Author: Serkadis

  • TomTom data finds drivers aren’t speeding much, are being watched

    Sure, you might be able to avoid speed cameras with an array of dash-mounted gadgets, but there’s also another unseen eye that might be keeping an eye on your speeding habits: your GPS unit. Of course, GPS makers aren’t too interested in collecting individual users’ data (at least, we hope not), but they are collecting some general data, and TomTom has now released a few of its findings. Most notably, it found that drivers in just about every state stay within the speed limit on average, with only Mississippi edging 0.1 miles per hour over the top speed limit of 70 MPH. Things get a bit more interesting when you get down to specific routes in the United States, however, where the I-15 in Utah and Nevada comes out on top with an average speed of 77.67 miles per hour. On the other end of the spectrum, Washington D.C. proved to have the slowest drivers, where speeds averaged a mere 46 miles per hour — although that likely has something to do with TomTom’s earlier findings that Washington D.C. also has the most congested traffic in the U.S.

    TomTom data finds drivers aren’t speeding much, are being watched originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 24 Jan 2010 23:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Indie-pop Manglish

    Over the weekend, one of the guests on the NPR show “Studio 360 with Kurt Andersen” was the Malaysian singer-songwriter Zee Avi, who has managed to convert YouTube buzz into an indie recording contract and a well-received debut album. Most of her lyrics are in English, but one of her songs, which she performed on the show, code-mixes Malay and English. As she explains, the song “Kantoi” (meaning “Busted”) is in “a hybrid of Malay and English called Manglish.” I talked about Manglish a few years ago in the post, “Malaysia cracks down on ‘salad language,’” where I discussed measures taken by the Malaysian government to ban Malay-English mixtures. I wonder how government officials feel now that Manglish is getting international exposure, thanks to a diminutive, ukulele-strumming songstress.

    Here is Zee Avi’s “Studio 360″ performance of “Kantoi”:

    And here are the lyrics, with an English gloss (courtesy of a tribute video on YouTube). I’ve italicized the Malay items in the original. Zee Avi’s code-mixing includes such typical Manglish features as the Malay particle lah attaching to an English phrase (“No wonder lah“), and also includes the interesting reduplication “last last,” evidently a calque of Malay akhir-akhir (‘in the end, finally’).

    Original Manglish: English gloss:
    Semalam I call you, you tak answer Last night, I called but you didn’t answer
    You kata you keluar pergi dinner You said you went out for dinner
    You kata you keluar dengan kawan you You said you went out with your friends
    But when I called Tommy he said it wasn’t true. But when I called Tommy he said it wasn’t true.
    So I drove my car, pergi Damansara So I drove my car to Damansara
    Tommy kata maybe you tengok bola Tommy said maybe you’re watching football
    Tapi bila I sampai, you, you tak ada But when I arrived, you weren’t there
    Lagi la I jadi gila. The crazier I became.
    So I call and call sampai you answer So I called and called until you answered
    You kata, “Sorry sayang tadi tak dengar You said, “Sorry darling, I didn’t hear you”
    “My phone was on silent, I was at the gym” “My phone was on silent, I was at the gym”
    Tapi latar belakang suara perempuan lain. But in the background was another woman’s voice.
    Sudah lah sayang, I don’t believe you Enough darling, I don’t believe you
    I’ve always known that your words were never true I’ve always known that your words were never true
    Why am I with you, I pun tak tahu Why am I with you, I really don’t know
    No wonder lah my friends pun tak suka you. No wonder my friends don’t even like you.
    So I guess that’s the end of our story So I guess that’s the end of our story
    Akhir kata she accepted his apology Last word, she accepted his apology
    Tapi last last kita dapat tahu she was cheating too But in the end we found out, she was cheating too
    With her ex-boyfriend’s best friend, Tommy. With her ex-boyfriend’s best friend, Tommy.
  • Hyde, HPV, and Her Lady Business


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    The history of menstruation, the political prejudices against scientific information on the HPV vaccine, and fighting against the Hyde Amendment, all on this week’s podcast.

     

    Subscribe to RealityCast:
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    Links in this episode:

    Scott Brown’s innuendo

    Repeal the Hyde Amendment

    More on the Hyde Amendment

    And even more on the Hyde Amendment

    The big picture on abortion rights

    Who’s afraid of the HPV vaccine?

    Zombie lies

     

    On this episode of Reality Cast, I’ll be interviewing Elisa
    Stein about the history of menstruation. 
    Also, can anger about Stupak-Pitts be marshaled to push back against the
    Hyde Amendment?  And I also have a
    segment on how pre-existing prejudice about health and sexuality determine
    people’s opinions on the HPV vaccine.

     

    So, this is kind of weird.  Blue Mass Group discovered a 2008 video of teabagger beloved
    candidate Scott Brown implying that Barack Obama was born out of wedlock. 

     

    • brown
      *

     

    I hate things like this, because by demanding that Brown
    apologize, you kind of imply that it matters.  And it shouldn’t matter if a President’s parents were
    married or not. 

     

    Despite baffling statements like this, the voters of
    Massachusetts handed Scott Brown the seat Ted Kennedy had held since 1962.

     

    ************

    From the beginning, one of the major problems I had with the
    push to maintain the so-called status quo on abortion in health care reform was
    that it seemed like doing that instead of pushing back against the
    already-existing ban on federal abortion spending under the Hyde Amendment was
    fundamentally unfair.  The status
    quo would mean that women that were in the private insurance circuit, which
    means they’re not at the bottom economic rung, would have access to abortion
    coverage and women on Medicaid would not. 
    And it seems very unfeminist to leave out the most vulnerable among us.
    Plus, abandoning the issue allowed the right wingers to move the bill to the
    right and eliminate the ability of private insurance to offer funding.

     

    It’s true that most of the women that will be negatively
    affected by Stupak-Pitts are lower income women, so as far as that goes, the
    outcry over this has been heartening. 
    But it’s not enough, not if we don’t go after the Hyde Amendment.  And that’s because even without
    Stupak-Pitts, the Hyde Amendment will hurt millions of women.

     

    • hyde 1
      *

     

    That was from a video put out by the Center for Reproductive
    Rights.  Full disclosure: I’m in
    the video myself.  The good news is
    that the Center has decided that we need to move past just talking about
    Stupak-Pitts and start talking about the entire logic behind restricting
    abortion funding, and attack the Hyde Amendment straight on.  And so they asked us what we don’t want
    our tax money spent on, which is only fair.  Why should anti-choicers get special treatment?

     

    • hyde 2
      *

     

    Those are just some of the ones they gathered.  If you go to the link in the show notes,
    you’ll find instructions on submitting one of your own. 

     

    What’s made me really happy is that the Center for
    Reproductive Rights aren’t the only ones who are seeing the bigger picture
    here.  This whole debacle is
    causing a whole lot of people to talk about reproductive justice and how a
    woman’s inability to scrounge up $500 in short order shouldn’t mean she should
    be forced to give birth against her will. 

     

    "Making Contact" of the National Radio Project dealt with
    the issue of how the original sin that’s created this mess is the Hyde
    Amendment, and how the Hyde Amendment continues to hurt women. 

     

    • hyde 3
      *

     

    According to the National Network of Abortion Funds, it’s
    estimated that one in three low income women who want an abortion are instead
    forced to give birth against their will because they can’t afford it.  That’s an unbelievable human rights
    violation in what’s supposed to be a pro-choice era.  Singling out poor women for forced pregnancy because they’re
    poor is not the America I was brought up to believe in.  There’s no other way for me to put
    that, even if it sounds extreme.

     

    Taking the time to look at the big picture isn’t just
    limited to looking at the Hyde Amendment, either.  Lynn Paltrow was on Grit TV, and she talked about how
    abortion is used as a cover to attack women’s health and rights in
    general. 

     

    • hyde 4
      *

     

    And just to prove how true this was, Laura Flanders played
    this anti-choice video clip:

     

    • hyde 5
      *

     

    Any fool can tell you that there is more to reproductive
    health care than abortion—it includes Pap smears, contraception, prenatal
    care, childbirth care, and other gynecological care.  By calling all of this "abortion", fanatical anti-choicers
    have basically declared open season on women’s right to health care.  Makes you wonder how exactly they’re
    different from the Taliban that banned all women’s health care that involved a
    doctor actually seeing a woman’s body. 
    Means sacrificing women’s lives for this fanatical hatred of female
    sexuality.

     

    *********

    Insert interview

    *********

    Thanks to the National Science Foundation for both having Yale University Law professor Dr. Dan Kahan on their webcast to
    talk about the political controversy over the HPV vaccine, and for alerting me
    to the existence of this webcast. 
    It was really interesting information.  Dr. Kahan and his colleagues created a survey of 1,500
    people to figure out who was scared of the HPV vaccine, and what their general
    attitudes were that might lead them to be afraid of the vaccine.  What they found shouldn’t be too
    surprising.

     

    • hpv 1 *

     

    What’s interesting to me is that until
    recently, the link between right wing nuttery and anti-scientific thinking was
    not so firm.  Even now, most
    anti-vaccination nuttery comes from the left, except when it comes to the HPV
    vaccine, which is a right wing hysteria issue.  But increasingly, you’re seeing the right wing just take a
    more generalized anti-science stance, especially on issues that they see as being
    in conflict with their values. 
    Research that leads to better, more effectively lethal weapons will
    never be questioned, but here you have a vaccine that will save the lives of
    sexually active women, and we can’t have that!

     

    The team assembled used the standard
    measurement system to determine someone’s political values, which are measured
    on two spectrums: one that measures if you’re more authoritarian or
    egalitarian, and one that measures if you’re more oriented towards community
    solutions or if you see the world as every man for himself.  What they found was that your values
    influenced how open you were to accepting scientific evidence about the HPV
    vaccine.

     

    • hpv 2 *

     

    Again, nothing surprising there.  What it does make me realize, however,
    is why there are some people on the left who have gotten all bent out of shape
    about vaccines, even though that sort of thing would generally be seen as a
    more right wing inclination.  And
    it really goes back to that individual initiative, which is a nice way of saying
    that some people believe they’ll be safe if they have a highly moralistic
    behavior pattern and that they don’t need others to help them because of
    this.  A lot of left wing types who
    fear vaccines that I’ve met have basically said that you don’t need vaccines if
    you eat right and avoid promiscuous sex. 
    This is of course untrue, but it really shows why they might think that
    getting a vaccine is some sort of judgment on their morals, instead of just a
    basic precaution.  But they’re
    still on the left, because they’re more egalitarian and less authoritarian.

     

    One of the most interesting findings of
    the study was that if you put the information in the mouth of an expert that
    people find culturally agreeable, then that can often completely reverse their
    normal inclinations.  The
    implications of this study are dire.

     

    • hpv 3 *

    Does that mean that it’s hopeless, that
    anti-scientific right wingers are going to hijack the discussion about HPV to
    the point that CDC recommendations that could effectively make cervical cancer
    a thing of the past will never get enacted?  Dr. Kahan does have one idea how to get around this problem.

     

    • hpv 4 *

     

    It’s a really good idea, but in order
    to get there, you need to drum those people up.  On some issues, that’s not a problem, but when it comes to
    women’s health care, the distaste for women’s health is often perceived as a
    value that makes someone trustworthy on the right.  Appearing to care too much for women can undermine their
    authority.  On this issue, however,
    it may be somewhat doable—it’s at least worth trying to recruit some right
    wingers who are predisposed to really hate cervical cancer to speak out on this
    issue.

     

    ************

     And now for the Wisdom of Wingnuts, zombie lies edition.  Sarah Palin will not stop lying about
    death panels being in the health care bill. 

     

    • palin *

     

    Notice the lie by implication built in
    by Sean Hannity?  By using the word
    "still", he implies there ever were death panels.  There weren’t. 
    Then Sarah Palin drops two doozy lies, one by claiming the Brits have
    death panels and that we modeled this bill after England.  Both are outrageous lies.  The Brits do not kill off their
    elderly. And they have a single payer system, which wasn’t even considered
    during the debate in this country. 

     

     

  • WooRank – Ferramenta de análise de sites

    WooRank

    O WooRank é uma nova aplicação web based que lhe permite gerar um relatório completo da análise do conteúdo e popularidade de um site em apenas alguns segundos.

    Para gerar este relatório, o WooRank obtém informações de várias fontes, incluindo o Google e as redes sociais mais populares. Poderá obter informações sobre as visitas, conteúdo, optimização de motores de busca interna e externa, a usabilidade do site, sites relacionados com a página indicada e ainda informações acerca da localização do servidor.

    Esta ferramenta pode ser bastante útil para webmasters e responsáveis de web marketing, proporcionando-lhes um guia rápido de tudo o que é conhecido acerca do site. Para além disso o WooRank atribui uma qualificação aos sites baseada nos resultados obtidos.

    WebTugaWooRank – Ferramenta de análise de sites

  • Top Topic Trackers (Updated List)

    Last week we listed and categorized some of the leading topic-tracking tools on the Web. As usual we got a great response in the comments, with additional information about the apps listed and suggestions for other apps to add. So in this post we present an updated list of topic tracking tools for you to explore. Once again, we invite you to add more in the comments and/or comment on the existing ones.

    We’ve also added links, to make it easier for you to check these services out.

    Sponsor

    Feed and/or Email Services

    These are services that output RSS and/or other formats, such as email notification. We think this type of topic feed tool is the most flexible, particularly when it outputs RSS. With RSS feed output, you can do further filtering or grouping of the feeds inside an RSS reader like Google Reader or Netvibes.

    Destination Services

    These services don’t output RSS or emails for topic searches. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, it just means you have to visit the destination site to see results every day.

    Social Filter

    These services show what is popular or new amongst their respective communities. There are many other such services, so the following is just a sample:

    Community Curated

    Similar to social filter services, only these have a specific community driving the output of stories. Again, the below is a small sample:

    People Curated

    Topic-focused blogs (such as ReadWriteWeb!) are great for tracking topics on the Web. In recent times, light blogging services have offered an easy way for individuals or small groups of people to curate information on a given topic.

    Update: also see this interesting post by Tony Karrer about "topic hubs" for bloggers.

    Aggregators / Portals

    These services aggregate, or group, news and other stories around a specific topic.

    Market Intelligence

    These are professional brand management services that you typically have to pay for. Many of them include topic tracking. Here’s a sample…

    Please add your further suggestions to our categorized lists in the comments.

    Discuss


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  • Q&A: ‘With More Political Space, Women Can Do More as Peacemakers’

    Ashfaq Yusufzai interviews ZAHIRA KHATTAK, a women’s rights advocate PESHAWAR, Pakistan, Jan 25 (IPS) As a political activist and president of the women’s wing of the Awami National Party (ANP), Zahira Khattak has been working relentlessly for the empowerment of women in the war-torn North West Frontier Province (NWFP) in Pakistan. She believes that by empowering them, they can contribute more to the peace efforts in the region.

    "We are holding a peace jirga in the near future in which women from the whole province will be invited to speak on the prevailing situation," Khattak said, referring to the spate of violence in the NWFP, one of Pakistan’s four provinces. Women have also been providing comfort to the bereaved families of the victims of militant attacks in NWFP, she said.

    When a suicide blast killed 34 people in Charsadda district in the NWFP in November 2009, the female members of the ANP, including the parliamentarians, offered prayers for the victims to embolden the people, she said. ANP’s women also visit the sites of bomb blasts and houses of the slain victims to encourage their families.

    "Men dying in these attacks have mothers, wives, daughters and sisters, who are grieving. We go to their houses to give them psychological, mental and emotional support in these trying times," said Khattak.

    The ANP is part of a coalition government in the NWFP alongside the Pakistan People’s Party of Benazir Bhutto, the former prime minister who was assassinated in December 2007. It was swept to power in the February 2008 elections, ousting an alliance of Islamic parties.

    Following the 2001 terrorist attacks in the United States, the Taliban government in Afghanistan was toppled, forcing the militant fighters along with al-Qaeda extremists to flee to the porous Pakistan-Afghanistan border, taking sanctuary in the Federally Administered Tribal Area in Pakistan.

    They later spilled over into the nearby NWFP and started targeting business establishments and security personnel and installations. They also restricted women from venturing out in public without the accompaniment of close family members, and going to schools. In Swat district alone, some 185 girls’ schools have been bombed by the Taliban.

    Noting that the violence inflicted on women must be stopped, the former chairperson of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan has also been working to expand public discourse to include the plight of the women in the province.

    She sat down with IPS to share her thoughts on the ongoing efforts to create more space for women in the war-torn NWFP.

    Q: The spate of violence in NWFP, including suicide attacks, can easily scare anyone. How are the women coping?

    A: Women have always expressed concern over the situation and struggled to live each day fighting off the dire consequences of such incidents. The women of this region have lost a lot as a result of militancy in the region.

    Q: You said ANP is organising a peace jirga (or council) where women will have a voice. How do you plan to mobilise them in this peace effort using the ANP platform?

    A: The ANP has always played a pivotal role in the efforts to mobilise the women to pursue peace initiatives in the region. An example of this was the peace rally organised by the women’s wing of the ANP in March 2009, which was aimed at promoting peace and harmony in the region while focusing on the role women could play in (achieving this goal).

    Q: After the peace council in March 2009, what’s next?

    A: The ANP women’s wing is planning to organise a peace conference in March this year, which would also include inputs from women who belong to other political parties. Even a sister of Baitullah Mahsud (chief of the outlawed Tehrik Taliban, who was killed in the U.S. drone attack on Aug. 5, 2009) is welcome to join our campaign against terrorism and contribute to our peace efforts.

    Q: How much more can women contribute to the peace efforts in the NWFP?

    A: Women can actually do more in establishing peace and stability in this region if they are given their due place within the socio-political structures of society.

    An example of this is the female governor [Habiba Sarabi] of the province of Bamyan in Afghanistan, who is working towards establishing reasonable conditions for promoting peace and stability in the province.

    Q: That’s interesting, but how come very few women are going into the political arena to vie for electoral seats?

    A: The political atmosphere in this country has never been conducive to women’s participation in electoral contests.

    In 2008, before the elections, a lot of women, such as Bushra Gohar of ANP, wanted to run for elective posts. But because of the situation obtaining then (mainly owing to the attitude of the mullahs or clerics in the NWFP, who frowned on women participating in politics), it was not possible for them to pursue their political aspirations.

    Hopefully, in the coming few years, the situation will change and women will finally be able to join the general elections, thus proving what they are capable of in the political sphere.

    Q: How does the ANP ensure that women are accorded the rights due them, including political ones?

    A: The constitution of the party has always given its women members equal status. We have used this very effectively, and because of the measures that we have taken (to ensure that they enjoy equal status with men), the number of women parliamentarians who represent the party has increased steadily over the last couple of years.

    Q: Are more women awakening to their rights?

    A: Yes, and they have done a lot to ensure that their struggles and efforts toward their political and social emancipation do not go to waste. The coming days will prove that.

  • Breaking: Flurry Notices Cupertino-based Users Testing Apps on Apple Tablet

    Flurry, a mobile app analytics company, has noticed approximately 50 devices in the Cupertino that match the characteristics of Apple’s tablet device. Flurry claims to have reliably placed these devices on Apple’s Cupertino campus, and are confident that they are “observing a group of pre-release tablets in testing.”

    This make sense – as the Apple Tablet has to be tested before it is announced this Wednesday, January 27 in San Francisco. Furthermore, Flurry has been an extremely reliable source on analytics data thus far and don’t often break stories unless they are sure they’ve checked their facts.

    They’ve noticed that a large number of the apps downloaded were Games (140 total downloads or launches) and the next group was Entertainment, followed by News and Books. Here’s a chart of the usage data:


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  • Exploding Term Sheets Prompt Y Combinator To Sync Acceptance Dates With Competitors

    This evening Y Combinator opened up applications for its Summer 2010 round, marking what will be the fifth anniversary of the program, which has funded 171 startups to date. This round is bringing an important change: the program calendar has been moved up by a month, which means that startups will find out if they’ve been accepted at nearly the same time that they’ll hear back from competing programs like TechStars and DreamIt Ventures.

    The move stems from the growing competition between Y Combinator, which pioneered the startup mentorship model, and similar programs that have sprung up in its wake. Last March, Y Combinator issued an advisory to prospective applicants warning them of exploding term sheet offers from some of these competitors. These exploding term sheets are nullified within a day or two, which forces startups to quickly decide if they’d like to accept the offer. Because Y Combinator’s acceptance dates have historically been later than those of some competitors, this led to some startups joining programs that may not have been their first choice.

    It’s worth pointing out that Y Combinator itself encourages startups to make up their minds quickly once they’ve received a funding offer. But YC founder Paul Graham says that the program will give startups more time if they have a reason for needing it, and that they’ve never used exploding termsheets.

    Companies that have been accepted to Y Combinator will be notified the weekend of March 26-29. TechStars will be extending their offers on March 28. And DreamIt Ventures will make offers between March 25-31.

    This session’s application includes one other notable change: startups are being encouraged to submit their applications as early as possible. Before now, half of all applications have been submitted in the last two days before the deadline as founders work to polish their applications. This time, the YC team will be reviewing applications earlier and interacting with founders before the deadline, so it’s in your best interest to apply as early as possible. Applications are due by March 3.


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  • Game developers look forward to making games for Apple tablet

    apple confirmsGame developers are starting to get excited about making games for Apple’s tablet computer, which is expected to be announced on Jan. 27.

    The tablet is likely to be a hot new platform for games, since it will have more processing power, a bigger touch screen, and other capabilities that dwarf the game experience on the iPhone, which is no slouch when it comes to games.

    The Wall Street Journal reported that Electronic Arts was preparing games for the Apple tablet. EA declined to comment, but it makes sense given EA’s heavy focus on making mobile games. There is also plenty of other content in the works, such as apps for reading books, magazines and newspapers, textbooks, TV shows, YouTube and other things. The Journal said the 10-inch or 11-inch screen device would be about $1,000.

    Flurry also reported today that the tablet is running the iPhone OS 3.2, which has not been released yet. That means that the device will likely run the current 130,000 apps that are available on the AppStore. About a fifth of those apps are games. And, in fact, Flurry said today that the bulk of the 200 apps that Apple has been testing on 50 new devices at its Cupertino, Calif. headquarters are games.

    The tablet will be a significant new test as to whether there is room in the crowded game market for a new gaming device. It comes at a time when there are no new game platforms planned even as consumers are turning to gaming on smart phones in droves.

    Games, for instance, are the No. 1 app on the iPhone and iPod Touch. While the iPhone and iPod Touch compete with the Nintendo DS and the Sony PSPgo, this new Apple device will be in virgin territory, along with all of the other tablet devices being created. Analysts believe that there could be a big market for devices that have 5-inch to 15-inch screens and yet are not netbooks or smart phones.

    Some of those devices are more like eBook readers, but the Apple tablet will be an interesting jack-of-all-trades. It may launch first as an eBook reader aimed at the Amazon Kindle, but it could also become a popular new gaming platform.


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  • Evidence of Apple tablet tests show up in Flurry data

    apple tabletApple has been testing 50 devices believed to be its new tablet computers, according to analytics firm Flurry.

    Flurry said its analytics showed that the device were being tested on Apple’s campus in Cupertino, Calif. Flurry said its data showed that the testing of the devices increased dramatically in January, although it detected the devices as early as October.

    “Apple appears to be going through its cycle of testing and polish, which is expected from any hardware or software company as it nears launch,” said Peter Farago, vice president of marketing at Flurry.

    Flurry embeds its tracking code in apps that use its analytics service. Each app sends Flurry information about the device that it is running on. That’s how Flurry detected the unknown devices which it assumes are tablets.

    Apple is expected to announced the new hardware device on Wednesday, Jan. 27, in San Francisco. Lots of leaks point to the tablet. Flurry said there were 200 different applications in use by the testers. Games are the number one app being tested, followed by entertainment, news and books.

    Hence, these tablets are different from typical slate computers where productivity applications are most frequently used. The device is believed to have a 10-inch or 11-inch diagonal touchscreen, making it ideal for games, entertainment and electronic books. This device clearly targets consumers, based on the apps being tested. Flurry also detected a strong theme of sharing and social interaction, with an emphasis on social games, social networking, photo sharing and file transfer.

    The hardware was apparently running the iPhone OS 3.2, which has not yet been released. The iPhone and iPod Touch are running OS 3.1.2. But the OS choice means the device should be able to run the 130,000 apps already available on Apple’s AppStore. The device is evidently not running the Mac OS X.


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  • Spotify revenues may pass $50 million this year

    spotify-logoOne of the interesting tidbits to come out of Midem, the music industry’s top trade fair in Cannes, over the weekend were some hard figures from Spotify, the much-hyped music streaming startup from Sweden.

    Spotify senior vice president Paul Brown said the company has 250,000 paid subscribers. At 9.99 euros or pounds, or 99 Norwegian or Swedish kronor, a month, that would put annual subscription revenues at between $41.1 million and $51.2 million, depending on how many of those subscribers are in each of those markets at current exchange rates. There are also advertising revenues, paid day passes and downloads on top of that, but figures on those aren’t public.

    Of course, one must consider the music royalties Spotify must be paying to the record labels, which can come in at a half-cent or full cent per song. With more than 6 million free-riders using the service, it adds up fast. It’s a model that has bankrupted predecessors like Imeem and is a drain the reported $50 million Spotify raised over the summer from investors including Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing.

    For this reason, Spotify is something of a curiosity. Every music startup that has come before it offering ad-supported, on-demand music has failed. (Radio models like Pandora don’t really count because you can’t choose exactly what you’re going to hear.) Contemporary competitors like U.S.-based MOG focus on paid subscriptions. But the Swedish startup has been particularly insistent on coming to the U.S. market with a freemium, not paid-only, model.

    The company seems to have some unique contracts. Universal Music Group senior vice president Rob Wells told the U.K.’s Telegraph last week that the company is paying the label royalties per user in only two countries, the U.K. and Spain. In the other four, Spotify pays based on money generated from subscriptions and advertising — not on a per user basis.

    He added that the company would have enough to pay labels if 10 to 12 percent of its users converted to paid subscriptions. If — and a big emphasis on if — the other three major record labels are also happy with that conversion rate, Spotify has some work cut out for itself. Two hundred and fifty thousands subscribers out of 7 million gives you a 3.5 percent conversion rate. The company’s got to at least triple that.


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  • Days before iTablet-palooza, the rumor hits keep comin’




    With just days to go before Apple is likely to unveil a long-expected tablet device, rumors continue to circulate over its details. As the buzz continues, we wanted to wrap up what we have heard recently.

    You want 3G with that? Sources inside both AT&T and Verizon once again say that an Apple tablet will be compatible with not just one or the other, but both networks. The source from Verizon claims that it will work automatically with Verizon’s WiFi hotspots and switch seamlessly to EVDO when out of range. Whether such a service would work the same on AT&T isn’t known, but that company did boast to Fox that it has “the largest network of Wi-Fi hotspots in the country.”

    Further rumors peg Qualcomm as the supplier of the 3G chip for the tablet. Apple may build separate versions, one with HSPA+ chips for AT&T and most other carriers, and another with EVDO chips for Verizon and other carriers using the CDMA standard. Alternately, Apple may even include a chip recently designed by Qualcomm that’s capable of connecting to either network.

    Read the rest of this article...


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  • Q&A: ‘With More Political Space, Women Can Do More as Peacemakers’

    Ashfaq Yusufzai interviews ZAHIRA KHATTAK, a women’s rights advocate PESHAWAR, Pakistan, Jan 25 (IPS) As a political activist and president of the women’s wing of the Awami National Party (ANP), Zahira Khattak has been working relentlessly for the empowerment of women in the war-torn North West Frontier Province (NWFP) in Pakistan. She believes that by empowering them, they can contribute more to the peace efforts in the region.

    "We are holding a peace jirga in the near future in which women from the whole province will be invited to speak on the prevailing situation," Khattak said, referring to the spate of violence in the NWFP, one of Pakistan’s four provinces. Women have also been providing comfort to the bereaved families of the victims of militant attacks in NWFP, she said.

    When a suicide blast killed 34 people in Charsadda district in the NWFP in November 2009, the female members of the ANP, including the parliamentarians, offered prayers for the victims to embolden the people, she said. ANP’s women also visit the sites of bomb blasts and houses of the slain victims to encourage their families.

    "Men dying in these attacks have mothers, wives, daughters and sisters, who are grieving. We go to their houses to give them psychological, mental and emotional support in these trying times," said Khattak.

    The ANP is part of a coalition government in the NWFP alongside the Pakistan People’s Party of Benazir Bhutto, the former prime minister who was assassinated in December 2007. It was swept to power in the February 2008 elections, ousting an alliance of Islamic parties.

    Following the 2001 terrorist attacks in the United States, the Taliban government in Afghanistan was toppled, forcing the militant fighters along with al-Qaeda extremists to flee to the porous Pakistan-Afghanistan border, taking sanctuary in the Federally Administered Tribal Area in Pakistan.

    They later spilled over into the nearby NWFP and started targeting business establishments and security personnel and installations. They also restricted women from venturing out in public without the accompaniment of close family members, and going to schools. In Swat district alone, some 185 girls’ schools have been bombed by the Taliban.

    Noting that the violence inflicted on women must be stopped, the former chairperson of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan has also been working to expand public discourse to include the plight of the women in the province.

    She sat down with IPS to share her thoughts on the ongoing efforts to create more space for women in the war-torn NWFP.

    Q: The spate of violence in NWFP, including suicide attacks, can easily scare anyone. How are the women coping?

    A: Women have always expressed concern over the situation and struggled to live each day fighting off the dire consequences of such incidents. The women of this region have lost a lot as a result of militancy in the region.

    Q: You said ANP is organising a peace jirga (or council) where women will have a voice. How do you plan to mobilise them in this peace effort using the ANP platform?

    A: The ANP has always played a pivotal role in the efforts to mobilise the women to pursue peace initiatives in the region. An example of this was the peace rally organised by the women’s wing of the ANP in March 2009, which was aimed at promoting peace and harmony in the region while focusing on the role women could play in (achieving this goal).

    Q: After the peace council in March 2009, what’s next?

    A: The ANP women’s wing is planning to organise a peace conference in March this year, which would also include inputs from women who belong to other political parties. Even a sister of Baitullah Mahsud (chief of the outlawed Tehrik Taliban, who was killed in the U.S. drone attack on Aug. 5, 2009) is welcome to join our campaign against terrorism and contribute to our peace efforts.

    Q: How much more can women contribute to the peace efforts in the NWFP?

    A: Women can actually do more in establishing peace and stability in this region if they are given their due place within the socio-political structures of society.

    An example of this is the female governor [Habiba Sarabi] of the province of Bamyan in Afghanistan, who is working towards establishing reasonable conditions for promoting peace and stability in the province.

    Q: That’s interesting, but how come very few women are going into the political arena to vie for electoral seats?

    A: The political atmosphere in this country has never been conducive to women’s participation in electoral contests.

    In 2008, before the elections, a lot of women, such as Bushra Gohar of ANP, wanted to run for elective posts. But because of the situation obtaining then (mainly owing to the attitude of the mullahs or clerics in the NWFP, who frowned on women participating in politics), it was not possible for them to pursue their political aspirations.

    Hopefully, in the coming few years, the situation will change and women will finally be able to join the general elections, thus proving what they are capable of in the political sphere.

    Q: How does the ANP ensure that women are accorded the rights due them, including political ones?

    A: The constitution of the party has always given its women members equal status. We have used this very effectively, and because of the measures that we have taken (to ensure that they enjoy equal status with men), the number of women parliamentarians who represent the party has increased steadily over the last couple of years.

    Q: Are more women awakening to their rights?

    A: Yes, and they have done a lot to ensure that their struggles and efforts toward their political and social emancipation do not go to waste. The coming days will prove that.

  • Give Us Your Feedback and Enter to Win a 1-Year Supply of World’s Best Cat Litter™!

    WBCL_Survey2

    World’s Best Cat Litter™ wants to hear from you! Please take a few moments to complete a short survey telling us about the cat litter that you use and what features are important to you. As a thank you for taking the survey, you will be entered in a drawing to win a 1-year supply of World’s Best Cat Litter™!

    One winner will be chosen in a random drawing on February 14, 2010. The winner will receive 12 – 7 lb. bags of World’s Best Cat Litter™ in the formula of their choice, to be delivered in two shipments of 6 bags each. The drawing is open to US addresses only. You must enter your email address at the end of the survey to be included in the drawing (you will not be added to any mailing lists unless you choose to be added).

    > click here to take the survey now!


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  • Miss Moustache Giveaway Winners

    winners

    Thanks to everyone for the great comments on the Miss Moustache product line! The two lucky winners of the giveaway are Brenda (comment #358) and Amber S (comment #430). Congrats and keep an eye out for an email from me with details on how to claim your prizes.

  • SmartFish concept aircraft swims in the air

    SmartfishThe SmartFish aircraft is a concept vehicle created by an engineering firm in Germany, based on the aerodynamic shape of a fish. So far, they have only built a remote control version of the aircraft, and a prototype is in the works. The prototype will be built from kevlar and carbon fiber; but, the designers expect the vehicle to be relatively inexpensive to build.

    The prototype is expected to be a ducted fan, two seater craft, capable of just under Mach 1. Still, that’s a respectable speed when you consider the top speed of other civilian aircraft in this size. Looking at the design though, I can’t help but think that is should be chrome with a robotic co-pilot.


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  • Q&A: ‘With More Political Space, Women Can Do More as Peacemakers’

    Ashfaq Yusufzai interviews ZAHIRA KHATTAK, a women’s rights advocate PESHAWAR, Pakistan, Jan 25 (IPS) As a political activist and president of the women’s wing of the Awami National Party (ANP), Zahira Khattak has been working relentlessly for the empowerment of women in the war-torn North West Frontier Province (NWFP) in Pakistan. She believes that by empowering them, they can contribute more to the peace efforts in the region.

    "We are holding a peace jirga in the near future in which women from the whole province will be invited to speak on the prevailing situation," Khattak said, referring to the spate of violence in the NWFP, one of Pakistan’s four provinces. Women have also been providing comfort to the bereaved families of the victims of militant attacks in NWFP, she said.

    When a suicide blast killed 34 people in Charsadda district in the NWFP in November 2009, the female members of the ANP, including the parliamentarians, offered prayers for the victims to embolden the people, she said. ANP’s women also visit the sites of bomb blasts and houses of the slain victims to encourage their families.

    "Men dying in these attacks have mothers, wives, daughters and sisters, who are grieving. We go to their houses to give them psychological, mental and emotional support in these trying times," said Khattak, who is also the provincial president of the ANP.

    The ANP is part of a coalition government in the NWFP alongside the Pakistan People’s Party of Benazir Bhutto, the former prime minister who was assassinated in December 2007. It was swept to power in the February 2008 elections, ousting an alliance of Islamic parties.

    Following the 2001 terrorist attacks in the United States, the Taliban government in Afghanistan was toppled, forcing the militant fighters along with al-Qaeda extremists to flee to the porous Pakistan-Afghanistan border, taking sanctuary in the Federally Administered Tribal Area in Pakistan.

    They later spilled over into the nearby NWFP and started targeting business establishments and security personnel and installations. They also restricted women from venturing out in public without the accompaniment of close family members, and going to schools. In Swat district alone, some 185 girls’ schools have been bombed by the Taliban.

    Noting that the violence inflicted on women must be stopped, the former chairperson of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan has also been working to expand public discourse to include the plight of the women in the province.

    She sat down with IPS to share her thoughts on the ongoing efforts to create more space for women in the war-torn NWFP.

    Q: The spate of violence in NWFP, including suicide attacks, can easily scare anyone. How are the women coping?

    A: Women have always expressed concern over the situation and struggled to live each day fighting off the dire consequences of such incidents. The women of this region have lost a lot as a result of militancy in the region.

    Q: You said ANP is organising a peace jirga (or council) where women will have a voice. How do you plan to mobilise them in this peace effort using the ANP platform?

    A: The ANP has always played a pivotal role in the efforts to mobilise the women to pursue peace initiatives in the region. An example of this was the peace rally organised by the women’s wing of the ANP in March 2009, which was aimed at promoting peace and harmony in the region while focusing on the role women could play in (achieving this goal).

    Q: After the peace council in March 2009, what’s next?

    A: The ANP women’s wing is planning to organise a peace conference in March this year, which would also include inputs from women who belong to other political parties. Even a sister of Baitullah Mahsud (chief of the outlawed Tehrik Taliban, who was killed in the U.S. drone attack on Aug. 5, 2009) is welcome to join our campaign against terrorism and contribute to our peace efforts.

    Q: How much more can women contribute to the peace efforts in the NWFP?

    A: Women can actually do more in establishing peace and stability in this region if they are given their due place within the socio-political structures of society.

    An example of this is the female governor [Habiba Sarabi] of the province of Bamyan in Afghanistan, who is working towards establishing reasonable conditions for promoting peace and stability in the province.

    Q: That’s interesting, but how come very few women are going into the political arena to vie for electoral seats?

    A: The political atmosphere in this country has never been conducive to women’s participation in electoral contests.

    In 2008, before the elections, a lot of women, such as Bushra Gohar of ANP, wanted to run for elective posts. But because of the situation obtaining then (mainly owing to the attitude of the mullahs or clerics in the NWFP, who frowned on women participating in politics), it was not possible for them to pursue their political aspirations.

    Hopefully, in the coming few years, the situation will change and women will finally be able to join the general elections, thus proving what they are capable of in the political sphere.

    Q: How does the ANP ensure that women are accorded the rights due them, including political ones?

    A: The constitution of the party has always given its women members equal status. We have used this very effectively, and because of the measures that we have taken (to ensure that they enjoy equal status with men), the number of women parliamentarians who represent the party has increased steadily over the last couple of years.

    Q: Are more women awakening to their rights?

    A: Yes, and they have done a lot to ensure that their struggles and efforts toward their political and social emancipation do not go to waste. The coming days will prove that.

  • Lamborghini Jota, the 2012 Murcielago replacement

    It has been going around the internet for a while now, but finally something tangible has been seen of what very well could be the next super car from Sant’Agata.

    On a snowy test track spy photographers have been able to take images of a test car that clearly shows some special lines that could be interpreted as belonging to a new Lamborghini to succeed the by now aging Murcielago flagship.

    It has even been given a name : the Jota, derived from that amazing and legendary Miura from the early Seventies and revived for a short period of time on the Diablo SE30 limited edition as a power upgrade, the Jota could now become a model on it’s own.

    Naturally no official details are available, it hasn’t even been confirmed what this test car represents, but from the images we can see it has the massively wide rear wheels as seen on the Murcielago, so it probably isn’t a Gallardo successor although it does use the exterior rear view mirrors from the V10 model at this time, but I’m sure these will be replaced by the time we see it being unveiled in Geneva or Paris in 2010.

    We could also speculate that the current steel tube chassis will be replaced by an aluminum space frame clothed with carbon fiber panels to keep weight down, as usual the styling is camouflaged in these shots, but still we can expect styling cues from the Reventon and Estoque, if we look closely at these shots we could discover those ‘opening’ shoulder air intakes remain on the successor.

    Power could be from a newly developed V12 engine, direct fuel injection will probably raise power output above the 700 Bhp mark being delivered on a new all-wheel transmission that could be acquired from Sweden based Haldex. Remember the engine currently mounted in the Murcielago is still based on the original 3.5 Litre V12 used back in the Sixties on the classic 350GT, so it might be time to take a totally different approach this time.

    But just take a close look at these spy shots … from the front right up to the rear wheel it looks like a Gallardo, the same mirrors, the same door style, the same triangular small window in front of the door, look closely at the design of the door and the front fender and you can clearly see this isn’t even an upward opening door, I doubt the Murcielago successor will not use these Lamborghini trademark doors … but things change considerably around the rear wheel.

    Notice that small triangular air exhaust just in front of that rear wheel ? it must be there for something, probably oil cooler like on the LP640 model, the Audi R8 style sides cover the shape of the air intake behind the door, and they even taped some ‘TestaRossa’ style fins on the door, but I’m sure these won’t be there on the production model.

    The shoulder mounted air intakes are similar in style to the Reventon ones, also the engine cover looks like it has been ‘borrowed’ from the Reventon two door, and just above that triangular air outlet on the sides there is a crease running upwards away from the rear wheel to the front, this hasn’t been seen on any Lamborghini yet.

    Also the rear overhang is a lot bigger than on the Gallardo, this could be evidence of a big V12 engine mounted longitudinally like on the Murcielago, also note two flat but very wide exhaust outlets in the middle … these actually look like the ones seen on the Estoque concept four door. A close look at the taillights could reveal Reventon Y-style leds again being used, but that’s easy, they’ve been used on all recent models so it’s no surprise they will be featured on an all new flagship in 2012 too.

    My best guess would be this is the front of a Gallardo body mounted on a modified Murcielago chassis with the rear of a Reventon stuck to it because the V12 engine is too large to fit completely inside a Gallardo bodywork and the rear track would be too wide to get tucked underneath a regular Gallardo body shell … so I really doubt this car could even resemble the styling we’ll see on the Murcielago successor when it is shown to the public in 2012 … all we can do is wait, but I’m sure it will be a stunning exotic that will put it’s competitors in the shadow once again … but the car in these shots is merely a hybrid Gallardo/Reventon bodywork probably over a new style chassis/drivetrain/engine combination to allow testing and further development of the upcoming Murcielago successor in moderate secrecy.

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  • Laser-based ‘clock’ shortens beam as wake-up time draws closer

    It’s probably not the clock you need to build if being punctual is your modus operandi, but it’s sufficiently nerdy nonetheless. One Nirav Patel — which may or may not be related to our own Mr. Patel — decided to hand craft his own “sleep remaining indicator,” which utilizes a slowly rotating servo, a laser beam and a timer in order to work its magic. Put simply, the beam gets shorter and shorter as one’s wake-up time draws near, but oddly enough, you’ll never be able to see its awesomeness if you’re actually sleeping. Quite the conundrum, no?

    Laser-based ‘clock’ shortens beam as wake-up time draws closer originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 24 Jan 2010 21:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Q&A: ‘With More Political Space, Women Can Do More as Peacemakers’

    Ashfaq Yusufzai interviews ZAHIRA KHATTAK, a women’s rights advocate PESHAWAR, Pakistan, Jan 25 (IPS) As a political activist and president of the women’s wing of the Awami National Party (ANP), Zahira Khattak has been working relentlessly for the empowerment of women in the war-torn North West Frontier Province (NWFP) in Pakistan. She believes that by empowering them, they can contribute more to the peace efforts in the region.

    "We are holding a peace jirga in the near future in which women from the whole province will be invited to speak on the prevailing situation," Khattak said, referring to the spate of violence in the NWFP, one of Pakistan’s four provinces. Women have also been providing comfort to the bereaved families of the victims of militant attacks in NWFP, she said.

    When a suicide blast killed 34 people in Charsadda district in the NWFP in November 2009, the female members of the ANP, including the parliamentarians, offered prayers for the victims to embolden the people, she said. ANP’s women also visit the sites of bomb blasts and houses of the slain victims to encourage their families.

    "Men dying in these attacks have mothers, wives, daughters and sisters, who are grieving. We go to their houses to give them psychological, mental and emotional support in these trying times," said Khattak, who is also the provincial president of the ANP.

    The ANP is part of a coalition government in the NWFP alongside the Pakistan People’s Party of Benazir Bhutto, the former prime minister who was assassinated in December 2007. It was swept to power in the February 2008 elections, ousting an alliance of Islamic parties.

    Following the 2001 terrorist attacks in the United States, the Taliban government in Afghanistan was toppled, forcing the militant fighters along with al-Qaeda extremists to flee to porous Pakistan-Afghanistan border, taking sanctuary in the Federally Administered Tribal Area in Pakistan.

    They later spilled over into the nearby NWFP and started targeting business establishments and security personnel and installations. They also restricted women from venturing out in public without the accompaniment of close family members, and going to schools. In Swat district alone, some 185 girls’ schools have been bombed by the Taliban.

    Noting that the violence inflicted on women must be stopped, the former chairperson of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan has also been working to expand public discourse to include the plight of the women in the province.

    She sat down with IPS to share her thoughts on what women have to go through in a war-torn society like NWFP.

    Q: The spate of violence in NWFP, including suicide attacks, can easily scare anyone. How are the women coping?

    A: Women have always expressed concern over the situation and struggled to live each day fighting off the dire consequences of such incidents. The women of this region have lost a lot as a result of militancy in the region.

    Q: You said ANP is organising a peace jirga (or council) where women will have a voice. How do you plan to mobilise them in this peace effort using the ANP platform?

    A: The ANP has always played a pivotal role in the efforts to mobilise the women to pursue peace initiatives in the region. An example of this was the peace rally organised by the women’s wing of the ANP in March 2009, which was aimed at promoting peace and harmony in the region while focusing on the role women could play in (achieving this goal).

    Q: After the peace council in March 2009, what’s next?

    A: The ANP women’s wing is planning to organise a peace conference in March this year, which would also include inputs from women who belong to other political parties. Even a sister of Baitullah Mahsud (chief of the outlawed Tehrik Taliban, who was killed in the U.S. drone attack on Aug. 5, 2009) is welcome to join our campaign against terrorism and contribute to our peace efforts.

    Q: How much more can women contribute to the peace efforts in the NWFP?

    A: Women can actually do more in establishing peace and stability in this region if they are given their due place within the socio-political structures of society.

    An example of this is the female governor [Habiba Sarabi] of the province of Bamyan in Afghanistan, who is working towards establishing reasonable conditions for promoting peace and stability in the province.

    Q: That’s interesting, but how come very few women are going into the political arena to vie for electoral seats?

    A: The political atmosphere in this country has never been conducive to women’s participation in electoral contests.

    In 2008, before the elections, a lot of women, such as Bushra Gohar of ANP, wanted to run for elective posts. But because of the situation obtaining then (mainly owing to the attitude of the mullahs or clerics in the NWFP, who frowned on women participating in politics), it was not possible for them to pursue their political aspirations.

    Hopefully, in the coming few years, the situation will change and women will finally be able to join the general elections, thus proving what they are capable of in the political sphere.

    Q: How does the ANP ensure that women are accorded the rights due them, including political ones?

    A: The constitution of the party has always given its women members equal status. We have used this very effectively, and because of the measures that we have taken (to ensure that they enjoy equal status with men), the number of women parliamentarians who represent the party has increased steadily over the last couple of years.

    Q: Are more women awakening to their rights?

    A: Yes, and they have done a lot to ensure that their struggles and efforts toward their political and social emancipation do not go to waste. The coming days will prove that.