learn, actually attended college in Cairo many years in the past. Other reporters of note were David Kirkpatrick and my cousin, Christopher Dickey, from Newsweek. Also hanging in was Max Rodenbeck from the BBC and the Economist in London and Frederik Pleitgen, a reporter of German origin who compared the final night's events to the destruction of the East German Wall. It would be unfair if I left out Nick Robertson. All of these news people, whether they stayed through it all or not, had everything to do with the success of the revolt. Without them, I have no doubt that there would have been much more bloodshed.


As I watched the protest I was taken by the undercurrents at play. Coverage on Fox Network engaged in not a little bit of fear mongering. Neil Cavuto talking about the Moslem Brotherhood and the fear that if Mubarak was ousted the Moslem Brotherhood would take over, suggested that the Moslem Brotherhood was affiliated with Al Qaeda. This was based upon the fact that Ayman al-Zawahiri, Osama bin Laden's sidekick, had once belonged to the Moslem Brotherhood. In fact the Moslem Brotherhood and Al Qaeda view one another as enemies. The Moslem Brotherhood was founded when Egypt was still under British rule with the sole purpose of driving the British out. That is not to say that this organization is populated by saints and virgins.

An interesting fact is that when Egypt imprisoned al-Zawahiri's brother, the Americans asked Sulieman, the head of Egypt's security establishment for a DNA sample. Sulieman offered to send one of al-Zawahirir's brother's arms.
In an interview with Wolf Blitzer, Mohammed Badie, head of the Moslem Brotherhood dodged the question, "Will the Moslem Brotherhood recognize the right of Israel to exist?"

This brings up the matter of endemic anti-Semitism in Egyptian society; many government vehicles during the demonstrations were spray-painted with the Star of David. There were also signs and placards against Israel and the Jews.

There is talk among some factions of Egyptians that a Moslem government would seek to finish Israel off. What a pipe dream that is. A third war between Israel and Egypt would be nuclear and Egypt, as we know it, would cease to exist.

Last of all, the amateurish incompetence of the Obama Administration should be noted.
1.) They were caught flat-footed.
2.) As Henry Kissinger said, "They talk about it too much."
3.) In a speech in Munich, Hillary Clinton referred to the Egyptian Constitution saying that any change in government must take place accordingly; what a ridiculous joke. No one disregarded the Egyptian Constitution more than Hosni Mubarak. Not only that, but Hillary Clinton later said that she was not even aware of the Egyptian Constitution until a day or so previously.

In a chronology of important events, it must be noted that Mubarak made two defiant speeches. The first, early in the protest, brought disappointment. The second, the night before he resigned, brought fury. Two days before he resigned, Wael Ghonim was released from prison. In an interview that was widely broadcast, he ended with the following statement....................

"I'm ready to die. I have a lot to lose in this life. I work in the best company in the world, I have the best wife and I love my kids but I will give all that up for my dream. No one is going to go against our desire. I am telling this to Omar Suleiman; he is going to watch this. He can kidnap me, kidnap all my colleagues, put us in jail, kill us; we are getting back our country. You have ruined this country for thirty years. Enough, enough, enough."

This statement galvanized the protestors, galvanized all of Egypt and people throughout the world. It was followed by Mubarak's last defiant speech Thursday evening. I went to bed with the roar of the crowd still in my ears. On Friday afternoon, after practicing the trumpet, I went into the kitchen and pealed two boiled eggs, took a piece of sushi out of the refrigerator and poured myself a small glass of Borscht when my wife called me and said, "Mubarak is out."

My personal feelings about all of this is one of sympathy for the brave young men and women who came out each day to protest. I wonder if "Pacushni" or her husband, sons or daughters might have been in the crowd. Whatever the case, I know the protesters were there because they loved Egypt and they stood like a shining light that said from Egypt with love.

*Heb. Prayer for the dead.
**Arabic. Fava bean snack

__________________________________________________________________
Be sure to watch David Rojay on The Dave Rojay Show each Saturday night at 9:30 on Channel 17. Starting Saturday, October 16, Dave introduces his new co-star, Erin Healy-Editor of Prime Time Magazine. Read A RED STATE HERO and THE LONG BRIDGE RUNNER by David Rojay on capecodtoday.com and finally check out David Rojay on YOUTUBE. For more information, Google "David Rojay".


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Facebook Officials Keep Quiet on Its Role in Revolts - New York Times

The social media giant finds itself under countervailing pressures after the uprisings in the Middle East. While it has become one of the primary tools for activists to mobilize protests and share information, Facebook does not want to be seen as picking sides for fear that some countries — like Syria, where it just gained a foothold — would impose restrictions on its use or more closely monitor users, according to some company executives who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were discussing internal business.

And Facebook does not want to alter its firm policy requiring users to sign up with their real identities. The company says this requirement protects its users from fraud. However, human rights advocates like Susannah Vila, the director of content and outreach for Movements.org, which provides resources for digital activists, say it could put some people at risk from governments looking to ferret out dissent.

“People are going to be using this platform for political mobilization, which only underscores the importance of ensuring their safety,” she said.

Under those rules, Facebook shut down one of the most popular Egyptian Facebook protest pages in November because Wael Ghonim, a Google executive who emerged as a symbol of the revolt, had used a pseudonym to create a profile as one of the administrators of the page, a violation of Facebook’s terms of service.

With Egypt’s emergency law in place limiting freedom of speech, Mr. Ghonim might have put himself and the other organizers at risk if they were discovered at that time. Activists scrambled to find another administrator to get the page back up and running. And when Egyptian government authorities did figure out Mr. Ghonim’s role with the Facebook page that helped promote the Jan. 25 protest in Tahrir Square, he was imprisoned for 12 days.

Last week, Senator Richard J. Durbin, Democrat of Illinois, urged Facebook to take “immediate and tangible steps” to help protect democracy and human rights activists who use its services, including addressing concerns about not being able to use pseudonyms.

In a letter to Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive, Mr. Durbin said the recent events in Egypt and Tunisia had highlighted the costs and benefits of social tools to democracy and human rights advocates. “I am concerned that the company does not have adequate safeguards in place to protect human rights and avoid being exploited by repressive governments,” he wrote.

Elliot Schrage, the vice president for global communications, public policy and marketing at Facebook, declined to discuss Facebook’s role in the recent tumult and what it might mean for the company’s services.

In a short statement, he said: “We’ve witnessed brave people of all ages coming together to effect a profound change in their country. Certainly, technology was a vital tool in their efforts but we believe their bravery and determination mattered most.”

Other social media tools, like YouTube and Twitter, also played major roles in Tunisia and Egypt, especially when the protests broke out. But Facebook was the primary tool used in Egypt, first to share reports about police abuse and then to build an online community that was mobilized to join the Jan. 25 protests.

In recent weeks, Facebook pages and groups trying to mobilize protesters have sprung up in Algeria, Bahrain, Morocco and Syria. Hashtags on Twitter have also helped spread the protests, which extended to Algeria over the weekend and to Bahrain, Iran and Yemen on Monday.

“This is an incredible challenge and an incredible opportunity for Facebook, Twitter and Google,” said Ethan Zuckerman, a senior researcher at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard, where he works on projects about the use of technology and media in the developing world. “It might be tougher for Facebook than anyone else. Facebook has been ambivalent about the use of their platform by activists.”

Unlike Vodafone and other telecommunications carriers, which often need contracts and licenses to operate within countries, Facebook and other social networks are widely available around the world (except in countries like China, Saudi Arabia and Iran, which have restricted access) and encourage the free flow of information for anyone with access to the Internet.

In a speech that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is scheduled to deliver Tuesday, she will once again emphasize that Internet freedom is an inalienable right. In recent weeks, the State Department has been sending out Twitter updates in Arabic and began sending updates in Persian over the weekend.

Twitter and YouTube, which is owned by Google, have been more willing to embrace their roles in activism and unrest, Mr. Zuckerman said.

After the Internet was shut down in Egypt, Twitter and Google actively helped protesters by producing a new service, speak2tweet, that allowed people to leave voice mail messages that would be filed as updates on Twitter. Biz Stone, one of Twitter’s founders, used it as an opportunity to emphasize the positive global impact that comes with the open exchange of information.

When the Internet was back up, YouTube, working with Storyful, a social media news curation service, took the thousands of videos pouring in from the protests in Tahrir Square to help people retrieve and share the information as quickly as possible on CitizenTube, its news and politics channel.

Facebook has taken steps to help protesters in Tunisia after government officials used a virus to obtain local Facebook passwords this year. The company rerouted Facebook’s traffic from Tunisia and used the breach to upgrade security last month for all of its more than 550 million users worldwide; at the same time, it was careful to cast the response as a technical solution to a security problem. There are about two million Facebook users in Tunisia and five million in Egypt.

Debbie Frost, a spokeswoman for Facebook, said the company was not considering changing its policy requiring users to use their real identities, which she says leads to greater accountability and a safer environment.

“The trust people place in us is the most important part of what makes Facebook work,” she said, adding that the company welcomed a discussion with Mr. Durbin and others who have an interest in this matter. “As demonstrated by our response to threats in Tunisia, we take this trust seriously and work aggressively every single day to protect people.”

Mr. Durbin has urged Facebook to join the Global Network Initiative, a voluntary code of conduct for technology companies, created in 2008, that requires participating businesses to take reasonable steps to protect human rights.

Andrew Rasiej, founder of the Personal Democracy Forum, said that the people and companies behind the technology needed to be more transparent about what information they collect, and that they needed to develop consistent policies to allow people to opt in or out of their data collection systems. “We must have a right to protect the privacy of information stored in the cloud as rigorously as if it were in our own home,” he said.


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Letters: Egypt, Facebook, gun laws - San Diego Union Tribune

By The San Diego Union-Tribune pv["p.a_3"] = ""; Monday, February 14, 2011 at midnight

If former President George W. Bush was paying attention, Hosni Mubarak’s departure Friday as dictator of Egypt after weeks of peaceful protests shows what a real people’s “regime change” looks like (“Democracy protests bring down Egypt’s Mubarak,” SignOn San Diego, Feb. 11).

The Bush administration’s idea of regime change, as shown by an ill-advised, disastrous invasion of Iraq, has caused nothing but years of misery for Iraq’s citizens and political uncertainty at a cost of billions of dollars and more deficit spending.

I’ll take the Egyptian style any day, anytime.

-- Mark Gracyk, Lemon Grove

Who would have thought that Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg is smarter than all of the generals and admirals in the U.S. military, and his weapon is more powerful than any of those developed by any defense contractor to topple dictators and to bring democracy to the Middle East? Just look what Facebook has wrought. -- Philip J. Butzen, San Diego

The photo that accompanied “Cement-mixer driver falls out of truck, which runs over both legs” (Local, Feb. 11) was astonishing. When we continue to read about the plight of our underfunded and understaffed police and fire departments, the picture showed not less than six police cars and three fire department vehicles on site. There’s no telling how many other public safety units were not in the picture but were also on the scene. How much did this overkill response cost the public? It just doesn’t make sense.

-- Dennis Merchant, Oceanside

One point missed in the commentary “Making the case for 33 rounds” (Opinion, Feb. 10) is that so-called high-capacity magazines are not legal in California. Magazine capacity is limited to 10 rounds maximum. This has been the law for many years. The one exception: if you owned a higher-capacity magazine (over 10 rounds) when the law was passed, you could keep it. -- Thomas Kendall, San Marcos

Thank you for your leadership to a more peaceful world as shown in “Sorry, America has moved on” (Editorial, Feb. 7).

Acknowledging the U-T’s use of personal attack in the past was an act of unusual courage for an institution of power and influence.

I, too, will look in the mirror and make sure that my speaking and even my thinking toward those with whom I disagree is civil and gentle. This doesn’t imply surrender. -- Marshall Saunders, Citizens Climate Lobby, Coronado

It seems no one can see the obvious solution about the homeless problem in San Diego, which may well be to round up the homeless and move them to already-available facilities, such as vacated military bases.

There they could be properly housed and persuaded to take their medications in return for food. The total number of homeless could readily be accommodated, and the facilities could be administered by members of the military, who already are provided appropriate training by the federal government.

And many of those who benefit from medication would be able to do some of the support work needed, such as laundry, cooking, painting and maintenance.

This approach is surely preferable to putting them in prison after the planned court procedure. -- R.J. McClure, San Diego

The letter from Jonathan Clark of New Zealand (Feb. 9) expressing dismay at the condition of the homeless in San Diego should not be taken lightly by city leaders. These administrators have an absence of zeal regarding holding to the humanistic premise that no one should go hungry and everyone should have shelter. They vote readily to spend taxpayer money for stadiums where young men beat their brains out for big money and owners live contentedly, having fleeced the public again. -- Edward Hujsak, La Jolla


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Thursday, February 3, 2011

Exhausted with Facebook Games? Come On, It's Time to Play Newtotal Jerkface Happy Wheels Game! - Associated Content

It is already proven that flash games played at Facebook and MySpace have won incredible fame and recognition among the game freaks. Fairly being a new addition, Happy Wheels Game got its entry recently.

Happy Wheels:

Happy wheels game is so simple to play and this doesn't fit the thirst of young players and people over 40 years of age. Crossing the game levels is simple and players will still become addictive with the game. The levels are relatively simple to navigate, whereby you'll become familiar by playing it a couple of times.

Play Happy Wheels:

Playing happy wheels is as easy as possible. On having control with the arrow keys, you can control the wheels; limb shed crash and prevents the bloody levels - that will give you real fun and joy. The game turns out with fun, while the player keeps laughing at the bicyclist trying to out pedal his own snipped leg or arms coming closer. Jerkface's Happy Wheels involves different game levels, where a few levels will even leave the monitor with blood. Most specifically, "My Shotgun" makes a little sense with different game experience.

Some levels of this flashy bloody game is challenging, particularly "The Office" level is intriguing to happen as expected. This level becomes tricky while you try to survive the ladder having your character active.

Characters involved in Happy Wheels:

Till now, the game involves 5 active characters such as the boy on the bicycle along with a small kid seated on the kiddie seat, a stout lady riding the handicapped scooter, the girl and boy on a moped, an aged man in a wheelchair. Individual players happen to be bloody, while the bicycle and scooter characters give extra spike and jab.

Understanding the levels and gathering knowledge of different game levels will certainly make you tired of playing Happy Wheels. You will master the game after a couple of tryout. Possibility is that, your gaffer will likely loathe this game. One thing assured is that you can spend the boring day very faster.


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2 vintage games go to Facebook - Boston Globe

Young video game fans who have traveled the virtual Oregon Trail or hunted the elusive Carmen Sandiego on their desktop computers can now continue those adventures on Facebook, the popular online social network.


Today, Blue Fang Games LLC of Waltham and Boston publisher Houghton Mifflin Harcourt will unveil a Facebook version of one of the oldest computer games still on the market: The Oregon Trail. On Feb. 9, the two companies will release the classic geography game Where In The World Is Carmen Sandiego? for Facebook.


Through the joint venture, Houghton Mifflin will try to revitalize a couple of its aging video game franchises, while Blue Fang strives to become a major player in the booming market for social games.


Blue Fang is not especially well known, but it is one of Greater Boston’s most successful video game developers. The company produced the family-friendly personal computer game Zoo Tycoon for Microsoft Corp., and it has sold 8 million copies since the first version was released in 2001.


“We still get royalty checks from Microsoft,’’ said Blue Fang’s president, Hank Howie.


The game’s popularity has waned, however, and the checks are “not as large as they once were,’’ he said.


Last year, Blue Fang laid off about two-thirds of its 75 employees and reinvented itself as a developer of simple online games. With backing from the German game publisher Gameforge AG, the company published Zoo Kingdom for Facebook.


As with the original Zoo Tycoon, players can design, build, and populate their own zoos, complete with exotic animals. But while the Facebook version is free to play, gamers can enhance the experience by purchasing unusual trees, buildings, or imaginary animals like unicorns.


The explosive success of Facebook game producers like Zynga Inc. tempted Blue Fang to enter the social gaming market. Zynga was founded in 2007, and its games like FarmVille and CityVille attract 298 million Facebook users every month, according to the industry research firm AppData.com.


Zynga is privately held, but Wedbush Securities, a Los Angeles firm that tracks the game industry, estimates the company grossed $500 million last year.


The opportunity is not lost on other Massachusetts game developers.


Quick Hit Inc. of Foxborough, which makes a popular Internet-based National Football League game, plans to release a Facebook version this month. “Facebook is the largest gaming platform in the world,’’ said founder Jeffrey Anderson. “It’s a big market opportunity.’’


Anderson said most popular Facebook games are tailored to appeal to women, but his NFL game will attract male gamers.


Facebook games can be relatively simple to build; it took just 11 weeks to create Zoo Kingdom. While the game attracted 1.2 million users at its peak, it has since settled down to an average user base of about 300,000 gamers. About 1 or 2 percent make in-game purchases. Howie won’t say how much the company earns from Zoo Kingdom, but he said the game began turning a profit in October.


Blue Fang’s transformation caught the attention of Tony Bordon, president of the Learning Co., Houghton Mifflin’s educational software division. Learning Co. had a number of well-known game franchises in need of a reboot. Bordon was especially interested in reviving The Oregon Trail, developed for mainframe computers by a group of Minnesota schoolteachers in 1971. Later, the game migrated to succeeding generations of classroom PCs, where it became a favorite among schoolchildren. Players are cast as 19th-century pioneers trying to survive a journey from Missouri to Oregon, fending off hunger, disease, and accidents.


Bordon believed the game’s simple design and addictive game play were suited to Facebook. He interviewed several developers to choose one to create a new version, and settled on Blue Fang.


“They were a relatively small company that was able to communicate well with us and give us the time and attention we needed,’’ Bordon said. He was impressed with the company’s work on Zoo Kingdom.


Bordon also decided to put Blue Fang to work on another Learning Co. title. The game series Where In the World Is Carmen Sandiego? was developed in the 1980s to teach kids about geography. It featured a cunning master thief who had to be captured by visiting locations around the world. Now, Blue Fang has transplanted Carmen Sandiego to Facebook.


Both games can be played for free, but users can get extra tools, such as virtual food and clothing, by paying a little something — generally no more than a few dollars. And unlike the traditional versions of the games, the Facebook versions let users team up with online friends to solve puzzles or overcome obstacles.


Blue Fang is also moving into mobile gaming. Its Lion Pride game runs on Apple’s iPhone and iPad, and it is working on an iPhone version of the board game Reversi.


“We still get feedback from users saying please, please do Zoo Tycoon 3,’’ Howie said, although the decision to develop a sequel is up to Microsoft, which owns the rights to the title. In the meantime, Blue Fang plans to prosper by making a lot of new friends on Facebook.


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Give Your Friends Dysentery With Oregon Trail Facebook - Wired News


The Learning Company launched a Facebook version of its beloved edutainment game The Oregon Trail Wednesday, introducing social features and microtransactions into the classic story of American can-do and bloody diarrhea.


Most everyone alive today between the ages of 25 and 35 probably played Oregon Trail on the Apple IIe computer that their middle school got after redeeming hundreds of soup can labels. We learned several valuable life lessons from this journey of early American pioneers who struck out into the untamed Northwest. For instance, trying to caulk your wagon and float it across a river usually results in the loss of several sets of clothing, half your bullets and a baby.


The Facebook version of The Oregon Trail game introduces different categories of pioneer wisdom. For example, if you get low on vigor and can’t find the strength to continue on the trail anymore, you can get more energy by using a major credit card. This educational software teaches that the early American settlers were morons, buying stupid oxen and whatever when they should have just packed their Visa cards.


What’s next for the Learning Company? On Feb. 9, the publisher will launch its Facebook version of Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?, in which the infamous criminal mastermind will turn herself in to the police for $5.


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Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Facebook Hired Ondrejka to Help Web Games Evolve - CNN Money

(gigaom.com) -- When Facebook bought stealth startup Walletin back in November, nobody was quite sure what it meant. The tiny, secretive company had a high-profile boss in Cory Ondrejka, the former CTO of Second Life maker Linden Lab — but that was about all that we knew.

But while it’s still unclear what Ondrejka and his co-founder Bruce Rogers were working on at the time, at least we know what they’re working on today: boosting Facebook’s support for HTML5 games. In a post on Facebook, Ondrejka writes that he and Rogers have spent the past few months pushing the boundaries of HTML5 for games:

Already over 125 million people visit Facebook using HTML5 capable browsers just from their mobile phones, and that number skyrockets when we add in desktop browsers. The future is clear…

Less clear are the capabilities of HTML5 as a high performance gaming platform today. New HTML5 games regularly appear, they often exhibit quirks and low frame rates.

The first fruits of their labor are for programmers only: a benchmarking kit called JSGameBench that should help developers enhance performance and understand how to create more complex HTML5 games.

That’s an important area for Facebook, which wants to make sure it is the top destination for people playing games. It’s already apparent that companies can build themselves into big businesses thanks to Facebook, but not everybody can boast social-gaming giant Zynga’s resources. Better games all around makes the pie bigger for Facebook, particularly when it requires payments to go through its own systems.

This isn’t because Facebook wants to make games, though. In fact, Ondrejka explicitly says in the post that is “definitely not” in the plan. But it’s clearly in the company’s interest to make the games it supports better and richer for players. More play equals more money.

What’s particularly interesting about this open-source approach, however, is that such developments have implications beyond Facebook. With proper browser support, mobiles can use HTML5 instead of Flash (ADBE) for some tasks, meaning that Apple, (AAPL) Google (GOOG) and others can all benefit from Facebook’s push. And while 3-D may not be so easy (“the HTML5 sweet spot is going to be 2-D and isometric games,” he writes) there’s still plenty that can be done right now.

So now it starts to become more apparent why Facebook bought Walletin and brought in Ondrejka. Whatever you think of Second Life, it’s an astonishing feat of engineering that makes it work, and one he created. Applying those abilities to web-based games may mean we’ll be seeing a lot of very rapid development in the near future.

Photograph used under Creative Commons license courtesy of Joi Ito on Flickr

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Classic Games like Oregon Trail Migrate to Facebook - Associated Content

Facebook seems to be taking over the internet at the moment, and now it has begun incorporating pre-internet computer games. Today, for example, the classic "Oregon Trail" will premiere on the social network  giant, along with "Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?"

Blue Fang Games LLC (which you have probably never heard of, but which owns "Oregon Trail") and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt are introducing these classic games to Facebook. The idea is to revitalized old but still loved gaming properties by incorporating them into the most cutting edge of gaming platforms, Facebook. [Source: Bray, Hiawatha. "2 vintage games go to Facebook; Firms aim to tap social networking," Boston Globe, 2/2/11, page B7].

Social networks are a great place to promote nostalgia-based commercial offerings (because you get all types of people there), so Facebook seems like an ideal platform to reintroduce "Oregon Trail" and other classic computer games. Will Facebook users take a few minutes to play Oregon Trail on-line? Probably, yes. If the public reaction to Farmville is any indication, there is plenty of room on Facebook for games that require users to earn tools and develop strategies.

Facebook is probably not the right platform to launch a huge, expensive game. For lingering properties that were created decades ago, though, Facebook could be just right. Think about it: All the owners of "Oregon Trail" want to do is increase their residual royalties from the game a bit. It does not have to become the top game on Facebook to make them happy - it just needs to generate a little extra income, which it is almost certain to do.


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