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Italia!
Creative Commons License photo credit: Stuck in Customs

For continuous World Cup coverage, check out Mashable’s 2010 World Cup Hub, which will be updated throughout the games.

Sometimes watching sports can be just as dramatic as watching a soap opera. Every four years the drama plays out on the football field as the FIFA World Cup Championship unleashes athletic chaos and rabid fans throughout the world.

Between the players, the refs, the fans and FIFA there are a lot of characters weaving a tangled net of controversy that some might say is at times more enthralling than the actual game. In 80 years, there have been many moments that brought fans to the edge of their seats, and subsequently left them shaking their heads in disbelief.

Here are the top six controversial moments.


1. 1990


1990 was a year of firsts, but not a good one for Argentina. Pedro Monzón became the first player ever to be thrown out of a World Cup final match following a controversial foul on Jürgen Klinsmann of Germany. A mere 21 minutes later, fellow teammate Gustavo Dezotti was booted as well.


2. 1994


Good sportsmanship is not just something we to teach kids so they’ll play nice. Chile learned that the hard way after it was banned from participating in the 1994 World Cup held in the U.S.

During a qualifying match for the 1990 World Cup, goalie Roberto Rojas faked being hit and seriously injured by firecrackers hurled by Brazilian fans, and the team refused to play the rest of the match. Footage later showed the firework never hit Roberto Rojas after all. His lie lead to Chile being banned from the next World Cup, and Rojas was banned for life.


3. 1998


It’s considered to be one of football’s greatest mysteries. In the final match of the 1998 World Cup held in France, Brazilian superstar Ronaldo Luís Nazário de Lima’s name disappeared from the teamsheet, only to suddenly reappear in time for kick-off.

The strange lineup flux sparked rumors of discord, talk that he was poisoned, and rumblings about his tumultuous love life. It had been reported that the striker had been dealing with an ankle injury and he had an upset stomach. Finally the team’s doctor revealed the player had been rushed to a hospital after he suffered a convulsion in his sleep. After a slew of tests Ronaldo was cleared to play, which proved not to be the best idea in the world.

Unsurprisingly off his game, Ronaldo ended up injuring himself when he collided with French goalie Fabien Barthez, and Brazil lost the game 3-0 to France.


4. 2002


The 2002 World Cup was co-hosted by Korea and Japan and was rife was controversy from the beginning. Questionable calls by refs caused a stir as Italy and Spain were both ousted, losing to South Korea. Everyone loves a good conspiracy, especially rabid football fans. Some insisted that the game was rigged and some of the refs had been bought. FIFA denied the allegations but fans were not happy.


5. 2006


It may be the most controversial moment in World Cup history and it’s not pretty. French footballer Zinedine Zidane will forever be remembered for headbutting Italian player Marco Materazzi. Zindane claimed he was provoked after the Italian made some remarks about his mother. The incident was even more controversial as Zidane had already announced his retirement and that game would be his last. Italy beat France, and while he said he regrets the incident, recently Zidane was quoted saying he would never apologize. “But to him I cannot. Never, never. It would be to dishonor me. I’d rather die. There are evil people, and I don’t even want to hear those guys speak.”


6. 2006


Sometimes the controversy is just silly, but Dutch fans were willing to grin and bare it. At the 2006 tournament held in Germany, FIFA decided to play fashion police. The organization effectively forced an estimated 1,000 Dutch fans to watch the match against the Ivory Coast in their underwear after they were ordered to remove the patriotic orange lederhosen that carried the name of a Dutch beer. Since the brewery wasn’t an official World Cup Sponsor, FIFA decided the orange pants had to go. The devotion of the Dutch fans paid off as they watched Holland take their 2-1 victory.

Soccer Geek: 6 Best FIFA World Cup Controversies of the Past 20 Years

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avatar semaphores
Creative Commons License photo credit: jared

Icons are an effective aid in helping users quickly find and gather information. They not only communicate information but help break it up and add visual interest to grab the users’ attention.

With thousands of icons available, with endless gradients, colors and reflections, it can be overwhelming as to what will best suit your minimalist design. There are alternatives to all those over-glossed icons, should you require a more simple, elegant design style.

Here are ten noteworthy icon sets which match the minimalist design ethos.


1. Iconic


Tricks: Top 10 Beautiful Minimalist Icon Sets

Iconic is a beautiful set consisting of 120 icons in raster and vector formats. The icon set packages are in both PNG, SVG, and SWC image formats with Omnigraffle stencil formats also included. The raster-format icons come in 8×8, 12×12, 16×16, 24×24 and 32×32 pixels; however, if you require a different size you can create your own with the original SVG icons. Iconic also comes in 14 separate colors to meet most designers requirements.

The beauty of Iconic is it’s flexibility, with each icon rendering from eight to 800 pixels, while maintaining a high legibility. Many of the icons in the set come in at least two variations to further increase flexibility. The strict adherence to a grid system also helps keep the look of the set consistent. While the icons are minimal in style they are highly stylized yet subtle enough to be easily incorporated into most design projects. The icons were originally designed for a WordPress theme, and it is within a blog format where they would perhaps be showcased best.


2. Mono Icons


Tricks: Top 10 Beautiful Minimalist Icon Sets

Available as a free download, this pack consists of 108 icons in a 32×32 pixel PNG format. While the icons are gray you can easily customize the color in Photoshop, by using layer styles and applying Color Overlay. In Fireworks, simply apply Filters → Adjust Color → Color Fill and choose your color.

The icons are simple, bold and extremely well designed and would fit well within most applications, perhaps best though within either a software application UI or blog format. The ease with which they can be customized and colorized make them an attractive option for your next project.


3. Pictoico


Tricks: Top 10 Beautiful Minimalist Icon Sets

With over 100 fully scalable icons, available free for download, Pictoico is an attractive package which bundles both vector and SVG formats. It is the start of a visual initiative to create over 1,000 symbols which will be released to the public over the course of 2010. Pictoico aims to create a contemporary, simple icon which can be used in a variety of ways.

The icons could be incorporated into your online, print, mobile and software applications. The author even suggests utilizing them for signs in the real world around your street, campus, resort or even city.


4. Gentleface Toolbar Icons


Tricks: Top 10 Beautiful Minimalist Icon Sets

Available free or with a Royalty Free license, the entire set totals 244 original icons (including eight cursors) optimized for 16×16 pixel size and available in 16×16, 32×32 and 48×48 pixel sizes. The set includes vector icons in EPS and flash SWF formats, which allow complete control to resize without loss of fidelity, color, and effects.

The icons include pagination arrows, ratings and voting controls, social interaction symbols, file system icons and text editor actions. These icons are extremely versatile and would be ideally suited to wireframes and software mock-up creation; however, they would also work well within software applications, toolbars, and even within iPhone and iPod apps.


5. PICOL


Tricks: Top 10 Beautiful Minimalist Icon Sets

PICOL stands for PIctorial Communication Language and is a project to find a standard and reduced sign system for electronic communication. PICOL currently offer 3 sets of icons each totaling 517 beautifully designed icons. 16×16 and 32×32 pixel formats are available along with a SVG vector package, all free to download.

The icons offer a unique take on many of the standard symbols, such as application, firewall, internet, cut, copy and paste. Each icon has been designed to be simple, yet effective in conveying the message.

The PICOL icons were heavily featured in the History of the Internet video (by the same designer), which has amassed over two million views and explains the Internet in a fun and incredibly simplistic and elegant way using the icons.


6. Brightmix


Tricks: Top 10 Beautiful Minimalist Icon Sets

Featuring 104 wonderfully elegant icons within one EPS vector format, Brightmix offers a flexibile package which can be resized, edited and colorized simply and efficiently to suit most projects.

The icons were originally designed for the relaunch of a newspaper site, and as the authors created and added to the set and utilized them for other projects, they later decided to release them as a free download. Of particular interest is the WTFPL license under which they are released!

The icons are an update to a previous version and include a wider range of icons, which would be useful for various mediums, such as presentations, iPhone applications, wireframes and software applications.


7. Token


Tricks: Top 10 Beautiful Minimalist Icon Sets

A beautiful, minimal set of icons which is available as a free download or with a commercial license ($50), Token includes 128 unique icon designs, available as an ICO bundling of 16×16, 32×32 and 256×256 pixels icons, or as a PNG at 128×128 pixels. Each icon has both dark and light variants, and comes along with a PSD which includes the layer styles for each resolution.

Token was created as a sequel to the designer’s earlier icon set, Mnml, and has been regularly updated and expanded. You can now download the additional Token File Type set which includes 32 icons, has a dark and light variant, and is saved as a windows ICO that displays crisply at most resolutions.


8. BackToPixel


Tricks: Top 10 Beautiful Minimalist Icon Sets

Designed in a retro pixel style, BackToPixel is available as a free download of 75 icons in 9×9, 18×18 and 28×28 size pixels, in both PNG and GIF formats. The package also includes the icons in over 10 separate colors.

This unique set also includes three button styles which are optimized for lighter backgrounds. The icons could be utilized especially well within a blog design (perhaps an 80s, old-school or retro styled blog) and equally well within both presentations and website design.


9. Eclipse2


Tricks: Top 10 Beautiful Minimalist Icon Sets

Available as a free download, the package includes 116 system and 165 application dock icons in 16×16, 32×32, 48×48 and 128×128 pixel sizes in PNG format.

Whilst originally created as a replacement for system and applications icons, the simplicity and clarity of each icon means they would fit perfectly within presentations, as well as web and software applications.

You can also extend the set by downloading the supplementary pack for additional system and application icons (e.g. Acrobat Reader & Microsoft Office) and the complementary Syzygy icon pack which builds upon Eclipse2.


10. Helveticons


Tricks: Top 10 Beautiful Minimalist Icon Sets

No minimalist icon showcase would be complete without including the beautiful Helveticons – a selection of vector icons, glyphs and symbols based on the Helvetica Bold typeface.

The purchasing options range from the basic set ($279) to the complete set of 477 icons with extras ($439), which includes a very helpful PSD file to inspire you on how to make the best use of the icons, with examples ranging from basic web buttons to strong logotypes. The set includes seven file formats of which six are scalable vectors as well as the GS format for Omnigraffle icons and CHS for Photoshop shapes.

The icons are stunning in their clarity and overall design and would be perfect for almost any medium, including; wire-framing, presentations, web applications, buttons and promotional material.

What other minimal styled icon sets have you discovered? Be sure to share your picks in the comments below.

Tricks: Top 10 Beautiful Minimalist Icon Sets

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29/365 (IPAD)
Creative Commons License photo credit:  Jesus Belzunce

If you’d like to enjoy the outdoors today, we suggest you stop reading right now.

What follows are five iPad addictive games that maximize screen real-estate with luring graphics, break ground in the handheld gaming sector. They ultimately exemplify why Apple’s tablet device is such an impressive device for gaming.

These games will capture your imagination, demand your attention, and may ultimately destroy your relationships with loved ones if you get too sucked in.

You can’t say we didn’t warn you.


1. We Rule GOLD


Games: 5 Extremely Addicting iPad Games

We Rule is like FarmVille for the iPad. Things start innocently enough in level one, but as you level up and tackle the tutorial challenges, a funny thing happens — the game gets serious and intricate.

Planting and harvesting crops is a key part of gameplay, but your efforts should be focused on trying to level up by accruing experience points. Levelling up allows you to continue expanding your kingdom, unlock more farm patches and grab other essentials like shops, plants, statues, roads and rivers for your kingdom.

Some of this may sound like nonsense, but most of your time will be spent designing your kingdom, and there’s nothing more frustrating than wanting to add a dragon’s lair or prison to your kingdom and not having the funds to do so.

The best part about the game is that everyone from your friends to tech celebrities like Digg’s Kevin Rose is in on the action. This makes for extra enticing gameplay because you can add your friends from real life and web life as neighbors and check out their kingdoms or buy goods from their shops.

After a few short days you’ll be hooked, even going so far as to set up push notifications so you know when your plants are ready to harvest, and your citizens are ready to hand over their tax payments.

A few tips: Build as many cottages as you can so you can collect taxes and earn experience points quicker. Plant the most expensive crops because you make more when you harvest them, and save your mojo to use in higher levels and plan around expansion.

Price Point: Free
Addiction Rating: 4.5 stars


2. Angry Birds HD


Games: 5 Extremely Addicting iPad Games

What’s so great about Angry Birds? How about “everything.” This is one of those games that will continue to nag at your sense of self-worth until you can beat a particular level — which may prove to be futile for some levels. Pick up this game and soon your dreams will be haunted by squawking birds, and the taunting grins of those green pigs that just will not die.

Things begin rather easily: You start with a few angry red birds that you sling at awaiting green pigs. The goal is to kill the pigs either by lampooning them with a bird dead-on, or craftily trying to topple bricks to crush them. In total, there are 105 different levels, each one more difficult than the last.

Beginner tips: Don’t play in front of friends or family because they will try to take the game away from you, sometimes the most obvious strategy is the right one, know your angles and learn the strengths of each bird type.

Price Point: $4.99
Addiction Rating: 5 stars


3. GodFinger


Games: 5 Extremely Addicting iPad Games

Oh the joys of playing God. In GodFinger, you’re a deity with a commanding finger you can use to turn people into followers and put them to work on your planet.

The idea of the game is to create a thriving planet populated with followers to do your bidding. Earning gold, mana, and awe let’s you level up and build better items to help you earn all three achievements as fast as possible.

You earn gold by placing followers at barns or farms. It is used to buy new items in the store. You need mana for rain, sunshine, lightning and the other natural elements required for planet functions. You can earn mana by placing followers at your shrine. Awe is a special element that you earn each time you level up, and you can use it at the Awe Store. You can also buy it if you get desperate.

GodFinger — like We Rule — is an Ngmoco game, so gameplay begins with a challenge-based tutorial. You level up based on the experience points you accrue through in-game actions. Pay attention to each task and prompt in the tutorial mode, as instructions include information that will become vital to the health of your planet and your followers.

Tips for ruling wisely: Wells and taverns are great for faster rejuvenation, gold that you don’t collect erodes, upgrade your shrine to generate mana faster, zoom out to visit neighboring planets and save your awe to buy cooler items in higher levels.

Price Point: Free
Addiction Rating: 4 stars


4. Plants vs. Zombies HD


Games: 5 Extremely Addicting iPad Games

Zombie fan or not, this game will suck the life out of you as you fall victim to each engrossing level.

The ultimate goal of the game is to prevent zombies from entering your home in each level. Should they succeed, you will die.

The game starts out with a few semi-harmless zombies and some less-than-potent plants that you will need to attack and kill the oncoming onslaught of the undead. As you level up, the zombies become more menacing and the plants more lethal.

Your biggest challenges will be deciding how many sunflowers to plant, figuring out how to protect them, and picking plants to use in your arsenal of attack for each level. Don’t forget that you will need the sunflowers to buy the plants you need. Also, the plants you choose for each level will vary on whether it’s day or night, and their ability to kill depends on the zombies you’re fighting against.

Tips to stay alive: Plant as many sunflowers as you can during the first few moments of each level, the double sunflower is a waste of money and space, always buy more slots for plants when you can and make sure you have at least one big attack plant for each level.

Price Point: $9.99
Addiction Rating: 5 stars


5. Dizzypad HD


Games: 5 Extremely Addicting iPad Games

Who knew having frogs leap from lilypad to lilypad could be so addicting? But in much the same way that DoodleJump can entertain and frustrate players for hours at a time, so too can Dizzypad HD for the iPad.

The object of the game is to get the frog from one lilypad to the next, by carefully timing each leap so as not to land in the water and lose a life. Unfortunately, this is one of those games that is deceptively simple: It will lure you in with its easy premise and then make you feel like a fool when you can’t beat your own high score.

Unlike most great games on the iPad, this one comes completely free of charge — but only if you’re fine with just playing the classic mode. If you’re anything like me, you’ll fork over the $1.99 (each) to add sliders, memory, and battle modes. They’re definitely worth the extra cash.

Pro tip for leapers: Learn to leapfrog as many lilypads as you can early on. For each lilypad you leapfrog, you earn an extra life. Those extra lives will come in handy as lilypads become harder to reach.

Price Point: Free
Addiction Rating: 3.5 stars

Games: 5 Extremely Addicting iPad Games

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Gamer: Nintendo 3DS in the flesh and hands on!

That Nintendo announced the 3DS was not a surprise — that they had a couple-dozen of these things to try out, that was. We elbowed our way to the front of the line to try one out, and the effect is actually not bad. It’s not great, but the 3.5-inch screen on top certainly gives a firm illusion of depth without resorting to glasses — or eye crossing. The feel is definitely reminiscent of those 3D cereal box prints, and as soon as you turn the device from left to right to try to look around anything the effect is immediately lost. You need to stare at the screen for a moment for your eyes to adjust and then not move around too much. If you do you’ll need to adjust again. But, stay reasonably still and it’s a compelling effect.

The new analog slider on the left feels a lot like the PSP’s analog nub, but larger and without the texture. It’s a bit easier on the fingers, and comfortable. Overall the device feels just like a current DS or DSi, though we couldn’t get a good feel for the weight thanks to a bulky tether attached on one end to the device, and on the other end to the row of ladies who were surely told to not let the gadgets out of their hands or face certain doom. The only thing we could do here is rotate along a still frame — Pikmin in a field, for example — and play with the 3D slider.

It is a pretty convincing effect, but it’s hard to tell at this point if it’s at all compelling — it wasn’t anything more than novelty in this demo, and we still don’t know how it stands up to fast-moving footage. Actual games were promised to us for the show floor, so we’ll hit that up later today. We snagged a few pics before getting elbowed out of the way, so check ‘em out!


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Akihabara
Creative Commons License photo credit: Stéfan

When Google launched its panoramic photomapping service back in 2007, it was the first time many netizens had the chance to explore a swathe of detailed street-level photos from their armchairs.

In the U.S., Street View’s rivals now include Microsoft’s Silverlight-powered “Streetside” via Bing Maps and MapQuest’s 360 View. Elsewhere in the world, other international sites offer rival photomapping for their particular part of the globe, even as the reach of Google’s Street View steadily increases.

We’ve picked our five favorite websites from around the world that offer extensive street level imagery from places as varied as Munich, Mae Hong Son, Moscow and Miskolc. So grab your Panama hats and get ready to hit the virtual sidewalks of streets many, many miles away, then let us know your favorite services in the comments below.


City8


Tricks: 5 Great Sites for Exploring Cities Around the Globe

There are a number of Chinese services that offer street level photography of the country, with one of the first being “virtual tour” software designer Easypano’s City8. It claims to have beaten Street View to the web by a year.

City8 currently offers fairly comprehensive imagery for more than 40 Chinese cities, however, navigating the site can be a little tricky unless you read and speak the lingo, which sadly, we don’t. The photo maps won’t display if you’re viewing the site through Google Translate (in Firefox anyway) so you’ll have to navigate back and forth (or go for a dual screen option) to find out what you’re looking at. However, the photos of everyday China are fascinating so it’s definitely worth the hassle if you have an interest in the People’s Republic.

Tricks: 5 Great Sites for Exploring Cities Around the Globe


NORC


Tricks: 5 Great Sites for Exploring Cities Around the Globe

NORC’s photo mapping services cover Eastern and Central Europe. Currently, you can see landmarks and parts of cities in Austria, the Czech Republic, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Hungary and Russia (Russia is accessed via a separate site — Mappi).

Luckily for those not blessed with multi-lingual skills, the site is available in English, making zipping round the back streets of Innsbruck, Austria a breeze. NORC ups the value by making most map views available as 3D images — if you have the correct glasses. You can identity which maps are 3D by the glasses icon on the top left of the display.

Tricks: 5 Great Sites for Exploring Cities Around the Globe


MapJack


Tricks: 5 Great Sites for Exploring Cities Around the Globe

Mapjack.com offers a slightly random mix of imagery from a few select areas on America’s West Coast and parts of Thailand.

“What others have done with NASA budgets and Star Wars-like equipment, we’ve done on a shoestring budget, along with a few trips to Radio Shack,” the site claims.

Those Radio Shack trips were worth the effort however, as Mapjack’s image quality exceeds that of Street View with particularly clear, bright scenes and vivid colors. We recommend Mapjack for seeing crisp photos of the Yosemite National Park and for soaking up the brilliant street scenes of Chiang Mai.

Tricks: 5 Great Sites for Exploring Cities Around the Globe


SightWalk


Tricks: 5 Great Sites for Exploring Cities Around the Globe

This German website offers street level photos of Bonn, Berlin, Dusseldorf, Hamburg, Cologne, Munich and Stuttgart. Thankfully it’s also available in English.

We were quite impressed with SightWalk’s option to share locations with your social circle via Facebook, Twitter, and e-mail. It also overlays map data with points of interest along with Wikipedia links (which are in German).

The site is easy to navigate — we were headed down the Potsdammer Platz within seconds of selecting Berlin from the homepage — and the imagery is in decent quality.

Tricks: 5 Great Sites for Exploring Cities Around the Globe


Yandex


Tricks: 5 Great Sites for Exploring Cities Around the Globe

As Russia’s leading search engine, Yandex started a photographic index of Eastern European cities starting with the biggest ones: Moscow, Saint Petersburg and Kiev. It has just recently expanded to also offer panoramic views for Kazan, Nizhny Novgorod, Samara and Chelyabinsk.

The service is in Russian, which can make navigation fairly difficult, but the clarity of the street maps (designed by the geek legends of Art Lebedev Studios) make the site less of a challenge to use.

Whether you want to see the exotic roofline of the the Kremlin as it appears from the street, or view the brutal tower blocks that pepper the cities, Yandex is a great place to go, especially considering Google is yet to get its camera-equipped cars across the Russian border.

Tricks: 5 Great Sites for Exploring Cities Around the Globe


BONUS: VideoStreetView


Tricks: 5 Great Sites for Exploring Cities Around the Globe

This is a bonus site because it actually offers 360-degree panoramic videos. In a nutshell, this Swiss firm has recorded footage as it drives down streets, and as you watch the clip you can pan around at will, looking left and right, up, down and even behind you. The commercial possibilities for panoramic video are really quite exciting for lots of different areas and industries, so be sure to check this out to see what the future might hold.Tricks: 5 Great Sites for Exploring Cities Around the Globe

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