Davodd: /* Full Season Pickups */ {{needcite}} The following is the '''2008–2009 network television schedule''' for the six major [[English language]] [[List of United States over-the-air television networks|broadcast networks in the United States]]. The schedule covers [[primetime]] hours from [[September 2008]] through [[May 2009]]. The schedule is followed by a [[#By network|list per network]] of returning series, new series, and series cancelled after the [[2007–2008 United States network television schedule|2007–2008 season]]. The schedule omits the [[Public Broadcasting Service]] (whose programming is [[List of programs broadcast by Public Broadcasting Service|listed here]]). :{{colorbox|lime}} Lime indicates the [[List of most-watched television episodes|#1 most-watched program]] of the season.<ref name="0809ratings">{{cite web|url= http://abcmedianet.com/web......
- David Speakman
Davodd: /* MyNetworkTV */ - rm - not a network {{Expand}} The following is the '''2010–2011 network television schedule''' for the five major [[English language]] commercial [[List of United States over-the-air television networks|broadcast networks in the United States]]. the schedule covers [[primetime]] hours from [[September 2010]] through [[May 2011]]. The schedule is followed by a [[2009-2010 United States network television schedule|list per network]] of returning series, new series, and series cancelled after the [[2009-2010 United States network television schedule|2009-2010 season]]. The schedule omits the [[Public Broadcasting Service]] (whose programming is [[List of programs broadcast by Public Broadcasting Service|listed here]]). ==Schedule== ===Sunday=== ===Monday=== ===Tuesday=== ===Wednesday=== ===Thursday=== ===Friday=== ===Saturday=== ==By network== ===[[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]]=== {{col-begin}} {{col-3}} '''Returning series:''' {{col-3}} '''New...
- David Speakman
Davodd: /* Most claims are uncited - needs to conform to WP:V and WP:NOR */ new section {{WikiProject Television|class=list|importance=low}} == Most claims are uncited - needs to conform to [[WP:V]] and [[WP:NOR]] == Claims of shows being canceled, scheduled or renewed need to conform with Wikipedia mandates; please see: [[WP:V|WP verfication rule]] and/or [[WP:NOR|Wikipedia rule against original research]]. Claims or statements of fact that are not verifiable to outside sources may be deleted at will by other editors. - [[User:Davodd|Davodd]] ([[User talk:Davodd|talk]]) 00:03, 22 December 2009 (UTC)
- David Speakman
Davodd: Undid revision 330169513 by 64.91.136.17 (talk) rm posible vandalism {{Unreferenced|date=December 2009}} <!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image:TurkPipkin_As_IsaacMillsaps.jpg|200px|thumb|right| Actor Turk Pipkin portrays Isaac Millsaps in The Alamo(2004)]] --> '''Isaac Millsaps''' (also spelled Milsaps in some records) (ca. 1803 – March 6, 1836) was one of the defenders killed at the [[Battle of the Alamo]] during the [[Texas Revolution]]. Millsaps was a veteran of the [[War of 1812]], having served in the East Tennessee Militia. By 1836 a resident of [[Gonzales, Texas]], he was serving as a private and a [[rifleman]] in the Gonzales Rangers, a group of volunteers that arrived in [[Alamo Mission in San Antonio|the Alamo]] after it was besieged by the [[Mexican Army]] under [[General Santa Anna|Santa Anna]]. A letter supposedly authored by Millsaps from the Alamo has been the subject of persistent controversy among historians. Written to his wife Mary,...
- David Speakman
Davodd: Reverted edits by 64.91.136.17 (talk) to last version by 217.42.255.137 The '''most popular given names''' vary [[country|nationally]], [[region]]ally, and [[culture|culturally]]. Lists of widely used [[given name]]s can consist of those most often bestowed upon [[infant]]s born within the last year, thus reflecting the current [[onomastics|naming trends]], or else be composed of the [[personal name]]s occurring most within the total [[population]]. == Popularity by region == The names listed in the following tables, unless otherwise noted, represent the most current top 10 breakdowns of what newborn children are commonly being named in the various regions of the world. {{dynamic list|date=November 2007}} === Africa === ==== Male names ==== {| class="wikitable" |- style="background-color: #a0d0ff" !width="193"|Region (year)!!|No. 1!!No. 2!!No. 3!!No. 4!!No. 5!!No. 6!!No. 7!!No. 8!!No. 9 !!No. 10 |- |[[Libya]]{{Citation needed|date=December 2008}} ||[[Muhammad...
- David Speakman
Davodd: Reverted edits by 64.91.136.17 (talk) to last version by Ccacsmss '''LGBT slang''', '''LGBT speak''' or '''gay slang''' in [[linguistics]] refers to a form of [[English (language)|English]] [[slang]] used predominantly among [[lesbian]], [[gay]], [[bisexual]] and [[transgender]] ([[LGBT]]) people. Although there are differences, modern gay slang has adopted many [[polari]] words, as detailed in the table below: {| class="wikitable" |+ align=bottom |<small>''Source: '''Fantabulosa: A Dictionary of Polari and Gay Slang<ref name="fantabulosa">(Baker, 2002)</ref>'''</small> |- |align=center colspan=2| '''''Glossary of gay slang taken from Polari''''' |- |align=center| '''Word'''|| '''Approximate meaning''' |- | basket ||the bulge of male genitals through clothes |- | bumming || the act of anal sex |- |shirtlifter || guy into anal sex |- |shirtlifterz || plural descriptor gay social network |- | [[chicken (gay slang)|chicken]] || young boy |- | [[cottaging]] || having or looking...
- David Speakman
Davodd: IN importance to MId - folklore is Mid, not Low {{WikiProject Indiana|class=stub|importance=mid}} {{WikiProject Paranormal|class=stub}} {{WikiProject Cryptozoology|class=Stub}} == moved here from article == For a ''more'' true to life account of the events surrounding Oscar [http://www.everything2.com/index...] A great aunt of mine, Hazel May Rapp Greider, was once on Sand Lake (now part of Chain O'Lakes State Park, Noble County, Inidana [http://www.in.gov/dnr...] and saw a turtle with a head the size of a child's. Flabbergasted, she could not speak and only pointed. Her husband, who was rowing the boat, looked over his shoulder just as the turtle submerged. I believe! It is quite possible that is could have been "Oscar" or a distant cousin. The lakes in that area are connected by channels and underground peatmoss making quite an enjoyable home. In any case, the town has adopted Oscar as its mascot and...
- David Speakman
Davodd: /* MyNetworkTV */ - rm - not a network {{Expand}} The following is the '''2010–2011 network television schedule''' for the five major [[English language]] commercial [[List of United States over-the-air television networks|broadcast networks in the United States]]. the schedule covers [[primetime]] hours from [[September 2010]] through [[May 2011]]. The schedule is followed by a [[2009-2010 United States network television schedule|list per network]] of returning series, new series, and series cancelled after the [[2009-2010 United States network television schedule|2009-2010 season]]. The schedule omits the [[Public Broadcasting Service]] (whose programming is [[List of programs broadcast by Public Broadcasting Service|listed here]]). ==Schedule== ===Sunday=== ===Monday=== ===Tuesday=== ===Wednesday=== ===Thursday=== ===Friday=== ===Saturday=== ==By network== ===[[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]]=== {{col-begin}} {{col-3}} '''Returning series:''' {{col-3}} '''New...
- David Speakman
Davodd: clarification {{Infobox Court Case | name = Perry v. Schwarzenegger | court = [[United States District Court for the Northern District of California]] | image = | imagesize = | caption = | full name = ''KRISTIN M. PERRY et al., Plaintiffs,'' ''CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO et al.,<br> Intervenor-Plaintiffs,'' ''v.'' ''ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER et al., Governor of California, etc., Defendants;'' ''DENNIS HOLLINGSWORTH<br>et al., Intervenor-Defendants.'' | date decided = | citations = | transcripts = | judges = [[Vaughn R. Walker]] | prior actions = | subsequent actions = | opinions = | keywords = [[Equal Protection]], [[Same-sex marriage]], [[Sexual Orientation]] }} '''''Kirstin M. Perry v Arnold Schwarzenegger''''' is a [[United States district court|U.S. District Court]] case challenging the validity of [[California Proposition 8 (2008)|California Proposition 8]]. Proposition 8 (the California Marriage Protection Act) is an amendment to the [[California Constitution|California...
- David Speakman
Davodd: clarification {{redirect2|Proposition 8|California Proposition 8}} {{ElectionsCA}} '''Proposition 8''' (or the '''California Marriage Protection Act''') was a [[California ballot proposition|ballot proposition]] and [[constitutional amendment]] passed in the [[California state elections, November 2008|November 2008, state elections]]. The measure added a new provision, Section 7.5 of Article I, to the [[California Constitution]]. The new section reads: {{cquote|Only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California.<ref name="text">[http://www.ag.ca.gov/cms_pdf... Scan of Initiative filing] from [[California Attorney General]]'s web site</ref><ref name="sos.ca.gov">"[http://www.sos.ca.gov/electio... Propositions that are on the November 4, 2008 General Election Ballot]", California Secretary of...
- David Speakman
Davodd: /* List of representatives */ The '''12th Congressional District of Indiana''' was a [[congressional district]] for the [[United States House of Representatives]] in [[Indiana]]. It was eliminated as a result of the [[United States Census, 1940|1940 Census]]. It was last represented by [[Louis Ludlow]] who was redistricted into the [[Indiana's 11th congressional district|11th District]]. ==List of representatives== {| class=wikitable |- valign=bottom ! Representative ! Party ! Years ! District home ! Notes |- | colspan=5 | District created March 4, 1875 |- | [[Andrew H. Hamilton (Indiana)|Andrew H. Hamilton]] | {{Party shading/Democratic}} | [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]] | March 4, 1875 - March 3, 1879 | | |- | [[Walpole G. Colerick]] | {{Party shading/Democratic}} | [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]] | March 4, 1879 - March 3, 1883 | | |- | [[Robert Lowry (Indiana)|Robert Lowry]] | {{Party shading/Democratic}} | [[Democratic Party (United...
- David Speakman
Davodd: + cite '''Alvin M. Strauss''' (1895 – 1958) was an [[Indiana]] [[architect]] and designer of many landmark buildings in Indiana and [[Ohio]] during the early twentieth century. He was born in [[Kendallville, Indiana]] to German immigrants and later apprenticed under prominent architects in [[Chicago]] and [[Fort Wayne, Indiana]]. Strauss founded his own practice in Fort Wayne in 1918. Among his commissioned works are the [[Allen County War Memorial Coliseum]], the [[Lincoln Bank Tower]], and the [[Embassy Theatre (Fort Wayne)|Embassy Theatre and Indiana Hotel]] in Fort Wayne.<ref> [http://www.cityoffortwayne.org/index... FORT WAYNE ARCHITECTS & FIRMS] </ref> His works also include the 1930 [[Art Deco]]-style showroom and administrative buildings of the [[Auburn Cord Duesenberg Automobile Facility]]. ==References== {{reflist|2}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Strauss, Alvin M.}} [[Category:1895 births]] [[Category:1958 deaths]] [[Category:People...
- David Speakman
Davodd: copyed for grammar and factual accuracy The following is the '''2009–2010 network television schedule''' for the five major [[English language]] commercial [[List of United States over-the-air television networks|broadcast networks in the United States]]. the schedule covers [[primetime]] hours from [[September 2009]] through [[May 2010]]. The schedule is followed by a [[#By network|list per network]] of returning series, new series, and series canceled after the [[2008-2009 United States network television schedule|2008-2009 season]]. The schedule omits the [[Public Broadcasting Service]] (whose programming is [[List of programs broadcast by Public Broadcasting Service|listed here]]). Starting this season, NBC removied scripted programming from the 10 p.m. Eastern/9 p.m. Central weeknight slot and instead added ''[[The Jay Leno Show]]''. Also, [[The CW Television Network|The CW]] is eliminated its Sunday night programming block and returning that time to local...
- David Speakman
Davodd: rm MyNetworkTV from grid - no longer a network; it is a syndication service as of Sept. 30, 2009 {{article issues|article=y|update=May 2008|POV=April 2008|citecheck=April 2008|refimprove=April 2008}} {{tocright}} In the [[United States]], for most of the history of broadcasting, there were only three or four major national broadcasting networks. From 1946-1956 these were [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]], [[CBS]], [[NBC]], and [[DuMont Television Network|DuMont]]. From 1956-1986, the national networks were ABC, CBS, and NBC. Today, more than 20 nationwide broadcasting networks exist. Other than the noncommercial [[Public Broadcasting Service|PBS]], the largest broadcast networks are the traditional [[Big Three Television Networks]] (ABC, CBS, and NBC). Many other large networks exist, however, notably [[Fox Broadcasting Company|Fox]], [[MyNetworkTV]], [[Ion Television|ION]] and [[The CW Television Network|The CW]] (formerly [[UPN]] and [[The WB Television Network|The...
- David Speakman
Davodd: /* MyNetworkTV */ {{WikiProject Television|class=list|importance=low}} ==Returning and not returning series.== Okay, I don't doubt that many are and aren't returning, but some have sources and others don't. Am I the only one that sees a problem with this? Shouldn't they all have sources, or not all have sources? Just a question. <span>--'''[[User:JpGrB|H]][[User talk:JpGrB|E]][[User:JpGrB/My Userboxes|L]][[User:JpGrB/Articles I Created|L]]'''Ø Ŧ'''[[User:JpGrB/Wikiproject Wishlist|H]][[User:JpGrB/Sandbox/Archive 1|E]][[User:JpGrB/Sandbox|R]][[User:JpGrB/Sandbox 2|E]]'''</span> 20:59, 15 March 2009 (UTC) Exactly. Harper's Island hasn't been canceled and could last beyond a season (though the premiere's ratings leave a lot to be asked for as it fell). But most of them are pretty right. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/72.177.231.105|72.177.231.105]] ([[User...
- David Speakman
Davodd: Out of date - including: "in 2007, and will eliminate the Brooks name." - which is 2+ years old. {{outofdate}} [[Image:hooksdrugs.png|right|Hook's Drug Stores]] '''Hook's Drug Stores''' was an [[Indianapolis, Indiana]]-based drug store chain which was founded in 1900 by John A. Hook. The chain flourished throughout central [[Indiana]] for most of the 20th-century before being acquired by [[Revco]] which was in turn acquired by [[CVS Corporation|CVS]]. Many former Hook's locations are now CVS pharmacies. ==History== [[Image:Hooks in 1974.jpg|thumb|left|250px|A typical Hook's store in [[New Castle, Indiana]] in 1974]] In October 1900, pharmacist John A. Hook opened the first Hook's Drug Store in an Indianapolis German community at the corner of South East and Prospect Streets. A second location opened at the corner of New Jersey and East Washington Streets and Hook added Edward F. Roesch as a partner.<ref name="rxmuseum.org">{{cite web...
- David Speakman
Davodd: Out of date, including: "In 2007, Brooks Pharmacy officially announced that the pharmacy chain will be sold to Rite-Aid Pharmacy." - 2+ years ago {{outofdate}} {{Infobox Defunct company| company_name = Brooks Pharmacy| company_logo = [[Image:Brooks Pharmacy.svg|220px]]| company_type = [[Pharmacy]]| foundation = 1932| defunct = 2007| fate = [[Mergers and acquisitions|Acquired]] by [[Rite Aid]]| key_people = [[Mary Sammons]], President and CEO| location = [[Camp Hill, Pennsylvania]]| }} '''Brooks Pharmacy''' was a chain of more than 330 pharmacies located throughout [[New England]] and [[New York]] and has been a well-recognized name in the New England pharmacy industry for several decades. The corporate headquarters were located in [[Warwick, Rhode Island]]. Brooks was acquired by [[Rite Aid]] on [[June 4]], [[2007]], and the Brooks trade name, long associated with New England drug retailing, is being retired. During its heyday in the late 1990s/early 2000s, Brooks was one of...
- David Speakman
Davodd: <ref name= SecretReach /> {{POV|date=July 2009}} {{Disputed|date=September 2009}} {{Infobox Organization |name = The Fellowship |abbreviation = |motto = |formation = 1935 |type = <!-- GO, NGO, IGO,INGO, etc --> |status = <!-- ad hoc, treaty, foundation, etc --> |purpose = <!-- focus as e.g. humanitarian, peacekeeping, etc --> |headquarters = The Cedars, a mansion in [[Arlington, Virginia]]<ref name=AllInFamily/> |location = |coords = <!-- Coordinates of location using a coordinates template --> |region_served = |membership = |language = <!-- official languages --> |leader_title = <!-- position title for the leader of the org --> |leader_name = Led by: [[Douglas Coe]] |main_organ = <!-- gral. assembly, board of directors, etc --> |parent_organization = <!-- if one --> |affiliations = Christians in Parliament |num_staff = |num_volunteers = |budget = |website = |remarks = }} '''The Fellowship''' is an international organization founded in [[1935]], which since at least 1969 has...
- David Speakman
Davodd: list is incomplete {{incomplete}} ==The Establishment of Religion== ===Standing to Sue=== *''[[Flast v. Cohen]]'' (1968) *''[[Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans United for Separation of Church and State]]'' (1982) *''[[Bender v. Williamsport]]'' (1986) ===Tax Exemption to Religious Institutions=== *''[[Walz v. Tax Commission of the City of New York]]'' (1970) *''[[Texas Monthly Inc. v. Bullock]]'' (1989) ==The Free Exercise of Religion== ===The Jehovah's Witnesses Cases=== *''[[Cantwell v. Connecticut]]'' (1940) *''[[Jones v. City of Opelika (I)]]'' (1942) *''[[Jones v. City of Opelika (II)]]'' (1943) *''[[Murdock v. Pennsylvania]]'' (1943) *''[[Minersville School District v. Gobitis]]'' (1940) *''[[West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette]]'' (1943) *''[[Cox v. New Hampshire]]'' (1941) *''[[Prince v. Massachusetts]]'' (1944) ===Religion and the Right to Work=== *''[[Sherbert v. Verner]]'' (1963) *''[[Trans World Airlines v. Hardison]]'' (1977) *''[[Ohio...
- David Speakman
Davodd: wikilink The '''Great Recession''' is a [[pun]] on [[Great Depression]], which has been used to refer to the [[late-2000s recession]], due to its depth and severity. The term "Great Recession" was first coined by an Austin, TX, Investment Manager, Frank Beck, in a Forbes magazine article in November 2008, called ''Dollar Devaluation to fix the Great Recession''.<ref name="etyl">{{citation |http://www.forbes.com/2008... |title='Dollar Devaluation to Fix the Great Recession' http://www.forbes.com/2008... |http://www.forbes.com/2008... |day=11 |year=2008 |first=Frank |last=Beck }} </ref><ref>{{citation |http://www.forbes.com/2008... |url=http://finance.yahoo.com/banking......
- David Speakman
Davodd: please prove a source {{otheruses2|Generation X}} '''Generation X''', commonly abbreviated to '''Gen X''', is a term used to refer to the generation born after the [[Post-World War II baby boom|baby boom]] ended <ref name="autogenerated1"/><ref>http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...</ref>, extending from the early [[1960s]] to mid [[1970s]].{{cite needed}} The term ''Generation X'' has been used in [[demography]], the [[social sciences]], and [[marketing]], though it is most often used in [[popular culture]]. ==Origin== In the U.S. Generation X was originally referred to as the "baby bust" generation because of the drop in the birth rate following the baby boom.<ref name="autogenerated1">[http://www.time.com/time... Gen-X: The Ignored Generation? - TIME<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> In the UK the term was first used in a 1964 study of [[British people|British]] youth by [[Jane Deverson]]....
- David Speakman
Davodd: DOB '''David Bernard Lipshultz''' ( [[June 2]], 1970 - [[January 3]], [[2004]]) was an American freelance journalist. His work appeared in ''[[The New York Times]]'' and ''[[USA Today]]'' as well as such high tech magazines as ''[[Wired magazine|Wired]]'', ''[[w:Red Herring magazine|Red Herring]]'', and Internet World. He died in a skiing accident in [[Aspen, Colorado]] in 2004 at age 33. ==External links== *[http://www.jewishaz.com/jewishn... Obituary in ''Phoenix Jewish News''] *[http://www.aspentimes.com/apps... Obituary in ''Aspen Times''] {{DEFAULTSORT:Lipshultz, David}} [[Category:Year of birth missing]] [[Category:2004 deaths]] {{US-journalist-stub}}
- David Speakman
Davodd: out of date {{out of date}} {{Infobox actor |image = Gavin Newsom and Jennifer Siebel at the 2008 Gay Parade.jpg | caption = With [[Gavin Newsom]] in [[2008]] | name = Jennifer Siebel | birthdate = {{birth date and age|1974|19|6}} | birthplace = [[San Francisco, California]] | birthname = Jennifer L. Siebel }} '''Jennifer L. Siebel''' (born [[19 June]] [[1974]]) is an American actress. She has appeared in several TV shows as guest star and has roles in several upcoming movies that include ''[[April Fool's Day (2008 film)|April Fool's Day]].''<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name... IMBD Profile]</ref> Siebel has an undergraduate and a business degree from [[Stanford University]]. She has worked for environmental group [[Conservation International]]. Her father Ken is an investment manager and her mother Judy co-founded the [[Bay Area Discovery Museum]] in [[Sausalito]]. On July 26, 2008, she became the first lady of [[San Francisco]] by marrying Mayor [[Gavin Newsom]]. It is...
- David Speakman
Davodd: /* Vote trading */ {{weaselword}} {{wiktionarypar|tyranny|majority}} The phrase '''tyranny of the majority''', used in discussing systems of [[democracy]] and [[majority rule]], is a criticism of the [[scenario]] in which decisions made by a majority under that system would place that majority's interests so far above a [[dissenting]] individual's interest that that individual would be actively oppressed. The phrase also refers to [[Tyrant|tyrants]] and [[Despotism|despots]] whose behavior causes similar oppression.<ref>John Stuart Mill. On Liberty, The Library of Liberal Arts edition, p.7. http://www.serendipity.li/jsmill...</ref> ==Term== Limits on the decisions that can be made by such majorities, such as [[constitution]]al limits on the powers of parliament and use of a [[bill of rights]] in a parliamentary system commonly meant to reduce the problem.<ref>A Przeworski, JM Maravall, I NetLibrary ''[http://books.google.com/books... Democracy and the Rule...
- David Speakman
Davodd: /* Some questions about your edit to Allen County Courthouse */ new section __NOINDEX__ {{Talkheader}} {{Usertalkback|you=watched|me=watched}} == one blue link per line on disambig? == where is that guidline written? what is the purpose? [[user:headlikeawhole|HeadsCanBeLargelyAkin]]2[http://www.answers.com/singer Wholes] 14:19, 1 July 2009 (UTC) :See [[WP:DAB]] and [[WP:MOSDAB]]. The purpose of a disambiguation page is to help readers distinguish between similarly named articles. Extra links beyond those leading to the pages being disambiguated do not help with that purpose. [[User:Bkonrad|older]] ≠ [[User talk:Bkonrad|wiser]] 22:52, 1 July 2009 (UTC) ==[[File:WikipediaSignpostHead.svg|200px|The Wikipedia Signpost|link=Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost]]<span style="display:none;">''Wikipedia Signpost''</span><span style="color:#666; font-variant: small-caps; font-size:80%; font-family:Georgia, Palatino, Palatino Linotype, Times, Times New Roman, serif;">: '''6 July...
- David Speakman
Davodd: Undid revision 248144084 by Vegaswikian (talk) revert blanking of content {{otheruses|Red herring}} {{primarysources|date=January 2008}} [[Image:Red Herring 2005 08 29.jpg|thumb|[[August 29]], 2005 cover of Red Herring magazine]] '''''Red Herring''''' was a weekly magazine focused on the business of funding, building, and taking new technologies to market. It also sponsors a number of conferences designed to bring venture capitalists, entrepreneurs, and technologists together. The print title was relaunched in late 2004 under publisher Alex Vieux and editor-in-chief Joel Dreyfuss. It is currently headquartered in [[San Mateo, California]], midway between San Francisco and Silicon Valley. At one time it had bureaus in Bangalore, Beijing, and Paris. Journalists included veterans of ''The Wall Street Journal'', Bloomberg, ''Forbes'', ''BusinessWeek'', ''CNET News.com'', the ''Financial Times'', ''Fortune'', ''The Industry Standard'', ''MarketWatch'', ''The New York Times'', ''The...
- David Speakman