недеља, 6. октобар 2013.

Bathroom Spy Camera,Shower AM/FM Clock Radio And CD Player Hidden Pinhole Spy Camera 720P HD DVR 16GB - News - Press Releases

Shower AM/FM Clock Radio And CD Player Hidden Pinhole Spy Camera 720P HD DVR 16GBDescription:

This is a ultra-small digital spy camera that hidden inside a waterproof Spy Radio/CD, it looks like an ordinary waterproof Radio/CD, but it has a very powerful function, the most interesting thing is that it internally hides a smallest camera DVR , you can listen to the radio and record everything you need at the same ,so secret that no one know where the camera exist.it does not need any external plug-in card, built in memory 16GB itself, can work up to 8-10 hours. there is time date stamp for the record, you can get the most authentic evidence for a variety of illegal behaviour.ideal for CIA agents ,police,detector,and spy agency.

Specification:

1.Tiny size makes it for a variety of uses.2.Its great for use as a hidden cam, spy cam , etc.3.Real time recording in AVI video format 4.continuously recording until memory is full auto off5.Color video with voice6.Internal rechargeable battery 7.Internal memory:16GB8.Playback video on PC 9.Video compression : AVI video format,1280X720 30fps10.Voice recording: Yes11.Internal memory: Yes12.Flash:16GB13.Video file size:5M per min.14.Recording mode :continuously recording until memory is full auto off15.Adaptor type: USB adaptor charging cable 16.Battery type : Lithium-ion 2000MA17.Record time : up to 2h for 1GB18.Battery use time : about 8-10 hour19.Weight:1500g20.Radio FM /AM /CD play/LCD Clock Display.21.CD features: digital keypad, you can gently touch quiet, waterproof button design.22.FM/AM, support auto search channel, support channel memory function, digital display channel, the digital FM.23.Waterproof CD. bedside CD drive. bathroom fitted with such a machine. allow s you to wonderful music, free and easy in the degree of ease Over.

Package:

1. Spy Radio/CD camera 16GB 1pcs2. 2.0 High Speed USB CABLE 1pcs3. USB Charger 1pcs4. Camera Operating Manual 1pcs5. Power adapter 1pcs

Description:

This is a ultra-small digital spy camera that hidden inside a Waterproof Spy Radio, it looks like an ordinary Radio, but it has a very powerful function, the most interesting thing is that it internally hides a smallest camera DVR , you can listen to the radio and record everything you need at the same ,so secret that no one know where the camera exist.it does not need any external plug-in card, built in memory 16GB itself, can work up to 8-10 hours. there is time date stamp for the record, you can get the most authentic evidence for a variety of illegal behaviour.ideal for CIA agents ,police,detector,and spy agency.

Specification:

1.Tiny size makes it for a variety of uses.2.Its great for use as a hidden cam, spy cam , etc.3.Real time recording in AVI video format 4.continuously recording until memory is full auto off5.Color video with voice6.Internal rechargeable battery 7.Internal memory:16GB8.Playback video on PC 9.Video compression : AVI video format,1280X720 30fps10.Voice recording: Yes11.Internal memory: Yes12.Flash:16GB13.Video file size:5M per min.14.Recording mode :continuously recording until memory is full auto off15.Adaptor type: USB adaptor charging cable 16.Battery type : Lithium-ion 1800MA17.Record time : up to 2h for 1GB18.Battery use time : about 8-10 hour19.Weight:500g

Package:

1. Spy Radio camera 16GB 1pcs2. 2.0 High Speed USB CABLE 1pcs3. USB Charger 1pcs4. Camera Operating Manual 1pcs

The unfolding saga threatens to expose Murdoch and his company to further scorn and legal troubles. News Corp. stock has shed billions of dollars in value. And criminal investigations are under way in Britain, while the FBI has begun a preliminary inquiry in the U.S., where the company's holdings include the nation's largest newspaper, The Wall Street Journal, the New York Post, the Fox TV network and the 20th Century Fox movie studio.

For now, Murdoch's job as News Corp.'s CEO is secure because he controls 40 percent of the company's voting stock through a family trust and the board is stacked with directors that shareholder activists have long criticized as his cronies. He also remains one of the world's richest people, although a fortune pegged at $7.6 billion in March by Forbes magazine has been clipped by a 13 percent decline in News Corp.'s stock during the past two weeks.

But the British lawmakers who have traditionally supported Murdoch rather than risk being pilloried in the pages of his newspapers no longer seem to be in his corner because their fear of retaliation is fading. He will surely face tough questions Tuesday when he appears before a Parliament committee eager to grill him about the phone hacking and bribery allegations.

"All the powerful allies that used to help him, either publicly or behind the scenes, have faded to the sidelines," says Eric Boehlert, a senior fellow at Media Matters, a liberal group that frequently criticizes Fox News for what it says is biased and inaccurate reporting. "He is on his own, and he is in over his head."

Boehlert likens the crisis and widespread antipathy surrounding Murdoch to the unraveling of Richard Nixon's presidency in 1974 as details of the Watergate cover-up were revealed. Like Nixon then, Murdoch is in "free-fall mode. There is nothing he can do to stop this story," Boehlert says.

The lack of control over the situation seemingly bothers the notoriously autocratic Murdoch, who told The Wall Street Journal on Thursday that he was "getting annoyed" with the media's unrelenting coverage of the scandal.

If the scandal widens, newspaper analyst Ken Doctor believes Murdoch eventually will have to step down as CEO, though he could still retain the chairman's title.

Disgraced newspaper publisher Conrad Black, whose former ownership of The Daily Telegraph turned him into a bitter Murdoch rival, thinks his old foe is more like another polarizing historical figure French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte.

Like Napoleon, Murdoch is a "great bad man," Black wrote in a column Wednesday for the Financial Times. "It is as wrong to dispute his greatness as his badness."

Black, who was convicted of fraud in 2007 and still has some prison time to serve, wrote that it would be "astonishing" if Murdoch's British newspapers didn't commit crimes while "reveling in the climate of immunity that has been the group's modus operandi for decades."

Although he stopped short of calling him a crook, Black lambasted Murdoch as an "an exploiter of the discomfort of others" and "a malicious myth-maker, an assassin of the dignity of others and of respected institutions, all in the guise of anti-elitism."

The criticism exemplifies Britain's widespread antipathy toward Murdoch, says Porter Bibb, a former media executive and now managing partner of advisory firm Mediatech Capital Partners.

"The people who are gloating now are much more in the U.K.," Bibb says. "He's really browbeaten the competition, most specifically the politicians."

Murdoch also is despised by union workers who still remember how he used a new printing plant to foil a printers' strike in the gritty London district of Wapping in 1986 and 1987. Nic Oatridge, who lived in the area, recalls seeing police regularly harass and arrest picketers while making sure delivery trucks got into and out of the printing plant. That fed his suspicions that the police were in Murdoch's pocket.

"I'm pleased he's been exposed," Oatridge, 55, says. "Something we've always believed was going on 25 years ago is finally going to be visible."

In the U.S., much of the ill will toward Murdoch has stemmed from the belief that he uses his media properties, especially the Fox News cable channel, to promote a conservative political agenda. "There is essentially a partisan reaction against Murdoch and his use of right-wing politics," Doctor, the newspaper analyst, says.

Fox News isn't covering Murdoch's scandal as aggressively as other outlets. From July 4 through July 13, Fox aired 30 segments about the story, according to an analysis by Media Matters. Rival CNN showed 109 segments and MSNBC 71.

When Murdoch bought Dow Jones, parent company of the Wall Street Journal, for $5.7 billion in 2007, there were fears the Journal's quality would deteriorate. But Paul Steiger, who left as the Journal's top editor shortly after the acquisition was completed and started a non-profit journalism service called ProPublica, credits News Corp. for investing in the newspaper to maintain its quality and increase its circulation.





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