10 February 2011: Afternoon
By The Morning News
—
All your demands will be met today. Egypt's military says it's time to end Mubarak's rule.
Syria unbans Facebook; Sudan tells supporters to use Facebook to beat opposition.
Harsh wind for king of Jordan: "Bunting and banners that marked the king's birthday were rarer than in previous years."
Long read: The day Mahfouz, Arab world's only literature Nobel Laureate, was stabbed.
There is no doubt that the post-Mubarak era is afoot, but it is not necessarily a democratic one.
Berlusconi insists he thought the girl prosecutors say he paid for sex was Mubarak's niece.
Iran to execute programmer because his photo-upload software is popular with porn sites.
Harvard grads start behavior-economics gym--customers pay more if they work out less.
Best economics podcasts.
Greece, Brazil, Scandinavia lead chart of countries with most dentists per capita.
Op: Video games like Sim City function better when society's conservative and Danish.
Following the Scandinavian cop-novel craze, Swedish TV turns to programming crime.
Video: Trailer for Bad Writing, documentary about digging around for poetry advice.
Toronto and London stock exchanges to merge, becoming world's largest exchange for mining companies.
How the New Yorker fact-checked its giant Scientology story: five checkers, Remnick, and lawyers.
Related: Remnick goes long and personal with Robert Birnbaum.
Interim Apple chief under fire after unveiling grotesque new MacBook.