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Video Games

North Korea Home to Lamest Arcade in the World

Under the leadership of ruler Kim Jong Il, the totalitarian state of North Korea has been notoriously isolated and secretive. It's incredibly difficult to obtain information or photographs from within the nation, but an anonymous freedom fighter has apparently released some incriminating photographs that demonstrate a disturbingly cruel attitude toward North Korea's youth.

The photos depict a depressingly sterile, outdated, and lonely video game arcade. The room, which looks like a lounge in a psychiatric hospital, has no invigorating neon lights, strobes, bells, or whistles. Most of the games also appear to be at least a decade old, but the knockoff of the classic Midway submarine game 'Sea Raider,' complete with periscope, does look like it might be entertaining, if it's operational.

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Editor's Picks

Best of the Rest: North Korean Beer Ad, Camera-Killing iPods?


There's a load of great tech news happening out there every day, and, unfortunately, we just can't cover it all. Here are a few of the other noteworthy things we saw today on our never-ending journey through the wild, wild Web.
  • Now making the rounds of the Web: North Korea's first ever television ad -- a strange, two-minute clip for Taedog River Beer, "pride of Pyongyang." [Foreign Policy]
  • Word online is that Apple will be bringing a camera to the iPod. Does this spell the end of the point and shoot? [Wired]
  • Tame that Facebook overload with these eight tips to mastering the social network that you just can't escape. [Geeksugar]
  • VLC, a video app known for handling almost any movie file you can throw at it, just hit 1.0.0. Get the newest version here. [TUAW]
Got a tip? Want to talk to us? In need of more choice links like these? Drop us a line on Twitter and check out our new Tumblr blog.

Google, Visionaries

'Citizen Spies' Using Google Earth to Uncover Secrets of North Korea



During Kim Jong Il's reign as leader of North Korea, the nation has been shrouded in mystery, with the government only periodically breaking its silence in order to tout fantastical accomplishments of the ruler and his nation. The veil of secrecy is now slowly being lifted, though, thanks to surveillance work carried out by ordinary citizens using Google Earth and information gleaned from news releases and eyewitness accounts.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Curtis Melvin, a doctoral candidate at George Mason University, has been spearheading the "citizen spy" movement. Melvin and his fellow not-so-clandestine agents, using "democratized intelligence," have created North Korea Uncovered, a file which details the locations of nuclear facilities, air fields and dams, as well as the nation's transportation and electrical grids (pictured above).

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Cell Phones

North Korea Lifts Cell-Phone Ban

North Korea Eases Ban on Cell PhonesWe take many freedoms for granted, like the freedom to own and use a cell phone. In some countries cell phone use is banned, most notably North Korea, where getting caught on a cell phone is a crime punishable by public execution. But, the restrictive nation is finally starting to lift the ban, allowing its citizens to carry mobile phones.

Cell phones have been banned in North Korea since a 2004 explosion in the city of Ryongchon. Their use fell under other bans that included the distribution of leaflets or contact with anyone outside of the country. The ban on cell phones will first be lifted in the capitol city of Pyongyang sometime this year, and then extended throughout the country later. Egypt's Orascom Telecom will provide wireless service.

From textually.org and donga.com

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