NEWS UPDATES AT 8 O’CLOCK WITH ORANGE. About five sections of - TopicsExpress



          

NEWS UPDATES AT 8 O’CLOCK WITH ORANGE. About five sections of the public have been excluded from the national ID registration exercise. These include some people living with disabilities, the terminally ill, those in the Diasporas, soldiers on missions and prisoners. Minister for internal Affairs, Aronda Nyakairima says the prisoners will be registered when they are released saying that there are no request means to register them. Uganda Prisons publicist Frank Baine says when the prisoners have finished to serve their time and are released they go back home without any identification which creates room for forgery. Human rights organizations say this is a violation of these sections of peoples’ rights. The Police presidential guard a police unit within the Special Forces command has volunteered to spend today on charity work at Sanyu babies home in Kampala. The policemen and soldiers will conduct general cleaning of the babys home and give donations to the abandoned children. Police in the central district of Luweero have started investigations in fresh reports of unknown people breaking into graves and stealing human skulls. The Luweero Criminal Investigations Department chief, Topher Gimei, says that preliminary inquiries have shown that the skulls are sold for ritual purposes. Gimei says the thugs who steal the skulls are armed Help is at hand for anyone who has shot a shaky video while cycling, climbing, kayaking or engaging in any other high-speed sport. Microsoft researchers have found a way to stabilise films and speed them up to make them more watchable. To fix the images, the software analyses footage and creates new frames to smooth out camera jumps. The team is currently working on ways to turn the research into a Windows application. First-person videos shot on wearable cameras such as the GoPro were becoming more popular, said the researchers, but could be dead boring to watch at normal speed and almost unwatchable when sped up, because of the exaggerated camera-shake that caused. While image-stabilisation software was already available, such programs typically did a poor job of coping with sped-up footage of any significant length. RADIOCITY NEWS: BRINGING THE WORLD CLOSER TO YOU!
Posted on: Tue, 12 Aug 2014 06:07:19 +0000

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