Friday, 9 August 2013

Essex beat Notts in T20 last eight

By Owen Phillips BBC Sport at Trent Bridge

Friends Life t20, Trent Bridge

Essex 187-6 beat Nottinghamshire 140 by 47 runs

Shaun Tait claimed a hat-trick as Essex crushed Nottinghamshire by 47 runs in a thrilling FLt20 quarter-final.

Chasing 188 for victory, Notts made a blistering start with Alex Hales smashing 31 off 12 balls.

But David Masters then took three quick wickets as the hosts slumped to 64-4, and despite a valiant 61 from David Hussey, they were always struggling.

Ryan ten Doeschate had earlier bludgeoned 82 off 44 balls and Tait's heroics ensured a comprehensive win.

Neither side have won the tournament before and Esssex have Ten Doeschate to thank for setting up the victory, the Netherlands international smashing the ball to all parts of Trent Bridge in front of a bumper crowd of 12,106.

Essex's victory means the top three in the Southern group have all qualified for finals day later this month. Essex's victory means they have reached finals day on four occasions, having reached the showpiece event in 2006, 2008 and 2010. Nottinghamshire have never won the domestic Twenty20 competition and have only reached finals day twice. Their last appearance - the only time they have reached the final - came in 2006. He could easily have been out lbw to Butler for six when he played around a delivery that seemed destined for middle and leg stump.

But he took full advantage of his reprieve, smashing his 82 off 44 balls before he was caught on the boundary by Jake Ball off the excellent Butler in the final over.

Apart from Ten Doeschate, only Ravi Bopara - who scored a busy 38 off 25 balls made a significant contribution.

And Ten Doeschate's big-hitting, particularly off the spin pair of Graeme White and Samit Patel, ensured Notts had a challenging but very gettable total to chase under the lights.

The Notts reply began in dubious fashion, with Lumb dropped first ball at slip by Mark Pettini off the bowling of Graham Napier.

Opening partner Hales, who was lucky to get away with a poor shot, made the most of his fortune albeit briefly. His 31 from 12 balls included 19 from a Graham Napier over.

When Hales went, caught at midwicket by Greg Smith off David Masters in the fourth over, Notts had reached 46.

Lumb followed in the same over, edging Masters to wicketkeeper James Foster. By then the destructive opening duo had given Notts a fine platform.

But Masters had James Taylor caught on the boundary by Tim Phillips off his third ball, and the Essex total suddenly seemed a daunting one.

Although Napier was expensive, Notts struggled against Reece Topley, Shaun Tait and Ten Doeschate.

And when they reached 100-4 in the 13th over, they were requiring two a ball to make finals day.

Skipper Hussey played sensibly to give the Outlaws hope, but a sensational piece of fielding by Bopara, who flicked the ball back to Phillips on the boundary got rid of Riki Wessels.

And Tait had Hussey, who had twice been dropped, caught and then dispensed with Butler before bowling White.

Essex wrapped up an impressive win and their victory means they join Surrey, Hampshire and Northants in the final day line-up at Edgbaston on Saturday, 17 August.

Match scorecard


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England collapse was no isolated slump

And so the fightback gathers pace.

It sounds illogical to claim that a side that have just retained the Ashes with two Tests to play have problems to solve, but England's stumble to 238-9 on the first day of this fourth Test was more than just a sixth successive ascendant day for Australia.

Once again, England's batsmen struggled badly, on a day where for much of the time the sun shone bright and the pitch misbehaved as much as a prissy school prefect.

From 149-2 they collapsed, just as in the bad old days of darkness and gnashing of teeth, to lose their next seven wickets for 65 runs.

Some got themselves out. Others got in and could then do nothing. Through it all a packed house that came to party watched it all with muted voice and heavy heart.

"Australia nagged away at the flaws in England's batting line-up and Bell's dismissal was emblematic of a confused and erratic batting display."

As always, a total needs context. The highest first-innings score in the five County Championship matches at this ground so far this season is 267.

Australia may yet endure similar problems on Saturday, and then again batting last on a deteriorating track; England may yet win this game, and with it the series in dominant style.

Equally, this was no isolated slump. In seven innings in this series so far, the hosts have not once passed 400.

You might wonder if that matters, when they won the first two Tests and held on to draw the third.

The side with the real headaches are Australia, reconciled to another series without the urn, six and a half years on from their last Ashes series win and counting. It is the tourists, not Alastair Cook's men, who were dismissed for under 300 four times in the first two Tests.

But those baggy green shortcomings, and the inspired form of Ian Bell, have helped mask the issues in the home ranks as well as propel them into an unassailable lead.

England Ashes triumphs of recent vintage have been built around big first-innings scores. Pile on the runs; pile the pressure on Aussie shoulders.

In 2005, the wins at Edgbaston and Trent Bridge came off the back of totals of 407 and 477, the so-nearly at Old Trafford from a first innings of 441.

Four years later, it was the same: 425 to set up the win at Lord's, an aggregate of over 700 runs across two innings as victory was snatched at the Oval. Down under two winters ago they batted Australia into oblivion - 517-1 at the Gabba, 620 in Adelaide, 513 at the MCG, 644 in Sydney.

Not this time.

In that last series Alastair Cook plundered his record-breaking 766 runs  at an average of 127, Jonathan Trott a similarly pivotal 445 runs at 89. This summer, Cook averages 28, Trott 24.

They are not alone. Jonny Bairstow, lost down the order and beset by self-doubt, averages 29. Matt Prior, England's player of the year, has scored a grand total of 86 runs from six innings.

Joe Root's 180 was instrumental to England's one-sided triumph at Lord's. In his six innings outside that, he averages 15, and that with the assistance of a not out.

Even Kevin Pietersen, scorer of that first-innings ton at Old Trafford, is going along at a mere 33. With the exception of Bell, English batsmen have made only two scores over 67 in the entire series.

"Australia's bowlers have been disciplined but England will be feeling grumpy with themselves having won the toss and batted.

"If you looked at the bowling figures you'd think it was spinning a mile but Nathan Lyon has bowled shrewdly and waited for England to make mistakes. Any spin bowler would love those figures in the first innings."

Neither are they being undone by fiendish bowling. Australia's attack on Friday nagged effectively, kept it tight when little happened and cashed in when it did. But too often England gave them the sort of generous assistance that could haunt them as effectively as the ghosts of the adjacent Lumley Castle have Shane Watson.

When you are out of form, you graft. Cook did precisely that, yet in his obduracy revealed much about his current tribulations.

In the first 12 balls he faced, he played a shot only against the 12th; the 21 runs he scored in the stodgy morning session took him 90 balls. His eventual dismissal, playing no shot to be trapped lbw by Jackson Bird for a colourless 51 from 164 balls, was suitably anti-climactic.

Trott was for a long time Australia's great scourge. His Ashes average until this series was 86, almost double his overall Test number. For 60 balls he looked in even better shape, clipping and driving seven fours, his runs coming at three times the rate of his skipper's, only to edge an unremarkable delivery from the workmanlike Nathan Lyon onto his pad and into short leg's hands on 49.

Ashes 2013: Nathan Lyon praises 'team effort'

Bell, for once, tossed his wicket away. Pietersen appeared to be attempting to do the same, only to fall to another innocuous Lyon non-turner. Bairstow, mired on 14 off 77 balls, swept wildly across the line to follow sorry suit, and on a flat pitch England were becalmed. Just five runs came in 10 overs after tea, 21 overs drifting by without a single boundary.

Neither is this a short-term malaise. From the last home Ashes series in 2009 to the 4-0 win over India in 2011 that pushed England to the top of the Test rankings, their average first-innings score was 412. In the 18 months before this Ashes series that had plummeted to 323. That England won just three of their seven series in that period was no coincidence.

Against this Australia side, this summer, they may get away with it. Whilst the two pace attacks are evenly matched, Graeme Swann's superiority over his opposite numbers has opened a gap that should not be breached. Lyon may have taken 4-42 from his 20 overs on Friday, but barely a ball spun from the straight.

This winter it might not be so straightforward. Tracks will be prepared to negate Swann's influence. Australia's own batting order might yet look settled, their bowling attack more grizzled. Even in overall superiority, England must look to improve.


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England women name Ashes squads

Spinner Holly Colvin has been left out of England's 14-player squad for the women's Ashes Test against Australia, which starts on 11 August.

Colvin, 23, who recently suffered a broken thumb, has been named in the one-day and Twenty20 squads.

The England side is led by captain Charlotte Edwards, with wicketkeeper Sarah Taylor also set to star.

11-14 August: Only Test, Wormsley

20 August: 1st ODI, Lord's

23 August: 2nd ODI, Hove

25 August: 3rd ODI, Hove

27 August: 1st T20, Chelmsford

29 August: 2nd T20, Southampton

31 August: 3rd T20, Chester-le-Street

The 2013 women's Ashes will be decided by who gains the highest points total after playing all three formats.

In total, England have named 17 players across all three squads.

All-rounder Laura Marsh and seam bowler Katherine Brunt both return after missing this summer's games against Pakistan.

Colvin and pace bowler Georgia Elwiss will replace Test call-ups Natalie Sciver and Danielle Wyatt for the ODI matches, with the latter pair returning for the Twenty20 internationals along with 17-year-old left-arm seamer Natasha Farrant.

"Facing Australia is the ultimate test for every player," Head of England Women's Cricket Clare Connor said.

"The inaugural multi-format Women's Ashes is unprecedented in terms of establishing a winning team across all three formats. Our selectors have picked well-balanced squads to maximise the strengths of our players in each of the formats of the game."

Six points will be awarded to the winners of the Test in Wormsley from 11-14 August, with each side receiving two points in the event of a draw. The limited-overs games which follow will see two points for a win.

The final two Twenty20 internationals, at Southampton and Chester-le-Street, will be played before the men's Twenty20 games between England and Australia.

Australia are the holders of the women's Ashes after winning a one-off Test match in Sydney in January 2011.

England Test squad to face Australia: Charlotte Edwards (Kent) (captain), Tammy Beaumont (Kent), Arran Brindle (Sussex), Katherine Brunt (Yorkshire), Lydia Greenway (Kent), Jenny Gunn (Nottinghamshire), Danielle Hazell (Yorkshire), Heather Knight (Berkshire), Laura Marsh (Kent), Natalie Sciver (Surrey), Anya Shrubsole (Somerset), Sarah Taylor (Sussex), Lauren Winfield (Yorkshire), Danielle Wyatt (Nottinghamshire).

England ODI squad to face Australia: Charlotte Edwards (Kent) (captain), Tammy Beaumont (Kent), Arran Brindle (Sussex), Katherine Brunt (Yorkshire), Holly Colvin (Sussex), Georgia Elwiss (Sussex), Lydia Greenway (Kent), Jenny Gunn (Nottinghamshire), Danielle Hazell (Yorkshire), Heather Knight (Berkshire), Laura Marsh (Kent), Anya Shrubsole (Somerset), Sarah Taylor (Sussex), Lauren Winfield (Yorkshire).

England T20 squad to face Australia: Charlotte Edwards (Kent) (captain), Tammy Beaumont (Kent), Arran Brindle (Sussex), Katherine Brunt (Yorkshire), Holly Colvin (Sussex), Natasha Farrant (Kent), Lydia Greenway (Kent), Jenny Gunn (Nottinghamshire), Danielle Hazell (Yorkshire), Laura Marsh (Kent), Natalie Sciver (Surrey), Anya Shrubsole (Somerset), Sarah Taylor (Sussex), Danielle Wyatt (Nottinghamshire)


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Get one can Free of Royal Canin wet for small dogs

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Free eCookbook - Easy Weeknight Dinners


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Netherlands Through To Semi-Finals Despite Loss

Netherlands Through To Semi-Finals Despite LossThe Dutch were able to celebrate a semi-final spot despite losing to Pakistan.

Netherlands won the battle with Thailand to progress to the semi-finals of the ICC Women’s World T20 qualifier in Ireland. Both sides lost their final group games but the Dutch had the superior net run rate and will join Ireland, Sri Lanka and Pakistan in the last four. Thailand join Canada, Japan and Zimbabwe in the plate competition.

The Netherlands lost out by 20 runs to Pakistan in a reduced-overs affair in Dublin. They won the toss and had Pakistan one for two in the second over but they rallied to post 72 for four. Nain Abidi hit an unbeaten 38 off 27 balls and added 60 in 39 balls with Bismah Maroof (25 off 17 balls) for the third-wicket. Mariska Kornet was the pick of the Dutch attack with two for eight from her two overs.

The Netherlands never really threatened the target and limped to 52 for five. Miranda Veringmeier (12), Helmien Rambado (15) and Tessa van der Gun (11) all reached double figures, but there were three run-outs as well as a wicket apiece for Sumaiya Siddiqi (1-9) and Sana Mir (1-8).

Sri Lanka beat hosts Ireland to top Group B and secure a more favourable semi-final opponent. Sripali Weerakkody and Shashikala Siriwardene each took a brace of wickets as Ireland could manage only a paltry 62 for nine from their 20 overs. Number 11 Elena Tice was one of only two batters to reach double figures and top-scored with 14 during a tenth-wicket partnership of 23 with Louise McCarthy (7). Sri Lanka then knocked off the runs for the loss of just Chamari Atapattu (10) and Yasoda Mendis (20) and in less than 15 overs. Deepika Rasangika ended on 22 not out.

Christabel Chatonzwa took four for 12 as Thailand could muster just 74 in reply to Zimbabwe’s 103 for eight and thus saw their hopes of qualifying for the ICC Women’s World T20 proper evaporate. Skipper Somnarin Tippoch was the only batter to reach double figures and made 24, while extras contributed a further 23. Besides Chatonzwa, there were two wickets each for Sharyce Saili and Sharne Mayers.

Nonhlanhla Nyathi had earlier top-scored for Zimabwe with 28, while Nattaya Boochatham, Tippoch and Ratanaporn Padunglerd each took two wickets.

Canada avoided the Group B wooden spoon by defeating Japan. They overcame a stuttering start that saw them slip to 46 for five to win by five wickets. Mai Yanagida had taken two wickets after Japan had notched up 97 for five after being asked to bat, while Suthershini Sivanantham held firm with 32 off 41 balls. However, it was left to Durriya Shabbir (36 not out off 31) and Sheryl Tittlemeier (10 off 16) to see Canada home with an unbroken sixth-wicket partnership of 54. Japan had earlier struggled with the bat, but benefited from 28 extras to post a competitive total.

Both the plate and main semi-finals take place on Monday, with the line-up confirmed as follows:
1st semi-final, Ireland v Pakistan (0900 GMT start)
2nd semi-final, Netherlands v Sri Lanka (1300)
1st plate semi-final, Japan v Zimbabwe (0900)
2nd plate semi-final, Canada v Thailand (1300)

The finals will be held on Wednesday, along with the all-important third-place play-off.

© Cricket World 2013


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Can Anyone Stop the Bullies of the AFC East?

Larry Csonka

The AFC East is one of the NFL's storied divisions. Remember 1972 when the Miami Dolphins went undefeated? Some veterans of that team say the '73 team was even better.

Remember the 1968 New York Jets, with Joe Namath, Emerson Boozer, Don Maynard? Their Super Bowl win over the highly favored Baltimore Colts cemented Namath's cocky reputation and brought legitimacy to the old AFL. If the Jets had lost, would the NFL look like it does today?

Or how about those great Buffalo teams with Jim Kelly at quarterback, Thurman Thomas at running back and other greats like Bruce Smith and James Lofton? They went to four straight Super Bowls. Of course, they lost them all, but they ruled the regular seasons for all those years.

Now, it's a division that's been completely dominated and steamrolled by the New England Patriots, who have won 10 of the past 12 division titles. The Patriots are the mighty U.S. fighting forces in full combat mode; the rest of the division is a tiny, third-world militia cowering before New England firepower.

This preview and analysis of the AFC East is the first in a series of eight such previews, leading us up to the season opener on September 5. Comments are welcome.

- Getty Images


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England Seize Complete Control of Lord's Test

England 361 & 333-5 (Root 178no) v
Australia 128 (Swann 5-44)
Second Ashes Test, Lord’s, day three
Scorecard

England gained complete control of the second Ashes Test on day three at Lord’s. Any thoughts of a wobble following last night’s Peter Siddle triple-strike were soon forgotten as Joe Root and Tim Bresnan took them through the first session unscathed.

Root, who it must be remembered should have been caught late yesterday evening, then kicked on in the afternoon, reaching three figures for the first time since being promoted to open, while Ian Bell benefited from an early reprieve to keep him company and was only denied a second century of the match when he slapped a Steve Smith long-hop to mid-wicket.

Root and Bresnan began cautiously at the start of the day and looked determined not to give Australia’s bowlers a sniff. Root unveiled a brace of on-drives to light up the morning session, but otherwise there was little of note in what must rank as the least eventful session of the series thus far. Only 83 runs were scored in 31 overs, but importantly England hadn’t lost a wicket and Australia were all but out of the contest.

After the break, things were scarcely more fluid. James Pattinson ended Tim Bresnan’s dogged innings at 38 by tempting him into a pull that found Chris Rogers at square-leg. England’s use of the night-watchman, questionable at the time, had paid dividends for the second time in the match.

There was then time for the third umpire to provide a brief moment of controversy. Ian Bell edged a catch to Steve Smith when he had scored just three, but remained at the crease, unsure as the whether the ball had carried. Tony Hill adjudged the replays to be inconclusive and Bell was given not out, much to the consternation of the Australian fielders and whoever was tweeting from the Cricket Australia Twitter account.

The afternoon session had yielded even fewer runs than the first. Just 57 from 27 overs, but England had now firmly cemented their advantage. A bolder side may have looked to have pressed on with a view to declaring in the final hour of the day, but that has never been the way of this England team.

Instead, Root and Bell were left to take advantage of the twin-pronged spin attack of Ashton Agar and Steve Smith in the evening. Michael Clarke spurned the opportunity of the second new ball, seemingly saving his pace bowlers for tenser situations ahead.

Bell upped the tempo and looked destined for twin centuries at Lord’s, only to find Chris Rogers at mid-wicket when on 74. Root then went past 150 and hit two sixes in a single overs from Smith just before the close. He finished on 178 and will surely be allowed to reach his double-hundred tomorrow, at which point England will declare.

Several milestones were passed in the final part of the day. The lead went past 404, Australia’s highest ever run chase in Test history, and the 418 for seven that the West Indies made against them to set a new world record in 2003. Then the landmark of the highest run chase in all first-class cricket - West Zone’s 541 in 2010 - was overhauled in the dying moments of the day. All that remains is the highest fourth innings total of all time in Tests - the 654 for five that England made in the ‘timeless’ Test of 1939. Surely, though, the declaration will come before then.

The pitch, by no means a minefield, is continuing to provide appreciable turn. What’s more, there is enough pace and bounce to suggest that Graeme Swann will find things easier than he did in the second innings at Trent Bridge, where the pitch just got slower as the game progressed. With little chance of rain, and two days still to play, it is hard to see the result being anything other than England win.

© Cricket World 2013


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Sage 50 Quantum Accounting 2014

Pros Generous data capacity. Company consolidation. Sage Advisor. Workflow automation. Deep job-, inventory-tracking (four costing methods). Sophisticated reporting. Role-based security. Up to 40 users.

Cons Outdated interface. No new online bill-pay accounts. Limited remote access. No revenue recognition management. Bottom Line Sage 50 Quantum Accounting is the most capable desktop-based, low-end accounting software available. True midrange accounting solutions like NetSuite, however, are built for anytime/anywhere access and more customizable, complex financial processing.

By Kathy Yakal

Sage 50 Quantum Accounting 2014 is a member of the largest global software family represented in my latest batch of ERP reviews. Over the years, its parent company, Sage, has acquired numerous small and mid-sized business solutions, primarily in the accounting field (though it also publishes an old, familiar contact manager, ACT!). It now supports several previously-independent lines, including Simply Accounting, BusinessWorks, DacEasy, and Peachtree.

Compare Selected

Sage has left the entry-level Peachtree lineup (Pro, Complete, etc.) intact, changing only the applications' names to Sage 50 (Sage 50 Pro Accounting, Sage 50 Complete Accounting, etc.). Sage 50 Quantum Accounting sits at the top of the list, maintaining the look and feel and core feature sets of the junior Sage 50 products, but incorporating functionality that brushes up against the low end of the midrange accounting solutions. This includes more generous data capacity, support for more users (up to 40), more sophisticated job-tracking, and role-based security levels.

All Sage 50 products—with the exception of the relatively new Sage One—are desktop-based. This allows growing businesses to move up through the ranks without having to learn a new application and appeases the large number of small companies who are uncomfortable doing their financial work in the cloud. But while some elements of Sage 50 Quantum Accounting look fresh, most of its working parts use the same interface and navigational tools that have existed with little change for years.

A Solid Base
The products formerly known as Peachtree have matured to the point where there's little more they can add in terms of small business financial processing features. In fact, they hit that wall a few years ago. So the emphasis in upgrades has been on how work is done, rather than what the products can actually do.

This means that Sage 50 Quantum Accounting is quite capable of handling the basic work required of a GAAP-compliant, double-entry accounting PC application. Its front end—the part that you as a user see—is designed to be understood by non-accountants. Behind the scenes, the software is busy doing the technical work—the debits and credits, journal entries, etc., that are necessary to keep the books balanced.

All of that work you used to do on paper or in Excel—or in another accounting product—can be done quickly and accurately using Sage 50 Quantum Accounting. You can track receivables and payables, manage your inventory and jobs, and process your payroll. Your paper forms and manual processes will be replaced by the software's records (customer, vendor, item, and employee) and transaction forms (invoices, purchase orders, quotes, and sales orders, etc.).


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Makeup Wars: My Favorite Summer Manicure.

My summer manicures are always bright, but they almost always have another thing in common too - they're pink. I love pink. It works with my skin tone and it looks great on my nails. L'Oréal Paris is launching a summer collection called Colour Me Pink next month, and all of the products are in pink tones. It's as if it were made for me.

L'Oréal Paris Colour Me Pink Nail Color | Beautiful Makeup Search

The nail colors:

Berry Jealous!Sugary SweetTaste of RomancePink AttitudeRosy MacaronHella Pink

I selected two of the shades for my summer manicure so I could have an accent nail, with a bit of a design. I used Pink Attitude as the base and accented it with Sugary Sweet on my ring finger. Pink Attitude is a beautiful, creamy geranium pink-red shade; Sugary Sweet is a sheer, light pink with a subtle shimmer that is only really visible in bright light.

L'Oréal Paris Pink Attitude and Sugary Sweet | Beautiful Makeup Search

First, I applied two coats of Pink Attitude. After they were dry, I taped off (using band aids because I am such a novice and never thought of using tape, which would have given me a much more clean edge) a vertical line on my ring finger, and applied three coats of Sugary Sweet. I left that on for about 30 minutes before I removed the guides. Finally, I took a little self adhesive crystal that I had left from a craft project, and placed that on my nail with tweezers. I finished with top coat.

L'Oréal Paris Nail Art Tutorial | Beautiful Makeup Search

My summer manicure:

L'Oréal Paris Nail Art | Beautiful Makeup Search

Be sure to check out all the summer manicures that my beauty friends created.

Categories: CategoryMakeup Wars

A press sample of the product featured may have been provided by brand or brand representative for editorial consideration. All opinions are my own. Affiliate links may have also been used in the post. Please see disclosure policy for complete information.

Copyright © 2001 - 2013 Beautiful Makeup Search.


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Surrey's Batty to miss finals day

Surrey captain Gareth Batty has been ruled out of FLt20 finals day after receiving a two-game suspension from the England & Wales Cricket Board.

The 35-year-old was reported by the umpires for two Level Two breaches of the ECB's disciplinary code in Surrey's three-wicket win over Somerset.

Batty was reported for a confrontation with Somerset batsman Peter Trego.

The spinner has been an ever-present for Surrey in this season's competition, taking nine wickets.

“He acted contrary to the spirit of the game and in a way which brings cricket into disrepute and failed to set the leadership example expected”

Gerard Elias QC Chairman of the ECB Cricket Discipline Commission After video footage was reviewed, Batty received penalty points for twice breaching the ECB's directives.

The first for "inappropriate and deliberate physical contact between players in the course of play" and the second for "using language or a gesture that is obscene or of a serious insulting nature".

Gerard Elias QC, chairman of the ECB Cricket Discipline Commission, said they expect players to "have regard to the image of the game and their place as role models".

"Gareth Batty was not merely a player but was the Surrey captain," Elias said. "His conduct as such was appalling.

"Not only was he involved in deliberately and inappropriately physically confronting a batsman he had just dismissed, he subsequently engaged in a foul-mouthed tirade at the batsman.

"Plainly, he acted contrary to the spirit of the game and in a way which brings cricket into disrepute and failed to set the leadership example expected."

The penalty will remain on Batty's record for two years.

"It is a decision the ECB have come to," Surrey executive director Alec Stewart told BBC Radio 5 live.

"We have to accept it regardless of our thoughts and will have to prepare for the Twenty20 final without him."

Meanwhile, Somerset batsman Craig Kiewswetter has received a penalty after being reported for a Level One breach of the ECB's code.

The 25-year-old was reported for using language that is obscene, offensive or insulting and/or making an obscene gesture during the defeat to Surrey at the Oval on Tuesday and has received a reprimand.


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Ashes venues: Old Trafford

Venue: Old Trafford, ManchesterDate: 1-5 AugustStart time: 11:00 BSTCoverage: Ball-by-ball Test Match Special commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra, BBC Radio 4 Long Wave and via the BBC iPlayer Radio app, BBC Sport website & BBC Sport app; updates on BBC Radio 5 live; live text commentary on BBC Sport website, app & mobile devices

Old Trafford has changed in many respects since it last opened its doors for an Ashes Test, on 15 August 2005 when Australia battled their way to a tense draw.

More than 10,000 people - the figure was closer to 20,000, according to insiders - were turned away that day after cheap tickets were made available for the final day's play.

Since then, the famous venue's square has been rotated through 90 degrees to prevent the sun from setting behind the bowler's arm, while many areas of the ground have been redeveloped,  with the old pavilion refurbished and new stands and a large conference centre constructed.

Old Trafford retains the unwanted record of being the only ground in England where a Test has been abandoned without a ball bowled - this happened twice, in 1890 and 1938.

This will be its first Test since 2010 - and many Lancastrian fingers will be crossed that the weather holds.

Malcolm Ashton

BBC Test Match Special statistician Malcolm Ashton presents Old Trafford's Ashes records:

Ashes Tests: 28 (England won seven, Australia won seven, with 14 draws; Australia also beat South Africa in a "neutral" Test there in 1912).

First Ashes Test: 10-12 July 1884. There was no play on the first of the three scheduled days because of the weather, and the match finished as a draw.

Highest Ashes total: 656-8 declared by Australia in 1964. The match finished as a high-scoring draw, with England making 611 in reply. Seamer Tom Cartwright bowled 77 overs (for only 118 runs) in Australia's first innings. Not to be outdone, Australia spinner Tom Veivers sent down a mammoth 95.1 overs when England batted.

Lowest Ashes total: 70 by Australia in August 1888. WG Grace led England to a innings victory within two days as after the hosts made 172, the tourists were skittled for 81 and 70 as spinner Bobby Peel returned match figures of 11-68.

Allan Border Allan Border is the leading scorer in Ashes Tests at Old Trafford

Highest individual Ashes score: 311 by Australia captain Bobby Simpson in that drawn fourth Test in 1964. Simpson added 201 for the first wicket with Bill Lawry before Lawry was run out for 106.

Most Ashes runs: 416 by another former Australia skipper, Allan Border, who played there in 1981, 1985, 1989 and 1993. He hit centuries on his first two visits, including a gritty unbeaten 146 to ensure a draw in 1985.

Best Ashes bowling (innings): 10-53 by England's Jim Laker in 1956 (see below) - which remain the best Test bowling figures of all time. India leg-spinner Anil Kumble, who took 10-74 against Pakistan in 1999, is the only other man to take all 10 wickets in a Test innings.

Most Ashes wickets: 23 by England fast bowler Tom Richardson who, like Laker, played only two Ashes Tests in Manchester. After capturing 5-49 and 5-107 in 1893, Laker claimed 7-168 and 6-76 against Australia three years later.

Ashes runs scored: 12,250, for the loss of 391 wickets at an average of 31.33 runs per wicket.

Ashes boundaries: 1,102 (1,067 fours, 35 sixes)

Just as the 1972 Lord's Test will always belong to Bob Massie, the mention of Old Trafford and 1956 should bring an instant response from cricket fans of a certain age.

Jim Laker. 10-53, and 19 -90. Laker's Match.

The 34-year-old off-spinner was eight years into his Test career when Australia arrived in Manchester for the fourth Test of the 1956 Ashes, with the series level at 1-1.

1956 Ashes - Laker's 19 wickets sink Australia

England captain Peter May won the toss and batted against an Australian side which included some famous names in Neil Harvey, Keith Miller, Richie Benaud and Ray Lindwall.

The hosts' top three of Peter Richardson (104), Colin Cowdrey (80) and the Reverend David Sheppard (113 by the future Bishop of Liverpool) set the tone as England were bowled out for 459 on day two.

After a few overs with the new ball by Brian Statham and Trevor Bailey, it was time for Laker and his Surrey "spin twin", slow left-armer Tony Lock, to get to work on a pitch assisting spin.

Australia were mesmerised as Laker, once he had switched to the Stretford End, took 9-37 from 16.4 overs (including a spell of seven wickets for eight runs in 22 balls) with Lock (1-37 from 14) playing the supporting role at the other end.

From 48-0, the Aussies crumbled to 84 all out in 40.4 overs on the second afternoon and, trailing by 375, were asked to follow on.

Date: 26-31 July 1956

Venue: Old Trafford

England 459 (Rev DS Sheppard 113, PE Richardson 104)

Australia 84 (JC Laker 9-37) and 205 (CC McDonald 89, JC Laker 10-53)

England won by an innings and 170 runs

The tourists' second innings began badly as Colin McDonald retired hurt and Harvey bagged a pair, but the weather threatened to halt England's victory charge as only 45 minutes' play were possible on day three, and an hour across two spells on day four.

Australia began the final day on 84-2 - 291 in arrears - but as England pressed for the win, Laker continued to take wickets, while at the other end Lock bowled economically but without reward.

When he trapped wicketkeeper Len Maddocks lbw with time running out, Laker finished with astonishing figures of 10-53 from 51.2 overs - a mark that has never been surpassed in Test cricket. Indeed, his match figures of 19-90 remain comfortably the best in first-class cricket.

According to legend, Laker stopped at a pub while driving south that evening for a beer and a sandwich. He was not recognised.

What happened next? Laker's 19-wicket haul at Old Trafford put England 2-1 up in the series and ensured they retained the Ashes, but a draw at The Oval allowed them to win the series. Laker played his last Test in 1959, eventually retiring from first-class cricket in 1965 after a three-year spell with Essex at the end of his career. In retirement, he became a successful television commentator, and passed away in 1986 at the age of 64.

Shane Warne's delivery to bowl Mike Gatting, the 'Ball of the Century' Shane Warne: 20 years on from the Ball of the Century

How could we select any other moment in Old Trafford's Ashes history than the one dubbed "The Ball of the Century"?

The 1993 series began at Old Trafford, with both sides fielding two debutants - England handed caps to New Zealand-born paceman Andrew Caddick and unassuming off-spinner Peter Such, while making their first appearance in a Baggy Green were opener Michael Slater and left-arm seamer Brendon Julian.

Such took six wickets and fellow spinner Phil Tufnell grabbed two more as Australia collapsed from 183-1 to 289 all out, but they - and every other spin bowler on the planet - were about to be eclipsed by a chubby blond leg-spinner from Ferntree Gully.

Mike Gatting looks round after being bowled by Shane Warne in 1993 Gatting looks round after losing his off bail to Warne's first ball in Ashes cricket

Shane Keith Warne had played 11 Tests but was a largely unknown quantity in England when he was thrown the ball just before lunch on the second day.

Facing him was veteran England number three Mike Gatting, renowned as an excellent player of spin.

But with his first delivery in Ashes cricket, Warne sent down a ball which, arguably more than any other, changed the face of modern cricket - while simultaneously reviving the art of leg-spin which was largely moribund outside the subcontinent.

The ball drifted in, pitched outside leg stump and spun past Gatting's forward prod to remove his off bail.

It left the batsman momentarily befuddled as to how he had been dismissed, even wondering if wicketkeeper Ian Healy's glove had disturbed the bail.

Suddenly, a Warne-shaped cloud had fallen across England's bright new dawn - one that would continue to torment them for more than a decade until he finally hung up his international bowling boots in January 2007.

Non-striker Graham Gooch was reputed to have commented, as the burly Gatting trudged off, that if Warne had bowled him a cheese roll, it would never have got past him.

Read more about "The Ball of the Century" - 20 years on

What happened next? England were bowled out for 210, with Warne taking 4-51. The Aussies fared much better in their second innings, declaring on 432-5.

With England chasing an unlikely 512 to win, Gooch made a century before being bizarrely dismissed "handled the ball", but Warne (4-86) and Merv Hughes (4-92) set up a 179-run win. Australia won the series 4-1 to regain the Ashes, holding them until 2005.

Gatting played only six more Tests, bowing out after the 1994-95 tour of Australia with a batting average of 35.55 from 79 matches.

Warne spent the next 14 years tormenting international batsmen, but seemed to save his best performances for the old enemy, taking 195 of his 708 Test wickets against England.

Statistics correct as of 31 July.


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Next Up, Updates on the iPhone

Good news for those sick of dropped signals and sluggish iMessage delivery: The iPhone 5 has chips that support additional bands and frequencies. It can handle HSPA+, DC-HSDPA and most importantly LTE, capable of delivering up to 100 Mbps per second. Mr. Schiller is detailing the carrier partners for the new iPhone: AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, Telefonica, to name a few, in Europe, Australia, Asia.


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Exhausted Anderson hails victory

By Tom Fordyce Chief sports writer at Trent Bridge England's 10-wicket hero James Anderson admitted to total exhaustion after his side held off a brilliant Australian fightback to win an extraordinary first Ashes Test by 14 runs.

"Nothing can prepare you for these kind of days. Alastair Cook reckoned he would be the only kind of captain that does not go bald but I wonder how he's feeling now. The most important thing was the England dressing room kept calm."

Australia's last pair of Brad Haddin and James Pattinson had taken the tourists from 231-9 to the brink of what had seemed an impossible victory before man-of-the-match Anderson struck to have Haddin caught behind.

He said: "It has been draining emotionally and physically. I'm lost for words - it's been amazing."

Anderson took all four wickets to fall on the final day, the last of them initially given not out by umpire Aleem Dar before a review showed Haddin had got the faintest edge to the wicketkeeper.

"I didn't hear anything [for the final wicket] but Matt Prior and Cookie [Alastair Cook] were convinced," said Anderson. "I'm just delighted we could review it and sneak home."

Australia had begun the day on 174-6, needing an unlikely 311 for victory, but Anderson had Ashton Agar, Mitchell Starc and Peter Siddle all caught at slip by his captain Cook before striking again just as the match was slipping away.

Anderson has now taken five wickets in an innings six times at Trent Bridge and was hailed by the Nottingham crowd as he received his man-of-the-match accolade.

He said: "The match had the nerves going but I love bowling here and I'm happy to pick up some wickets again.

"A brilliant game of cricket, no-one gave Australia a chance, no-one thought they would compete but they have shown they have a talented bunch who will fight. England were gone, but the closer you get to a target, the harder it becomes. When England reviewed it, you could tell from Haddin's reaction he had nicked it."

"It generally swings here but whatever way we can get the ball moving, it is a bonus for us.

"At one point it looked like we were only going to have a lead of 150 but Stuart Broad and Ian Bell batted superbly well and got us to a decent total. You can't fault the effort of the boys.

"I love playing Test match cricket and the Ashes is right up there. The hard work in the gym is for bowling the long spells in matches like these."

Cook admitted that his team's nerves had been frayed as the 10th wicket pair threatened to pull off the highest fourth innings run-chase ever seen in a Trent Bridge Test.

"I always said I would be the only England captain not to go bald in the job but days like this won't help that," the captain added.

"Australia battled hard and a lot of credit to them, but Jimmy was outstanding.

"He is a world-class bowler and we use him when we need him. Finny [Steven Finn] and Broady have been great bowlers for us too but it was Jimmy's day today."

Listen to the key moments from BBC Test Match Special's commentary

Catch up with the Test Match Special podcast as Geoff Boycott and Jonathan Agnew review the final day.


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Melbourne To Host 2015 World Cup Final

Melbourne To Host 2015 World Cup FinalThe Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) will host the final of the 2015 World Cup on 29th March

The fixtures for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 have been announced and the Melbourne Cricket Ground will host the final on 29th March.

Defending champions India will open their defence against rivals Pakistan on 15th February, one day after New Zealand play Sri Lanka and Australia take on England.

The format of the competition will be identical to that of 2011 with eight teams qualifying for the quarter-finals from two groups of seven with group games ending on 14th March.

Co-hosts Australia are joined in Group A by England, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, New Zealand and two qualifiers while India, South Africa, Pakistan, West Indies, Zimbabwe, Ireland and the remaining qualifier are in Group B.

Ireland have already qualified via the World Cricket League Championship, from which one more team will qualify automatically.

The other two teams will qualify through next year's World Cup Qualifier which will be held in New Zealand.

49 matches will be spread across 44 days and 14 venues. Australia hosts 26 matches in Adelaide, Brisbane, Canberra, Hobart, Melbourne, Perth and Sydney while New Zealand hosts 23 matches in Auckland, Christchurch, Dunedin, Hamilton, Napier, Nelson and Wellington.

"I’m delighted to be part of this historic occasion as today we officially start the countdown to the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015, an event that, over the past 40 years, has become a truly global event," ICC President Alan Isaac said at the launch in Wellington.

"ICC events have established a unique place in the cricket calendar, and, as we’ve seen at our most recent events in Sri Lanka and the United Kingdom, players, sponsors, media, fans and supporters from all around the world want to be part of the spectacle.

"Sport is synonymous with life in Australia and New Zealand, and both countries boast some of the best facilities in the world. With the World Cup returning to these shores for the first time since 1992, I am sure it will be an event to remember."

ICC Chief Executive David Richardson, added: "The ICC Cricket World Cup is the flagship tournament of the 50-over game.  The 2015 tournament will mark 40 years since the first World Cup in 1975 and that history of great contests and heroes helps make the tournament what it is – the most sought after prize in our increasingly global game.

"The ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 will be returning to Australia and New Zealand after 23 years and will be staged at the back of two outstanding 50-over ICC events – the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 and ICC Champions Trophy 2013.

"I’m absolutely confident that the success of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 will further strengthen the status of 50-over cricket as a successful and viable format alongside Tests and Twenty20 Internationals."

ICC Cricket World Cup 2015

Group A: Australia, Bangladesh, England, New, Zealand, Sri Lanka, Qualifier 2 (from World Cricket League Championship), Qualifier 3 (from World Cup Qualifier)

Group B: India, Ireland, Pakistan, South Africa, West Indies, Zimbabwe, Qualifier 4 (from World Cup Qualifier)

© Cricket World 2013


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Pietersen 'must look after himself'

England boss Andy Flower says Kevin Pietersen must "look after himself as well as possible now" in order to extend his international career.

Pietersen, 33, is one of a number of England players engaged in all three formats - Tests, one-day and Twenty20.

The batsman described himself as an "old man" after his hundred in the third Ashes Test at Old Trafford.

Graeme Swann (34) Kevin Pietersen (33) Jonathan Trott (32) James Anderson (31) Ian Bell (31) Matt Prior (31) Chris Tremlett (31) Graham Onions (30) "He's in his early 30s - everything seems to hurt a bit more after long days and big innings," added Flower.

Pietersen was only passed fit to play in Manchester at the last minute after overcoming a calf strain, and has missed three out of eight Tests this year because of injury.

Team director Flower, who played 63 Tests and 213 one-day internationals for Zimbabwe, knows from experience that the body begins to struggle with advancing years.

As well as highlighting the need to avoid overworking 31-year-old fast bowler James Anderson, Flower also hinted that he is keeping an eye on Alastair Cook.

The Test and one-day international captain may be only 28, but it seems he may be rested for some matches.

Flower added: "The players that play all three forms of the game, we do try to look after in as wise a way as possible.

"Kevin's one of those guys, so we do take him out of certain competitions when it's necessary. Just like we do with Jimmy Anderson and might do with Alastair Cook in the future."

England's Wilfred Rhodes  is the oldest player in Test history. He was 52 when he earned the last of his 58 caps against West Indies in Kingston, Jamaica, in 1930.

A right-handed batsman who averaged 30.19, he was also employed as a left-arm spinner, taking 127 wickets at 26.96.

Described by Wisden as "shrewd, dour, but quick to seize an opportunity", Rhodes was a Yorkshire stalwart.

He died, aged 95, in 1973.

With Friday's fourth Test at Chester-le-Street in mind, Flower hinted at a change in England's seam attack.

Anderson, Tim Bresnan and Stuart Broad toiled hard for little reward during Australia's lengthy first innings at Old Trafford.

Chris Tremlett and Graham Onions have been included in a squad of 13 for the Durham Test, and Flower said: "We're totally focused on winning this series, and they are in the squad for a reason and available to play.

"We are quite willing to be flexible on that front.

"We thought Tremlett's type of bowling was more useful at Old Trafford, and he was the spare bowler if anyone had gone down on the morning of the game.

"Up at Durham might be slightly different, and Onions has been in good form all summer."


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Caddick criticises Somerset boss

Somerset legend Andy Caddick has said director of cricket Dave Nosworthy needs to improve his understanding of the team and English traditions.

South African Nosworthy replaced Brian Rose at Taunton in December 2012.

Caddick, 44, told BBC Somerset: "He's got to understand the team that's already here.

"He's got to understand the English traditions, the English culture, the way the English play their cricket and the English set up."

Caddick continued: "He's got to give the people who are under him, and the players, the time to understand what they do and why they've been so successful."

Somerset, who finished second to Warwickshire in Division One of the County Championship last year, are currently seventh this season and only two points clear of the relegation zone.

They are fourth in their FL t20 group, but sit top of Group C in the Yorkshire Bank 40.

The former England seamer also said Nosworthy needed to ensure he did not interfere with the work of head coach Andy Hurry, and voiced concern at the overall coaching structure.

"As I see it, a director of cricket is a person who directs cricket, he doesn't direct the team," New Zealand-born Caddick added.

"That's the coach's job. You've got to back the coach, who's been doing it for the last six or seven years.

"My concern right now is that we haven't got the structure in place.

"What playing staff do you turn to if you have a bowling issue or a batting issue? We can't, we've got nobody in place.

"That's my biggest concern. How are you going to attract players around the country to come to this club if you don't have world-class coaches in place?

"Who do you turn to in this team right now to try and get things right? At the moment it's senior players.

"Well, if the senior players aren't doing the job at the moment, who can you turn to then?"

Caddick, who played at Taunton for 18 years, said he would be happy to fulfil a mentoring role with Somerset.

"We need the infrastructure in place and we need that sooner rather than later," he said.

"I find it very frustrating that I've been away from the game for four years and I still haven't been asked to come down and do some coaching with the boys.

"I'd love to get involved and be brought on board as a consultant."


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Australia collapse dismays McGrath

By Tom Fordyce Chief sports writer at Lord's Australia great Glenn McGrath expressed his dismay after the Ashes hopes of the current side were battered by another dramatic batting collapse.

The visitors were bowled out for 128 on day two of the second Test as England took a 233-run first-innings advantage.

England were reduced to 31-3 in their second innings but, with a lead of 264, will be confident of a 2-0 series lead.

McGrath said: "It was a very poor, very disappointing scorecard. I'm not sure where Australia can go from here."

Australia collapsed from 42-0, much of the damage done during a calamitous afternoon session that saw six wickets fall as their top order were guilty of poor shots and dreadful use of the decision review system.

"When you see your spinner making things happen, like Graeme Swann did, you always feel you are in the game and wickets are around the corner."

Graeme Swann took five wickets and, with the pitch showing more turn with every passing hour, will be confident of doing further damage whatever total Australia are finally set.

"It was more the disappointing way it unfolded on a very good batting wicket," McGrath, who took 563 Test wickets, told BBC Test Match Special.

"Sure, there was a bit of spin, but not to this extent. They have to come out and show a bit of pride and bowl their hearts out."

Former England skipper Michael Vaughan, who won the Ashes in 2005, believes Friday's flurry of wickets may have been the pivotal play in this five-match series.

He told TMS: "England know they have the attack to bowl Australia out on any surface. What Australia have done here is play so badly that any positivity they have gained from Trent Bridge has disappeared.

"It is back to square one now. The performance on Friday was the performance of the team we thought they were going to be two or three weeks ago before (new coach) Darren Lehmann took over."

Yet Lehmann insists his side still have a chance.

Graeme Swann is the first England spinner to take five wickets in an Ashes Test at Lord's since Hedley Verity in 1934, when he claimed 7-61 and 8-43

"It's a good wicket so it's disappointing how we performed with the bat," he admitted. "But it's a great fightback with the ball.

"We have to fight pretty hard on Saturday morning, try to bowl them out cheaply and then bat for 150 overs because this is a good track.

"The players might be a little low on confidence but they know what to do. They have to trust their plans. If we can win all three sessions we are back in the game."

Swann was the chief beneficiary of Australia's inept batting, trapping opener Chris Rogers lbw with a high full toss.

He said: "It was quite simply the worst ball I've ever bowled; it slipped out of my hand. I can't even watch it so the less we see of it the better.

"It was truly awful cricket. I was a bit embarrassed but I'm sure Chris Rogers was even more embarrassed.

"Bowling Australia out for 130 - we would have bitten anyone's hand off if offered that.

"The plans for us will be to score as many as possible tomorrow and then have two days' bowling on a dry pitch."


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Have Durham joined cricket's elite?

Durham may be the youngest county and only in their 21st year of first-class cricket, but staging Friday's fourth Ashes Test between England and Australia will admit them entry to an exclusive club.

Since the inaugural fixture in 1882 just eight venues have been used in England and Wales, with Cardiff's Swalec Stadium the latest to be added to the list when it hosted the opening Test of 2009.

First match: Durham v Warwickshire - 18 May 1995

Capacity: 20,000

First one-day international: Scotland v Pakistan - 1999 World Cup - 20 May 1999

Total one-day internationals: 14

First Test match: England v Zimbabwe - 5 June 2003

Total Test matches: Four

First Ashes Test match: England v Australia - 9 August 2013

Bringing the fixture to the north east is a significant coup for a club whose rapid rise as a first-class county has also brought one-day and County Championship silverware, in addition to a prolific academy which has yielded talent such as Steve Harmison, Paul Collingwood and Graham Onions for the England side.

The arrival of the Australia team also represents a step up in the quality of opposition, having delivered successful Tests against Zimbabwe, Bangladesh and the West Indies since Chester-le-Street's debut in 2003.

Is this the moment that Durham finally join the county 'elite'? Or does a club in relative infancy need to prove itself over hundreds rather than tens of years?

BBC Sport has spoken to figures involved in the game to gain a cross-section of views.

Graeme Swann

"Chester-le-Street has only been a first-class ground for 15-16 years, and to get an Ashes Test match so quickly is magnificent. Sport has always thrived in the north east, and for Durham to have such success in such a short period of time as a first-class county, it's great it's been recognised in an Ashes Test match.

"The holy grail of Test cricket has landed, I'm sure they'll put on a good show and if the weather holds out, like I'm sure it will, it will be an incredible five days.

"They are an elite county, I think any county that regularly challenges or wins the County Championship can see themselves as a huge county these days. They've got the ground, they've got the facilities and they've got the players as well so they're definitely up there."

Geoff Boycott

"The national side belongs to everyone in Great Britain and it's great it should be played all over so everyone has the opportunity to get to a Test match without travelling an enormous amount.

"What you've got to accept is Durham is a young county. Most of the counties like Yorkshire - where I am president and we are in our 150th year and not the oldest - have a lot of tradition and history.

"You've got to be patient and make your own history, and over the years Durham will. They seem to be run quite properly and they've got a lovely ground. I remember many years ago when there was no stadia there, just a ground. It was a lovely cricket ground but nothing there and look how it's grown.

"In 30 or 40 years' time Durham will have a 50-year tradition in terms of Championship and Test cricket. Deep down Newcastle and the surrounding areas are a sporting part of the world, but they haven't had cricket to really support until the last few years."

David Collier

"Since they became a first-class county in 1991, Durham has become part of the family and are now one of the established 10 international venues. I think given that they were the first club to be granted first-class status in 70 years, it really is an amazing achievement to have made the progress they have over the last two decades.

"Durham as a minor county before their first-class status had a proud and rich history, in fact the first Durham county side played MCC in 1876 and beat the touring Australians in 1878, so it just shows how rich the history has been.

"They've probably got the best minor counties record ever with nine championships, and now with over 100 first-class games at Chester-le-Street have the ground and the team that the north east should be very proud of.

"The way the ECB operates, we have a major match group that awards the matches, but there are 10 international venues and each of those bid for certain matches and Durham have bid very successfully for those over the last few years. They've staged not only Test matches but also a large number of one-day games. This year Chester-le-Street will host not only the men's Ashes but also the women's Ashes as well."

David Harker

"We're certainly now members of a very select club in terms of Ashes venues. When you think of the club you think of everything that we provide in terms of a domestic team which is clearly now competitive; our youth development programme which has been highly successful, and you look at the venue which is now staging probably the most iconic series in Test cricket.

"Whether or not we're an elite club, we're certainly one of the big boys now. In terms of tradition and culture we'll never be the oldest venue, but one of things we'd like to think is we're a warm and friendly venue and distinctive in that regard.

"In terms of creating our own history, I'd like to think we're creating our own distinctive position in world cricket, which is consistent with who we are, where we've come from and what we're trying to achieve.

"Every event which is staged successfully adds to our credibility and that helps. Every time we stage an event we are judged, the ECB will assess the event and it's important we continue to be one of the leading venues in that regard. With the Ashes Tests there is greater demand than supply and I have to accept that as we're a relatively small venue in a relatively small part of the world.

"Our geographical position is helpful in terms of making sure English cricket is truly representative of the country and that we get a fair share of international cricket. Whether that's Ashes Tests or one-day games, time will tell."

Additional reporting by Alfie Joey and Damian O'Neil.


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VIDEO: Trott rues missed opportunity

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Northants loan gave belief - White

Spinner Graeme White says his loan spell at Northants gave him the belief to shine at Nottinghamshire.

White returned to Notts earlier this month and recorded the county's best Twenty20 figures of 5-22 in the 60-run FLt20 win over Lancashire on Sunday.

He told BBC Radio Nottingham: "It was good to get the chance at Northants. I started the competition well and taking wickets gives you confidence.

"It was about trying to prove a point and showing my worth for the team."

The win secured a home tie in the quarter-finals, which will be played on either 6, 7 or 8 August.


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Taylor's chance to impress selectors

Nottinghamshire's James Taylor seems to be in line for an England recall after being picked for Sussex in Friday's three-day game against Australia.

England are waiting on the fitness of fellow batsman Kevin Pietersen ahead of the third Ashes Test at Old Trafford.

Taylor, 23, played in two Tests against South Africa in 2012.

"This will provide him with a valuable opportunity to play in a longer format while we consider our options," said England team director Andy Flower.

Pietersen suffered a left calf strain during England's second-Test win at Lord's and is a doubt for next week's Old Trafford match, which starts on Thursday, 1 August.

Flower added: "Kevin is continuing his recovery from a calf strain and a decision about his availability for the Test will made nearer the time."

Taylor made scores of 34, 10 and four in his only previous Test experience against South Africa

Several names have been mentioned as possible replacements, such as Essex's Ravi Bopara and Yorkshire's Gary Ballance.

Right-hander Taylor would appear to be set for a call-up, having traded Nottinghamshire for Sussex at England's request for the match starting at Hove on Friday, but he is taking nothing for granted.

"I'm not back in the Test side yet but I'm pleased to be a step closer to it and I've always dealt with situations like this by concentrating on the game in hand and refusing to look too far ahead," said Taylor.

"I'm disappointed to have to miss two big Notts matches but the Sussex fixture will give me an opportunity to get some red ball practice and then I'll wait and see."

Taylor will miss Nottinghamshire's Friends Life T20 matches against Yorkshire on Friday and Lancashire on Sunday.

They do not have a County Championship match until 2 August and director of cricket Mick Newell said: "We want to provide James the best possible opportunity to be prepared to play in the third Test should he be required."

The 5ft 6in Taylor is no stranger to the Test environment, having made those two appearances last summer, scoring 34 in a 147-run stand with Pietersen at Headingley.

Meanwhile, Australia have rested six of their XI from the second Test for the game against Sussex, while paceman James Pattinson has been ruled out of the series with a back injury.

3rd Test: 1-5 August, Old Trafford

4th Test: 9-13 August Chester-le-Street

5th Test: 21-25 August, The Oval

To fill out their side at Hove, the tourists have summoned Western Australia off-spinner Ashton Turner - one of several men playing club cricket in England this summer as part of a development link-up with county side Hampshire.

Turner has been playing for Chichester Priory Park in the Sussex Cricket League, and will figure in a side captained by Ed Cowan as skipper Michael Clarke and his deputy Brad Haddin are among those rested.

Australia team to face Sussex: Ed Cowan (capt), Phillip Hughes, Usman Khawaja, Steve Smith, Matthew Wade (wk), James Faulkner, Ashton Agar, Ashton Turner, Mitchell Starc, Nathan Lyon, Jackson Bird.


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Bronzer with Cocoa Powder: Too Faced Chocolate Soleil.

How great is bronzer? I feel like I talk about it all the time, but I can't help it; I'm a bronzer girl. I have a list of my favorite bronzers, and even though I most often use drugstore bronzers, I don't turn my nose up when browsing new ones. This new bronzer from Too Faced caught my eye, or well, my nose. That's because this Chocolate Soleil Bronzer is made with real cocoa powder and it smells so good.

Too Faced Chocolate Soleil Bronzer Review | Beautiful Makeup Search

Chocolate Soleil is a darker medium-deep shade that is perfect for both contouring or all over bronzing because of the matte formula. I like matte bronzing formulas the best, because they look very real on the skin. I have to be careful with matte formulas though, as I've definitely tried some that look too powdery or chalky. This formula is great. I don't know if it is because it contains antioxidant rich cocoa powder or it's just the pure bronzing pigments. The color is real and natural looking.

I like to apply this bronzer with a big fluffy brush and apply it in place of powder to add a bit of a tanned look to my skin.

Too Faced Chocolate Soleil Bronzer Review | Beautiful Makeup Search

Too Faced Chocolate Soleil Bronzer Review | Beautiful Makeup Search

Too Faced Chocolate Soleil Matte Bronzer is available for $30 at Sephora, Ulta, Macy's and toofaced.com now.

A press sample of the product featured may have been provided by brand or brand representative for editorial consideration. All opinions are my own. Affiliate links may have also been used in the post. Please see disclosure policy for complete information.

Copyright © 2001 - 2013 Beautiful Makeup Search.


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Sony Xperia Z (T-Mobile)

Pros Beautiful, water-resistant design. Sharp display. Good size for a big-screen phone.

Cons Mediocre call quality. Dated processor. Average battery life. Bottom Line The Sony Xperia Z is a powerful, sleek new smartphone for splash-prone T-Mobile customers.

By Alex Colon

Sure, the Apple iPhone 5 may have a gazillion apps, the Samsung Galaxy S 4 may have countless cool features, and the HTC One may be built out of a block of aluminum, but one dip into the pool, one slip into the kitchen sink, or one drop into the toilet (gross) and they're history. So for some people, Sony's latest smartphone for T-Mobile, the $99.99 Xperia Z, has the ultimate killer feature: water resistance. It also happens to be an all-around great phone, with a large, gorgeous display, fast performance, and a good camera… that you can use to record video underwater. It isn't quite as powerful as the HTC One or the Galaxy S 4, but if you've been known to keep a bag of rice around to revive waterlogged devices, the Sony Xperia Z may be just the phone for you.

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Design
Next to the HTC One, the Xperia Z is one of the sleekest Android phones we've ever seen. Framed out by a polyamide skeleton, the Xperia Z is covered in scratch-resistant, tempered glass on all sides and protected by a shatterproof film. I wouldn't suggest dropping this phone on the ground and expecting it to be no worse for the wear, but it has a very solid feel in the hand. It measures 5.47 by 2.79 by 0.31 inches (HWD) and weighs 5.15 ounces, which makes it just slightly larger than the Galaxy S 4, but it also feels a lot more premium. And while this isn't a good phone if you've got small hands, it is a nice, manageable size considering the large 5-inch screen.

In addition to the striking, primarily glass design, the Xperia Z meets military specifications IP55 and IP57. That means the phone is dust resistant and submersible in up to three feet of water for up to 30 minutes. For this to work, you need to make sure that all of the external ports are properly sealed, but the phone is programmed by default to let you know when they aren't (you can turn these popup notifications off if you wish to live dangerously). We tested the Xperia Z's water resistance by submerging it in a pitcher filled with water for 30 minutes at a time, and never once did it falter. In fact, you can even turn on the video camera and film underwater, which I'll discuss in more detail later.

First let's talk about the display. The Xperia Z's 5-inch, 1080p screen is powered by Sony's Mobile Bravia 2 engine, and it looks fantastic. Every inch of the display is comprised of 443 pixels, which makes text, images, and video all look remarkably sharp. Compared with the Galaxy S 4, the Xperia Z looks more crisp, while colors on the GS 4 are more saturated. Which display looks better is really a matter of preference, but my vote is for the Xperia. Still, the HTC One bests them both, though it's a little smaller, at 4.7 inches.

The Xperia Z has a notification light in the upper right corner, a la BlackBerry. A flashing blue light, for instance, means you have a new message or a missed call. This is a useful feature I'm surprised hasn't made its way to more phones yet.

Your two physical controls can be found on the right side of the phone. There's Sony's trademark aluminum Power button in the middle, and a volume rocker right below. There's also a tiny cutout for the phone's speaker at the bottom, which I found a little too easy to inadvertently cover with my hand. There's a covered 3.5mm headphone jack on the top right edge, covered microSD and power ports on the left, and a covered SIM card port on the right. It took me a minute to find the power port the first time around because it blends into the phone's design so seamlessly. I reviewed the all-black model, but T-Mobile is also offering it up in a rather striking shade of purple.

The phone's sleek unibody design means the 2,330mAh battery is sealed inside. Sony includes a suite of power management software, which this phone definitely needs. Without any power-saving tools turned on, the Xperia Z lasted for 7 hours and 47 minutes of talk time, which is okay, but a few hours short of the Galaxy S 4.

Network and Call Quality
The Xperia Z supports both HSPA+ 42 and LTE on T-Mobile's network. If you pay the $579.99 to buy the phone outright, you can also use it on low-cost carriers like Simple Mobile, which also uses T-Mobile's network. It also supports 802.11 a/b/g/n Wi-Fi on the 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands, as well as Wi-Fi calling.

T-Mobile is in the midst of expanding its LTE coverage and plans to cover 200 million by the end of the year. We've seen LTE signals pop up in New York City from time to time, but it wasn't available when I tested the Xperia Z, so my tests were conducted over HSPA+ 42. The thing is, even T-Mobile's HSPA+ 42 network is still very good. I saw average speeds of 12Mbps down and 2Mbps up, which is an excellent fallback if you aren't covered by LTE.

Reception was average, and unfortunately, call quality is lacking. Voices sound harsh in the earpiece, with lots of fuzz in the background, and the phone itself vibrates at top volume. Calls made with it can be somewhat hard to hear as noise reduction is poor. The speakerphone sounds okay, but it isn't loud enough to hear outdoors. The phone had no trouble pairing with a Jawbone Era Bluetooth headset and standard Android voice dialing worked fine.

T-Mobile's new contract-free plans start at $50 per month, and that gets you all the talk and texts you want, along with 500MB of high-speed data per month, after which your speeds are slowed to 2G. $60 gets you 2GB of high-speed data, and $70 gets you unlimited high-speed data. These are excellent rates compared with competitors like AT&T and Verizon.

Android and Apps
The Xperia Z is powered by a 1.5GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro APQ8064 processor. On the one hand, that makes it one of the fastest smartphones you can get. But on the other, that processor is a whole generation behind the Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 chip in the HTC One or the Galaxy S 4. Don't get me wrong—the Xperia Z will remain a solid performer for some time to come, but this isn't cutting-edge technology. The Xperia Z performed admirably in our benchmark tests, but cannot match the scores set by those faster devices. Still, performance feels smooth across the board, and you won't have trouble running any of the 800,000+ apps in the Google Play store, including graphically intensive games.

(Next page: Comera, Multimedia, and Conclusions)


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How Will Tim Tebow Respond to Being a Backup?

Tim Tebow

What kind of backup quarterback will Tim Tebow be with the New England Patriots, assuming he even makes the team?

Will he hunker down and work? Will he use the time to work on his flaws and improve his strengths?

Will he learn from Tom Brady? Will be he a positive presence in the quarterback room?

Or will he be a disruptive force, like so many of his detractors seem to believe?

There have been pretty much every kind of backup quarterback in NFL history: the good, bad and ugly. Here are 10 of them that the newest Patriot could learn from.

- Getty Images


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Netflix (for Windows Phone)

Pros Excellent picture quality. Huge content library. Simple, clear interface.

Cons No offline viewing. Bottom Line This Netflix app lets you take advantage of your Windows Phone's large high-res screen, with a deep library of movies and TV shows.

By Michael Muchmore

Very few things with a screen of any size are without a way to play Netflix movies and TV shows, and the company is pretty consistent about its presentation in all the various player scenarios. Whether you're watching on a large screen TV using a Roku box, an iPad, or a mobile phone, you'll see that familiar bright red screen and logo, and a clear way to navigate around your account and start watching a video stream. The Netflix app for Windows 8 is no exception: You get access to your instant queue, top picks, and can start watching almost as soon as you install it. 

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Get Started with Netflix on Your Windows Phone
Of course, you'll have to have a Netflix account for this app to be of any use, but anyone with a smartphone these days is likely to already be a member of the leading streaming video entertainment service. For just $7.99 a month, you get a massive library of movies and TV shows, including exclusives like the wildly funny new episodes of Arrested Development. If you don't already have an account, a link takes you to the Web signup page.

Once you've signed in with your account, you'll see a Metro-style version of your Netflix account. The startup view shows Recently Watched, along with a button to continue watching a show you started and didn't finish. Swipe down to see the Top Ten recommendations for you, Popular on Netflix, Popular on Facebook, New Releases, and more shows in genres you've frequented.

Swiping right to left reveals a text selection of Genres, a Search box, and your Instant Queue. Tapping any show's "box" image launches playing of the show immediately. I'd prefer options to read its description and credits, perhaps watch a trailer, and to add to my queue. As it turns out, if you tap on the title text (which also shows the user star rating) instead of the thumbnail image, you'll get just those options.

So as you can see, there are plenty of ways to find tons of shows to watch. Though Netflix doesn't publicize the actual number of programs available, the company states that it's constantly looking for new deals with content producers and studios. Sometimes a current hit TV show will be available on Hulu but not Netflix, so you may want that app, as well. If the app's tools aren't floating your boat, there are a couple of excellent sites dedicated to nothing but finding good shows on Netflix by scanning new releases and ratings, including instantwatcher.com, A Better Queue, and the visually interesting Pivot View.

Watching Movies and TV
Unsurprisingly for a service that produces a pleasing HD picture on large-screen TVs, the picture quality on my Nokia Lumia 928's sharp AMOLED 1280x768 TrueColor screen was crystal clear. While playing a movie or TV show, the on-screen controls are at a minimum. Tapping on the screen reveals the title of the production at the top, and at the bottom there's a pause button and a scrubber, which let you slide forward and backward through the show. You also get a Subtitles icon in the shape of a text bubble.

And that's it. I do wish I could just tap to full-screen the view and remove the controls immediately: instead you have to wait for them to fade out after a few seconds. As with any streaming service, playback is dependent on connection speed and Neflix use volume, but during my testing I didn't encounter a single playback hiccup.

One main drawback of Netflix for Windows Phone is that there's no off-line viewing feature. It is, after all, a streaming service, and this limitation is shared with any other media playing app that streams. To get movies onto the phone for offline viewing, you have to transfer them from your PC using the Windows Phone app for desktop after downloading them from Xbox Video or another source of DRM-free video.

The Best Flicks for Your Windows Phone?
Netflix is a must for movie and TV buffs, and movies and TV shows look great in the Netflix app for Windows Phone. The app is a snap to navigate, and you can add any content from Netflix's huge library via browsing, searching, and seeing what the service proposes based on your viewing history. The ability to continue watching a show you started on another screen is a big plus. Don't expect offline viewing, but that's a limitation no matter what device you use to watch Netflix. All told, Netflix for Windows Phone is a big win for mobile couch potatoes.


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VIDEO: White delighted with T20 progress

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Thursday, 8 August 2013

Aviary (for Windows Phone)

Pros Lots of effective photo editing tools. Simple, clear interface. Photo effect filters.

Cons No pinch zoom. No sharing options. No extra filters or effects available through in-app purchase. Bottom Line Aviary gives you a flock of excellent photo-editing tools for Windows Phone, but the app has yet to really take flight.

By Michael Muchmore

Aviary makes some of our favorite, easy-to-use photo editing software. It's available in many venues, including as the default online editor integrated with Flickr, as an iPhone app, and even as a Windows 8 app. It includes a dozen Instagram-like special photo-look effects, but adds loads of photo correction, adjustment, and enhancement tools, like text, stickers, cropping, blemish removal, and drawing brushes all in a super clear, simple interface. The app has recently been updated as a Windows Phone 8 app, and even though it's a top choice for image editing on that platform, the app still falls short of its iPhone counterpart and other Windows Phone photo apps.

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Interface
I tested the app on a spiffy new Nokia Lumia 928. The startup interface for Aviary on Windows Phone differs in design from the iPhone version—not in a bad way, though: A large sample image takes up the largest part of the screen, followed by thumbnails of your camera roll and a camera button for snapping a shot on the spot. The app doesn't add any shooting features, but the excellent Windows Phone camera interface is less in need of that than the iPhone's, which doesn't give you access to ISO, exposure, and so on. A Browse button lets you traverse all your photo folders including any that reside in the cloud on SkyDrive or on Facebook (if you've hooked up your account to your Windows Phone). You can't swipe through images the way you can in the iPhone app, however.

After the initial screen, the Aviary Windows Phone app's interface is nearly identical to that of its iPhone app counterpart, once you select an image. It's also nearly identical to the top free photo app in the store—Picture Perfect, and to the top paid photo app, Instagraph, though the latter adds the actual Instagram filters and lets you share the picture on Instagram. Unlike the iPhone version of Aviary, however, I couldn't change the interface's button selection and order.

Like the iPhone version, Aviary for Windows Phone has a streamlined workflow from selection to image adjustment to enhancing to sharing. The editing interface sports a row of 15 cartoon-like but very clear, labeled icon buttons along the bottom. The first is simply Enhance, which offers four options—Auto, Night, Backlit, and Balance. On several test images, the Auto made very subtle fixes, while the Backlit and Balance tools noticeably improved problematic photos. Unfortunately, I couldn't unpinch to zoom, as I could on the iPhone version of Aviary and in Picture Perfect.

Filters and Other Effects
Aviary's Effects button leads to Instagram-like retro film looks and monochrome choices. There are 12 in all, and unlike the iPhone version of Aviary, there's no in-app up-sell option for getting more. When I asked an Aviary rep whether these would be offered at some point, I got this reply:

"For a limited time, Photo Editor by Aviary comes with a set of filters and stickers that are free to Windows Phone 8 users. Once we have a better sense of user dynamics and are ready to roll out the in-app purchases, users will have the option of purchasing additional filters and stickers while they are editing their photos."

Most of the effects have non-descriptive names, such as people's first names, which doesn't help much in selecting one. You do, however, get a sample image with the effect applied in the thumbnail. I like that once you use one tool, like one of these effects, you can go back and edit the photo more with any of the other tools, like cropping or brightness. This gives you a lot more control and customization than just applying a preset filter. One missing tool is tilt-shift, aka, selective focus. Free competitor Fhotoroom offers a well-functioning tool to produce this nifty effect.

The Stickers tool lets you overlay things like moustaches, eyeglasses, hats, speech bubbles, arrows, and other useful items on top of your photo. Again, you don't get the option to add more stickers at cost the way you can in the iPhone version.

The app's crop tool uses large touchable corner controls and offers preset aspect ratios, but the inability to zoom limits its usefulness. Another tool for which that's an even bigger problem is the blemish tool. Despite this shortcoming, however, I was able to remove a pimple from my test subject's forehead fairly convincingly.

No Sharing?
When I was done editing a test photograph, I had but one option, to save my new creation to a folder called Saved Pictures. No Facebook, no Flickr, no SkyDrive, no email. Of course, it's easy enough in Windows Phone to share to any of those places from the folder, but it's preferable for this to be a part of the app's workflow, the way it is in another Windows Phone photo app: Fhotoroom. 

Does Aviary's Windows Phone App Take Flight?
This official Aviary app feels just like what it probably is: a proof-of-concept demonstration of the software's photo-editing capabilities, rather than a full-bodied photo app like the one the company has produced for iOS. There are no sharing options, to social networks or otherwise, and no configuration settings. Don't get me wrong, the app offers an abundance of effective photo tools that will serve many users' purposes.  But if you want more than basic editing, you may be better off with another Windows Phone photo editing app, such as Picture Perfect; or for photo editing plus a community, the rather interesting Fhotoroom.


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Citadel malware active on 20,000 PCs in Japan

IDG News Service - Citadel malware is installed on over 20,000 PCs in Japan and actively sending financial information it harvests to servers abroad, according to security software vendor Trend Micro.

Tokyo-based Trend Micro said it monitored remote servers in the U.S. and Europe that collect data gathered by Japanese versions of the malware for six days last week. On some days there were nearly 230,000 connections made from 20,000 infected computers.

The malware has been designed specifically to target domestic users, collecting financial details corresponding to six Japanese financial institutions as well as popular services such as e-mail from Google, Yahoo and Microsoft.

"Damage from this tool for online banking fraud is still continuing today," Trend Micro said in a Japanese security blog.

The security firm said it detect IP addresses from at least nine remote servers that are being contacted regularly by copies of Citadel on infected computers. It said over 96% of the contact comes from PCs in Japan.

Citadel is malware that can modify or replace websites opened on the computers it infects. It then collects log-in details and other private information and sends it to remote servers. Some varieties also block access to anti-virus sites to prevent users from cleaning their computers.

The software allows malicious users to create networks, or botnets, of infected PCs that harvest details and send them to remote servers. It can be customized to mimic specific sites in different countries.

Last month Microsoft and the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation worked together to disrupt 1,400 Citadel botnets that the company said were responsible for over half a billion dollars in financial losses worldwide.

The action disrupted many existing Citadel botnets, but anyone with a builder application can create customized versions and launch an operation of their own.

Highly-customized versions of the malware, with detailed content localization and advanced techniques to corrupt browser software, have also popped up across Europe since the Microsoft action.

Reprinted with permission from IDG.net. Story copyright 2012 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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Wednesday, 7 August 2013

That's a Wrap

Good news for those sick of dropped signals and sluggish iMessage delivery: The iPhone 5 has chips that support additional bands and frequencies. It can handle HSPA+, DC-HSDPA and most importantly LTE, capable of delivering up to 100 Mbps per second. Mr. Schiller is detailing the carrier partners for the new iPhone: AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, Telefonica, to name a few, in Europe, Australia, Asia.


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Levi is ruled out of quarter-final

Northamptonshire will be without batsman Richard Levi for their FLt20 quarter-final.

The East Midlands side booked a home tie in the last eight with Sunday's win over Glamorgan.

But Levi, 25, has been called up to play for South Africa A in a triangular tournament which starts on 6 August.

Northants head coach David Ripley told BBC Radio Northampton he would attempt to persuade the Twenty20 specialist to return for finals day, if needed.

"The door is still open for him to come back to finals day should we make it, should we be able to agree financially and Richard wants to do it," he said.

"But I'm afraid we've got no chance for the quarter-final."

Levi, whose unbeaten 110 against Gloucestershire is the highest score in the competition this season, will play in Tuesday's match against Worcestershire.

Having already secured top spot in the Midlands, Wales & West Group with a game to spare, Ripley has the option of resting some of his players.

"David Willey is having a breather. We may well rest somebody else as well - Stephen Crook or Mohammed Azharullah," he said.

"We still want to win and keep a bit of momentum but there's another massive game on Friday in the County Championship [against Gloucestershire]. We've got to manage the troops as best we can."


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