My Coffee and My Thinking’s on this Monday – September 10th, 2012…

Americans Are become just plain “Lacking of knowledge, information, or awareness about something in particular:” or how about “ignorant” for the short version? That is my coffee thinking’s this morning…

However, my message is not intended to offer a scientific assessment. It is not intended to cajole your views! It was intentionally subjective and anecdotal. I was expressing my own personal frustration and disappointment. I perceive a strong current of anti-intellectualism in America. I perceive it every time I turn on the “media” and find reporters covering Michael Jackson or Anne Nichole Smith’s corpse for an entire month, while our empire’s war-making goes unreported. I perceive it when I go to an English tending country and see the inane tabloids and the mindless celebrity magazines. How can it not be obvious that we are being dumbed down?!

What would happen in America, if a child were to take an interest in chess or mathematics or science? I suspect that the child would be ridiculed and shunned. Seems to be no pride in being an intellect. I certainly don’t see our media celebrating achievement in chess or science. We do have “Academy Award” presentations that promote artistic achievement, but our arts are definitely divorced from political reality: I don’t think I have ever seen a movie about the struggle for peace…

So I think I have a right to be disappointed, a right to wish for less jingoism, less war-making, and more appreciation for intellect and imagination…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

No Debt For Russians: RBC Polls are Good to Follow…

I follow and I vote in a set of polls that are literally done everyday! Usually 10,000 to 20,000 people vote on these polls and they really are a lot better sense of Russia and what is going on than a poll that talks to a few hundred Siberians about issues in Moscow… 🙂

Here is the latest poll:

The reason that I bring it up is that this is really true for Russians. They are not like Americans in this aspect…

If you want it? Pay cash! Debt is an evil thing and when people wonder how Russians survive? You got it, no debt payments, they own everything they got… (Even if it is not that much!)

To see the daily polls. Go to this link http://www.rbcnews.com/ and go to the bottom of the page. That is where the polls are…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Two Trolls Passed Away Today…

But somehow one of them will come back to life as he tries to figure out another way to play troll games…

It is strange how they think that they do not show up like a sore thumb…

Why it is pretty obvious when, one comment comes from Germany, then from Florida, then from Texas and then – so on and so on. They love to use proxies and try to hide…

So when I first get a troll, I try to wait and see if they are a troll or just a paranoid person who is scared that the world will see where they live… 🙂

So today two trolls became history and they were wiped out. At first I thought they were possibly the same in one troll, but alas, they were definitely from different parts of America, but they went hand in hand today to the Troll dustbin…

I will say that the DC Trolls are almost gone and that has to do with the avalanche of information that I sent to a few certain agencies and proved that government computers were being used to perform more than just porn watching, as government workers work. “Me Oh My” I had it pin pointed down to the exact buildings and computers that the offending excrement came from. It got very quiet after that…

I have been trying the troll spray that you see in the photo, but I find that “Don’t Feed the Troll!” Works the best…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

“Anti Capitalism” march held in Moscow…

“Capitalism – the source of all the problems that we are experiencing,” – said the organizer of the march.

Interesting, I heard that more reporters showed up than protestors…

MOSCOW, September 9 – RIA Novosti. Anticapitalist march and rally on clearing in the center of Moscow collected about five hundred participants and members of the media and ended without incident, told reporters on Sunday at the press service of the Russian capital GUMVD.

“In the march and rally in Polianka attended to 500 people, including members of the media, any disturbance of public order was not allowed,” – said the representative of the central board.

He added that the event is over.

Read more: http://ria.ru/moscow/20120909/746485486.html # ixzz263J4HmrB

Windows to Russia…

Wonderful Khalva or Halva: Kinda a Russian Taste Treat…

Russian Khalva comes originally from Middle East and is especially popular in Kazakhstan. It is made of walnuts or sunflower seeds and rich syrup. Excellent addition to your gourmet knowledge! Halva (халва) is used in Russia as a traditional dessert. Sometimes Russian children are given halva as candy…

I know that on visits to Russian homes, this is a favorite with many people. There is as always a thousand ways to make it, but this seems to get the job done. So try this delicious recipe for a traditional dessert today…

Ingredients:
480ml/16fl.oz. Milk
4 tbsp Sugar
1 tbsp Cornstarch
100g/4oz shelled Walnut Halves
8 tbsp Butter, melted
1/2 teaspoon Ground Cinnamon

Instructions:

Preheat the oven to 200 C or about 400 F…

Place most of the milk in a saucepan together with the sugar heat over a medium heat, stirring constantly, until the sugar is dissolved…

In a small bowl mix the remaining cold milk with the cornstarch until it forms a smooth running paste then pour into the hot milk-sugar mixture, bring to a boil stirring constantly and continue to cook until the mixture thickens to a custard-like consistency. Remove from the heat and set aside… (Remember cornstarch into cold not hot to dissolve…)

Place the walnuts and the melted butter in a mixing bowl and mix thoroughly until they are completely coated…

Spread them out in a shallow baking dish and roast in the oven for about 20 minutes turning frequently, until they are well browned…

Pour the custard evenly over the browned nuts, cover with aluminum foil, and continue to bake for a further 15 or 20 minutes, until the custard is thick and or solid like. Many like it syrupy and pour it over ice cream and fruit. Others like it hard almost and taffy like…

Serve immediately…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Important Russian / American Visa Information… (September of 2012)

This is good news and we will see how this all works out in the end…

On visa agreement, which comes into force on September 9, issuing multiple-entry visas valid for three years become standard practice when issuing visas to citizens of the United States to visit Russia for Russians visiting the United States.

“When applying for a visa for business or leisure travelers will not have to provide an official invitation from the U.S. although applicants for tourist visas to Russia, will continue to be required to confirm the preliminary booking and arrangements with the tour operator. Both sides also pledged to adhere to standard time required to process a visa – 15 days, although in some cases it may take longer for additional processing of applications.” – the report says.

Note for U.S. agreement frees the maximum stay in Russia up to 90 days in any 180-day period of the visa. Just as the Russians in the U.S., they will now be allowed to stay in Russia for up to six months. Also, do not need an exit visa by the U.S. citizens who have lost their passports during their stay in Russia.

Most of it is good news and the fact of no more invitations is awesome. Also I have been on a year visa for two years now and this allows me to get a three year visa instead of a 1 year, next time… 🙂

But by then I should have my residency worked out and have at least a temporary permit as I strive to get my permanent residency permit…

Still it is good news in the visa departments for America and Russia…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Update: Sveta found the original site source…

Historic Visa Agreement Enters Into Force September 9, 2012:

Moscow, Russia | August 29, 2012

The U.S. Embassy in Moscow is pleased to announce that the historic U.S.-Russia visa agreement will enter into effect September 9, 2012. The agreement will facilitate travel and establish stronger ties between Russia and the United States, as it will benefit the largest segment of travelers in both our countries: business travelers and tourists. Starting September 9, Russian and American travelers for business or tourism will be eligible to receive visas valid for multiple entries during a period of 36 months. The agreement also outlines other simplifications in the bilateral visa regime and eases visa processing time for travelers from both countries. At the same time, the United States will be reducing the fee charged to Russians issued visas for business or tourism from $100 to $20.

Thanks to the agreement, three-year, multiple-entry visas will become the standard “default” terms for U.S. citizens visiting Russia and Russian citizens visiting the United States. No formal invitation will be required to apply for a business or tourism visa, although applicants seeking Russian tourist visas must continue to hold advance lodging reservations and arrangements with a tour operator. Both sides have also committed to keep standard visa processing times under 15 days, although the circumstances of individual cases may require additional processing.

Also on September 9, the $100 issuance – or reciprocity – fee for Russians issued U.S. visas for business or tourism (visa types B1/B2) will fall to $20. As a rule, successful visa applicants will receive the full-validity three-year visa. The $160 application fee will still apply, and validity and fees for other visa types (for example for students, workers, and journalists) will not change.

For Americans in Russia, the agreement lifts the previous restriction limiting stays in Russia to 90 days within any given 180-day period—just like Russian travelers, they will now be permitted stays of up to six months. In addition, “exit visas” will no longer be necessary in the case of U.S. citizens who lose their passports while in Russia. (Russian citizens may already exit the United States without an exit visa). U.S. citizens with current Russian visas are reminded that they are still subject to the terms and dates of the visas already in their possession.

U.S. citizens with Russian travel plans are encouraged to monitor Embassy Moscow’s website for additional details concerning this agreement: http://moscow.usembassy.gov/russian-visas.html. Russian citizens may visit http://www.ustraveldocs.com/ru/index.html for specific instructions on how to apply for a U.S. visa.

Want a Place to Invest or Put Your Money? Try Russian Agriculture…

Russia will double its grain exports to 40 million tons a year by 2020, President Vladimir Putin said at the APEC summit in Vladivostok on Friday. “We project that our country will be producing 120 million-125 million tons of grain a year by 2020, which will increase our export capacity to 30 million-35 million tons, and even up to 40 million tons,” Putin said…

Like I have been saying, The Russian government is pouring tons of money into the agriculture of Russia and the West world agriculture businesses are flocking silently to ride the wave…

I am watching as I travel Russia, the warehouses and agricultural equipment factories being built. I am watching considerable sections of old fields being put back into production. I just watched the grain being harvested and lets talk about something old but new that is expanding by the million’s of acres in Russia…

Sveta and I just came back from the village and we simply were stunned by the corn fields that were being harvested. Now I know that in America, you are use to corn, but in Russia corn has not been prominent in the fields, that I travel around, not at all. But this year as we drove, the fields of corn were being harvested, and these fields had no end in the horizon and new combines and tractors were everywhere…

The little villages with there grain storage ares were overflowing with grain and the corn being brought in was in the hundreds of trucks, waiting to dump their loads at the main grain bins…

If I had desired, I could have stopped the car and filled as many sacks with corn silage as I could, because it was falling off the trucks by the tons as they hurried on down the roads trying to get the crops in. For awhile Sveta and I drove on these land mined destroyed Russian roads and I drove to the crunching of corn silage under the tires… 🙂

Now I am much more in tune with agriculture, than Sveta and while she could see what was happening, her city mind then took over and corn became less important. Now my mind kept turning as I took all that I could see in. In fact Sveta and I took a very different way home and saw a better picture on the grain harvest in Russia…

Bet you do not hear about fields of corn, as far as the eye can see in Russia, in the news?

Nuff said except, “We have grain in Russia and lots of it!”

Now all this rambling needs to go back to the beginning of the article…

Russia is increasing production in its agriculture! I have seen chicken farms popping up all over, I see cattle farms popping up, I see farm equipment being transported constantly to farms and I see 5 to 6 times the fields being plowed and planted than there was 6 years ago when I first started to travel Russia…

This is all conjunction to the duos in charge of Russia. Putin and Medvedev made it clear that Russia is going to work hard at helping to feed the world and Putin’s last statement shown above, is showing that…

I think about a few readers of mine, who are farmers and they really want to live in Russia. Well now is the time and the future is big in agriculture in Russia. Russia has the land and Russia is spending the money. I am reading about older Americans everyday and how they are coming to Russia and starting a farm, a farm like they grew up on and their families owned – once upon a time in America…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Huawei Honor U8860 – Some Information for the daring ones…

Update: Use this link to get all stock roms and such…

I have had more than several people inquire about where I get all my ROM’s to work on my Huawei phone? So I will list a bunch of information and I want you to remember that I am just showing you some places to go and get stuff…

I could careless and not responsible if you blow up your phone, because you do not know what you are doing…

That said: I do not know what I am doing either, but I have accomplished what I wanted to do on my Huawei and the phone is still in one piece. I assume that you can do it also…

You can find stock ROM’s here: (From 2.3.+ to 4.0.+)

International ROM’s: http://www.huaweidevice.com/worldwide/technicaIndex.do?method=gotoProductSupport&productId=3834&tb=1

Chinese ROM’s (can be changed to english): http://www.huaweidevice.com/cn/technicaIndex.do?method=gotoProductSupport&productId=3884&tb=1

Huawei Germany ROM: http://huaweidevices.de/telefone/honour.html#downloads

I suggest the Chinese ROM’s above as they are by far the most resilient…

Android 4.x MIUI ROM’s:
Original chinese: http://www.miui.com/download.html
Translated english: http://miuiandroid.com/community/
German: http://miui-germany.de/wp/?page_id=274

Silent Huawei camera (ICS):
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=29079425&postcount=1028

Adding Google Apps: Download zip from here http://goo-inside.me/gapps and flash it with recovery…

Root:

Stock ICS version B919/B923/B924
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=28403132&postcount=799

and newer way…

http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=22688341&postcount=53

Now let me tell a little bit about what I have done. I am using the stock Chinese ROM B977 I rooted through a program called Unlock Root that installs upon your computer. I do not use Google apps at all and that is why I prefer Chinese ROM’s…

The ROM that I use comes stripped of all Google Apps straight from the Huawei website. I have no desire to use Google Apps and that is that…

I replace virtually all built in apps with different apps and I strip all excess garbage out of the system. I rely upon GPS map systems and not internet tracking! I do not allow any synching with Google in anyway. I just allow GPS to track me and that is only when I want it too…

Now in the links above you will find lots of new ICS versions. They have a new one for Norwegian and for British! These are in English of course, but they are very very heavy and bog a phone down a bunch. The best ROM for a newbie is stock Gingerbread, but ICS can be made just as fast and light on her feet, for the experienced…

You must root to utilize the workings of ICS to its best and Root Uninstall is a great app. I also use System App Mover and it will move apps into and out of the system section, with a few clicks…

Tidbit of information:

You can flash a ROM two ways easily in a Huawei Honor phone…

1. Create folder if not there already called “dload” on SD card
2. Upload UPDATE and UPDATE_CUST.APP file to “dload”
3. Open in settings “storage->update from SD” follow directions and file in dload with flash…

and or

Extract the file on your computer…
– Make a “dload” directory on SD card root directory as above on the phone…
– Copy from the computer to dload the “UPDATE.APP” and “UPDATE_CUST.APP” on the SD card of the phone…
– Open settings/application then turn off/untick “fast boot” and power off you device…
– Long press volume up + volume down + power button on the handset to startup your device in upgrade mode. That means hold both up and down volume down at the same time and the power button…
– It will reboot few times. When done, you will have a new ROM flashed…

I use the storage way until I crash my phone then I have to use the holding buttons down trick. The easiest is not to mess up and use storage update… 🙂

Flashing a ROM will erase all internal memory in the phone. Anything that you have and is precious, you better have a copy of it. I have not had any issues with my SD card and anything on that seems safe???

So as always, use a backup app and back up all your favorite apps to the SD card and reload them after you change the ROM…

I hope that gives you some information that you can use to play with your Huawei Honor phone. I think that my Huawei is one of the best phones ever made and I could not imagine a more forgiving and easy to work with phone, as far as experiment ability goes…

My motto with my phone is, “I push it to the limit and when it quits working, I start over and do not push as hard that particular direction next time…”

Post by Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Putin Quote of the Day… (09-06-2012)

In a peculiar aside, Putin also mentioned a 2008 demonstration in which jailed Pussy Riot member Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and husband Pyotr Verzilov had public sex alongside several other couples in a museum to protest former President Dmitry Medvedev’s inauguration.

“You know some fans of group sex say it’s better than one-on-one because, like in any team, you don’t need to hit the ball all the time,” Putin said…

Putin talks about Pussy Riot and their long time escapades…

Windows to Russia…

Putin Defends Policies and Offers Warnings to the World…

Russian President Vladimir Putin addressed his most controversial policies in a whirlwind interview with the RT television news network on Thursday, defending what his critics say is his crackdown on dissent, repeating the Kremlin’s warnings against foreign intervention in Syria, and engaging foreign rivals over contested issues.

In his first full-length interview since his inauguration in May, Putin appeared to fit the carefully-crafted image of a cool and confident leader with an answer for everything as he settles further into his third term as president amid global and domestic criticism.

From denying involvement in the case against members of the punk group Pussy Riot, who were jailed for two years last month over their raucous “punk prayer” in Moscow’s Christ the Savior Cathedral last February, to rebuffing criticism from abroad over the Kremlin’s foreign policy, the president commented on nearly every issue that has landed Russia in international headlines in recent months.

‘Clampdown’ Means Order

He justified what critics have said is a clampdown on dissent as a necessary move to maintain order in Russia and praised what he says are democratic reforms he introduced in the wake of mass protests against his rule.

“We should clarify what we’re talking about,” he said. “If we understand [the term ‘clampdown’] as a simple requirement that everyone, including the opposition, complies with Russian law, then this requirement will be consistently enforced.”

Putin also invoked the mass riots that erupted in the U.K. last August, apparently comparing them to the anti-Kremlin opposition movement that emerged after last December’s parliamentary elections.

“A lot of people were injured and lot of property damaged. Is it better to let things deteriorate to that state and then spend a year tracking down people and locking them up?” he said. “I think it’s best not to let things go this far.”

The former KGB officer added that he played no part in the two-year sentences for the Pussy Riot members and denied commenting on the severity of their punishment or the methods of the court, which had been accused of rushing through the case.

Instead, he reaffirmed Pussy Riot critics’ allegations that the group’s performance offended many Russians, and even offered a peculiar criticism of a 2008 demonstration in which jailed Pussy Riot member Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and husband Pyotr Verzilov had public sex alongside several other couples in a museum to protest former President Dmitry Medvedev’s inauguration.

“Some fans of group sex say it’s better than one-on-one because, like in any team sport, you can slack off,” he said.

Defending Reforms

By way of defense, Putin trumpeted as successful moves which, at best, have raised suspicions about the Kremlin’s intentions and, at worst, have further consolidated criticism of his regime from several fronts.

He pointed to the return earlier this year of gubernatorial elections, which had been canceled in 2004, as well as his role in several bills introduced after his inauguration that he says have opened up the political playing field.

“These specific steps will pave the way for a more democratic Russia, and it’s true both for its people and its state,” he said.

An election law passed earlier this year was aimed at easing the party registration process and was widely seen as the Kremlin’s concession to the street protests. Critics, however, have said the law is designed to effectively splinter the opposition into a multitude of uncompetitive parties.

The president also drew heavy criticism over a recent law which requires NGOs receiving funding from abroad to be registered as “foreign agents,” as well as another critics have alleged is aimed at restricting the Internet.

The State Duma, he added, is considering a new system by which public initiatives would be submitted through the Web and moved to parliament as draft bills if they receive 100,000 votes or more.

We seek to make our society more advanced and more democratic and we intend to be consistent in following this path,” he said.

Foes Abroad

Putin denied any political motivations behind the death of Sergei Magnitsky, a finance lawyer who died in pre-trial detention in 2009 while investigating alleged official tax fraud.

“What I want to emphasize is that there is absolutely no political context to this case,” he said. “It is a tragedy, but it only has to do with crime and legal procedure, not politics – not more than that.”

Putin added that the visa blacklist drafted by U.S. lawmakers and allegedly introduced by the U.K., which denies entry to Russian officials suspected of human rights abuses, is politically motivated.

“There are people who need an enemy, they are looking for an opponent to fight against,” he said. “Do you know how many people die while in prison in those countries which have condemned Russia?

When questioned about Julian Assange, the controversial founder of WikiLeaks currently holed up in Ecuador’s embassy in London as he fights extradition to Sweden over sex charges, the president used the opportunity to criticize Britain for harboring a number of high-profile Kremlin critics, such as vehement Putin critic Boris Berezovsky and former Chechen separatist Akhmed Zakayev.

“Britain happens to be harboring certain individuals who have blood on their hands,” Putin said, before accusing London of a “double standard” over Assange.

Syrian Deadlock

On Syria, an issue which has long remained a thorny issue in U.S.-Russian relations, Putin warned that perceived Western support for anti-regime fighters could backfire.

“Today some want to use militants from Al Qaeda or some other organizations with equally radical views to accomplish their goals in Syria,” he said. “This policy is very short-sighted and is fraught with dire consequences.”

He compared alleged Western funding of radical Islamic militants to help topple Syrian strongman Bashar al-Assad’s regime with U.S. support for Afghan rebels after the Soviet Union’s 1979 invasion of its Central Asia neighbor.

In his trademark combative tone, Putin also railed against Western criticism over Russia’s failure to back UN sanctions against Assad and offered little hope Moscow would change its stance in the future.

“How come Russia is the only one who’s expected to revise its stance? Don’t you think our counterparts in negotiations ought to revise theirs as well?” he said. “Because if we look back at the events in the past few years, we’ll see that quite a few of our counterparts’ initiatives have not played out the way they were intended to.”

Cold War Rivalry

In remarks aimed at the United States, however, Putin appeared open to continued talks with Washington over the hotly contested U.S. missile defense shield to be built in Europe – but that President Barack Obama is hampered by a slew of conservatives.

“My feeling is that he is a sincere man and that he sincerely wants to implement positive change. But can he do it – will they let him do it?” Putin said. “There is… the military lobby, and the Department of State, which is quite conservative.”

Washington has repeatedly said the shield is aimed at preventing an attack from the Middle East, but Moscow stands by its suspicion that it could be used against Russia.

Yet Putin also expressed concerns about U.S. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, who on the campaign trail has taken a markedly aggressive tone against Russia and Obama’s “reset” policy, should he be elected in November.

“When we talk about the missile defense system, our American partners keep telling us, ‘This is not directed against you,’” he said. “But what happens if Mr. Romney, who believes us to be America’s number one foe, is elected as president of the United States?”

Windows to Russia…