Author: Serkadis

  • Windows Mobile continues to grow browsing market share, stay ahead of Android

    wmbrowsertrendWe posted last month on the exceptional rise in browser usage as measured my Hitlinks recently.  At the time it may have been a fluke, but it seems the feat was repeated again in January.

    In December Windows Mobile browser usage increased from 0.04% of all browsers (including desktops) to 0.06%.  In January it increased further to 0.07%, 75% higher than the pretty stable 0.04% Windows Mobile occupied most of the year.

    Windows Mobile currently occupies the 3rd spot in smartphone browser usage, behind the iPhone and Symbian, but ahead of Android, which at 0.6% also increased by 0.01 point in the last month, and well ahead of other platforms such as RIM’s Blackberry with 0.03% and Palm with 0.01%.

    That Windows Mobile remains a growing platform should be borne in mind by developers, both on the web and in apps, who often chose not to serve an increasing and increasingly active user base and serve a more congested market.

    The message – Windows Mobile is not just not dead, but actually thriving.

    Are you using your smartphone browser more?  Let us know below.

    See the stats at Hitlinks here.

    Share/Bookmark

  • Republican races dominate DuPage County primary

    DuPage County Republican voters will have more choices in the voting booth Tuesday than their Democratic counterparts. And, voters in four communities will have a say in local projects.

    Local GOP voters will be choosing sides in a bevy of primary battles.

    However, only two Democratic county races feature multiple candidates, and in one of those races one candidate dropped out after the ballots were printed.

    The big local race of the night for DuPage Republicans is the four-way fight for the DuPage County Board Chairman’s nod.

    The race features state Sen. Dan Cronin, Burr Ridge Mayor Gary Grasso, District 4 county board member Debra Olson and state Sen. Carole Pankau.

    The four candidates spent much of the race attacking each other’s financial records and campaign promises, while occasionally throwing in their thoughts on job creation and economic development stimulus.

    The winner will face Democrat Carole Cheney in November.

    Republican incumbent Sheriff John Zaruba is facing a primary challenge from retired DuPage deputy Mike Quiroz. No Democrat has been slated, and it’s unclear if the Democrats will challenge the Republican winner in November.

    DuPage voters will also have less ballot questions to deal today than in previous years.

    Carol Stream voters are being asked to support a $37 million park district plan for a new recreation center and other park improvements. Supporters say approval won’t result in a tax increase, it will only keep tax rates at the current level for a longer period of time.

    Property owners could expect to see a $30 tax cut in 2020 if the question fails.

    Villa Park voters are being asked to support a $27.5 million street improvement plan that would be paid for by a half-percent increase to the village’s sales tax rate. The project would resurface or pave a third of the village’s streets.

    Property tax increase requests will also be decided by voters to improve the Winfield library, as will residents living in an unincorporated part of the county covered by Bensenville Fire Protection District No. 1.

    The retirement of State Rep. Bob Biggins of Elmhurst is opening up his seat for the first time since 1993. Five Republicans – Matt Burden, Michael Manzo, Chris Nybo, Rafael Rivadeneira and Brien Sheahan – are vying to replace him.

    The GOP winner will face Democrat Brian Stephenson in November.

    The county board is also losing one of its longest-serving members, Linda Kurzawa. The Winfield Republican has held the seat in District 6 since 1992 and is a longtime member of the county’s board of health as well.

    Three Republicans are angling for their party’s nomination to replace her. Voters will choose among Paul Darrah, Matt Fuesting and Bob Larsen to run against Democrat Dave Barry in November.

    The district includes all or parts of West Chicago, Bartlett, Wayne, Winfield, Wheaton, Carol Stream, Warrenville, Hanover Park, Streamwood and Bloomingdale.

    Republican District 3 voters will also have three new names to choose from for the county board seat that was vacated by Kyle Gilgis in late 2009. Republicans Greg Abbott, Dennis Brennan and Brian Krajewski are vying to face Democrat Karol Sole in the November general election.

    That district includes all or parts of Downers Grove, Westmont, Burr Ridge, Hinsdale, Lisle, Darien, Bolingbrook and Lemont.

    DuPage’s District 4 features primaries for Republican and Democrat races for a county board seat and forest preserve seat.

    However, Democrat Tom Grimston was seeking the Democratic nomination for the county board seat in that district until he dropped out in early January and threw his support to fellow Democrat Tom Wendorf.

    Grimston’s name will still appear on the ballot. County board incumbent JR McBride is facing a challenge from Brad Webb.

    The Republican District 4 forest preserve race features incumbent Mike Formento and former Wheaton Mayor Jim Carr, while Democratic voters will choose between political newcomers Eric Bergman and Don Kirchenberg.

    District 4 includes all or parts of Wheaton, Winfield, Carol Stream, Glen Ellyn, Glendale Heights and Lombard.

    Republicans are also being asked to choose between recently appointed District 5 county board member John Zediker and challenger Joe Wozniak as well as District 6 forest preserve incumbent Roger Kotecki versus challenger Al Murphy.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.


  • Two Glenbard West high school students seriously hurt in crash

    Two Glenbard West High School students were clinging to life in critical condition late Sunday following a Friday night crash.

    Senior Pierre Washington-Steel and junior Demarco Whitley, both running backs on the football team, were seriously injured in a one-car crash just before 8 p.m. Friday on Swift Road north of St. Charles Road in Glen Ellyn.

    Fire department officials said both men had to be extricated from the car, which hit a pole on land owned by ComEd.

    Several school officials, including head coach Chad Hetlet, declined to comment Sunday. But someone familiar with the situation, who declined to be named, said Hetlet and other school officials have been at the boys’ sides with their families at Advocate Good Samaritan Hospital in Downers Grove.

    “The entire school is devastated,” the staff member said. “No one is looking forward to walking into the building and facing this (today). It’s going to be tough.”

    The DuPage County sheriff is handling the crash investigation, and no new details were available Sunday.

    Washington-Steel transferred to Glenbard West in 2009 from Driscoll Catholic High School, where he also starred on the football and track teams.

    News of the crash and the students’ conditions was making the rounds on the Internet on Sunday, with one Illinois high school sports blog reporting: Whitley “broke his pelvis and damaged a lung. Pierre broke his neck and is on life support.” However, medical officials have not verified the specific injuries.

    Daily Herald staff writers Marco Santana and Orrin Schwarz contributed to this report.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.


  • Chicago Cubs, outfielder Xavier Nady agree to one-year contract

    The Chicago Cubs and outfielder Xavier Nady have agreed to terms on a one-year contract.

    Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    Nady, 31, hit .305 (169-for-555) with 37 doubles, 25 home runs and 97 RBI in 148 games between the Pittsburgh Pirates and New York Yankees in 2008, his last full big league campaign.

    He played only seven games with the Yankees in 2009 due to Tommy John ligament replacement surgery on his right elbow last July, his second such procedure. He totaled a .357 on-base percentage and a .510 slugging percentage in 2008.

    In 2008, Nady set career highs in runs (76), hits (169), doubles, home runs, RBI and walks (39).

    He was acquired by New York from Pittsburgh with pitcher Damaso Marte for four minor league prospects July 26 and was batting a team-high .330 (108-for-327) with 26 doubles, one triple, 13 home runs and 57 RBI in 89 games at the time of the trade.

    Nady was tied for first in the National League with 10 outfield assists and ranked fifth in the league in batting average on July 26.

    In all or part of eight major league seasons with San Diego (2000, 2003-05), the New York Mets (2006), Pittsburgh (2006-08) and the Yankees (2008-09), Nady is a career .280 hitter (632-for-2257) with 128 doubles, 87 home runs and 325 RBI in 679 games.

    He has played all three outfield positions (408 games in right field, 100 games in left field and 45 games in center field) and seen time at first base (82 games) and third base (three games).

    Nady, who bats and throws righthanded, is a career .308 hitter (184-for-597) with a .383 on-base percentage, 21 home runs and 85 RBI vs. left-handed pitching and a .270 hitter (448-for-1660) vs. right-handed pitching. He is a career .304 hitter (31-for-102) in 28 games at Wrigley Field.

    The six-foot-one, 185-pound Nady was selected by San Diego in the second round of the 2000 Draft and joined the major league club September 17 without a day in the minors, becoming the 20th player to go directly to the majors out of the draft since the draft was instituted in 1965.

    He played the next two full seasons in the minors before splitting the 2003 and 2004 campaigns between the Padres and Triple-A.

    After half a season with the Mets in 2006, Nady was acquired by Pittsburgh at the trade deadline and spent the next two years with the Pirates until being sent to the Yankees in 2008.

    He batted .301 (289-for-961) with 62 doubles, 36 home runs and 152 RBI in 269 games with the Pirates. Nady hit .286 (8-for-28) with four doubles and two RBI in his seven games with the Yankees in 2009.

    Nady, his wife Meredith and their son, Xavier IV, reside in San Diego, Calif.

    He is the first player in Cubs history to have his first name begin with the letter X.


  • Buffett’s Bet Is Off Track On Burlington Northern Railway

    WarrenBuffett-0909-1

    Although I have tremendous respect for Warren Buffett and believe his criticism of the Kraft-Cadbury transaction was well-founded, I am fearful that his purchase of Burlington Northern was not in his shareholders’ best interests.
     
    As Buffett surely knows, shrewd investing requires a healthy dose of skepticism.  Every word that comes out of his mouth should not be looked upon as prophecy. For the investment community and the media alike, Buffett has been canonized into value investing sainthood.  Investors refuse to criticize him – after all he’s been right more often than wrong – and so we only get positive “puff” pieces from the media.
     
    On the rare occasion when Berkshire Hathaway stock declines more than the market, an article appears asserting that “Buffett has lost his magic touch.” Those articles, however, are usually followed by stellar performance by Berkshire.  Though Buffett deserves admiration for the incredible returns he has achieved for his investors over the last half-century, he should not be canonized.
     
    Sometimes he is wrong, and when that happens Berkshire’s investors pay the price.
     
    Buffett was right to criticize Kraft’s decision to buy a fairly valued (or overvalued) Cadbury at 22 times earnings (over the past 15 years, its average price-to-earnings ratio has been 21), using Kraft’s undervalued stock.  Cadbury runs a global, non-cyclical confectionary business that, if properly managed, should have a very high return on capital.  Buffett, a shareholder of Kraft, was very public about his dismay – he said he felt poorer when Cadbury accepted Kraft’s increased offer.  
     
    Though I agree with Buffett’s assessment of the Kraft-Cadbury deal, I fear that investors and media are completely ignoring Berkshire’s own, $30-billion-plus acquisition of a very cyclical, capital-intensive, not terrifically high-return-on-capital business – Burlington Northern.  It is a railroad for which Berkshire will lay out 18 times earnings.  To make matters worse, part of the deal will be financed by issuing what Buffett recently called “cheap” Berkshire stock.
     
    Burlington stock is not cheap; it is fairly priced at best – over last 15 years its average P/E was 15.  Owning Burlington Northern will not make Buffett’s railroad business more valuable.  There is little value to be unlocked in this business, especially if Buffett practices his usual hands-off approach.  At least in case of Cadbury, there is room to unlock value if Cadbury’s business is managed properly.  It should have much higher return on capital.  Is Kraft the right “unlocker” of value?  I am not sure.  After all, it has struggled to manage its own business well.
     
    Buffett said many of the right words – “I am betting on the recovery of the US economy” – but rays of hypocrisy shine through his statements about Kraft and his actions regarding Burlington Northern.   He felt “poorer” when Kraft made the acquisition.  Well, Berkshire’s shareholders should feel poorer, too.
     
    Vitaliy N. Katsenelson, CFA, is a portfolio manager/director of research at Investment Management Associates in Denver, Colo. He is the author of “Active Value Investing: Making Money in Range-Bound Markets” (Wiley 2007). To receive Vitaliy’s future articles my email, click here.

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  • How a blogger can cause Audi a headache over Green Police Super Bowl ad [w/video]

    Filed under: , ,

    Audi Green Police Campaign – Click above to watch the video after the break

    Audi is taking some heat over the unintended connection one blogger made between the company’s Green Police ad that’s scheduled to debut during the Super Bowl and the Ordnungspolizei, the uniformed regular German police force when the Nazis ruled Germany. Because of the Ordnungspolizei’s green uniforms, they were sometimes referred to as the green police. In the ad, Audi’s Green Police arrest people for crimes against the environment, things like using styrofoam cups and not composting correctly. Drivers of the A3 TDI, though, get praised for their actions. In short, it’s a Super Bowl ad.

    Jeff Kuhlman, the chief communications officer for Audi of America, told AutoblogGreen that he personally talked to two Jewish leaders – Abraham Foxman, head of the Anti Defamation League, and Fred Zeidman, Chairman of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial and Museum – about the green police ads and that they did not see a problem with the spot. Kuhlman added that:

    One thing that I think is also needed in order to put this into perspective is the issue of green police vs. Ordnungspolizei. Ordnungspolizei is directly translated to mean Order Police. It’s more than just the difference between capital letters and small letters, it’s official versus nicknames. And in our research not one person drew any other distinction other than “environmental”.

    We researched the term. We tested the ad concept with focus groups. We sought input and reaction from key organizations, including the Jewish community, and we sent out a press release that went to thousands of media, and not one reaction. I then worked again with key Jewish leaders after the blogger raised the issue, just to make sure that we hadn’t missed something, and again, we were reassured that the term is not one that has historical significance, and that reactions to the term are completely in line with our intent … environmental enforcement.

    Of course, Audi could perhaps have gone with Eco Police or Enviro Police or a bunch of other names that don’t have this association and avoided the incident, but it those terms might not be available for use, either. From where we stand, it’s not the best ad campaign we’ve ever seen, but it’s also not worth getting one’s eco-washed undies in a bundle about, either. After all, Israel’s main arm of the Ministry of Environmental Protection in the area of enforcement and deterrence is called, you guess it, the Green Police.

    [Source: mediabistro.com]

    Continue reading How a blogger can cause Audi a headache over Green Police Super Bowl ad [w/video]

    How a blogger can cause Audi a headache over Green Police Super Bowl ad [w/video] originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 01 Feb 2010 16:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • TARP Watchdog Diagrams Exactly How The Government Is Inflating The Next Housing Bubble

    The government has just visualized exactly how it is trying to manipulate the housing market higher in its latest TARP report by the Special Inspector General (SIGTARP).

    Mechanisms For Supporting Home Prices

    Supporting home prices is an explicit policy goal of the Government. As the White House stated in the announcement of HAMP for example, “President Obama’s pro- grams to prevent foreclosures will help bolster home prices.”…

    Chart

    …The Federal Reserve can thus boost home prices by either lowering general interest rates or purchasing mortgages and MBS. Both actions, which the Federal Reserve is pursuing, have the effect of lowering interest rates, which increases demand by permitting borrowers to afford a higher home price on a given income.

    Full document below. (Via FTAlphaville)

    January 2010 Quarterly Report to Congress

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  • Scott Brown Action Figures

    There’s a new superhero on The Cape……Massachusetts Sen.-elect Scott Brown won Ted Kennedy’s old seat in stunning upset last month, now a custom doll company is cashing in on his success. Herobuilders.com has created a new action figure modeled after the Republican, The Boston Herald’s Inside Track column said Monday.

    Pickup truck sold separately….

    The company will release three versions of its Scott Brown action figure on Tuesday. Each will sell for $34.95.

    First up, we’ve got the “Scott Brown Everyman Action Figure. This toy sees Brown dresses in jeans, a T-shirt and sneakers. The soon-to-be senator looks dapper in a professional suit & tie for the “2012 Executive” figure. For “Adults Only,” the “Cosmo Man Anatomically Correct” features the conservative lawmaker in nothing but a fig leaf. That one was inspired by Brown’s infamous 1982 nude centerfold for Cosmo.


  • Sega goes back to making consoles

    No leaks, no rumors, no teasers, no frustrated execs. Apart from revamping the Mega Drive in 2009, it seems that Sega has successfully kept itself under the radar about their plans of going back to manufacturing consoles

  • Boeing improvements produce better next-generation 737s faster

    In just 12 years, Boeing (NYSE: BA) employees in Renton, Wash., built and delivered 3,133 Next-Generation 737 airplanes.

    It took 32 years to produce that same number of earlier-model 737s. Relentless employee and supplier focus on efficiency has resulted in 121 customer airlines receiving their airplanes more quickly.

    On Dec. 23, GOL Airlines flew the record-making airplane, a 737-800, to its base in Brazil. Minutes later, a second GOL flight crew departed from Seattle on an identical 737-800.

    Shortly after delivering the first Next-Generation 737 in 1997, Boeing employees and suppliers began a dual journey to continuously update the airplanes and produce them more efficiently.

    Employees now assemble the airplanes in just 10 days, compared to 22 days in the past. Boeing produces 31 Next-Generation 737s a month – better than an airplane a day, including weekends and holidays.

    Next-Generation 737s are lighter, consume less fuel, release fewer emissions and are more economical to operate and maintain.

    Airplanes delivered between September 2008 and September 2009 had so few technical issues that passengers left the airport gate on time 99.8 percent of the time.

    Next-Generation 737s are as versatile and flexible as they are efficient.

    The airplane serves as a platform for military transport and surveillance vehicles, as private jets and as commercial airplanes operated around the world by every type of carrier from low-cost to those offering premier service.

    In the next few years, passengers will enjoy the new 737 Boeing Sky Interior and airlines will operate models that reduce fuel consumption and emissions by a further two percent.

    MEDIA CONTACT:

    Vicki Ray, +1 206-852-3319
    737 Communications
    [email protected]

    Nicolaas Groeneveld-Meijer, +1 206-228-4527
    Boeing International & Sales Communications
    [email protected]


  • ‘This American Life’ app now available on iTunes

    CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Those who resolved to listen to more radio in the new decade are in for a treat. This American Life, the hit public radio show from Chicago Public Radio, has collaborated with Public Radio Exchange (PRX) to launch an app for iPhone and iPod touch on the iTunes App Store.

    The This American Life App gives unprecedented on-demand access to the full show archive going back to 1995.

    New episodes are added automatically and users can search by episode or contributor — including David Sedaris, Sarah Vowell, John Hodgman, and dozens more.

    Episodes can be streamed for free or purchased from iTunes for offline listening.

    Additionally, all episodes of the This American Life television show on Showtime can be downloaded for a fee.

    The app also has free cartoons and other bonus content from the This American Life television show. Customizable features include a favorites list, sharing by email, Facebook, and Twitter, and alerts for the live weekly broadcast from WBEZ in Chicago, which can be streamed from within the app.

    Exclusive content includes behind-the-scenes video with the show’s producers, some of David Sedaris’s and host Ira Glass’s first radio stories (from the early 90s), audio of NPR’s Terry Gross interviewing Ira Glass (and vice versa), clips from live stage events, special staff picks lists, and more.

    “We’re excited to provide an app that includes our entire archive of nearly 400 radio episodes, and we’re grateful the talented folks at PRX came to us with this idea,” says Ira Glass, host of This American Life. “We hope lots of people will find unfamiliar episodes they’ll like.”

    “This American Life rocks, and we were thrilled to work with Ira and his team to create an app worthy of the groundbreaking show we all know and love,” says Jake Shapiro, CEO of PRX, which developed the app.

    “Fans and new listeners alike are getting an audiovisual feast.”

    About the live feed that’s part of the app, WBEZ President Torey Malatia says, “Note, ours is the only app providing a hand-held Geiger counter for the live show that drives interactive media inexorably backwards to 1968.”

    The This American Life App is available for $2.99 from the App Store on iPhone and iPod touch or at itunes.com/appstore.

    This American Life has also engaged PRX to provide the program’s archives for sale in the iTunes Store.

    About ‘This American Life’

    This American Life (thisamericanlife.org) is a public radio show produced by Chicago Public Radio and distributed to more than 500 stations by Public Radio International (PRI). 1.8 million people listen to the show each week on radio, and another half million download the weekly podcast, making it the most popular podcast in America most weeks.

    From 2006-2008, a television version of This American Life aired on Showtime, winning three Emmys.

    About PRX

    PRX (prx.org) is an award-winning public media network focused on innovation at the intersection of technology and talent.

    The PRX platform is an open distribution marketplace connecting thousands of producers and local public radio stations, creating public radio’s largest archive of on-demand programs for broadcast and digital use.

    PRX is also the lead developer of the Public Radio Player App which has been downloaded over 2.5 million times from the iTunes Store.

    For more information, contact:

    Rekha Murthy, +1-617-576-5455


  • Dispatches from the Abortion Wars: Talking to Carole Joffe

    There is no area of medicine except for abortion in which
    secrecy, constant politicization of a medical procedure, and even fear and
    shame about medical work is par for the course. While many women seeking
    abortions find their access to this legal procedure diminishing, abortion
    providers also face onerous obstacles to providing care, and increasing danger
    in doing so.

    In Carole Joffe’s new book Dispatches
    from the Abortion Wars: The Costs of Fanaticism to Doctors, Patients, and the
    Rest of Us
    , she often uses pseudonyms to protect the privacy of
    doctors and clinic workers she interviewed. As she details, many physicians are
    actively discouraged from incorporating abortion into other forms of medical
    practice, and the choice to perform abortions in some areas may make practicing
    any other type of medicine virtually impossible.

    Similarly, the risks and
    complications of performing abortions in isolation prevent many doctors from
    ever doing them. Knowing that they will not be backed by a supportive community
    and may be targeted by fanatic activists, they may simply choose to opt out of
    providing care they believe to be necessary and ethically unquestionable. In
    these and many other ways, Joffe’s comprehensive overview and history of the
    past 35 years details the very real and often urgent implications for women
    when health care providers-doctors, nurses, pharmacists-are targeted by violent
    extremists.

    Throughout the book, Joffe explores such divergent but
    related topics as advances in fetal medicine and widespread use of ultrasounds,
    which became popular in the 1980s and have affected many peoples’ relationship
    with the fetus; how anti-abortion activists’ tactics play on other people’s
    guilt of possessing sexual freedom, and how abortion practitioners who feared
    the police pre-Roe now fear protestors instead. She details the specific issues
    facing teens and the double standard that is applied when young people can be
    judged as too immature to make the decision to choose to terminate a pregnancy
    without parental consent, yet are judged fit to have a child nonetheless. Joffe
    also investigates the relationship between economic hardship, childbirth, and
    reproductive justice and writes passionately about how strictly pro-abortion
    advocates must make space for the reproductive justice movement to flourish if
    it is going to promote the health and rights of all women.

    It is telling that the most extreme violence against
    abortion providers takes place during pro-choice presidencies, and perhaps most
    salient for many readers looking ahead, Joffe pays respectful homage to Dr.
    George Tiller, who provided essential care in the most extreme circumstances of
    incest, rape, and complications late in pregnancy when so many others could or
    would not. Joffe ends her detailed account by looking at a future in which new
    leaders must come forward to take up Tiller’s-and our collective-cause.

    Joffe, also an RH Reality Check contributor, recently spoke
    to me about her timely, if controversial, book.

    Q: In Dispatches
    from the Abortion Wars
    , you explain the importance of the role
    of the deputy assistant secretary for population affairs (DAPSA) in the
    Department of Health and Human Services, who is in charge of federal family
    planning programs and oversees Title X of the Public Health Service Act.
    However, former DAPSA appointees have lacked substantial professional experience
    in family planning and have been appointed based more on their moral stances
    than credentials. Why is such an important role so frequently overlooked in the
    debates about federal laws regarding reproductive freedom?

    Well, this role is overlooked by most Americans, but
    carefully looked at by advocates on both sides of the abortion debate. In
    general, it is fair to say that most Americans are apolitical, not especially
    interested in government, and know relatively little about the workings of the
    federal bureaucracy.

    Q: You write about how
    many ob-gyn practitioners lack basic abortion training. Do you think the
    medical community’s larger lack of understanding of abortion procedures
    trickles down the population at large? How do you think this affects women’s general
    knowledge of abortion technology and options?

    Even though most ob-gyns don’t perform abortions, I do not
    believe that they don’t understand what abortion involves — many ob-gyns, for
    example, perform procedures (e.g. d and c’s) that are similar to abortions. I
    believe the American public’s misunderstandings of abortion procedures stem
    directly from the very effective propaganda campaigns waged for years by the
    anti-abortion movement. In particular, the so-called "partial-birth abortion"
    campaign led many people to believe that most abortions took place very late in
    pregnancy and involved near-term fetuses. In fact, only 1 percent of all
    abortions take place after 21 weeks.

    Q: You explain some of
    the ways primary care physicians have incorporated abortion into their
    practices. Can you talk about some of the hurdles these doctors face?

    They face the problem of obtaining malpractice coverage.
    They face the problem of having supportive colleagues, who share their
    commitments to abortion care, and who will provide coverage for them if they
    have to be out of town. In spite of these obstacles, some primary care
    doctors-and where it is legally permitted, nurse practitioners, midwives and
    physician assistants-have successfully incorporated abortion care into their
    practices.

    Q: Why isn’t the general
    public more aware of the everyday threat of violence and dangers abortion
    providers can face?

    I think the general public is aware of the violence that
    providers face. I think the public is less aware of the other obstacles — such as
    targeted regulations against abortion providers ("trap laws"), lack of
    collegial support, malpractice problems, etc — that face abortion providers. I am
    quite convinced that the overwhelming majority of the public is very much
    against the violence faced by providers, especially when it results in murder,
    as we saw recently with the assassination of Dr. Tiller in Kansas. But though
    this violence brings sympathy for the providers (and disgust with the
    extremists), I also think the legacy of this violence is to mark abortion as
    something that is always controversial, and that many people therefore simply
    wish to avoid thinking about (until/unless they need one!).

    Q: With the enormous
    costs in terms of time and resources spent on security, police backup, cleanup
    and HAZMAT for clinics under the threat and reality of violent
    actions-including anthrax threats, acid attacks, and arson — why are
    anti-abortion activists not considered domestic terrorists?

    Excellent question! Certainly by the abortion rights
    community, they are thought of in this way — when the violence first started to
    pick up in the late 1980s, I recall advocates going to the administrations of
    Ronald Reagan and the first President Bush and saying exactly that — these are
    domestic terrorists… but not until the Clinton administration, and the first
    killings of providers in the 1990s, was the problem taken seriously. Clinton
    signed the "face act" — "freedom of access to clinic entrances" — which made it a
    federal crime to interfere with someone trying to enter a clinic. This did
    reduce the then quite common blockades and sieges of clinics. And after Dr.
    Bart Slepian of Buffalo was killed in 1998, then-Attorney General Janet Reno
    convened a task force within the Justice Department on clinic violence. I do
    believe that the Dept. of Justice, especially under this administration, takes
    violence against providers seriously. The problem of course is with
    implementation of laws at the local levels. For whatever reasons, the local FBI
    and the local police in Kansas did not respond to reports of Scott Roeder (the
    murderer of Dr. Tiller) having vandalized a Kansas clinic the day before the Tiller murder, even
    though Roeder’s license plate number was reported to these authorities.

    Q: What effect do you
    think the recession is having on women’s access to abortions? How much more
    limited are poor women now than they were previously?

    There are widespread reports of more women needing
    reproductive health services — both contraception and abortions — and not being
    able to afford them. The various funds that help poor women pay for abortions
    (35 states do not allow use of Medicaid funds for this purpose) report that
    they are running out of money, because the requests have escalated. Our access to data on how many abortions are
    taking place is always lagging by a few years — but I suspect that this period of
    recession will ultimately be revealed to be one in which the number of both
    unintended pregnancies and abortions rose.

    Q: How will a
    significantly restricted universal healthcare bill affect low-income women who
    seek abortions?

    Well at this moment, it is not clear there will be any
    kind of healthcare bill, and it almost certainly will not be universal, to my
    great disappointment. From the start, it was clear that the best the abortion
    rights movement could hope for was the status quo — that is, as the Capps
    Amendment (named for Rep. Lois Capps of California) put it, the bill would be
    abortion neutral, leaving in place the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits the use
    of public funding for poor women. But both the Stupak Amendment in the House,
    and the Nelson "compromise" in the Senate, would make the abortion situation
    worse-ultimately resulting, as health policy scholars from George Washington
    University concluded, in a situation in which insurance plans which now offer
    abortion coverage, would cease to do so — making it harder to obtain such
    insurance, even with private funds.

  • Splosion Man Only Five Bucks This Week

    Splosion Man

    Today marks another new entry in Microsoft’s Xbox Live “Deal of the Week” program. This week’s deal brings us Splosion Man, developer Twisted Pixel’s highly-combustible Xbox Live Arcade platformer, for half off its usual price of 800 Microsoft points ($10).

    Like all of Microsoft’s weekly bargains, this deal is set to expire precisely one week from today. So if you’re at all interested in a game in which every face button on the controller causes the main character to explode, then you should probably hit up the Xbox Live Marketplace immediately.

    The only remaining question is what to do with the extra five dollars in your wallet after you’ve downloaded the game. And the answer is pretty obvious: Go buy a box of donuts. Everybody loves donuts, right?


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  • Jesse James Increases Reward In Search For Missing Dog

    You know what they say about desperate times: Jesse James is so determined to be reunited with his missing pit bull, he’s now offering $5,000 for the dog’s safe return.

    The TV mechanic and bike enthusiast launched an online campaign to find Cinnabun, the carmel-colored nine-month-old pup disappeared from James’ custom bike shop West Coast Choppers in Long Beach last Monday. Jesse and his actress wife Sandra Bullock even hired pet finding service Find Toto in hopes of bringing Cinnabun home, but the pooch’s trail seems to have gone cold. Now Jesse’s hoping increasing the reward from $2,000 to $5,000 with encourage someone to return his dog.

    If you have any information on Cinnabun’s whereabouts, you’re asked to call (562)-983-6666….


  • Spy Shots: 2011 Mercedes-Benz S65 AMG Coupe

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    2011 Mercedes-Benz S65 AMG Coupe – Click above for high-res image gallery

    It’s been nearly four years since the Mercedes-Benz CL-Class underwent a major overhaul, so M-B is planning a few subtle improvements to the third-generation W216 model before an all-new S-Class coupe arrives on the scene in late 2014.

    The new coupe will continue to be available in a variety of variants, but our spy shooters weathering the wintery climes have caught what they believe to be the 604-horsepower twin-turbocharged V12 version wearing a slightly modified fascia adorned with a single chrome slat, enlarged logo, LED daytime driving lamps and a new front bumper and splitter mildly reminiscent of the SLS AMG.

    When the refreshed model debuts either next month at the Geneva Motor Show or later this year in Paris don’t expect any seriously substantive tweaks to be made to the powertrain. That’ll likely come in the next few years when Mercedes begins downsizing and turbocharging, and we expect the S-Class coupe to be one of the first models to benefit from the new mill.

    Spy Shots: 2011 Mercedes-Benz S65 AMG Coupe originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 01 Feb 2010 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Report: Spyker investor Antonov’s alleged ties to organized crime nixed earlier Saab deal

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    Saab – A History in Pictures – Click above for high-res image gallery

    When Koenigsegg dropped out of the running to purchase Saab from General Motors, there apparently weren’t many automakers interested in rescuing the Swedish brand from the abyss. The only company with any serious interest, Spyker, seemed to be a long-shot to bring the brand into its portfolio. Of course, we now know that other investment groups were in the running, but Spyker came out on top to purchase Saab for $75 million and a closet full of clogs. But just like the winding road that led to the sale, the story doesn’t simply end there. According to several reports, the deal could have been done a month sooner were it not for the involvement of the Russia’s Antonov group.

    SR International is among several international news agencies to report that the Swedish government was under the strong suspicion that the Antonov group has strong ties to the Russian mafia. The Antonov family is allegedly tied to organized crime and money laundering, and the English government has blocked the family from investing in the UK because of similar suspicions. The Swedish government then reportedly informed America’s FBI of their findings, a move that lead to the U.S. government telling the GM board to stop the sale of Saab to Spyker on December 18. Hans Lindblad, state secretary at the Swedish Ministry of Finance, has reportedly confirmed the situation, adding that the discovery gave the Swedish government more time to help broker a deal.

    In the end, Spyker was able to purchase Saab from GM only after the Antonov group was bought out of its interest in Dutch specialty automaker. And we thought the Saab tale couldn’t get any weirder… or convoluted.

    [Sources: SR International, The Local]

    Report: Spyker investor Antonov’s alleged ties to organized crime nixed earlier Saab deal originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 01 Feb 2010 15:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Unica Continues Shopping Spree; Acquires MakeMeTop

    Marketing software company Unica has made its second acquisition of 2010. The Nasdaq-listed company is buying up UK-based MakeMeTop, a UK-based search bid management technology. The terms of the deal were not disclosed. Earlier this year, Unica acquired Pivotal Technologies, an email marketing startup, for $17.8 million.

    MakeMeTop’s technology will be branded as Unica Search OnDemand. MakeMeTop will help Unica to allow online marketers to automate and optimize their keyword buys across search engines including Ask, Baidu, Google, LookSmart, Microsoft’s Bing, Miva, Yahoo, and Yandex, while also manage their bidding and reporting across multiple currencies and languages.

    Unica’s enterprise marketing management software companies to manage web marketing efforts, including web and customer analytics, search marketing, email marketing, and website marketing/personalization. With the acquisition of MakeMeTop and email marketing provider Pivotal Technologies, Unica is trying to build a on-stop-shop marketing offering that automates most of the tasks for for optimizing web, email, search ad, display ad, and offline channels.


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  • Fire Outfoxed: Greasemonkey Creator Builds Native Support Into Chrome

    When Google launched Extensions for Chrome in December, they had around 300 of them ready to go in their gallery. A day later, that number was already up to 500. By now, there are a few thousand available, and that number just got multiple by several times as Google has announced that the latest official version of Chrome, version 4, now natively supports Greasemoneky user scripts.

    As Google engineer Aaron Boodman (who also happens to be the creator of Greasemonkey) writes today on the Chromium blog, on the popular site userscripts.org there are over 40,000 scripts alone. While he notes that not all of the user scripts written for Greasemonkey will work seamlessly with Chrome immediately (because of the differences between Chrome and Firefox), that should only affect 15%-25% of those over 40,000. He also notes that Google will continue to work on issues on their end to improve compatibility with these Greasemonkey scripts.

    While neither side is likely to admit it, this is another big blow to Mozilla’s Firefox browser. Boodman wrote Greasemonkey in 2004 specifically for Firefox, and now he’s just helped a rival browser implement the majority of these scripts natively. And in fact, the native support works so well that Chrome actually treats these user scripts just like regular Chrome Extensions, so you can install and disable them in the same way you do with regular ones.

    Boodman cautions users who choose to install these user scripts to be careful, as they can potentially access private data you’re browsing on a website. He notes that you should read the comments and descriptions on a user scripts’ page to figure out exactly what it’s doing before installing it. Still, there are a ton of very useful Greasemonkey user scripts out there, and this makes Chrome even better.

    While obviously, Chrome 4 is only officially launched for Windows, the beta versions available for both Mac and Linux are also version 4. And actually, the newer dev builds across all platforms are already onto version 5, so these user scripts should work fine on all of them.


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  • Davos Interviews: Max Levchin Says Slide Now Makes Almost All Of Its Money From Virtual Goods

    Continuing his series of Davos interviews, Michael talks to Slide CEO and founder Max Levchin in the video above. Levchin discusses the ” shift from advertising to virtual goods” and reveals that most of Slide’s revenues now come from sales of virtual goods, whereas it was the reverse a year ago. Slide makes some of the most popular apps on Facebook and other social networks, and the fact that it is no longer focussed on advertising says a lot about the prospects for social ads. Last year was a huge transition for Slide, made possible by the fact the company has raised a total of $78 million.

    Levchin is now steeped in the dynamics of virtual goods and how to get people to pay for them, which he discusses at length in the interview. He makes a distinction between buying virtual goods as a “consumption decision” (because you want to level up in a game immediately, for instance) and an “investment decision” where you spend to improve your standing in a community. He believes there are “less diminishing returns” in getting consumers to make see spending on virtual goods as an investment rather than just consumption.

    Levchin also says that Slide is working on the ability to allow consumers to create (and sell) their own virtual goods. You can also watch Mike’s other Davos interviews with Brightcove CEO Jeremy Allaire, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, MySpace CEO Owen van Natta, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, Russian DST investor Yuri Milner, and a run-in with Michael Dell.

    Transcript courtesy of PhoneTag:

    Mr. MIKE ARRINGTON: Mike Arrington here, I’m here with a very tired Max Levchin, CEO and founder of Slide. How are you?

    Mr. MAX LEVCHIN (CEO, Founder of Slide): Good.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: You’re wearing a suit today. You never wear suits.

    Mr. LEVCHIN: I never wear suits.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: Kind of a world economic forum thing.

    Mr. LEVCHIN: It is.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: No sleep at all? You’ve been up late working?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Up late working but some sleep. Just the sleep depriviation several days that’s what gets to you.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: It adds up.

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Yeah.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: So, tell me, I haven’t talked to you in a while, tell me about Slide, how things are going and where it is going.

    Mr. LEVCHIN: We’re doing well. We’ve evolved as a business in a pretty cool way. I think a year and a half ago we made, all the money that we made is from advertising. At this point, we make almost all the money that we make through sales of contents to consumers which is a pretty huge transformation for a business at our scale and is a relative success. We have expanded our product line. We’ve realized that some products weren’t going to last so we changed them. But, the most interesting is really the shift from advertising to virtual goods. We’re going to do that more. Probably the most interesting wrinkle in virtual goods that we have is, we also think once we enable our users to create the goods as opposed to us which we believe in a scalable model and we’re going down that road pretty well.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: You always sell toward cash. You don’t do much in a way of offers other than some stuff with flowers or something like that, right?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: We’ve done exactly one offer.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: The one with flowers?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Yeah. Actually it was pretty cool. It was a… strange people…

    Mr. ARRINGTON: You know that guy whispered “thank you” in my ear because he was filming us, he was filming me filming you. I wonder who it was.

    Mr. LEVCHIN: That’s very meta.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: He was behind me. Is that what he’s doing, he’s filming me filming you?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: He’s doing more than that, probably more than that. Anyway, yes we’ve done exactly one offer type of thing which was really demand discovery as opposed to demand generation. Demand generation is very tricky. It’s really easy to create from demand generation to lead generation which is an easy thing to drive towards pretty unethical behavior is a slippery slope. Demand and discovery is a lot easier to deal with but it’s also a lot harder to execute. And so, we’ve done one experiment (unintelligible).

    Mr. ARRINGTON: If you buy flowers for somebody…

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Yeah, if you’re getting something already.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: But you didn’t like it, you didn’t like the financial results. You felt it was a slippery slope or…

    Mr. LEVCHIN: No, no, from the moral compass perspective, it was pretty –

    Mr. ARRINGTON: It’s clearly okay?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Yeah, absolutely. In fact I would recommend it to others. This is neither something I’m ashamed of nor do I think it’s a bad business; it’s just hard to do well. If you’re looking for scalable direct to consumer sales behavior where you’re making things or somebody’s making things and they’re selling through the users and it’s a smooth process creating a really nice smooth demand discovery is hard because then you say, alright, well, it’s Mother’s Day, so we should do flowers. It’s pretty manual labor. It ultimately winds up being about as lucrative as just direct sales merchandising. So, ultimately it’s neither cannibalistic nor massively mass improvement over just direct sales which offers certainly is massive improvement because all sorts of people had said, I will never spend money, pretend spend, through that, which is how you wind up on a slippery slope.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: What percentage of customers can you convert to giving you money – single digit, couple percent, five percent?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: I think we are well within the industry average. So, it’s – between one and three percent. I think 3 percent in the Western markets is fantastic and I always certainly say it’s fantastic for us. Below half percent is what most people I think can get to and we tend to float substantially better than the lowest and well within the best.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: What happens to the other 97 or whatever percent? Are they there to get other users and to have some ads reserved? Is that basically their use?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: We don’t do much ads or in fact, we’ve really cut down our advertising efforts by quite a significant margin. Not that we don’t think advertising is a bad business. We do think that commodity advertising is a bad business. So, if you’re in a world of just click on this banner and just get more, it’s hard to get privacy well accounted for. So, a large scale pure reach, just give me anyone or even some modest marketing, low price CPM advertising I think is a declining business in general, but certainly within the world of social networks. Because, in that case, the only differentiating feature is reach and reach is firmly in the hands of Facebook and MySpace. So, at any one time, the only way you can compete if you’re a social advertising network or platform or whatever, is on price. And that is just – that’s another slippery slope I’d like to not be on.

    Now, slipping around to a high-end or brand advertising where the audience is uniquely predisposed towards the brand or towards the transaction being promoted, that’s an excellent business model. You look at, before the current, our times, the mortgage refinancing ads, I think, went for like $60 CPM and still probably go for similar amounts of money on sites that have to do with personal finance. Same exact ads on the front page of some random gaming portal will probably go for very little because they’re just pure (unintelligible). So, having the extremely targeted advertising is still a lucrative business even on social networks. An even better version of this and which is what we’re interested in is what is essentially product placement. If you can work a brand successfully into the narrative of your product, then it’s really cool. Then people actually take the brand up and say, my positive experience in your product is directly connected and influenced by this brand and that worked great.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: So, in a virtual world, having a can of Coca-Cola should have been an ad sitting and having fun.

    Mr. LEVCHIN: If Coca-Cola is listening, I’d love to have their cans in my virtual world.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: Do you find, this is a little off topic, back to the old topic. Do you find that users that pay, their friends are more likely to pay? Or that statistically they’re only three percent likely to pay? How do you find those ones that actually pull their wallet out?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: I think the best predictor is their commitment to the product. You can predict whether they will or will not pay both to backing up for a second, there are two ways we think of virtual goods and this is possibly leading to us but I think it’s one good way to split up.

    One is the consumption decision, one is an investment decision. The consumption decision is if you’re playing a game and you’ve got to level up and you just can’t wait another 24 hours for your crops to mature, for your fish to be sold or whatever, and so you pull out a dollar and say, oh look, I used to be level 15, now I’m level 16 which is great. It works and it is a true consumption decision. It is like watching a movie, you don’t really expect anything in return but you had a lot of fun.

    Investment decision is where you are involved in a proto community or perhaps a real community and their conversations, they’re not necessarily on the game topic or a topic of whatever the community was originally formed around, where your standing in the community matters, where you have a voice where people care for who you are and how you differ from others and most of all, you care. If you’re really committed, you start caring a lot. In fact, you’re willing to invest in your standing and personality within that community which is the other way in a virtual-based goods become relevant where your avatar or persona or whatever term is somebody actually are willing to actually invest in cash. The ones I’m most interested in are the latter because they are ultimately a more scalable model in a sense that people are less likely to say diminishing returns. I graduate from level 15 to 16 for a dollar, grow to 500 to 501 for a dollar. Why would I possibly give out in two to 503? And some people are very happy to keep going but on average, I believe, there’s diminishing returns which just has to be. Most people don’t level up to over 500 on anything.

    On the other hand, in a real world, as people gain standing and status in their community, they actually do invest more in it. You can join in a parent teacher’s association, next thing you know, you’re donating money to it and helping with the after-school activities. And that’s very possible. So, the investment type, virtual goods I think are probably somewhat more sustainable although they do have their shelf life and their lifespan. The predictor of that behavior is commitment. Will you join the PTA? Are you going to go post on the feedback forum or are you going to help others get better at this game? So, that’s what we found to be the best way to predict that. The thing that you first referred to, my friend is spending money, maybe I should spend money follows naturally from that second type of behavior. It also does sort of follow from the first type of behavior but that’s competitive. You’re level 15, I’m still level 14, if I got to beat you, I got to beat you. I think most people in social gaming or social entertainment in general are on average not as competition driven as they are driven by other means. And community is one of them but also escapism, the desire to have complete control over the process to understand in real life but don’t have full control in their own world, e.g. people play – there’s farming games I think in a big way because it’s something I understand, is very complex and they could never accomplish in the real world, but having a farm that sits there and just produces revenue even if it’s completely virtual is pretty awesome, you can control it.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: How long does it last, those types of games? How long does the user last, a month on average, less?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: I think it really depends on the game. But there are several different retaining factors. One is content. If the game designer produces more content than he can consume per month, some fraction of the people will say more quests, more tests, more challenges, more whatever and they will be compelled by it. There are diminishing returns there as well. At a certain point he will say – well, this challenge is kind of like the one from last month and I already solved that one. The other retention factor obviously is the community. If you play with your friends and they’re still playing, you’ll probably have higher odds of playing. There are lots of other things and they all add up to some sort of retention curve. That retention curve, it drops down to zero within 30 days then you have a – 30 days of their attention. I think it really – I will only go as far as claiming that from most products their retention curves are not too similar. I mean there are products that have incredibly high retention, and incredibly low retention.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: So what about this year for you? What’s going to happen to Slide this year? Any new big product launches that you’re excited about, you want to talk about now? Raising good money that you want to talk about? This is the one like (unintelligible) easy questions.

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Right. There are some product launches that I’m excited about, that I’m not willing to talk about.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: New games and applications.

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Yes.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: And this is all still Facebook, MySpace focused? Looking at mobile at all?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: On mobile, there are several questions in there so I’ll choose which one I want to answer. The mobile view that we have is as follows. It’s a fantastic extension of a committed community or committed group that exists on the web, and whether it is from the Facebook or MySpace or on any destination site or – it doesn’t really matter that much. But given the distribution cost and dynamics on the web versus the same on mobile, makes a great deal of sense to tell someone to take your favorite game with you versus discover your favorite game on mobile even if mobile is in some cases certainly is more compelling or more lucrative or whatever, just the footprints that it needs to get to, to become financially interesting is much easier achieved as a buyer instead of the people from a Facebook game extending it to their iPhone than a hundred percent of people discovering it through the App Store, for us. I think there are many companies that have mastered the App Store distribution to the point where they can get to a similar financial footprint, but I don’t think that’s a core competence for Slide. Probably it isn’t likey to change this year although hoping to do that one if I can figure out how to do it, I’ll definitely try.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: Anything else?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Pretty exciting here for us. I think so. A lot of really interesting maturation that will happen in the overall industry. I think many different assumptions will be challenged.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: You want to expand on that a little bit, like which assumptions?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Assumptions of – assumptions of what it means to have a successful social app and possibly the assumption of what categories are going to be successful in social apps. I think this may be the year where things start becoming more blurred about what’s a game, what’s not a game.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: Interesting.

    Mr. LEVCHIN: How do I delete that part? It’s way too vague, even I think it’s vague.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: It’s vague but it sounds like it’s begging to be unpacked a little more. For instance, are you talking about taking Slide social tools and extending them over to platform to other things? By things I mean other apps for other people, other sites, other…

    Mr. LEVCHIN: I think what we’re trying to get to is in effect a platform where some of the content is created by the users and…

    Mr. ARRINGTON: Yeah, they create a shirt and then other people sell it or something.

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Or they create a shirt and then they sell it.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: Right. But even other people could theoretically.

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Sure.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: I mean, you know, I’d love to have, you know, there’s virtual gifts on Facebook, occasionally I give one. I’d love to be able to create my own gift and give it. It would be really cool if it was so popular other people will give it. That’s the kind of thing you’re talking about?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: That’s certainly a big part of what we think we’re going to do. And if you look at the historic expertise of our company, it is in the tool-making skill of enabling consumers making something out of practically nothing. And I don’t mean to disrespect the occasionally fabulous but mostly just nice and sentimental pictures that people have but combined with our now five-year-old slideshow product…

    Mr. ARRINGTON: Has it been that long?

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Maybe it’s been four-and-a-half years, four years, but it’s been around and it’s helped at this point millions of people who go from regular expected to pretty awesome and I think in some cases that pretty awesome becomes financial lucrative. So, we try to think of ourselves as enablers of that.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: Right. That sounds like that’s all you’re going to give me right now. You’ve been generous with your time. I’d love to hear more about these when you guys are ready though.

    Mr. LEVCHIN: Sure.

    Mr. ARRINGTON: Thanks, Max.


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  • Toro Rosso launches its “first” F1 car: the 2010 STR5

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    2010 Toro Rosso STR5 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Big deal, you say? Another F1 car, you say? Well it’s a big deal in Faenza, where Scuderia Toro Rosso is based. That’s because, in accordance with new regulations, this is the first car designed and built entirely in house since Red Bull acquired the team in 2005.

    The STR5, then, might as well be called the STR1, because its predecessors were all designed by its sister team Red Bull Racing. Now STR’s on its own, and this is the sword it will wield for the 2010 Formula One World Championship. Like other teams, Toro Rosso designed its car around the double diffuser which it adopted after a clarification to the rules mid-season last year. Also like its competitors, the STR5 abandons the KERS regenerative braking system, but takes on a bigger fuel tank in light of the new ban on mid-race refueling.

    Although Volkswagen has joined STR as a nominal sponsor, “the other Scuderia” sticks with Ferrari power for 2010. With Toyota and BMW gone, the entire grid is being powered by only four engine suppliers: Ferrari, Mercedes, Renault and Cosworth. The STR5 will be piloted once again by Sebastien Buemi and Jaime Alguersuari, who – due to the mid-season test ban – is now in Valenica where the car was launched, undertaking his first F1 test session despite having raced last season. Click on the thumbnails below to jump to the mega-gallery of high-resolution images.

    [Source: Scuderia Toro Rosso]

    Toro Rosso launches its “first” F1 car: the 2010 STR5 originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 01 Feb 2010 16:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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