Today's photo: Satellite images
Today's photo: Satellite images of the conflict in Burma (USA Today)
Scientists announced today that they've used satellite images to verify human-rights abuses in Burma. The top photo was taken Jan. 14, 2000. The bottom one, taken Feb. 1, 2007, shows that 17 structures disappeared. This corresponds with reports that villages…
Satellite images corroborate eyewitness accounts of human rights abuses in Burma, AAAS reports (EurekAlert!)
Before-and-after satellite images show the site of an apparent military encampment in Burma on Nov. 11, 2000, (top), and again on Dec. 13, 2006, (bottom), when new bamboo fencing can…
Satellite pictures show Burmese villages destroyed by military (The Nation)
New York - Satellite imagery of Burma show a number of villages destroyed in the last six years to clear….
Toshiba Satellite A215-S4757 (Washington Post)
The Toshiba Satellite A215-S4757 is the first Toshiba laptop with an AMD processor instead of an Intel one. It has heaps of features, including a 250GB hard drive, but its performance could be better.
Satellite images expose Burma's ethnic cleansing (Times Online)
Dozens of human rights abuses reported in eastern Burma have been confirmed by a series of satellite images released today by American scientists.
Satellite images show evidence of Myanmar violence (The New Zealand Herald)
Satellite images confirm reports earlier this year of burned villages, forced relocations and other human rights abuses in Myanmar, scientists said today.
Satellite Images Corroborate Eyewitness Accounts Of Human Rights Abuses In Burma (Science Daily)
A new analysis of high-resolution satellite images pinpoints evidence consistent with village destruction, forced relocations and a growing military presence at 25 sites across eastern Burma where eyewitnesses have reported human rights violations.
Officials tout satellite system to fill in communications gaps (Boston Globe)
Emergency responders in northeastern Vermont are hoping a new satellite communications system expected to go into service next year will help them fill in the gaps in radio and cell phone communications.