Nicole Minetti Bikini Pictures Sweat Up South Beach

You may recall Nicole Minetti is the Italian showgirl caught up in the Prime Minister Berlusconi sex romp scandal, which turned into her become a council member from Northern Italy, then when Berlusconi asked her to drop out of politics, she demanded one million dollars or a sweet job on one of his media channel’s TV shows. Smart girl.

Well, now you can recall Nicole Minetti from her boobtastic adventures for the holidays in Miami, barely contained bosom in her sweaty bikini top, soaking up the South Floriday sunshine with heaps and loads of other sextastic celebrities all drawn to Miami for the winter. Now, if you like a curvy Italian gal with a bottomside that you could spend a near lifetime gently punishing with a firm hand, than Nicole Minetti might just be for you. Albeit, be sure to have that million dollars on hand. Enjoy.

Like other beaches, Casino now has internet for vacationers in Brazil

The beach has a wifi hotspot with dedicated link four Mbps, whose range can reach up to two kilometers away

At least an area of ​​250 meters in the vicinity of Government House will signal guaranteed

Had you ever imagined the possibility of a free internet signal during the summer? And the best, by the beach? Starting this summer will not have to think how this would be possible, because since the last 22 days the service is a reality. In the digital world of today, access to social networks and various web tools is closely linked to people’s daily lives, where leisure and work go hand in hand. For many the notebook, cell phone or tablet are essential to keep the population always connected. However, there are those who can invest in a 3G system, for example. However, this picture began to change with the implementation of the project of the state government a Good Summer More Digital. The initiative first brought the casino structure developed by Data Processing Company of Rio Grande do Sul (Procergs) under the coordination of the Secretariat of Communications and Digital Inclusion (Secom), that with the investment of about U.S. $ 150 000 must connect tourists to March 2013. Like other six points of the coastline bathed by the sea gaucho (Capon of Canoa, Tramandaí, Melissa, Imbé, Quintão and Pinhal) and two for fresh water ( Pelotas andSão Lourenço do Sul ), Rio Grande also now available on your bathhouse structure installed in telecentre deployed at the Government House. Each beach has a wifi hotspot with dedicated link four Mbps, whose range can reach up to two miles away. According to the director of the Digital Inclusion Secom, Gerson Barrey, the proposal came as a challenge that began with the design pilot Capon of Canoa. The beach on the north coast was the first to provide open wireless network and prove the acceptance of the action that between January and March this year registered more than 70,000 hits where tourists gauchos, Argentines, Uruguayans, Chileans, Paraguayans, Bolivians, Italian, Spaniards and Americans viewed more than 500,000 pages online. Thus it is expected that the expansion is to record simultaneously contemplating various spas. Notwithstanding the lans and servers Barrey reinforces the concern about not achieve commercial establishments working with service providers seeking not harm local internet or internet cafes. “The state wants to take the benefit without harming the servers,” explains the director also explaining their interest in providing the system as close to the waterfront. With the support of local governments and the State Secretariat of Tourism (Setur), which offers a professional to work on registration of users, the methodology is offered at low cost to the government. As Barrey, the viability of the project met with the design of Infoway Procergs important ally, where fiber optic networks available helped make the process of implementation of the Wi-fi on the beach easier. To use simply register As a regional coordinator Procergs, Neli Rosinha Reis at least an area of 250 meters in the vicinity of Government House will signal guaranteed. To use the service you must make prior registration in the telecentre. These are just a few minutes to inform personal data and number of ID, get the access key and enjoy the whole summer 2013 with a network of free internet. The estimated gauchos serve both tourists and foreigners. “Who comes to work can also continue to use,” says the coordinator. Pelotas, the structure will only offer the wi-fi and is being assembled at the Mall Sea Inside. In São Lourenço do Sul should be made ​​available both the wireless signal as the telecentre. On the edge lourenciana, the system should work together to Summer Station SESC. The prediction was that the equipment installation was completed in two cities until Jan. 5. However, as the work is still in progress, the Procergs confirmed only that the inauguration should take place before the 15th of January. In both locations the procedure to join is the same. Novelty For brothers Marlon Lara and Bittencourt, 35 and 38, offering wi-fi on the beach is something that until then was not even considered. According to Lara’s river-grandina but lives in São Paulo, even in big cities saw something. “It’s innovative. Never seen anything like it before, “he says. As for the actress defends use common sense of vacationers and warns that leisure time is not minimized by the facility that may lead many to not break away from work. “It’s nice if they do not stay on the internet all the time.” In assessing the brother, the proposal indicates the ideal opportunity that no resources are wasted during the holidays. “It’s great, because today technology is infiltrated in our daily lives,” notes the port agent. Services What: Free wi-fi and telecentre Where: at the Government House in the Casino (registration) Time: Tuesday to Sunday, from 13h to 19h

Buttons, bottoms rule on Trade Me

Humour, originality and a hard sell separated the wheat from the chaff of scratched CDs, half-used beauty products and unwanted Christmas presents on Trade Me this year.

Trade me

Upper Hutt woman Tina Beznec’s auction for the right to tattoo her behind was one of the most viewed auctions on Trade Me this year.

 

The auction site’s top 10 listings of 2012 included Upper Hutt woman Tina Beznec’s sale of the right to tattoo her behind – an auction that attracted more than 355,000 views.

Ms Beznec was the subject of international attention when Karangahape Rd strip club Calendar Girls paid $12,450 to have its logo tattooed on her bottom.

Her auction was about 100,000 hits short of the top spot, which went to a fundraising listing on which bidders competed for the chance to press the button to implode the 14-storey Radio Network House building in Christchurch.

Also in the top 10 were: studio time with Neil Finn; a date with The Crowd Goes Wild reporter Meghan Mutrie; the flattened remains of a Porirua boy racer’s crushed Nissan; and the chance to choose a student’s middle name.

Trade Me spokesman Paul Ford said the list was wildly diverse. “Every one of these auctions has got a whole bunch of different elements to capture people’s imaginations, whether it’s celebrity or humour or political.”

An original 1955 single signed by Miles Davis and his band, listed from Martinborough, placed fourth with 193,936 views.

Mr Ford said the single was the only “traditional” listing that made the top 10, with the others marketing either experiences, or quirky items with a backstory.

Joke auctions were nothing new, Mr Ford said. “People have always had a go at it: they’ve tried to sell Australia, a hug, a captured ghost … Then other people go, ‘I wish I’d thought of that’, and you get copycat auctions.”

Many people listed advertising sites on their bodies after Ms Beznec’s successful auction.

“They thought, ‘She made 12 grand out of it, surely I can get something’ – and inevitably it didn’t work. The early bird catches the worm on that front.”

View China as a partner, not a problem

In a few weeks, President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden will be reinaugurated with great fanfare in Washington. Soon after that, in Beijing, Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang will ascend to the presidency and premiership of China. (China’s premier is the second-highest office but unlike the American vice president is more like the country’s chief operating officer, with the president as chief executive officer.) If our political leaders would play their cards right, the concomitant inaugurations could be prelude to a brilliant new start for our relationship with China.

But I doubt it, because soon after the inaugurations, the tedious process of Senate confirmation hearings for cabinet positions will begin. As usual, most attention will focus on the three big jobs, the secretaries of treasury, state and defense. Given the nation’s current mood, when the nominees are grilled about their views, I’m sure each in turn will express a strong degree of indignation toward China, especially regarding its currency and its military. To be sure, these issues are important and must be addressed, but I highly doubt bellicosity does much to help. Such tough talk will probably help the nominees win their cabinet positions ― but surely won’t build any ties with China.

That’ll be quite a shame. Our business leaders know well that although China is an aspiring superpower, it is not the Soviet Union, and this is not the Cold War. You won’t hear them second the opinions we’ll surely hear from our cabinet nominees. That’s because they fully realize the opportunity that China presents. Just last month, a study released by the Boston Consulting Group concluded that China will have 280 million affluent consumers by 2020. A potential market of affluent consumers nearly the size of the U.S. population is enough to make any CEO salivate. So might we, if we appreciated the opportunity this could afford us to pull us back to economic growth.

To the cabinet nominees, I say this: China may have its problems, but a suicidal tendency is not one of them. Like any country, it acts in its own interests. This may sometimes put the Chinese at odds with other countries, but it does not mean they seek confrontation ― especially not with the United States. And everyone in China over 20 can do a very quick before-and-after comparison of living conditions over the past two decades. It’s no contest which period comes out ahead. I’m not aware of any culture in which not eating is preferable to eating. And the Chinese well know that the great American market has been substantially responsible for their current banquet.

In turn, their market could be quite a banquet for us. Two little factoids might provide proper perspective about the size of Chinese markets. If little Wu and young Jiang would be particularly diligent in their foreign language studies, China could very quickly also have the largest English-speaking population in the world, too. Never heard that, did you? But even a quarter of a 1.4 billion population equals a whopping big number. Moreover, Christians (including Catholics) in China already outnumber Christians in Italy. Surprising? Sure. But a number like 1.4 billion can do things like that.

Of course, economic considerations are not the only ones of importance. But surely not every issue regarding China is a matter of national security. Let’s not treat every one of them as if they were. There’s an ancient Chinese proverb (which I may have just made up) that if you treat someone like an enemy, he’ll become one.

Do we want an inimical relationship with our most important business partner ― and the one, frankly, that we need the most as we struggle to climb out of recession?

Bomb kills at least 19 Pakistan pilgrims, 21 soldiers shot dead

A car bomb killed at least 19 Shiite Muslim pilgrims in southwest Pakistan on Sunday as troops searched for the killers of 21 kidnapped soldiers in the troubled northwest, officials said.

The remotely-triggered bomb hit a convoy of three buses carrying about 180 pilgrims to Iran and set one of the buses ablaze in Mastung district, they said.

“At least 19 people have been killed and 25 injured,” said Tufail Baluch, a senior district government official. “All of them were Shiite pilgrims.”

Most of those killed were burnt to death, he said. “The bomb was planted in a car. The condition of some of the injured is critical.”

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the bombing at Mastung, some 30 south of Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province.

The province has become an increasing flashpoint for sectarian violence between Pakistan’s majority Sunni Muslims and minority Shiites, who account for around a fifth of the country’s 180 million people.

Baluchistan is also rife with Islamist militancy and home to a regional insurgency which began in 2004. The insurgents demand political autonomy and a greater share of profits from oil and gas resources.

It was the country’s second mass killing to be reported in less than a day.

In the northwest, security forces were hunting the killers of 21 soldiers whose bodies were discovered not far from two camps outside Peshawar where they had been kidnapped by the Pakistani Taliban.

Around 200 militants, armed with heavy weapons including mortars and rocket launchers, stormed the government paramilitary camps before dawn on Thursday, killing two security personnel and kidnapping 23.

Officials said Sunday the 21 soldiers had their hands tied with rope before they were shot. Two others — one wounded and one unhurt — were also found.

Philippines’ president signs law promoting contraception

The Philippine president has signed a law that will promote contraception, sexual education and family planning programs vigorously opposed by the country’s Roman Catholic Church.

President Benigno Aquino III signed the law on Dec. 21 and his administration announced it only Saturday because of the “sensitivity” of the issue, said deputy presidential spokeswoman Abigail Valte.

Valte said the passage of the law “closes a highly divisive chapter of our history” and “opens the possibility of cooperation and reconciliation” among those who oppose and support the “Responsible Parenthood and Reproductive Health Act of 2012.”

One of the most outspoken opponents of the legislation while it was still being debated in Congress, retired Archbishop Oscar Cruz, said Aquino is dividing the country while adopting a “first world country value system.” He warned that the law will be followed by the passage of a divorce bill and same-sex marriage, both strongly opposed by the Church.

Cruz, a former president of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines, criticized the secret signing of the law despite the presidential certification that it was an urgent measure.

“What is that? He is either ashamed of it or he is afraid of the repercussion of that bill,” Cruz said.

“My first objection there is why don’t you call a spade a spade? Why do you have to call it ‘reproductive health?’ Come on. That is population-control legislation,” he said. “From the onset there is already deception.”

He said responsible parenthood as taught by the church entails using only natural family planning methods. Providing artificial contraceptives will “separate pleasure from the hardship” of bringing up a family.

“This government has now entered the bedroom bringing with it the condom and the pill … That is very irresponsible,” Cruz said.

He said a Catholic group is planning to question the law at the Supreme Court.

Women’s groups and other supporters of the law have praised Aquino for pushing its passage within the first half of his six-year term after the measure languished in Congress for 13 years largely because legislators were reluctant to pass it because of the strong opposition of the Catholic Church.

The Aquino administration “should be commended for its political will to see this law through,” said Carlos Conde, Asia Researcher for the U.S.-based Human Rights Watch.

Conde said the law “will advance human rights in the Philippines, particularly of women and mothers” and empower them to make their own decisions over their health and family life. “It gives a clear mandate to the government to make reproductive health services readily available and, because of that, the law can save many lives,” he said.

In about a dozen provisions, the 24-page law repeatedly reminds that abortion drugs are banned, but it requires health workers to provide care for those who have complications arising from illegal abortions.

Under the law, the government will hire more village health workers who will distribute contraceptives, especially to the poor, and provide instructions on natural family planning methods that the Church approves.

The government will also train teachers who will provide age- and development-appropriate reproductive health education to adolescents — youth age 10 to 19 years old. This will include information on protection against discrimination and sexual abuse and violence against women and children, teen pregnancy, and women’s and children’s rights.

Egypt’s president warns over dangers to economy

Egypt’s Islamist president used his first address before the newly convened upper house of parliament on Saturday to warn against any unrest that could harm the country’s battered economy, as he renewed calls for the opposition to join in a national dialogue.

In the nationally televised speech, Mohammed Morsi said the nation’s entire efforts should be focused on “production, work, seriousness and effort” now that a new constitution came into effect this week. He blamed protests and violence the past month for causing further damage to an economy already deteriorating from the turmoil since the fall of autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

In an alarm bell over the economy, the central bank announced soon after Morsi’s speech that foreign currency reserves ― which have been bleeding away for nearly two years ― are at a “critical” level, the minimum needed to cover foreign debt payments and buy strategic imports.

Morsi’s strongly worded address to lawmakers appeared aimed at sending a message to the mainly liberal and secular opposition not to engage in any new protests, depicting unrest as a threat to the priority of rebuilding.

All sides must “realize the needs of the moment” and work only through “mature democracy while avoiding violence,” Morsi told the 270-member upper house, or Shura Council. “We condemn and reject all forms of violence by individuals, groups, institutions and even from the nation and its government. This is completely rejected.”

He appeared to chide the opposition for not working with him.

“We all know the interests of the nation,” he said. “Would any of us be happy if the nation goes bankrupt? I don’t doubt anyone’s intentions. But can anyone here be happy if the nation is exposed to economic weakness?”

The mainly liberal and secular opposition accuses Morsi of concentrating all power on the Muslim Brotherhood, from which he hails, and other Islamists and steamrolling any alternative voices.

The main opposition groups have refused to join a national dialogue convened by Morsi, saying past talks have brought no compromise. They also stayed out of the president’s appointments last week of a few opposition figures to the overwhelmingly Islamist Shura Council, calling the move tokenism.

The bitterness between the two sides was inflamed by the crisis of the past month leading up to the referendum that passed the new constitution. Mass street rallies were held by both the opposition trying to stop the charter and by Morsi’s Islamist supporters determined to push it to victory. Clashes that erupted left 10 dead. The charter was approved by 64 percent, but with a low turnout of around 33 percent.

Civil society groups and the opposition also point to incidents of fraud in the vote they say have not been properly investigated.

Opponents fear the new charter will consecrate the Islamists’ power. The document allows for a stronger implementation of Islamic law, or Shariah, than in the past and has provisions that could limit civil rights and freedoms of minorities.

Morsi has depicted his national dialogue as a chance for all factions to have a voice in planning the next steps and drawing up key legislation to put before the upper house, including a law organizing parliamentary elections. So far, mainly Islamists and only a few small opposition parties are participating.

Liberal former lawmaker Amr Hamzawi said the president’s speech offered no new insights and failed to acknowledge significant opposition to the Islamist-drafted constitution. Hamzawi was among those who walked out in protest of the Islamists’ handling of the draft process earlier this year.

“We need binding mechanisms to amend the flawed constitution, guarantee that the legislative role of the upper house of parliament will be temporary and to ensure fair elections,” he said. “We will not enter into fraud elections each and every time.”

Morsi’s address aimed to set the tone as the Shura Council begins work on a slate of new laws. The upper house normally has few powers but it will now serve as the law-making body until a new lower house is chosen in national elections expected within a few months. Two thirds of the Shura Council members were elected in voting last winter, but few Egyptians bothered to vote, and Islamist allies of Morsi swept the chamber.

The ultraconservative Salafi al-Nour Party, the second strongest party after the Brotherhood’s political wing, suffered a blow this week when its founder and chief Emad Abdel-Ghafour resigned to start a new party, Al-Watan. He took with him around 150 members, including many who were elected to office. The fracturing of the party may bolster the Brotherhood in the coming elections.

In his speech, Morsi repeatedly said it was time to return to “production” and “work.” But he did not give details on an overall economic program, including crucial questions like how the government will tackle a crippling budget deficit or carry out expected tax hikes or reductions of subsidies.

The impending austerity measures are major concerns in a country where some 40 percent of the 85 million population live near or below the poverty line of surviving on $2 a day. Morsi’s government has requested a $4.8 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund to bridge the budget deficit, but talks are on hold after the government reversed plans for tax hikes this month.

Instead, Morsi denounced those who he said were spreading panic about Egypt’s economy, saying the country will “not go bankrupt.” He underlined that banks were healthy, after a rush to buy dollars the past week over fears of devaluation of the Egyptian pound.

“Those who talk about bankruptcy, they are the ones who are bankrupt. Egypt will never be bankrupt and will not kneel, God willing,” he said to a round of applause.

He directly blamed the past month’s violence for Standard & Poor’s downgrading this week of Egypt’s long-term credit rating one level this week to “B-,” six steps below investment grade.

Morsi presented the country’s foreign currency reserves, currently at $15 billion, as up slightly from last year, though he acknowledged they were still down dramatically from around $36 billion in 2010.

After last year’s anti-Mubarak uprising, foreign investment and tourism — one of the country’s biggest money makers — dried up. With fewer dollars coming in, the central bank has been spending reserves furiously to prop up the currency and pay for key imports. The slight uptick in reserves from last year is mainly due to hundreds of millions of dollars provided by the Gulf nation of Qatar.

S. Korea to join U.N. Security Council amid deadlock over N.K. rocket

South Korea could take a more active role in getting the United Nations Security Council to punish North Korea for its recent long-range rocket launch, diplomatic sources said Friday.

South Korea is set to serve as a non-permanent member of the 15-nation Council for two years, beginning Jan. 1. The Council is the U.N.’s top decision-making body that can tighten sanctions on North Korea.

Seoul, Washington and other nations condemned North Korea’s Dec. 12 rocket launch as a violation of U.N. resolutions that ban the communist country from testing ballistic missile technology.

It remains unclear, however, whether China, as North Korea’s key ally and a veto-wielding council member, will agree to imposing additional sanctions on Pyongyang.

North Korea is already under sanctions for its previous rocket launches and nuclear tests.

“The Chinese mission to the U.N. has not yet received guidelines from the Chinese government,” a diplomatic source at the U.N. said, asking that he not be identified. “Even if it were to receive instructions today, it’s unclear what their position will be and it usually takes a week to draw up a statement, so it will be difficult to reach a conclusion by the end of the year.”

Seoul and Washington are reportedly firm on pushing for additional sanctions.

South Korea will soon be able to speak up more on North Korea as it will become an official member of the Security Council, though its membership on its own may not spur the decision-making process, said another source at the U.N.

“In order to heighten pressure on the North, timing is just as important as the form (of action taken), and one could argue too much time has already passed,” the source said.

There are concerns that North Korea may respond to any additional U.N. sanctions with another nuclear test.

North Korea carried out its first and second nuclear tests in 2006 and 2009, weeks after the U.N. Security Council adopted a resolution and condemned Pyongyang for its long-range rocket launches.

In Washington, a U.S. think tank said North Korea appears ready to conduct a nuclear test in as little as two weeks after a political decision is made to move forward.

“Satellite photos as recent as December 13 show that Pyongyang is determined to maintain a state of readiness at the area of the Punggye-ri nuclear test site, where a third test is expected even in the dead of winter,” the U.S.-Korea Institute at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies said on its Web site, 38 North.

Won Sei-hun, head of South Korea’s National Intelligence Service, also told lawmakers earlier this month that the North is prepared to test-blast a nuclear device at any time, according to Rep. Chung Moon-hun of the ruling Saenuri Party.

On Saturday, North Korea renewed its determination to carry on launching rockets loaded with satellites.

“Our satellite launches are an exercising of sovereignty that is in full compliance with the treaty on space, which stipulates that the peaceful use of space is a right of all countries,” the North’s main newspaper, Rodong Shinmun, said in a report.

N. Korea’s nuke, ‘post-Gangnam’ era on CNN’s watch list in 2013

North Korea’s possible nuclear test and a “post-Gangnam” era are among stories that will draw keen global media attention in the year ahead, CNN said Sunday.

Releasing a list of 13 things to closely watch in 2013, the U.S. cable news channel said North Korea may step into the global media spotlight with another nuclear test.

“On the subject of nuclear states that the U.S.-wishes-were-not, the succession in North Korea has provided no sign that the regime is ready to restrain its ambitious program to test nuclear devices and the means to deliver them,” it said.

CNN cited reports that North Korea seems to be technically set for the detonation of an atomic bomb at a nuclear site where it carried out two tests in 2006 and 2009.

“So the decision becomes a political one,” it said, adding the choice will be made by North Korea’s young leader Kim Jong-un who apparently wants to demonstrate that he is in firm control of the communist regime.

Another hot topic in the new year will be “Will ‘Gangnam Style’ give it up to something sillier?” CNN said.

It was referring to “Gangnam Style,” a song by South Korean rapper Psy. The music video of the song has become the all-time most watched clip on YouTube.

The music video became the first YouTube clip to top 1,000,000,000 views earlier this month.

“Can something — anything — displace ‘Gangnam Style’ as the most watched video in YouTube’s short history?” CNN said without ruling out the possibility that “Gangnam will get to 2 billion with a duet with Justin Bieber.”

Also included on the CNN’s list are the territorial row between China and Japan, turmoil in Syria and Iran’s nuclear program.

Yahoo exits S. Korea, halts service

U.S. Internet company Yahoo Inc. on Monday halted its South Korean service, pulling out of one of the world’s most wired countries after 15 years.

yahoo

Yahoo will halt all products, services and content of Yahoo Korea starting Dec. 31 in addition to ending customer support in Korea on the same day, the company wrote on its Korean Web site.

In October, Yahoo announced a plan to pull out of South Korea as chief executive officer Marissa Mayer focuses more on stronger markets.

“The decision is part of Yahoo’s efforts to focus its resources on establishing a stronger global business,” the company said in an earlier statement.

The exit comes as the U.S. search firm is grappling to stay afloat amid the emergence of newer service providers such as Google Inc. and Facebook Inc. that have successfully amassed users in Web and mobile sectors.

Locally, the company has been dwarfed by homegrown portal operators such as NHN Corp. and Daum Communications Corp. that operate the country’s two most visited Web sites — Naver.com and Daum.net.

Yahoo, which once dominated the local search market, is estimated to now claim less than 1 percent of the local market. The company did not make it into the top 10 domains, whereas visitors to Naver and Daum hit 31.6 million and 28.3 million in November, according to data by KoreanClick.

The U.S. search firm’s departure is among the recent exits by global technology firms that have failed to emulate their home success in South Korea.

Handset makers Motorola Mobility and HTC Corp. have also announced plans to leave South Korea after facing competition from local manufacturers Samsung Electronics Co. and LG Electronics Inc.