Archive for February, 2005

ny shooting

Shooter wounds two at New York mall
Gunman surrendered to employees

Sunday, February 13, 2005 Posted: 11:26 PM EST (0426 GMT)

story.mall.wnyw.jpg
Police swarmed the Hudson Valley Mall after the shooting Sunday.

What’s this?

New York
Hudson Valley (New York)

(CNN) — A gunman was arrested Sunday after opening fire and wounding at least two people at Hudson Valley Mall in upstate New York, police said.

The incident began shortly after 3 p.m., when a man from the nearby Saugerties area fired from “an assault-type rifle” as he entered a Best Buy store at Hudson Valley Mall, said Capt. Wayne Olson of the New York State Police.

The man then walked out of the store and into the mall’s main corridor, where he continued firing until he ran out of bullets, then put down his rifle and surrendered to a mall employee, Olson told reporters.

A 20-year-old National Guard recruiter was struck in the left knee and taken by helicopter to Albany Medical Center, Olson said.

“There’s a possibility he might lose the limb,” Olson said.

The second gunshot victim, a 56-year-old man from nearby Kingston, suffered superficial wounds to his left arm, left thigh and left lower leg, possibly caused by a single “fragmented projectile,” Olson said.

Another person was injured not from a bullet but possibly from flying glass, he said.

Two other people had bullet holes in their clothing, but escaped injury, he said.

“We consider it fortunate that more people were not struck,” he said.

The man, who has not been identified publicly, is being charged with reckless endangerment in the first degree, assault in the first degree and assault in the second degree — all felonies under New York law.

“There will be a review to see if more severe charges are appropriate, for instance, the possibility of attempted murder,” Olson said.

The man was expected to be arraigned Sunday night or Monday morning at Town of Ulster court, Olson said. The man was to be held overnight in Ulster County Jail.

Police have yet to determine whether the weapon, which the man purchased, was legally possessed, Olson said.

The rifle is not an AK-47 “in the truest sense of the word, in that it is not foreign-made,” Olson said.

Store surveillance videotapes are under review, he added. Ulster police are leading the investigation, with assistance from Kingston police, the Ulster County Sheriff’s Department, New York State Police, the FBI and a host of other agencies.

The large suburban mall is one of the most popular shopping centers in the area and was crowded at the time of the shooting, said James Sottile, mayor of Kingston.

The mall was to re-open when police have finished work on the crime scene, Olson said, adding that that could be a lengthy process. “It may not be tomorrow.”

Jana Decker told CNN she was at the mall with her boyfriend when they heard the shots, which sounded like fireworks.

“A few minutes later, we seen a whole mob of people coming through the mall,” she said. “We turned around and ran with them.”

With the mall packed with shoppers on a Sunday afternoon, “people were just tripping over each other trying to get out,” she said.

Ulster is about 90 miles north of New York City, and the mall is in a rural area just south of the Catskill Mountains in Ulster County.

CNN’s Jeanne Meserve contributed to this report.

I got a more complet estory from jack but i can’t say more till poleice relase name . I knew that guy………….

quotes

“artist should never have to be satisfied with their creativity and performance,if they satisfied they will not able to create masterpiece in future–manikant kujur”

good word from my Indian friend,

(like from the country India)

the open store

OPEN STORE OPENS
–>

Tired of computer viruses, spyware and expensive computer operating software?
080205

BUSINESS
SavannahNow.com
Tired of computer viruses, spyware and expensive computer operating software?
–>

Matthew Conley thinks he has a solution for Savannah’s fed up computer users.

It’s call Linux.

Linux is not a new operating system.

What is new is Conley’s store that sells bundled Linux-based software and compatible hardware at The Open Store, at the corner of Abercorn and 33rd streets.

(You’ll know you’re in the right place, when you see the “Linux Club” neon sign over the door.)

And there’s a demo machine set up so those curious about Linux can go and see what it looks like, and how it works.

(It looks remarkably like a Windows-based computer.)

So who’s he selling to?

“Anyone that’s willing to change,” he said.

“Anyone that wants something that works,” he added.

(Linux-heads tend to be true believers.)

The open source code called Linux was developed as a hobby by Linus Torvalds while he was a student at the University of Helsinki in Finland in 1991. It’s since grown into an operating system widely used on servers and personal computers around the world.

What’s different about Linux is that it’s free.

Free in that users are allowed to make changes and improvements to the source code. And if their modifications are good enough, they become widely adopted.

Try that with Microsoft and you’d have a lawsuit on your hands.

With Linux it’s like buying a car and getting the blueprints at the same time and being told to make whatever changes you like, and then sharing them with others, explained The Creative Coast’s Executive Director Chris Miller.

“The result is a highly polished, highly efficient piece of code that’s basically free,” he said. “It sounds like a fairly small thing, but with thousands of people doing it, it ends up being a very powerful development paradigm.”

The payoff is the acknowledgement of your peers.

(No small thing in the programming community.)

And a very stable operating system, which makes for a stable computer.

Where the companies that bundle and sell Linux-based programs make money is in support. They also earn money by selling to people who don’t want to rewrite the code, but do like what Linux offers as an operating system.

Sound like a strange business model?

“The next thing you know, they’ll be bottling water and selling it,” said Miller, who sees the opening of Conley’s store as another step in the development of Savannah as a technology-oriented city.

There’s no reliable way to gauge how many Linux users there are out there, because you can download a copy of free source code and load it on as many desktops as you like.

So calculating it is not an exact science.

But in December, a study by global market research firm, International Data Corp., predicted that by 2008 the combined worldwide market for desktops, servers, and packaged software running on Linux will reach $35.7 billion.

The number of personal computers running the operating system is expected to total 42.6 million in the same time frame.

Locally, the universities and colleges use and teach Linux, Web servers, and anyone who has a Linksys router, a piece of computer hardware commonly used by people with a wireless Internet connection, use Linux.

“Linux is everywhere,” said Mary Hill, who handles tech, sales and marketing for The Open Store. “People just don’t know it.”

This story is continued at the following URL::

http://savannahnow.com/stories/020805/2783830.shtml

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