Aquino insults murdered journalists

President Aquino  arrives at  Egmont Institute , Brussels.

President Aquino arrives at Egmont Institute , Brussels.

Marlene Esperat, Gerry Ortega , Nilo Baculio, Romy Olea must be turning in their graves now with President Aquino’s latest insult against murdered journalists just to defend his administration’s dismal record in putting a stop to the killing of journalists in the Philippines.

In Brussels last Tuesday, Aquino was asked about human rights violations in the country. In defending his administration, he cited as an example the killing of journalists that has earned for the Philippines the ignominious reputation of the third most dangerous place for journalists, next only to strife-torn Syria and Iraq.

“For instance, in the media killings, some who used to work in media died. Did they die because they were investigative journalists? Were they exercising their profession in a responsible manner, living up to journalistic ethics? Or did they perish because of other reasons?” Aquino said.

This is another example of Aquino’s warped thinking.

Human beings were killed. That’s murder. He should be concerned about it.

Whether the journalist’s killing was work related or not, that is still murder. And murder is a crime.

Aquino asks,” Were they exercising their profession in a responsible manner, living up to journalistic ethics?”
Granting that the mediaman violated journalistic ethics, killing him/her is still not justified. The Philippines is a government of laws. The party aggrieved by the journalists has options to seek redress; one of them is the libel law. Murder is never an option and of all people, the President, should never rationalize it.

Aquino should be reminded of his oath to “preserve and defend its Constitution, execute its laws, do justice to every man….”

Number one in the Constitution’s Bill of Rights says: “No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, nor shall any person be denied the equal protection of the laws.”

Who are Marlene Esperat, Gerry Ortega , Nilo Baculio, Romy Olea?

Romy Olea, Marlene Esperat, Nilo Baculio, Gerry Ortega

Romy Olea, Marlene Esperat, Nilo Baculio, Gerry Ortega

Marlene Garcia-Esperat started the expose of the diversion of hundreds of millions of money for farm fertilizer to the campaign kitty during the administration of Gloria Arroyo.

Marlene was killed in the presence of her children in her own home on March 24, 2005.

Gerry Ortega was a medical doctor who was also a broadcast journalist. He was also an environment activist. He was shot at the back at a used clothing store in Palawan on Jan. 24, 2011.

Nilo Baculio, a crusading journalist from Mindoro, was killed on June 12, 2014 by two motorcycle men riding in tandem. He was working on a story on illegal drugs syndicate at the time of his death.

Romy Olea, radio commentator of DWEB-FM in the province of Camarines Sur was shot several times in an ambush in barangay San Jose, Iriga City inthe morning of June 13, 2011 while he was on his way to work.

They are just four in the list of journalists killed in the Philippines.

The National Union of Journalists of the Philippines said “Aquino’s latest remarks on media killings expose a blatant disregard for justice.”

“This only buttresses our contention that Aquino cannot wash himself of the blood of those who have fallen under his watch and of those whose murders he continues to gloss over, for blaming the victims is tantamount to approval of the fate that befell them.”

BlackBerry Porsche Design P’9983 now official

Lazada Philippines

BlackBerry’s newest luxury smartphone the Porsche Design P’9983 is now official, and it sports a 3.1-inch touch screen display, dual-core Snapdragon S4 Plus CPU, and powered by BlackBerry OS 10.3.

blackberry porsche design P9983_1

BlackBerry Porsche Design P’9983 specs:
3.1-inch (720 x 720) IPS display, 328ppi
1.5GHz Qualcomm S4 Plus MSM8960 dual-core CPU
2GB RAM
64GB internal storage
up to 128GB via microSD
8 megapixel AF rear camera w/ LED flash, F2.2 lens with Sapphire glass
2 megapixel front camera
4G LTE, HSPA+
WiFi 802.11 a/b/g/n
Bluetooth 4.0 LE
NFC
FM Radio
GPS, A-GPS, GLONASS
USB 2.0
Micro HDMI
2,100mAh battery
BlackBerry OS 10.3
119 x 67.1 x 10.6 mm
140 g
Stainless steel chassis, glass-weave rear

Pricing and availability are yet to be announced.

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The post BlackBerry Porsche Design P’9983 now official appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

TBT: My first MP3 player

Lazada Philippines

Last week, Apple quietly dropped the iPod Classic from its online store which marks then end of an era for MP3 players. To some, the Classic was probably their first MP3 player or their first MP3 player they absolutely loved. For me, it made me remember my first MP3 player which I received almost 10 years ago.

I received my first MP3 player when I was still in college around 2004 or 2005. It wasn’t a shiny new iPod though (Apple has probably introduced the 4th or 5th gen iPod Classic during that time) but a Taiwanese-made Clicker Pocki 5-in-1 MP3 player.

clicker_1

Heavily influenced by the iPod’s signature white color, my Clicker also came in white. The design has more affinity towards the flash drive and only has 128MB capacity with 117MB usable, which equates to around 20 songs give or take. It uses a USB 1.1 interface and powered by a AAA battery, which is costly if you don’t use rechargeable batteries. Aside from that, it also doubles as a USB drive, voice recorder, and supports SD cards which I believe is up to 1GB. The Clicker also became my go-to SD card reader for my desktop back then.

clicker_2

It was light years away from what the iPod can offer but it was affordable. Times were tough and college wasn’t exactly cheap so the Clicker became my constant companion. To add to its value, it was a gift from my mom so I’m not complaining. And yes, I still have it and here’s what it looks like now:

clicker_3

It’s pretty banged up. The rubber grip is gone, the player doesn’t work anymore, but the flash drive still does.

After the Clicker, I shifted to Nokia phones to be my dedicated music player, starting with their XpressMusic line. I had the Nokia 5310 XpressMusic, then upgraded to a Nokia 5800 XpressMusic for its touchscreen display.

xpressmusic_1

I received my first Apple product in 2009 in the form of the iPod nano 4th gen. I fell in love with Apple’s design and simple interface that it encouraged me to upgrade to its iPod touch lineup. I bought the iPod touch 3rd gen in 2010 followed by the iPod touch 4th gen a year later. Both have been handed down in the family.

ipods_1

Fast forward to the present, dedicated music players are quickly being replaced by smartphones. Looking at my Clicker now, it amazes me how much technology has improved over the years. Right now my smartphone handles all my music needs and I don’t think I’d be needing a dedicated player anytime soon unless something remarkable comes along that will make me go back.

mp3 player_1

With this article I’m officially putting my first MP3 player to rest. I have no plans of throwing this away though. I would probably keep this for a few more years then show it to my son and tell him how we listened to digital music back then.

How about you? Do you still remember your first MP3 player? :)

The post TBT: My first MP3 player appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

TBT: My first MP3 player

Lazada Philippines

Last week, Apple quietly dropped the iPod Classic from its online store which marks then end of an era for MP3 players. To some, the Classic was probably their first MP3 player or their first MP3 player they absolutely loved. For me, it made me remember my first MP3 player which I received almost 10 years ago.

I received my first MP3 player when I was still in college around 2004 or 2005. It wasn’t a shiny new iPod though (Apple has probably introduced the 4th or 5th gen iPod Classic during that time) but a Taiwanese-made Clicker Pocki 5-in-1 MP3 player.

clicker_1

Heavily influenced by the iPod’s signature white color, my Clicker also came in white. The design has more affinity towards the flash drive and only has 128MB capacity with 117MB usable, which equates to around 20 songs give or take. It uses a USB 1.1 interface and powered by a AAA battery, which is costly if you don’t use rechargeable batteries. Aside from that, it also doubles as a USB drive, voice recorder, and supports SD cards which I believe is up to 1GB. The Clicker also became my go-to SD card reader for my desktop back then.

clicker_2

It was light years away from what the iPod can offer but it was affordable. Times were tough and college wasn’t exactly cheap so the Clicker became my constant companion. To add to its value, it was a gift from my mom so I’m not complaining. And yes, I still have it and here’s what it looks like now:

clicker_3

It’s pretty banged up. The rubber grip is gone, the player doesn’t work anymore, but the flash drive still does.

After the Clicker, I shifted to Nokia phones to be my dedicated music player, starting with their XpressMusic line. I had the Nokia 5310 XpressMusic, then upgraded to a Nokia 5800 XpressMusic for its touchscreen display.

xpressmusic_1

I received my first Apple product in 2009 in the form of the iPod nano 4th gen. I fell in love with Apple’s design and simple interface that it encouraged me to upgrade to its iPod touch lineup. I bought the iPod touch 3rd gen in 2010 followed by the iPod touch 4th gen a year later. Both have been handed down in the family.

ipods_1

Fast forward to the present, dedicated music players are quickly being replaced by smartphones. Looking at my Clicker now, it amazes me how much technology has improved over the years. Right now my smartphone handles all my music needs and I don’t think I’d be needing a dedicated player anytime soon unless something remarkable comes along that will make me go back.

mp3 player_1

With this article I’m officially putting my first MP3 player to rest. I have no plans of throwing this away though. I would probably keep this for a few more years then show it to my son and tell him how we listened to digital music back then.

How about you? Do you still remember your first MP3 player? :)

The post TBT: My first MP3 player appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.