Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty

RFE/RL journalists report the news in 21 countries where a free press is banned by the government or not fully established. We provide what many people cannot get locally: uncensored news, responsible discussion, and open debate.

Jul 082013
 
DistanceStudent

Massive Open Online Courses available globally without cost.

by Richard Solash

WASHINGTON DC, July 06, 2013 — It's more than 11,000 kilometers from Shakargarh, a city in northeastern Pakistan, to the venerated halls of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, one of the top universities in the United States.Twenty-five-year-old Khalid Raza lives in Shakargarh but is taking "The Challenges of Global Poverty," a course taught by a former adviser to the World Bank and a professor of international economics at MIT.

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Jun 102013
 

Protesters moved by economic concerns, wary of religious manipulation.

by Glenn Kates

ISTANBUL, June 8, 2013 — A bagpipe squeals over Taksim Square as a ring of demonstrators dances merrily around.  The circle largely represents the grab bag of disparate groups that has come together in their anger at Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. They say he is becoming increasingly authoritarian and many claim that he has tried to force Islamism — through laws like restrictions on alcohol sales — on a segment of the population that cherishes its secularism.

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Jun 032013
 

Protesters praise economy but demand respect for human rights.

by Abbas Djavadi

The uproar started all too typically, with a rather minor event. Last week, a few thousand people protested against plans to allow construction of a shopping mall in a park near Istanbul's central Taksim Square. An unexpectedly harsh crackdown by police armed with tear gas provoked tens of thousands more to pour into the area. Soon the protests spread to other districts of Istanbul and on to the major Turkish cities of Ankara and Izmir.

By the second and third days of unrest, the protests began to focus more on the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and less on the plans to raze the park near Istanbul's Taksim Square. The protests, though largely limited to Turkey's three largest cities, seemed to have united young and old, secular and conservative-religious, and rich and poor. Continue reading »

May 272013
 
IslamicBank

Open to all faiths, Islamic banks have survived in global economic crisis.

by Charles Recknagel

May 25, 2013 — When Islamic banking was first developed in the 1970s in the Persian Gulf states, its customers were almost exclusively observant Muslims who wanted a banking system that complied with their religious values. These include prohibitions against lending money with interest, which is defined as usury, and investing in businesses deemed morally harmful, such as alcohol or pornography.

But today, Islamic banking is getting wider attention, including among non-Muslims. That is because Islamic banks, which are open to people of all faiths, have largely survived the global economic crisis intact. So far, none has had to receive substantial bailouts to keep them afloat, suggesting that they somehow offer a safer haven to savers than conventional banks.

Mohammed Amin, a London-based Islamic finance consultant, says that perception is partly true, and partly not.
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May 132013
 
MedicalMask

The new virus seems deadly but not particularly contagious.

by Daisy Sindelar

 It’s been a decade since severe acute respiratory syndrome, widely known as SARS, swept through Asia and beyond, killing some 775 people and raising fears of a global pandemic. Now health officials are expressing alarm about a similar virus — called novel coronavirus — that emerged on the Arabian peninsula last autumn.

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May 092013
 

Woman candidate takes on Taliban fighting for Islamic rule in May 11 election.

by Abubakar Siddique

Election day is approaching in Pakistan, and women in one violence-wracked province are working hard to ensure they have a voice. Tens of millions of women are expected to refrain from voting during the May 11 general elections due to societal restrictions, failures in the electoral system, or the very real threat of violence. Continue reading »

Apr 222013
 

Kyrgyz former neighbors talk about Tsarnaevs, North Caucasus ties.

by Bruce Jacobs

TOKMOK, Kyrgyzstan, April 20, 2013 — Before their family moved to the United States a decade ago, Boston Marathon bombing suspects Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev spent some of their early, formative years in the northern Kyrgyz town of Tokmok, home to the country's largest ethnic Chechen community.

RFE/RL Kyrgyz Service correspondent Timur Toktonaliev and cameraman Ulan Asanaliev traveled to Tokmok, which sits near the border with Kazakhstan, one day after the death of Tamerlan and the capture of Dzhokhar after a massive manhunt in the Boston area. They spoke to family friends and other members of the community who knew the Tsarnaevs.

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Apr 112013
 
MikhailBeketov

Crusading Russian journalist dies five years after severe beating left him totally disabled.

from Radio Free Europe

Crusading Russian journalist Mikhail Beketov died on April 8, five years after being savagely beaten in his hometown of Khimki near Moscow. Beketov, who was left severely brain damaged from the attack, had uncovered alleged large-scale corruption surrounding the construction of a controversial Moscow-St. Petersburg highway through the Khimki Forest.

RFE/RL’s Claire Bigg spoke to prominent opposition campaigner Yevgenia Chirikova, the leader of the Defenders of Khimki Forest movement and a close friend of Beketov.

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Apr 112013
 

Campaign to support gay youth goes global.

by Daisy Sindelar

In 2010, the US journalist and sex-advice columnist Dan Savage posted a video on YouTube in which he and his husband talked about the challenges of growing up gay.  Their aim was simple — to send a message to American teenagers coming out as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT) that their struggles wouldn’t last forever. 

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Apr 082013
 
3DPrinter

Soon, anyone with a computer and a 3D printer can be a manufacturer.

by Antoine Blua

It merited just one line in US President Barack Obama's State of the Union address in February, but it could change the very nature of manufacturing, alter the global trade balance, and potentially spark a new industrial revolution. It is something known as 3D printing, which Obama claimed "has the potential to revolutionize the way we make almost everything."

So what exactly is 3D printing?

The term is actually a colloquial phrase for something called "additive manufacturing" — a process of assembling products by sending a digital file to a machine that stacks layers of plastic, resins, ceramics, metal, or other materials on top of each other.

“It’s going to open up so many new possibilities for new businesses, new business models, start-up companies, entirely new types of products that before were very expensive or impossible to produce.”

Engineers and designers in the automotive and aerospace sectors have been using the process for decades to build prototypes. Many complex parts manufactured by 3D printing are present on aircraft, unmanned aerial vehicles, and satellites. And in the medical industry, three-dimensional printing has also been used to make hip implants out of titanium and dental prosthetics out of ceramic material.

But just as was the case in the computing industry a generation ago, 3D printing technology is advancing rapidly and its cost is falling dramatically. And this means something that was once restricted to a few elite industries is quickly becoming more widely available and affordable.  Some three-dimensional printers, for example, now sell for as little as $1,000.

According to Terry Wohlers, president of the US-based Wohlers Associates and a pioneer in the field of 3D printing, the possibilities are practically limitless.

"It's going to open up so many new possibilities for new businesses, new business models, start-up companies, entirely new types of products that before were very expensive or impossible to produce," he says. "So there's a very exciting array of possibilities that are developing as a result of this technology."

The technology is already catching on in some niche industries, including those producing figurines, smartphone cases, handbags, and lamps.  Fashion designers are also using additive manufacturing to produce jewelry and clothing, employing materials such as nylon.

Architects, meanwhile, are working on ways to use 3D printing to manufacture building components in concrete. There is even a race afoot to construct the world's first house built entirely with 3D printing products. Researchers are also seeking ways to use the technology to make body parts with biological material, such as cartilage, bone, and skin. 

There is a race afoot to construct the world's first house built entirely with 3D printing products. Researchers are also seeking ways to use the technology to make body parts with biological material, such as cartilage, bone, and skin.

At the same time, many schools across the United States are already being equipped with 3D printers.

Wohlers Associates predicts the additive manufacturing industry will be valued at $3.1 billion worldwide by 2016 and $5.2 billion by 2020.

Futurist Thomas Frey, director of the DaVinci Institute in the US state of Colorado, believes 3D printing will “affect virtually every aspect of society" and enable producers to cheaply and efficiently customize their products to meet the specific desires of individual consumers.

“If you can imagine yourself going into a clothing store in the next few years, the first thing that will happen is that they will scan your body and they will send that information to a machine that can print out the clothing that you want," he says. "So you can pick out whatever fashion you want, whatever colors you want, and they'll print it out right there on the spot. And it will not only be your clothing, but it will also be your shoes."

While the "gee whiz" factor of this emerging technology is certainly high, it could have far-reaching implications for the global economy. Many see 3D printing as an opportunity for developed economies to reclaim certain sectors of industrial manufacturing from developing countries.

London-based economist George Magnus suggests that 3D printing could “tilt [the] competitive edge" in manufacturing back to the United Sates, Western Europe, and Japan.

“Why manufacture in China — with all the problems from rising labor costs to governance and [intellectual-property] protection, and with all the costs of shipping raw materials in and finished products out — when you can do all this close to your markets and customers much more cheaply?” he says.

“Why manufacture in China — with all the problems from rising labor costs to governance and [intellectual-property] protection, and with all the costs of shipping raw materials in and finished products out — when you can do all this close to your markets and customers much more cheaply?” he says.

With 3D printing, it is no longer necessary to construct complex assembly lines before production can begin. Factories using the technology also require fewer workers and materials, reducing production costs.

But don't write the obituary for traditional assembly-line manufacturing just yet. Additive manufacturing also has its limitations, according to some analysts.

"Today, 3D printing is less than 0.1 percent of conventional manufacturing in the total services and products made," says Hod Lipson, an associate professor at Cornell University in the U.S. state of New York and co-author of the book Fabricated: The New World of 3D Printing. He believes additive manufacturing still "has a long way to go" before it becomes completely commonplace.

3D printing makes sense for manufacturing highly technical products with complex designs, Wohlers says. But it is less efficient for simple goods produced in high volumes, like stadium seats and trash cans.

The impact of the technology will also be felt in the workforce in developed Western economies. It is much less labor intensive than traditional assembly-line manufacturing, but at the same time it will create a market for more high-tech jobs.

The impact of the technology will also be felt in the workforce in developed Western economies. It is much less labor intensive than traditional assembly-line manufacturing, but at the same time it will create a market for more high-tech jobs.

“Programmers, designers, software and IT personnel, machine minders, and supervisers are the brains — and the brawn input won't be as big,” says Magnus.

As 3D technology spreads, it is bound to raise some important legal issues, specifically regarding intellectual property, copyright, and liability.

"If you print a steering wheel and the steering wheel breaks, who is to blame?" asks Lipson. "Is it the designer, is it the equipment manufacturer, [or] is it the material manufacturer? There are a lot of people in the chain. Responsibilities are not clear."

Lipson adds that the technology is also not without its dangers. He notes, for example, the possibility of printable firearms.

"It's not going to be a military-grade firearm, but it can be in a kind of plastic, disposable firearm that can shoot only a few rounds," he says. "But even that can do damage, especially to the person who is firing the firearm. And that's something that we need to think about."

In Texas, a group called Defense Distributed already runs a website from which gun lovers can download the files needed to produce firearm parts using a 3D printer. 

The group has also posted videos on YouTube of rifles firing rounds with 3D printed magazines.

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