The Conservatives say, 1m offer a prize in a competition to design a Web
site makes it possible for large groups of people to help develop new
strategies.
Tory front bencher Jeremy Hunt, told the BBC that the idea was to use the
tremendous amount of knowledge in Britain in order to avoid the policy of
nonsense to.
The award is public money – the budget of the Office of the Cabinet – but
said it would offer taxpayers a good relationship.
Labor and the Liberal Democrats called it a gimmick and a publicity
gimmick.
The plan – to be introduced if the Conservatives win the next election seems
- on the wisdom of the mass written on the theory of author James
Surowiecki has.
He said that large groups of people smarter than the privileged few to have
to make wise decisions.
Hunt, Secretary of State for Culture, said the shadow on BBC Radio 4 Today
program: Look at the turn of childcare vouchers, the tax on the NHS IT
system, 10p.
It is absurd that these things have gone wrong, if you have many, many
retire, for example in health, police, retirees, people in the teaching
profession who have extensive knowledge and experience …
Is there any way we can use the Internet … to some of these gaffes as a
future Tory government can not just good ideas, prevent, however, examine
the politics of policy implementation in a way much more and thought through
?

A shot in the head of the woman in a violent row in which he killed his
former partner and daughter, both died.
It is Andy Copland fired four years Maisie and her former partner Julie
Harrison, before committing suicide in Aldershot, Hampshire.
K. Harrison, 40, died at St George Hospital in London shortly after 0930
GMT, said Hampshire police.
Police were called to the shooting on Tuesday in an apartment on Church
Hill.
After post mortem examinations of the bodies of Mr Copland and Maisie.
A spokesman for Hampshire Police, said the formal identification of all
persons involved in the shooting and later as expected.
Consider the rotation and is not available to Maisie for a visit of this
resource.
Police believe Copland shot his daughter and her former partner before
committing suicide.
Bouquets of flowers were at home when the guards left the area around the
house remains sealed off.
Flowers were also laid at the doors of a nearby park.
Liz Mathias, principal of St. Michael, the children’s school in Aldershot,
where Maisie was a student, and pays tribute to the girl.
He said: We destroyed to know about the tragic incident with Maisie. It was
a girl and a daughter who all could be proud.

Apple shares are up another 1% as speculation increases that will launch a
new touch screen computer.
Over the past two weeks, the maker’s stock price has risen steadily iPhone
rumors.
Apple, at Yerba Buena Center in San Francisco on January 26 booked for the
announcement of a major product, no further details.
The company has used since January to present their products as the iPhone
and MacBook Air.
Space is the same used by Apple CEO Steve Jobs, if you are returning this
year after a liver transplant.
Blogs and analysts have been rumors that Apple is launching a new touch
screen tablet computers – like a larger version of the iPhone, but
sometimes as fuel iSlate or iTablet.
The rumors are the price of Apple shares rose more than 11% since early
December.
However, the price of company stock has dropped in recent days, amid another
patent dispute with handset manufacturers Nokia.
Nokia claims that the majority of Apple products – the iPhone’s iPod – the
use of technologies with patents.

The Conservative ex-cabinet minister John Gummer has said he will step down
as an MP at the next election to focus on the campaign against climate
change.
The Suffolk Coastal MP said he made up his mind following the
“disappointing” end to the Copenhagen climate summit.
Mr Gummer, MP for the area since 1979, is one of more than 120 MPs to have
announced they are quitting next year.
The Guardian reported he was to join a new pan-European campaign on climate
change due to be launched next month.
In a statement, Mr Gummer, 70, said he had been “forced to rethink my plans
for the future” following the “very disappointing results” of the Copenhagen
negotiations.
After talking to colleagues internationally, he said he realised he could
not commit “to the work that they believe has to be done” while continuing
as an MP.
He said he had taken the decision with “very great sadness” and had
considered it a “privilege” to be an MP for 35 years – he was also a member
from 1970-74.
The former agriculture minister and environment secretary said he had had an
opportunity to play a part in raising the alert about climate change – and
had hoped to continue to do so as a backbencher.
But he added: “Those of us who have any chance to influence the course of
events, even in a small way, have simply to make that our first priority,
however difficult the choice.”
Mr Gummer is a former Conservative Party chairman who served in both
Margaret Thatcher and John Major’s cabinets.
When agriculture minister in 1990 he famously tried to feed his daughter a
burger to convince people British beef was safe from BSE.
Mr Gummer is one of more than 120 MPs who have already said they will step
down next year – many more are expected to announce they will do so in the
run-up to the general election, which must be called by June 2010.

A 22-year-old tea drinking mallard, thought to be one of the oldest recorded
living ducks, has died.
Edwina was rescued by Ian Knight and Christine Christopher two decades ago
after she was almost pecked to death by her family.
The couple, from Ringwood, Hampshire, initially called her Edward but
changed her name when she started to lay eggs.
Mr Knight said Edwina, who died on Monday, had been buried in their garden
under an ornamental duck as a memorial.
He said that when he first discovered Edwina she was being attacked by her
family as she was the “runt of the litter”.
The family rescued her, but when Mr Knight attempted to release her back
into the wild she followed him home and had lived with the family ever
since.
Edwina also became fond of tea and toast, which she would have for breakfast
in the family home where she spent time living in the garden and garage.
Mr Knight told BBC News the family was “devastated”.
“She wasn’t well over Christmas because of the cold spell we have been
having and her legs became a bit wobbly.
“We were going to take her to the vet after the holidays but we found her
inside her little house.
“It was going to happen eventually but it’s like losing one of your family,
I have had her since she was only a few days old.”
Edwina was buried in the family’s garden in a box, with an ornamental duck
placed on top of her final resting place as a memorial.
The British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) said the oldest known wild mallard
in the UK is 20 years and five months.
The oldest known wigeon stands at 34 years, the oldest gadwall at 21 and the
oldest teal at just over 18 years.
But the oldest wild duck on record is a sea-duck called Eider at 35 years
and six months.
The birds’ ages have been calculated through the BTO’s ringing scheme.

Sudan’s parliament has passed a key law paving the way for a referendum on independence for the oil-rich south
The move ends months of wrangling between the north and south about how the referendum should be conducted.
Last week, southern politicians walked out of parliament in a row over where southerners would be able to vote.
The referendum, scheduled for January 2011, is a crucial part of the peace deal signed nearly five years ago which ended two decades of civil war.
The 2005 peace agreement saw President Omar al-Bashir’s northern National Congress Party (NCP) going into government with former Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) rebels from the south.
It i widely predicted that the south will vote for independence but there are concerns that tensions will increase in the run-up to the referendum and a general election in April.
Mr Bashir and SPLM leader Salva Kiir reached a deal on the referendum earlier this month in crisis talks that followed angry demonstrations by southerners about electoral reforms.
But when northern politicians tried to amend a section of the referendum bill about where people could vote last week, southern MPs walked out of parliament.
This prompted the United States to put pressure on the NCP.
The law passed on Tuesday now stipulates that southerners living in the north will be allowed to vote there if they were born after 1956 but those born before that date will have to register and vote in the south.
The SPLM had feared the north would manipulate the vote if southerners who had not lived in southern Sudan since independence in 1956 had been allowed to vote anywhere.
“Anybody can claim: yes I have my grandparents from the south… unless you go and verify yourself in southern Sudan, this can be abused,” SPLM MP Aligu Manawa told the BBC’s Focus on Africa programme.
BBC Africa analyst Mary Harper says Sudan’s politicians try – in public at least – to talk of enduring unity and good relations between the north and south.
But they sometimes slip up and Mr Kiir recently warned southerners that if they voted against independence they would become second-class citizens in their own country, she says.
There are also problems regarding the border between the north and south, as the status of some areas has not yet been clearly defined.
And there are serious tensions in southern Sudan, with different ethnic groups fighting over land.
More than 2,000 people have been killed and 250,000 people displaced this year alone.
The 22-year war between the mainly Muslim north and the Christian and animist south claimed the lives of some 1.5 million people.

A German scientific team gave details of encryption to protect the public in debates over 4 billion mobile phone users.
Karsten Nohl, cooperation with other experts, has spent the last five months, cracking algorithm for encryption technology called GSM.
GSM is the most popular standard for mobile networks worldwide.
The project will listen to anyone – including criminals – in private telephone conversations.
Mr Nohl said the Chaos Communication Congress in Berlin that the project has shown that the GSM security was inadequate .
We try to inform people about the general weakness, he told the BBC.
We expect some additional pressure and customer demand for better encryption to create. The GSM Association (GSMA), which developed the algorithm, and oversees the development of standards, said Nohl project is totally illegal in the United Kingdom and many other countries.
This is not something we take lightly at all, said the spokesman.
Mr. Nohl, told the BBC that he consulted with lawyers before publication, and believes the project was legal.
Mr. Nohl have published work with some dozens of others, the requirements for the material to crack the A5 / 1 algorithm, 22-year-old code from many sources.
The code is designed to force intercepted telephone conversations through mobile phones and base stations change frequencies quickly to a series of 80 channels for prevention.

Parliament of Sudan is an important law paves the way for a referendum on independence from oil-rich southThe circulating in recent months that ended fighting between North and South, as the referendum will take place.
Last week was the Southern politicians in the parliament in a series in the south, where they will be able to vote.
The referendum, scheduled for January 2011, an important part of the peace agreement was signed nearly five years before the end of two decades of civil war.
The 2005 peace agreement has been President Omar al-Bashir’s northern National Congress Party (NCP) to go to the Government for the release of (former Sudan People’s SPLM) rebels in the south.
The i generally expected that the south will vote for independence, but there is concern that tensions will increase before the referendum and general elections in April.
Mr. Bashir and SPLM leader Salva Kiir agreed on the referendum earlier this month in crisis talks after angry protests from the southern electoral reform.
But when politicians tried to northern part of the referendum bill as amended, where people could vote last week, went south, members of parliament.
This led the United States exerted pressure on the NCP.
The bill approved Tuesday is expected that the South living in the north, the possibility exists, voting rights, if born after 1956, but those born before that date, you should register to vote south.
The SPLM had fear in northern manipulate votes in the south who had lived in southern Sudan since independence in 1956, if allowed to vote anywhere.
Everybody can say I have my grandparents, from the south … if you go and check yourself in southern Sudan, which can be misused, Manawa Aliu SPLM MPs told the BBC on Focus Africa Program.
BBC Africa analyst Mary Harper says that politicians try to Sudan – at least in public support – the talk of unity and good relations between North and South.
But sometimes I’m wrong and Mr Kiir warned recently, Southerners, if he voted against independence, were second-class citizens in their country, he said.
There are also problems in the border area between North and South, as the situation is not clearly defined in some areas.
And there are serious tensions in southern Sudan, with different ethnic groups in the land dispute.
More than 2,000 people died and 250,000 people displaced this year alone.
The 22-year war between the Muslim north and Christian and animist south has killed about 1.5 million people.

Two gay men arrested in Malawi after getting engaged are to be charged with gross public indecency, police say.
“We arrested them because they committed an offence; homosexuality in Malawi is illegal,” police spokesman Davie Chingwalu told the BBC.
Tiwonge Chimbalanga and Steven Monjeza held a traditional engagement ceremony over the weekend – believed to be the first gay couple in Malawi to do so.
Homosexuality carries a maximum prison sentence of 14 years in Malawi.
The pair are being held in separate cells in Blantyre until their case is heard, Mr Chingwalu told the BBC’s Network Africa programme.
The BBC’s Raphael Tenthani in Blantyre says the pair have been seen relaxing at the police station with Mr Tiwonge still wearing the dress he wore at the engagement party.
He says they may have to spend a few more nights in jail as the judiciary is on its Christmas recess and they will not be able to appear in court until next Monday.
Our correspondent says Malawi is a deeply conservative society, but recently a group of campaigners came together to form a gay rights organisation, Centre for the Development of People (CEDEP).
CEDEP’s executive director, Gift Trapence, says the laws used to arrest the couple are invalid because they are against the Bill of Rights enshrined in the 1995 constitution.
“Even if you arrest them or charge them for 20 years, you cannot change their sexual orientation. They are what they are,” he told the BBC.
“So the issue is in a democratic era – if you are arresting people based on their sexual orientation, are you doing justice to the fundamental human rights of these individuals?” he said.
Correspondents say some voices in government have also started to call for more openness about homosexuality as the authorities try to tackle high rates of HIV/Aids.

Committing a young woman died and her mother was seriously injured when a gunman shot them both before committing suicide.
The four-year-old woman was found with serious head injuries after neighbors alerted the police, a domestic dispute in Aldershot, Hampshire.
Although they urgently needed medical treatment, she died at the scene. The man was also killed in the incident came shortly after 1000 GMT, the.
Relationship of man with the child and the woman is not yet clear.
Police were the property of the Church Hill in 1011 GMT from neighbors about a national dispute involved called.
She was taken to hospital by Air Ambulance Surrey, where he remains included in a critical condition, police said.
A spokesman for Hampshire Police said a gun found in the property.
He said the incident was domestic and the police did not try someone else.
A large cordon was established around the end of the terrace house next to the main street of the city.
Officials also cut off access to Aldershot Manor Park, opposite the property.
Scenes of crime officers were seen entering the house, erected a small tent on the sidewalk.
Bouquets of flowers left in the house where the officers of the guard.