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Communicate NewsText Generation Gap: U R 2 Old (JK)Children increasingly rely on personal technological devices to create social circles apart from their families, changing the way they communicate with their parents.Read Full Article British photographer takes top award with Afghan war imageSee the <a href="javascript:function pictureGalleryPopup(pubUrl,articleId){var newWin=window.open(pubUrl template/2.0-0/element/pictureGalleryPopup.jsp?id= articleId &offset=0§ionName=News,mywindow,menubar=0,resizable=0,width=615,height=655);};pictureGalleryPopup(http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/,3334115);">winning entries</a> <br/> <br/> A British photographer has scooped the top prize at the prestigious World Press Photo awards for his image of a US soldier collapsing with exhaustion after fighting militants in Afghanistan. <br/> <br/> Tim Hetherington’s picture of a US soldier resting in a bunker after an intense fire-fight was lauded by judges in Amsterdam, who said it was an image which communicated "the exhaustion of a nation."<br/> <br/> The award, which Mr Hetherington, 37, won while working for Vanity Fair magazine, is considered one of the greatest distinctions a photojournalist can achieve. <br/> <br/> The winning photograph depicts the soldier collapsing against a bunker wall, one hand held to his eyes and the other clutching his helmet. The bunker is named "Restrepo" after a soldier from his platoon who was recently killed by insurgents. <br/> <br/> It was taken on September 16, 2007, in the Korengal Valley, a strategic passage considered one of the most dangerous pieces of terrain for US forces in the world. With Taleban and al-Qaeda fighters fighting for control of the valley, it has seen some of the deadliest battles in the country, including the downing of a US helicopter in 2005 that killed all 16 commandos on board. <br/> <br/> “This image shows the exhaustion of a man and the exhaustion of a nation,” Gary Knight, the jury chairman, said in a statement. “We’re all connected to this. It is a picture of a man at the end of a line.” <br/> <br/> Mary Anne Golon, a fellow juror, commented: "I use all my energy to have people notice bad things. Theres a human quality to this picture. It says that conflict is the basis of this mans life."<br/> <br/> The colour photograph also took the second prize in the General News Stories category. <br/> <br/> Liverpool-born Mr Hetherington spent five months embedded with the 2nd Battalion Airborne of the 503rd US infantry while working with journalist Sebastian Junger on both a film for ABC and a story for Vanity Fair’s January 2008 issue titled <a href="http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2008/01/afghanistan200801">“Into the valley of death”</a> . <br/> <br/> In a <a href="http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/video/2008/junger_hetherington_video200801">video</a> recorded for Vanity Fair’s website, Mr Hetherington spoke of his fascination with the discordance between the soldiers’ home lives and the alien environment which they had been thrust into. <br/> <br/> “A lot of them are from Texas or the Midwest, classic middle America that I had never really been close to, and here I was in Afghanistan experiencing combat with these guys. And I suppose that’s what really struck me about them, this dissonance between what they were experiencing and where they had come from.” <br/> <br/> He said: “If you look at the statistics there have been 450 separate fire-fights in the five-and-a-half months of Battle Company’s deployment there. The type of fire-fights and the type of combat involved is a range, from indirect fire which can be where mortars are hitting one of the fire bases there to machine gun attacks to snipers.” <br/> <br/> As a photojournalist he tried to stay as close as possible to the action without endangering his own life and the lives of others, he explained. “There’s an oft-said comment by Robert Kappa that if your pictures aren’t good enough it’s because you’re not close enough, so I try to stay as close as possible to the action while also being aware of cover and aware of safety.” <br/> <br/> Mr Hetherington, who works as both a photographer and filmmaker and had won lesser prizes in the awards in 2000 and 2002, was this morning onboard a flight from the Pacific island of Palau and was expected to arrive in New York later today. It was unclear whether he had been informed of his success in the competition, which carries a cash prize of 10,000 euro. <br/> <br/> The awards, sponsored by the Dutch Postcode Lottery, Cannon and TNT, attracted a record 5,019 entrants this year from 125 countries. <br/> <br/> In addition to the overall winner, the jury awarded first, second and third prizes in 20 categories, and two honourable mentions. Getty Images won the most with five awards, taking first place in both Spot News Singles and Spot News Stories with a blurred image by John Moore, a US photographer, taken at the moment of the assassination of Benazir Bhutto in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, on December 27. <br/> <br/> A mesmerising shot of a dead mountain gorilla being carried out of Virunga National Park in Eastern Congo, strapped to a wooden stretcher, won a further award for Getty. The photo, by Brent Stirton, a South African photographer, took first prize in Contemporary Issues Singles. <br/> <br/> For Associated Press, Oded Balilty, last year’s Pulitzer Prize winner, took third prize for People in the News Stories for a series from Nanjing, China. AP also won an honorable mention for Spot News Singles for an image from the Gaza Strip by Emilio Morenatti, a Spanish photographer. <br/> <br/> Balazs Gardi, a Hungarian photographer working for VII Network, took first prize in both General News Singles and General News Stories for his photographs from Afghanistan - one of a man carrying a wounded young boy, and an eerie black-and-white shot of a mountain landscape titled “Operation Rock Avalanche.” <br/> <br/> Both were taken in the same region of southern Afghanistan as Mr Hetherington’s image. <br/> <br/> National Geographic swept the board in the Nature Stories category, with first place going to National Geographic Images for David Liittschwager’s magnified images of ocean life off the coast of Hawaii, and second and third places being awarded to National Geographic Magazine. <br/> <br/> The British chalked up another success in the Portraits category, with UK photographer “Platon” taking first place with his head shot of President Vladimir Putin of Russia for Time magazine. Time also won in the People in the News category, with a photo of Kurdish rebel fighters in Northern Iraq taken by Philippe Dudouit of Switzerland. <br/> <br/> Bulgarian Ivaylo Velev took the top prize in the Sports Action Singles category for Bul X Vision Photography Agency with his image of competitive skier Philippe Meier fleeing an avalanche in Flaine, France.Read Full Article Coping With the Caveman in the CribTrying to teach parents the skills to communicate with and soothe tantrum-prone children.Read Full Article BlackBerry communicates growing rivalry with Apple iPhoneBlackBerry yesterday threw down the gauntlet to Apple’s iPhone, outlining an aggressive push into the Californian group’s core consumer market after doubling profits and sales.Read Full Article Software That Fills a Cellphone GapSoftware radio could offer an elegant solution to a vexing problem: how to have a single handset communicate across multiple networks.Read Full Article External News for: communicateApple Files Patent for Mobile Social Networking - NewsFactor NetworkProduct Reviews (blog)Apple Files Patent for Mobile Social NetworkingNewsFactor NetworkApple is planning an ad-hoc social network called iGroups that would let users communicate without a central access point. ...Apple Patent Creates iPhone Social NetworkingChannelWebElgan: Why iGroups is coming to an iPhone near youComputerworldApple Working On A Wireless Social Networking App Coined “iGroups”My Gadget News (blog)all 77 news articles »Apple Files Patent for Mobile Social Networking - NewsFactor NetworkProduct Reviews (blog)Apple Files Patent for Mobile Social NetworkingNewsFactor NetworkApple is planning an ad-hoc social network called iGroups that would let users communicate without a central access point. ...Apple Patent Creates iPhone Social NetworkingChannelWebElgan: Why iGroups is coming to an iPhone near youComputerworldApple Working On A Wireless Social Networking App Coined “iGroups”My Gadget News (blog)all 77 news articles »March Madness: Using Tournament Brackets to Debate Academic Questions - New York Times (blog)March Madness: Using Tournament Brackets to Debate Academic QuestionsNew York Times (blog)Understands how informal and formal theatre, film, television, and electronic media productions create and communicate meaning 6. 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