Thursday, September 3, 2015

Russia. Crimea. Partenit. Sycamore, age 50 years. 03.09.2015.

These trees live up to 2000 years. This sycamore quite young. And he was great!


It is located in Paradise Park. This branch of the Nikitsky botanical garden.

Russia. Zaraysk city and Zaraysk Kremlin. 03.09.2015.

In late August and decided to ride a motorcycle. Where to go? I went to watch the city of Zaraysk. There is Zaraisky Kremlin. This is one of the smallest of the Kremlin in Russia. Zaraysk city located 180 kilometers from Moscow.














I go here on this bike: 200ss, 13,6HP:


The photo motorcycle in Belarus. Lida city.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Russia. Luhovicy. Monument cucumber. 28 August 2015. 02.09.2015.


On the track "Ural" is a monument to the famous Lukhovitsy cucumber, are distinguished by their excellent quality.
Text on the monument reads: "Cucumbers - breadwinner from grateful residents.

Saying: "There are three in the Russian capital of Moscow, St. Petersburg, Luhovicy."

RUS: "Есть в России три столицы: Москва, Питер, Луховицы."

Russia. Moscow. Gorky Park. 30 August 2015. Street musicians. 02.09.2015.


Street musicians play in Gorky Park in Moscow.



Monday, June 6, 2011

Russia will create a service center in Afghanistan helicopter"Mi". 06/06/2011.

Russia and the United States in Afghanistan will create aservice center helicopters series "MI ". On it informs RIA Novosti news agency. Haul and repair helicoptersfrom Afghanistan to Europe is expensive.

Rosoboronexport and the command of the U.S. Army signed a contract to supply the Air Force in Afghanistan 21 Mi-17V5in the amount of 367.5 million dollars. The first machines will be transferred to the customer in October 2011. A fully all Air Force helicopters in Afghanistan will be at the end of 2012.

Currently, the Air Force in Afghanistan operate flights on theMi-8 and Mi-17. In addition, armed countries are ninetransportation-combat Mi-35.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Russia renounce "Topol" in favor of "Yars". 01.12.2010.

Strategic Missile Forces will gradually rearm with single-warhead mobile missile complexes RS-12m2 Topol-M mobile systems to the new RS-24 Yars. This was stated by the commander of the Strategic Missile Forces, Lieutenant General Sergei Karakayev. According to him, the new complex on a par with the already accepted for service, "Topol" will be "based strike group SRF for the foreseeable future, until 2020.

Over the past period pilot alerting missiles 'Yars' has established itself as a reliable weapon, and therefore the decision on re-rolling groups for this type of missile systems. The first regiment with a new mobile missile system had been put on pilot combat duty in early 2010.

Meanwhile, Adopt the missiles of the Topol-M silo-based will continue. It is expected that by late 2010 for combat duty will arise sixth missile regiment, armed with stationary Topol. Work on upgrading missile regiments on missile system Topol-M 'steady bases will continue in 2011.

Development "Yars" deals Moscow. The missile will be capable of carrying nuclear warheads 3-4 individual guidance capacity of 150-300 kilotons each. Technical data missiles are classified. It is assumed that it can hit targets at a distance of 11,000 kilometers.

Source: http://www.lenta.ru/news/2010/11/30/rvsn/

Monday, November 22, 2010

Worm Was Perfect for Sabotaging Centrifuges. 22.11.2010.

Experts dissecting the computer worm suspected of being aimed at Iran’s nuclear program have determined that it was precisely calibrated in a way that could send nuclear centrifuges wildly out of control.

Their conclusion, while not definitive, begins to clear some of the fog around the Stuxnet worm, a malicious program detected earlier this year on computers, primarily in Iran but also India, Indonesia and other countries.

The paternity of the worm is still in dispute, but in recent weeks officials from Israel have broken into wide smiles when asked whether Israel was behind the attack, or knew who was. American officials have suggested it originated abroad.

The new forensic work narrows the range of targets and deciphers the worm’s plan of attack. Computer analysts say Stuxnet does its damage by making quick changes in the rotational speed of motors, shifting them rapidly up and down.

Changing the speed “sabotages the normal operation of the industrial control process,” Eric Chien, a researcher at the computer security company Symantec, wrote in a blog post.

Those fluctuations, nuclear analysts said in response to the report, are a recipe for disaster among the thousands of centrifuges spinning in Iran to enrich uranium, which can fuel reactors or bombs. Rapid changes can cause them to blow apart. Reports issued by international inspectors reveal that Iran has experienced many problems keeping its centrifuges running, with hundreds removed from active service since summer 2009.

“We don’t see direct confirmation” that the attack was meant to slow Iran’s nuclear work, David Albright, president of the Institute for Science and International Security, a private group in Washington that tracks nuclear proliferation, said in an interview Thursday. “But it sure is a plausible interpretation of the available facts.”

Intelligence officials have said they believe that a series of covert programs are responsible for at least some of that decline. So when Iran reported earlier this year that it was battling the Stuxnet worm, many experts immediately suspected that it was a state-sponsored cyberattack.

Until last week, analysts had said only that Stuxnet was designed to infect certain kinds of Siemens equipment used in a wide variety of industrial sites around the world.

But a study released Friday by Mr. Chien, Nicolas Falliere and Liam O. Murchu at Symantec, concluded that the program’s real target was to take over frequency converters, a type of power supply that changes its output frequency to control the speed of a motor.

The worm’s code was found to attack converters made by two companies, Fararo Paya in Iran and Vacon in Finland. A separate study conducted by the Department of Homeland Security confirmed that finding, a senior government official said in an interview on Thursday.

Then, on Wednesday, Mr. Albright and a colleague, Andrea Stricker, released a report saying that when the worm ramped up the frequency of the electrical current supplying the centrifuges, they would spin faster and faster. The worm eventually makes the current hit 1,410 Hertz, or cycles per second — just enough, they reported, to send the centrifuges flying apart.

In a spooky flourish, Mr. Albright said in the interview, the worm ends the attack with a command to restore the current to the perfect operating frequency for the centrifuges — which, by that time, would presumably be destroyed.

“It’s striking how close it is to the standard value,” he said.

The computer analysis, his Wednesday report concluded, “makes a legitimate case that Stuxnet could indeed disrupt or destroy” Iranian centrifuge plants.

The latest evidence does not prove Iran was the target, and there have been no confirmed reports of industrial damage linked to Stuxnet. Converters are used to control a number of different machines, including lathes, saws and turbines, and they can be found in gas pipelines and chemical plants. But converters are also essential for nuclear centrifuges.

On Wednesday, the chief of the Department of Homeland Security’s cybersecurity center in Virginia, Sean McGurk, told a Senate committee that the worm was a “game changer” because of the skill with which it was composed and the care with which it was geared toward attacking specific types of equipment.

Meanwhile, the search for other clues in the Stuxnet program continues — and so do the theories about its origins.

Ralph Langner, a German expert in industrial control systems who has examined the program and who was the first to suggest that the Stuxnet worm may have been aimed at Iran, noted in late September that a file inside the code was named “Myrtus.” That could be read as an allusion to Esther, and he and others speculated it was a reference to the Book of Esther, the Old Testament tale in which the Jews pre-empt a Persian plot to destroy them.

Writing on his Web site last week, Mr. Langner noted that a number of the data modules inside the program contained the date “Sept. 24, 2001,” clearly long before the program was written. He wrote that he believed the date was a message from the authors of the program, but did not know what it might mean.

Last month, researchers at Symantec also speculated that a string of numbers found in the program — 19790509 — while seeming random, might actually be significant. They speculated that it might refer to May 9, 1979, the day that Jewish-Iranian businessman Habib Elghanian was executed in Iran after being convicted of spying for Israel.

Interpreting what the clues might mean is a fascinating exercise for computer experts and conspiracy theorists, but it could also be a way to mislead investigators.

Indeed, according to one investigator, the creation date of the data modules might instead suggest that the original attack code in Stuxnet was written long before the program was actually distributed.

According to Tom Parker, a computer security specialist at Securicon LLC, a security consulting firm based in Washington, the Stuxnet payload appeared to have been written by a team of highly skilled programmers, while the “dropper” program that delivered the program reflected an amateur level of expertise. He said the fact that Stuxnet was detected and had spread widely in a number of countries was an indicator that it was a failed operation.

“The end target is going to be able to know they were the target, and the attacker won’t be able to use this technique again,” he said.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/19/world/middleeast/19stuxnet.html?_r=1&scp=2&sq=stuxnet&st=cse

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Putin gave an account of the restoration in Russia after the summer fires. Work carried out in time. 01.11.2010.

Construction of dwelling houses to replace houses destroyed by wildland fires of the summer of 2010, is completed. On this November 1, said Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, his words convey NIA "Nizhny Novgorod". The announcement was made in the village of Nizhny Novgorod Verhneya Vereya, in late July, is completely destroyed by fire.

"I set a task to complete all work on the construction of houses by November 1. It's done. All the houses are built, people have received housing and monetary compensation. There are several contentious issues, they are considered in court", - said Putin.

He thanked the builders and said he was satisfied with the quality of built environment. "In the Verhneya Vereya built over 400 houses, each of them with gas, electricity, sewerage and telephone. There are appliances, furniture available at a deep discount," - said the prime minister.

Putin noted that the amount of assistance to those whose property is destroyed by fire has been increased from 50 000 to 200 000 rubles (1220 to 4880 euro) per person. For each victim paid a million (24 400 euro).

In Vyksybsk District of Nizhny Novgorod region as a result of summer fires killed 22 people. The deputy head of the district was charged with negligence. Putin twice visited the Verhneya Vereya - inspected the village after a fire in July and followed the progress of work in September.

Fires in Russia have begun as a result of heat waves of summer 2010. In total, the fire covered more than 800 thousand hectares. Fire killed more than 50 people. In addition, Moscow suffered from smog, was recorded a sharp increase in mortality.

At the direction of Vladimir Putin, on-site construction of new homes for victims of the fire was set the camera to a recovery operation can be monitored live (http://premier.gov.ru/build/5.html?pos=0, other villages: http://premier.gov.ru/build/).

Source: http://www.lenta.ru/news/2010/11/01/firerecovery/

Vietnam receives first Russian submarine in 2013. 02.11.2010.

The first diesel-electric submarine of Project 636 "Varshavyanka" for the Navy in Vietnam will be fully ready in 2013. On this, as reported by ITAR-TASS, said deputy general director of the Central Design Bureau for Marine Engineering Sergei Smirnov. As expected, at the same time the submarine will be transferred to the customer. When did Vietnam get all bought from Russian submarine, was not specified.

Vietnam has purchased from Russia six submarines of Project 636 at the end of 2009. The deal amounted to 1,8 billion dollars. Engaged in fulfillment of the order "Admiralty Shipyards", which, as previously reported, will be able to pass the customer on one submarine a year through the production of connection to the public ships of Project 636. Thus, Vietnam may get the last of the submarines purchased in 2018.

Currently, Vietnam does not have the submarine fleet, submarines of Project 636 will be the first submarine in service with the country. In March 2010, Russian Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov said the navy would help Vietnam establish a point-based submarines. It is also possible that Russia will give Vietnam a loan that the country will spend on the creation of databases, the purchase of various ships and the establishment of naval aviation.

Displacement of submarines of Project 636 "Varshavyanka" is 3.95 tons. Submarines capable of speeds up to 20 knots, and the battery life of their voyage is 45 days. Project 636 boats have six torpedo tubes caliber of 533 millimeters, which can also be used for setting mines and launch cruise missiles.

Source: http://www.lenta.ru/news/2010/10/29/submarine/

Thursday, October 28, 2010

EU rumbling over German-French fiscal discipline push. 27.2010.

EU leaders are on edge over the prospect of a full-blown political shoving match when they gather for a summit this Thursday. Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel and France’s President Nicolas Sarkozy have upset many of their partners with a call for EU treaty changes to enforce fiscal discipline.

Particularly alarming to some is Berlin’s demand to make it possible to suspend the voting rights of states which seriously violate key principles.

European Council President Herman Van Rompuy says his role is to find consensus amid
the member states’ varying positions.

Eurogroup chief Jean-Claude Juncker, also Luxembourg’s prime minister, said the Franco-German deal over reform of the EU’s budget rules was unacceptable.

European Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding (also of Luxembourg) said that reopening the Lisbon Treaty would be irresponsible.

Germany wants limited amendments to the treaty to allow for a permanent system to handle sovereign debt crises in countries that use the euro.

Merkel has threatened to block other reforms if no deal is reached on treaty alterations.

She did, however, bow to French demands to allow some political discretion over sanctions for deficit and debt deviants.

Analyst Daniel Gros, with the Centre for European Policy Studies, said: “It is very likely that other governments will see that the Germans have a point. Right now we do not have a procedure for restructuring the debt of a country in really big difficulties.”

At this Thursday and Friday’s talks in Brussels, EU leaders are expected to approve an agreement by a task force of finance ministers to impose sanctions on member states that violate budget deficit and debt limits.

Source: http://www.euronews.net/2010/10/27/eu-rumbling-over-german-french-fiscal-discipline-push/