Author: Serkadis

  • Eureka Virtual Machining

    Eureka is a easy-to-use and powerful cnc machining simulation software.
    Verifying the G-code, created manually or by a CAM system, Eureka helps to avoid risks of damaging expensive work pieces, breaking tools and fixtures or even crashing a CNC machine because of some programming error.

    Eureka supports any machine and any controller on the market like: Heidenhain, Fanuc, Siemens, Num, Fidia, Fagor, Selca, OSAI, Z32, Heller. Other controller can be easily integrated on demand.

    Eureka will be on display at EMO 2009 in Milan – Italy, Booth# H09 – B05.

    WE ARE LOOKING FOR PARTNERS IN USA, ASIA AND EUROPE. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED PLEASE GET IN TOUCH.

  • Report: Toyota to take pedal recall global

    Filed under: , ,

    TheDetroitBureau.com is reporting that Toyota is currently in discussions with other world governments and safety agencies about expanding its latest recall involving defective accelerator pedal mechanisms that may cause unintended acceleration. Eight models are included in the current U.S. recall, which affects some 2.3 million Toyota branded vehicles. Without a fix for the issue, Toyota is required by law to stop production and sales of the vehicles, which it did yesterday – some five days after the recall was announced. Toyota also announced another recall earlier this month affecting 4.2 million vehicles with floor mats that could trap accelerator pedals, also causing unintended acceleration, and while the two issues are said to be unrelated, around 1.7 million vehicles are affected by both recalls.

    At the heart of this latest recall are accelerator pedal mechanisms produced by Indiana-based CTS Corp. at its plant in Mississauga, Ontario. What’s not immediately known is whether the pedal mechanisms produced by CTS Corp. have been used in any models sold outside North America, or whether the problem with these parts is in their manufacturing or an issue with their design, choice of materials, etc. If it’s the latter, the defective pedal mechanisms could be produced in other Toyota supplier plants around the world and be used in millions more vehicles than the ones covered by this latest recall in the U.S.

    Toyota has not officially commented whether or not its considering expanding the recall to other markets, or other brands like Lexus and Scion. Stay tuned as more news about Toyota and its recall woes continues to surface.

    [Source: The Detroit Bureau, The Canadian Press | Image: HO/AFP/Getty]

    Report: Toyota to take pedal recall global originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 27 Jan 2010 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Gov. Schwarzenegger to Highlight Green Tech Manufacturing Equipment Sales Tax Exempti

    Gov. Schwarzenegger will tour SunPower Corporation’s Richmond Facility and hold a press conference to highlight a proposal to exempt the purchase of green tech manufacturing equipment from the sales tax in his California Jobs Initiative.

    http://gov.ca.gov/speech/14286

  • Text of the Videotaped Message from President Barack Obama for the Ceremony Commemora

    01.27.10 06:40 AM

    Good morning. And thank you to everyone who worked to bring us to this day, especially the International Auschwitz Council and the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum.

    To President Kacynski Prime Minister Tusk and to the people of Poland—thank you for preserving a place of such great pain for the Polish people, but a place of remembrance and learning for the world.

    Although I can’t be with you in person, I’m proud that the United States is represented there today by a delegation of distinguished Americans, including Ambassador Feinstein; my wife Michelle’s chief of staff, Susan Sher; and my good friend, and the son of Holocaust survivors, Julius Genachowski.

    And let me commend you for recognizing a woman who has devoted her life to preserving the lessons of the shoah for future generations—Sara Bloomfield of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington.

    But most of all, I want to thank those of you who found the strength to come back again, so many years later, despite the horror you saw here, the suffering you endured here, and the loved ones you lost here. Those of us who did not live through those dark days will never truly understand what it means to have hate literally etched into your arms. But we understand the message that you carry in your hearts.

    For you know the truth that Elie Wiesel spoke when I stood with him at Buchenwald last spring. There, where his father and so many innocent souls left this earth, Elie said that “memory has become the sacred duty of all people of goodwill.”

    We have a sacred duty to remember the twisted thinking that led here—how a great society of culture and science succumbed to the worst instincts of man and rationalized mass murder and one of the most barbaric acts in history.

    We have a sacred duty to remember the cruelty that occurred here, as told in the simple objects that speak to us even now. The suitcases that still bear their names. The wooden clogs they wore. The round bowls from which they ate. Those brick buildings from which there was no escape—where so many Jews died with Sh’ma Israel on their lips. And the very earth at Auschwitz, which is still hallowed by their ashes—Jews and those who tried to save them, Polish and Hungarian, French and Dutch, Roma and Russian, straight and gay, and so many others.

    But even as we recall man’s capacity for evil, Auschwitz also tells another story—of man’s capacity for good. The small acts of compassion—the sharing of some bread that kept a child alive. The great acts of resistance that blew up the crematorium and tried to stop the slaughter. The Polish Rescuers and those who earned their place forever in the Righteous Among the Nations.

    And you—the survivors. The perpetrators of that crime tried to annihilate the entire Jewish people. But they failed. Because 65 years ago today, when the gates flew open, you were still standing. And every day that you have lived, every child and grandchild that your families have brought into the world with love, every day the sun rises on the Jewish state of Israel—that is the ultimate rebuke to the ignorance and hatred of this place.

    So to those of you who have come back today, I say, no, you are not “former prisoners.” You are living memorials. Living memorials to the loved ones you left here. And to the spirit we must strive to uphold in our time—not simply to bear witness, but to bear a burden. The burden of seeing our common humanity; of resisting anti-Semitism and ignorance in all its forms; of refusing to become bystanders to evil, whenever and wherever it rears its ugly face.

    Let that be the true meaning of Auschwitz. Let that be the liberation we celebrate today—a liberation of the spirit that, if embraced, can lead us all—individuals and as nations—to be among the righteous.

    May God bless you all, and may God bless the memory of all those who rest here.

    ###

    A video of the President’s message commemorating the 65th Anniversary of the Liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau will be posted on whitehouse.gov later today.

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Guest List For The First Lady’s Box At The 2010 State Of The Union

    01.27.10 07:43 AM

    Mrs. Michelle Obama

    Dr. Jill Biden

    Clayton Armstrong (Washington, DC)
    Clayton was a DC Scholar with the White House Office of Intergovernmental Affairs during the summer of 2009. He is currently a freshman at the University of Arizona. Clayton grew up in Southeast Washington, DC and graduated from Ballou High School where he was the captain of the football team.

    Li Boynton (Bellaire, TX)
    Li is a 18-year-old senior from Bellaire, Texas whose passion for science and global health has led her to new and potentially ground-breaking methods for testing the quality of drinking water. Almost one billion people lack access to safe drinking water, and 3.5 million people die each year from water-related diseases. Observing the limitations and significant expense of conventional chemical-specific tests, Boynton saw a need for a broader, more efficient assay for testing – and developed a bacteria bio-sensor. Li’s work, which has the potential to be significant in improving public health worldwide, received the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair award for 2009.

    Li has always had a passion for science and invention: in 5th grade, she designed a solar-distillation device after reading Life of Pi in case she ever got stranded in the middle of the ocean. Li is also an avid painter and participates in high school debate, which is where she originally developed her environmental interests.

    Jeffrey Brown (Philadelphia, PA)
    Jeffrey Brown is the founder, President and CEO of Brown’s Super Stores, Inc., a growing ten-store supermarket chain trading under the ShopRite banner. As one of the leading supermarkets in the Philadelphia area, the company employs 2,300 associates who are committed to making a difference for their customers and the local communities they serve.

    Brown graduated from Babson College, Massachusetts with a degree in entrepreneurial studies. He resides in southern New Jersey with his wife Sandy and their four sons Joshua, Alex, Lenny, and Scott.

    Mayor Mick Cornett (Oklahoma City, OK)
    Mick Cornett became Oklahoma City’s 35th mayor on March 2, 2004, and was re-elected on March 7, 2006. In 2007, he was elected as a Trustee of the U.S. Conference of Mayors. Cornett is also the national President of the organization representing Republican Mayors and Local Officials.

    Cornett is a graduate of the University of Oklahoma, where he earned a degree in journalism, and after graduation embarked on a 20 year career in broadcast journalism. In 2001, Cornett was elected to City Council, where he served until becoming mayor.

    Cornett was born and raised in Oklahoma City, and together, he and his wife Lisa have raised three sons – Michael, Casey and Tristan.

    Tina Dixon (Allentown, PA)
    Tina is currently employed by Lehigh Valley Health Network as a Technical Partner Trainee, a job that she was able to secure through the EARN program (Employment Advancement and Retention Network – a program focused primarily on Paid Work Experience placement) at the Allentown, Pennsylvania CareerLink in preparation to re-enter the workforce after years as a stay-at-home mother to three girls, Olivia, Allison, and Lauren.

    It was at CareerLink that Tina met President Obama on the first White House to Main Street Tour in December 2009.

    Gabriela Farfan (Madison, WI)
    Gabriela is a 19-year old from Madison, Wisconsin whose passion for geology started at a young age – collecting rocks as a seven-year old with her father. In 2009, as a senior in high school, her hard-work and research won her one of the top awards in the Intel Science Talent Search, winning a scholarship for her independent research describing why certain gemstones appear to change color when viewed from different angles—a finding that directly affects the gemstone industry and may have applications in the nano and materials sciences. Gabriela is now in college as a freshman at Stanford University, and a declared geology major.

    Gabriela is also a National Hispanic Scholar awardee, has two very proud parents, Abigail Farfan and Carlos Peralta, and has a real dedication to the arts: singing, drawing, painting, speaking French and Spanish, and following operas and musicals.

    Julia Frost (Jacksonville, NC)
    Julia is a former Marine bandsman trumpeter, a wife of an active duty Marine, and current student at Coastal Carolina Community College. She served a four year term with the United States Marine Corps stationed at Marine Corps Base Hawaii. Her husband, Sergeant Ryan Frost, is also a Marine bandsman, stationed at Camp Lejeune North Carolina.

    With the aid of the GI Bill, Julia is currently enrolled in the Elementary Education program through a partnership between Coastal Carolina Community College and the University of North Carolina, Wilmington. Julia hopes to complete her associate degree this summer and bachelors in the spring of 2012.

    Dr. Biden, a community college professor, first met Julia when she visited her campus last October as part of the Administration’s ongoing efforts to support America’s community colleges and their students.

    Ping Fu (Chapel Hill, NC)
    Ping Fu co-founded Geomagic, a company which pioneers technologies that fundamentally change the way products are designed, engineered and manufactured around the world from automobiles to medical devices. Geomagic, under her leadership, has been an active participant in the SBA’s Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program. Fu has led Geomagic to deliver broad-based economic impact to the US economy with tangible results – the company tripled its customer base and employment while achieving high growth and profitability. As such, the NSF awarded Geomagic the prestigious Tibbetts Award for exemplifying the very best in SBIR.

    Fu has more than 25 years of software industry experience in database, internet technology, and visual computing. Before Geomagic, she was the Director of Visualization at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications and is also, actively involved in promoting entrepreneurship and women in mathematics and sciences.

    Janell Holloway (Washington, DC)
    Janell was a DC Scholar with the White House Domestic Policy Council during the summer of 2009. She is currently a freshman at Harvard University where she is a member of the Harvard College chapter of the American Red Cross, dances with the CityStep dance troupe, and is active in the Black Student Association. Janell is interested in the connection between child abuse and youth violence and has served as a volunteer at Safe Shores: DC Children’s Advocacy Center for more than three years. She is a native of Washington, DC and graduated from Benjamin Banneker Academic High School.

    Ambassador Raymond Joseph
    In 1990 Raymond Joseph was called to be Haiti’s Chargé d’Affaires in Washington and his country’s representative at the Organization of American States. After helping with the first democratic elections in December 1990, he returned to the Haiti Observateur where he remained until he was called back to Washington in March 2004, where he is currently the Ambassador.

    Joseph is a graduate pastor from the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago, a B. A. holder in Anthropology from Wheaton College, Wheaton, Illinois. He also has a Master’s degree in Social Anthropology/Linguistics from the University of Chicago.

    Don Karner (Phoenix, AZ)
    Don Karner is the President, CEO, and Co-Founder of eTec (Electric Transportation Engineering Corporation). As President of eTec, Don provides strategic direction, conducts research and leads the company’s development of new products and services.

    eTec received $99.8 million from the Recovery Act’s Battery and Electric Vehicle Grant program, which the company will match with another $99.8 million in locally raised funds. The funding will be used to manufacture and implement the charging infrastructure for an 11 city pilot program intended to research electric vehicle charging infrastructure. Cities involved are Phoenix, Tucson, San Diego, Salem, Portland, Eugene, Seattle, Nashville, Knoxville, and Chattanooga. The award will create at least 50 new permanent clean economy jobs working directly at eTec, has already saved numerous positions, and will require construction workers across the country to implement the project.

    Don participated in a Recovery Act roundtable discussion with Vice President Biden in Phoenix in November 2009 where they discussed the importance of the public/private partnership to a green economy.

    Janell Kellett (Sun Prairie, WI)
    Janell has served as a lead volunteer within the Wisconsin Army National Guard for approximately six years, including during her husband’s fifteen month deployment from 2005-2006 and recent twelve month deployment from 2009-2010. Janell’s husband, Major Michael Hanson, serves with the 32nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team and recently returned home to Wisconsin. During Major Hanson’s deployment, Janell served the 3,200 families of the 32nd Brigade and over 50 volunteers of the 32nd Brigade with dedication. Janell was honored for her service with a 2009 Wisconsin National Guard Volunteer of the Year award by the Wisconsin State Family Program. Under Janell’s leadership, the 32nd Brigade was selected for the prestigious Department of Defense Reserve Family Readiness Award in December 2009 for the Army National Guard. Additionally, Janell served as the Battalion Volunteer for the 2nd Battalion, 128th Infantry when it received the same award, the Department of Defense Reserve Family Readiness Award, in 2006.

    Janell and Michael have two children, Jaclene and Lucas.

    Rebecca Knerr (Chantilly, VA)
    Rebecca is representing her husband, Captain II Joseph Knerr, the Task Force Leader of Fairfax County’s Virginia Task Force 1 serving in Haiti. Having worked as a Fairfax County Firefighter for 15 years, Joe currently serves as Station Commander at Fairfax Fire and Rescue Station 18. He initially joined the USAR team in 1998 serving in a variety of operational capacities and now in leadership positions. Joe is also involved in the coordination, teaching and training of other international rescue teams. A former Fairfax County Firefighter and Paramedic herself, Rebecca works as an Emergency Physician’s Assistant in a Northern Virginia Hospital and for Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department developing and delivering emergency medical services education to uniformed personnel. Rebecca, 24 month old son Jackson, and 12 week old daughter Grace are eager to welcome Joe home.

    Chris Lardner (Albuquerque, NM)
    Chris Lardner is a patient service manager at the New Mexico Heart Institute and her husband, Scott, owns a small family business. Together they have three children, two daughters in college at Regis University in Denver, Danielle and Caitlin, and a son in 7th grade, Sean. As a result of the economic downturn they resorted to paying for some of their daughters’ education with a credit card. Lardner realized she was close to reaching the card limit, so she contacted the college to change the card on file. The school mistakenly charged another payment to the original card, which then put her above the limit. In response, the credit card company more than tripled her rate to nearly 30 percent, despite of record of responsibility with her finances and payments. Lardner submitted a letter to the President online expressing her frustration with the rate hikes leveled as a result of the mistaken charge.

    Chris shared her story when she introduced the President at a Town Hall in May 2009 – since that time her issue with the credit card company was eventually resolved; their rate was lowered to 7 percent and the company returned the over-the-limit fees that had been charged.

    In May 2009, President Obama signed the credit card reform bill that bans credit card companies from unfairly raising interest rates on existing balances, protects against unfair fee traps (including requiring the consumer’s permission before processing an over-the-limit transaction), and increases accountability and transparency from credit card companies.

    Anita Maltbia (Kansas City, MO)
    Anita Maltbia is a native of Kansas City, Missouri, and has over 30 years experience in city government, and community activism. In August 2009, at the request of Congressman Emanuel Cleaver II, Anita assumed the director position of the Green Impact Zone. This initiative works with the residents of a 150 square-block area in the urban core of Kansas City to raise the quality of life environmentally, economically and socially. Energy efficiency and environmental conservation, including home weatherization and energy upgrades are critical goals as is job training and acquisition.

    The Green Impact Zone in Kansas City, Missouri is an urban success story that reflects President Obama’s national urban policy vision of breaking down silos and building strong communities of opportunity that will, in turn, contribute to the economic prosperity and the sustainability of cities and metropolitan areas.

    Kimberly Munley (Killeen, TX)
    Kimberly was born and raised in North Carolina. In 1999, she completed Basic Law Enforcement Training and began her career in law enforcement. Kimberly spent the next 11 years working as a University of North Carolina, Wilmington undercover vice/narcotics agent, a Wrightsville Beach uniformed patrol officer and beach patrol officer, a Special Police Officer for New Hanover County Regional Medical Center, a Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Operations Specialist Soldier in the United States Army, and is currently a federal police officer serving on the Special Reaction Team for the Fort Hood Police Department in Fort Hood, Texas.

    Cindy Parker-Martinez (Belle Isle, FL)
    Cindy is a mother of two young children, who shared her story of the problems her family faces with the current health care system at a Health Care Community Discussion held at the University of Central Florida in Orlando, one of thousands of discussions held nationwide in December 2008. In April 2008, Cindy, her husband, and her son were all denied insurance coverage on the individual insurance market because of pre-existing conditions. Her 11-month old daughter was also denied coverage due to an insurance company age requirement of 12 months. Both Cindy and her husband are currently uninsured because they cannot afford the insurance offered at her husband’s employer. Although they previously paid their premium, they could not afford to keep up the monthly payments after receiving thousands of dollars in medical bills from her husband’s unexpected 6-day hospital stay for pneumonia. Their family’s income is too high for them to qualify for Medicaid. Cindy and her husband currently have no insurance and have thousands of dollars in medical debt.

    Deborah Powell (Hugo, OK)
    Deborah Powell is a Native American Development Specialist for the Housing Authority of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. Having earned only a high school diploma, Powell built her experience outside of college and soon became interested in accounting and finance. After spending 43 years of her life in her hometown of Flagstaff, Arizona, she moved to Oklahoma in April 2004 for a change of pace and is currently working on a project funded by the Recovery Act. A member of the Choctaw Nation, she is currently helping to track budgets and ensure bids for independent elderly homes. This project, which is still under construction, will provide homes for more than 86 elderly people in the Choctaw Nation. Powell is recently remarried, and enjoys hunting, fishing, and spending time with her family.

    Sergeant First Class Andrew Rubin (Savannah, GA)
    Sergeant First Class Andrew Rubin entered the Army in 1997 from Boston, Massachusetts and completed One Station Unit Training, Airborne Training and Ranger Assessment and Selection at Fort Benning, Georgia before becoming a Ranger assigned to the 75th Ranger Regiment.

    Andrew has spent his entire military career serving in the 75th Ranger Regiment in positions of increasing responsibility. He is currently assigned to 1st Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, headquartered in Savannah, Georgia, which recently redeployed from a combat tour supporting operations in Iraq and Afghanistan in December 2009.

    SFC Rubin currently leads 45 Rangers as a Rifle Company Platoon Sergeant. In the Regiment, he has also served as an anti-tank gunner, sniper, sniper team leader, sniper section leader, and rifle squad leader, Ranger Assessment and Selection Instructor, and Rifle Platoon Sergeant.

    SFC Rubin has served four combat tours in Iraq and two combat tours in Afghanistan. He has been involved in countless fire fights, was wounded on two separate occasions and has received two awards for Valor. During his recent deployment to Iraq, he was shot by enemy forces while risking his life to save one of his Rangers who lay wounded and immobilized in the streets of As Sadiyah, Iraq during an intense firefight. For that action, he received the Bronze Star with Valor and the Purple Heart. Previously, he was wounded in Afghanistan when he was hit by a rocket propelled grenade during an enemy ambush.

    SFC Rubin and his wife Megan have three children, Michael, Joseph and Kendal.

    Mark Todd (Killeen, TX)
    Mark Todd was born and raised in San Diego, California. Todd enlisted in the United States Army as a Military Policeman in 1985. He was selected to attend Military Working Dog Handlers Course and later assigned as a K-9 handler at Fort Devens, Massachusetts, Fort Polk, Louisiana, and Wurezburg, Germany. Later he was assigned as a K-9 Trainer and Instructor at Lackland Air Force Base Texas. Todd earned an Associate in Applied Science – Instructor of Technology and Military Science from the Community College of the Air Force in 1997. His last two assignments were Grafenwoehr, Germany and Fort Hood, Texas. In 2007, he joined the Directorate of Emergency Services and is currently the Lead Police Officer, Military Working Dog Branch – Acting Chief at Fort Hood Texas. Todd is married to Lisa Dalton and together they have three children; Jennifer, Mark Jr., and Kristyn; and two grandsons.

    Army Specialist (ret.) Scott Vycital (Ft. Collins, CO)
    Specialist Scott Vycital served as a paratrooper in the 82nd Airborne Division. Vycital spent 8 months deployed in Iraq as a Specialist with 2nd Platoon, Bravo Company, 3-505 Parachute Infantry Regiment and was medically retired due to injuries received in defense of Operation Iraqi Freedom. On February 15, 2004, while on patrol of suspected mortar sites, his fire team was engaged by enemy fire and he sustained gunshot wounds on the right side of the face, neck, and shoulder. As a result of his injuries, the right side of SPC Vycital’s face has been paralyzed and he lost the hearing in his right ear. After spending some time rehabilitating from injuries, SPC Vycital returned to school and with the assistance of the VA and the Army Wounded Warrior (AW2) program. He completed his degree in Business Administration with an Accounting concentration from Colorado State University in December 2008. Following graduation, with the help of his AW2 advocates SPC Vycital landed a position within the Federal Highway Administration. He has since been promoted to the position of Programs & Planning Financial Specialist and will have been with the Agency for one year in March. The President’s executive order on employing Veterans in the Federal Government has made employing Veterans like Vycital a priority. Vycital resides in Fort Collins, CO with his wife of 7 years, Jarah, and has a 4 year old son, Breccan, and a 17 month old daughter, Micah.

    Trevor Yager (Indianapolis, IN)
    Trevor Yager began his career in 1995 while in college by founding TrendyMinds, a full-service advertising/public relations firm. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in psychology from Anderson University and went on to work with various motor sports sponsors, team owners and sanctioning bodies. Today, at TrendyMinds, Yager provides strategic planning, business development, marketing and technology guidance and support to various local, national and international clients. In 2009 the agency grew by more than 200 percent, doubled the number of employees and gained 15 new accounts. Yager credits President Obama’s welcoming climate for small businesses, including the many initiatives under the Recovery Act, for this success.

    He is also passionate about helping non-profits and TrendyMinds is committed to giving back to the community by donating in-kind services to organizations throughout Indiana.

    Yager resides in Indianapolis with his partner of seven years, Tyler Murray. The two have recently started the process of adoption and look forward to adding a new member to their family.

    Juan Yépez (Lawrence, MA)
    Juan Yépez, and his brother Luis, are Ecuadorian-natives, who in ten short years, have built a successful and growing commercial real estate company in addition to growing Mainstream Global, a worldwide distributor of computer products, consumer electronics, and electronic components, in mills once inhabited by earlier generations of immigrants.

    The Yépez brothers were the recipients of the 2009 Small Business Administration Phoenix award for recovering from a major flood that destroyed almost $400,000 of inventory while still managing to flourish in the midst of an economic downturn. They believe that doing business in an area hit by 17 percent unemployment is more than just giving back and that hiring first generation Americans like themselves who want to work and contribute to society is the cornerstone of long-term success.

    Phil Schiliro, Assistant to the President and Director, Office of Legislative Affairs

    Tina Tchen, Deputy Assistant to the President and Director, Office of Public Engagement,
    Executive Director, White House Council on Women and Girls

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Statement From the Press Secretary on Statutory PAYGO

    01.27.10 07:52 AM

    The serious fiscal situation that our country faces reflects not only the severe economic downturn we inherited, but also years of failing to pay for new policies—including the 2003 prescription drug law and large tax cuts that most benefited the well-off. The result was that the surpluses projected at the beginning of this decade were transformed into trillions of dollars in deficits that threaten future job creation and economic growth.

    In the 1990s, statutory PAYGO encouraged the tough choices that helped to move the government from large deficits to surpluses, and the President believes it can do the same today. Statutory PAYGO would hold the government to a simple but bedrock principle: Congress can only spend a dollar if it saves a dollar elsewhere. Mandatory spending increases and tax cuts must be paid for; they’re not free, and borrowing to finance them is not a sustainable long-term policy.

    Statutory PAYGO would require us to pay for any new non-emergency tax cut or mandatory spending expansion with offsetting revenue increases or spending reductions. Both houses of Congress have already taken an important step toward righting our fiscal course by adopting congressional rules incorporating the PAYGO principle, but we can strengthen enforcement and redouble our commitment by enacting PAYGO into law. That’s why the President strongly supports the Senate’s efforts to pass statutory PAYGO. The President is committed to returning our government back to a path of fiscal discipline, and PAYGO represents a key step toward that goal.

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • iPad Development Made Easy

    Alongside the army of consumers and tech pundits waiting for a peek of the aptly named iPad, the over 25,000 strong development community have been patiently standing on the sidelines too.

    Taking several leaps forward in terms of its processing power and onboard hardware, the device includes Apple’s own chip, said Jobs, “It’s called the A4, and it screams.” Most exciting for developers with iPhone apps already on sale is that Apple has made the transition up to iPad as smooth as possible.

    Since the device’s Home Screen is essentially a facsimile of the iPhone Home Screen, developers won’t have to worry about creating new icons or other assets in order to port the app across. In fact, as stated by Apple themselves, the iPad can run all iPhone apps unmodified out of the box.

    The big announcement for the dev community is that Apple are releasing the new SDK today. Just like the user experience is somewhat like a big iPhone, development will take place within the iPhone SDK and — thanks to the device’s app scaling feature — developers won’t even have to worry about creating content in the larger device’s resolution.

    It’s unclear whether Apple will also take steps to update its Developer Connection site, that unusually clunky web-based tool-set and administration area for App Store developers.

    Most interesting though will be seeing how developers leverage the additional processing power that the iPad includes. Developers can grab the new SDK from Apple.com today.

  • Commodities Tank, Oil Dropping Below $74 A Barrel

    Score one for the Bears.

    Commodities are tanking along with equities. Right now, crude oil is down 2.2% to $73.08 a barrel and looks to fall even further throughout the day.

    Gold continues its run below $1100 an ounce, currently at $1086/oz, down $12.70. Silver is down 2.5% to $16.45 an ounce.

    commodities jan27th

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  • Supporters turn out for Santa Clarita councilman who called himself ‘proud racist’

    Supporters of a Santa Clarita councilman who called himself a “proud racist” at a recent anti-immigration rally packed the city’s council chambers to praise him for speaking out on an issue many residents find frustrating.

    A few opponents called on the councilman Tuesday night to apologize for his comments, but no action was taken.

    The remarks made by Bob Kellar, a veteran councilman who has twice served as the city’s mayor, set off a firestorm after some residents accused Kellar of using his position to spread divisiveness and hatred.

    Some out-of-area activists vented their frustration outside City Hall before the meeting. They lambasted Kellar and claimed he had violated the city’s code of ethics — an allegation that the city’s attorney said was unfounded.

    But most of the overflow crowd that attended Tuesday’s four-hour council session praised Kellar as a “caring and compassionate leader,” “a patriot” and a “proud American.”

    At a Jan. 16 anti-immigration rally in Santa Clarita, Kellar referred to a statement made by President Theodore Roosevelt, noting that the United States has a place for only one flag and one language. Kellar said those remarks caused some people to accuse him of being racist, to which he replied that if believing in America causes people to believe that he is racist, “then I’m a proud racist.” 

    Roger Gitlin, founder of the Santa Clarita Valley Independent Minutemen, who had helped organized the anti-immigration rally, defended Kellar’s remarks as “rhetorical hyperbole.”

    “He got a little ahead of himself in words,” Gitlin said. “But in no shape or form is Bob Kellar a racist….He is tired of political correctness. Nobody hates anybody. We just want the rule of law.”

    A U.S. Army veteran who served 25 years with the Los Angeles Police Department, Kellar told attendees at Tuesday’s meeting that he was a proud American who was critical of the failure of the federal government to tackle illegal immigration, which burdens the nation.

    “Illegal immigration is a problem for all Americans, and we need to do our part to address it,” Kellar said. “If we are to remain a nation of laws, we must respect those laws.”

    But opponents called Kellar’s remarks “disgraceful” and called on the councilman to at least issue an apology.

    “This kind of language is divisive and harmful to our community,” said Harrison Katz, a candidate in this April’s election for City Council.

    — Ann M. Simmons

  • Apple iPad Apps: The First Batch [Apple]

    The iPad, much like the iPhone and iPod Touch, will run apps. Some will be specially made for the iPad. Here are the first few they’ve shown off. UPDATED: Video of NY Times app in action added.


    Nova
    This game, from GameLoft, is already available on the iPhone. But this new version gets new controls on the iPad, such as the ability to slide the D-pad around to where you want it, sliding two fingers across the screen to toss a grenade, and sliding three fingers to open a door. You can also draw a targeting box around groups of enemies to fire on them all at once.


    New York Times
    We expected this one, and it looks great. A lot like the Times Reader they’ve had available for a while, but more, you know, multitouchy. It looks pretty great, actually, much more like a newspaper than an app.


    Need for Speed
    This is a driving game (duh) that lets you use multitouch to tap inside the car and swipe up and down to change gears. You can also tap the mirror to look behind you. Looks pretty smooth.


    MLB.com
    This lets you check out scores, stats, a weird animation of pitches and all sorts of other stuff while games are on. You can also watch live games, with your choice of home or away announcers. Looks pretty badass for baseball fans.

    There’s also the new iWork suite and iBooks for readin’.






  • Jay Leno On Oprah: “Letting Things Cool Off Before Reaching Out To Conan”

    Speaking of Leno: In an all-new interview, airing on The Oprah Winfrey Show this Thursday, the late night veteran says there are no hard feelings between him and the guy most Americans believe Leno helped NBC send to the unemployment line, Conan O’Brien.

    Jay tells O that he does want to speak with Conan — just not right now.

    “I haven’t talked to him since all of this,” Jay explains. “It didn’t seem appropriate. Let’s let things cool down and then maybe we’ll talk.”

    “They were jokes and that’s okay,” he tells Oprah when asked if the verbal assaults her took from O’Brien and ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel were hurtful. “It’s what we do. It’s like being a fighter … when you get punched in the head and someone asks, ‘Did it hurt?’ Well, yeah, but you’re a fighter, that’s what you do.”

    Jay Leno will return as host of NBC’s The Tonight Show on March 1.


  • Apple Introduces the iPad

    Looking dapper in jeans and a black mock turtle-neck, Steve Jobs took the stage today and officially introduced his iPad to the world. As we’ve been seeing and hearing from so many rumors as of late, it appears as if the iPhone got the super-size treatment, complete with a home button.

    At only half an inch thin, and sporting a 9.7″ screen, the iPad weighs in at only one and a half pounds. It’s powered by Apple’s very own chip – the A4 – ans “screams” at 1GHz. Available with 16, 32, or 64GB flash storage, and has 802.11n Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR. Oh, and you can run it for 10 hours (a month in standby!) while watching videos. Wow! So far, no mention of any cellular carrier connectivity. UPDATE: Carrier details below!

    If you’re a current iPhone user, much of the interaction with the iPad looks to be very familiar. For instance, tilting the iPad gives you portrait or landscape viewing — both orientations support a lovely full screen keyboard. It also appears that the app icons on the “home screen” change orientation too.

    The software — assumed to be iPhone version 4.0, SDK available now — appears quite familiar, but has been blown-up to support the larger screen. It appears also to allow custom background wallpaper, and sports a very OS X-like dock at the bottom of the screen. And of course, it runs iPhone Apps using “pixel doubling” for full screen mode, or sports a black frame in regular sized mode. As an aside, this looks sick for viewing the likes of New York Times and other ‘print media’ type web content.

    We have yet to hear the price, but watch this space and we’ll updated as soon as we know.

    UPDATE: We’re now finding out that there will be a 3G-capable version of the iPad, with service from AT&T starting at $14.99 for 250MB per month, and $29.99 for unlimited monthly usage. It’s pre-paid and there is no contract to deal with. International deals are projected to be worked out by June. All 3G models are unlocked, though and will work anywhere globally with new GSM micro SIMs.

    As for pricing of the device itself, it starts at $499, which is a very low cost of entry. It will get you the 16GB base model without 3G. $599 will get you the 32GB Wi-Fi only model, and $699 will bump you up to 64GB. With 3G, the prices are $629, $729 and $829 respectively for the different storage capacities.

    Shipping will take place within about 90 days for the 3G models, 60 days for those with Wi-Fi only.

  • 15 Questions Lost Needs To Answer To Avoid Epic Internet Nerdrage

    I recently completed a marathon viewing session of all five seasons of Lost, having put off watching the show until the even of the final season. I definitely loved the show but can’t imagine how frustrating it must have been to watch in real time. The absolutely brutal cliffhangers, the strange choices at times, an often pretty weak season three … I don’t envy those of you that have been watching week in and week out from the start. With everything fresh in my mind I’ve put together fifteen questions Lost really should answer to satisfy fans in its last season. They’ve made their audience suffer enough to leave any of these ambiguous. Some of these questions involve large concepts that go to the heart of the show, while others are trivial matters that nonetheless deserve their moment in the sun. On to the list, feel free to add what else you want answered in the comments.

    15. Who built Jacob’s statue?

    The Egyptian styled statue that houses Jacob was revealed in the season five finale to be fully intact when the Black Rock crashed onto the island in 1845, but at some point in the next 130 odd years the statue was demolished, leaving only a foot with four toes. Will the backstory behind the statue be explained when Jacob’s history is explored? According to the official recap from ABC of last year’s finale, the statue is of the Egyptian goddess Taweret, who was a fertility goddess. This plays heavily into one of the themes of the show (childbirth, Juliet, women on the island dying after conception, etc.). It’s one of the most interesting structures on the island and so I’m hopeful it will see some screen time in season six.

    14. Who are Adam and Eve?

    You have to go all the way back to episode six of season one to find this unanswered question. In “House of the Rising Sun”, Jack and Kate found two corpses. On the corpses they found two stones, one black, and one white. This may or may not turn out to be an important bit of information, but fans have been wondering about these two corpses for nearly the entire run of the show, and it would be great if they turned out to be key figures in the overall mystery of the show. Bringing them up again would also help to confirm that writers haven’t completely been making it up as they go, which some people are skeptical about.

    13. Why are the numbers powerful?

    I’m guessing this is the question that the writers of Lost get sick of the most, but it has to be included. My guess is actually that they overdid the numbers a little bit, not intending for people to go so overboard on wondering what they meant, but it’s such an interesting part of the show that people cant be blamed for fixating on them. In the ARG game “The Lost Experience” and in interviews the numbers have basically been explained to be part of the Valenzetti equation, an equation meant to determine the likelyhood of the world ending. Here’s what writer Damon Lindelof had to say in an interview:

    “Here’s the story with numbers. The Hanso Foundation that started the Dharma Initiative hired this guy Valenzetti to basically work on this equation to determine what was the probability of the world ending in the wake of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Valenzetti basically deduced that it was 100 percent within the next 27 years, so the Hanso Foundation started the Dharma Initiative in an effort to try to change the variables in the equation so that mankind wouldn’t wipe it itself out.”

    This is pretty interesting and it’s satisfying to know, but doesn’t explain why the numbers were lottery/contest winners for Hurley and his friend, or why they caused Hurley such bad luck. It also doesn’t explain how the numbers drew Rousseau and her crew to the island. It’s possible (probable?) that there’s no more to the numbers than what’s explained above, but I would love to know exactly what gives them their power.

    12. What happened to Annie?


    Annie’s gift to Ben that he has kept his entire life

    Possibly one of the smaller questions on our list, but Annie was so key to the development of Ben, who is possibly the most interesting character on Lost, that it’s impossible not to be curious about exactly what happened with Annie. Presumably she was killed when the Dharma Initiative was gassed by the Others, but that would have required Ben to have killed his childhood friend. Obviously that wouldn’t be beyond him, given what happened with Alex, but still.

    11. What happened to the Black Rock?

    At times the Black Rock has seemed an incidental piece of the island’s history, but surely the writer’s put the ship so deep in the jungle for a reason. I have a feeling we’ll get a full episode involving the Black Rock in season six, possibly related to the backstories for Jacob and the man in black. Plenty of details here that would make for an interesting story, from the slaves onboard, to the ship ending up in an odd location. Maybe the story of the Black Rock will end up being Lost: The Next Generation.

    10. Why was Charles Widmore exiled, and what is his backstory? How did he make his fortune?

    There’s so much to dig into with Charles Widmore, and I’m sure he will play a vital role in season six. Was he born on island, and if not how did he become an Other? He was in a relationship with Eloise Hawking, what caused their breakup? Why does Ben say he is unable to kill him, and how does that relate to the man in black saying he wishes he could kill Jacob, if not for the rules? What exactly are the rules? Widmore, while not getting as much screen time as Benjamin Linus, is just as entrenched in the Lost story, and it will be great to find out more about this man.

    9. What is the Hurley bird?

    Obviously everything in the Lost universe isn’t going to be explained, and I doubt most fans would really want every detail spelled out anyway, as that would ruin some of the fun when it comes to post mortem discussion. Out of everything on this list, I think the thing possibly most likely to fall by the wayside is the Hurley bird, which has appeared twice in the series, both times being seen by Hurley, once screeching Hurley’s name. This is possibly related to the Dharma Initiative’s zoology research (there’s a giant bird cage at one of their centers), but a bird with a 16 foot wingspan needs some more explaining.

    8. What happened to Walt while he was with the Others?

    Actually this is another question that may never be fully explained, but due to real world details as opposed to lazy storytelling. I imagine the writers intended to discuss this at some point, but the actor who plays Walt grew roughly 11 feet between the first two seasons complicating things. There are lots of loose strands with Walt’s story however, namely what tests the Others made Walt take, what his special abilities are, and just how he managed to communicate with his father through the Hatch’s computer. Hopefully the writers can find a way to answer some of these questions given the real world difficulties faced with Malcolm David Kelley growth spurt.

    7. What happened to the Oceanic 815 members who were taken away, i.e. the children, Cindy, and others?

    One of the things that once seemed so interesting was the fact that the Others seemingly had lists of Oceanic 815 survivors to steal, that included children but also several adults, including flight attendant Cindy. How did these people get put on these lists, and what made them special enough to integrate them into the Others community? Presumably Cindy and the children are now at the Temple with the rest of the Others, and hopefully Lost will delve on what’s gone on with them in season six.

    6. Why Doesn’t Richard Alpert Age?

    Richard Alpert’s refusal to age seems to be the centerpiece of many Lost theories, including the famous Time Loop theory that can be read here. He has credited Jacob for his agelessness, but of course that doesn’t really tell us anything. I’m sure at some point in season six we will have a Richard Alpert centered episode, and I anticipate that episode will answer many questions, as he is clearly key to the struggle between Jacob and the man in black, to the Others, and to the Island in general.

    5. Where did the Others come from?

    Looking back on it, it’s kind of amazing just how little has been explained about the Others over five seasons. We have learned so much about the survivors of Oceanic 815, and we’ve even learned most of the story of the Dharma Initiative, but we really don’t know much about the Others than we did at the start. We know that Charles Widmore and Eloise Hawking were once leaders, and that they were viewed as “hostile” indigenous people by the Dharma Initiative, but that’s not really much to go on. Hopefully we get the full story of the Others in this final season, as this would be one of the more frustrating things to not learn by the end of the series.

    4. What exactly is the Monster?

    One of the biggest mysteries going all the way back to the pilot of the show, the smoke monster is a huge enigma. It has been referred to multiple times as a “security system” for the island, and questions concerning it are endless. What is it’s origin? Who controls it, Jacob or the man in black? Is it one of them in a different form? Why is it harmful to some, but not others? How does the Monster take on the form of the dead? Why couldn’t it go through Dharma’s sonic fence? What is the relationship between the Others and the Monster? Ben seems able to call it, so clearly there’s some sort of relationship there. This is definitely one of the things I’m most excited to learn about in season six.

    3. Who exactly are Jacob and the man in black?

    It felt like the show took a big leap forward in season six, finally getting to the heart of the matter, showing Jacob and the man in black speaking on the beach, and later Jacob touching Oceanic survivors in their lives before the crash, sometimes many years before. The questions here are simple. Who are these people? Gods? Something else? And what exactly is their conflict?

    2. Why the passengers of Oceanic 815?

    The writers have said many times that the sci-fi with this show is incidental and that the show is really about the characters. This has definitely shown over the course of the series, and I think it’s a big reason why the show has been so good compared to weaker sci-fi television efforts. Because of that I think this question goes to the heart of the show, and might be the most vital question of all. Why were the passengers of Oceanic 815 chosen to come to the island? What made them special? Jacob seemingly selected the specifically and it doesn’t seem to have been an accident or random chance that Oceanic 815 was the plane that crashed that day, so why this group of people? I think it’s very possible that were this question to be answered we would understand just about everything as far as the show’s major themes go.

    1. What exactly is the Island?

    The biggest mystery of all. It moves through time, moves location, is hidden to the world. In many shows this would be a dumb question with an easy answer (the setting, duh), but on Lost the Island is clearly treated as an individual character, with motivations and actions like any other. So many of the mysteries of Lost revolve around the Island’s nature and its history that I think this, somewhat like question two above, is an all encompassing question that will reveal answers to most of our Lost questions.


  • iPad’s Brushes App: Like Paint, but With Multitouch [Apple]

    One of the new apps that will run on the iPad is a fancy multitouch painting app called Brushes. It’s got all the brushes and palettes and stuff that you’d expect from such an app.






  • Plunder The Inner Workings Of The DS-MAX Sales Cult

    Now is your chance to find out what really goes inside the strange and shady world of the DS-MAX/Cydcor/Innovage multi-level-marketing sales cults. Luke St. Germaine, who last shared with us an excerpt from a book he’s working on about his experiences, has agreed to let Consumerist readers interview him. Put your questions in the comments or email them to [email protected] and let’s find out the straight scoop. For the backstory on what DS-MAX is all about, Eric Wolfram’s List of Known Scams gives a very comprehensive overview, and you can also check out these posts from our archive.

  • Last Episode “The Jay Leno Show” Feb. 9

    NBC is plugging the plug on Jay Leno’s “primetime experiment” faster than we anyone imagined. The Jay Leno Show will air its last episode on Tuesday, Feb. 9. The final episode of the ill-fated variety show will come almost a month before Jay returns to his post as host of The Tonight Show on March 1.

    While is was originally believed that the network would air Leno In Primetime through Feb. 11, a new programming schedule released by the network on Tuesday indicates that a repeat of Law & Order SVU will air in the 10 PM timeslot on Thursday, February 10 and two repeat episodes of The Office are slated for the 10 PM hour on Friday, Feb. 11.


  • Legal Fight Over Billboards About Trademarks On The Hotness Of Your Wife

    This one’s a bit old, but somewhat amusing. Chris Mikaitis alerted us to the story of an air conditioning company suing another air conditioning company for trademark infringement over competing billboards. Apparently, the first air conditioning company came up with a billboard advertising campaign that read, in large letters:


    “YOUR WIFE IS HOT — BETTER GET YOUR A/C FIXED.”

    The competing company put up its own billboards, that read:

    “YOUR WIFE IS NOT HOT! Because you called All Year Cooling to replace your A/C rather than the other guys.”

    This seems like a pretty amusing response. While the first company claims trademark infringement, suggesting confusion, it seems like perfectly reasonable competition. I’m reminded of a billboard that Informix put out a decade or so ago right in front of Oracle on the side of highway 101 in Silicon Valley reading “You just passed Oracle. So did we.” It was amusing (if not particularly accurate), but as an advertising dig at a competitor, it seemed perfectly reasonable.

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  • Your Old iPhone Apps Will Have a Home on the iPad, But New Apps Get a New SDK [Apple]

    Don’t worry, friends! The hundreds of dollars you’ve spent on fart apps will not have gone to waste with the iPad: it can fart, too. Just smaller, and in the middle of the screen.

    The iPad can run “virtually every one of these apps, unmodified, right out of the box.” They can either run it very small, 1:1 pixel, in the center of the screen. Or they can “pixel double” it and run it full screen, in a low resolution mode.

    For new apps, however, Apple is releasing a new SDK for apps with special interfaces for the iPad.






  • 2 water main breaks in L.A. flood homes, apartment building

    Watermain

    Two water main ruptures this morning sent water pouring into a downtown Los Angeles apartment building and two homes in Hyde Park, officials said.

    An 8-inch cast-iron pipe ruptured about 8 a.m. in the 1500 block of West 65th Street in Hyde Park, creating a 20-foot sinkhole, said representatives for the L.A. Department of Water and Power and the L.A. city Fire Department.

    Another 8-inch pipe ruptured about 4.30 a.m. at Cesar Chavez Avenue and North Figueroa Street, said Gale Harris, a DWP spokeswoman. The apartment building’s lobby, underground parking garage and gym were flooded, fire officials said.

    — Alexandra Zavis

    Photo: Workers try to clear water from vacant office space in an apartment building after this morning’s 8-inch water main break in the 800 block of West Cesar Chavez Avenue in downtown L.A. Credit: Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times

  • Shorter Max Baucus and Blanche Lincoln: Help Us, Olympia Snowe, You’re Our Only Hope!

    225px-Olympia_Snowe,_official_photo_2Oh Jesus, Mary and Joseph — here we go again.

    Centrist Democratic senators have circumvented party leadership to approach Maine GOP Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins about reviving healthcare talks.

    Democrats such as Sens. Blanche Lincoln (Ark.), Bill Nelson (Fla.) and Max Baucus (Mont.) have approached Snowe within the past week to discuss her potential support for various healthcare proposals.

    Because that worked so well the first time!

    Serious question: has there been a weaker, more impotent and pathetic majority in the history of the United States Senate legislative bodies?

    I think that it would be possible for the White House to come together with the Republican leaders to draft a scaled-down bill and I hope that might happen,” Collins said.

    LOL. On which planet, Susan?

    Ah yes, planet Lieberman.

    Lieberman predicted Tuesday that White House officials would soon contact Snowe, Collins and other Republicans.

    “I have always felt that the best way to adopt a major reform like healthcare reform is bipartisan,” Lieberman told reporters.

    It already was, putz. You voted for it.