Jun 12

NEW YORK–The inaugural Internet Week New York was eight days of open bars and missed opportunities.

On the red carpet at the 12th Annual Webby Awards on Tuesday night, the final event of the week-long city-sanctioned festival, I called out to Internet Week executive director David-Michel Davies and asked him what he’d do next year to change it. “We’d like to do a better job with the schedule,” he said to me after hesitating for a moment. He added a few more words about how a better calendar could help Internet Week-goers connect, before publicists snagged Davies for a string of photo ops.

That was the problem with Internet Week: connecting. But it’s an issue that can’t just be solved by hiring a few extra Ruby developers for the festival calendar.

As a string of individual events, Internet Week was wildly successful–there was, literally, something for everyone. Tech enthusiasts were treated to job seminars at Google, industry roundtables at Time Warner, and free beer at the “Wiimbledon” tournament. There were no fewer than four digital-ad conferences, two evenings of Webby Awards, a whole BlackBerry’s worth of parties every evening, and enough power-breakfast panels to make you never want to see a cheese danish again.

The crowd at the New York Tech Meetup.

(Credit: David Karp)

But even all those cheese danishes couldn’t fill the sizeable gulf between Gotham’s stalwart media-advertising machine and the digital start-ups popping up across the country.

It’s an age-old stereotype: the friction between the big guys with the deep pockets and the business expertise who are short on new ideas, and the newcomers teeming with innovation but lacking the financial cred. And in New York’s digital scene, it’s a reality. Given the shaky economic conditions and uncertain outlook for the ad industry both online and offline–display ad spending dropped in the first quarter of 2008–an effort toward more cohesion in the media business would be a smart move. Internet Week was a stellar opportunity to focus on that cohesion, and it didn’t happen; that’s why the festival was a disappointment.

True, Internet Week was hindered from the start: because there was no central conference or event, a la South by Southwest Interactive, festival-goers were less likely to encounter new people and make new connections, and more likely to be socializing instead with the people they already knew. During the day, Internet Week’s conferences were populated by ad-industry types in suits; at night, it was local entrepreneurs and their fun-loving groupies who were out on the town.

Neither party looked good in the process. It didn’t do much of a service to the image of the big-media guys that they rolled into town for a handful of expensive conferences–the Federated Media Conversational Marketing Summit, Digital Hollywood’s Advertising 2.0 conference, ContentNext’s EconAds–where, in typical New York fashion, the focus was on the money rather than the innovation.

Revelers at Thrillist’s ‘Information Superparty’

(Credit: Nick McGlynn/RandomNightOut.com)

The tech start-up CEOs who’d been called in to speak at those conferences seemed very conscious of the ad industry’s impatience. “This whole ‘application economy’ that was meant to emerge is really concentrating on a handful of developers,” said Joanna Shields, president of Bebo, the social network acquired by AOL earlier this year, in a panel at the Conversational Marketing Summit.

She was speaking to a crowd of ad-industry types who, with pens and notebooks out, were attempting to get an idea or two on how to tackle social-media marketing campaigns. Regarding developer platforms’ failure to explode into a cash cow, Shields said, “that’s just the reality of the situation.” In other words, the advertisers needed to calm down.

“I think it’s important to also acknowledge the fact that…the concept of a platform and application developers is one year old, that’s it,” Gina Bianchini, CEO of the hyped social-media start-up Ning, said in the same panel about cashing in on social-network platforms. “I think that certainly everybody is motivated to enable more people to have the freedom to create and customize and use what they want where they want to use it, but we’re still really early here.”

“This whole ‘application economy’ that was meant to emerge is really concentrating on a handful of developers.”

–Bebo President Joanna Shields

On the flip side, there are those on the big-media side who perceive their start-up brethren as brash, fiscally irresponsible, and unduly disrespectful of the status quo. Some current leaders in the Valley don’t disagree with the characterization.

“There’s a little bit of the sense that you have to come in and tell people that things have to change and that you have to be this visionary,” Bianchini told CNET News.com in an interview during Internet Week. Instead, she said, the focus should be problem-solving. “I think you have to be a lot more respectful of a business that is established.”

Bianchini went on to emphasize that the dialogue between old media and new media, San Francisco Bay Area and New York, is more than crucial given the fact that she estimates the economy will be very challenging for the next year and a half. “It’s going to take advertising and marketing teams a few years to catch up,” she said. “(The media business) is under pressure…and I’m respectful of that, and I think online media companies need to be. That’s not to say that things aren’t changing.”

Somewhat ironically, the brightest glimpses of industry-wide cohesion were at the Webby Awards ceremony, which some members of the New York media like to rip on for its exclusivity and ostensible irrelevance. True, the overlong ceremony and seemingly endless parade of “winners” seemed to underscore the common wisdom that the Internet industry in New York is just too jumbled and scattershot for a week-long festival.

But on the other hand, the lavish event space at Cipriani Wall Street was a more diverse crowd than Internet Week had seen yet: the heads of oddball start-up blogs were seated alongside representatives from the world’s biggest media companies and advertising agencies. (I was placed, for example, between an ad strategist from the BBC and one of the editors of political activism site FactCheck.org.)

When it came to the Slinky-shaped Webby Award trophies, sometimes it was the big corporations that won. And sometimes it was the start-ups, as emphasized by the five-word acceptance speech on behalf of Web browser Flock when it won the Webby for best social-networking product: “No s***! We beat Facebook!”

Love them or hate them, the Webbys were Internet Week New York’s finest example of digital media’s big and small players standing side-by-side. It was a closing note that would do well as a catalyst for a hypothetical Internet Week next year: not just a way to show off the diversity of New York as a digital city, but to help it march in lockstep.

And Davies’ team will likely get a chance. Considering Mayor Michael P. Bloomberg took the inaugural Internet Week as an opportunity to throw an official press conference and launch a new venture fund for local tech start-ups, signs indicate he’ll want to bring it back next year.

But for the sake of the entire industry, let’s just hope everyone will be using the word “monetize” about one-fifth as often.

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Jun 10

The company is hoping to boost its share of the smartphone market, which is dominated by Nokia and Blackberry.

The new devices were launched by Apple boss Steve Jobs who said the phone would be “more affordable” for consumers, starting at $199 (£100).

The new iPhone also comes with GPS satellite navigation built in for location-based services.

The iPhone was first launched last year and was criticised for its support for slower 2G networks only.

Mr Jobs said the 3G iPhone was “three times faster” downloading content over a mobile network compared to the original device.

Analyst John Delaney, research director for consumer mobile at IDC, said the iPhone 3G was disappointing.

They are going for volume. But they have got a big mountain to climb outside of the US
Analyst John Delaney

“To me it’s more about what they didn’t say, than what they did. Everyone knew it would be 3G and have GPS.”

Apple has a 20% share of the US smartphone market, but only 5% worldwide.

Rival manufacturers

Rival handset manufacturers have also been designing devices which assume the iPhone’s mantle as the “most desirable phone on the market”, including Nokia’s N96 and the Blackberry Thunder.

Google’s Android platform will also hit mobile phones later this year, adding yet more competition to the high-end consumer smartphone market.

The big talk in the corridors of the Moscone Centre was about the new lower cost of the device.
BBC Technology reporter Maggie Shiels

Apple has sold more than six million iPhones since the device debuted in the US in June last year and the firm says it is on course to sell 10 million by the end of 2008.

Mr Jobs said the cost of the original iPhone was the “number one reason” that people had not bought one of the devices.

Mr Jobs said “The iPhone started at $599. It now sells at $399. We want to make it even more affordable.”

The cheapest 8GB iPhone 3G will sell for $199, while a second model with 16GB of storage will sell for $299.

Mr Jobs pledged that the $199 price would be the same across many countries.

34 iPhone

The 3G iPhone will be released on 11 July

The new iPhones will be launched on 11 July in 22 countries, including the UK.

Reaction to the new 3G iPhone from developers and media at the conference in San Francisco was broadly positive, said BBC technology reporter Maggie Shiels.

Henry Kannapek told BBC News that the $199 price tag would be hard to resist when the phone hit the shops.

“It’s tremendous. It’s an incredible price. It’s the best mobile device I have ever seen. I’ve got some cheap cell phones and I want to buy one of these.”

Developer Chris Cooksey of Wimba said Apple would score big with such a low price point.

“It’s a great price. They have made huge improvements to the phone and the fact that you can do third party applications rules.”

Mobile developer Robert F. Farnum, of Boingo.com, told BBC News he was all set to splash out on the new device for his family.

‘Pretty excited’

“I’ve got six people in my family that need to get one so I just sent them all e-mails saying they have to buy it. The price just blew me away and the software is amazing. It is the best phone on the market.”

Michael Arrington, of the influential blog TechCrunch, said: “I was pretty excited by what I saw but I was hoping for a thinner model and a front-facing camera. But I think with the 3G speed and the price point it looks like a winner.”

Analyst John Delaney said: “The fact it’s cheaper is interesting. But how is it going to be cheaper?

“If Apple is doing it by cutting the retail price, it will drastically hit their margins if they sell volume.

“If the lower price is through operator subsidy, they are becoming a bit more humble. But that’s not clear at this stage.

“Either way, they are going for volume. But they have got a big mountain to climb outside of the US.”

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May 22

Bujjigadu is a Telugu film, starring Prabhas, Trisha, Mohan Babu, and others, directed by Puri Jagannath. Produced by KS Rama Rao. This film has been released on May 22, 2008.

Story:
Lingaraju aka Bujji (Prabhas) is adopted son of Prabhas Raju (M.S Narayana) living in Vizag. Young Bujji & Little Chitti are neighbours and best friends in vizag.One day Chitti was deeply hurt ‘coz Bujjgadu spoiled her sand temple.She asks him not to talk to her for 12 years & also says she will marry him if he can live up to her challenge.Bujjigadu runs away from home shifts base to Chennai keeping no touch with his parents.

After 12yrs:
Bujji grows up to be a hard core Rajnikanth fan and his only aim is to finish the 12 year wait and return to Vizag for Chitti.Chittiis studying in London and her family is living in Hyderabad.She sends her sister(Sanjana) to contact Bujji.Bujjigadu also lands in a tempting deal, with Machireddy & sons(Kota Srinivasarao gang)for Rs.1Crore to kill Sivanna (Mohan babu),as he needs money to live happily after marrying Chitti.He comes to Hyderabad to find Chitti & to kill Sivanna.There he comes to know Chitti is the only sister of Sivanna.What he will do next forms rest of the story.

Highlights :
Prabhas looks macho.Prabhas performed very well as a Puri mark funny.it’s a totally different charecter for prabhas.1st and 3rd fights are highlight’s of the movie,last song dance is awesome. Nothing special to say about Trisha.Her makeup is awkward. Music by Sandeep Chowta is not good.There are some enjoyable witty one liners and overall comedy isn’t upto the mark compared to Puri’s earlier films.Sunil did well,Ali appears in 3 different roles .

Sidelights:
It’s a Lazy screenplay by Puri Jagannadh.Though no one expect a novel storyline for a mass film atleast people expects an entertaining film with a fluid screenplay from him.he failed to deliver so.it’s a routine mass flick. Mohan babu is casted in a pretty routine don cum brother character.His terrific acting abilities were absolutely wasted. amma-abba,munda-randa kind of telugu thitlu are used very casually for comedy( often uttered by heroines )

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May 22

Feel overwhelmed by the firehose of data that the Internet delivers to your personal computer every day?

Get ready for more. Anywhere. Anytime.

Most of the biggest names in technology, from AT&T (nyse: T - news - people ) to Intel (nasdaq: INTC - news - people ) to Samsung, are betting billions that they can deliver all the information on the Internet–and then some—to your mobile devices. That would mean that just about any consumer device, from your cellphone to your MP3 player to your digital camera to your laptop, would serve up rich, multimedia data any time and any place, without annoying hiccups or pauses, and without wires. It’s a future in which many devices in your home will touch the Web multiple times every day–whether you realize it or not.

In Pictures: 10 Devices That Put The Web In Your Pocket

Samsung’s sleek VLUU i70 camera offers a glimpse into this future. It’s an advanced camera, packing 7.2 megapixels, a 15x optical zoom, anti-shake technology and a professional-grade video recorder. What really sets the camera apart, however, is how it moves the data it collects out: via a super-fast data connection, built around a high-speed downlink packet access (HSDPA), which is comparable to digital subscriber line (DSL) connectivity but without any wires. That’s about five times faster than the fastest mobile data networks available in the U.S. today.

The connection, paired with the camera’s 3-inch LCD screen and MP3 music functions, turn it into a sophisticated multimedia player, suited for downloading and reading e-books, listening to music or watching videos. Though the gadget can’t make calls and is sold only in Korea, analysts compare it to Apple’s Apple (nasdaq: AAPL - news - people ) iPhone.

“With all its functionality … it’s very much like a smart phone,” says Philip Solis, a principal analyst at ABI Research.

It’s no accident the camera was designed in Korea. The country invested heavily in mobile broadband in 2005, deploying it throughout Seoul. The U.S. is jumping into action now, with Sprint Nextel’s (nyse: S - news - people ) recent announcement of a consortium with wireless broadband provider Clearwire (nasdaq: CLWR - news - people ), Intel, Google (nasdaq: GOOG - news - people ) and cable companies Time Warner (nyse: TWX - news - people ), Comcast (nasdaq: CMCSA - news - people ) and Bright House to build a nationwide network using a long-distance wireless technology called WiMax (see “WiMax Gets Real”).

The $14.55 billion deal is “pushing the whole idea of enabling connectivity for new types of devices,” says Solis.

Also fueling the trend: Verizon Wireless and AT&T’s decision to support a broader range of devices on their networks and upgrade them within the next two to three years to another super-fast technology, called LTE. Solis forecasts that nearly 100 million mobile broadband-connected devices (not including cellphones or computers) will be sold globally by 2012, up from less than 500,000 today.

You might think your mobile devices already tap the Web. Maybe your laptop has a good wi-fi receiver. But future mobile broadband networks will be faster and broader than wi-fi or Bluetooth, the popular, short-range wireless technology. Increasing how much data chugs through these networks changes what you do–just like moving from dial-up Internet access to broadband unleashed new waves of Internet services that use pictures and videos.

Cellphones–particularly Apple’s iPhone–are the closest most Americans can get right now to the future of wireless broadband. If you’ve bought a cellphone in the past year, you can probably use it to get online pretty quickly. Most new cellphones support third-generation, or 3G, technology, which isn’t as fast as DSL but is widespread throughout the U.S.

Apple is expecting to upgrade the iPhone to a 3G-capable device this summer. A crop of premium phones, like the just-announced BlackBerry Bold and HTC Touch Diamond and Nokia (nyse: NOK - news - people )’s best-selling N95, support the faster HSDPA. WiMax will come to cellphones too: Sprint says it plans to offer “dual-mode” handsets that combine WiMax with cellular technology this winter.

Cellphones aren’t the only always-connected devices that are already here. Amazon.com’s (nasdaq: AMZN - news - people ) Kindle e-book reader, which taps Sprint’s data network to deliver books by electronic file, is another example. The price of the wireless connection is included in the cost of each e-book. Sprint gets a cut of each $9.99 download rather than charging by the minute or the megabyte.

“It’s a refreshing business model,” says Sanjay Jha, chief operating officer of wireless technology firm Qualcomm (nasdaq: QCOM - news - people ). “The wireless part is totally integrated and truly hidden.”

Personal navigation devices from Dash Navigation also incorporate cellular connections to provide real-time information, such as traffic updates and construction warnings, to users. Dash sells the device for $399 and charges $12.99 per month for the wireless service. Taiwanese electronics maker Mio Technology is developing similar products.

Jha says many more such gadgets are on the horizon. More than 15 devices built on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon platform, which combines a processor with wi-fi, Bluetooth, and 3G technology, are slated for release before the end of the year. All will support a global positioning system, high-definition video and other forms of multimedia, along with wireless broadband. Next year, Ericsson (nasdaq: ERIC - news - people ) will introduce a similar product, called the U500, that will support 3-D gaming and high-quality audio and video.

That means as early as 2009 you could easily own a handful of devices always connected to the Web, such as MP3 players that will sync with your home stereo system when you walk in the door, or cameras/camcorders, like the VLUU i70, that will post photos and video wirelessly to a blog or e-mail them to a group of family and friends. DVD players that download full-length movies in a snap over WiMax are also on the way, as are WiMax-connected appliances and utility meters that would allow remote monitoring from a mobile device.

Outside the home, cars will get fast, mobile connections too. Chrysler has said it will install WiMax in vehicles over the next few years to support real-time weather information, e-mail access and Internet searches direct from the dashboard.

How smart could these connected devices be? A portable gaming device could automatically download a sequel of a game to your player after you’ve completed the original. The first game player equipped to do that will be the WiMax-connected G100 from Korean firm Posbro, which is scheduled to launch in the U.S. by early 2009.

Because most of these devices will be portable, computers that touch the Web in this way will be small–what Intel and other companies call “ultra-mobile PCs,” or mobile Internet devices. Jha envisions a computer with a 5-inch screen that would have robust enough broadband Internet connections that it can do anything a desktop PC can do on the Web but would also fit in a pocket. At home, a user could connect it to a full-size keyboard and monitor.

“While it’s docked, you could create content. While outside, you would use it to consume content,” says Jha.

Not every device will be yoked to the Web. Low-cost gadgets will not likely have a Web connection. Midtier products will connect to the Web for free via wi-fi, suggests Solis. But more expensive, multifunctional devices will probably always have an open connection to the Internet, via 3G, WiMax or LTE networks, he adds.

The first test in the U.S. will be Nokia’s WiMax-compatible tablet. Early adopters are likely to snap up the 4.1-inch screen computer, now that Sprint and Samsung have announced that their first trial WiMax network (in the Baltimore/Washington, D.C., area) is ready for commercial service. The always-connected future is about to begin.

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May 21

PALO ALTO, Calif. - Having nearly tripled its audience and added about 20,000 new applications over the past year, Facebook Inc.’s popular online hangout is about to undergo a housecleaning.

Visitors who can’t stand the clutter that’s been piling up will be glad to see that the site’s new look sweeps disparate bits of information into categories marked by tabs at the top of each user’s customized home page.

Basic personal background and interests will be filed under an “info” tab, for instance, while news about users’ buddies’ latest activities will land under a “feed” tab, pictures will be corralled in a “photo” section and applications will be easily located under a “programs” tab. That content is now scattered, creating a confusing mishmash that has frustrated some Facebook users.

The facelift, in the works since January, is to debut in June.

Besides tidying the site, the overhaul should give users more control over their profiles, Facebook managers said Wednesday as they previewed the redesign at the startup’s Palo Alto headquarters. Users will be able to magnify information they want to emphasize and downplay other features, for example.

Even so, many users are likely to protest, said Mark Slee, the Facebook product manager overseeing the facelift.

“Change is difficult for our users, even positive changes,” Slee said. “But we are pretty confident that we can walk everyone through this so they will be engaged with the changes and enjoy them.”

Facebook has had to quell two user rebellions since Mark Zuckerberg started the site a little over four years ago while he was still an undergraduate at Harvard University.

In 2006, users railed against a feature called “news feed” as too intrusive because it shared too much information about their activities. The backlash caused Zuckerberg to apologize and tweak the application to give users more control over how the information was shared. The news feed is now a Facebook staple.

Zuckerberg, 24, apologized again late last year after a tracking tool called “Beacon” caught users off guard by broadcasting information about their shopping habits and personal preferences expressed by their activity at other Web sites. Facebook decided to allow users to turn off Beacon, diminishing its reach and possible value to advertisers.

Despite those hiccups, Facebook has emerged as Silicon Valley’s hottest startup since Internet search leader Google Inc., which recently has been losing some of its prized employees to Facebook. Ben Ling, a former top engineer at Google, is part of the team working on Facebook’s overhaul.

Microsoft Corp. put its stamp of approval on Facebook late last year by paying $240 million for a 1.6 percent stake in the startup — a deal that implied a $15 billion value for Facebook.

Since dropping a $47.5 billion offer to buy Yahoo Inc., Microsoft reportedly has been mulling a bid for Facebook, although Zuckerberg has repeatedly indicated he wants to preserve the privately held company’s independence.

Facebook turned into a potential gold mine as it extended beyond its initial goal of allowing college students swap information about each other. The site now has 70 million users worldwide, up from about 24 million a year ago.

Zuckerberg’s decision to open Facebook to outside applications last year has played a key role in Facebook’s rapid growth. Since then, developers have contributed 20,000 applications that make it easier to distribute photos, share music and play games.

But all those programs were starting to make Facebook look jumbled — a problem that also has plagued the Internet’s largest social network, News Corp.’s Myspace.com.

Facebook is trying to address the situation without alienating the outside developers who helped fuel the site’s success. That’s taken on added importance since Google launched a network last year to help developers create applications to run on multiple Web sites.

After spending months addressing their concerns, Facebook plans to open a “sandbox” where programmers can experiment with how things will work at the redesigned Facebook.

“There may be some short-term pain, but I think there will be more long-term gains,” predicted Ling, who is Facebook’s director of platform product marketing.

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May 21

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May 21

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May 21

Apple’s doing well in the high-rent district of the computer industry, according to NPD.

On Friday eWeek published some data confirmed by NPD that reveals Apple now owns 66 percent of the U.S. retail market for personal computers that cost more than $1,000. Its percentage of the U.S. retail market in general is 14 percent, according to NPD.

Apple only sells one Mac below $1,000–the Mac mini–so it’s not all that surprising that it would do well in that category, given the momentum behind Mac sales over the past year. By contrast, the single largest category of notebooks available at Best Buy–when sorted by price–falls between $700 and $899. And two-thirds of the desktops on the site are priced below $1,000.

These numbers don’t include an awful lot of sales–such as corporate PCs that account for about half the market, and online-heavy sellers such as Dell–but tend to illustrate trends in the U.S. PC market over time. Apple only had about 18 percent of the same category in January 2006, according to Fortune. That was the same month Apple introduced its first Intel-based Mac.

This is a profitable category, however, that all PC companies covet. Those PC companies may be reaching corporate customers at those price points, but Apple is dominating the consumer half of the high end.

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May 21

LONDON (AFP) - Oil prices headed towards a record high of 130 dollars a barrel on Wednesday on anxiety about stretched supplies in the face of strong demand for energy, analysts said.

New York’s main oil futures contract, light sweet crude for July delivery, rose 35 cents to 129.33 dollars a barrel. On Tuesday it reached an all-time high of 129.60 dollars.

London’s Brent crude contract for July showed a gain of 46 cents to 128.30 dollars a barrel on Wednesday after spiking to a record summit of 128.53 dollars earlier in the day.

The market was awaiting the latest weekly snapshot of energy inventories in the United States — the world’s biggest consumer of oil — to be published by US government on Wednesday.

Tony Nunan, of Mitsubishi Corp.’s international petroleum business, said that concerns over supplies not keeping up with demand were driving prices higher.

“The market is technically and fund-driven right now,” he said on Wednesday, referring to investors buying into oil in hopes for higher returns.

David Moore, a commodity strategist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, said a weaker US dollar and “the recent trend for analysts to revise higher their oil price forecasts” are helping to push up prices.

Moore added there were reports that the need for diesel-fuelled power generation in earthquake-affected areas of China was boosting demand for the fuel.

The Chinese government said on Tuesday the death toll from the 8.0 magnitude earthquake that devastated the nation’s southwest on May 12 had risen to 40,075.

Despite calls by the United States for the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to raise output to cool prices, OPEC president Chakib Khelil said on Monday that the oil cartel would take no decision on production before a meeting in September.

Analysts said a decision by Saudi Arabia to raise output had not done much to lower crude prices. Many OPEC officials argue that record oil prices are being driven by speculators seizing on geopolitical unrest, such as in Nigeria — Africa’s biggest exporter of crude.

Eric Wittenauer, analyst at Wachovia Securities, said reports about growing tensions between Washington and Tehran heightened concerns about a conflict that could affect oil supplies in Iran and the wider Middle East.

He said the market reacted to an article in the Jerusalem Post that said US President George W. Bush “intends to attack Iran before the end of his term.”

“We have certainly not ruled out the possibility of conflict later this year,” Wittenauer said.

In Washington on Tuesday the House of Representatives passed a bill authorizing the federal government to sue OPEC in US courts over alleged price fixing, in the latest swipe at the cartel over skyrocketing oil prices.

Bush has however threatened to veto the legislation, although its margin of passage in the House suggested Democrats may get a two-thirds majority needed to sustain the largely symbolic measure.

Oil prices have jumped more than a quarter since the start of 2008, when they struck 100 dollars a barrel for the first time.

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