Gallery: Shocking scenes from the Vancouver Game 7 riots

Gallery: Shocking scenes from the Vancouver Game 7 riots

Inside Rogers Arena on Wednesday night, there was champagne in the Boston Bruins‘ dressing room and sullen faces for everyone wearing a Vancouver Canucks sweater after the home team’s Game 7 loss in the Stanley Cup Final.

In downtown Vancouver, it was anarchy.

Seventeen years after another Game 7 riot in the city, what began as a few random fires and incidents of vandalism by spectators became utter chaos, with looters stealing from local stores and police trying to clear the streets. From QMI:

Between 130 and 140 people were sent to hospital, including three people with stab wounds and two suffering trauma, while a number of others were treated in the courtyard of a downtown hospital for the effects of tear gas.

Most people were treated for tear gas and pepper spray effects, lacerations, facial trauma, substance abuse and head injuries, Alyssa Polinsky, spokeswoman for B.C. Ambulance, told QMI Agency Thursday morning.

There were no fatalities, but one person was in critical condition Thursday at St. Paul’s Hospital in downtown Vancouver. Polinsky could not confirm if it was the same person witnesses reported seeing jump off a viaduct.

Here are the scenes from the Vancouver riots:

Gallery: Shocking scenes from the Vancouver Game 7 riots

The turning over of police vehicles was an early part of the unrest.

Gallery: Shocking scenes from the Vancouver Game 7 riots

Police began to mobilize to begin clearing the streets and were met with resistance.

Gallery: Shocking scenes from the Vancouver Game 7 riots

A man throws a chemical riot control agent back at police.

Gallery: Shocking scenes from the Vancouver Game 7 riots

Smoke could be seen rising from the city into the night.

Gallery: Shocking scenes from the Vancouver Game 7 riots

Gradually, the rioters turned their attention to breaking into local stores, including Hudson Bay and this Sears store.

From the Province:

Just after 11 p.m., in the aftermath of violence, the street was a deserted war zone. Very few businesses were left unscathed and sidewalks were littered with shattered glass.

One shoe store had virtually no merchandise left, while the London Drugs on Georgia and Granville, where alarms still blared, had its doors smashed in, and coat hangers and shoes strewn outside.

Unruly, booze-fuelled mobs also broke into Sears at Robson and Howe. One looter managed to break into Chapters bookstore, but apparently no one bothered entering.

Ugly brawls tinged with a racial element were seen breaking out on Granville Street as late as 11 p.m. and a police chopper circled the crowd overhead as police attempted to take control of the melee.

At a hastily-called press conference, Mayor Gregor Robertson said he was disappointed at tonight's "embarrassing" turn of events.

Gallery: Shocking scenes from the Vancouver Game 7 riots

A hockey stick is used outside of the ice.

Gallery: Shocking scenes from the Vancouver Game 7 riots

Fires spread to some buildings as well.

Gallery: Shocking scenes from the Vancouver Game 7 riots

The streets were covered in debris and small fires, from cars to trash cans.

Gallery: Shocking scenes from the Vancouver Game 7 riots

People lingered in the riot area well into the night.

Again, this was not all Vancouver Canucks fans, and the looting appeared to be the work of anarchists based on the local news reports. Many fans got caught up in the chaos and simply couldn’t find a safe passage home, due to street closures and interruptions in mass transit service.

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IBM turns 100, brags about bench pressing more than companies half its age

IBM is quite possibly the only tech company around that might have genuine difficulty whittling a list of its industry defining contributions down to a mere 100. And it’s an impressively diverse collection at that, including the floppy disk, the social security system, the Apollo space missions, and the UPC barcode. All of this self-congratulation is not without cause, of course. IBM was born 100 years ago today in Endicott, New York, as the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company, a merger between three companies, all peddling different technologies. That diversity has helped define IBM from its inception, and has offered a sense of flexibility, making it possible to keep in step with technology’s ever-quickening pace for a century.

In 1944, the company helped usher in modern computing with the room-sized Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator, and 37 years later, it played an important role in defining the era of home computing with the much more manageable IBM Personal Computer. In 1997, IBM introduced a machine that beat the world’s reigning chess champion, and earlier this year, it created one that trounced two of the greatest players in Jeopardy history. These days, when the company is not building machines dedicated to outsmarting mankind, it’s looking to promote sustainable development through its Smarter Planet program. So, happy centennial, Big Blue, and here’s to 100 more, assuming your super-smart machines don’t enslave us all in the meantime.

IBM turns 100, brags about bench pressing more than companies half its age originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Jun 2011 08:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Riots erupt in Vancouver after Canucks loss

Riot police fired tear gas, pepper spray and flash bombs in Vancouver Wednesday night to try to disperse rioters who set cars on fire, looted and taunted police officers after the Canucks’ 4-0 Stanley Cup final loss to the Boston Bruins.

Lenovo ThinkPad tablet coming in summer with Android, Windows slate later in the year

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Lenovo ThinkPad tablet coming in summer with Android, Windows slate later in the year originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Jun 2011 07:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceDow Jones Newswires (Nasdaq)  | Email this | Comments

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Dual-screen LG Android phone shows up in the wild, poses more questions than it answers originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Jun 2011 06:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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This up to 1000 years old snow has metamorphosed into highly…

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Rain and meltwater on the glacier surface is channelled into streams that enter the glacier at crevices. The waterfall melts a hole into the glacier while the ponded water drains towards lower elevations by forming long ice caves with an outlet at the terminus of the glacier. The fine grained sediments in the water along with wind blown sediments cause the frozen meltwater stream to appear in a muddy colour while the top of the cave exhibits the deep blue colour.

Due to the fast movement of the glacier of about 1 m per day over uneven terrain this ice cave cracked up at its end into a deep vertical crevice, called cerrac. This causes the indirect daylight to enter the ice cave from both ends resulting in homogeneous lighting of the ice tunnel.

Kinect for Windows SDK beta to roll out tomorrow?

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Kinect for Windows SDK beta to roll out tomorrow? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Jun 2011 22:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dolby suing RIM over Patent Infringement


Dolby has decided to sue Waterloo-based RIM for infringing on their patents. In a press release today Dolby stated that they “seek recovery of financial damages and injunctions to halt sales of the many RIM products that infringe Dolby’s patents”.

Apparently RIM is using Dolby’s digital audio compression technology in the Playbook and their smartphones. According to Dolby this patented technology outputs “high quality audio while using extremely limited amounts of transmission and/or storage space”. The downside is that “all other major smart phone makers have agreed to license the Dolby technologies”, but for some reason RIM opted to do otherwise. “Litigation was regrettably our last resort after RIM declined to pay for the use of Dolby’s technology”.

Clearly not good news for RIM.

Source: BusinessWire
Via: BerryReview

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Google Sync adds mail server search, appointment confirmation to native iOS apps originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Jun 2011 17:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Game 7 tickets sold for more than $8K

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