Năm: 4
Internet cable ruptures for 5th time in 2017
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| In 2017, the 20,000km-long AAG cable was disrupted four times and maintenance work had to be undertaken. — Photo fwallpapers.com |
This is the fifth time the cable has broken this year, slowing down internet speed in the country.
According to internet service providers (ISPs), the breakage occurred at a cable branch from HCM City. Tiếp tục đọc “Internet cable ruptures for 5th time in 2017”
Chuyến dã ngoại cuối cùng của cô sinh viên
1.
Sau một cái Tết vui vẻ bình thường, M. bỏ nhà ra đi. Một lá thư bốn trang giấy vở học trò để lại trong ngăn kéo bàn học. Vẫn nét chữ mộc mạc của cô sinh viên ngoan ngoãn, hiền lành, nhưng lần này, sau lời “Kính thưa ba me”, M. lại đột khởi thông báo về một hành vi không hiếu thảo, ngoan hiền chút nào. Ba mẹ M. đau khổ gần như điên dại. Dò hỏi bạn bè thân, sơ trong lớp tại trường học của M.; bắn tin cho bạn bè, bà con thân thuộc – kể cả bà con ở ngoài Sài Gòn hay tận dưới quê; lục tìm danh sách bệnh nhân trong các bệnh viện, trung tâm cấp cứu và cả nhà xác của những nơi này; đem ảnh của M. đến báo công an phường, đồng thời đăng lời rao trên mấy tờ báo và ti-vi; ra bưu điện đăng ký dịch vụ “hiển thị số máy vừa gọi đến”.v.v… Tiếp tục đọc “Chuyến dã ngoại cuối cùng của cô sinh viên”
Battery swapping can propel India’s electric car revolution
Published on Monday, 23 October 2017

adb.org_Imagine you’re buying a car, and the manufacturer forces you to purchase not only the vehicle itself but also demanded you pay upfront for 10 years worth of fuel. About $25,000 for the car and another $50,000 for the gas. Would you still purchase the car? Absolutely not, unless the gasoline was given at a discount price, right?
Anyone shopping for an electric car could be forgiven for thinking that manufacturers are asking to pay upfront for future energy use. These vehicles are still on average about 35% more expensive than non-electric cars – despite gradually declining battery prices and the promise of practically zero maintenance fees. Tiếp tục đọc “Battery swapping can propel India’s electric car revolution”
The scientist who spots fake videos
nature_Hany Farid discusses how to detect image manipulations — and the increasing sophistication of forgers.
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Eli Burakian/Dartmouth College
Hany Farid.
Hany Farid, a computer scientist at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, specialises in detecting manipulated images and videos. Farid, who provides his services to clients as varied as universities, media organizations, and law courts, says that image manipulation is becoming both more frequent and more sophisticated. He spoke to Nature about the arms race to stay ahead of the forgers.
Where do you start when trying to spot a fake image?
One simple but powerful technique is reverse image search. You give the image to a site such as Google Image Search or TinEye, and they show you all other instances of it. A project at Columbia University, in New York City, is taking this to the next level, and starting to find parts of images that have been repurposed from other images.
“I’ve seen the technology get good enough that I’m now very concerned”
Dozens of men describe rape, torture by Sri Lanka government

LONDON (AP) — One of the men tortured in Sri Lanka said he was held for 21 days in a small dank room where he was raped 12 times, burned with cigarettes, beaten with iron rods and hung upside-down.
Another man described being abducted from home by five men, driven to a prison, and taken to a “torture room” equipped with ropes, iron rods, a bench and buckets of water. There were blood splatters on the wall. Tiếp tục đọc “Dozens of men describe rape, torture by Sri Lanka government”
How we can end sexual harassment at work
Tourism projects worth 2.7 billion USD launched in Quang Ninh
VietNamNet Bridge – A series of projects worth a total 61 trillion VND (2.7 billion USD) will be built in the Van Don Special Administrative – Economic Unit, the northern province of Quang Ninh in 2018, according to Deputy Head of the management board of Quang Ninh economic zone Hoang Trung Kien.
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| A graphic image of the Sonasea Dragon Bay project (Photo: cafef.vn) |
Tiếp tục đọc “Tourism projects worth 2.7 billion USD launched in Quang Ninh”
UN Security Council increases pressure on Myanmar to end violence against Rohingya
The UN Security Council has called on Myanmar to rein in its military campaign in Rakhine state and allow hundreds of thousands of Muslim Rohingya driven from their homes to return. Tiếp tục đọc “UN Security Council increases pressure on Myanmar to end violence against Rohingya”
Vietnam action agenda must focus on inclusion: APEC Secretariat
‘Growth should be more inclusive’
By Son Luong / Tuoi Tre News
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| Denis Hew, Director at APEC Secretariat Policy Support Unit (L) and Alan Bollard, Executive Director of the APEC Secretariat, address a news conference in Da Nang, central Vietnam, November 7, 2017. Photo: Son Luong/Tuoi Tre News |
Editor’s note: Denis Hew, Director of the APEC Secretariat Policy Support Unit, spoke to Tuoi Tre News on the challenges to be addressed at the ongoing 2017 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Economic Leaders’ Week in the central city of Da Nang.
What are the topline points of the APEC summit most relevant to Vietnam? Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam action agenda must focus on inclusion: APEC Secretariat”
Vietnam premier highlights solutions for development at APEC business summit
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| Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc greets the attendees at the Vietnam Business Summit in the central city of Da Nang on November 7, 2017. Photo: Tuoi Tre |
Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc has underlined three key solutions for boosting Vietnam’s development during a business summit held in parallel with the ongoing 2017 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) week.
The first Vietnam Business Summit (VBS) was organized in the central city of Da Nang on Tuesday with the attendance of Vietnamese government leaders and officials, representatives from prestigious international organizations, scholars and hundreds of business influencers from across the Asia-Pacific region. Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam premier highlights solutions for development at APEC business summit”
Typhoon Damrey kills 106 in Vietnam, reservoirs brimming before APEC summit
Chuỗi bài Bão Damrey
Tuoitre News, By Reuters
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| People travel by boat past buildings flooded by Typhoon Damrey in the ancient UNESCO heritage town of Hoi An, Vietnam November 7, 2017. Photo: Reuters |
DANANG, Vietnam, Nov 8 — Vietnam’s deadliest storm this year, Typhoon Damrey, has killed 106 people, while dozens of dangerously full reservoirs release water as the southeast Asian nation prepares to host a regional summit.
VN grabs top prizes at APEC Photo Contest
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| Harvest Time by Oki Arisandi |
The winners of the photo contest were announced at the Concluding Senior Officials’ Meeting by the APEC Secretariat’s Executive Director, Dr Alan Bollard, on Tuesday.
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| Sunset Life by Kiều Anh Dũng |
Kiều Anh Dũng of the Mekong Delta province of Bạc Liêu received the first prize for his work, Sunset Life. The second and third prize winners were Trương Vinh of HCM City for The Sea Flower and Trần Đình Thương of Bình Thuận Province’s Phan Thiết City for Building the Flower Industry, respectively. Tiếp tục đọc “VN grabs top prizes at APEC Photo Contest”
One Belt, One Trap? A debate over who benefits from China’s new silk road
channelnewsasia
Questions are being asked about how, and whether, China can deliver the benefits of its multi-trillion-dollar initiative to connect a region with 62 per cent of the world’s population. Between The Lines debates the issue.

HONG KONG: In Myanmar, first a China-led dam project was suspended because of environmental and social problems. Then local protests about environmental damage have made the joint development of a copper mine a stop-start affair.
In Pakistan, there are internal differences over where the China Pakistan Economic Corridor projects should take place, with poorer provinces petitioning for more projects to be directed towards them instead of Punjab.
Such snags on the ground, among other things, are raising questions about how, and whether, Beijing can deliver on the grand vision of its Belt and Road initiative ushering in a new era of globalisation in Asia, Europe and Africa.
That was an issue debated in a recent Between the Lines episode looking at the implementation of China’s multi-trillion-dollar push to connect a region with 62 per cent of the world’s population. (Watch the episode here)
One thing is clear: Lessons have to be learnt. “The Chinese authorities as well as the business community have to go through a soul-searching process,” said commentator Professor Joseph Cheng, one of four discussants on the programme.
CULTIVATE PEOPLE, NOT JUST GOVERNMENTS
Their suggestions included taking care of local communities, doing good work, such as community projects to build good relations – and not only good public relations – as well as learning the local culture.
“Certainly, some Chinese corporations working in Myanmar were or have been perceived as looking down on the local people, not showing adequate respect for the local people,” said Prof Cheng. “It isn’t enough just to deal with the government.”
Other characteristics of Chinese investment and participation in infrastructure projects have also led to complaints.
“China has a lot of manpower, so when it takes part in projects, it not only brings along engineers, it also brings along skilful technicians, skilled labour and so on,” noted Prof Cheng.
So this means very little employment opportunities for local labour.
This contrasts with, say, the American viewpoint that bringing engineers to developing countries is costly, he added.
Some of the Chinese workers also start restaurants, small supermarkets and “even take over a segment, sometimes a very substantial segment, of the restaurant business and so on”. Tiếp tục đọc “One Belt, One Trap? A debate over who benefits from China’s new silk road”
Philippines to ask China to clarify its intentions in disputed sea
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, in an apparent policy shift, said on Wednesday he planned to ask China to make clear its intentions in the disputed South China Sea during Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meetings in Vietnam.

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MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, in an apparent policy shift, said on Wednesday he planned to ask China to make clear its intentions in the disputed South China Sea during Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meetings in Vietnam. Tiếp tục đọc “Philippines to ask China to clarify its intentions in disputed sea”









