Author: Serkadis

  • Minardi Will Run for Mayor in Faenza

    Formula One and politics often go hand in hand, as recent events have showed us that endless discussions and negotiations regarding the future of the sport are just as part of it as racing is. However, this is not what this article is about. It appears a former team founder and boss inside Formula One has decided to run for mayorship in the Italian city of Faenza.

    We’re talking about Gian Carlo Minardi, the former team owner of Minardi F1 Team, who is allegedly considering a run for the mayor… (read more)

  • Toyota Suspends Sales of Recalled Models

    The braking problems Japanese carmaker Toyota is experiencing with millions of its vehicles have just gotten from bad to worse, as the manufacturer announced last night it is suspending sales of selected vehicles in the US to avoid any other unwanted incidents.

    As of now, Toyota dealers will no longer sell 2009-2010 RAV4, 2009-2010 Corolla, 2009-2010 Matrix, 2005-2010 Avalon, certain 2007-2010 Camry, 2010 Highlander, 2007-2010 Tundra and 2008-2010 Sequoia – meaning all the models involved in… (read more)

  • Ditch All Those Bookmarks! Quix Is an All-In-One Solution

    Would you like to consolidate a hefty chunk of your browser’s bookmark bar real estate?

    Quix is an interesting application that allows users to create an all-in-one solution for bookmarklets and bookmarks, as well as a handy toolkit that will let users shorten links and post to multiple locations, all from any browser.

    Check out the demo, give the app a test drive, and let us know what you think.

    Sponsor

    Quix is an extensible bookmarklet that allows users to access all their bookmarks and bookmarklets across all browsers, while maintaining the necessary shortcuts in just one spot. In essence, Quix acts like like a command line for the browser.

    Commands run the gamut from basic web searches and functions to social utilities to searches and SEO/webmaster functions – the range of functionality for Internet power users is truly mind-boggling.

    The Quix bookmarklet comes ready-made with a decent gallery of commands, but the best part of the app is that users and developers can extend its functions using custom commands files. Once a user has made his own custom commands file available online, he can simply go to the Quix extensions page to create a bookmarklet that will work with that file.

    The only downside is having to remember all the commands.

    In many senses, this reminds of of Mozilla’s Ubiquity, the add-on/UI we raved about back in the mists of time and that allowed users to apply textual commands to any page they were browsing. Ubiquity isn’t dead, but it seems to run silent and deep. We hope this conceptual revival from Quix will fare better.

    Quix comes from Joost de Valk, a seeming one-man web dev shop based in the Netherlands. Let us know what you think of this app in the comments.

    Discuss


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  • The irony of Scott McNealy’s goodbye note

    sun microsystemsScott McNealy is one of the legendary characters of Silicon Valley. It is jarring to read his goodbye note to Sun Microsystems employees as Oracle is poised to complete its $7.4 billion acquisition of Sun. In the email to Sun employees, McNealy said, “Thanks for a great 28 years.”

    Both McNealy and Sun’s CEO Jonathan Schwartz are not expected to remain at Oracle after it swallows Sun, and both have now written goodbye notes.

    I had the chance to watch McNealy on stage many times and to interview him face to face. He was always performing some kind of role. As a statesman, clown, practical joker, visionary etc. But this memo is not full of marketing dreck. It’s one of those rare expressions of a founder’s emotional attachment to his company, which generated $200 billion in revenues during its history and broke into the Fortune 200.

    McNealy has been a fixture of the valley scene during his tenure as the ruler (first as CEO, then chairman for the last four years) of the Sun Microsystems empire. He presided over Sun’s meteoric rise as a workstation company, and oversaw its shift into servers at the dawn of the Internet age. Sun gave everyone an alternative to Big Blue, and made a bundle of money for its shareholders and employees in the meantime. It had a great run in the dotcom boom, identifying itself proudly as the “dot in dotcom” and then dropping the motto during the dotcom bust.

    McNealy provided a counterforce, not just to the dominance of IBM but to Microsoft as well. McNealy claimed that he had a “big mouth who was always ready with a clever quip” (constantly referring to Microsoft as a “hairball” and to Bill Gates as a “convicted monopolist”) because he didn’t have a big marketing budget. He had to get his kicks in via the free advertising of the press, and reporters were always gleeful to use his witty remarks.

    But Sun missed some golden opportunities to beat its rivals, and McNealy lingered longer than he should have. He kept trying to turn around Sun and return it to its former glory. But instead it was undercut by Intel-based computers. McNealy acknowledged that his company did not monetize its inventions as well as it could have, a reference to the now-ubiquitous Java programming environment. Sun had a lot of bruising battles, but McNealy wrote, “I never had to hide the newspaper in shame from my children.”

    For the sake of money, McNealy had to bury the hatchet and make peace with both Microsoft and Intel. But it was too late. As McNealy bows out, it is ironic that one of his buddies, Steve Jobs, has ascended to the throne. Jobs managed to do what McNealy could not: rescue a failing Apple and turn it into the envy of all businesses. As Jobs noted earlier this week during Apple’s earnings report, it’s hard to believe that Apple has become a $50 billion company. As Apple rose, Sun sank further. And it was easy to disbelieve McNealy’s view that Sun would rise again. Under McNealy’s replacement, Jonathan Schwartz, Sun reminded me of the Red Queen in the Alice books, always running as fast as it could just to stay in the same place. The Oracle acquisition is a much better outcome than I imagined for Sun.

    “To be honest, this is not a note this founder wants to write. Sun, in my mind, should have been the great and surviving consolidator. But I love the market economy and capitalism more than I love my company,” McNealy said in the email. “And I sure ‘hope’ America regains its love affair with capitalism. And except for the auto industry, financial industry, health care, and some other places (I digress), the invisible hand is doing its thing quite efficiently. So I am more than willing to accept this outcome.”

    It is appropriate that McNealy is selling his company to another valley icon, Oracle CEO Larry Ellision. It makes me feel like this is one general surrendering his sword to another. McNealy was a character and a historic figure. Like many of the icons of the valley, he had deep flaws. We will miss his presence, but it is indeed time for him to go and to close a chapter of Silicon Valley history.

    [photo: France24]


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  • Zulily launches members-only savings for moms

    Zulily-logoZulily is a members-only site where moms can find discounted apparel, furniture, and toys for their kids. The company raised $4.6 million in funding last month, and now its site is live and ready to offer savings.

    Seattle-based Zulily is taking the “private sale” model from sites like Gilt Groupe and Rue La La, where members get steep discounts on fashion. When I spoke to co-founder and chief executive Darrell Craven in December, he told me the model makes sense for reaching moms, because there are lots of mid-range and high-end boutique shops offering these products that want to sell to a broader audience.

    Zulily’s first sale featured products from eco-friendly apparel company Origany, with discounts of up to 55 percent. Other early sale partners include Lex Modern and Baby Nay. Each sale is supposed to last 72 hours, although supplies may run out sooner.


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  • Is this the Apple tablet?

    Okay, we obviously can’t confirm this, but we just got two very interesting images of what certainly looks like a prototype Apple tablet, or what could be the tablet bolted down to a table. It’s big — really big — and it’s running what clearly looks like an iPhone app, although we’ve never seen an iPhone app with that interface or at that resolution before. We also see a WiFi icon and a cell service indicator, although tragically there’s no carrier listed. As far as fakes go, this is as convincing as it gets, so either this is the real deal or someone deserves a hearty congratulations.

    On a totally separate note, we also received a tip claiming to have some specs — we can’t verify any of this either, but we’re told that the device will have a 10-inch screen and look like a larger iPhone with a MacBook-like aluminum back, and that pricing will run $800 on contract with Verizon and $1000 without when it arrives in March. We’re also told that the official name remains a secret and that Apple employees are still calling it by the codename of “K48″ — a name we last heard in May from the same source that pegged the iPhone 3GS exactly. This source also tells us that the iPhone will be coming to Verizon as well and that we’ll see iLife ‘10 tomorrow, but there won’t be any MacBook updates. A relatively safe set of predictions — which is why we sort of believe them.

    Just 13 hours to go — we’ll find out if any of this is the real deal soon enough.

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    Is this the Apple tablet? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Jan 2010 01:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Obama the “most polarizing president” according to Gallup

    01.26.10 05:02 PM posted by Drew McKissick

    Mirror, mirror, on the wall, who’s the most polarizing of them all?

    The answer? Barack Obama. (via Gallup):

    The 65 percentage-point gap between Democrats’ (88%) and Republicans’ (23%) average job approval ratings for Barack Obama is easily the largest for any president in his first year in office, greatly exceeding the prior high of 52 points for Bill Clinton.

    So how does a "polarizing" president try to become less polarizing? By focusing on something that the bulk of the country agrees on. According to the latest news, Obama plans to focus on the fact that we’re spending too much money and need to get our fiscal house in order.

    The only problem with is that the message doesn’t fit the messenger. It’s a little like a call girl being a big advocate for chastity.

    Reports indicate he’ll use his State of the Union speech to call for a "freeze" on "non-defense, discretionary" spending. Basically, that means he’s not touching where the real spending is – entitlements. As Hot Air pointed out, the $250 billion he says this would save is only a little more than the roughly $200 billion in MONTHLY deficit spending this government does. read more »

    http://www.conservativeoutpost.com/o…cording_gallup

  • Governor Joins Denny Sanford for Announcement Regarding Burnham Institute for Medical

    Governor Schwarzenegger participated in a press conference with Denny Sanford to make an announcement regarding the Burnham Institute for Medical Research.

    http://gov.ca.gov/speech/14277

  • Australia: An Australia Day of Celebration and Protest

    Australians celebrated Australia Day on January 26, an annual national holiday marking the arrival of British settlers to the Land Down Under over two centuries ago. The day tends to draw mixed emotions, as Indigenous Australians refer to the event as Invasion Day, recalling the day their lands were invaded by Britain.

    Australia Day is often a low-key event passed under the summer sun, with families and friends enjoying a barbecue and beer before the reality of the working life and school sinks back in.

    “Excessive patriotism”

    However, this year's Australia Day witnessed a boom in patriotism and debates about Australian identity. Australian flags were unusually omnipresent throughout the country, a new for celebrating the national holiday. Miniature flags could be seen on cars, in shops, and at the front of houses. Twitter also felt the boom in Australian patriotic pride, with Happy Australia Day becoming a Trending Topic for several hours during the day.

    The following tweet summarizes the mood of the national holiday:

    Meg Mclachlan @megasaurus_x: @Pink Happy Australia Day for yesterday! I hope you had a little flag to celebrate the country that LOVES you most. I had a VB in ur honour!

    Some Australian bloggers were bemused by the excessive display of patriotism yesterday, including the following from Eva Cox on Crikey!:

    It is this misuse of symbols, mixed with excessive patriotism that is making me anxious about what this holiday has become. It seems to have started shortly after the Bicentennial but has escalated into an ever more problematic symbol of the splintering of identities. How did we manage to change this holiday into a celebration of something that we used to think was a bit naff?

    Five years ago that Cronulla [race] riots became a new benchmarks of a particular type of nationalistic thuggery. The flag is everywhere! This is not local developed change but imitates the USA, which is always flying flags and has a flag day! I object to flags on cars, on faces, on T shirts on towels and probably on condoms! The Cronulla pictures should warn us that such misuse of symbols is both tasteless and dangerous as it allows for the type of mindless mob rule that feeds into totalitarianism.

    Nationalism and patriotism have their place in our histories and present but should not ever be used as rallying points for including and excluding groups on the basis of tacky assumptions of loyalty and commonalities. I can appreciate living in Australia without a need to indulge in hyperbole. Concepts like ‘Australian’ values are hard to define, as most seem to be what we would expect in any reasonably civilised community.

    Blogger Club Wah echoed similar sentiments in a blog post titled, “We need to stop taking Australia Day so seriously”:

    Until yesterday, the only time I ever really celebrated Australia Day was when I lived in London. Since then I have been among the cynical, criticising over the top patriotism, lamenting that January 26 marks the invasion of Aboriginal Australia and cringing at recent phenomenon of our national day becoming an excuse for people to freely express their xenophobic views.

    The far left and right sides of the political spectrum have done their best to hijack Australia Day so now whenever it rolls along it generates the same of series of debates ranging from an Australian Republic to immigration numbers…

    As I ended Australia Day at a Vietnamese restaurant in St Albans, I thought about how much fun I had doing things we can take so much for granted. This is what Australia Day should be about. Rather than hijack it to highlight our problems and political agendas – which we can do any day – we should use it to reflect on the great things about Australia and being Australians. It shouldn’t be a day of guilt, nor should it be one of nationalism or social exclusion.

    Not all posts were negative about the national holiday, with the following from a Sydney taxi driver/blogger, Cablog, recounting his Australia Day at work:

    Early this morning a drunken passenger remarked, “Australia Day? I don’t even know what it is we’re actually celebrating.” To which his mate replied, “Doesn’t matter, we’re sure as hell are going to start it off with a bang, eh?” And they both laughed in anticipation.

    Whilst they were of Anglo heritage this salutation was extended by various nationalities last night, including non-citizens. At dinner the Turkish proprietors wished me a Happy Australia Day, as did two female baristas during the shift, an Argentinian and a Columbian.

    This was the instructions issued by King George III to Governor Phillip for establishing the first white settlement. Founding principles which contrast with the view that white settlers were merely marauding invaders with little regard for the indigenous.

    These laudable intentions of the Crown towards the aborigines are therefore one thing worth celebrating on this day. Something I could have explained to my aforementioned passengers, puzzled by Australia Day whilst awaiting their gram of coke.

    Internet censorship protest

    Australia Day also had its fair share of controversy, including the Great Australian Internet Blackout. Hundreds of Australian websites blacked-out on Australia Day as part of an ongoing campaign against the Australian Government's plan to impose a Chinese-like mandatory internet censorship filter.

    Websites included the third-largest political party, the Australian Greens, internet service providers, online media outlets, bloggers, and lobbyists, such as Electronic Frontiers Australia.

    Amongst the celebratory tweets marking Australia Day, criticism of Australia's planned internet censorship filter crept in:

    Symod J. Urich @symodhcn: So Australia is the next China obviously. Happy Australia Day! Wish you didn't have such government… #thegreataustralianinternetblackout

    The mixed reaction to Australia Day reveals a young nation still finding its feet and purpose. It is indeed still difficult to define a unified, inclusive Australian identity. Trying to reconcile an Aboriginal ancestry, a white Anglo-Saxon colonial past and a multi-cultural present is no easy task. Admittedly, it leaves us all guessing.

  • feature: Windows 7’s XP Mode: what it is, how it works, who it’s for




    The bespoke line-of-business application is a common feature of the corporate world, and a thing that has been instrumental in cementing Windows as the corporate desktop OS standard. These applications—I’ve worked on a few myself—are typically crummy affairs. The foundation of such applications is typically some combination of Visual Basic 6 and obsolete versions of Access and Excel. On top of this mound of [redacted], these apps usually contain one or more third-party components to draw graphs or something, from vendors that have long since gone out of business.

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  • Israeli Court Supports Anonymity For Online Commenters

    While the US courts have been quite good about protecting the anonymity of online commenters, very few other countries feel the same way. However, Roni Evron alerts us to a ruling in Israel that also protects the anonymity of blog commenters, ruling that the site doesn’t need to hand over the IP addresses of commenters:


    “The good of online anonymity outweighs the bad, and it must be seen as a byproduct of freedom of speech and the right to privacy.”

    The court didn’t necessarily say that commenters could never be revealed, but that courts have to be careful to measure the impact:


    Avraham suggested looking at issues such as how extreme the allegedly damaging remarks are, whether the attack was systematic or a one-time phenomenon, and how seriously a reasonable reader would take the comments.

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  • Maybe Newsday Made Its Pay Wall a Little Too Strong [MediaMemo]

    That pay wall that Newsday put around its Web site last year? Crazily effective–at keeping people from buying an online subscription.

    Last year, when executives from Cablevision (CVC) announced plans to turn their  paper’s Web site into a pay-to-play proposition, I dreamed up a way it could work: Maybe Long Island residents who wanted to peruse the paper’s classifieds would pay up. Nope.

    Since the wall went up three months ago, only 35 people–as in not quite three dozen–have paid the $5-a-week fee for Web access, the New York Observer reports.

    The Observer’s John Koblin quotes a Cablevision PR person who says that the “modest” pickup isn’t a surprise, but that’s some very unconvincing spin. Putting up a pay wall isn’t cheap or easy: Why bother if it only generates an extra $9,000?

    Here’s the full statement from Cablevision/Newsday:

    Millions of Cablevision customers in the New York tri-state area and 75% of Long Island households, including all Newsday home delivery subscribers, now have exclusive access to newsday.com at no additional charge. Internal research shows that Newsday’s Web site is an extremely popular new benefit to hundreds of thousands of Long Island Cablevision households. Given the number of households in our market that have access to Newsday’s Web site as a result of other subscriptions, it is no surprise that a relatively modest number have chosen the pay option.

    As PaidContent notes, Cablevision can also argue that the real idea behind the pay wall is that it’s supposed to make existing subscribers feel like they’re getting something of real value (advertisers too, supposedly). But it’s hard to argue that online access is a “value-add” if only 35 people value it.

    It’s also hard to argue that Cablevision’s problems offer any clue about the prospects of the New York Times’s (NYT) coming pay wall. Because the Times is a different beast from any other paper in the country.

    I would be interested, though, in learning how the Minneapolis-based Star Tribune did with “Access Vikings Premium,” a $20-a-year pay wall it put up around most stories about the home team last season.

    I could see the thinking behind this one, which showed up around the same time Brett Favre joined the team. And this was the year to try it, since the Vikings had a great season until they blew the NFC Conference game, as is their wont.

    But in my personal one-man focus group, the pay wall only served to keep me from visiting StarTribune.com at all. I see now that the paper seems to have dropped the wall around content it used to ask me to pay for, so perhaps I wasn’t the only one. I’ve asked the paper for more details.

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  • India: I want my country back, says Munna

    Environmental blogger Hemant Anant Jain aka Munna, writes a thought-provoking post on 26th January, the nation's 61st Republic Day, urging people to look beyond the commercial “growing market” tag and work towards restoring the rich environmental heritage of the amazing country that is India.

  • NASA Technology To Enhance ‘Green’ Building’s Efficiency

    building-technologies-program(NASA, January 14, 2010)  Moffet Field, CA– NASA today announced that it is collaborating with Integrated Building Solutions (IBS), Inc. to develop a next-generation intelligent, automated, and integrated environmental monitoring and management capability for office buildings and research environments.  The building control systems being developed jointly by NASA’s Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif., and IBS signal a new era in the evolution of ‘green,’ sustainable buildings. They will enhance energy efficiency, reduce energy consumption, and maximize worker performance and comfort. ‘Sustainability Base,’ the environmentally friendly building that is being constructed at NASA’s Ames, is expected to be completed in late 2010 and will be a testbed for these new ’smart’ systems.  “We are thrilled to be applying NASA aerospace technologies to our everyday living and working environments,” said Steven Zornetzer, associate center director at NASA Ames. “This collaboration represents the first of many research partnerships for Sustainability Base that will bring NASA technologies down to Earth and connect them with capabilities from the private sector to leverage taxpayer investment and improve the quality of life for everyone.”

    Ames engineers are working with their IBS counterparts to repurpose NASA-developed software systems for health and resource planning into a building environment. The NASA technologies were originally developed for everything from aircraft control systems to mission planning for the Mars rovers, Opportunity and Spirit. A suite of these NASA software tools is now being integrated with IBS’s Intelligent Building Interface System. The latter provides centralized management, monitoring, automation, and analysis of building systems in an intuitive, browser-based console. The resulting building-control system will interpret data from sensors and merge this information with occupancy calendars and local weather predictions.

    Multiple sensors deployed throughout the building will monitor its power demand, air temperature, moisture, air flow, light levels, and water consumption. The system will “learn” about the facility’s dynamics, including the human component, and will continuously evolve to produce better operational outcomes based on identifying connections, consequences, and trends.

    “The resulting integrated intelligent controls system will gather information about the building and its subsystems, the occupants, the resources available, and upcoming events,” said Dougal Maclise, lead engineer for the Integrated Systems Health Management Technology Maturation Group at NASA Ames. “It then will use this information to plan and implement a control strategy to maintain the comfort of the occupants, while minimizing energy consumption and its carbon footprint.”

    “We believe that combining NASA technology with our own software represents the future in smart building-control and automation technology,” said Eugene Gutkin, President of IBS. “We are thrilled to be working with a great partner like NASA on this exciting and groundbreaking project.”

    For more information about Sustainability Base, please visit: http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ames/greenspace/sustainability-base.html
    For more information about NASA Ames, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/ames/
    For more information about Integrated Building Solutions, visit: http://www.ibs-cal.com/

  • The Tablet Could Spur A Media Revolution, But It Will Be Out Of Apple’s Hands

    Here we are, on the eve of the Tablet’s unveiling, with only hours to go before we find out just how ambitious Apple’s latest creation is. Countless articles have been written about how the forthcoming Tablet could be the savior of old media. Supposedly, people will finally start paying for this content because it will be readily available at their fingertips. But the promise of the tablet does not lie in immediate access to content; the Internet can already do that, as can the Kindle, to some extent. The true revolution lies in the new medium the tablet will give us. Three months ago Dan Lyons, writing as Fake Steve Jobs, totally nailed it:

    New technology spawns new ways to tell stories. That’s the really exciting thing here. Not the tablet itself, but what it means for news, for entertainment, for literature. Gasp. Geddit? Is the f***ing light going off yet? This is what Anton Chekhov meant when he said that the medium is the message. This is why the Tablet is so profound.

    There is no point in moving to digital readers if we’re just going to do what we did on paper. That’s why Kindle is such a piece of shit. All they did was pave the cowpath. And that’s why we’ve held back on our Tablet — not because the technology wasn’t ready, but because the content guys are such f***tards that they still can’t create anything that makes it worth putting the Tablet into the world.

    You Say You Want A Revolution

    Now, I don’t think the Kindle is a “piece of shit” by any means. The Kindle is to text what the iPod was to music. It lets you store and easily carry a vast amount of content with you at all times. That’s in no way a bad thing — the iPod has been adopted by a significant portion of Earth’s population because its appeal is so universal. But the Tablet can break new ground. It won’t just be a new way to conveniently access content. It will be a new way to consume it. Last September, Gizmodo reported that Apple was urging publishers to create so-called hybridized content that “draws from audio, video and interactive graphics in books, magazines and newspapers, where paper layouts would be static. ”

    When we hear talk of Steve Jobs saying this is the most important thing he’s done, I don’t think he’s excited about giving people a bigger screen to watch their movies on, or to play better games. I think he’s excited about changing the way we read and learn.

    But it’s going to be tough. My concern is not that Apple will fail to deliver; I have little doubt that their product launch tomorrow will be stellar. My doubts lie with the content providers themselves. Yesterday, the LA Times ran a story that touched on this:

    Although Apple has proved its deftness at creating trendy devices and a digital store in which publishers could sell their wares, Gartner Inc. analyst Allen Weiner said there will be plenty of trial and error before newspaper, magazine and book publishers figure out the “fine art” of creating digital editions that take advantage of the device’s graphics and video”… “Where’s the opportunity? It’s creating book experiences. It’s taking a cookbook and adding video and author updates. That’s an opportunity, because you can charge extra for that.”

    The question, then, is how long it will take publishers to figure this out for themselves.  Perhaps I’m a pessimist, but I think that this will be a long and frustrating process. Look at how long it has taken the large media companies to fully embrace rich, multimedia content on the web.

    Old Media Is Still In Trouble

    The online buying model for news and magazines isn’t going to save the publishers, any more than iTunes Music and TV downloads have been saviors for their respective content owners. Will consumers benefit? Absolutely. But they won’t be willing to pay a premium for content they can access on the web for free. And if old media shifts to a pay-only model, consumers will just switch to free online alternatives. There will be exceptions — publishers with high quality, exclusive content (say, the New York Times) will likely benefit. But the majority of newspapers and magazines? Not so much.

    But what about this promised land of revolutionary hybridized content — won’t people be willing to pay for that? Thing is, that’s going to be time consuming and expensive to make. A handful of very large publishers, like the NYT, may be able to scrap together some compelling content on a regular basis. But it’s going to be difficult to quickly integrate additional supplementary material in a way that doesn’t feel tacked on.

    So Who Will Benefit?

    Textbooks. Guides. Biographies. Novels. Pretty much anything that has previously been offered in book form, but has been handicapped because it was restricted to paper. Few of these have ever been ported to the web in a rich media form, because they’re lengthy and it just isn’t fun to read a book on your computer screen. And even when textbooks have been digitized (like for the Kindle DX), they didn’t bring anything new to the table. But there’s so much room for improvement.

    Imagine a biography of Abraham Lincoln that allowed you to pull up photos of every person and place mentioned in a single finger swipe.  Flicking the top of the screen would bring down an interactive timeline of Lincoln’s life, making it easy to get your bearings. The hybrid book could include comprehensive references for each person mentioned in the book. Not just a Wikipedia article, mind you, but information that is contextually relevant to the moment you’re currently reading about. The experience wouldn’t simply be one of jumping from hyperlink to hyperlink. All of this supplementary material would naturally flow into the reading experience, while you never left your place in the primary text.

    There are plenty of other potential applications. Picture a chemistry textbook where you could freely rotate any molecule, tapping on a chemical bond to learn more about why it behaves the way it does. Or a Shakespeare play (in text form) where you could tap a piece of dialog to hear it spoken aloud, or perhaps even played in a video. Tapping a sidebar at any time would bring up a roster of characters and their allegiances, lest a love triangle leave you confused.

    There are infinitely more possibilities ready to be unlocked.  Many of these things could be done were this content converted to a rich webpage, but up until now there hasn’t been much benefit to doing so because there was no way to comfortably consume it.

    My guess is that come Wednesday, Steve Jobs will hold up a Tablet with a piece of content that lives up to this dream. Instant lookup of relevant information. An experience that simply has never been seen before. It won’t just be a webpage with a touchscreen — it will be a living book. It will be the future. And then we’ll have to wait years until we start seeing books that really live up to that promise. Apple can build the tools, but someone will need to deliver the content.

    I’m still excited for the Tablet, I’m just not expecting it to live up to its potential for quite a while. The big publishers will figure out this new medium eventually. Well, maybe they won’t. But someone will.
    Fake tablet image via Gizmodo


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  • Think To Tap RV Industry Skills

    Electric CarBy Rhoda Miel

    (Plastics News, January 15, 2010) Detroit – Norwegian carmaker Think is getting ready to begin making its City electric car in the U.S. next year, and is looking for local suppliers that will be ready to begin production of key parts, including exterior plastic body panels. “Our initial production in the U.S., if everything goes according to plan, will be in the first quarter of next year and we hope to be sourcing the body panels in the U.S. for that initial production,” said Keith Takasawa, director of product development for Think North America.  Oslo-based Think is now building cars for the European market from a plant in Finland. With $47 million worth of new backing from a range of investors including New York-based Ener1 Inc., the firm is ready to expand with a fully tested electric car for the U.S. market.

    The $24.7 million operation is going into an Elkhart, Ind., facility that, until recently, was making doors and windows for recreational vehicles. Ener1’s lithium-ion battery making unit, EnerDel, will supply batteries for Think from Indianapolis.

    With those two parts of the production puzzle already in place, Think now is lining up other suppliers. The firm likely will tap into the Elkhart region’s plastics expertise in a variety of molding techniques first developed for the recreational vehicle industry, Takasawa said in a Jan. 12 interview at the North American International Auto Show, where the Think City was part of a demonstration fleet of electric and hybrid vehicles.

    The City’s two-seat, all-electric car uses plastics extensively to reduce weight and improve performance. Its exterior is made of coextruded acrylic styrene acrylonitrile/ABS, which is pressure formed. The interior is mostly polypropylene, relying heavily on expanded PP foam. Some of the EPP is wrapped in a polypropylene textile; some is intentionally left exposed.

    Think’s low-volume production — with a capacity of 20,000 vehicles annually at the new Elkhart plant — lends itself to non-traditional molding compared to elsewhere in the auto industry where injection molding is king, Takasawa said.

    “The RV industry knows how to handle a lot of different plastics at relatively low volumes,” he said. “They don’t need 100,000 or 200,000 units a year to be profitable. Between a workforce that already knows how to build RVs and the supply base, we think this will be a good situation for us.”

    Takasawa said that after years of struggle, Think now finds itself in a good position for a global audience ready to take a serious look at electric vehicles. The company has been making cars since the late 1990s, first under original owner Pivco Industries AS, then under a series of owners that included Dearborn, Mich.-based Ford Motor Co.

    Think has feedback from more than 300 million miles of real world driving from its customers. Its electric engine can take the car 100 miles on a charge and the U.S. version will have a top speed more than 70 miles per hour. It already meets strict crash and performance regulations in Europe.

    “We know how to design and build electric cars,” Takasawa said. “The other guys are just getting into it and don’t have the experience that we do.”  Click here to read more…

  • DOE Solicitations

    doeEnergy Innovation Hub–Modeling and Simulation for Nuclear Reactors – The U.S. Department of Energy, Idaho Operations Office is issuing this final Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) for the Energy Innovation Hub – Modeling and Simulation for Nuclear Reactors program. The purpose of the Energy Innovation Hubs will be to assemble the most talented scientists and technologists to focus intense research and development efforts on the critical areas listed above. The Hubs are designed to accelerate the current state-of-the art energy science and technology toward their fundamental limits and support high-risk, high-reward research projects that produce revolutionary changes in how we produce and use energy. Ideally, each Hub will have a central location housing many investigators, who will likely span multiple disciplines. Each Hub may be led by universities, private for-profit or non-profit firms, or government laboratories.  Estimated Total Program Funding: $22,000,000, Award Ceiling: $122,000,000.  Closing Date: March 1, 2010.

    Posted Date: January 20, 2010

    RFA Number: DE-FOA-0000170

  • 2011 Mazda Atenza/Mazda6

    Attachment 274762

    PRESS RELEASE:

    Mazda Releases Facelifted Atenza in Japan

    Enhanced environmental and safety features, driving performance, interior and exterior quality; 2.0L engine models qualify for Japan’s eco-car tax breaks

    HIROSHIMA, Japan-Mazda Motor Corporation has commenced sales of the facelifted Mazda Atenza (known overseas as the Mazda6) for the Japanese market. Available in three body styles – Sedan, Sport (five-door hatchback) and Sport Wagon – Mazda’s globally acclaimed mid-size car has been refined and evolved, and it goes on sale today at all Mazda and Mazda Anfini dealerships throughout Japan.

    The Mazda Atenza has attracted a wide range of customers with its sporty styling and exceptional driving performance. The enhancements for the freshened Mazda Atenza are based on the Zoom-Zoom evolution development concept, and include improvements to its environmental and safety attributes, driving performance, interior and exterior design, and quality levels.

    The 2.0-liter engine Atenza models, available in both the Sedan and Sport Wagon body types, have been updated with Mazda’s direct injection MZR 2.0L DISI*1 gasoline engine. This engine provides plenty of power as well as outstanding fuel economy that exceeds Japan’s "2010 fuel economy standard plus 15%." All grades equipped with a 2.0-liter engine qualify for Japan’s eco-car incentive program and are subject to 50 percent less tax under the government’s eco-car tax reduction program. Additionally, the entire Atenza range, including front-wheel drive (FWD) and four-wheel drive (4WD) grades, qualify as Super-Ultra-Low Emission Vehicles (SU-LEV) by achieving exhaust emissions that are at least 75 percent lower than the levels set in the Japanese Government’s 2005 exhaust emissions standard.

    Improvements to driving performance include updated power steering and suspension settings that have resulted in better handling and straight-line stability at high speeds. With newly optimized front and rear suspension, the freshened Atenza also realizes a stable, more premium quality ride and enhanced comfort.

    The exterior of the facelifted Atenza adopts the new Mazda family face with a five-point front grille and other spirited design elements that enhance its sportiness. Both the 17-inch and 18-inch aluminum wheels have new designs, and the range of eight exterior body colors has been augmented with new tints. The brand new colors are Clear Water Blue Metallic and Midnight Bronze Mica, which expresses a premium identity.

    Inside, the center panel stack has a smooth, glossy, piano-black finish. Beautiful and tactile chrome plating adorns the climate control and audio dials, and other parts. This color combination in the interior conveys a refined and high quality atmosphere.

    The manufacturer’s suggested retail prices (including sales taxes) range from 2,100,000 to 2,500,000 yen for the Sedan body type, 2,450,000 to 2,750,000 yen for the Sport model, and 2,250,000 to 2,750,000 yen for the Sport Wagon model. The target sales volume is 800 units per month.

    Attachment 274765
    Attachment 274766

    1. Direct Injection Spark Ignition

    Main features of the facelifted Mazda Atenza

    1. Design: emphasized sportiness and premium identity
    The Mazda Atenza’s design concept is "bold & exquisite." The updated model carries over the solid front face of its predecessor, and retains the beauty, strength and tension conveyed through its simple contours. With enhancements for a stronger expression of dynamism and sportiness, the latest facelifted Atenza expresses a more premium identity.

    Exterior
    The front fascia features the five-point grille that has become a shared design element of all Mazda products. Strong lines that flow from the grille to the A-pillars, and contours that extend from the bottom of the lower grille horizontally along the foglight bezels, highlight the five-point grille and express sinuous dynamism and stability.
    The Sport and Sport Wagon models have a larger brand symbol on their fascia, creating a bolder presence. Additionally, wing-shape moldings the same color as the vehicle body extend sideways from the brand symbol for an added sense of dynamism. The Sedan features a mesh grille and chrome plated decorations, which convey refinement and sportiness.
    The 25EX and 25Z model grades feature newly designed bi-xenon headlights. The position lights are aligned with the headlights to produce a sharp wing shape that, combined with chrome-plated inner bezels, produces a look of exquisiteness and expansiveness.

    Attachment 274763
    Attachment 274764

    The design of the discharge headlights on the 25S and 20S grades, and the halogen lights on the 25C and 20C grades, has been carried over from the pre-facelift Atenza, but with added chrome plating for a more premium identity.
    The part of the rear combination light that curves toward the side of the body has a chrome-plated wing motif. This change gives the rear a stronger impression of width and superior quality. The rear lights’ wing motifs are extended on the Sport Wagon to suit its long body shape.

    The Sport and Sport Wagon rear lights have clear inner covers and light-emitting diodes (LEDs). The Sedan has red inner covers and conventional bulbs.

    Both the 17- and 18-inch aluminum wheels have new designs. The 17-inch wheels have an intricate form with each spoke twisted relative to the wheel center for a look of sporty, high-quality refinement. The 18-inch wheels have bold, strong-looking spokes that communicate dynamism and high-performance.

    There are eight exterior body colors. Two colors (Clear Water Blue Metallic and Midnight Bronze Mica) are brand new. Two other colors (Graphite Mica and Black Mica) are new to the Mazda Atenza.

    Interior
    In order to enhance the premium feel, a smooth, glossy, piano-black finish has been applied to the center panel, audio and air conditioner panel surrounds. For a consistent interior design, the shift gate and steering wheel spokes also feature the same piano-black finish.

    Attachment 274769
    Attachment 274770

    Visually appealing and tactile chrome garnish is newly used on parts such as the climate control and audio dials, shift knob and inner door handles. The piano black and chrome combination renders a refined and high-quality interior environment.

    Bold black leather seats and decoration panels with a sporty and refined silver-hairline finish come as standard equipment on the 25EX model grade. To enhance the premium flavor of the 25EX even further, brown leather seats are also available as a factory-installed option for the first time.

    The 25Z grade comes with black, half-leather seats and decoration panels with a silver-hairline finish. The 25S and 20S grades have well-crafted black, flat-woven fabric upholstery with a contemporary pattern of flowing lines. The 25C and 20C grades have the same black, flat-woven seats with matte-silver decorative panels.

    2. Driving performance: A fine balance of comfort and driving pleasure which enhances the driver’s sense of oneness with the car

    The engine lineup provides powerful driving performance as well as excellent fuel efficiency. Options include the direct injection MZR 2.0L DISI* and the responsive MZR 2.5L gasoline engines. To further improve the Atenza’s green credentials and affordability, both engines run on regular gasoline.

    Attachment 274771

    The five- and six-speed electronically-controlled automatic (Activematic) transmissions also feature Active Adaptive Shift (AAS). This allows the optimal gear to be selected depending on driving circumstances, enabling a linear and lively ride.

    The 4WD model grades feature Mazda’s Active Torque Control Coupling 4WD System, which uses electronic control to optimally distribute torque between the front and rear axles depending on driving conditions and the road surface.
    Newly tuned power-steering assist characteristics and optimized suspension settings increase steering torque at highway speeds, giving more feedback and reassuring handling. In addition, by making the vehicle respond more gently to driver inputs, the vehicle’s straight line stability is enhanced, so drivers can enjoy a more comfortable ride with greater confidence.

    Finely tuned front and rear suspension and damping force settings realize a gentler, more comfortable ride. Even on coarse road surfaces, the ride is stable and smooth.

    Under the body, the freshened Atenza features new plate-type deflectors in addition to the horseshoe shape front tire deflectors that have proved so effective on the current model. Larger rear tire deflectors contribute to the outstanding aerodynamics.

    Attachment 274767

    3. Environmental and safety performance: Refined ride quality, evolved environmental and safety performance
    The Sedan and Sport Wagon models with the 2.0-liter engine qualify for Japan’s eco-car tax reduction (50 percent) and incentive programs.

    All model grades, including the 4WD grades for the first time, qualify as Super-Ultra-Low Emission Vehicles (SU-LEV) by achieving exhaust emissions at least 75 percent lower than Japan’s 2005 standards.

    All grades come with Mazda’s single-nanocatalyst technology, which provides superb exhaust purification performance while reducing the amount of precious metals needed by over 70 percent.

    A new eco-drive support function (eco-lamp) clearly indicates when the car is running in a fuel-efficient manner, thereby encouraging a more eco-friendly driving style in a fun way. (Fitted on all grades except the 25Z with six-speed manual transmission).

    Mazda’s adaptive front lighting system (AFS) with bi-xenon headlights is a newly adopted safety feature. The headlights automatically swivel to follow the road ahead and improve nighttime visibility (standard equipment on the 25EX and 25Z).
    The FWD Sedan models have an upright seatbelt buckle in the rear center seat that is much easier to use.

    Front Active Headrests are fitted as standard equipment to mitigate neck injuries in the event of a rear-end collision.
    The updated Atenza grade with manual transmission features Mazda’s Hill Launch Assist (HLA) for the first time. It supports smooth starts when the vehicle is on a slope by preventing it from rolling backwards.

    During emergency braking at speeds above 50 kilometers per hour, the Emergency Signal System (ESS) rapidly flashes the hazard warning lights to alert following drivers. ESS is standard equipment on all model grades.

    Parking sensors to aid safe driving in narrow spaces are standard equipment on the 25EX and 25Z.

    At speeds over 60 kilometers per hour, the Rear Vehicle Monitoring (RVM) system detects vehicles approaching from behind and alerts the driver. (Available on the 25EX and FWD automatic 25Z grade as a factory-installed option.)

    Mazda’s Pre-crash Safety System detects oncoming obstacles, alerts the driver and, if necessary, automatically applies the brakes and pre-tensions the seatbelts to reduce the risk of injury. The Radar Cruise Control System uses a radar sensor to measure the speed and distance of the vehicle in front and automatically controls acceleration and deceleration to maintain a preset distance. Both systems are available as a factory-installed set option on the 25EX grade and the 25Z grade with automatic transmission.

    Attachment 274768

    4. Equipment and functionality: An improved human-machine interface enhances the sense of oneness between car and driver
    To make the steering-wheel controls easier to use, the Cross Functional-Network (CF-Net) has been simplified so that there is only one switch or button for each function.

    To minimize driver eye movement away from the road, the exterior temperature and information from the audio system, climate control and trip computer are displayed together on a central display at the top of the instrument panel. The numbering on the odometer/tripmeter has also been enlarged to improve legibility.

    The 40GB HDD satellite navigation system with a 7-inch display now also includes a terrestrial digital television receiver. Four tuners and four antennas enable stable reception of 12 seg and 1 seg terrestrial digital broadcasts. It includes a Bluetooth® hands-free system that can be controlled by voice commands or switches embedded in the steering wheel. It is compatible with Mazda’s G-BOOK Alpha system (available as factory-installed set option on all models).
    A fully automatic climate control system with a pollen filter is equipped in all model grades. Temperature can be independently adjusted from the driver seat and front passenger seat.

    A Bose® sound system with eight speakers was exclusively developed for the Atenza. It delivers clear and dynamic sound to all occupants in the cabin. It is equipped with Bose’s original driving noise compensation system, AudioPilotTM. (Available for all grades except the 20C and 20S as a factory-installed set option.)

    A push-button ignition system, where the driver can start and stop the engine without having to insert a key, is available with Mazda’s advanced keyless entry system for all model grades except the 20C. (Standard equipment on the 25EX and 25Z. Available as a factory-installed set option on the 20S, 25C and 25S.)

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  • Ron Paul Speaking at Loyola University Maryland in Baltimore

    Congressman Ron Paul will present “The Case Against the Fed” at Loyola University Maryland on Wednesday, Jan. 27, at 7 p.m. The event, which takes place in McGuire Hall on the University’s North Charles Street campus, will be followed by a book signing and reception.

    Dr. Paul, a Republican and an obstetrician by training who has served Texas’s 14th district for 20 years, will discuss many of the key themes outlined in his book End the Fed, a New York Times bestseller. Dr. Paul is also the co-author of a current bill requiring an audit of the Federal Reserve.

    “Dr. Paul presents a very convincing case that the Federal Reserve is not only the cause of much of our current economic condition, but is continuing with policies that will lead to greater difficulties in the future,” said Thomas DiLorenzo, Ph.D., a professor of economics at Loyola who arranged Dr. Paul’s appearance. “In addition to calling for the first audit of the Fed, he also proposes several alternatives for managing the U.S. money supply.”

    Dr. Paul, a graduate of Gettysburg College and Duke University School of Medicine, serves on the House Foreign Affairs and Financial Services Committees as well as the Joint Economic Committee. He was a candidate for the Republican nomination during the 2008 United States presidential campaign.

    The event, part of the Moral Foundations of Capitalism lecture series led by DiLorenzo, is supported by a grant from the BB&T Foundation.

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  • Law To Curb Lobbying Sends It Underground

    LawBy David D. Kirkpatrick

    (New York Times, January 17, 2010) WASHINGTON — Ellen Miller, co-founder of the Sunlight Foundation, has spent years arguing for rules to force more disclosure of how lobbyists and private interests shape public policy. Until recently, she herself registered as a lobbyist, too, publicly reporting her role in the group’s advocacy of even more reporting. Not anymore.  In light of strict new regulations imposed by Congress over the last two years, Ms. Miller joined a wave of policy advocates who are choosing not to declare themselves as lobbyists.  “I have never spent much time on Capitol Hill,” Ms. Miller said, explaining that she only supervises those who press lawmakers directly. “I am not lobbying, so why fill out the forms?”  Her frankness makes Ms. Miller a standout among hundreds of others who are making the same decision. Though Washington’s influence business is by all accounts booming, a growing number of its practitioners are taking a similar course to avoid the spotlight of public disclosure.

    “All the increasing restrictions on lobbyists are a disincentive to be a lobbyist, and those who think they can deregister are eagerly doing so,” said Jan Baran, a veteran political lawyer who has been fielding questions from clients hoping to escape registration. “It is creating some apparent contradictions.”

    Before the new rules, the number of advocates who registered as lobbyists appeared to have grown steadily, peaking in late 2007. A tally by the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics (another group founded by Ms. Miller) put the count at about 13,200. The number fell by nearly 2,000 by the fall of last year.

    The falloff began shortly after Congress passed a sweeping ethics and lobbying law that imposed on registered lobbyists both heavier reporting requirements and potential criminal penalties. The law required lobbyists to report four times a year instead of two, and to detail any campaign contributions and certain meetings with public officials. The law also made it a crime for registered lobbyists to provide gifts or meals to lawmakers or their aides.

    But for all its penalties, the law left the definition of a lobbyist fairly elastic. The criteria included getting paid to lobby, contacting public officials about a client’s interests at least twice in a quarter and working at least 20 percent of the time on lobbying-related activities for the client.

    Enforcement is also light. Lobbyists suspected of failing to file receive at least one official letter offering a chance to rectify their status before any legal action is taken.

    After the rules changed, private companies and nonprofit groups immediately began to rethink their registration.

    The Union of Concerned Scientists, which advocates on arms control, energy policy and environmental issues, had previously registered almost anyone who went to Capitol Hill on its behalf, said Stephen Young, a senior analyst for the group. That changed after the new law.

    “We thought: ‘Hmm, this is now not such an easy thing. Let’s see if we are required to do it. We are not? Let’s take them off,’ ” he said. The group terminated the registrations of “virtually all” its former lobbyists, he said.

    Lobbyists were further motivated to adopt new tactics after President Obama limited their access to meetings and to government officials. He barred administration officials from talking to registered lobbyists about any projects involving federal stimulus money. He blocked lobbyists from working on his transition or taking jobs in his administration.

    Some Democrats said the president’s prohibitions had motivated them to terminate their registrations and keep lobbying below the registration threshold; all insisted on anonymity to discuss the reasons for their decision.

    “Lobbying isn’t a crime,” said one recently de-registered lobbyist who is looking for a job. “It is a profession, and in my view it is an honorable one. But this administration has made a decision about who can serve and who can’t.”

    Some corporate lobbyists, speaking anonymously for fear of irking the White House, said they were revising job descriptions in light of the administration’s decision to bar registered lobbyists from sitting on industry advisory panels. “Wait a minute, who is going to be on this board?” a lobbyist for a major aviation company recalled thinking. “Are we going to actively manage people to not be lobbyists?”

    The pattern has set off a debate on K Street and Capitol Hill. Many lobbyists argue that the decline in registration demonstrates the unfairness of cracking down on their trade while ignoring the campaign contributors, corporate executives, union chiefs and others who seek the ears of public officials. Advocates for the rules, on the other hand, argue that they should be tighter still, with tougher enforcement.

    “In a world of two and a half years ago,” said Thomas M. Susman, director of government affairs for the American Bar Association, “people in Washington would have said: ‘If in doubt, register. I like the publicity. I like to be in periodicals that list lobbyists. I want to be able to tell potential clients how many I am already registered for.’ Those are people who I believe have reconsidered.”  Click here to read more…