Wednesday, March 19, 2014

የ2 ማይሉ ታክሲ መሳፈር $787.33 አስከፈለ

Woman charged $787.33 for two-mile cab ride የሁለት ማይሉ ታክሲ  መሳፈር  $787.33  ዋጋ አስከፈለ

ነገሩ እንዲህ ነው። ችካጎ ውስጥ አንዲት ወጣት ታክሲ ትሳፈራለች፣ በአሁኑ ወቅት ጥሬ ገንዘብ መክፍል ለማይፈልጉ ሰውች በስልክ ላይ የምትሰካ እስኮር (square) የምትባል ካርድ ማንበቢያ መሳሪያ አለች። ታዲያ አቶ ታክሲ ሾፌር  ተሳስቶ ሂሳቡን ተጭኖ ኖረ  የልጅቷ ወላጆች ወርሃዊ የባንክ ሂሳባቸውን ሲያወራርዱ ነበረ ያ ሁሉ ክፍያ ብቅ ያለው። ሰዎቹ ወዲያው ቪዛ(VISA) የሚባለውን ኩባንያ ቢደውሉ መልሱ አይሆንም ነበር። ገንዘባቸው የውሃ ሽታ መሆኑን የተረዱት ሰወች ለፖሊስም ቢያስታውቁ ክፍያው ልጅቷ ተስማምታ ፈርማ የከፈልችው ስለሆር ምንም አናደርግም ነበር። በስንት መከራ የታክሲ ሾፌሩ ተፈልጎ ሲትየቅ ሁኔታውን ለቪዛ ቢያስታውቅም  የካርዱ ሙሉ ቁጥር ስላልነበረው ምንም ነገር ማድረግ አልቻለም ነበር። ለዝርዝሩ የእግሊዘኛውን ዘገባ ያንብቡ።

A college student from Winnetka, Illinois jumped into a cab for a short ride to a restaurant in downtown Chicago, but instead of a couple dollars, she was charged almost $800.

In December, 20-year-old Becky Siegel was running late to meet friends at the Sweetwater Tavern and Grille, so she went immediately from the Metra train to a cab at the Ogilvie Transportation Center.
The restaurant was less than two miles from the station and Becky’s mother, Susan Siegel, told WFLD Fox 32 News, "He was apparently very friendly and chatty, and was talking about pedestrians crossing where they shouldn't." Once she arrived at her destination, the student asked the cab driver if she could use her credit card for the fare. “He gave her a price and she thinks it was, you know, under ten dollars,” explained Susan. “And so she said, ‘Can I use a credit card?’ And he said, ‘Oh, my swiper isn't working. Here give it to me and I'll do it on my Square."
The Square device and app allow merchants to charge customers through a mobile device. Becky handed over her credit card, told the driver to add a $2 tip, and signed the app. Becky told the Chicago Tribune, "I guess I didn't pay attention or I didn't look…I just signed my name with my finger and I left."
The problem was, as Susan Siegel found out while reviewing her transactions, instead of a charge under $12, the card was charged a whopping $787.33. Ms. Siegel contacted Visa customer service to dispute the charge, but because Becky had signed off on the transaction, a refund was refused. The Chicago Police department told Siegel that there was nothing they could do about it either. Angry about what transpired, Siegel contacted the driver, Ali Ghazanfari, for a resolution. Instead the cab driver stood behind the nearly $800 charge.
Ghazanfari’s tune changed when Siegel got in touch with the Chicago Tribune’s, “What’s Your Problem?” problem solvers. They reached out to the Chicago Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection. "I remember exactly what happened,” the driver told the Tribune. I made a mistake on the fare." Ms. Siegel said, "He called me two or three times, and he was in a panic. What I do know is that he is really sorry that he got caught."

Ghazanfari said he made efforts to contact Square and his bank to refund the Siegels’ money but because the company had only the last four digits of their credit card, that was not possible. Another request to Visa by Ghazanfari and Siegel working together, was unsuccessful.Mika Stambaugh, a spokesperson for the Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection, said that they contacted Square and the company promised to send Siegel a check for $787.33 by the end of this week. Stambaugh added, "Our department has suspended his public chauffeur license pending this investigation… He cooperated with us but he's not in the country so we still have a few unresolved issues pertaining to this case.”

So how can you avoid incidents like this from happening to you? Ms. Stambaugh explained that, "The problem here was that Square is a non an approved device. So we want to urge people to use the front and back mounted credit card device payment systems in our cabs and that's it." She also said that passengers should never allow their credit card to leave their hands and if it does, to contact 3-1-1. Finally, a lesson that Becky Siegel learned the hard way, always double check the final charges before signing a credit card receipt.

Video and more info: WFLD, Chicago Tribune

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

የሰው መግደያው መርዝ እጥረት ምክንያት ሞት ፍርድ የተፈረደባቸው 2 እስrኞች የመሞቻ ቀናቸው ተራዘመ

የሰው መግደያው መርዝ  እጥረት ምክንያት ሞት ፍርድ የተፈረደባቸው 2 እስረኞች የመሞቻ ቀናቸው ተራዘመ:: ወይ  የእግዜር ስራ?
An Oklahoma court has rescheduled executions so that state prison officials have more time to find a supply of lethal drugs. While two inmates had sued, challenging Oklahoma’s execution procedures, the Court of Criminal Appeals declared on Tuesday that their request for a stay was moot because the prison system did not have enough drugs to execute them. In their brief order, the judges moved the execution of one of the inmates, Clayton Lockett, to April 22 and the one of the other, Charles Warner, to April 29. They had been set to die this week and next week. The Oklahoma attorney general’s office told the court on Monday that prison officials did not have enough doses of lethal drugs on hand and that it was unlikely they could find some in time to execute Mr. Lockett on Thursday.

የሰው መግደያ መርዝ

የክንድ ሰዓት የክንድ ኮምፒተር ሆነ

የክንድ ሰዓት የክንድ ኮምፒተር ሆነ

 የቦ ቴክኖሎጂ :
ቴክኖሎጂ ተራቀቀ። መጀምሪያ ጠረቤዛ (desk top) ላይ ከዚያ በጭናችን ላይ (lap top) አስቀመጥን ከዚያ በእጃችን/መዳፍ  ላይ  ይዘን (palm top)ከዚይ  በኪሳችን  Smart phone  አሁን ደግሞ በክንዳችን  አስረን ( smartwatches) ከሲያስ?

Google is bringing its Android operating system to smartwatches, opening the doors for a flood of high-tech wearable devices for consumers, experts said.
Google said yesterday it will release Android Wear — a version of its popular software tailored for wearable devices — to hardware manufacturers. Google’s vision of a smartwatch differs slightly from others that have hit the market, with an emphasis on its predictive assistant Google Now.
“I think it is really interesting and likely that this development will bear a lot of fruit,” said Roger Kay, a technology analyst and founder of Endpoint Technologies.
Google is partnering with LG and Motorola ­— both of which announced Android-powered smartwatches yesterday ­— and other companies including watchmaker Fossil.
More wearable technology, including a long-rumored iWatch, is inevitable, said Ryan Martin, a analyst with Yankee Group.
“I think we’re going to see a flood of new entrants,” Martin said. “It’s pretty clear that wearables are shaping up to be in the running for ‘next big thing.’”
Companies so far have released a wide range of wearable devices, everything from Pebble, focused on showing notifications from a paired phone, to Samsung’s Gear Fit, a dedicated fitness tracker.
Quanttus, a Cambridge-based startup, is developing a device focused on health care.
“The wearable space is, even to the most casual observer, taking off,” said Steve Jungmann, vice president for product management at Quanttus. “It is a growing market. There will not be a one size fits all.”

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የ $400 ሚሊዮን ሎተሪ አሽናፊ ቁጥሮች ይፋ ሆነ። አሸናፊው ግን እስከ አሁን አልታወቀም

የ $400 ሚሊዮን ሎተሪ አሽናፊ ቁጥሮች ይፋ ሆነ።  አሸናፊው ግን እስከ አሁን አልታወቀም 

11, 19, 24, 33, 51  Mega Ball of 7

Numbers have been drawn for the estimated $400 million Mega Millions lottery jackpot, but there was no immediate word on whether someone is holding a winning ticket.
The numbers drawn Tuesday night were: 11, 19, 24, 33 and 51 with a Mega Ball of 7.
The jackpot is the sixth-largest lottery prize in U.S. history, with a lump-sum option of paying out $224 million.
If no one hits all six numbers, the jackpot will rollover for Friday's drawing and start marching toward $500 million.
Mega Millions changed its rules in October to help increase jackpots by lowering the odds of winning the top prize.
Mega Millions is played in 43 states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

መገንጠል ፋሸኑ አለፈበት Crimean leaders sign treaty to join Russia, as Putin rips Ukraine's interim leaders, West

መገንጠል ፋሸኑ አለፈበት:  ይብላኝ እገነጠላለሁ ብለው ለሚያስፈራሩት

Crimean leaders sign treaty to join Russia, as Putin rips Ukraine's interim leaders, West

A defiant Russian President Vladimir Putin answered President Obama's announced sanctions against a handful of officials in Putin's inner circle -- but not Putin, himself -- by signing a treaty Tuesday making Crimea a part of Russia.

The signing follows a referendum on Sunday in which residents of Ukraine's southern region overwhelmingly backed the move. The treaty still must be approved by Russia's Constitutional Court and ratified by both houses of parliament. Those steps are considered mere formalities.

Putin signed the treaty with Crimea's prime minister and parliament speaker following a televised address to the nation, in which he vigorously defended Crimea's vote as a restoration of historical justice.

Putin has accused the West of encouraging unrest in Ukraine in order to break its historic ties with Russia, and dismissed Western criticism of the Crimean vote as illegitimate.

A Ukrainian military spokesman said that one Ukrainian serviceman was killed and another injured when a military facility in Crimea was stormed Tuesday by armed men just hours after Putin's speech.

The officer was shot in the chest, the Ukrainian Defense Ministry told Fox News, adding that the Ukrainian government now is allowing its soldiers to use firearms to defend themselves.

The armed men were dressed in uniforms similar to Russian military uniforms and appeared in trucks previously stolen from the Ukrainian military base, the Ministry said.

The attackers took over the base, confiscated documents, arrested the Ukrainian soldiers and are now controlling the base.

The sanctions ordered by Obama include freezing any assets in the U.S. and banning travel into the country of seven ranking Russian government officials and four Crimea-based separatist leaders, Reuters reported.

According to the Washington Post, the Russians targeted include top Putin aides Sergei Glazyev and Vladislav Surkov, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin, and parliament leaders.

Some of the Russians mocked the sanctions, the Post reported.

“I quite like the company I have found myself in,” Andrei Klishas, chairman of the Russian Federation Council’s Constitutional Legislation Committee, told the Interfax news service.

“I don’t have any accounts or real estate in the U.S., and as regard private visits, I’ll have to do without them," Leonid Slutsky, who heads a parliamentary committee on Eurasian integration, said, according to the Post.

In a televised address to Russia Tuesday, Putin defended Russia's move to annex Crimea, saying that the rights of ethnic Russians have been abused by the Ukrainian government.

He also called authorities in Ukraine “nationalists, neo-Nazis, Russophobes and anti-Semites,” according to Reuters.

“Those who were behind recent events, they were ... preparing a coup d'etat, another one,” Putin said. “They were planning to seize power, stopping at nothing.”

He denied Western accusations that Russia invaded Crimea prior to a referendum vote there, saying Russian troops were sent there in line with a treaty with Ukraine that allows Russia to have up to 25,000 troops at its Black Sea Fleet base in Crimea.

Putin also said that Crimea's vote Sunday to join Russia is in line with international law, reflecting its right for self-determination.

He pointed at the example of Kosovo's independence bid, supported by the West, and said that Crimea's secession from Ukraine repeats Ukraine's own secession from the Soviet Union in 1991.

“Our Western partners headed by the United States prefer not to be guided by international law in their practical policies, but by the rule of the gun,'' he told a joint session of parliament, according to Reuters. “They have come to believe in their exceptionalism and their sense of being the chosen ones. That they can decide the destinies of the world, that it is only them who can be right.”

Putin added that he will never seek to spark a confrontation with the West, but said he would defend Russia’s interests.

Putin signed a decree Monday recognizing Crimea as a "sovereign and independent country.” Earlier Monday, the United States and the European Union announced asset freezes and other sanctions against Russian and Ukrainian officials involved in the Crimean crisis.

Denouncing Russia's actions in Crimea as nothing more than a "land grab," Vice President Joe Biden warned Russia on Tuesday that the U.S. and Europe will impose further sanctions as Moscow seeks to annex the Ukrainian territory.

Meeting with anxious European leaders in neighboring Poland, Biden said the world sees through Russia's actions. He said virtually the entire world rejects the referendum in Crimea that cleared the way for Russia to annex the peninsula in Ukraine.

"The world has seen through Russia's actions and has rejected the flawed logic," Biden said.

Biden, who arrived Tuesday morning in Warsaw, said the U.S. joins Poland and the international community in condemning the continuing assault on Ukraine's sovereignty, calling it a blatant violation of international law.

The decree signed by Putin and posted on the official government website Tuesday morning is one of the steps which would formalize the annexation of Crimea. The treaty to annex Crimea has to be signed by leaders of Russia and Crimea, approved by the Constitutional Court and then must be ratified by the parliament.

Residents of Crimea voted overwhelmingly Sunday in favor of the split, and Crimea's parliament declared the region an independent state on Monday.

The Crimean parliament declared that all Ukrainian state property on the peninsula will be nationalized and become the property of the Crimean Republic. Lawmakers also asked the United Nations and other nations to recognize it and began work on setting up a central bank with $30 million in support from Russia.

Moscow showed no signs of flinching in the dispute that has roiled Ukraine since Russian troops took effective control of the strategic Black Sea peninsula last month. In fact, one of the Russians named openly mocked the sanctions.

"Comrade Obama, what should those who have neither accounts nor property abroad do? Have you not thought about it?" Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin tweeted. "I think the decree of the President of the United States was written by some joker."

The State Duma, the lower chamber of parliament, on Tuesday unanimously passed a resolution condemning sanctions which targeted Russian officials, including members of the chamber. The chamber urged President Obama to extend the sanctions to all the 353 deputies who had voted for the resolution. Eighty-eight deputies left the house before the vote.

The sanctions freeze any assets the targeted individuals have under U.S. jurisdiction, make it illegal for Americans to do business with them and discourage international banks and financial institutions from having relationships with them, administration officials said. The officials, however, would or could not say if those targeted actually have assets in U.S. jurisdictions.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said Tuesday the U.K. is suspending military cooperation with Russia.

Speaking shortly after Putin signed the treaty, Hague told British lawmakers that it is regrettable that Putin is choosing a path of isolation in the annexation of Crimea and denying Russian and Crimean citizens of a partnership with the international community

Hague said the U.K. is suspending military export licenses to Russia, has canceled naval exercises and suspended a proposed Royal Navy ship visit to Russia.

He said this is not the relationship Britain wants with Russia, but one it is being forced to have.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said Tuesday that leaders of the Group of Eight world powers have suspended Russia's participation in the club amid tensions over Ukraine and Russia's incursion into Crimea.

The other seven members of the group had already suspended preparations for a G-8 summit that Russia is scheduled to host in June in Sochi.

Fox News' Greg Palkot, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this repor

Monday, March 17, 2014

የቻይና ከወላጆቻቸው ተጥለው የሚገኙ ህፃና ማሳደጊያ ተቋም በለጋነቱ ተዘጋ። Guangzhou 'baby hatch' forced to stop taking children after too many abandoned

የቻይና ከወላጆቻቸው ተጥለው የሚገኙ ህፃና ማሳደጊያ ተቋም በለጋነቱ ተዘጋ። 

በቻይና ውስጥ በወላጆቻቸው ተጥለው የተገኙ ህጻናት ማሳደጊያ በነሱ አጠራር "የልጆች መፈልፈያ" ( 'baby hatch')  በኛ አጠራር የህጻናት ማሳደጊያ ተጥለው የሚገኙ ህጻናት ቁጥር መብዛትና ማሳደጊያው ውስጥ ከገቡ በሗላ የሚሞቱት ህጻናት በመብዛቱ ነው። በአጠቃላይ ቻይና ወስጥ ከ 10(አስር) በላይ ተመሳሳይ ጣቢያዎች ሲኖሩ ሁሉም ተመሳሳይ ችግር አጋጥሟቸዋል።

A baby-abandonment center in Guangzhou where distressed parents can leave their unwanted infants has been closed down temporarily as staff cannot care for the large number of children being dropped off. Xu Jiu, the director one of the city's welfare centers, said in a press conference that 262 babies have been dropped off since the station opened on January 28, according to the China News Service, and that resources were being stretched thin. Around 25 of such centers have been set up on the mainland across 10 provinces in China, SCMP reports. The stations have stirred up controversy, with critics arguing that they encourage parents to abandoned their children. Yet, in cases of the inevitable, the stations remain a far better choice than the alternative. The China News Service report said that all the babies left at the center were ill. Examinations showed that 42 percent of the infants had cerebral palsy, 15 percent had Down's syndrome and 12 percent had congenital heart disease. All of the infants have received medical treatment, although around nine percent have died, according to Xu. Ye Fen, director of social welfare in the civil affairs bureau, said the city would start providing fantail aid to poor families with sick babies as to reduce the number of drop-offs. Xu has cautioned parents against leaving their babies at the temporarily closed station, warning them that surveillance footage would be sent to police.

የቻይና ከወላጆቻቸው ተጥለው የሚገኙ ህፃና ማሳደጊያ ተቋም በለጋነቱ ተዘጋ።

የቻይና ከወላጆቻቸው ተጥለው የሚገኙ ህፃና ማሳደጊያ ተቋም በለጋነቱ ተዘጋ። በቻይና ውስጥ በወላጆቻቸው ተጥለው የተገኙ ህጻናት ማሳደጊያ በነሱ አጠራር "የልጆች መፈልፈያ" ( 'baby hatch')  በኛ አጠራር የህጻናት ማሳደጊያ ተጥለው የሚገኙ ህጻናት ቁጥርና ማሳደጊያው ውስጥ ከገቡ በሗላ የሚሞቱት ህጻናት በመብዛቱ ነው። በአጠቃላይ ቻይና ወስጥ ከ 10(አስር) በላይ ተመሳሳይ ጣቢያዎች ሲኖሩ ሁሉም ተመሳሳይ ችግር አጋጥሟቸዋል።

A baby-abandonment center in Guangzhou where distressed parents can leave their unwanted infants has been closed down temporarily as staff cannot care for the large number of children being dropped off. Xu Jiu, the director one of the city's welfare centers, said in a press conference that 262 babies have been dropped off since the station opened on January 28, according to the China News Service, and that resources were being stretched thin. Around 25 of such centers have been set up on the mainland across 10 provinces in China, SCMP reports. The stations have stirred up controversy, with critics arguing that they encourage parents to abandoned their children. Yet, in cases of the inevitable, the stations remain a far better choice than the alternative. The China News Service report said that all the babies left at the center were ill. Examinations showed that 42 percent of the infants had cerebral palsy, 15 percent had Down's syndrome and 12 percent had congenital heart disease. All of the infants have received medical treatment, although around nine percent have died, according to Xu. Ye Fen, director of social welfare in the civil affairs bureau, said the city would start providing fantail aid to poor families with sick babies as to reduce the number of drop-offs. Xu has cautioned parents against leaving their babies at the temporarily closed station, warning them that surveillance footage would be sent to police.