Reported by The Register 3 days ago.
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Apple won't bag HUMUNGOUS 4G deal... 'cos China HATES plastic iPhone 5C – analyst
↧
Apple in major Chinese iPhone deal
US technology giant Apple has signed a deal to bring its iPhone to China Mobile - the world's largest carrier.
Reported by BBC News 4 hours ago.
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↧
Apple signs deal to open connection between iPhones and China Mobile
iPhone will be available to network of more than 760 million subscribers in one of world's fastest-growing markets
Apple has announced a lucrative deal that ensures iPhones will be available in China on the the world's largest mobile network.
The multi-year agreement with China Mobile had been expected but was finally announced on Sunday.
It means the phone will be available to more than 760 million subscribers to China Mobile, a huge boost to the already successful brand. Even before the deal, Apple's iPhone 5S was a dramatic hit in China, comprising 12% of smartphone sales in the country during October, according to market research company Counterpoint.
Some analysts predict up to 20m iPhones could be sold in the first year of the deal.
Xi Guohua, the chairman of China Mobile, said: "Apple's iPhone is very much loved by millions of customers around the world. We know there are many China Mobile customers and potential new customers who are anxiously awaiting the incredible combination of iPhone on China Mobile's leading network. We are delighted that iPhone on China Mobile will support our 4G and 3G networks."
Tim Cook, the CEO of Apple said: "Apple has enormous respect for China Mobile and we are excited to begin working together.
"iPhone customers in China are an enthusiastic and rapidly growing group."
China is the world's largest smartphone market, and one of the fastest-growing. Smartphone sales there in the third quarter of 2013 totalled 87.7m, according to data supplied to the Guardian by research company IDC, with sales growth at 52% year-on-year compared to 40% for the rest of the world. Samsung was the biggest seller of smartphones in the third quarter, averaging more than 6m phones per month. Reported by guardian.co.uk 3 hours ago.
Apple has announced a lucrative deal that ensures iPhones will be available in China on the the world's largest mobile network.
The multi-year agreement with China Mobile had been expected but was finally announced on Sunday.
It means the phone will be available to more than 760 million subscribers to China Mobile, a huge boost to the already successful brand. Even before the deal, Apple's iPhone 5S was a dramatic hit in China, comprising 12% of smartphone sales in the country during October, according to market research company Counterpoint.
Some analysts predict up to 20m iPhones could be sold in the first year of the deal.
Xi Guohua, the chairman of China Mobile, said: "Apple's iPhone is very much loved by millions of customers around the world. We know there are many China Mobile customers and potential new customers who are anxiously awaiting the incredible combination of iPhone on China Mobile's leading network. We are delighted that iPhone on China Mobile will support our 4G and 3G networks."
Tim Cook, the CEO of Apple said: "Apple has enormous respect for China Mobile and we are excited to begin working together.
"iPhone customers in China are an enthusiastic and rapidly growing group."
China is the world's largest smartphone market, and one of the fastest-growing. Smartphone sales there in the third quarter of 2013 totalled 87.7m, according to data supplied to the Guardian by research company IDC, with sales growth at 52% year-on-year compared to 40% for the rest of the world. Samsung was the biggest seller of smartphones in the third quarter, averaging more than 6m phones per month. Reported by guardian.co.uk 3 hours ago.
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Apple says in iPhone pact with China Mobile; no terms disclosed
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Apple Inc on Sunday announced a multiyear deal with China Mobile to bring its iPhone product lines to China, starting January 17, 2014.
Reported by Reuters 2 hours ago.
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Apple Strikes iPhone Deal With China Mobile

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↧
I never thought I'd be an outlaw, but the Affordable Care Act might make me one | Diane Snyder
I'm not a Tea Party member, and I want Obamacare to work, but the ACA has actually made healthcare less affordable for me
I want to – believe me, I do. But I'm not sure I should sign up for health insurance through the Affordable Care Act, because for me, it's not affordable.
Contrary to what you might think, I'm not some Obama-hating Tea Party supporter who resents government interference. I'm pretty far to the left politically, and as a freelancer without employer-sponsored healthcare, I really want Obamacare to work. I don't want to see it repealed, just improved, and if others like me don't sign up, perhaps this solidarity will make America's brave new healthcare world better for everyone – not the extension of the profit-making enterprise it remains. Leaving healthcare to the private sector, instead of expanding government-sponsored Medicare to those under 65, has not meant affordability.
But I hoped for the best when I registered through New York State's "marketplace" website (the name makes clear that this is business first, healthcare second). There you can compare plans from various insurers, and the most "affordable" one (from MetroPlus, without dental) was more than $350 a month – not affordable on my income. I was eligible for a subsidy, which reduced my monthly cost to under $200, but it was still nearly double the $100 I was hoping for.
Much has been written about the premiums being too expensive for people in their 20s, but the price is also a financial burden for me at age 43. Still, had that been the entire cost, I would have signed up. But additionally, each doctor's visit would cost $30, and there was a $1,750 deductible.
Quite a contrast to what I've paid the last several years. As a New York City resident, I've been eligible for a program called HHC Options, sponsored by the city's Health and Hospitals Corporation, which provides truly affordable care to low and moderate-income individuals. It's not insurance, and there's no monthly fee. You pay only when you see a doctor, and your copayment (between $15 to $60) is based on your income.
I felt guilty paying so little when I could afford a bit more, and hoped to contribute that when Obamacare kicked in – just not so much more. My healthcare expenses for last year (around $350) are about equal to the fine I'd pay if I don't get insurance by 31 March.
Though I hardly lead an extravagant existence, I've thought about ways to lower my expenses to pay for the premium. There's my already small $25-per-month gym membership, but regular exercise may mean less healthcare as I get older. Should I buy cheaper fast-food meals for lunch instead of healthier alternatives? How good would that be for my overall well-being? Maybe I could just not make any charitable donations next year, or forget about taking a vacation. But would I have to not do either of those things every year, indefinitely? Do I put less money into my already scant retirement savings? That doesn't seem responsible.
And I think I've been fiscally responsible with my modest income. I have no loan or credit card debt, and my rent-stabilized apartment is covered by renter's insurance. I don't have an iPhone, or spend loads of money on things like clothes and entertainment, and I don't relish returning to the hand-to-mouth existence I lived during my 20s. Is that what I have to do to be a law-abiding American in 2014?
When I went back to reassess my options I discovered that you can change the income on which the premiums are determined. They're not based on my last income tax return or on my 2013 earnings. The amounts I entered are what I expect to make from my various employers in 2014. And because it's hard to predict, I just put in how much I made in 2013, assuming it would be about the same.
But you can lower your premium by lowering your financial expectations for the new year. With more conservative earning estimates, I was able to get it down to $140 a month. Do I try to get it down to the $100 I could afford to pay? Has US healthcare become some inverted version of the game Angry Birds, where the lowest score wins and you can keep trying until you get three stars?
That sums up "universal healthcare" in America. Even with all the work that went into the Affordable Care Act, it remains a game of chance. Perhaps if enough Americans who can't handle the financial burden break the law and don't sign up, we can get it amended to something simpler and truly affordable, like the single-payer, free-choice system Ralph Nader, Bernie Sanders, and even Colin Powell support.
I never thought I'd be an outlaw, but I may become one next year. Reported by guardian.co.uk 4 days ago.
I want to – believe me, I do. But I'm not sure I should sign up for health insurance through the Affordable Care Act, because for me, it's not affordable.
Contrary to what you might think, I'm not some Obama-hating Tea Party supporter who resents government interference. I'm pretty far to the left politically, and as a freelancer without employer-sponsored healthcare, I really want Obamacare to work. I don't want to see it repealed, just improved, and if others like me don't sign up, perhaps this solidarity will make America's brave new healthcare world better for everyone – not the extension of the profit-making enterprise it remains. Leaving healthcare to the private sector, instead of expanding government-sponsored Medicare to those under 65, has not meant affordability.
But I hoped for the best when I registered through New York State's "marketplace" website (the name makes clear that this is business first, healthcare second). There you can compare plans from various insurers, and the most "affordable" one (from MetroPlus, without dental) was more than $350 a month – not affordable on my income. I was eligible for a subsidy, which reduced my monthly cost to under $200, but it was still nearly double the $100 I was hoping for.
Much has been written about the premiums being too expensive for people in their 20s, but the price is also a financial burden for me at age 43. Still, had that been the entire cost, I would have signed up. But additionally, each doctor's visit would cost $30, and there was a $1,750 deductible.
Quite a contrast to what I've paid the last several years. As a New York City resident, I've been eligible for a program called HHC Options, sponsored by the city's Health and Hospitals Corporation, which provides truly affordable care to low and moderate-income individuals. It's not insurance, and there's no monthly fee. You pay only when you see a doctor, and your copayment (between $15 to $60) is based on your income.
I felt guilty paying so little when I could afford a bit more, and hoped to contribute that when Obamacare kicked in – just not so much more. My healthcare expenses for last year (around $350) are about equal to the fine I'd pay if I don't get insurance by 31 March.
Though I hardly lead an extravagant existence, I've thought about ways to lower my expenses to pay for the premium. There's my already small $25-per-month gym membership, but regular exercise may mean less healthcare as I get older. Should I buy cheaper fast-food meals for lunch instead of healthier alternatives? How good would that be for my overall well-being? Maybe I could just not make any charitable donations next year, or forget about taking a vacation. But would I have to not do either of those things every year, indefinitely? Do I put less money into my already scant retirement savings? That doesn't seem responsible.
And I think I've been fiscally responsible with my modest income. I have no loan or credit card debt, and my rent-stabilized apartment is covered by renter's insurance. I don't have an iPhone, or spend loads of money on things like clothes and entertainment, and I don't relish returning to the hand-to-mouth existence I lived during my 20s. Is that what I have to do to be a law-abiding American in 2014?
When I went back to reassess my options I discovered that you can change the income on which the premiums are determined. They're not based on my last income tax return or on my 2013 earnings. The amounts I entered are what I expect to make from my various employers in 2014. And because it's hard to predict, I just put in how much I made in 2013, assuming it would be about the same.
But you can lower your premium by lowering your financial expectations for the new year. With more conservative earning estimates, I was able to get it down to $140 a month. Do I try to get it down to the $100 I could afford to pay? Has US healthcare become some inverted version of the game Angry Birds, where the lowest score wins and you can keep trying until you get three stars?
That sums up "universal healthcare" in America. Even with all the work that went into the Affordable Care Act, it remains a game of chance. Perhaps if enough Americans who can't handle the financial burden break the law and don't sign up, we can get it amended to something simpler and truly affordable, like the single-payer, free-choice system Ralph Nader, Bernie Sanders, and even Colin Powell support.
I never thought I'd be an outlaw, but I may become one next year. Reported by guardian.co.uk 4 days ago.
↧
BlackBerry on the brink as new boss tries to reinvent smartphone firm
With losses at £2.7bn, interim chief executive John Chen must find a new way forward
This month Bloomberg Businessweek magazine's cover showed a range of archaeological objects – a flint arrowhead, a skull – and a BlackBerry handset. The label? "Relic".
On Friday BlackBerry's interim chief executive John Chen outlined a new strategy for the Canadian company in which he acknowledged that making smartphones was a thing of the past. Instead, the company will focus on intangible services such as offering cyber-security for businesses and not making physical handsets.
Making smartphones has not been a good business for anyone who isn't Apple and Samsung recently, as they have squeezed the profits out of the rest of the industry. BlackBerry has been crushed. On Friday it announced a loss of $4.4bn (£2.7bn) on revenues of just $1.2bn; only a tax rebate of $624m saved its net figures from being worse.
Those three months to the end of November marked a turning point: for the first time, BlackBerry now gets more money – 53% of revenues – from selling "services" such as sending data including email and web pages, than it does from selling handsets, which generated 40%. Software made up the other 7%.
But that has come as the company's revenues have shrunk to levels smaller than at any time since May 2007, and the number of phones shipped, 1.9m, is the smallest since December 2006. BlackBerry, whose founders laughed at the iPhone's lack of a keyboard, is out of the smartphone race. In future Foxconn, which makes the iPhone, will co-design and manufacture BlackBerrys too, and hold the stock. BlackBerry will effectively become a reseller of its own phones.
"The smartphone business is brutal," says Kevin Restivo, global smartphone analyst at the research company IDC. "It's one where the big players – Samsung, Apple, and a few Chinese companies – are going to have success, and the others are scratching for crumbs."
Andy Perkins, an analyst at Société Générale, told Bloomberg: "At some point it becomes uneconomic to make handsets in such small quantities."
Chen is a turnaround artist. He was brought in to the software company Sybase, where he executed a successful reorganisation. Since taking over 45 days ago (following the ejection by the board of former chief executive Thorsten Heins) he has overseen a number of departures of existing senior executives, and hired some former colleagues. The obvious conclusion is that he is reshaping BlackBerry as a services and software company.
Unlike other struggling smartphone makers, BlackBerry can fall back on tens of millions of customers in large businesses, who rely on the security of its products. Chan said that 80% of Blackberry users were business customers. That could be anywhere up to 50 million users worldwide, offering a substantial base for rebuilding any corporation, even the struggling BlackBerry.
But the data also confirmed that BB10, the operating system launched in January by Heins, has been a flop. Since March, BlackBerry's customers have bought a total of around 17m phones, but only 5.6m have been BB10 devices.
The new products have fared poorly with consumers and the large businesses that rely on BlackBerry. Consumers have been turned off because the BB10 functions differently from the old BB7 model, while businesses have backed away because BB10 devices can't be hooked up to the older BlackBerry Enterprise Server (BES) systems so many big customers use.
So while consumers have dumped them in favour of other makes, BlackBerry-using businesses have taken one of two paths: either sourcing old BB7 handsets to keep their existing users happy, or abandoning BlackBerry altogether. Even Goldman Sachs, once a BlackBerry fortress, has begun letting some executives use iPhones for email, a move that would have been unthinkable a few years ago.
Chen has an answer to both. For consumers, BlackBerry will try to somehow make money from the millions of people who have downloaded the BBM messaging software and installed it on to iPhones and Android phones. "Revenues might come from a per-user per-month model, or rolling out advertising," he said on Friday. "We're a long way from knowing how to do it."
For businesses he will offer "mobile device management" software that will be able to control not just BlackBerrys, but also iPhones and Android phones. But there are plenty of rivals there, and it's not a big business – worth only about $560m (£343m) this year globally for all vendors, and growing at 12% annually, according to ABI Research. Even if a reshaped BlackBerry captures more than half of that, it would still look tiny compared to what it was.
That means, says IDC's Restivo, that "BlackBerry's not out of the woods yet." He explains: "First and foremost, Chen needs to figure out how to make money from products that have a significant customer base and are growing. The handset business isn't growing. And how they're going to generate significant revenue from BES and BBM, and create a company driven by those two parallel paths – right now, the path isn't clear." Reported by guardian.co.uk 18 hours ago.
This month Bloomberg Businessweek magazine's cover showed a range of archaeological objects – a flint arrowhead, a skull – and a BlackBerry handset. The label? "Relic".
On Friday BlackBerry's interim chief executive John Chen outlined a new strategy for the Canadian company in which he acknowledged that making smartphones was a thing of the past. Instead, the company will focus on intangible services such as offering cyber-security for businesses and not making physical handsets.
Making smartphones has not been a good business for anyone who isn't Apple and Samsung recently, as they have squeezed the profits out of the rest of the industry. BlackBerry has been crushed. On Friday it announced a loss of $4.4bn (£2.7bn) on revenues of just $1.2bn; only a tax rebate of $624m saved its net figures from being worse.
Those three months to the end of November marked a turning point: for the first time, BlackBerry now gets more money – 53% of revenues – from selling "services" such as sending data including email and web pages, than it does from selling handsets, which generated 40%. Software made up the other 7%.
But that has come as the company's revenues have shrunk to levels smaller than at any time since May 2007, and the number of phones shipped, 1.9m, is the smallest since December 2006. BlackBerry, whose founders laughed at the iPhone's lack of a keyboard, is out of the smartphone race. In future Foxconn, which makes the iPhone, will co-design and manufacture BlackBerrys too, and hold the stock. BlackBerry will effectively become a reseller of its own phones.
"The smartphone business is brutal," says Kevin Restivo, global smartphone analyst at the research company IDC. "It's one where the big players – Samsung, Apple, and a few Chinese companies – are going to have success, and the others are scratching for crumbs."
Andy Perkins, an analyst at Société Générale, told Bloomberg: "At some point it becomes uneconomic to make handsets in such small quantities."
Chen is a turnaround artist. He was brought in to the software company Sybase, where he executed a successful reorganisation. Since taking over 45 days ago (following the ejection by the board of former chief executive Thorsten Heins) he has overseen a number of departures of existing senior executives, and hired some former colleagues. The obvious conclusion is that he is reshaping BlackBerry as a services and software company.
Unlike other struggling smartphone makers, BlackBerry can fall back on tens of millions of customers in large businesses, who rely on the security of its products. Chan said that 80% of Blackberry users were business customers. That could be anywhere up to 50 million users worldwide, offering a substantial base for rebuilding any corporation, even the struggling BlackBerry.
But the data also confirmed that BB10, the operating system launched in January by Heins, has been a flop. Since March, BlackBerry's customers have bought a total of around 17m phones, but only 5.6m have been BB10 devices.
The new products have fared poorly with consumers and the large businesses that rely on BlackBerry. Consumers have been turned off because the BB10 functions differently from the old BB7 model, while businesses have backed away because BB10 devices can't be hooked up to the older BlackBerry Enterprise Server (BES) systems so many big customers use.
So while consumers have dumped them in favour of other makes, BlackBerry-using businesses have taken one of two paths: either sourcing old BB7 handsets to keep their existing users happy, or abandoning BlackBerry altogether. Even Goldman Sachs, once a BlackBerry fortress, has begun letting some executives use iPhones for email, a move that would have been unthinkable a few years ago.
Chen has an answer to both. For consumers, BlackBerry will try to somehow make money from the millions of people who have downloaded the BBM messaging software and installed it on to iPhones and Android phones. "Revenues might come from a per-user per-month model, or rolling out advertising," he said on Friday. "We're a long way from knowing how to do it."
For businesses he will offer "mobile device management" software that will be able to control not just BlackBerrys, but also iPhones and Android phones. But there are plenty of rivals there, and it's not a big business – worth only about $560m (£343m) this year globally for all vendors, and growing at 12% annually, according to ABI Research. Even if a reshaped BlackBerry captures more than half of that, it would still look tiny compared to what it was.
That means, says IDC's Restivo, that "BlackBerry's not out of the woods yet." He explains: "First and foremost, Chen needs to figure out how to make money from products that have a significant customer base and are growing. The handset business isn't growing. And how they're going to generate significant revenue from BES and BBM, and create a company driven by those two parallel paths – right now, the path isn't clear." Reported by guardian.co.uk 18 hours ago.
↧
Apple signs deal to sell iPhones on China Mobile, world's largest carrier
iPhone will be available to network of more than 760 million subscribers in one of world's fastest-growing markets
Apple has announced a lucrative deal that ensures iPhones will be available in China on the the world's largest mobile network.
The multi-year agreement with China Mobile had been expected but was finally announced on Sunday.
It means the phone will be available to more than 760 million subscribers to China Mobile, a huge boost to the already successful brand. Even before the deal, Apple's iPhone 5S was a dramatic hit in China, comprising 12% of smartphone sales in the country during October, according to market research company Counterpoint.
Some analysts predict up to 20m iPhones could be sold in the first year of the deal.
Xi Guohua, the chairman of China Mobile, said: "Apple's iPhone is very much loved by millions of customers around the world. We know there are many China Mobile customers and potential new customers who are anxiously awaiting the incredible combination of iPhone on China Mobile's leading network. We are delighted that iPhone on China Mobile will support our 4G and 3G networks."
Tim Cook, the CEO of Apple said: "Apple has enormous respect for China Mobile and we are excited to begin working together.
"iPhone customers in China are an enthusiastic and rapidly growing group."
China is the world's largest smartphone market, and one of the fastest-growing. Smartphone sales there in the third quarter of 2013 totalled 87.7m, according to data supplied to the Guardian by research company IDC, with sales growth at 52% year-on-year compared to 40% for the rest of the world. Samsung was the biggest seller of smartphones in the third quarter, averaging more than 6m phones per month. Reported by guardian.co.uk 16 hours ago.
Apple has announced a lucrative deal that ensures iPhones will be available in China on the the world's largest mobile network.
The multi-year agreement with China Mobile had been expected but was finally announced on Sunday.
It means the phone will be available to more than 760 million subscribers to China Mobile, a huge boost to the already successful brand. Even before the deal, Apple's iPhone 5S was a dramatic hit in China, comprising 12% of smartphone sales in the country during October, according to market research company Counterpoint.
Some analysts predict up to 20m iPhones could be sold in the first year of the deal.
Xi Guohua, the chairman of China Mobile, said: "Apple's iPhone is very much loved by millions of customers around the world. We know there are many China Mobile customers and potential new customers who are anxiously awaiting the incredible combination of iPhone on China Mobile's leading network. We are delighted that iPhone on China Mobile will support our 4G and 3G networks."
Tim Cook, the CEO of Apple said: "Apple has enormous respect for China Mobile and we are excited to begin working together.
"iPhone customers in China are an enthusiastic and rapidly growing group."
China is the world's largest smartphone market, and one of the fastest-growing. Smartphone sales there in the third quarter of 2013 totalled 87.7m, according to data supplied to the Guardian by research company IDC, with sales growth at 52% year-on-year compared to 40% for the rest of the world. Samsung was the biggest seller of smartphones in the third quarter, averaging more than 6m phones per month. Reported by guardian.co.uk 16 hours ago.
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Apple to bring iPhone 5S and 5C to China Mobile, world's largest phone carrier...as Android phones REPEATEDLY OUTSELL them in China

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VIDEO: Apple in China Mobile iPhone deal
US smartphone manufacturer Apple has reached an agreement to bring its iPhone to the world's biggest phone carrier, China Mobile.
Reported by BBC News 1 day ago.
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Apple brings iPhone to China Mobile
Technology giant Apple has reached a deal to bring the iPhone to China Mobile, the world's biggest phone carrier.
Reported by Express and Star 20 hours ago.
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Apple strikes deal with China Mobile
Partnership worth billions of dollars in iPhone revenues finally opens largest mobile market to world’s most valuable tech company
Reported by FT.com 2 days ago.
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Today's media stories from the papers
Our roundup of the day's media stories, including Addison Cresswell dies and Last Tango in Halifax recommissoned
If you are viewing this on the web and would like to get our email every morning, please click here
*Top eight stories on MediaGuardian*
*Addison Cresswell, comedy agent, dies aged 53*
Comedy world pays tribute to agent whose clients included Jonathan Ross, Jack Dee and Jo Brand
*Last Tango in Halifax recommissioned*
BBC signs up for third series of Bafta-winning drama starring Derek Jacobi and Anne Reid
*Christopher Jefferies says ITV drama will show 'destructive nature' of press*
Experiences of man wrongly implicated in Joanna Yeates murder to be told in two-part programme The Lost Honour
*Homeland finale pulls in 1.7 million viewers*
Third run of Claire Danes and Damian Lewis drama ended on Channel 4 with lowest ratings for a series' climax
*Strictly final watched by more than 12 million*
BBC1 dance competition, won by Abbey Clancy, draws lowest audience for a final since 2009
*
Vatican journalist's front pew view*
Stories of 2013: Giovanna Chirri expected a Vatican meeting in February to be a dry affair, then Pope Benedict said meas ingravescente aetate
*Reuters dodges questions about death of 17-year-old photographer in Syria*
Agency under fire for using inexperienced journalist
*Radio Times: 90 years of Xmas covers – in pictures*
ee classic festive front pages from the TV and radio listings magazine's nine decades
*Top comment on MediaGuardian*
*Today's headlines*
*The Guardian*
Comedy agent Addison Cresswell dies. P8
*Daily Telegraph*
Last Tango in Halifax to return next year. P4
Nigella Lawson coverage. P7, 21
Homeland hanging scene 'is offensive'. P12
Comment: Apple deal shows power is shifting east. P28
*Financial Times*
LinkedIn sets sights on recruitment trade. P14
China Mobile-Apple battle cuts to the core. P16, 27
*The Times*
Nigella Lawson coverage. P11
Endemol buys stake in Reshet. P33
*The Independent*
O2 changes porn filter after charity sites blocked. P17
Christmas adaptation of David Walliams' Gangsta Granny. P33
*i*
Nigella Lawson coverage. P11
*Wall Street Journal Europe*
BT, BSkyB aim for Premier League. P1, 20
Music streaming to make waves. P15
Apple lands iPhone deal with China's top carrier. P18
*Daily Mail*
Apple signs deal to offer iPhone to 760 million Chinese. P21
Revealed: Downton Abbey's intimate secrets in 3D. P22
*Daily Express*
Downton Abbey v Call the Midwife Christmas TV ratings war. P9
*The Sun*
Nigella Lawson's new Channel 4 show – The Taste. P5
Danny Dyer wants to be on EastEnders for 20 years. P9
Ally Ross on Strictly Come Dancing. P11
Jack Dee interview. P25
Call the Midwife Christmas special. TVBiz, P2
*Daily Mirror*
Comedy agent Addison Cresswell dies. P13
* Go to MediaGuardian *
theguardian.com © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds Reported by guardian.co.uk 22 hours ago.
If you are viewing this on the web and would like to get our email every morning, please click here
*Top eight stories on MediaGuardian*
*Addison Cresswell, comedy agent, dies aged 53*
Comedy world pays tribute to agent whose clients included Jonathan Ross, Jack Dee and Jo Brand
*Last Tango in Halifax recommissioned*
BBC signs up for third series of Bafta-winning drama starring Derek Jacobi and Anne Reid
*Christopher Jefferies says ITV drama will show 'destructive nature' of press*
Experiences of man wrongly implicated in Joanna Yeates murder to be told in two-part programme The Lost Honour
*Homeland finale pulls in 1.7 million viewers*
Third run of Claire Danes and Damian Lewis drama ended on Channel 4 with lowest ratings for a series' climax
*Strictly final watched by more than 12 million*
BBC1 dance competition, won by Abbey Clancy, draws lowest audience for a final since 2009
*
Vatican journalist's front pew view*
Stories of 2013: Giovanna Chirri expected a Vatican meeting in February to be a dry affair, then Pope Benedict said meas ingravescente aetate
*Reuters dodges questions about death of 17-year-old photographer in Syria*
Agency under fire for using inexperienced journalist
*Radio Times: 90 years of Xmas covers – in pictures*
ee classic festive front pages from the TV and radio listings magazine's nine decades
*Top comment on MediaGuardian*
*Today's headlines*
*The Guardian*
Comedy agent Addison Cresswell dies. P8
*Daily Telegraph*
Last Tango in Halifax to return next year. P4
Nigella Lawson coverage. P7, 21
Homeland hanging scene 'is offensive'. P12
Comment: Apple deal shows power is shifting east. P28
*Financial Times*
LinkedIn sets sights on recruitment trade. P14
China Mobile-Apple battle cuts to the core. P16, 27
*The Times*
Nigella Lawson coverage. P11
Endemol buys stake in Reshet. P33
*The Independent*
O2 changes porn filter after charity sites blocked. P17
Christmas adaptation of David Walliams' Gangsta Granny. P33
*i*
Nigella Lawson coverage. P11
*Wall Street Journal Europe*
BT, BSkyB aim for Premier League. P1, 20
Music streaming to make waves. P15
Apple lands iPhone deal with China's top carrier. P18
*Daily Mail*
Apple signs deal to offer iPhone to 760 million Chinese. P21
Revealed: Downton Abbey's intimate secrets in 3D. P22
*Daily Express*
Downton Abbey v Call the Midwife Christmas TV ratings war. P9
*The Sun*
Nigella Lawson's new Channel 4 show – The Taste. P5
Danny Dyer wants to be on EastEnders for 20 years. P9
Ally Ross on Strictly Come Dancing. P11
Jack Dee interview. P25
Call the Midwife Christmas special. TVBiz, P2
*Daily Mirror*
Comedy agent Addison Cresswell dies. P13
* Go to MediaGuardian *
theguardian.com © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds Reported by guardian.co.uk 22 hours ago.
↧
↧
Apple seeks bite of big China market with iPhone 5S and 5C deal

↧
The best Twitter apps to download 2014
If you're looking for the best Twitter apps for iOS and Android you're in luck. We've sought out the best apps for cutting through the noise and getting the most out of this fantastic service.
So you want to stay connected, and you want the best experience. To find the best Twitter app, and there are almost as many out there as there are waffling tweeters, you’re going to need to look at your own requirements. Do you need a fire-and-forget 10 second update, or a flexible fully-featured app that you can put hours in to?
Do you want something minimal and functional or packed with features? Do you want a core Twitter experience, or something… strange? We’ve found all those things and everything in between in our roundup of the best mobile Twitter experiences. Read on!
If you, like us, are massive app fanatics, you best check out our best iPhone apps 2013: free and paid apps for iPhone, best Android apps 2013: free and paid apps for Android and best Windows apps ever features.
Reported by T3 13 hours ago.
So you want to stay connected, and you want the best experience. To find the best Twitter app, and there are almost as many out there as there are waffling tweeters, you’re going to need to look at your own requirements. Do you need a fire-and-forget 10 second update, or a flexible fully-featured app that you can put hours in to?
Do you want something minimal and functional or packed with features? Do you want a core Twitter experience, or something… strange? We’ve found all those things and everything in between in our roundup of the best mobile Twitter experiences. Read on!
If you, like us, are massive app fanatics, you best check out our best iPhone apps 2013: free and paid apps for iPhone, best Android apps 2013: free and paid apps for Android and best Windows apps ever features.
Reported by T3 13 hours ago.
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Apple fined for Taiwan price restrictions
Regulator fines company $666,700 for requiring local carriers to get its permission before setting iPhone contract prices, in violation of island’s free-trade laws
Reported by FT.com 7 hours ago.
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Ex-church trustee admits secretly recording woman in shower

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Who's been in the courts?

JAMIE Konzak, 29, of Bembridge Drive, Alvaston, was given an 84-day jail sentence suspended for 12 months, a supervision order, told to pay an £80 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for dishonestly receiving stolen goods worth £55 in Derby on October 19.
JANE Lamont, 55, of Cowley Close, Ilkeston, was fined £270, told to pay a £27 victim surcharge, £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance in Ilkeston on June 6.
NICOLA Peeling, 28, of Green Lane, Derby, was given a 56-day jail sentence suspended for 12 months, an alcohol treatment order, told to pay a £100 victim and £85 costs for stealing beer from Tesco, in Derby, while subject to a previous community order in Derby on October 22.
KYLE Bull, 26, of Castle Croft, Alvaston, was fined £40 with a £20 victim surcharge and given three penalty points on licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit in Shardlow Road, Alvaston, on June 18.
LEE Cooper, 34, of Carrington Street, Derby, was fined £30 with a £20 victim surcharge for driving without wearing a seatbelt in Derby on May 11.
STEPHEN Morgan, 44, of Burton Road, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance, and above the 50mph speed limit on Raynesway, in Derby, on April 20.
SAVAS Paskouis, 45, of Underhill Avenue, Derby, was given a 16-week jail term suspended for two years, and must pay £360 costs for dishonestly giving a false document to the Department for Work and Pensions on January 31 and March 8 in Derby.
ADAM Anthony, 31, of Ringwood Close, Chaddesden, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 18 months, a drug treatment order, told to pay £80 surcharge and £85 costs for breaching a non-molestation order in Derby on November 20.
LEVI Morley, 36, of Nairn Avenue, Derby, was given a three-month jail sentence, suspended for 12 months, and told to pay an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing five packs of Persil Small and Mighty from the Co-operative in Derby on September 29.
STEFAN Bera, 59, of Sherbourne Drive, Hilton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay a £15 victim surcharge, £175 costs and given four penalty points for driving without due care and attention in Derby on January 11.
RYAN Curley, 19, of Boulton Lane, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay £100 compensation, a £15 victim surcharge and £200 costs for assault in Derby on July 31.
STEVEN Evans, 46, of Nottingham Road, Ilkeston, was given a 12-week jail sentence for stealing bread from B&M Bargains, in Ilkeston, on November 18, while subject to a previous community order.
DALE Tew, 21, of Kerry Street, Derby, was fined £100 with a £20 victim surcharge for going on to the playing area during a Derby County football match at Pride Park, on October 5.
MARTIN Pollard, 34, of Clarence Road, Long Eaton, was jailed for 16 weeks for stealing toiletries from the Co-op on October 29, and wine from Sainsbury's on October 26, both in Long Eaton.
ROBERT Slonecki, 56, of Station Road, Ilkeston, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement and told to pay a £60 victim surcharge for possessing amphetamine in Ilkeston on June 14 and August 1.
RAZA Mehmood, 37, of Victoria Crescent, Burton, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points for driving without insurance in Derby on June 20.
MICHAEL Porter, 36, of London Road, Derby, was jailed for four weeks for damaging a female police cell in Derby on November 7.
SCOTT Tooze, 26, of Nightingale Road, Derby, was given a community order, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and given six penalty points on licence for driving a moped whilst disqualified and without insurance in Derby on November 7.
GARY Welton, 45, of Staveley Close, Shelton Lock, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, told to pay an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for breaching the terms of a restraining order in Derby on November 6.
DARIUSZ Luczyk, 36, of Bethulie Road, Derby, was fined £216, told to pay £35 costs and disqualified from driving for six months for speeding on Osmaston Park Road, in Derby, for driving without the correct licence or insurance, all on May 25.
TONIA Sutcliffe, 45, of Kingfisher Walk, Sinfin, was given a community order with supervision requirement, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing items worth £124.05 from Sainsbury's at Kingsway, Derby, on October 15.
JHI Proctor, 24, of Becksitch Lane, Belper, was given an eight week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, a supervision order, told to pay £49.99 compensation, an £80 victim surcharge and £35 costs for stealing a child's ride-on tractor from B&M Bargains, in Belper, on October 23.
NATHAN Leeson, 21, of Stockbrook Road, Derby, had a supervision order extended for two months for breaching a previous community order made by Southern Derbyshire magistrates on June 25.
PAUL Stevens, 19, of Holly Street, Alvaston, was fined £145 with a £20 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for assault in Derby on July 7.
ROBERT Zablovsky, 19, of no fixed abode, was told to pay £50 compensation for criminal damage in Derby on November 3.
All cases dealt with by Southern Derbyshire magistrates
ALAN Cook, 27, of Harrington Street, Pear Tree, was given a four-month jail term suspended for a year, a supervision order, told to pay £50.21 and £80 surcharge for stealing from the Co-op in Derby on October 24 and making off without paying for petrol, also in Derby on September 4. He was also told to pay £5 compensation for taking a ready meal from Sainsburys, in the city, on June 29.
DARIS Baulkalns, 41, of Canterbury Street, Chaddesden, was fined £75 with £20 surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given four penalty points for failing to give vehicle and driver information to police and driving above the 30mph speed limit on Hampshire Road, in Derby, on March 30.
DANIEL Smith, 27, of Coton Park, Linton, was jailed for 18 weeks for breaching a previous suspended prison sentence, given on November 9 for drink-driving, taking a vehicle without consent and driving while disqualified in Swadlincote on August 21.
FABIAN Thomas, 22, of Dorset Street, Derby, was given a 12 month conditional discharge, told to pay £15 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for possessing Class B drug methylmethcathinone in Derby on August 31.
QABEER Yusef, 26, of Cummings Street, Derby, was fined £110 with a £20 surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given nine penalty points for careless driving in Spondon on May 4.
THOMAS Pruvis, 19, of Fenwick Street, Derby, was fined £115 with a £35 surcharge, told to pay £35 and given three penalty points for driving without a correct licence or insurance in Allenton on June 4.
AARON Millward, 24, of Ashover Close, Chaddesden, was jailed for 12 weeks for stealing fragrance sets from Boots, Derby, on November 11, while subject to a previous conditional discharge.
LAURA Harvey, 31, of Grammer Street, Denby Village, was fined £75 with £20 surcharge and £35 costs and given six points for driving above the 70mph limit on the A38 near Ripley, on May 7.
All cases dealt with by Southern Derbyshire magistrates
PATRICK Roome, 45, of Hoggett Close, Beeston, was fined £35 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for driving on the M1 without wearing a seatbelt, near Long Eaton, on May 9.
TOMASZ Wojcik, 42, of Leacroft Road, Derby, was fined £80 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points on licence for driving above the 40mph speed limit on Osmaston Park Road, in Derby, on May 4.
JACQUELINE Anderson, 50, of Falcon Way, Sinfin, was fined £40 with a £20 victim surcharge, and given three penalty points on licence, for driving while using a hand-held mobile phone in Derby on May 7.
ARKADIJS Stephans, 18, of Cromwell Road, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for driving without insurance or the correct licence in Derby on June 14.
BENJAMIN Gussow, 24, of Loscoe Road, Heanor, was fined £110 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six points on licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Heanor on May 24.
LEIGHTON Murray, 28, of Boswell Square, Derby, was fined £100 with a £20 victim surcharge for damaging a toilet door and window in South Derbyshire Magistrates' Court on July 1.
STEPHEN Barradell, 47, of Addison Road, Derby, was fined £110 with a £20 surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and banned from driving for 20 months for drink-driving in Derby on November 3.
MADELINE Craven, 22, of Willow Meadow Road, Ashbourne, was fined £36, given a community order, told to pay a £60 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for drunk and disorderly behaviour, and assaulting police in Ashbourne on November 3.
PAWEL Kozak, 39, of Lime Tree Rise, Ilkeston, was fined £160 with a £20 surcharge with £85 costs and banned for 14 months for drink-driving in Ilkeston on November 2.
All cases dealt with by Southern Derbyshire magistrates
CHRISTOPHER Scott, 35, of Chestnut Avenue, Midway, was given a two-year conditional discharge, told to pay £100 compensation, £15 surcharge and £100 costs for assault in Swadlincote on June 25.
SAMUEL Chambers, 20, of Dale View Gardens, Kilburn, was fined £184 with £20 surcharge and £85 costs and banned for 20 months for drink-driving in Ripley on November 3.
SAMANATHA Jones , 38, of Ozier Holt, Long Eaton, was given an eight-week jail term suspended for a year, a supervision order and told to pay £100 compensation for assault and racially aggravated assault in Long Eaton on June 3.
ALISTAIR Dalziel, 35, of Pippin Gardens, Alvaston, was fined £165 with a £20 surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points for breaching a traffic order on Acorn Way, Derby, on June 25.
MOHEEN Hussain, 18, Wilfred Street, of Derby, was fined £250 with a £25 surcharge, told to pay £300 compensation and £100 costs, and given nine points for careless driving and for having no insurance, in Derby on February 18.
SHANE Rostron, 19, of Werburgh Street, Derby, was fined £250 with a £20 surcharge and £85 costs for being drunk and disorderly in Derby on October 26 and failing to surrender to custody on November 12.
KAMALJIT Jassal, 37, of Foston Hall Prison, was jailed for an additional 10 weeks for assault in the prison on October 14.
NICOLI Lacatus, 33, of Ash Street, Ilkeston, was fined £110 with £20 surcharge and £85 costs and banned for 17 months for drink-driving and having no insurance, in Ilkeston on October 28. Also fined £50 for failing to surrender to custody on November 14.
ANTON Fenton, 18, of Rosehill Street, Derby, was fined £75 with a £20 surcharge and £85 costs for possessing cannabis on November 15.
All cases dealt with by Southern Derbyshire magistrates
Abdul Ghani, 46, of Almond Street, Derby, was fined £180, told to pay £35 costs and given three points for carrying eight people in a vehicle in a way that could have been dangerous to them, in Derby on May 28. He was also fined an additional £90 for not wearing a seatbelt.
JAMES Hall, 36, of Rupert Road, Chaddesden, was fined £400, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for failing to give police information about the driver of a vehicle believed to have committed an offence in Ripley on July 28.
JULIUS Kovac, 24, of Sutherland Road, Derby, was fined £200 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance or the correct licence in Derby on August 6.
PAUL Barnett, 33, of Commerce Street, Derby, was fined £260, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points for driving above the 30mph speed limit on A511 Raynesway, in Derby, on July 14.
All cases dealt with by Southern Derbyshire magistrates
DAVID Lees, 37, of Wood Street, Church Gresley, was fined £105 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points on licence for driving whilst using a hand-held mobile phone and not wearing a seatbelt in Repton on June 19.
WAZIR Mahroof, 24, of Dairyhouse Road, Derby, was fined £145 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given eight penalty points on licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Derby on July 17.
JASON Bowman, 25, of Dean Street, Derby, was told to pay £300 compensation and given eight penalty points for failing to stop after causing damage to another vehicle or report the incident and driving without insurance in Derby on June 11.
BILLY Lovatt, 19, of Glengarry Way, Sinfin, was given a community order and told to pay £700 compensation for damaging a car in Derby on October 29.
MARK McCarthy, 28, of Green Lane, Derby, was given a 16-week jail sentence for stealing meat from the Co-op, a camera from Argos, a TV from the Co-op, washing powder from One Stop and perfume from Debenhams, all in Chesterfield on September 5, and alcohol from Tesco Metro in Derby on November 13.
SHAWN Whitmore, 29, of Wood Road, Chaddesden, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, fined £110 and given six penalty points on his licence for damaging a police radio, driving without insurance or the correct licence, and resisting a police officer in Derby on September 19.
MARK Gallear, 49, of St Thomas Road, Derby, was given a two-year conditional discharge, told to pay a £15 surcharge and £85 costs for possessing amphetamines and being in Derby Royal Infirmary with intent to steal on October 29.
ROCKY Taylor, 27, of Salisbury Drive, Midway, was given a community order with alcohol treatment, told to do 80 hours' unpaid work and pay a £60 surcharge for threatening behaviour in Swadlincote on October 22.
GARETH Haywood, 28, of Uttoxeter New Road, Derby, was fined £600, told to pay £85 costs and disqualified from driving for a year for driving a quad bike without a licence or insurance in Matlock on July 5.
JASON Bowman, 25, of Dean Street, Derby, was told to pay £300 compensation and given eight penalty points on his licence for driving without insurance, causing damage to another vehicle, and not leaving contact details in Derby on June 11.
GEMMA Cole, 30, of Wood Road, Chaddesden, was given a community order, told to carry out 60 hours' unpaid work and must pay a £60 victim surcharge for allowing the production of Class B drug cannabis at her premises in Chaddesden on September 19.
ANA Petre, 18, of no fixed abode, was given a six-month conditional discharge for loitering in Hartington Street and Normanton Road, Derby, for the purpose of prostitution between September 17 and November 13.
ALAN Sharpe, 42, of College Street, Long Eaton, was jailed for 26 weeks for stealing a Mercedes, drink-driving and driving without a licence or insurance in Long Eaton on October 21.
FAHEEM Ali, 28, of Balfour Road, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six points on licence for driving without insurance in Derby on June 8.
RYAN Simpson, 25, of Milldale Road, Long Eaton, was fined £200 and told to pay £120 costs and £2.10 compensation for travelling on a train without a valid ticket on June 7.
ANTHONY Dry, 25, of Manners Road, Ilkeston, was fined £110, told to pay £35 costs and disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving without the correct licence or insurance, or MoT test certificate, in Ilkeston on July 29.
No TV licence
THe following people have appeared before magistrates charged with using a colour television without a licence:
FAY Watson, 35, of Hope Street, Ilkeston, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 12.
KAREN Winfield, 36, of Norman Street, Ilkeston, was fined £35, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 17.
JESSICA Zoppi, 34, of King Alfred Street, Derby, was fined £300, with £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 13.
AUDREY Cameron, 32, of Moor Road, Breadsall Village, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement and told to pay a £60 victim surcharge for stealing shoes from Shoe Zone and children's clothes from Sports Direct, both in Derby, on October 19 and 21.
ROBERT Agbrahall, 42, of Kent Road, Burton, was fined £215 with a 321 victim surcharge and £35 costs, and given five penalty points on licence, for driving above the 70mph speed limit on the A38 in Mickleover on July 29.
JOSEPH Grogan, 25, of Leaper Street, Derby, was given a community order, told to carry out 60 hours' unpaid work, pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing perfume from Debenhams, in Derby, on October 28.
SHAUN Archbold, 31, of Mickley Lane, Stretton, was fined £240 with a £24 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance or a valid MOT test certificate in South Normanton on July 12.
VICTORIA Fell, 28, of Lathkill Drive, Marehay, was fined £105 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points on licence for driving while using a hand-held mobile phone and without wearing a seatbelt in Heage on July 17.
BENJAMIN Gussoq, 24, of Loscoe Road, Heanor, was fined £110, told to pay a £20 victim surcharge and £35 costs for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Heanor on May 24.
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THE following people have appeared before magistrates charged with using a colour TV without a licence:
SEBASTIAN Sidorczuk, 34, of Lincoln Way, Midway, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between July 29 and August 30.
LISA Simpson, 38, of Monsal Drive, Spondon, was fined £400, with £40 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 27.
GARRY Smith, 33, of Field Court, Kilburn, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between August 3 and September 4.
VANESSA Stone, 42, of Farmhouse Road, Sinfin, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 12.
MARIE Summers, 42, of Cranmer Street, Long Eaton, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 13.
DAVID John Tallent, 41, of Coupland Place, Somercotes, was fined £500, with £50 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 3.
VICTORIA Taylor, 24, of Marsh Avenue, Ilkeston, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 17.
GILLIAN Walton, 48, of Glossop Street, Derby, was fined £500, with £50 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 9.
ANNETTE Warren, 37, of Grampian Way, Sinfin, was fined £70, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between June 12 and July 13.
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ABDUL Ghani, 46, of Almond Street, Derby, was fined £180 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points for driving in a manner dangerous to passengers by carrying two adult passengers, one baby and four children in one car in Derby on May 28. He was also fined £90 for not wearing a seatbelt.
JAMIE Whitmore, 27, of St Vincent Close, Long Eaton, was fined £200, told to pay £120 costs and £4.10 compensation for travelling on a train between Derby and Long Eaton without a valid ticket on June 10.
MARK Dunlop, 29, of Mount Carmel Street, Derby, was jailed for six weeks for stealing whisky from Tesco and bolt croppers from Wilkinson, both in Derby, on November 12.
ROBERT Grace, 48, of Green Lane, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and told to pay a £15 victim surcharge for begging in Derby on November 3.
ARKADIJS Stepans, 18, of Cromwell Road, Derby, was fined £600 and told to pay £85 costs for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Derby on June 14
BILLY Lovatt, 19, of Glengarry Way, Sinfin, was given a community order and told to pay £700 compensation for criminal damage in Derby on October 29.
JULIUS Kovac, 24, of Sutherland Road, Derby, was fined £200 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance in Derby on August 6.
WAZIR Mahroof, 24, of Dairyhouse Road, Derby, was fined £145 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given eight penalty points on licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance on July 17.
SATNAM Singh, 26, of Anstey Court, Oakwood, was fined £180, told to pay £35 costs and given nine penalty points on licence for driving without due care and attention and without insurance in Breaston on August 26.
STEVE Shaw, , of Stainsby Avenue, Heanor, was fined £700 with a £70 victim surcharge and told to pay £400 costs for failing to comply with a noticed served by Amber Valley Borough Council requiring him to tidy waste material from his garden between May 30 and September 4.
JAMES Clarke, 23, of Buttermere Close, Long Eaton, was fined £37 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £95 costs and £2.10 compensation for travelling on a train between Derby and Long Eaton without a valid ticket on July 31.
SHELLEY Comery, 51, of Hexham Avenue, Ilkeston, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points for driving without insurance or an MOT test certificate in Ilkeston on May 19.
THOMAS Green, 24, of Littleover, Derby, was fined £200 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on Raynesway, in Derby, on July 14.
TERRENCE Hall, 25, of Moss Street, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Allenton on June 13.
LANCE Serra, 34, of Hawthorn Street, Derby, was fined £400 with a £40 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on Raynesway, in Derby, on July 7.
SHARON Bull, 49, of Talbot Street, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs, and given six penalty points on licence, for driving without insurance or an MOT test certificate in Derby on June 16.
SIMON Williams-Hunter, 35, of Hastings Road, Swadlincote, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance in Swadlincote on June 10.
JAMIE Whitmore, 27, of St Vincent Close, Long Eaton, was fined £200, told to pay £120 costs and £4.10 compensation for travelling on a train between Derby and Long Eaton without a valid ticket on June 10.
MARK Dunlop, 29, of Mount Carmel Street, Derby, was jailed for six weeks for stealing whiskey from Tesco and bolt croppers from Wilkinsons, both in Derby, on November 12.
ROBERT Grace, 48, of Green Lane, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and told to pay a £15 victim surcharge for begging in Derby on November 3.
ARKADIJS Stepans, 18, of Cromwell Road, Derby, was fined £600 and told to pay £85 costs for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Derby on June 14
BILLY Lovatt, 19, of Glengarry Way, Sinfin, was given a community order and told to pay £700 compensation for criminal damage in Derby on October 29.
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THE following people have all appeared before Southern Derbyshire magistrates charged with using a colour television without a licence:
FRANK Pearson, 69, of Cardigan Street, Derby, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on May 16.
CHARLOTTE Phillips, 20, of Humbleton Drive, Derby, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between May 10 and June 11.
EMMA Phillips, 27, of Ash Crescent, Ripley, was fined £300, with a £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 3.
PATRICIA Pickering, 43, of Norfolk Road, Long Eaton, was fined £35, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 1.
ANDZELIKA Pomerening, 24, of Whiston Street, Derby, was fined £300, with a £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between September 1 and 13.
OLIVIER Rockley, 20, of Melton Court, Sandiacre, was fined £300, with a £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on July 31.
DEBBIE Rogerson, 47, of Holme Close, Hatton, was fined £110, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 28.
MICHELLE Saglam, 34, of Depedale Avenue, Ilkeston, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 10.
DEBORAH Scott, 44, of Pear Tree Avenue, Ripley, was fined £93, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £130 costs, for an offence between June 25 and July 26.
------------------------------ The following people have all appeared before Southern Derbyshire magistrates for using a colour television without a licence:
JAMES Morgan, 33, of Stonesdale Court, Alvaston, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between August 3 and September 4.
JESSICA Newsome, 25, of Dawsmere Close, Derby, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 17.
SONIA Pallett, 50, of Bentley Dale, Hartshorne, was fined £55, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 29.
EMMA Pearson, 41, of Moyne Gardens, Chellaston, was fined £500, with £50 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between August 10 and September 11.
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CHRISTOPHER Knight, 22, of Stanhope Road, Swadlincote, was given a community order and told to attend a drug rehabilitation programme for two months and put under a year's supervision order for stealing a quantity of steak from Sainsbury's, in Newhall, on October 23 and for being in possession of cannabis on October 28 at St Mary's Wharf police station, Derby.
SEAN Brendan O'Reilly, 30, of Ellastone Gardens, Alvaston, was given six weeks' jail suspended for 18 months, a year's supervision order and told to do 120 hours of unpaid work for causing fear of violence and committing an assault. He was also ordered to pay £100 compensation and £85 costs.
LEWIS Alexander, 27, of Crompton Street, Derby, was given a community order and told to do undertake probation activity for 20 hours over 10 days, carry out 80 hours of unpaid work and pay a victim surcharge of £65 and costs of £85 for assault.
PRABJIT Singh Johal, 26, of Eastbrae Road, Sunny Hill, was ordered to comply with a community order and complete a 60-day probation programme. He was also given an 18-month supervision order and told to do unpaid work for 80 hours and pay £65 victim surcharge and £85 costs for assault.
CHRISTOPHER Taylor, 25, of Cummings Street, Derby, was given a community order, told to undertake an employment training programme for five days, put on an 18-month supervision order and told to pay £60 surcharge and £85 costs for assault.
LUKE Tams, 19, Wood Street. Ilkeston, was discharged conditionally for six months and ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £15 for being in possession of cannabis.
MARCUS Stringer, 28, of Grosvenor Street, Derby, has been ordered to carry out a further seven hours of unpaid work for failing to comply with a community order made on June 11.
OMED Rahman, 33, of Lapwing Close, Sinfin, was fined £55 ordered to pay £50 compensation and £100 costs for assault on June 17.
ASHLEY Hogg, 47, of Parkfields Drive, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, fined £75 and told to pay a £20 victim surcharge and £85 costs, for stealing a Fred Perry jacket from Debenhams and using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour on October 26.
NICHOLAS Stredder, 41, of Wilson Street, Derby, has been given a four-month curfew order between the hours of 5pm and 6am everyday for failing to comply with a community order issued on October 10.
BRIAN Learmouth, 19, of Richmond Road, Derby, was fined £36 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs, for being drunk and disorderly on November 9.
JAMIE Holmes, 37, of Haddon Way, Long Eaton, was given a community order, with £60 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for stealing 11 shirts from Peacocks in Ilkeston.
MARK Charlton, 44, of Andrews Drive, Langley Mill, was jailed for four weeks for breaking a restraining order between June 1 and August 15.
THE following people were charged with watching television without a licence.
SHANE Bednall, 24, of Kew Crescent, Heanor, was fined £500 with £50 victim surcharge and £90 costs for an offence between August 4 and September 5.
STACIE Bowring, 24, of Bentley Dale, Hartshorne, was fined £400 with £40 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence on September 13.
MALCOLM Collins, 58, of Knightsbridge, Derby, was fined £35 with £20 surcharge, and £90 costs for an offence on September 13.
KATHY Cooper, 29, of Lower Gladstone Street, Heanor, was fined £80 with £20 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence between August 4 and September 5.
EMMA Cope, 38, of Crayford Road, Alvaston, was fined £400 with £40 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence between May 14 and June 16.
SOPHIE Corbett, 20, was fined £200 with £20 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence on June 25.
LAUREL Degg, 45, of Parks Avenue, South Wingfield, was fined £500 with £50 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence on September 7.
STELLA Dobie, 55, of North Street, Swadlincote, was fined £300 with £30 surcharge and £90 costs for an offence on September 2.
JORDAN Werkowski, 24, of Co-operative Street, Long Eaton, was jailed for 12 weeks for stealing a mobile phone on October 24. He was given a further four weeks, to run concurrently, for damaging a door, gate and patio set on August 17 and two further weeks in jail, to run concurrently, for failing to surrender to custody on September 4 and October 31.
RAKESH Chander Kainth, 45, of Rawdon Street, Derby, was jailed for four weeks for stealing meat worth £40 from the Co-op on October 8. He was given a further four weeks, to run consecutively, for stealing meat worth £39.07 from the Co-op on October 12 and four weeks, also consecutively, for stealing meat worth £25.11 from Sainsbury's on November 7.
CRAIG Morgan, 25, of Uttoxeter New Road, Derby, was given a year's conditional discharge and told to pay £308 compensation, a £15 surcharge and £85 costs for damaging a car on July 7.
LORRAINE Welsh, 52, of Swinburne Street, Derby, was given a year's conditional discharge, with a £15 surcharge and £85 costs, for possessing diazepam on August 12.
ANN Catherine Hallam, 56, of Dryden Street, Derby, was given a community order, with £60 surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for driving while disqualified on July 31. She was banned for a further five months.
MARIO Klyc, 24, of Shaftesbury Crescent, Derby, was given a community order, with £60 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for drink-driving on October 7. He was disqualified from driving for 40 months.
GARETH Vaughan Thomas, 33, of Epworth Villas, Duffield Road, Derby, was given a community order, with £60 surcharge, for wasting police time on October 22. No order for costs was made.
AIDEN Charles John Thomason, 21, of Walnut Street, Allenton, was jailed for 21 weeks for assault on August 16.
ARCHIE James West Spencer, 21, of Ash Fields, Belper, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, with £15 victim surcharge, and told to pay £1,498 compensation for damaging a door and window on August 29.
RUHULLAH Armani, 22, of Baker Street, Derby, was fined £266, with £26 victim surcharge, and disqualified from driving for six months, for stealing a Vauxhall Astra on September 18. No order for costs was made.
JACQUELINE Ann Keating, 51, of Abington Street, Allenton, was given a four-week jail sentence, suspended for a year, and told to pay £150 compensation for assaulting a police officer on June 22.
PHILLIP Betts, 32, of Station Court, Ilkeston, was given a community order and told to pay £160 compensation, £60 surcharge and £100 costs, for stealing two vacuum cleaners from the Co-op on August 14 and August 16.
GEORGE William Fernley, 20, of Tavistock Close, Stenson Fields, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, with £15 surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour on June 15.
LEANNE Marie Peat, 30, of Briar Gate, Long Eaton, was given a community order, with £60 surcharge, and told to pay £17.50 compensation and £85 costs, for stealing beer from the Co-op on September 4 and cigarettes from the Co-op on July 28.
PAUL Hallam, 24, of Longfield Lane, Ilkeston, was given a community order and told to pay £48 compensation for stealing make-up from Boots, Ilkeston, on October 24.
SHANE Joseph Keyland, 21, of Galway Avenue, Chaddesden, was jailed for eight weeks for stealing wine from Sainsbury's on October 7 and October 15.
BARRY Wright, 34, of London Road, Alvaston, was jailed for 18 weeks for stealing aftershave from Boots on November 12.
RUSSELL Bannister, 29, of Cantelupe Road, Ilkeston, was given a community order with £60 surcharge and told to pay £100 compensation and £85 costs for assault on July 6.
GARETH John Evans, 46, of Excelsior Drive, Woodville, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with £15 surcharge and told to pay £625 costs for damaging a fence panel on April 10.
DWAYNE Aston Medcalf, 26, of Alleyne Close, Swadlincote, was fined £110 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for drink-driving on August 25. He was banned for 12 months.
MARIAN Magyar, 26, of Hawthorn Street, Derby, was told to pay £20 surcharge and £55 costs for stealing rings from Claire's Accessories on October 25.
ROSE-MARIE Nicholls, 45, of Hayes Avenue, Littleover, was fined £75 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for stealing goods worth £381.54 from Asda. ADNAN Ali Quayum, 31, of Co-operative Street, Normanton, was fined £600, with a £60 victim surcharge, and told to pay £600 costs for driving without insurance on March 22. His license was endorsed with six penalty points. SHERYL Easton, 42, of Bedford Street, Derby, was given a two-year conditional discharge, with a £15 victim surcharge, for stealing aftershave on October 27. No order for costs was made. JASON Peersaib, 43, of Addison Road, Allenton, was given an 18-month conditional discharge, with a £15 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for possessing methylmethcathinone on July 7. TANYA Munyebvu, 34, of Osmaston Road, Derby, was given a year's conditional discharge with £15 surcharge, and told to pay £45 compensation and £85 costs for stealing an iPhone on July 27.
NICOLE Lucy Williamson, 27, of The Burrows, Newhall, was fined £110, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs, for drink driving on October 18. She was disqualified from driving for 18 months.
GEORGE Steven Bramley 21, of Cardigan Street, Chaddesden, was given a community order and told to pay £550 compensation for stealing a bike worth £80, a chainsaw worth £250 and a projector worth £300 between September 28 and October 10. No order for costs was made.
JOHN Astle, 40, of Harvey Road, Derby, was fined £120, with £20 surcharge and £35 costs for using a mobile phone while driving on May 9. His licence was endorsed with three penalty points.
STEVEN Frederick Delacy, 58, of Castle Road, Castle Gresley, was fined £240, with £20 surcharge and £35 costs, for driving a vehicle which exceeded its maximum permitted weight on May 15.
BOGUSLAW Laszczynski, 51, of Crayford Road, Alvaston, was fined £65, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs, for driving with no MoT on May 12.
GRAHAM Parkin, 25, of Mackenzie Street, Derby, was jailed for 16 weeks for stealing electrical items from TK Maxx, in Derby, on October 25, breaching a conditional discharge.
JONATHAN Croft, 38, of Commerce Street, Derby, was fined £116 with £110 costs and told to pay back duty of £57.09 for having an unlicensed car on a public road on April 3.
LEE Andrew Ginger, of Outram Street, Ripley, was fined £200 with a £20 victim surcharge and £110 costs for failing to notify the DVLA of a change of ownership of a car on February 8.
IAN Vernon, 39, of Wilson Street, Derby, was given a four-week prison sentence, suspended for 12 months, and told to pay an £80 victim surcharge, for stealing perfume from Dazzle on November 7.
TONDERAI Andrew Chinyanda, 42, of Drysdale Road, Mickleover, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £110 costs, for failing to inform the DVLA of a change of ownership of a car in February.
KEVIN Russell, 51, of Burton Road, Derby, was given a community order and told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for wasting police time by giving a false report, in Derby, between January 1 and July 10.
PHILLIP Bennett, 51, of Donington Close, Sinfin, was fined £110 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for breaching the terms of a restraining order in Derby on October 28.
MARK Friery, 36, of Lynden Avenue, Long Eaton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with £15 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for stealing aftershave and other items worth £102.67 from Asda on September 14.
ADAM Fulford, 23, of Francis Street, Derby, was fined £110 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs, for drink-driving on September 4. He was disqualified for three years.
NASAR Khan Mahmood, 33, of Oriel Court, Derby, was given a 12-month community order with £60 surcharge and told to pay £85 costs, for assault on September 27.
DEX Tenbrink, 26, of Pear Tree Street, Derby, was fined £50, with £20 surcharge, for failing to surrender to custody on October 29.
GEORDIE Boye, 48, of Green Lane, Derby, was fined £60, with £20 surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs, for begging in Derby on October 22.
SAMUEL Pepper, 26, of Sitwell Street, Spondon, was fined £300, told to pay £200 costs and disqualified from driving for 18 months for drink-driving in Derby on August 22.
JASON Bamford, 41, of Golden Valley, Riddings, was given a community order, told to carry out 100 hours' unpaid work, pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs, and disqualified from driving for 23 months for drink-driving in the Assembly Rooms car park, in Derby, on October 13.
JAMES Bainbrigge, 34, of Shelmory Close, Allenton, was given a restraining order and an eight-week jail sentence, suspended for 24 months, and told to pay an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for harassment in Derby between July 28 and September 17.
LEON Wilks, 20, of Cavendish Street, Derby, was given a community order and told to carry out 80 hours' unpaid work and pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for threatening behaviour in Derby on August 2.
BRANDON Draper, 23, of Little Hallam Lane, Ilkeston, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement and told to pay £250 compensation for burglary and possessing class B drug methylmethcathinone in Ilkeston on October 18. Magistrates ordered the destruction of the drug.
SANDRA Fern, 51, of Cockayne Mews, Ashbourne, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with £15 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs, for possessing crack cocaine and diamorphine on May 25.
CHARLOTTE Emma Christine Allen, 26, of Waterford Drive, Chaddesden, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £110 costs, for failing to inform the DVLA of a change of ownership of a car on March 4.
AARON Hall, 25, of Emerson Square, Sunny Hill, was fined £55, with £20 victim surcharge, and must pay £200 costs, for assault on July 1.
SCOTT Thomas Weston, 46, of Cotmanhay Road, Ilkeston, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and ordered to pay £85 costs and a £15 victim surcharge for stealing cable worth £50 from Harpbrand Engineers on September 14.
LUKE Alexander Hayward, 27, of Haig Street, Derby, was given a 14-week jail sentence, suspended for 12 months, for stealing a camera worth £309.99 from Argos. He must also pay an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs.
ANDREW Nicholas Mallett, 55, of Grafham Close, Chellaston, was fined £300, with £30 victim surcharge, and told to pay £85 costs for drink driving on October 10. He was also disqualified from driving for 16 months.
ADEVEMI Omorinove, 38, of May Street, Derby, was fined £200, with a £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs for failing to stop after an accident on March 17. His licence was endorsed with five penalty points.
MOHAMMED Nawaz, 57, of Leacroft Road, Derby, was fined £50, with a £20 victim surcharge, and ordered to pay £85 costs for possessing cannabis on August 8.
BENJAMIN Robert Cooper, 32, of Winchester Crescent, Chaddesden, was jailed for 16 weeks for assault on August 31. He must also pay £200 costs.
PAUL Foster, 37, of Bailey Street, Normanton, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months for breaching the terms of a previous community order made by magistrates on June 4 for possessing the class B drug methylmethcathinone in Derby on March 22.
RICHARD Pepper, 24, of Chadwick Avenue, Allenton, was jailed for four weeks for failing to comply with the terms of a community order made by magistrates on September 29 for criminal damage and assault in Derby on June 29.
ADAM Thorpe, 24, of Cardean Close, Chester Green, was jailed for eight weeks for failing to comply with the terms of a community order made by magistrates on July 24 for assault in Derby on July 7.
DAVID Mosley, 25, of Hexham Walk, Derby, had a community order made by magistrates on June 4 altered to include an alcohol treatment requirement.
SINEAD Thomson, 20, of Charnwood Street, Derby, was fined £150 for failing to abide by licence conditions by reporting to a supervising officer on August 15.
STEVEN Chand, 25, of Beeches Street, Derby, was given a restraining order, fined £150 and told to pay £275 costs for assault in Derby on August 12.
BRETT Traynor, 32, of Hartington Street, Derby, was fined £50, with a £20 victim surcharge, for possessing cannabis on August 20.
MOHAMMED Hassan, 30, of Whitaker Street, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with a £15 victim surcharge and ordered to pay £600 costs for assault on July 26.
MICHAEL Falconbridge, 35, of Leaper Street, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge with £15 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for stealing aftershave from Debenhams on October 11.
CLIVE Beatty, 53, of Albion Street, Derby, was fined £50 with a £20 victim surcharge for begging in the street on October 8.
MICHAEL Beeson, 56, of Deborah Drive, Chaddesden, was given a community order, told to carry out 80 hours' unpaid work and must pay £50 compensation, a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for touching a girl under 16 in a sexual way in Derby on September 18.
STEPHEN Gallacher, 23, of Quarn Way, Derby, was given a community order with drug treatment, told to carry out 100 hours' unpaid work and must pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for possessing cocaine and cannabis in Derby on August 10. Magistrates ordered the destruction of the drugs.
PERRY Davis, 24, of Crewe Street, Derby, was jailed for 28 days for breaching the terms of a restraining order in Derby on October 10.
LINZIE Grey, 28, of Starthe Bank, Heanor, was given a community order with supervision requirement and told to pay £200 compensation for damaging a car in Ilkeston on May 28.
VILIS Kozlovskis, 30, of Twyford Street, Derby, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, told to carry out 150 hours unpaid work, told to pay £85 costs and an £80 victim surcharge and was disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving while disqualified and without insurance in Derby on October 9.
TRISTAN Berridge, 38, of Thorndike Avenue, Alvaston, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay a £15 victim surcharge and £85 costs for failing to stop drinking in a public place in St Peter's Street, Derby, on September 16, when asked to do so by a police community support officer.
SIMON Banjanin, 25, of Allestree Street, Alvaston, was fined £165 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £200 costs and disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving without insurance and drink-driving in Spondon on July 15.
ALEX Kelsey, 18, of Station Road, Burton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay £85 compensation and a £15 victim surcharge for criminal damage in Swadlincote on October 14.
LEE Brown, 33, of Green Lane, Derby, was jailed for 12 weeks for stealing tracksuit bottoms and a hat from JD Sports, in Derby, on October 28.
VILIS Kozlovskis, 30, of Twyford Street, Derby, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, told to carry out 150 hours unpaid work, told to pay £85 costs and an £80 victim surcharge and was disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving while disqualified and without insurance in Derby on October 9.
TRISTAN Berridge, 38, of Thorndike Avenue, Alvaston, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay a £15 victim surcharge and £85 costs for failing to stop drinking in a public place in St Peter's Street, Derby, on September 16, when asked to do so by a police community support officer.
SIMON Banjanin, 25, of Allestree Street, Alvaston, was fined £165 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £200 costs and disqualified from driving for 12 months for driving without insurance and drink-driving in Spondon on July 15.
ALEX Kelsey, 18, of Station Road, Burton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay £85 compensation and a £15 victim surcharge for criminal damage in Swadlincote on October 14.
LEE Brown, 33, of Green Lane, Derby, was jailed for 12 weeks for stealing tracksuit bottoms and a hat from JD Sports, in Derby, on October 28.
TALIVALDIS Vancans, 54, of St James Road, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence or failing to give police information relating to the identification of a driver believed to be guilty of an offence, in Ripley on June 17.
RIA-ROSE Smalley, 22, of Drewry Lane, Derby, was given a community order with a drug treatment requirement, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and ordered to pay costs of £85 for being found in possession of class A drug cocaine and also the class B drug cannabis in Derby on August 10.
DAVID Taylor, 27, of St Mary's Wharf Road, Derby, was given a six-month jail sentence, suspended for 18 months, for stealing a mountain bike, saddle bag and its contents, on October 23. He was ordered to pay £80 victim surcharge.
AMANDA Trowbridge, 46, of Boulton Drive, Alvaston, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs, for driving without insurance on May 7. Her licence was endorsed with six penalty points.
IAN Glenn Wood, 50, of Margreave Road, Chaddesden, was fined £250, with £25 victim surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs, for driving without insurance on July 2. His licence was endorsed with eight penalty points.
LUKE Maltby, 25, of Middleton Avenue, Condor, was fined £300 with £30 victim surcharge and £85 costs and banned for 12 months for drink-driving in Smalley on October 23.
MICHELLE Sentence, 43, of Dale Road, Spondon, was fined £280 with a £38 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and banned for 16 months, for drink-driving, and driving without a correct licence or insurance in Derby on October 23.
JOE McWilliam, 35, of Ash Place, Derby, was given a 10-week jail sentence, suspended for a year, a supervision order, told to pay £16.20 compensation, an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing meat from Sainsbury's, in Derby, on October 20.
JOHN Stacey, 52, of Richmans Corner Caravan Park, Overseal, was given a community order with supervision requirement, told to pay a £60 surcharge, £85 costs and banned for 12 months for careless driving, failing to stop and failing to report an accident that caused injury to another person, in Swadlincote, on April 1.
FRANCESCA Ward, 24, of Burton Road, Woodville, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement, told to pay a £60 surcharge and £85 costs for stealing toys from B&M Bargains, Swadlincote, on October 29, and damaging the wall of a police cell at St Mary's Wharf, Derby.
JOHN Butler, 25, of Newlyns Close, Church Gresley, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, disqualified from driving for six months, told to pay a £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for driving whilst disqualified and without insurance in Swadlincote on June 13 and July 1.
CLAIRE Hughes, 46, of Ashby Road, Woodville, was given a community order with alcohol treatment requirement, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing vodka from Home Bargains, in Swadlincote, on September 29.
DANIEL Small, 40, of Gerard Street North, Derby, was jailed for 26 weeks for burglary at Park Farm Medical Centre, where he stole a prescription.
CHARLES Cook, 20, of Cranhill Close, Littleover, was jailed for 10 weeks for assault in Long Eaton on March 16.
REBECCA Stephens, of Koppe Close, Moira, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points for failing to give police information relating to a driver believed to have been guilty of an offence in Midway on May 17.
KEITH James Plackett, 56, of Wirksworth Road, Ilkeston, was fined £155 with £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for driving a transit van with defective tyres on July 12. His licence was endorsed with three penalty points.
MANDY Louise Keany, 31, of Clifton Road, Ashbourne, was given a community order and told to pay £100 costs, for failing to notify Derbyshire Dales District Council of a change of circumstances which would affect her benefits.
ADAM Megill, 23, of Taverners Crescent, Littleover, was fined £350 with £35 victim surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for driving without insurance on April 29. His licence was endorsed with eight penalty points.
DOLARS Borcovs, 40, of Cromwell Road, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance in Derby on July 4.
LEE Doherty, 32, of Langdale Drive, Derby, was fined £200, told to pay £85 costs and given three penalty points on licence for driving while using a hand-held mobile phone in Chaddesden on April 16.
ALEX John Priest, 18, of Grosvenor Street, Derby, was fined £100 and told to pay £80 compensation, a £20 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing a fire extinguisher on April 1.
DANIEL Rogers, 29, of Cavendish Road, Long Eaton, was given a 12-month conditional discharge, told to pay £84 compensation, £15 surcharge and £85 costs for stealing 21 packets of bacon from Iceland, Long Eaton, on October 10.
MARTIN Cudworth, 60, of York Street, Derby, was fined £37 with a £20 surcharge and £85 costs for being drunk and disorderly in York Street on October 10.
NICHOLAS Kearney, 52, of Andrews Drive, Langley Mill, was given an eight-week jail term suspended for a year, an alcohol treatment order, told to pay £80 surcharge and £85 costs for harassment on August 28.
PAUL Bramley, 25, of Huntingdon Green, Chaddesden, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 12 months, a drug treatment order, told to pay £36.17 compensation, an £80 victim surcharge and £85 costs for stealing meat from the Co-op, in Derby, on October 20.
ADRIAN Payne, 34, of Deadmans Lane, Derby, was fined £140 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for criminal damage in Alvaston on May 10.
JAMES Gyongyosi, 29, of Adler Court, Chester Green, was fined £74 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for begging in Albion Street, Derby, on October 20.
ZOE Birkinshaw, 21, of Grasmere Road, Long Eaton, was told to pay £75 compensation for assaulting a police officer in Long Eaton on October 21.
DEANO Dharam, 20, of Cambridge Street, Normanton, was fined £67 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for threatening behaviour in Derby on October 13.
FAHIM Hussain, 24, of Sale Street, Derby, was fined £67 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for possessing class B drug cannabis in Derby on September 28. Magistrates also ordered the destruction of the drug.
RUSSELL Staniland, 35, of Eggesford Road, Stenson Fields, was fined £67 with a £20 victim surcharge and told to pay £85 costs for possessing class B drug cannabis in Derby on January 30. Magistrates also ordered the destruction of the drug.
DARIUSZ Glabicki, 42, of Haddon Street, Derby, was jailed for 18 weeks for stealing aftershave worth £72 from Debenhams, in Derby, on November 5.
DANIEL Hampson, 18, of High Street, Heanor, was fined £110 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and disqualified from driving for 14 months for drink-driving, driving without insurance and the correct licence in Long Eaton on August 24.
THE following motorists were charged with speeding:
DANIEL Aucott, 25, of Cheribough Road, Castle Donington, was fined £100 with £20 surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on July 7. His licence was endorsed with three penalty points.
DIANA Carter-Selwood, 39, of Stirling Close, Derby, was fined £100 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on July 13. She was given three penalty points.
ALLAH Ditta, 50, of Richmond Road, Derby, was fined £120 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on April 5. He was given three penalty points.
DAVID Downing, 67, of Station Road, Castle Donington was fined £30, with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on April 5. He was given three penalty points.
KEVIN Hall, 23, of Newport Court, Alvaston, was fined £100 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on April 6. He was given three penalty points.
ANTHONY Plunton Lennox, 45, of Woodfield Drive, Ripley was fined £120, with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on June 29. He was given four penalty points.
LUKE Partridge, 18, of Belper Road, Ashbourne. was fined £100 with £20 surcharge, and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on July 8. He was given three penalty points.
JEREMY Regan, 52, of Field Lane, Alvaston, was fined £80 with £20 surcharge and told to pay £35 costs for an offence on April 5. He was given three penalty points.
MARK Holmes, 61, of Windley, Belper, was fined £40 with £20 surcharge for an offence on April 8.
SIMON Peter Sims, 30, of Rawlinson Avenue, Derby, was fined £40 with £20 surcharge and £35 costs for an offence on April 5. He was given three penalty points.
PATRICK Broderick was fined £600 with a £60 surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six points for driving above the 50mph limit on Raynesway on April 15, and failing to give information about the identification of a driver believed to have committed an offence in Derby after May 25.
SIMON Green, 41, of Western Road, Mickleover, was fined £400 with a £40 surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six points for driving above the 40mph limit on Osmaston Park Road, Derby, on April 21.
SIMON Hind, 49, of Foyle Avenue, Chaddesden, was fined £40 with a £40 surcharge and given three points for driving above the 30mph limit in Hampshire Road, Chaddesden, on April 17.
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MICHAEL Conbridge, 35, of Leaper Street, Derby, was given a 12-week jail sentence suspended for 18 months, a drug treatment order, told to pay an £80 victim surcharge and £34.99 compensation for stealing an Arsenal football shirt from Sports Direct, in Derby, on October 25, and a figurine from British Heart Foundation, in Derby, on October 3.
SARAH Edmonds, 24, of Parliament Street, Derby, was given a community order with drug treatment requirement, told to pay a £60 victim surcharge and £40 costs for stealing clothes from GAP, in Derby, on October 8, while subject to a previous conditional discharge.
KELLY Earp, 33, of Elmsleigh Drive, Midway, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and ordered to pay a 315 victim surcharge and £85 costs for assault in Midway on October 20.
JOSEPH Bosworth, 26, of New Street, Stanley, was fined £247 with a £22 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points on his licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on London Road, in Derby, on April 14.
MICHELLE Carlin, 30, of Mill Road, Heanor, was fined £135 with a £20 victim surcharge and £35 costs, and given six penalty points on her licence, for driving without insurance in Ilkeston on May 23.
CHRISTOPHER Holmes, 24, of Critchley Street, Ilkeston, was fined £110 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given eight penalty points on his licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Ilkeston on May 23.
KATIE McMahon, 20, of Doveridge Walk, Littleover, was fined £135 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on her licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on Ladywood Road, in Kirk Hallam, on July 23.
MATTHEW Smith, 33, of no fixed abode, was jailed for four weeks for threatening behaviour in Langley Mill on November 11.
THE following people have appeared before magistrates charged with using a colour TV without a licence:
SEBASTIAN Sidorczuk, 34, of Lincoln Way, Midway, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between July 29 and August 30.
LISA Simpson, 38, of Monsal Drive, Spondon, was fined £400, with £40 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on August 27.
GARRY Smith, 33, of Field Court, Kilburn, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between August 3 and September 4.
VANESSA Stone, 42, of Farmhouse Road, Sinfin, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 12.
MARIE Summers, 42, of Cranmer Street, Long Eaton, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 13.
DAVID John Tallent, 41, of Coupland Place, Somercotes, was fined £500, with £50 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 3.
VICTORIA Taylor, 24, of Marsh Avenue, Ilkeston, was fined £200, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on June 17.
GILLIAN Walton, 48, of Glossop Street, Derby, was fined £500, with £50 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence on September 9.
ANNETTE Warren, 37, of Grampian Way, Sinfin, was fined £70, with £20 victim surcharge, and told to pay £90 costs, for an offence between June 12 and July 13.
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ABDUL Ghani, 46, of Almond Street, Derby, was fined £180 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given three penalty points for driving in a manner dangerous to passengers by carrying two adult passengers, one baby and four children in one car in Derby on May 28. He was also fined £90 for not wearing a seatbelt.
JAMIE Whitmore, 27, of St Vincent Close, Long Eaton, was fined £200, told to pay £120 costs and £4.10 compensation for travelling on a train between Derby and Long Eaton without a valid ticket on June 10.
MARK Dunlop, 29, of Mount Carmel Street, Derby, was jailed for six weeks for stealing whisky from Tesco and bolt croppers from Wilkinson, both in Derby, on November 12.
ROBERT Grace, 48, of Green Lane, Derby, was given a 12-month conditional discharge and told to pay a £15 victim surcharge for begging in Derby on November 3.
ARKADIJS Stepans, 18, of Cromwell Road, Derby, was fined £600 and told to pay £85 costs for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Derby on June 14
BILLY Lovatt, 19, of Glengarry Way, Sinfin, was given a community order and told to pay £700 compensation for criminal damage in Derby on October 29.
JULIUS Kovac, 24, of Sutherland Road, Derby, was fined £200 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without insurance in Derby on August 6.
WAZIR Mahroof, 24, of Dairyhouse Road, Derby, was fined £145 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given eight penalty points on licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance on July 17.
SATNAM Singh, 26, of Anstey Court, Oakwood, was fined £180, told to pay £35 costs and given nine penalty points on licence for driving without due care and attention and without insurance in Breaston on August 26.
STEVE Shaw, , of Stainsby Avenue, Heanor, was fined £700 with a £70 victim surcharge and told to pay £400 costs for failing to comply with a noticed served by Amber Valley Borough Council requiring him to tidy waste material from his garden between May 30 and September 4.
JAMES Clarke, 23, of Buttermere Close, Long Eaton, was fined £37 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £95 costs and £2.10 compensation for travelling on a train between Derby and Long Eaton without a valid ticket on July 31.
SHELLEY Comery, 51, of Hexham Avenue, Ilkeston, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points for driving without insurance or an MOT test certificate in Ilkeston on May 19.
THOMAS Green, 24, of Littleover, Derby, was fined £200 with a £20 victim surcharge, told to pay £35 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on Raynesway, in Derby, on July 14.
TERRENCE Hall, 25, of Moss Street, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving without the correct licence or insurance in Allenton on June 13.
LANCE Serra, 34, of Hawthorn Street, Derby, was fined £400 with a £40 victim surcharge, told to pay £85 costs and given six penalty points on licence for driving above the 30mph speed limit on Raynesway, in Derby, on July 7.
SHARON Bull, 49, of Talbot Street, Derby, was fined £600 with a £60 victim surcharge and £85 costs, and given six penalty points on lic Reported by This is 5 hours ago.
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The best photo editing app to download 2014
Getting the best photo editing app can turn your phone snaps into works of art, and help you get more from your smartphone or tablet. Whether you're looking for the best apps for Android, iOS, Windows or Mac, we've scoured the web for the best free and paid for photo editing apps money out there.
Apps for photo editing are more and more powerful, whether they're for your phone, browser or PC, you now no longer have to depend on pricey software like Adobe Photoshop to touch up your snaps and make them look fantastic.
With all the apps on the market, across of load of different stores, it can often be tricky to find the one that fits your needs the most. We've made things a whole lot easier by rounding up ten of our favourite apps for making your photos all nice and shiny. From iOS exlcusives, to multi-platform stars and even ones that only require a browser - these are best photo editing app to download right now.
Oh, and one more thing, we all know Instagram and Hipstamatic are good - but everyone already knows about them, so that's why you won't find them on our list.
If you, like us, are massive app fanatics, you best check out our best iPhone apps 2013: free and paid apps for iPhone, best Android apps 2013: free and paid apps for Android and best Windows apps ever features.
Reported by T3 1 hour ago.
Apps for photo editing are more and more powerful, whether they're for your phone, browser or PC, you now no longer have to depend on pricey software like Adobe Photoshop to touch up your snaps and make them look fantastic.
With all the apps on the market, across of load of different stores, it can often be tricky to find the one that fits your needs the most. We've made things a whole lot easier by rounding up ten of our favourite apps for making your photos all nice and shiny. From iOS exlcusives, to multi-platform stars and even ones that only require a browser - these are best photo editing app to download right now.
Oh, and one more thing, we all know Instagram and Hipstamatic are good - but everyone already knows about them, so that's why you won't find them on our list.
If you, like us, are massive app fanatics, you best check out our best iPhone apps 2013: free and paid apps for iPhone, best Android apps 2013: free and paid apps for Android and best Windows apps ever features.
Reported by T3 1 hour ago.
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Photographer's '#365 Photo a Day' project features stunning images taken with nothing but an iPhone

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