Saturday, May 27, 2006

BBC NEWS | 'Dead' Everest man safe at camp










Everest
Dozens of people have perished attempting to scale Everest



An Australian man left for dead as he descended Mount Everest has left the "death zone" near the summit and has spoken by phone to his relieved wife.

Lincoln Hall, 50, was left behind by his Sherpas on Thursday after he began hallucinating and refused to move.


But he was found alive on Friday, and rescuers have now accompanied him down to a camp at about 6,400m (21,000ft).


He was helped down the mountain by 11 Sherpas and is being treated for frostbite and swelling on the brain.


Mr Hall was said to have suffered the swelling, known as a brain edema, as a result of altitude sickness while close to the summit.


He does not remember trying to descend the mountain or his time alone on Everest, according to Duncan Chesswell, a friend and fellow climber not currently in Nepal.


 











He's in reasonably good condition but he doesn't have much memory of things at this stage



Duncan Chesswell
Friend



"He's in reasonably good condition but he doesn't have much memory of things at this stage," Mr Chesswell said.


Another friend, Simon Balderstone, told Australia's Associated Press that Mr Hall spoke briefly to his wife, telling her he had suffered bad frostbite while exposed on the mountain.


She reportedly replied by telling her husband she would love him even if he lost all his fingers.


Tea and oxygen


Mr Hall, an experienced climber, reached the summit on Thursday.


Another member of the climb, German Thomas Weber, died shortly before reaching the summit, according to a statement issued by expedition leader Alexander Abramov.


During the descent Mr Hall became weak and despite hours of effort and the Sherpas were told by their expedition leader to leave him behind, Mr Chessell said, speaking in Australia.


Mr Abramov's statement said Mr Hall had died as he descended.


But on Friday, an American climber - Dan Mazur - came across Mr Hall and found he had survived the night, at more than 8,000m (24,000ft).


After giving him hot tea and oxygen, a radio call was made to Mr Abramov, who ordered an urgent rescue mission.


At least 10 deaths have been reported on Everest this season, close to the record of 12 during the 1996 spring climbing season.


Mr Hall's rescue has provided a bright spot days after a successful summiteer admitted that dozens of climbers aiming for the top had passed by a stricken British climber who soon afterwards died, our correspondent adds.


New Zealander Mark Inglis' decision not to help British climber David Sharp has sparked an ongoing debate about climbing ethics.


 











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Wednesday, May 17, 2006

FERRARI MYSTERY




FERRARI MYSTERY: Audio, video, photos, articles


 



Life in Fast Lane Long Before Ferrari Crash

 


May 15, 2006


Life in Fast Lane Long Before Ferrari Crash


UPPSALA, Sweden — Before he shattered a red Ferrari in Malibu and became grist for Internet legend, Bo Stefan Eriksson ran a criminal gang in Sweden, raced cars in Europe, skippered a yacht called Snow White and helped run a video game company with dreams of taking on Sony and Nintendo, according to police and bankruptcy investigators.


 



A Pileup of Charges in the Case of the Totaled Ferrari

 


April 18, 2006


A Pileup of Charges in the Case of the Totaled Ferrari


Los Angeles prosecutors filed embezzlement, grand theft, drunk driving and weapons charges Monday against a former European video game executive, whose involvement in the crash of a rare Ferrari Enzo in Malibu two months ago has mushroomed into a case filled with international intrigue.


 




April 12, 2006


Prosecutors Delay Decision on Charges in Ferrari Case


Prosecutors on Tuesday delayed a decision on filing charges against a former Swedish videogame executive arrested on suspicion of grand theft of a rare Ferrari, which crashed in Malibu, and two other exotic sports cars.


 




April 11, 2006


Ferrari Case Continues to Widen


The investigation into a former Swedish video game executive whose rare Ferrari crashed in Malibu widened Monday as the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency confirmed it is investigating Stefan Eriksson.


 




March 28, 2006


Ferrari Owner Is Minus His Second Car


Stefan Eriksson's famous exotic car collection keeps shrinking.


 



Ferrari Case Takes New Twist With Possible Tie to Bus Agency

 


March 3, 2006


Ferrari Case Takes New Twist With Possible Tie to Bus Agency


As sheriff's detectives investigate last week's crash that destroyed a $1-million Ferrari, they are now looking into an obscure nonprofit organization that provides disabled people with transit in the San Gabriel Valley.


 




February 28, 2006


The Plot Thickens in Ferrari Crash


The mystery deepened Monday in the case of the puzzling crash last week of a $1-million Ferrari Enzo on Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu.


 




February 23, 2006


Ferrari Owner Had Other 'Crash'


Stefan Eriksson had hoped that millions of video gamers would experience the thrill of street racing on a hand-held device he helped develop. But then Eriksson's $1-million Ferrari was totaled, an accident that gamers around the world may see as a cruel metaphor for the collapse of the portable console company.


 



So Speedy, So Exclusive, So Expensive, So Totaled

 


February 22, 2006


So Speedy, So Exclusive, So Expensive, So Totaled


It was a SigAlert made for Malibu.


 



Copyright © 2010, Los Angeles Times




Thursday, May 4, 2006

GameSpot: Confirmed: Microsoft getting Massive




Last week, the Wall Street Journal reported that Xbox 360 manufacturer and software giant Microsoft was acquiring the in-game advertising firm Massive Inc. That proved accurate today, as the company made its latest purchase official at the seventh annual MSN Strategic Account Summit in Redmond, Washington.


Massive makes its money by placing ads into games that have already shipped, typically slapping the ads onto in-game objects like vending machines, billboards, and TV screens. The ads are dynamically served, which means they can be changed on the fly, so a billboard advertising a fast food restaurant this week could be updated to plug a new movie next week. According to Microsoft's announcement, purchasing the company "will help deliver dynamic, relevant ads across Microsoft's online services, starting with Xbox Live and MSN Games."


Massive's client list includes NCsoft, Atari, Eidos, Konami, Codemasters, Vivendi, THQ, 2K Sports, Spark Unlimited, Acclaim, Ubisoft, and Sony Online Entertainment. Currently, Massive provides in-game ads for SOE's The Matrix Online and PlanetSide, which brings up the unusual situation of having a working agreement between businesses owned by rival console manufacturers Microsoft and Sony.


Unusual though it might be, Microsoft isn't planning on cutting that tie to its competitor. Not yet, at least. A Microsoft representative told GameSpot today, "There will be no change in Massive's relationships with third-party publishers. Massive will continue to function as [an] independent subsidiary of Microsoft for some time."


Financial terms of the deal weren't disclosed, but the Wall Street Journal report had it pegged in the range of $200 million to $400 million.